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

Friday, June 7, 2013

A Day With Deepal


Colombo TelegraphJune 7, 2013 
“He never is looking for any publicity or any help from any one, he has being doing this service for 13 long years with his own resources and never wants anyone to disturb him, so please don’t be misled if some one is telling that he can be reached or is looking for help, this film was posted only for people like me to realize that some people WALK THE TALK” says the film maker Subramaniam Chammanthraj.

PB misleads the President to appoint his batch mate

Thursday, 06 June 2013 
Finance Ministry Secretary Dr. P.B. Jayasundera has proposed the name of former Manager of the Bank of Ceylon, W.A. Nalini to the post of National Savings Bank (NSB) Chairman. W.A. Nalini had studied together with Jayasundera at the Colombo University. She has been appointed to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of Sunil S. Sirisena from the post of NSB Chairman.
Sirisena was under pressure from Jayasundera to secure US$ 1 billion through foreign bonds. However, Sirisena had ignored Jayasundera’s directives and finally had decided to resign from his post in the bank due to continuous pressure.
Therefore, Jayasundera’s friend was appointed as NSB Chairman on June 3rd.
Jayasundera has also re-appointed Deputy Treasury Secretary S.R. Attygalle as the Finance Ministry representative to the NSB board of directors in order to ensure that the NSB management would carry out his directive to secure a foreign bond of US$ 1 billion.
However, the government is trying to change the members of the board of directors to somehow secure the US$ 1 billion loan that could be used for the government’s operations. When the former NSB Chairman had asked for the government guarantee on the loan risk and the exchange rate risk, Jayasundera had provided a guarantee only for US$ 500 million. Sunil S. Sirisena had therefore continuously told Jayasundera that he could not take an unwanted risk.
The former NSB Chairman had said that out of the total savings of Rs. 422 billion of the bank, 72% was invested in government bonds and could not invest in more bonds. Jayasundera had then told the President, “Sir, Nalini is the person for the job. She did a good job at the Bank of Ceylon. I told her to find US$ 300 million and she raised US$ 500 million. Let’s get rid of Sirisena and appoint Nalini to the post. She will fearlessly raise the US$ 1 billion.”
Finance Ministry Secretary Dr. P.B. Jayasundera has continuously told the President to raise foreign loans by showing the balance sheets of the state banks. Accordingly, NDB and DFCC banks are to also raise US$ 250 million from the foreign markets. UNP General Secretary Tissa Attanayake has said that Sri Lanka’s state loan ratio is now 82.6% of the GDP.

Six positions – Rs298,200 monthly

logoFRIDAY, 07 JUNE 2013
It is revealed that the monthly income of Dr. Priyath Bandu Wickrama, the Chairman of  Sri Lanka Ports Authority is Rs. 298,200. This was revealed in a response to a question asked by the UNP Parliamentarian Dayasiri Jayasekera in Parliament yesterday (6th).
Dr. Priyath Bandu Wickrama gets a salary of Rs.90,000, Director Board allowance of Rs.30,000 and entertainment allowance of Rs.10,000 from the Port Authority. In addition to this he earns Rs.110,000 monthly as the project director of Mahinda Rajapaksa Port at Hambantota. He also gets monthly Rs.12,500 as the Chairman of Jaya Container Terminal, Rs.28,200 as the Chairman of Sri Lanka Ports Management and Consultancy Services Ltd., Rs.10,000 as a Director of Urban Development Authority and Rs.7,500 as a Director of Waters Edge.
Vehicles, fuel allowances, telephone allowances and expenses for foreign tours have not been included here.

Pope Francis: Wasting food is like stealing from the poor


VATICAN CITY — Pope Francis on Wednesday (June 5) denounced consumerism and what he called the “culture of waste” of modern economies, especially when it comes to food.
“Throwing away food is like stealing from the table of those who are poor and hungry,” he said during his weekly audience in St. Peter’s Square.

His words came on the day the United Nations launched an anti-food waste campaign to mark World Environment Day.
According to data provided by the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization, approximately 1.3 billion tons of food — one third of the world’s total food production — are lost or wasted every year. In the United States, 30 percent of all food is thrown away each year.
“Consumerism has made us accustomed to wasting food daily and we are unable to see its real value,” Francis said, comparing this attitude to the frugality of “our grandparents” who “used to make a point of not throwing away leftover food.”
In his speech, the pope also warned that a “culture of waste” and consumerism have dulled the moral sense of humanity to the point that when “some homeless people die of cold on the streets, it is not news. In contrast, a 10-point drop on the stock markets of some cities, is a tragedy.”
The Argentine pope has been a vocal advocate for the poor since his election to the papacy in March, and has personally practiced austerity at the Vatican, living in a guesthouse rather than in the papal apartments and cutting down on elaborate vestments and liturgies.

Hammond, Manning, Assange and Obama’s Sledgehammer Against Dissent

Posted on May 29, 2013
One cyberactivist’s federal case wrapped up this week, and another’s is set to begin. While these two young men, Jeremy Hammond and Bradley Manning, are the two who were charged, it is the growing menace of government and corporate secrecy that should be on trial.
Hammond was facing more than 30 years in prison, charged with hacking into the computers of a private security and intelligence firm called Strategic Forecasting, or Stratfor, when he agreed to a plea agreement of one count of computer hacking. Stratfor traffics in “geopolitical intelligence, economic, political and military forecasting,” according to its website. Yet, after Hammond and others released 5 million emails from Stratfor’s servers to WikiLeaks, it became clear that the firm engages in widespread spying on activists on behalf of corporations. Coca-Cola hired Stratfor to spy on the group PETA, People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals. Dow Chemical hired Stratfor to spy on the activists who were exposing Dow’s role in the cyanide chemical disaster in Bhopal, India, in 1984 that killed an estimated 8,000 and injured thousands more.
Hammond is scheduled to be sentenced Sept. 6. His lawyers have asked for time served—15 months, some of which was in solitary confinement. He faces 10 years.
Bradley Manning, meanwhile, will finally have his day in military court at Fort Meade, Md. He faces a slew of charges related to the largest leak of classified information in U.S. history. Manning pled guilty to mishandling the information, and acknowledged uploading hundreds of thousands of documents to the WikiLeaks website. But he denies the most serious charge, still pending, of “aiding the enemy.” Prosecutors are seeking life in prison; however, if Manning is found guilty, the judge could still impose the death penalty.
Bradley Manning and Jeremy Hammond are among the highest profile in a series of cases that the Obama administration has been pursuing against whistle-blowers and journalists. Attorney Michael Ratner, president emeritus of the Center for Constitutional Rights, and an attorney for WikiLeaks and its founder, Julian Assange, said in front of the courthouse after Hammond’s court appearance, “This is part of the sledgehammer of what the government is doing to people who expose corporate secrets, government secrets, and really the secrets of an empire.”

Manning explained his actions and his motivation in a detailed statement in his pretrial proceedings. He said, “I believed that if the general public, especially the American public, had access to the information ... it could spark a domestic debate on the role of the military and our foreign policy in general.” The first public release by WikiLeaks of the material provided by Manning was the video (titled by WikiLeaks) “Collateral Murder.” The grainy video, taken from an attack helicopter, shows the cold killing of a dozen men on the ground in Baghdad on July 12, 2007. Two of those killed by the U.S. Apache helicopter gunship were employees of the Reuters news agency, cameraman Namir Noor-Eldeen, 22, and his driver, Saeed Chmagh, a father of four.
After their violent, senseless deaths, Reuters sought answers and filed Freedom of Information requests for material relating to the attack, which were denied. Manning saw the video when stationed in Iraq, and researched the background of the attack. He saved the video file. He explained in court, “I planned on providing this to the Reuters office in London to assist them in preventing events such as this in the future.”
Hammond and Manning, facing years in prison, have in common their connection to WikiLeaks and its founder, Assange. Assange is wanted for questioning in Sweden about allegations of sexual misconduct—he has not been charged. After losing a fight against extradition in Britain, he was granted political asylum by the government of Ecuador, and has remained in Ecuador’s embassy in London since last June. It was a leaked Stratfor email that referenced a U.S. indictment against Assange, reading: “Not for Pub—We have a sealed indictment on Assange. Pls protect.”
This all happens amidst recent revelations about the Obama administration’s extraordinary invasion of journalists’ privacy and the right to protect sources. The Associated Press revealed that the Justice Department had secretly obtained two months of telephone records of its reporters and editors in an effort to discover the source of a leak about a foiled bomb plot. Fox News’ chief Washington correspondent, James Rosen, may actually be charged in a criminal conspiracy for allegedly receiving classified information from a source about North Korea. 
President Barack Obama and Attorney General Eric Holder have used the Espionage Act six times to prosecute whistle-blowers—more than all previous presidents combined. Obama’s assault on journalism and his relentless war on whistle-blowers are serious threats to fundamental democratic principles on which this nation was founded.
The job of journalists is to hold those in power accountable. Our job is to be the fourth estate, not “for the state.” Let us be.

Denis Moynihan contributed research to this column.
Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!,” a daily international TV/radio news hour airing on more than 1,000 stations in North America. She is the co-author of “The Silenced Majority,” a New York Times best-seller.
© 2013 Amy Goodman
Distributed by King Features Syndicate

Australian assistance for displaced people in Rakhine State, Myanmar

Media release-4 June 2013
ReliefWebForeign Minister Bob Carr today announced that Australia will provide an additional $1.5 million to help displaced people in Rakhine State, Myanmar.
Senator Carr said Australia will support UNICEF to provide 40,000 people with safe drinking water and better facilities for hygiene and sanitation in the affected areas.
“This new funding includes 8,000 buckets and water purification kits, and hygiene kits including soap, sanitary napkins, toothbrushes and toothpaste, and 2,000 latrines and hand washing stations,” Senator Carr said.
“The rainy season poses increased health threats for more than 140,000 people who are still displaced in Rakhine State following communal violence last year.
“There is a high risk of acute diarrhoea and other waterborne diseases, including cholera.
“Assistance improves access to safe drinking water by upgrading water points and providing water-proof latrines to reduce contamination, and providing basic supplies such as soap.”
Senator Carr reaffirmed Australia’s commitment in assisting to resolve communal tensions, supporting the peace process, and providing humanitarian assistance to those affected by recent ethnic and sectarian conflict.
“Australia is supporting local efforts to bring peace to regions affected by conflict in Myanmar,” Senator Carr said.
“We continue to call for a efforts to resolve the underlying causes of the unrest in Rakhine State.”
This contribution takes Australia’s total humanitarian assistance to people in Rakhine to over $5.79 million since the violence last year, making us one of the largest donors to the emergency.
Our previous funding has already made a difference by:
  • providing food to more than 100,000 displaced people
  • delivering tents and other emergency shelter materials to people who have fled their homes
  • providing blankets, clothes, mosquito nets and other essentials for up to 14,000 people living in temporary shelters
  • providing protection for vulnerable people, including around 7,000 children, who have been separated from their families.
Australia continues to urge all parties to work together to resolve the underlying causes of the situation and support the reconciliation of the two communities.
Media enquiries:
Minister’s office: (02) 6277 7500
DFAT Media Liaison: (02) 6261 1555

India can’t solve Lanka’s political issues: BJP


FRIDAY, 07 JUNE 2013 
A Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP)-led team, which is currently on a tour in Sri Lanka, has told the war-ravaged Lankan Tamils that India is ready to provide the “healing touch” but it cannot be expected to solve their political problems the Indian Express reported.

The news report said that the BJP delegation which is touring Sri Lanka made these remakrs while interacting with a wide cross section of political parties and civil society in Jaffna on Wednesday.

The leader of the six member team, Rajya Sabha member Ravi Shankar Prasad, is reported to have said that India was aware that the Tamils of the Northern provinces needed a healing touch and assured them that India was with them.

However, he had made it clear that Lankan Tamils should not expect India to solve their political problems. These would have to be solved by the people themselves through participation in the domestic political processes, the Indian Express reported.

India did not have a magic wand to solve their problems he is reported to have said.

Prasad also made it clear that India saw Sri Lanka as a friendly country and would never de-stabilize it.

The six member Indian team, which has a representative of the Shiv Sena (Suresh Prabhu), an RSS official (Ram Madhav), a political commentator (Swapan Dasgupta) and a human rights activist cum advocate (Monika Arora), was presented a kaleidoscopic view of opinions in Lanka’s Tamil-speaking Northern Province. The team met pro-government and anti-government groups separately, besides top civil and military officials.

Members of the team are also reported to have shown keen interest in the issues the Tamils were facing and asked probing questions. On Thursday, the team met MPs from the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) at Hilton Hotel in Colombo.

Thursday, June 6, 2013

Sri Lanka: The Genocidal Imperative – Causes And Consequences

Colombo Telegraph
By Ana Pararajasingham -June 6, 2013 
Ana Pararajasingham
Preamble:
Sri Lanka’s history since its independence from 1948 clearly demonstrates that all Sri Lankan governments were driven by the intent to destroy the distinct identity of the Tamils as a nation[1]. As these actions were underpinned by intent, they clearly fall within the definition of genocide as stipulated by the 1948 UN Convention on Genocide.[2]
The genocidal Imperative:
The causes:
Not all countries inhabited by more than one nation are torn apart by the spectre   of the numerically larger nation seeking to eliminate the distinct identity of the smaller nation/s.  There are many examples of multi-national states co-existing and prospering under political arrangements that recognise the distinct national identity of the composite nations. Canada, Belgium and Switzerland are examples of countries which have constitutional arrangements to co-exist as multi-national states. India is another country which, notwithstanding its diversity has forged ahead as a multi-national state

Pass your O/L to get job with allowance of Rs.250,000

logoTHURSDAY, 06 JUNE 2013 
There was a discussion in Parliament regarding the Chairman of ‘Srilankan’ Air Lines Nishanthe Wickremesinghe, who is a brother of Ms. Shiranthi Rajapaksa.
It was reported that a Rolex wrist watch worth Rs. 4.5 million and foreign money to the value of about Rs.4 million were robbed from Mr. Nishanthe Wickremesinghe’s residence in June 2012.
Here are the questions asked by UNP Parliamentarian Dayasiri Jaysekera and the responses by the Minister of Civil Aviation.
Q: Who’s the present Chairman of Srilankan Air Lines?
A: Nishanthe Wickremesinghe
Q: What are his educational and professional qualifications?
A: G.C.E. (O/L)
Q: How much is his salary?
A: He doesn’t receive a salary.
Q: If he receives any allowances how much is it?
A: The allowances of a director.
Q: What is the value of such an allowance?
A: Rs.250,000.
Meanwhile, the Minister gave following details regarding the six other members of the Director Board of ‘Srilankan’ Air Lines.

TNA wants maximum devolution

June 6, 2013
TNA
The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) would want the maximum amount of exercise of power, should it lead Sri Lanka’s Northern Provincial Council (NPC) following the elections slated for September, its members said, according to the Hindu newspaper.
Addressing the Foreign Correspondents’ Association, TNA leader R. Sampanthan said that in regard to the people of the north and east, affected by the war, the Alliance had endeavoured to avoid an attitude of confrontation with the government and had offered to cooperate.
Sampanthan added that the TNA would work with the government, to provide them [the people] with proper housing and livelihood, and to give them an opportunity to recommence life.
M.A. Sumanthiran, TNA MP, said that the issue really was the extent of executive power the Governor will be willing to share with the board of ministers. “Under the Constitution, the entirety of the executive powers of the province is vested with the Governor. So there will have to be certain negotiation in accordance with the people’s democratic wish and expectations.”
The board of ministers, he said, must have sufficient executive powers to carry out their own programmes, in regard to economy, job creation, agriculture and fisheries.
Observing that the TNA has offered to work with the government, Mr. Sampanthan said: “We have clearly told the President that if he works with the TNA, being the democratically elected representative of the Tamil people, more funds will be available for rehabilitation and resettlement work in the north.” The TNA’s participation would give the entire process an increased measure of credibility and the diaspora would also be prepared to be involved in a big way, he said.
“I even told him [the President] that his government was facing serious allegations on questions of human rights, democracy and good governance.
“If the government is seen to be working with us, and if there is substantial improvement in the living conditions of the people in the north and the east, that will add to the government’s benefit… It would diminish the gravity of the accusations,” he said.
On whether the Alliance was open to a broader Tamil coalition, “We will be willing to work with anybody who wants to work with us. We function in a democratic way. We have some little problems among ourselves, but those will be resolved. We are prepared to form a broader coalition. The only thing is they have to genuine, credible and willing to work within a given policy framework.” he said.
The TNA is an umbrella organisation for Tamil parties such as the Ilankai Tamil Arasu Katchi (ITAK), All Ceylon Tamil Congress (ACTC), a wing of the Eelam People’s Revolutionary Liberation Front (EPRLF) and
Tamil Eelam Liberation Organization (TELO), Peoples’ Liberation Organisation of Tamil Eelam (PLOTE), and Tamil United Liberation Front (TULF).
Though the TNA faced the threat of a split recently – with some of the constituent parties accusing the ITAK of dominating – the Alliance has stayed together for the battle at the NPC elections that are likely to be held this September.
Political commentators in Sri Lanka say that the TNA is quite likely to win the polls, considering the support it has in the north that has a majority of Tamils, and also the absence of any other strong alternative Tamil party.
Observing that it was “exciting and uncertain times” in Sri Lanka, Mr. Sampanthan said: “The TNA has been committed to the evolution of an acceptable resolution of the conflict, in a peaceful, non-violent way, within the framework of a united, undivided Sri Lanka”.
On whether the TNA was confident that the elections will be held, given that some sections were opposed to the 13th Amendment to the Sri Lankan Constitution, Mr. Sampanthan said: “I don’t know.” He said the President has public talked about the election. After the cabinet meeting, the acting Media Minister has stated that the elections will be held in September. “We also have information that the President has made commitments to several other countries. So we do think that in this context it would be reasonable to think that elections could be held. But whether they will be held, whether everything will be reversed, I cannot now predict.”
On the TNA’s engagement with the ongoing issue among fishermen of Sri Lanka and Tamil Nadu, Mr. Sumanthiran said that the two governments were exploring deep sea fishing as a possible alternative. Last year, the TNA had appealed to the Indian government to provide Sri Lankan fishermen facilities to enable them to go deeper into the seas, he said.

Canada shuns Sri Lanka summit over human rights concerns

In November representatives of 54 countries will descend on Colombo for the next Commonwealth Heads of Government Summit but the meeting is proving very controversial.
It is four years since Sri Lanka's war against Tamil Tiger rebels came to an end but its human rights record remains in the spotlight.
Many campaigners say unless there is a full war crimes investigation Sri Lanka should not host the meeting.
Frances Harrison, author and former BBC correspondent in Sri Lanka, Hugh Segal, the Canadian government's envoy to the Commonwealth and Lal Wickrematu

Disembowelling The 13th Amendment?

By Tisaranee Gunasekara -June 6, 2013
“Nemesis, the goddess of measure and not of revenge, keeps watch. All those who overstep the limits are pitilessly punished by her”. -Albert Camus (Helen’s Exile)
Colombo TelegraphOne of the most incisive analyses about Rajapaksa modus operandi was made not by a Sri Lankan but by an American – Ambassador Robert Blake. Mr. Blake’s observations about how the Siblings operate have a particular resonance as the Rajapaksas plan to neutralise the last remaining structural obstacle to their power-grab: the 13th Amendment.
“The President is often reluctant to make decisions and will stall for time, particularly on important issues. Sometimes he avoids decision making altogether by delegating many responsibilities to Gothabaya or Basli, allowing him to avoid blame for unpopular decisions…. the President’s brothers play an important and influential role in shaping GSL security and political policy. Moreover, one of their biggest roles is to provide political cover to the President. The President often has Gothabaya and Basil take credit for decisions so he can appear less involved in actions that earn the GSL criticism at home and abroad”[i].
Mahinda Rajapaksa is friendly and, by most accounts, likeable; Gotabhaya Rajapaksa is brash to the point of uncouthness; Basil Rajapaksa is smarmy, even oleaginous. These varying styles, and the amazingly effective division of labour they have perfected, often create the impression that the Siblings do not possess a singleness of purpose, and that they pursue divergent (even contradictory) policy objectives. These different personality traits also give rise to myths and rumours, periodically: ‘Mahinda the Moderate and Gotabhaya the Hardliner’, ‘Mahinda fell out with Basil/Gotabhaya’, ‘Mahinda is a prisoner of Gotabhaya/ Basil’ etc.
Like all siblings, the Rajapaksas would have their personal differences. They also share a political agenda. All three want to concentrate every ounce of power in their collective hands; all three want to destroy every other centre of power/influence (their concerted assault on the judiciary is a classic case in point); all three want to safeguard familial rule and ensure dynastic succession. Sans the 18th Amendment, there could have been major opinion differences amongst them about who should don the Presidential mantle when Mahinda Rajapaksa retires at the end of his second term. Those differences may have evolved into serious schisms, providingSri Lanka (and the SLFP) with an opportunity to escape the Rajapaksa-stranglehold. But once the term-limit provision was removed, that positive potential vanished; now the brothers can work in unison to empower themselves and disempower everyone else.
Rendering the 13th Amendment ineffectual is a key component of that power-drive.
The 13th Amendment still exists because the Rajapaksas have some concerns about Indian/Western reactions to its abrogation.
The Rajapaksa political project is inherently centripetal. The Siblings’ antipathy to power-sharing is visceral and total. That is why they moved with such ruthless velocity against the judiciary when the Supreme Court refused to make a blatantly anti-constitutional ruling. The Siblings will be equally opposed to the idea of a provincial council which is outside their control. This was a non-issue so long as the Siblings were able to evade the holding of Northern provincial council elections. That changed when the regime was compelled to accept a quid-pro-quo of Indian provenance:Delhi’s backing for the Hambantota Commonwealth in return for the holding of NPC poll in September.
Given the anti-democratic and anti-devolutionary nature of their political project, the Rajapaksas have two choices: hold elections on time to a disempowered provincial council; or use the threat of an imminent disembowelling of the 13th Amendment to win Indian consent to another postponement. (Incidentally, if the TNA boycotts the NPC poll, in protest against the downgrading of the 13th Amendment, the Rajapaksas might even be able to win the NPC.)
Will India fall for this latest ruse, as she fell for all the previous ones? Or will she insist on the Siblings honouring the original agreement?
Will Delh ihave the guts to use the Hambantota Commonwealt has a hostage?
A Retrogressive Project
In the dawn hours of June 6th 2007, police teams descended on several Colombo lodges. The residents (including the very old and the very sick) were herded into waiting buses to be transported to their North-Eastern villages. The first load was already on its way before the Supreme Court intervened to stop the expulsions.
The decision to expel Tamil lodgers (on the basis that some Black Tigers are lodge-dwellers) was taken at the highest level. Gotabhaya Rajapaksa defended this anti-constitutional and racist move stridently; Mahinda Rajapaksa did so, less abrasively.
Such an ethno-centric atrocity was unimaginable in post-AccordSri Lanka, until the advent of the Rajapaksas.
By the time Mahinda Rajapaksa won the Presidency (thanks to the boycott imposed by his LTTEcounterpart), most Lankans adhered to a point of view which can be termed non/post chauvinist. A majority accepted the need for a generous political solution to the ethnic problem. For instance, according to an opinion survey conducted by the Marga Institute in June/July 2006, 66% of the respondents consented to a political solution which exceeded the unitary-state model. This public mood was in tandem with the positions of the UNP and the SLFP; both supported a quasi-federal or federal arrangement.
The retrogressive change which took place in the thinking of the Sinhala South did not happen spontaneously, but as a result of Rajapaksa rule. The Siblings made clear their non-belief in the existence of an ethnic problem, early on. They also interpreted the Fourth Eelam War as the main axis of a restorationist project aimed at giving back to the Sinhala-Buddhists the place of dominance they enjoyed since 1956 and lost in 1987, due to external intervention.
In order to create a support base for their political project, the Siblings needed to create an axiomatic link between themselves and the majority of the populace via Sinhala-Buddhist supremacism. They also needed a racist-wedge to prevent any future Sinhala-Tamil-Muslim unity on the basis of common economic woes. Since the 13th Amendment impeded their power-grab, they needed a patriotic cover to justify its eventual negation.
To achieve these purposes they had to appeal not to the best, the more intelligent and humane part of the Sinhala-psyche, but to the worst, the more inane and merciless part, the part which enabled the ‘Sinhala Only’ and the Black July, and regarded neither as a mistake.
If the North-Eastern issue was merely a terrorist problem, then the matter became resolved the moment the LTTE was defeated. If there is no ethnic problem, then a political solution based on devolution becomes not just unnecessary but also undesirable – as dangerous as administering chemotherapy to a healthy man. In this context, peace-building becomes a law-and-order exercise, with some development thrown in as relish. Peace can be guaranteed not by devolution but by erecting more military camps, buying more military-hardware and imposing stricter laws and regulations, the whole somewhat leavened by physical infrastructure projects and occasional handouts.
This Rajapaksa thinking renders inevitable the current assault on the 13th Amendment.
Disembowelling the 13th Amendment will be the new ‘Sinhala Only’. It will jeopardise peace and reconciliation, push even moderate Tamils into alienated despair, revitalise the separatist-slogan and transform Vellupillai Pirapaharan from failed leader into misunderstood prophet.
An urgent amendment spells recipe for disaster
2013-06-06

In what can be considered the final nail on the only constitutional attempt made in post-independent Sri Lanka to devolve power, an urgent bill to Parliament on Thursday will seal the fate of the 13th Amendment to the 1978 Constitution, with absolute finality.
 
For all the liberal rhetoric and verbal commitments to pursue a genuine solution to the festering political question, the Sinhala majority had demonstrated strong reluctance to accept any power-sharing model, including the Provincial Council system (which was never implemented to reflect its true spirit), similar to the militant rejection by the Tamil community to acknowledge anything short of a self-rule model that recognizes a traditional Tamil homeland.

Sri Lanka's political history is replete with examples of various calls for the devolution of power as well as their violent aftermath. Each time the Tamil political parties voiced their demands, post-independence, the Southern leadership's response had been crushingly uncompromising. On the other hand, the Tamil political parties since the 1985 Thimpu talks, had remained steadfast on their claim for the recognition of a traditional Tamil homeland in the North – the key reason for the failure of the Thimpu talks. The Sri Lankan Government swiftly rejected the four demands made in Thimpu on the basis that they sought to violate the Constitution, and breached the principle of sovereignty, proposing draft legislation on power sharing as a solution, which the Tamil delegation rejected.

Regional peace
The Thimpu Declaration set out four demands of the Tamil militant groups, the first ever peace talks to be held between the Sri Lankan Government and Tamil armed groups. When India facilitated the talks in 1985, the talks were expected to pave the way not just for the immediate political question but also to ensure regional peace, a permanent worry for India, keen to reign in the growing Tamil militancy in the island's North with possible repercussions for Tamil Nadu, India's own, political, problem child. It is also the key reasoning behind India's unrepentant strategic support to the Sri Lankan Government to secure victory against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in 2009.

Much water had flowed since the first round of failed talks. More rounds of talks had followed – and predictably failed. At the end of it all, besides the colossal loss of lives and the destruction caused by the prolonged military engagements, the war in its wake had only rendered Sri Lanka the loser, along with her people.

Yet, India's involvement had never been one of a military nature alone, this despite the introduction of the Indian Peace Keeping Forces (IPKF) and the strategic support to the Sri Lankan Security Forces in the final phase of the war in 2008-2009. As much as it worried about regional peace and tension in Tamil Nadu, India understood as a key stakeholder, the political complexities of the problem, and the reason for brokering the Indo-Lanka Peace Accord in 1987, which finally paved the way for the 13th Amendment to the Constitution.

For all its faulty lines, it was the only constitutional effort made in the island to address the complex political question, with strong political implications also for India. Its relevance as a political tool to address an issue, in hindsight, had not been appreciated by most, including that in the United National Party (UNP) that introduced the amendment. It is this amendment, controversial as it is but not without its benefits, with a foundation to address the national question, billed to undergo drastic changes today, as it is scheduled to be amended through an urgent Bill.
Just as its introduction, its evolution too had been a painful process, often resisted and objected to by many. To begin with, it was one amendment that was not introduced with any ease. There was no public discussion on its contents as well as the reasons that compelled its introduction. Suffice to say that Sri Lanka had little choice in the matter. Yet, the Sinhala middle-class resistance does not stem from the absence of democracy in its introduction, but mostly due to a deep reluctance to share power with ethnic minorities.

At the time of its introduction, the government's popularity took a strong nosedive as it signed a Peace Accord with a state of curfew declared together with a strongly-divided Cabinet. Yet, it led to the problematic birth of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, which sought to introduce a Provincial Council system, the recognition of Tamil as a national language, and English as a link language.

Opposing the very essence of the amendment were members of the government at that time while the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) that gave leadership to islandwide campaigns, condemning the amendment as an attempt to divide the country, and a violation of territorial integrity. In retrospect, it is as if nothing had indeed changed, and the polity, not in the least has matured since 1987. The same arguments and prejudices continue to prevail, and the victorious government now appears to backtrack on recent undertakings to India to implement the amendment in full.

Fixation with a
unitary state
Just like President Jayewardene's move being opposed by the late Ranasinghe Premadasa, Lalith Athulathmudali and others, there are the Wimal Weerawansas and Champika Ranawakes, who believe, the amendment in its final analysis, seeks only to dilute territorial integrity and threatens sovereignty.

On the other hand, it is amazing to realize the majority's fixation with the unitary character of the Sri Lankan State. It cannot be recognized as a concept deeply ingrained in the Sri Lankan psyche, and many would even argue it to be an alien concept, at least until the British colonized the island. For centuries, Sri Lanka had been happily (or at times unhappily) ruled, not by one single ruler at a time. Instead, history bears evidence that the 'unifications' were only by a few kings (and Dutugemunu springs to mind) was an act few kings achieved, and the country was ruled as autonomous States (provinces, States, administrations , take your pick) by different rulers, and the regions were popularly known as Ruhunu, Pihiti and Maya.

But a special meeting of Government Party Leaders on Tuesday evening, chaired by President Mahinda Rajapaksa, had resulted in a decision to propose key amendments, in the form of a Special Cabinet Paper, to be converted into an urgent Bill to amend the controversial amendment.

The amendments, according to top government sources, are twofold. One looks at asymmetrical power devolution, similar to a model proposed by Prof. G.L. Peeris during his days as Constitutional Affairs Minister of the Kumaratunga Cabinet, and since long forgotten. The constitutional clause that requires the consent of all nine Provincial Councils in order to amend the Constitution is to be amended, allowing the majority of PCs to make the decision. Likewise, the clause that provides for the merger between two Provincial Councils is also to be done away with.

The 13th Amendment had been the easy target of most politicians, since its introduction. Just like the 1978 Constitution, often portrayed as the mother of all ills, on the national constitution, the easiest to pick cudgels with had been this single amendment to the Constitution.

In implementing it, there had been much insincerity and majoritarianism. The failure to fully operationalize the Northern Provincial Council caused its first Chief Minister, Varadaraja Perumal, to unilaterally declare a spate state, and flee to India.

The majority, basking in the glory of post-war political superiority, is quite unwillingly to discuss genuinely, a solution to the national question. What that invincibility and majoritarianism fails to recognize is that such acts only fuel hatred in the country and indeed sow seeds once more, for dissention, and eventually, violent forms of dissent.

Starting point of non-cooperation struggle

TamilNet[TamilNet, Tuesday, 04 June 2013, 10:00 GMT]
After staging one of the worst genocides humanity has seen–this time a paradigm setting one experimented jointly by all the major Establishments of the world–a torturing structural genocide is now conducted almost as a daily routine against the remaining Eezham Tamils and their nation in the island. This is facilitated by an agenda agreed upon and legitimised at Geneva by the ultimate culprits, especially New Delhi and Washington. The pressure that is now exerted on Tamil leaders to accept the 13th Amendment or any provincial deception under the unitary constitution of the genocidal State, whether in the guise of a ‘starting point’ or not, aims at making Tamils to confirm their own genocide. In the last four years both New Delhi and Washington proved nothing in stopping the structural genocide, but demonstrated only to the contrary, commented a Tamil activist for alternative politics. 

Further comments from the activist in the island:

Ancient texts of India talk of four strategies in facing adversaries: Saama (peaceful approach), Daana (donation), Bheda (show of difference/ non-cooperation) and Danda (armed action).

A Saama or peaceful struggle of decades failed with genocidal Colombo, Even the peaceful pleadings of Tamils in the last four years fell on an international community pretending deaf and blind, but actively competing in facilitating the genocidal State. Of course, the Tamils don’t have anything to give as Daana now, as everything is occupied and seized. The IC tilting the balance has crushed Danda, the armed struggle.

In their long struggle, if the Tamils have not given any serious consideration to a strategy so far, that is the third one, Bheda (non-cooperation), and that is the only one they could do now in spearheading the struggle. Mahatma Gandhi made an effective use of the strategy in the struggle against a world empire.

Tamils in the island, in Tamil Nadu and in the diaspora should have no hesitation in boldly showing Bheda to the ultimate culprits, who because of their own interests or because of the need to appease the Sinhala State for their interests, dare to talk to the genocide-affected nation of Eezham Tamils to ‘start’ with unitary solutions. 

Eezham Tamils and their politicians should never forget that the genocide was staged and is being continued by New Delhi, which they were always looking upon as saviour, and by the Washington-led West with which they never had any qualms in history. Yet the two didn’t hesitate on staging the genocide. It is time to ask that how could we ‘cooperate’ any further with our own genocide.

Detractors of non-cooperation and advocates of collaboration have been planted among Tamils at every place.

Those who advocate ‘cooperation’ with the provincial model in a unitary State as a ‘starting point,’ know well and have seen well, how the model, especially after the war, has become the starting point of a bulldozing structural genocide in the East. Yet they speak of ‘starting’ that in the North too. They are also prepared to welcome the unitary constitution giving special status to Buddhism proposed by the UNP, in order to satisfy the ‘regime change’ masters. Rather than exposing them, Tamils expect that they should mend their ways.

In the inevitability of not shunning the Northern PC election and in facing the ground realities, the TNPF leader, Mr Gajendrakumar Ponnambalam advises open denouncement of the model even as a starting point, and to field a set of independent and committed candidates commonly supported by the Tamil national parties.

Either through such an elected body or by other means in other eventualities, Eezham Tamils should plan and be ready for a non-cooperation struggle. 

The PC deception should never be allowed to provide excuse to an anti-humanity Commonwealth of Establishments that will be meeting at the backyard of Rajapaksa this November, or to serve the enactment of another round of confirmation of genocide at Geneva by Washington and New Delhi. 

In their struggle, Tamils need not worry about the ‘bear hug’ of Beijing or ‘economic expansion’ ambitions of New Delhi or ‘regime change’ imperialism of the USA that aim at sustaining the genocidal State, because none of them would ideologically or otherwise justify the credibility of these Establishments in the long run. Eezham Tamils have a universal case for humanity and they should succeed if they are fearless in showing non-cooperation with injustice, and if the global Tamils cast their weight in the process.