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

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

No uniforms for airport employees

Tuesday, 04 June 2013
The Airport and Aviation Services Company has reportedly failed to provide uniforms to its staff at the Katunayake International Airport.
Airport sources have said that the staff including security personnel have not been provided with uniforms for the past four years. Airport and Aviation Services Company has not allocated funds for staff and security uniforms.
It is learnt that female airport staff members assigned to the terminals are facing great difficulties since some of their blue sarees have torn and they have to stitch them and wear for duty.
The airport security personnel are also faced with a similar situation since they too have not received uniforms for the past four years.

Mattala Airport security clash with Nal Balakya head

Tuesday, 04 June 2013
The group of youth from the Nil Balakaya who were employed as security personnel at the Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport (MRIA) has expressed their displeasure at the failure of the Nil Balakaya seniors to honor the assurances given to them.
The Nil Balakaya group that is currently providing security to the MRIA was promised a monthly basic salary of Rs. 35,000 each.
However, the monthly salary received by each of them so far is Rs. 10,000.
The Nil Balakaya security group has informed the Nil Balakaya seniors that Rs. 10,000 per month was not sufficient.
The security personnel had further observed that their services are being extorted by the MRIA authorities for a pittance of a salary

Eight bronze age boats surface at Fens creek in record find

3,000-year-old fleet discovered in a Cambridgeshire quarry on the outskirts of Peterborough
Boat
The boats, which were deliberately sunk into the long-dried-up creek, have been well preserved and still show carvings
The Guardian home-Tuesday 4 June 2013
A fleet of eight prehistoric boats, including one almost nine metres long, has been discovered in a Cambridgeshire quarry on the outskirts of Peterborough.
The vessels, all deliberately sunk more than 3,000 years ago, are the largest group of bronze age boats ever found in the same UK site and most are startlingly well preserved. One is covered inside and out with decorative carving described by conservator Ian Panter as looking "as if they'd been playing noughts and crosses all over it". Another has handles carved from the oak tree trunk for lifting it out of the water. One still floated after 3,000 years and one has traces of fires lit on the wide flat deck on which the catch was evidently cooked.
Several had ancient repairs, including clay patches and an extra section shaped and pinned in where a branch was cut away. They were preserved by the waterlogged silt in the bed of a long-dried-up creek, a tributary of the river Nene, which buried them deep below the ground.
"There was huge excitement over the first boat, and then they were phoning the office saying they'd found another, and another, and another, until finally we were thinking, 'Come on now, you're just being greedy,'" Panter said.
The boats were deliberately sunk into the creek, as several still had slots for transoms – boards closing the stern of the boat – which had been removed.
Archaeologists are struggling to understand the significance of the find. Whatever the custom meant to the bronze age fishermen and hunters who lived in the nearby settlement, it continued for centuries. The team from the Cambridge Archaeological Unit is still waiting for the results of carbon 14 dating tests, but believes the oldest boats date from around 1,600 BC and the most recent 600 years later.
They already knew the creek had great significance – probably as a rich source of fish and eels – as in previous seasons at the Much Farm site they had found ritual deposits of metalwork, including spears.
The boats themselves may have been ritual offerings, or may have been sunk for more pragmatic reasons, to keep the timber waterlogged and prevent it from drying out and splitting when not in use – but in that case it seems strange that such precious objects were never retrieved.
Some of the boats were made from huge timbers, including one from an oak which must have had a metre-thick trunk and stood up to 20 metres tall. This would have been a rare specimen as sea levels rose and the terrain became more waterlogged, creating the Fenland landscape of marshes, creeks and islands of gravel.
"Either this was the Bermuda Triangle for bronze age boats, or there is something going on here that we don't yet understand," Panter said.
Kerry Murrell, the site director, said: "Some show signs of long use and repair – but others are in such good condition they look as if you could just drop the transom board back in and paddle away."
The boats were all nicknamed by the team, including Debbie – made of lime wood, and therefore deemed a blonde – and French Albert the Fifth Musketeer, the fifth boat found. Murrell's favourite is Vivienne, a superb piece of craftsmanship where the solid oak was planed down with bronze tools to the thickness of a finger, still so light and buoyant that when their trench filled with rainwater, they floated it into its cradle for lifting and transportation.
Because the boats were in such striking condition, they have been lifted intact and transported two miles, in cradles of scaffolding poles and planks, for conservation work at the Flag Fen archaeology site – where a famous timber causeway contemporary with the boats was built up over centuries until it stretched for almost a mile across the fens.
"My first thought was to deal with them in the usual way, by chopping them into more manageably sized chunks, but when I actually saw them they just looked so nice, I thought we had to find another way," Panter, an expert on waterlogged timber from York Archaeological Trust, said. "I think if I'd arrived on the site with a chainsaw, the team would have strung me up."
Must Farm, now a quarry owned by Hanson UK, which has funded the excavation, has already yielded a wealth of evidence of prehistoric life, including a settlement built on a platform partly supported by stilts in the water, where artefacts including fabrics woven from wool, flax and nettles were found. Instead of living as dry-land hunters and farmers, the people had become experts at fishing: one eel trap found near the boats is identical to those still used by Peter Carter, the last traditional eel fisherman in the region.
The boats will be on display from Wednesday at Flag Fen, viewed through windows in a container chilled to below 5c – funded with a £100,000 grant from English Heritage which regards their discovery as of outstanding importance – built within a barn at the site. At the moment conservation technician Emma Turvey, dressed in layers of winter clothes, is spending up to eight hours a day spraying the timbers to keep them waterlogged and remove any potentially decaying impurities. They will then be impregnated with a synthetic wax, polyethylene glycol, before being gradually dried out over the next two years for permanent display.
Murrell is convinced there is more to be found down in the silt.
"The creek continued outside the boundaries of the quarry, so it's off our site – but the next person who gets a chance to investigate will find more boats, I can almost guarantee it."

American tourist gang-raped in India

BBC4 June 2013 

Indian police say that a 30-year-old American woman has been gang-raped in the northern state of Himachal Pradesh.

Last December's rape sparked protests across India
Protest in Delhi, India (29 Dec 2012)Police said that the woman had been attacked after she accepted a lift by three men in a truck in Manali, a resort town in the state.
No arrests have been made but police have set up roadblocks and are searching for the suspects.
Scrutiny of sexual violence in India has grown since the rape and murder of a student on a Delhi bus in December.
The gang rape of the student sparked widespread protests and prompted the government to alter laws relating to rape in India.
Five men and one juvenile have been charged with the rape. One of the men has since hanged himself in prison, officials say.
In the Manali case, police say the three men drove the woman to a secluded spot where they raped her and robbed her.
After arriving in Manali on Monday she had been on a visit to Vashisth, a nearby tourist area popular with foreigners, but was delayed and had been looking for a taxi in the early hours of Tuesday morning.
"Because it happened at night, she couldn't read the truck number. At around 7am, we put up checkpoints everywhere and we've been looking for the suspects," senior local police official Vinod Dhawan told BBC Hindi.
"We have found some clues at the crime scene."
A case of rape was filed after the woman had been medically examined in a local hospital, police say.
The US embassy in Delhi said it was aware of the case. "We are in contact with authorities but due to issues of privacy we have no further comment," a spokesperson told the BBC.
The attack comes after a Swiss tourist was gang raped in Madhya Pradesh state in March - six men were arrested in connection with that attack.
That same month, India passed a new bill containing harsher punishments, including the death penalty in certain cases, for rapists.
Reported cases of sexual assault are on the rise in India, although foreign tourists are rarely targeted.

Erotic Republic

Iran is in the throes of an unprecedented sexual revolution. Could it eventually shake the regime?

BY AFSHIN SHAHI | MAY 29, 2013

Foreign Policy Magazine

When someone mentions Iran, what images leap into your mind? Ayatollahs, religious fanaticism, veiled women? How about sexual revolution? That's right. Over the last 30 years, as the mainstream Western media has been preoccupied with the radical policies of the Islamic Republic, the country has undergone a fundamental social and cultural transformation.
While not necessarily positive or negative, Iran's sexual revolution is certainly unprecedented. Social attitudes have changed so much in the last few decades that many members of the Iranian diaspora are shellshocked when they visit the country: "These days Tehran makes London look like a conservative city," a British-Iranian acquaintance recently told me upon returning from Tehran. When it comes to sexual mores, Iran is indeed moving in the direction of Britain and the United States -- and fast.
Good data on Iranian sexual habits are, not surprisingly, tough to come by. But a considerable amount can be gleaned from the official statistics compiled by the Islamic Republic. Declining birth rates, for example, signal a wider acceptance of contraceptives and other forms of family planning -- as well as a deterioration of the traditional role of the family. Over the last two decades, the country has experienced the fastest drop in fertility ever recorded in human history. Iran's annual population growth rate, meanwhile, has plunged to 1.2 percent in 2012 from 3.9 percent in 1986 -- this despite the fact that more than half of Iranians are under age 35.
At the same time, the average marriage age for men has gone up from 20 to 28 years old in the last three decades, and Iranian women are now marrying at between 24 and 30 -- five years later than a decade ago. Some 40 percent of adults who are of marriageable age are currently single, according to official statistics. The rate of divorce, meanwhile, has also skyrocketed, tripling from 50,000 registered divorces in the year 2000 to 150,000 in 2010. Currently, there is one divorce for every seven marriages nationwide, but in larger cities the rate gets significantly higher. In Tehran, for example, the ratio is one divorce to every 3.76 marriages -- almost comparable to Britain, where 42 percent of marriages end in divorce. And there is no indication that the trend is slowing down. Over the last six months the divorce rate has increased, while the marriage rate has significantly dropped.
Changing attitudes toward marriage and divorce have coincided with a dramatic shift in the way Iranians approach relationships and sex. According to one study cited by a high-ranking Ministry of Youth official in December 2008, a majority of male respondents admitted having had at least one relationship with someone of the opposite sex before marriage. About 13 percent of those "illicit" relationships, moreover, resulted in unwanted pregnancy and abortion -- numbers that, while modest, would have been unthinkable a generation ago. It is little wonder, then, that the Ministry of Youth's research center has warned that "unhealthy relationships and moral degeneration are the leading causes of divorces among the young Iranian couples."
Meanwhile, the underground sex industry has taken off in the last two decades. In the early 1990s, prostitution existed in most cities and towns -- particularly in Tehran -- but sex workers were virtually invisible, forced to operate deep underground. Now prostitution is only a wink and a nod away in many towns and cities across the country. Often, sex workers loiter on certain streets, waiting for random clients to pick them up. Ten years ago, Entekhab newspaper claimed that there were close to 85,000 sex workers in Tehran alone.
Again, there are no good countrywide statics on the number of prostitutes -- the head of Iran's state-run Social Welfare Organization recently told the BBC: "Certain statistics have no positive function in society; instead, they have a negative psychological impact. It is better not to talk about them" -- but available figures suggest that 10 to 12 percent of Iranian prostitutes are married. This is especially surprising given the severe Islamic punishments meted out for sex outside marriage, particularly for women. More surprisingly still, not all sex workers in Iran are female. A new reportconfirms that middle-aged wealthy women, as well as young and educated women in search of short-term sexual relationships, are seeking the personal services of male sex workers.
Thailand: End Inhumane Detention of Rohingya
Provide Asylum Seekers Access to UN Refugee Agency
JUNE 4, 2013
Thailand should respect the basic rights of Rohingya ‘boat people’ and stop detaining them in horrific conditions. The government should immediately allow them to pursue their asylum claims with the UN refugee agency.
Brad Adams, Asia director
HRWThe Thai government should immediately end the detention under inhumane conditions of more than 1,700 ethnic Rohingya from Burma, Human Rights Watch said today. Rohingya asylum seekers should be transferred from overcrowded cells in immigration detention centers to get screening and protection from the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR).
Shocking video footage of Rohingya locked up in an overcrowded immigration facility in Thailand’s Phang Nga province was shown on ITN Channel 4 News on May 31, 2013. Thailand’s prime minister Yingluck Shinawatra had agreed in January to permit Rohingya arriving by boat in Thailand to stay temporarily, initially for six months, until they could be safely repatriated to their places of origin or resettled to third countries.
“Thailand should respect the basic rights of Rohingya ‘boat people’ and stop detaining them in horrific conditions,” said Brad Adams, Asia director. “The government should immediately allow them to pursue their asylum claims with the UN refugee agency.”
The ITN program showed most of the 276 Rohingya men living in extremely cramped conditions in two cells resembling large cages, each designed to hold only 15 men, where they barely had enough room to sit. Some suffered from swollen feet and withered leg muscles due to lack of exercise. The men said they have not been let out of the cells in five months.
Thai immigration authorities have not permitted UNHCR to conduct refugee status determination screenings of these Rohingya, and instead lock them in overcrowded immigration detention facilities across the country. Rohingya families have been split up, with women and children sent to government-run shelters separate from the men placed in immigration detention.
Each year, tens of thousands of ethnic Rohingya from Burma’s Arakan State set sail to flee persecution by the Burmese government, and dire poverty. The situation has significantly worsened followingsectarian violence in Arakan State in June 2012 between Muslim Rohingya and Buddhist Arakanese, and later government-backed crimes against humanity committed during a campaign of “ethnic cleansing” in October against Rohingya and other Muslims.
Thailand’s so-called “help on” policy towards small boats carrying Rohingya has failed to provide Rohingya asylum seekers with the protections required under international law, and in some cases significantly increased their risk.
Under this policy, the Thai navy intercepts Rohingya boats that come close to the Thai coast and supposedly provides them with fuel, food, water, and other supplies on the condition that the boats sail onward to Malaysia or Indonesia. Enforcement actions to prevent Rohingya from these vessels from coming ashore intensified after the Thai government responded to international pressure, and agreed to provide temporary shelter for more than 1,700 Rohingya who had arrived in Thailand since January 2013.
Under the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, everyone has the right to seek asylum from persecution. While Thailand is not a party to the 1951 Refugee Convention, under customary international law, the Thai government has an obligation of “non-refoulement” – not to return anyone to places where their life or freedom would be at risk. UNHCR’s Guidelines on Applicable Criteria and Standards Relating to the Detention of Asylum Seekers reaffirms the basic human right to seek asylum and state that “[a]s a general rule, asylum seekers should not be detained.” The UNHCR Guidelines also note that detention should not be used as a punitive or disciplinary measure, and that detention should not be used as a means of discouraging refugees from applying for asylum.
The Thai government should work closely with UNHCR, which has the technical expertise to screen for refugee status and the mandate to protect refugees and stateless people. Effective UNHCR screening of all Rohingya boat arrivals would help the Thai government determine who is entitled to refugee status.
“Thai authorities should provide temporary protection to Rohingya and scrap the ‘help on’ policy that places these asylum seekers in harm’s way,” Adams said. “The government should help Rohingya who escape from oppression and hardship in Burma – not worsen their plight.”

Bradley Manning 'systematically harvested' documents

3 June 2013 
BBCMilitary prosecutors have said US soldier Bradley Manning "systematically harvested" a vast trove of secret documents to share with Wikileaks.


Mark Mardell reports
Mark Mardell reports
At the start of Pte Manning's court martial, a prosecutor said Osama Bin Laden had received leaked information.
But defence lawyers said Pte Manning, 25, was young and naive when he shared the files with the anti-secrecy site.
He has not denied his role in the leak, and faces up to life in prison if convicted of aiding the enemy.
Earlier this year, Pte Manning pleaded guilty to 10 of the 22 charges against him related to the leaks, but not to the most serious charge.
The Manning-Wikileaks case is considered the largest-ever leak of secret US government documents. Prosecutors say the disclosures harmed US national interests, while Pte Manning's supporters say he is a whistle-blowing hero.
In opening statements on Monday at a military courtroom in Fort Meade, Maryland, prosecutor Capt Joe Morrow called the case an example of what happened "when arrogance meets access".
'Harvest' of documents

The BBC's Ben Wright explains the case in 80 seconds
Capt Morrow argued the case was not about a whistleblower's leak of targeted information.
"This, your honour, this is a case about a soldier who systematically harvested hundreds of thousands of documents from classified databases and then dumped that information on to the internet into the hands of the enemy," he said.
According to the prosecutor, Pte Manning used his military training to gain the notoriety he craved and attempted to hide what he had done at every step of the process.
He said he would introduce evidence Osama Bin Laden himself had gained access to some of the Wikileaks information - and had put it to use.
Prosecutors plan to introduce blog entries, a computer, a hard drive and a memory card as evidence against Pte Manning. The military prosecutors will also call witnesses to describe his training and his deployment to Iraq.
In an opening statement, Pte Manning's lawyer David Coombs said he was "young, naive and good-intentioned" when he arrived in Iraq.
'Troubled'
But in late 2009, after an Iraqi died in an attack, he grew disillusioned after seeing his comrades celebrating because no US soldiers had been hurt.
After that incident, Pte Manning began collecting information he thought would "make the world a better place" if public.
"He believed this information showed how we value human life," Mr Coombs said. "He was troubled by that. He believed that if the American public saw it, they too would be troubled."
The defence lawyer argued that Pte Manning was "selective" in his choice of the hundreds of millions of documents he had access to.
The prosecution's opening arguments directly relate to the most serious charge against Pte Manning: aiding the enemy. To obtain a conviction, prosecutors must prove Pte Manning acted with intent to aid the enemy and knowingly gave such adversaries US intelligence information.
The BBC's Mark Mardell says the prosecution's argument - that releasing such information on to the internet counts as aiding the enemy - has serious implications for anyone leaking classified information in the future.
Our correspondent adds the military will aim to show the information was of "great value" to US enemies, but supporters argue all Pte Manning did was make public what should never have been private.
Pte Manning, who was arrested in May 2010 while serving in Iraq, has not denied leaking the documents.
He told a pre-trial hearing in February he divulged the documents to spark a public debate on the role of the US military and foreign policy.
However, prosecutors argue the leaks damaged national security and endangered American lives.
One of the leaked videos shows graphic footage of an Apache helicopter attack in 2007 that killed a dozen people in Baghdad, including a Reuters photographer.
Other documents leaked included thousands of battlefield reports from Afghanistan and Iraq, as well as secure messages between US embassies and the state department in Washington.
Whatever prison sentence Pte Manning receives will be reduced by 112 days, after a judge ruled he had suffered unduly harsh treatment during his initial detention following his arrest.
Assange asylum talks
The soldier chose to have his court martial heard by a judge instead of a jury. It is expected to run all summer.
Judge Col Denise Lind ruled in May she would close parts of the trial to the public to protect classified material.
Meanwhile, the UK government said on Sunday it was considering a request from Ecuador to hold talks on the future of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange.
Mr Assange has lived in the Ecuadorean embassy in London for a year, having been granted political asylum there.
He faces extradition to Sweden over sex allegations, which he denies.

Cameroonians Speak Tamil

http://www.salem-news.com/graphics/snheader.jpg

Tamil people, prominent in India, and well established in neighboring countries like Sri Lanka, have one of the oldest languages on the face of the earth.
Cameroon
Cameroonians Speak Tamil by Tamil Chinthanaiyalar Peravai

Jun-02-2013 
(TAMIL NADU, India) - This video establishes the fact that one of the tribes of the west African nation, speak Tamil, using the videos by NOVA.
In this video, for the first time, we have explained the origin of the name "Berber" of a tribe of people who speak Tamazight language. It is a north African language spoken by Moroccan, Algerian & Libyan people.
Berber means "Dry Land" people and the word origin is Tamil Varavara, which is an adjective meaning "dry" in Tamil.
Our conclusion is proven right from the fact that the Tinfinagh script of the Tamazight language is a derivative of Indus script which again is an ancient Tamil Script.
Tamazight also sounds like Tamil. The fact that Cameroonians, situated close to Algeria, speak a deformed dialect of Tamil, strengthens our conclusion that all of the African languages including Tamazight, were derived from ancient Tamil.
Cameroonians Speak Tamil
by Tamil Chinthanaiyalar Peravai

Monday, June 3, 2013

Election Of NPC Can Be Benefit All Provinces

By Jehan Perera -June 3, 2013 |
Jehan Perera
Colombo TelegraphThere are many unresolved grievances that face the war-affected people of all communities after the end of the war, and which the centralized system of government has so far failed to adequately address.  These include the resettlement of persons who were displaced during the war, such as Muslims displaced over twenty years ago, who have still to go back to their original places.  Over 2,000 displaced persons in the North have filed action in the courts of law against the expropriation of their lands by the government for military use that amounts to over 6300 acres or 2/3 the amount of land on which Colombo city is located.  There is also the vexed issue of those who went missing during the war, and those who were made to disappear.  There are tens of thousands who continue to be unaccounted for, if pre-war and post-war statistics for population in the North are to be believed.
Another emerging problem in the North relates to the government’s plan to industrialise it but without consultation with the elected representatives of the people of those areas.  Recently the government entered into negotiations with an international company of Nepalese origin, to restart and revamp the long closed cement factory in Kankesanthurai in the northernmost part of the island. On the face of it, this would appear to be a very positive action as the factory to be built will produce on a large scale for the international market and this could mean that there will be a lot of job openings soon in the Northern Province.  However, concern is being expressed that this massive project has been formulated without consideration for the environmental damage that could result  from the large scale extraction of limestone and the potential pollution of the underground water that feeds agriculture in that part of the country.
While centralized decision making has the advantage of being quick and decisive it can take place without sufficient concern for the different local level priorities of people living in the provinces.  The example of the cement factory at Kankesanthurai is a relevant one.  When it was a relatively small factory meant for local production it made a positive contribution to the economy of the area.  However, a much larger factory with a production level that enables it to export can become detrimental to local interests, unless carefully managed.  An elected provincial council with devolved powers, and which represents the people’s interests can be a counter-balance to centrally driven plans that too often benefit those at the centre more than those on whose land the project is based.  It is in this context that the government’s decision to hold the provincial council elections for the Northern Province in September has been welcomed by those who see Sri Lanka’s main challenge as being post-war reconciliation.
Beyond Ethnicity 
The provincial council system of devolved government came as a result of attempts to end the ethnic conflict through political means.  However the need for a system of government that is responsive to local level or provincial needs goes beyond ethnicity.  This point was brought out most forcefully at a seminar on the Lessons learnt and Reconciliation Commission that took place in Polonnaruwa last week.  The participants were a mix of senior civil society activists and more junior local level government officials.  In keeping with the experience in other parts of the country where such discussions have taken place, the general opinion was favorable to the LLRC recommendations.  But there was also a new and very harsh aspect in the Polonnaruwa discussions that I have not encountered elsewhere.
People are generally moved emotionally when something affects them personally.  Nothing affects people more than matters of life and death.  This is why throughout the country there is gratitude to the government for having brought the war to an end.  Even if the cost of living is much higher than it was during the war, and even if misuse of government resources is also high, people still give thanks that they can travel on the roads without fear of being blown up by a bomb or shot at in an ambush or massacred in a storm trooper attack.  The special problem in Polonnaruwa that is not to be found in other parts of the country is an issue of life and death to the people, and that is why the discussion on the LLRC brought out emotion in its rawest form.
The high level of kidney related diseases and deaths arising from them in the North Central Province in which Polonnaruwa is located has been regularly featured in the media.  But what is a distant news report to most people, is an immediate tragedy to those who live there.  Several of the participants at the seminar who spoke up said that their next door neighbours or relatives were suffering from kidney disease and had either died or were at death’s door.  One gave the example of a family that had already lost two members and was in the process of losing a third.  The participants believed that the government had done little to remedy the situation.  There is possibly more than an iota of truth in this complaint.  Those who are distant decision makers in Colombo would see the kidney disease problem as a distant one that does not call for their immediate and prioritized attention.  The priority concern of decision makers in Colombo might be to get loans from abroad for big infrastructure projects or ensuring the country’s sovereignty.
Valuing Devolution
The value of devolved government is that it permits local level problems to be identified and decided by the local authorities.  Those who are elected representatives of the people in the provincial council will be under more and closer scrutiny by their electors than those who are central government decision makers.  In Jaffna, which is a Tamil majority area, the priorities of the people are not being met by the government.  The Jaffna people’s priorities, as expressed in the seminar they attended on the LLRC in Jaffna, are to find their missing ones and to get back their confiscated houses and land.  In Polonnaruwa, which is a Sinhalese majority area, the people’s priorities are to ensure that those suffering from kidney disease are looked after, and that the cause of the disease should be found.  The participants at the seminar made it clear that they held the government responsible for creating the disease by distributing sub-standard fertilizers and pesticides.
The question, however, is whether the provincial council to be elected for the Northern Province will be able to succeed where the provincial council elected for the North Central Province has failed.   One of the drawbacks of the provincial council system at this time is that the party in power in the central government invariably also captures power in the provincial councils.  This is because the voters are aware that the central government is the source of financial and other resources which are utilized by the provincial councils.  The problem is that having the same political party ruling both at the centre and the provincial levels is a recipe for the subordination of the provincial council to the central government.  On the other hand, such a scenario is not likely to unfold in the case of the Northern Provincial Council alone.  This is because of the continuing ethnic divide which will prompt the overwhelmingly Tamil majority voters of the Northern Province to opt for a Tamil opposition party over the ruling party at the centre.
The forthcoming provincial council elections in the North is therefore going to be of great importance to the country, not only in terms of empowering the ethnic minorities who live in the North, but also in terms of showing the way to greater local level autonomy to the other eight provincial councils, which are currently under total central government control.   By deciding to hold the provincial elections for the Northern Province as promised, the government will also be sending a positive message to the people of the North that it is keeping a promise that it has made and can be trusted by the minorities.   At the same time an elected Tamil majority provincial administration created through free and fair provincial elections would further increase the level of trust in the democratic process and in the value of devolution of power as part of the long awaited political solution.  The most hopeful vision is that the example of the Northern Provincial Council, once it is elected, will also help to revitalise the provincial council system by showing to the other provincial councils how they can better protect and promote the interests of the people in each of their provinces.

Govt. attacked students struggling to protect education for future generations – NMPFE

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MONDAY, 03 JUNE 2013 
The National Movement for Protecting Free Education (NMPFE) has issued an announcement asking as to who takes the responsibility of the brutal attack carried out on students of Sabaragamuwa University.
The announcement issued with the signatures of the co-conveners of NMPFE Ven. Dhambara Amila Thero and Senior Lecturer Devaka Punchihewa states’ “The students of Sabragamuwa University have been agitating since January demanding authorities to solve several issues pertaining to their education and welfare. The administration that had been mum regarding students’ demands banned the Students’ Council and five Faculty Councils on 15th March and suspended five students who held important positions in the student bodies. The immediate reason for this is the opposition of student bodies for a political pageant the administration with the participation of the Minister of Higher Education attempted to organize.
The agitations launched to protest against banning of student bodies and suspension of students developed into a ‘death fast’ by 31st May. The students agitated yesterday to support the struggle carried out by students engaged in the ‘fast’. We saw how the government deployed the police and security forces to brutally attack this agitation. This is a barbaric act that should be condemned by all.
Allowing issues to fester without finding solutions for them, unnecessarily politicizing university administrations and deploying police and forces to suppress students have continued throughout the tenure of this government. Students’ Councils in universities are officially established democratic institutions. This is the structure for students to interact with the administration. Denying this democratic right indicates the government is driving university administrations towards despotism. This situation would drag the higher education in the country towards the abyss of Asia but not towards the ‘miracle’.
We see the attack on students of Sabaragamuwa University as a fatal blow aimed at free education. The government attacked students who struggled for their legitimate rights. They struggle not for themselves but to protect education for future generations. We vehemently condemn this attack and call upon all to join the struggle to protect free education.”

Government looking at suppressing media to cover public dissention

Monday, 03 June 2013
The growing public dissention against the government has caused a problem to President Mahinda Rajapaksa and Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa. The President has ordered his advisors to look at ways of overcoming the current crises.
The advisors have proposed that the best way to prevent the public from knowing the intensifying anti-government agitation campaign is to further stifle the already gagged media in the country.
The Media Ministry was immediately ordered to draft regulations to suppress the media and accordingly, the media code of ethics was mooted.
A Draft Bill containing a Media Code of Ethics aimed at creating ‘a salutary media culture in the country’ will be tabled in Parliament for adoption in September, Mass Media and Information Minister Keheliya Rambukwella has said.
The government information department quoted the Minister as saying that drafting of this Bill was completed and the proposals incorporated in this Bill have been submitted to the Parliamentary Select Committee on Media and political parties for their observations, including suggestions for suitable amendments.
Minister Rambukwella has said that the actions of certain media institutions in the recent past had led to many problems and therefore it had become an urgent need to introduce a code of ethics for a good media culture.

Judge further remanded, probe into goons

MONDAY, 03 JUNE 2013
Colombo Chief Magistrate Gihan Pilapitya ordered a separate inquiry into the supporters of Homagama Judge Sunil Abeysinghe , identified as prominent businessmen, who were present at the Cinnamon gardens police last week.

The Magistrate made this order while remanding the two suspects- the Judge and his security guard, till June 10 for allegedly accepting a bribe of Rs. 300,000.

The goons, identified as prominent businessmen, threatened journalists against taking pictures of the judge when was escorted out of the Cinnamon Gardens police last week.