Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Monday, May 20, 2013


யுத்த வெற்றி விழாவில் வதைக்கப்பட்ட சிப்பாய்கள் புலம்பல்! காணாமல் போன கடற்படை சிப்பாய் சடலமாக மீட்பு

JVP News-May 18, 2013


இன்று கொழும்பு நகரை முடக்கிய யுத்த வெற்றி விழா நிகழ்வுகளில் ஆயிரக்கணக்கான இராணுவத்தினர் அணிவகுப்பு நிகழ்வுகளில் பங்கேற்றிருந்தனர்.
யுத்த வெற்றி விழாக் கொண்டாட்டம் என்ற பெயரில் தாம் பெரிதும் வதைக்கப்படுவதாக இராணுவச் சிப்பாய்கள் விசனம் தெரிவித்துள்ளனர்.
இதில் தமது படைப் பிரிவுகளுடன் தமது திறமைகளை வெளிப்படுத்தும் முகமாக ஒவ்வொரு பிரிவினரும் அணி வகுப்பில் ஈடுபட்டிருந்தனர்.
இவர்கள் பல மணி நேரம் இத்தகைய அணிவகுப்பில் ஈடுபட்டமையால் பெரிதும் களைப்படைந்து சோர்ந்த நிலையிலேயே காணப்பட்டனர்.
காலி முகத்திடலில் ஆரம்பித்த இந்த அணி வகுப்பு லேக் ஹவுஸ் சுற்று வட்டத்தை அண்டியே முடிவடைந்தது. அங்கு முடியும் தருவாயில் பல இராணுவ சிப்பாய்களின் முகங்களில் யுத்த வெற்றி விழா குறித்த வெறுப்புத் தன்மையைக் காணக்கூடியதாக இருந்தது.
இவ்வாறான இராணுவச் சிப்பாய்களிடம் கேட்ட போது,
அவர்கள், “எங்களை வைத்து இந்த அரசு அரசியல் லாபம் காண்கிறது” என்றும், இந்த யுத்த வெற்றி விழாவையிட்டு எம்மை சில நாட்களாக பெரிதும் வதைத்துள்ளனர்.
இந்த விழாவுக்கான அணி வகுப்பிற்காக நாம் எமது உடலால் மாத்திரமின்றி மனசளவிலும் சோர்ந்த நிலையிலேயே பயிற்சிகளை மேற்கொண்டோம்.
எமது கைகளில் பெருமளவிலான சுமைகளைச் சுமத்தி வீதி நெடுகிலும் அணி வகுப்பாக நடக்கவிடும்போது நாம் படும் துன்பம் சொல்லிட முடியாது.
victory_day_ceml11
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யுத்த வெற்றி விழாவில் கடலில் மூழ்கி காணாமல் போன கடற்படை வீரர் சடலமாக மீட்பு

கொழும்பு, கொள்ளுப்பிட்டி கடற்பரப்பில் நேற்று நடைபெற்ற வெற்றி விழாவின்போது கடற்படைக்கு சொந்தமான படகொன்று விபத்துக்குள்ளாகி காணாமல் போன கடற்படை வீரரின் சடலம் இன்று காலை மீட்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.
20130518_162508விபத்தில் காணாமல் போன கடற்படை வீரதைத் தேடும் பணிகள் முன்னெடுக்கப்பட்டு வந்த நிலையில் பம்பலப்பிட்டி கடற்பரப்பில் வைத்து சடலம் மீட்கப்பட்டதாக கடற்படைப் பேச்சாளர் கொமாண்டர் கோசல வர்ணகுலசூரிய தெரிவித்தார்.
கொழும்பு, கொள்ளுப்பிட்டி கடற்பரப்பில் நேற்று நடைபெற்ற வெற்றி விழாவின்போது கடற்படைக்கு சொந்தமான படகொன்று விபத்துக்குள்ளானதில் ஒருவர் காணாமல் போனதுடன் படகில் இருந்த இரண்டு கடற்படை வீரர்கள் காப்பாற்றப்பட்டனர்.
படகு விபத்தில் உயிர்தப்பிய இரு கடற்படை வீரர்களும் கொழும்பு தேசிய வைத்தியசாலையில் அனுமதிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளதுடன் தொடர்ந்தும் சிகிச்சை பெற்று வருகின்றனர்.

Sailor dies during Sri Lanka victory parade


Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, wearing a scarf, rides on a jeep with commanders of security forces as he inspects a guard of honor during a war victory parade in Colombo, Sri Lanka, Saturday, May 18, 2013. The military parade is being held to commemorate the 4th year anniversary of the government's victory over Tamil Tiger rebels.Photo - Reuters

Times of Oman
:
Colombo Sri Lanka's navy Sunday recovered the body of a sailor who drowned during a parade marking the fourth anniversary of the defeat of Tamil Tiger rebels, an official said.

The body was found near a beach in Colombo where his small boat capsized while taking part in the victory celebrations presided over by President Mahinda Rajapakse on Saturday.

"The boat was salvaged on Saturday and four crewmen were rescued, but one officer went missing and his body was recovered only this morning," a military official said on condition of anonymity, adding that the boat had got into trouble in choppy waters.

Rajapakse, who addressed troops at the land and sea parade, vowed not to allow the Tamil Tiger rebels or any other separatist group to create trouble in the ethnically dived nation of 20 million people.

His troops declared an end to 37 years of ethnic bloodshed after killing the top Tamil Tiger leadership in May 2009.

In the north the main opposition ethnic Tamil political party, the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), defied a military ban and staged a remembrance ceremony for those who died in the final battle which also killed Tigers leader Velupillai Prabhakaran.

TNA officials said the main memorial event in the town of Vavuniya went off without incident despite army threats to arrest participants. But in the adjoining district of Mannar, police briefly detained mourners.

The military offensive which crushed the Tigers triggered allegations of war crimes. Rights groups said up to 40,000 civilians perished in the last months of fighting, a charge denied by Colombo.
 

Sunday, May 19, 2013


Gota, The National Security State And The PTA

By M A Sumanthiran -May 19, 2013
M.A. Sumanthiran
Colombo TelegraphThe arrest and detention of Azath Salley, leader of the Muslim Tamil National Alliance, brought the incongruously named Prevention of Terrorism [Temporary Provisions] Act to the spotlight. There is nothing quite temporary about the PTA. It is here to stay unless the people of this country demand that it be abolished. Until it is, it will continue to victimize and terrorize families and communities, as it has done for more than three decades now.
The PTA is a draconian piece of legislation that rights activists, progressive politicians and well meaning international friends have asked successive governments to repeal. The Tamil people have been the worst affected victims of the PTA. Indeed, the PTA continues to strike terror into Tamil families and the larger Tamil community. I have appeared for a number of individuals held in detention under the PTA. Typically, persons arrested under the PTA are arrested and whisked away to a police station, or worse, the TID or CID Headquarters. The desperate families of the arrested person must then go looking for their loved ones, often relying on unhelpful officials for snippets of information on the location in which their relative is held. When this trauma ends, another begins. That of attempting to visit the detenue. Almost always, a Detention Order is issued within days of the arrest, extending the period of time under which a suspect can be held without charge to eighteen months! As suspects are kept in custody without charge or judicial supervision for long periods, police abuse is rampant. This is compounded by provisions in the PTA which enable confessions made by suspects to the police to be admissible in evidence. In fact, many convictions under the PTA are based solely on the confession of a suspect. Being aware of this, the police stop at nothing to extract confessions. The methods of torture are legion. The lucky survive with telltale mental and physical scars of torture – paranoia, panic attacks and headaches. The not so lucky are permanently disabled. Some are killed. One person whom I represented was blinded in both eyes. This is the reality of the PTA.
While the PTA has brought agony and distress to its victims, it has played a fundamental role in defining governance in Sri Lanka.
Firstly, it enables the government in power to persecute and terrorize communities and classes of people considered ‘enemies of the state’. The PTA is almost never used in isolation. Its purpose is not to deal with individuals suspected of terrorism. Instead, its use has always been designed to subjugate communities thought to be troublesome. This is why the PTA has been used so widely against Tamils. The PTA enables governments to crush the source of any organized resistance against it and this is why it continues to be used in the North and East today. During the second southern insurrection, the PTA was turned on Sinhala youth. Thus, the arrest and detention of Azath Salley under the PTA was not an ad hoc exercise done in response to a single line in a single interview in a single newspaper published outside Sri Lanka’s shores. The treatment of Salley was not merely a threat to Salley. Instead, it is a chilling reminder to Muslims that they too must be cautious, lest the fate of the Tamils come to haunt them. The message is that any resistance to the prevailing orthodoxy of Sinhala Buddhist suzerainty will be crushed.
Secondly, the PTA has been instrumental in ushering in the ‘National Security State’. The use of the PTA to carve a ‘national security’ niche within the law of this country was the first step toward the establishment of the National Security State. While a confession to a police officer is not admissible in evidence in respect of every other criminal offence on the law books, the PTA carved out an exception, ostensibly in the pursuit of national security. While persons charged of offences are normally entitled to bail, the PTA takes this right away. While the constitution recognizes the freedom of speech and the right to criticize the government, the PTA nullifies the effect of the constitution by criminalizing legitimate criticism. In short, the PTA forces the judiciary and lawyers to view regular civic activity through the narrow prism of national security. In his book “The Brave New World Order”, Jack Nelson Pallmeyer identifies the first characteristic of the national security state as one in which “the military is the highest authority. In a National Security State the military not only guarantees the security of the state against all internal and external enemies, it has enough power to determine the overall direction of the society. In a National Security State the military exerts important influence over political, economic, as well as military affairs.” This characteristic is strikingly apt to describe the current dispensation of governance in Sri Lanka. While the government makes much of its victory in the war, it has used the euphoria and triumphalism surrounding that victory to entrench the military in governance. From animal husbandry to golfing, and whale watching to the management of entertainment venues, the military is in the process of establishing control over the country’s economy. The Defence Secretary – only a public servant – now plays a central role in the formulation of national policy. The militarization of society is continuing apace, in which the PTA had no small role.
In conclusion, it is worth recalling Benjamin Franklin’s reminder that those who give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, deserve neither liberty nor safety. These words have prophetic ring to those of us listening to the voices of history. In Sri Lanka’s pursuit of temporary safety, it has lost respect for civil liberties. Indeed, the National Security State spawned by those very compromises is now making enemies of constituent communities of the country. To say this undermines the country’s security is but an understatement. This is what, I believe, Azath Salley was warning us about.
*The author – M. A. Sumanthiran (B.Sc, LL.M) is a Member of Parliament through the Tamil National Alliance, senior practicing lawyer, prominent Constitutional & Public Law expert and civil rights advocate
TNPF Mullivaikkal remembrance event
19 May 2013


Photographs TCCMediaFr

The Tamil National People's Front (TNPF) marked the 4th anniversary of the Mullivaikkal massacre in Mannar on Saturday. Plans to hold it by the remembrance memorial in Samanakulam, Vavuniya were ended when the memorial monument was destroyed the night before.



Following the event, S. Kajendran and V. Manivannan of the Tamil National People's Front (TNPF), were arrested along with other party members.



According to party president, Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam, the TNPF members were questioned by the Terrorism Investigation Department (TID) for many hours, before eventually being released on personal bail. 


Destroyed remembrance monument, Samanakulam

See also: TNPF members arrested for Mullivaikkal remembrance (18 May 2013)


Melbourne Tamils mark 4th anniversary of Mullivaikkal
 19 May 2013


Over 500 Australian Tamils gathered in Melbourne on Saturday to remember the victims of the Mullivaikkal massacre, 4 years on.
Despite the poor weather, hundreds of Tamils gathered outside the historic State Library of Victoria to mark the occasion. The event saw dance Bharatanatyam dance performances depicting the suffering of civilians and included a wide range of speakers.
Amongst them was Trevor Grant from the Tamil Refugee Council, who paid tribute to the history of the Tamil struggle and called for the Tamil Eelam flag and nation to attain international recognition.
Also addressing the event was Senator John Madigan from the Democratic Labour Party, who called for Australia to boycott the upcoming Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, and moreland City Councillor Sue Bolton who stated that the absence of war on the island did not mean that there was peace. She went on to state that whilst the Sri Lankan government claims tourists are visiting the island and all was well, the ethnic conflict and suffering remains.











The Agony Of Peace

May 19, 2013 |
 not to be free” - Jose Marti (eddosrios.org )
The photograph[i] is iconic; Alavi Moulana, 83 years old and an SLFP veteran of 52 years, bending down and kissing the hand of President Mahinda Rajapaksa.
Colombo TelegraphThat picture is revelatory of the current Lankan reality at multiple levels. It shows what citizens have to do if they are to prosper under Rajapaksa Rule. It shows what SLFPers have to do if they want are to get ahead in a Rajapaksa-party. It shows what minorities have to do if they are to survive in a Rajapaksa country.
The Rajapaksas believe that by defeating the LTTEthey won the right to do to and with Sri Lanka what they please.
The nature of the war cannot but have a bearing on the nature of the peace that follows, especially if the peace-builders are the same ones who won the war.
Lankan peace is a peace of absences. For Northern/Eastern Tamils it is a peace sans normalcy; they eke out a humiliated and right-less existence, under a de facto military occupation. For the Muslimsit is a peace sans security; they live with fear not knowing when – and why – the next attack on their community would come. For the Sinhalese it is a peace sans a peace-dividend; their economic woes are exacerbating. All are being deprived of their political rights and democratic freedoms; all are being compelled to live in a land where the law of the rulers has supplanted the rule of law. The main difference is that many Sinhalese still retain a sliver of hope of a better future; most Tamils probably never had any while most Muslims seem to be losing theirs.
The Rajapaksas have redefined politics as the continuation of war by other means. Disbelieving in the existence of an ethnic problem, they are not interested in implementing a political solution. For them the ‘Northern problem’ was just a ‘terrorist problem’; the terrorists are annihilated, ergo, there is no problem. Their approach to peace building is non-consensual and non-democratic. Minorities, as guests in a Sinhala-Buddhist country, are expected to accept their secondary status with good grace. Those who protest, peacefully and democratically, are treated as racists/traitors.
The Sinhala-Buddhists are expected to be content with their illusory sense of superiority over the minorities and accept the relentless economic-lashings as the price of Pax Sinhala. To take their mind off the absent peace-dividend and other discontents, they are being fed on a daily fare of threats and enemies. According to this racist/xenophobic narrative, though the Eelam War is won, the Tiger is undead, our enemies are legion and the barbarians are at the gate. We must be vigilant about such ‘snares’ as ‘human rights’ and ‘media freedom’.
When the President, himself, in his Victory-commemoration speech, castigates ‘human rights’, ‘media freedom’ and the ‘independence of the judiciary’ as ‘strategies tried out by these (external) forces to rule our Motherland’[ii], when he equates the protection of democracy and human rights with separatism and does so with a face contorted by anger, the future that is in the making becomes as unambiguous as cyanide.
Hate – and fear – has an indispensable place in this Sri Lanka.
Since peace it is not dependent on the freely given consent of the minorities, an omnipresent military is needed to underpin it; force is also necessary to keep the majority in check. The galloping militarization is thus another indispensable feature of this unequal, unjust and intolerant peace. Lankan militarization is a guided-militarization, a militarization in which the military is subordinate to the Ruling Siblings and functions as an instrument of familial rule. In return, the military is allowed to build its own economic/business empire. The latest step in this process is the creation of ‘army farmers’: “For the first time in military history, persons who were recruited to the Sri Lanka Army as farmers started their duty on the 12th of May” [iii]. These ‘militarised civilians’ are currently employed at the Kandakadu farm which the army took over from the LTTE. Will Navy-fishermen be next?
This militarization is as disastrous for the majority community as it is for the minorities, and not just for economic reasons. Even as 6,400 acres of Tamil-owned land in Valikamam North is being taken-over to build military cantonments, 1220 acres of Sinhala-owned land in Panama(Ampara district) is being acquired to build camps and hotels. In the confluence of these two acts of injustices, the right-less future which awaits the absolute majority of Lankans can be foreseen.
Enthroning Hate and Dishonour
Last week, the military commander of the Vanni district reminded the Tamil people of one of the most essential components of this peace – the criminalisation of mourning: “Any citizen has the right to commemorate their loved ones but no one can commemorate terrorists who were disloyal to the government. If persons are planning to remember LTTE members it is treason. We will arrest whoever is involved in this[iv].
It is one thing to prevent the commemoration of Vellupillai Pirapaharan and other Tiger-chieftains. It is quite another thing to ban hundreds of thousands of ordinary Tamil families from commemorating their loved ones. How would the Sinhala-South have reacted had the government/army imposed a similar ban after winning the Second Insurgency and arrested Sinhala families who mourned their JVP-dead?  Would that have led to reconciliation or to greater hate?
Is a mother expected to stop loving her child simply because he/she was a Tiger? Does a parent, a spouse, a child, a sibling, a grandparent become a traitor because he/she weeps for a loved one who fought in the LTTE ranks? How can a human know peace, if he/she is not allowed to mourn a dead child or a parent or a sibling, or a spouse or a loved one? How can there be closure without mourning? How can there be forgetting without remembering?
What kind of peace is this? Perhaps the only kind of peace which can be created by a leadership which opposed the provision of a high nutrition biscuit to Tamil children in the war-zone (by the UNICEF) on the ground that it will be used by the LTTE.
In Sophocles’ Ajax, the eponymous Greek General turns traitor, plans to kill other Greek leaders and, in the end, takes his own life. The enraged Greek commanders order that the ‘traitor’ be denied an honourable burial. Odysseus opposes this order; asked by Agamemnon why he refuses to trample his hated enemy in death, he cautions against trampling ‘justice underfoot’ out of limitless hate and warns: “Delight not, son of Atreus, in gains which sully honour”.
That is Rajapaksa peace, a state poisoned by hate and sullied by dishonour. So ordinary Tamils are banned from mourning their dead; so Gen. Sarath Fonseka has no place in the victory-commemoration.
Imagine the peace Vellupillai Pirapaharan would have imposed on Tamils had he won the war.
The Rajapaksas are increasingly looking like the enemy they defeated. And the peace they are building is disturbingly like the peace the Tiger would have created, a peace sans justice or mercy, a dishonourable, pitiless, intolerant peace; a violent peace.
Mauritians march to demand end to genocide19 May 2013

Hundreds of Mauritian Tamils marched through Port-Louis on Friday, demanding an end to the genocide of Tamils by the Sri Lankan government and called upon the Mauritius not to attend the upcoming Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Colombo.

Marking the 4th anniversary since the massacre at Mullivaikkal, the marchers carried banners which read "Say NO to Colombo" and waved red and yellow flags, alongside the Tamil Eelam national flag.



The march was supported by several Mauritian organisations, including the Mauritius Tamil Temple Federation, Tamil League, Union Tamoule, Tamil Cultural Centre, Tamil Speaking Union, Journal Jaune, Pathirikai and HJMS.


Left unites against scrapping 13A

By Ranga Jayasuriya-Sunday, 19 May 2013


The Left parties in the ruling coalition have taken a collective decision not to support an amendment that envisages weakening the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, Senior Minister and General Secretary of the Communist Party, D.E.W. Gunasekara said.


A coalition of traditional Left parties including the Communist Party, Lanka Sama Samaja Party, Socialist Left Party and Desha Vimukthi Janatha Party which are constituent parties of the ruling United People's Freedom Alliance (UPFA) hold 12 seats in the current Parliament.


At present, the government holds 161 seats in Parliament, including the MPs who have crossed over from other parties. However, the government cannot reach the two-thirds majority required to pass a constitutional amendment, without the 12 votes of the Left parties and the support of the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) and the Eelam People's Democratic Party (EPDP). Both the SLMC and the EPDP have opposed the campaign to abolish the 13th Amendment and the effort to trim the powers of the Provincial Councils.

Minister Gunasekara said the combined Left parties have taken a collective decision to defend the 13th Amendment. The decision was first announced when powerful Defence Secretary, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, called for the abolishment of the 13th Amendment.

Meanwhile, Minister Patali Champika Ranawaka, at a public seminar organized by the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), said yesterday, his party would present a private member motion to abolish the 13th Amendment and the Provincial Council system.
JHU National Organizer, Nishantha Sri Warnasinghe, told this newspaper the private member motion would be finalized in two weeks and the JHU would canvass for the support of other political parties to the Bill.


Meanwhile, Indian External Affairs Minister, Salman Khurshid, rang up his Sri Lankan counterpart G.L. Peiris late last week to ask that Sri Lanka would not take action that would weaken the 13th Amendment. Khurshid reminded Prof. Peiris that President Mahinda Rajapaksa himself had given regular undertakings to Indian Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, to build on the 13th Amendment in order to seek a political solution to the ethnic conflict.

Danish Tamils demand justice for Mullivaikkal massacre
 19 May 2013

Tamils in Copenhagen, Denmark, marked the 4th year anniversary of the Mullivaikkal massacre, and marched from the country's Foreign Office towards Parliament on Friday, demanding justice for the genocide that took place in 2009.







Addressing crowds gathered, the MP Nicholas Villumsen accepted that what took place was a genocide of the Tamil people.



Grinsted

Danish Tamils in Grinsted, also marked May 18th with dance and drama acts, as well as a remembrance service.


Pakistan’s Democratic Milestone: First Electoral Succession In 66 Years

By Rajan Philips -May 19, 2013 
Rajan Philips
Colombo TelegraphPakistan passed a rare milestone in its bumpy 66 year history.  For the first time power has been transferred from one elected government to another.  The succession of power in Pakistan has almost always alternated between civilian and military administrations.  National elections usually followed long periods of military dictatorships under Ayub Khan (1959-68) and Yahya Khan (1968-71), Zia-ul Hak (1977-1988), and Perverz Musharraff (1999-2008) – a total of 32 years.  No civilian government or Prime Minister who governed in between was allowed to complete the full elected term.  So it was a rare achievement that the May 11 General Election to Pakistan’s 14th National Assembly marked the completion of the full term of the Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) government elected in 2008.
Remarkably, and in a worthy example that Sri Lanka could follow, the elections to Pakistan’s four Provincial Assemblies were held on the same day as the election to the National Assembly.  The elections, as the well-connected commentator Farahnaz Ispahani noted, were a definite victory for democracy in Pakistan but a potential setback for the federation of Pakistan.  Pakistani people turned out in encouragingly large numbers (60%) to exercise their vote and celebrate democracy in the face of intimidation, threats and killings by Taliban and other religious extremists.  But the voting and the verdict were fractured along ethnic and provincial boundaries.  The fragmentation of voting is a matter for concern but should not be used as an argument against federalism – as it seems to have become the wont of academic geographers in Sri Lanka.
Ethnicity is has become an organizing principle in Pakistani politics as it is in other South Asian countries including Sri Lanka.  Pakistan’s four main ethnic groups, the Punjabis, Sindhis, Pashtuns and Baluchis, are geographically concentrated in the four Provinces of Punjab, Sindh, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa (KPK, formerly Northwestern Province), and Baluchistan. Punjab accounts for  more than half (148) of the total elected seats in the National Assembly, followed by Sindh (61),  KPK (35), and  Baluchistan (14).  The remaining 14 seats are distributed in the Federal capital of Islamabad, the Federally administered tribal areas.  In addition the National Assembly allocates 60 seats to women representatives (35 of whom are allocated to Punjab) and 10 seats to non-Muslim minority representatives nominated by each political party in proportion to its number of elected representatives.  This again is a worthy model for Sri Lanka where the National List seats could be used to increase women’s representation and to give seats to sections of the population who do not achieve representation through elections.
The election results in Pakistan are fragmented along geo-ethnic boundaries with each major party dominating a single province and no party achieving an overarching national presence. Thus the victorious Punjab Muslim League (PML-N) led by Nawaz Sharif won over 120 of its 130 seats in Punjab, the outgoing PPP won 30 of its 31 seats in Sindh, and Imran Khan’s  Pakistan Tehrik-i-Insaaf (PTI – Pakistan Justice Party) won 20 of its 35 seats in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and 8 in Punjab.  Historically, although belonging to the Bhutto dynasty in Sindh, the PPP has been Pakistan’s only ‘national party’ until now.  In the last parliament, the PPP held 94 seats from all the four Provinces, but in this election the PPP has been reduced to a party of the rural Sindh.  Although impressive, Nawaz Sharif’s victory lacks electoral legitimacy outside Punjab.  For Imran Khan the election results fell far short of the expectations that his stirring campaign raised both within and outside Pakistan.  Khan’s PTI secured most of its seats in the northwestern KPK territory but could not achieve the anticipated breakthrough in Punjab.
Provincially, the PML-N swept the assembly seats in Punjab securing a two-thirds majority, the PPP won more than half the assembly seats in Sindh, and Khan’s PTI won a third of the seats in KPK and is poised to form the government in that Province.  None of the three parties fared well in Baluchistan and a coalition of minor parties are likely to form the government.
The PPP’s dismal showing nationally is really the people’s punishment for the party’s worse than dismal performance in governance.  It was also singularly targeted by the Taliban forces during the election campaign as payback for the PPP government’s dependence on the US.  On the other hand, the parties of Imran Khan and Nawaz Sharif were not targeted by the Taliban and religious extremists.  Mr. Sharif, a protégé of Zia-ul Haq, is a conservative who has in the past advocated negotiations rather than confrontation with the Taliban and other militants.  Members of Sharif’s PML-N are also known to links to the militant groups.  Imran Khan may not have such networks in place but he played to Pakistani patriotism and the general antipathy towards the US, even dramatically promising that as Prime Minister he would order the shooting down of the American drones if they entered Pakistani airspace.  In addition, the Peshawar High Court has recently ruled that drone strikes are illegal and a war crime. A similar view has been expressed by Ben Emmerson, the UN special rapporteur.
Inheritances and challenges
For Nawaz Sharif, this is his third opportunity to serve as Pakistan’s Prime Minister.  His two previous terms were abruptly terminated by the army – first indirectly in 1993 and later by a military coup staged by General Perverz Musharraff in 1999.  The political power structure he is inheriting is somewhat less insecure than what he had to deal with in his two earlier stints, but the challenges he will be facing especially on the economic front are far more daunting than they were before.  As Prime Minister, he will also have to navigate Pakistan’s regional and international relationships involving Afghanistan, India and the US.
As for power structures, there is greater balance now than ever before between the three branches of the state in Pakistan, namely, the army, the government and the judiciary.  The judiciary that won its spurs by taking on President Musharraff has since shown its power and willingness to take on the government.  The army is still powerful but seems to have realized that a direct military takeover is no longer an option.  An instance of the new limitations came in the so called ‘Memogate’ affair in 2011.  At issue was a Memo written by the then Pakistani ambassador in Washington, Husain Haqqani (who had earlier represented Pakistan in Colombo), to a US Admiral asking for US protection for the Pakistani government against an impending military coup.  In earlier times, this would have been a good excuse for a military coup but matters did not go beyond media controversies, court battles and resignations.  As well, the unwelcome return of General Musharraff and his arraignment in the court has sent shivers through the military establishment.  Put another way, army officers fear that Musharraff may have created a precedent for subjecting military leaders to court inquiries.
Nawaz Sharif as opposition leader kept the pressure on the government all the time, but fully supported the PPP government completing its full term in office.  More importantly, the PPP led by President Asif Ali Zardari and the PML-N under Nawaz Sharif co-operated in enacting the 18th and 19th (I am not making this up!) Amendments to the constitution that (a) reduced the powers of the President and expanded those of parliament and the Prime Minister; and (b) devolved greater powers, autonomy and financial authority to the provinces.  The PPP government, while universally condemned for its corruption and incompetence, has also been credited by commentators for institutionalizing democracy in Pakistan for the first time since its inception.
Imran Khan’s aggressive campaign and his use of the social media has also helped create political awareness among significant sections of the population. He galvanized the youth and despite his outlandish promises succeeded in mobilizing people against corruption and incompetence.  He even introduced a system of ‘primaries’ for selecting candidates for the Party.  Although the effort was hardly a success, it was a worthy effort considering Pakistan’s dynastic stranglehold on electoral politics.  In the 1970s, the story on Pakistan was about the 70 families who controlled Pakistan’s economy.  The story now is about 600 families that have accounted for 3300 of about 7600 elected seats in the National Assembly, the Senate and the four Provincial Assemblies over the course of nine elections since 1970. To put this in perspective, about half of the country’s elected representatives belonged to 600 out of about 40 million families in the country.
Prime Minister Sharif has won a strong mandate even though most of it is from Punjab.  He is coming into office for the third time when the democratic system of government is at its strongest, the army is not as strong as it used to be, and the judiciary is exercising its independence more vigorously than at any time before.  Mr. Sharif has struck a positive and inclusive note including a visit to the hospital to see Imran Khan who is recovering after a bad fall from a platform in an election rally.  There also reports that the new Prime Minister will be offering the chairmanship of the powerful Public Accounts Committee (PAC) to Imran Khan, who has now won a seat in parliament.  As Chair of PAC, Mr. Khan could continue his crusade for accountability and against corruption.
Pakistan’s economic problems are similar to Sri Lanka’s but on a significantly larger scale.  The energy crisis is bad enough to require the rationing of electricity supply.  The government’s revenues are falling thanks to poor tax collection. High military budgets and debt levels are also troubling.  Economic activities and investment prospects are hampered by internal law and order breakdown and ever present Taliban attacks.  The Prime Minister is not taking any chances with the economic portfolio and has appointed Ishaq Dar, who was the Finance Minister in the two previous Sharif governments, as the new Finance Minister.
Indian commentators seem happy with Nawaz Sharif and the prospects for improved relationships between the two countries.  His positive overtures to India were a reason for the military coup that overthrew his government in 1999.  He has now invited Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to attend his inauguration.  But Prime Minister Sharif will have his hands full in dealing with Afghanistan and the US.  During his previous terms, Sharif cultivated the Taliban while working closely with the US.  He is not the only Pakistani leader to have done that.  But such a duplicitous position will become increasingly untenable in the future.

Sri Lanka Tamils defy ban on rebel memorial

By AFP | AFP – Sat, May 18, 2013
Sri Lanka's main opposition Tamil party Saturday defied a military ban and staged a commemoration of their war dead as the government celebrated the fourth anniversary of defeating Tamil Tiger rebels.
The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) said it staged the remembrance in the northern town of Vavuniya for those who died in the final battle which also killed Tamil Tiger leader Velupillai Prabhakaran and his entire top leadership.
"We had a meeting to commemorate all those who died in the conflict," TNA lawmaker Suresh Premachandran told AFP from Vavuniya, 260 kilometres (162 miles) north of Colombo.
The event came as Sri Lankan troops held a parades in the capital to mark the victory over Tamil Tiger rebels and an end to 37 years of ethnic bloodshed.
The state-run Daily News said the Vavuniya meeting was illegal and warned anyone commemorating the defeated Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) would be jailed.
Witnesses said the TNA-led ceremony ended peacefully amid a heavy police presence in the area, a front-line town near the former war zone in the island's north.
In the capital Colombo, President Mahinda Rajapakse viewed the military parade showcasing heavy weapons used against the Tigers who were known for their ferocious suicide bomb attacks.
"We will not allow a single inch of the land that you won by the sacrifice of your life to be taken away," Rajapakse said. "There will be no room for separation."
A naval craft taking part in the celebrations capsized and a search was on for an officer who was reported missing after the accident, a military official said, adding that the other four crew members had been rescued.
The military offensive which crushed the Tigers had triggered allegations of war crimes with rights groups saying that up to 40,000 civilians perished in the last months of fighting alone.

Mullivaikkal commemorated in Sweden
19 May 2013
  
Updated 09:00 GMT
Over 100 Tamils gathered in Stockholm to mark the 4th anniversary of the Mullivaikal massacre on Saturday.
Tamils from across the city came to pay their respects, with university students and activists handing out leaflets to raise awareness of the genocide.