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, June 10, 2013

President uses Dombe to hit out at Maithri

Monday, 10 June 2013 
The President it is learnt has personally given information to the Sunday Lankadeepa Editor Ariyananda Dombagahawatte to publish a story targeting SLFP General Secretary and Health Minister Maithripala Sirisena. Sources from the newspaper said that the story against Sirisena was published on the Sunday Lankadeepa accordingly.
The President has told the Sunday Lankadeepa editor that one of the Health Minster Sirisena’s brothers had changed the report submitted by the intellectual committee that studied the kidney diseases prevalent in the North Central Province. The President has then asked the editor to publish the story to hot out at Sirisena.
Instead of the report agreed on May 7th at the Environment Ministry, the altered report was presented to the ministry secretaries on May 20th and to the discussion headed by Senior Minister Athauda Seneviratne on May 28th.
The President has noted that it was a serious issue and asked the Presidential Media Unit to give publicity to the story and attack Sirisena. When inquired from a senior official from the President’s Media Unit, he said that the President has decided to slash power vested with five ministers including Minister Maithripala Sirisena.
The official further said that the ministerial powers would be reduced following a report submitted by SLFP National Organizer, Minister Basil Rajapaksa.

Safety of journalists highlighted in global press freedom report


IFEX - The global network DEFENDING AND PROMOTING FREE EXPRESSION
Spanish journalists and supporters stage a protest on the 10th anniversary of the death of cameraman Jose Couso in front of Madrid's U.S. embassy, 6 April 2013
Spanish journalists and supporters stage a protest on the 10th anniversary of the death of cameraman Jose Couso in front of Madrid's U.S. embassy, 6 April 2013
 REUTERS/Susana Vera
WAN-IFRA's Global Press Freedom Report takes a twelve-month snapshot of the major issues affecting press freedom and freedom of expression worldwide. 

The safety of journalists continues to be of major concern in areas of the world where conflict makes reporting the news dangerous, often deadly. WAN-IFRA research reveals that at least 15 media professionals lost their lives in Syria, and at least 10 in Somalia during the reporting period. Whether at the hand of extremists, organised criminal gangs or official security forces, journalists increasingly find themselves in the firing line. 

Where the media is targeted, impunity for the killers of journalists continues to prolong the agony for the victims' families and cast a chilling shadow over the profession. In countries where justice persistently fails such as Pakistan or Mexico, where independent investigative reporting is vital, too frequently journalism has become a deadly occupation. Global efforts to reverse such trends such as the United Nations' Plan of Action on the Safety of Journalists and the Issue of Impunity have gained traction in the last twelve months. Bringing together governments, the UN system, NGOs and industry in one concerted effort to combat crimes against journalists, it remains to be seen how effectively the Plan can be implemented in the parts of the world most affected by violence. 

Criminal defamation and other legal weapons aimed at muzzling independent media persist, with cases in Russia, Italy, Libya and Cameroon highlighting the global appeal of such pernicious legislation for those in power to stifle criticism and debate. The space for such freedoms within newly formulated constitutions is yet to be defined, and as debate continues in Egypt and Tunisia the media remains unprotected and faces increasing attacks in the post-revolution reconstruction. Proposals for tighter press regulation in the United Kingdom and a Secrecy Bill in South Africa contrast with the positive steps towards greater legislative freedom for the press in Myanmar. Nevertheless, media watchdog organisations are closely monitoring the formulation of legal texts that will define how freedom of expression is framed in emerging societies and established democracies alike. 

Soft-censorship has become the weapon of choice for governments looking to exert financial pressures on the independent press as a means of bending it to their will. Government interference in advertising distribution in countries such as Argentina and Azerbaijan forms part of a larger worldwide pattern of economic sanction against independent journalism. 

Policing the digital debate has led to increased online censorship and imprisonment of netizens in countries around the globe. Bahrain has targeted Twitter users while Vietnam continues to jail bloggers in its on-going suppression of political debate. China remains key to how online censorship will develop, with its Great Firewall still policing hundreds of millions of users and restricting the free-flow of information, despite some notable exceptions. Perhaps most worrying is the influence the Chinese model of Internet censorship is having over countries such as Pakistan, Egypt and Iran when it comes to installing surveillance technologies and emulating government-controlled Internet policing. The fight for online freedoms will only intensify in the coming twelve months as Anonymous movement 'hacktivist' trials and that of WikiLeaks source Bradley Manning reach verdicts. 

Police Tortured And Threatened To Sodomize Businessman, Insulted Him About His Wahumpura Caste Origin


Colombo Telegraph
June 10, 2013 |
Several police officers from the Karandeniya police illegally arrested Chandila Padmakumara Gurusinghe of Kiripedda, Babuwo Kanda, Karandeniya in Galle District, apparently on the instigation of a cinnamon trader. He was arrested without being informed of the reason for his arrest and he learned it only after he was brought to the police station by listening to the conversation of the police officers who tortured him. He identified the officers who were responsible for his ordeal as Police Constable Silva (PC 53241), Sub Inspector (SI) Prasanna Mendis (who is Officer-in-Charge of the Crime Branch) and Inspector of Police (IP) Lal Chandrasiri, among others.
Chandila Padmakumara Gurusinghe
After taking him into police custody  on7 May 2013 at 3 pm, he was handcuffed to a bed in a cell, before being taken out and slapped by SI Mendis twice at around 7:30 pm. SI Mendis asked him about a cinnamon trader. Later, he was put back in the cell until the next morning. On 8 May, the Office in Charge (OIC) of the Karandeniya Police Station, Inspector Chandrasiri, accused Chandila of committing robberies, stealing a gold chain and trading in illegal weapons. Chandila flatly denied all the accusations. Then the OIC played a recording, asking Chandila to listen, but the recording was not clear at all. The OIC then stated that he hated people from ‘Hakuru’ caste. (‘Mata Hakurangwa pennanna be.’) This was a derogatory reference to Wahumpura caste.

US travel advisory to SL warns females against sexual attacks

The Sundaytimes Sri LankaSunday, June 09, 2013
The US State Department’s latest travel advisory warns that foreign women should exercise vigilance in Sri Lanka, due to an upswing in sexual attacks against female visitors in tourist areas.
Updated on May 6, 2013, it states that travellers, especially women, should consider travelling with other people when possible.
“Western women continue to report incidents of verbal and physical harassment by groups of men,” it warns. “Such harassment can occur anytime or anywhere, but most frequently has taken place in crowded areas such as marketplaces, train stations, buses, public streets and sporting events.”
“The harassment ranges from sexually suggestive or lewd comments to physical advances, and sexual assaults have occurred as well,” it states. “While most victims of sexual assault have been local residents, an upswing in sexual attacks against female visitors in tourist areas in the southern beaches, underlines the fact, that foreign women should exercise vigilance.”
Newspapers and other sources report ongoing criminal activity around the country, including murder and kidnapping, the notice cites. “Most violent crime occurs within the local community,” it observes. “However, reports of violent crime and sexual assaults directed at foreigners have been increasing in recent months.”
It states that police response to assist victims “can vary from a few minutes to hours, even in tourist areas, and particularly in remote areas. In response to this rise in crime, the Sri Lanka government now requires that all foreign tourists provide their passport information to hotel staff when registering at local hotels and guest houses, so that this data can be used by local law enforcement for the monitoring of foreign tourists,” it elaborates.
The notice makes reference to the killing of British Red Cross worker Khuram Shaikh and the assault on his Russian partner in Tangalle in December 2011. “The Sri Lankan justice system can be slower than in the United States and there are a number of outstanding cases of crimes against foreign nationals, including the murder of the British national noted above, which have yet to be prosecuted,” it informs. It also reveals that street hustlers or “touts” are common around hotels, shopping centres and tourist sites.

Thinking of visiting Sri Lanka?Think again.

Sril Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice

Ethical tourism

Beach in Sri Lanka. Consider ethical tourism when booking a holiday in Sri Lanka.For tourism to be ethical it must not be exploitative, and must ensure that local people get a fair share of the economic benefits. Tourism Concernprovides a list of ethical tour operators to help you ensure your holiday spending goes to help local communities. Experience Travel are the listed provider for Sri Lanka.* We have produced a list of businesses to avoid on grounds of human rights concerns.
Refugee camp during the civil war. Consider ethical tourism when booking a holiday in Sri Lanka.Sri Lanka has many family run hotels and local businesses that can provide you with a wonderfully authentic experience, far more personal than that offered by the big resorts. In many places there are alsocommunity projects that provide fair employment to local people. If you want to visit a tea plantation while in the hill country, try to find one that operates to Fairtrade standards, and ask about the working conditions for tea pickers.
Elephant sanctuary in Sri Lanka. Ethical tourism when booking a holiday in Sri Lanka.Some packages even offer community projects and off-the-beaten-track homestays as part of their tours. But do be aware that signing up to a package means that the package operator may be making some of your ethical decisions for you.
The most important thing is to make an informed choice. By asking your travel agent or tour operator for more information about who exactly is providing (and profiting from) your flights, accommodation, activities, and excursions, you can help local people to benefit from your visit, and avoid benefiting human rights abusers.

Get informed

Make a difference

Tuk Tuk Rickshaw Bajaj at a holiday resort. Consider ethical tourism when booking a holiday in Sri Lanka.Why not make your holiday an activist's one? Print out material which may be hard for Sri Lankans to get hold of and leave them in Sri Lanka: on a bus, on a train, or any public place. Purchasing relevant books and DVDsthrough our store will directly help our campaign, but there are also many free resources available:
Or just talk to people about their situation. Ask them how they feel about the war, about the President, about the media, or about corruption.
This has to be done with a certain degree of care: your role here is not to judge or to educate, but to listen and share information - and so combat the Sri Lankan Government's isolation of its people. You need to be conscious of the safety and security of local people. You need - for example - to be careful about where you choose to ask people sensitive questions - people might get into trouble if soldiers or policemen overhear them badmouthing the Government.
There should be little risk to you - the Government of Sri Lanka does not want to risk its carefully maintained façade of respectability by causing problems for foreigners. 
Finally, some organisations do offer homestays with human rights defenders, which can allow you a way to see what the country is really like, as well as helping them. It's not for everyone, but if you are interested get in touch with us.
Experience Travel are listed twice on this site. Here we talk about the fact they are listed as Tourism Concern’s Ethical tour operators group, and here we talk about how they use businesses with which we have concern. This is because both these things are true. On the one hand Experience Travel have worked hard to provide ethical and sustainable holidays, and Tourism Concern’s award recognises that, on the other hand some of their packages use Sri Lankan Airlines – who are linked with perpetrators of the worst kind of war crimes.

TNA Concerned Over Jaffna Expressway

By Camelia Nathaniel-Monday, June 10, 2013
The Sunday LeaderThe Tamil National Alliance has raised concerns regarding the proposed Colombo Jaffna expressway, to be constructed with Chinese assistance.
“The Sri Lankan government has signed an agreement with China for the construction of an expressway to the North as well as the South.
However the problem that we are foreseeing is that the Northern Province, being close to India, approximately 32kms from Thalaimannar, could threaten Indian security. The Sri Lankan government is granting huge contracts to the Chinese. In the guise of various projects anyone can sneak into that area and it will be detrimental to the Indian security. Therefore we don’t want to allow certain external forces to enter the Northern Province and use it for their own agendas,” TNA parliamentarian Suresh Premachandran said.
He pointed out that currently the most pressing need of the people in the North is not an expressway, but there are so many other issues that they are facing, after having suffered immensely during the war.
“The other issue is that in the North and East there are over 87,000 young war widows. The Sri Lankan government has not formulated any livelihood program for these innocent women, who have lost their husbands during the war, and are forced to take on the burden of sustaining their families. If the government implements a program to assist these women then it will be greatly appreciated. These are the most urgent issues in the North and East and not an expressway. Even those who have been rehabilitated and released have no livelihood program to help them live as independent citizens of this country. The government claims that they will be granted loans to set up their businesses, yet we all know how difficult obtaining a loan can be. These are rehabilitated ex LTTE cadres and how are they going to get guarantors, etc? Therefore the government must come forward and assist these people to get back on their feet,” he said.
Premachandran pointed out that currently there is no pressing need for an expressway, as the government reconstructed the A9 road. “The A9 road in my opinion is more than adequate to cater to the requirements of the people in the North, and perhaps in a few more years if required the government could consider constructing this highway. For the time being the A9 road will suffice for at least the next ten to 15 years.
It’s not that we are opposed to development of these areas, but we don’t want to invite unnecessary problems to the Northern province,” he explained.

Streamline the Ministries: UNP

MONDAY, 10 JUNE 2013 
While condemning the present system of allocating portfolios to a ministry, the opposition UNP said today that there should be new standard when allocating portfolios.


“A ministry’s subjects should not be complicated,” UNP leader Ranil Wickrememsinghe said.

He said that having different subjects under one minister gave the loop hole to avoid responsibilities.

He also said both that Provincial Council and Central government ministers must work together when it came to the same subject.

Speaking at the Annual General Meeting of the National Trade Union Services Federation, UNP and Opposition Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe said Government Departments should also put under the related ministry.

He said that the government services were in a state of disarray today.

“Meteorology Department is a good example for a failed department. It could not inform the people of the adverse weather conditions although the United States had passed out the information in time,” he said.

The UNP had further proposed monitoring committees in its draft constitution which have the power to monitor each ministry and also the Minister.

Fixing Sri Lanka’s Gaping Trade Deficit

By W.A Wijewardena -June 10, 2013
Dr. W.A. Wijewardena
Colombo TelegraphFinance Ministry plans to go for import substitution and not for structural reforms
Annual Report of the Ministry of Finance and Planning for 2012
Last week saw the release of the Annual Report of the Ministry of Finance and Planning for 2012. Though it is a report pertaining to a Ministry, since the Ministry of Finance is the focal point in the economy, it is a comprehensive analysis of the current state of the Sri Lanka’s economy with a detailed presentation of the economic strategies to be adopted by the Government to fix numerous issues presently facing the economy.
Thus, the Ministry Annual Report is the last of the four reports which one can peruse to learn of the state of the country’s economy. The first three were the State of the Economy 2012 issued by the independent think tank, Institute of Policy Studies in November 2012, Annual Report of the Central Bank for 2012 made public in early April 2013 and the Report issued by IMF after the consultations its staff had with Sri Lanka’s authorities in its Article IV Consultations series in February 2013 but released to the public domain in May 2013.
A well-written readable report
God Save America: Godfather Helps China!

Rajinder Puri6/10/2013 1:09:14 AM
Iraq is atop a political volcano.
Sectarian strife between Sunnis and Shiites threatens violence reminiscent of what happened in India in 1947. The UN Envoy to Iraq Mr. Martin Kobler has warned: “Systemic violence is ready to explode any moment.”

How strange that a decade after the US invasion of Iraq amidst this entire turmoil one nation is blissfully promoting its economic prospects. Post invasion Iraq has emerged as one of the world’s top oil producers and China is its biggest customer. Before the invasion Iraq’s oil industry was crippled by sanctions. Saddam Hussein’s overthrow lifted sanctions and released the nation’s enormous oil reserves for the global market. Chinese state-owned companies seized the opportunity by investing more than $2 billion annually and injecting hundreds of Chinese workers into Iraq. The New York Times quoted Mr. Mike Makowsky, a former Defence Department official of the Bush administration who dealt with oil policy to state:

“We lost out. The Chinese had nothing to do with the war, but from an economic standpoint they are benefiting from it, and our Fifth Fleet and air forces are helping to assure their supply.”
Thereby hangs a tale.

Recall the sequence of events and connect the dots. The strangest picture emerges. Consider these established facts.

For decades America carried on a heavily adverse balance of trade at one to five with China importing low tech products owned and manufactured by the People’s Liberation Army (PLA). So scandalous was the arrangement that America’s leading journalist the late Abe Rosenthal, the New York Times Editor, accused Democratic and Republican leaders of America for endangering national security because they had been corrupted by China. The PLA managed factories violating all labour laws by employing slave workers bossed over by their army warlords.

For fifteen years US authorities pressured China to enter the World Trade Organization (WTO) in order to ensure that international labour norms were not violated. Finally the PLA agreed. China consented to sign the WTO agreement on 17th November 2001 that would bring its industry under international purview. Six days earlier on 9/11, 2001 China signed a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with Afghanistan’s Taliban government headed by Mullah Omar. The MOU was signed in the presence of Osama bin Laden to establish the Telecom network in Afghanistan in return for the assurance that Al Qaeda would not interfere in the affairs of Xingjian. On that very same day the terrorist 9/11 attack on the twin towers of the WTO in New York was launched. The attack jolted WTO but did not succeed in preventing China’s entry into WTO. After 9/11 there occurred a strange sequence of events.

The 9/11 terror attack itself was mired in controversy and conspiracy theories.

Despite repeated Intelligence warnings of an impending attack by Al Qaeda the US government allowed the attack to occur. It allowed safe passage to members of the Osama bin Laden family camped in America to leave the country. The US government demanded that Osama be surrendered to it for legal proceedings. The Taliban government said that it was willing to surrender Osama to any third country named by the US. The US rejected this offer. The US attack against Afghanistan commenced. But it was never allowed to be clinched. America gave little importance to Al Qaeda. Six months after 9/11 while Osama roamed free, President Bush on March 13, 2002 said: “Terror is bigger than one person (Osama). And he’s just – he’s a person who’s now been marginalized. His network, his host government has been destroyed… I am truly not concerned about him.” Who could have been briefing President Bush?

Osama managed to flee Afghanistan with his family to a safe haven in Pakistan. Instead of eliminating Al Qaeda America diverted to a war against Iraq. The war against Iraq was pre-planned. This becomes clear from the revelations of Mr. Richard Clarke who was the National Coordinator for Security and Counterterrorism and had been warning the administration for years about Al Qaeda. He was rebuffed by attention focused on Iraq. He knew that Iraq had no links with Jihad terror.

Eventually America started its war against Iraq on the false premise that Iraq had weapons of mass destruction. Later, this was officially admitted to be a false claim. Nevertheless America embroiled itself in two costly wars heavily expending men and resources. In disgust Clarke resigned from the government and exposed the truth in a book, “Against All Enemies”.

For over a decade America blew its resources and manpower in two costly wars. How did it pay for these wars? It continued its adverse trade with China and allowed Beijing to purchase trillions worth of US treasury bonds to make the world’s leading superpower a huge debtor nation. The irony is that in Afghanistan where American soldiers risk lives in an unpopular war and billions of dollars are spent to attempt maintaining order, it is China that profits hugely by obtaining lucrative mining contracts with mineral-rich Afghanistan.

Now it transpires the same is happening in Iraq.

Thereby it might be seen that America’s inexplicable policy has made the US a huge debtor nation, created enormous unemployment by diverting investment from the domestic market to labour-cheap China, expending considerable resources and lives in two costly wars, and allowed Beijing to hugely profit from the results of these wars without deploying a single Chinese soldier.
Therefore the question must be asked.

Are the policies of the world’s most powerful nation influenced and directed by forces unbelievably stupid or fatally subverted? This is a question that Americans themselves must ponder. But for policymakers in India it should be clear that this nation must deal with America most cautiously. A stupid friend can be more damaging than an intelligent enemy.

Edward Snowden: the whistleblower behind the NSA surveillance revelations

The 29-year-old source behind the biggest intelligence leak in the NSA's history explains his motives, his uncertain future and why he never intended on hiding in the shadows

• Q&A with NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden: 'I do not expect to see home again'

,  and  in Hong Kong-Sunday 9 June 2013

nsa whistleblowerLink to video: NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden: 'I don't want to live in a society that does these sort of things'
The Guardian home
The individual responsible for one of the most significant leaks in US political history is Edward Snowden, a 29-year-old former technical assistant for the CIA and current employee of the defence contractor Booz Allen Hamilton. Snowden has been working at the National Security Agency for the last four years as an employee of various outside contractors, including Booz Allen and Dell.
The Guardian, after several days of interviews, is revealing his identity at his request. From the moment he decided to disclose numerous top-secret documents to the public, he was determined not to opt for the protection of anonymity. "I have no intention of hiding who I am because I know I have done nothing wrong," he said.

Snowden will go down in history as one of America's most consequential whistleblowers, alongside Daniel Ellsberg and Bradley Manning. He is responsible for handing over material from one of the world's most secretive organisations – the NSA.

China To Train Sri Lankan Army

 | Link Newspaper
BEIJING – Firming up its ties with Sri Lanka, China has granted fresh development loan worth $2.2 billion for infrastructure projects and agreed to provide defence technology as well as training to the island nation’s army.
Both sides agreed to further deepen defence cooperation and maintain exchanges between the two defence ministries and would continue to carry out cooperating in defence technology, personal training and other fields, Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesperson Hong Lei told media-persons here today.
He was replying to questions on the just-concluded visit by Sri Lankan President Mahenda Rajapaksa during which both the nations signed a defence agreement besides a host of deals to beef up infrastructure projects in the country, deepening China’s foothold there.
Hong did not disclose the details of the agreements including the one related to development of Colombo port and read out some of the highlights from joint statement issued by both the countries.
According to Sri Lankan Foreign Minister G L Peiris, China has offered $2.2 billion worth of new loans.
The countries agreed on $1.5 billion investment of private sector in the northern express highway linking Kandy in the central part of Sri Lanka to Jaffna in the north, he earlier told the media here.
The two sides agreed on the extension of a railway, the southern highway and the development of the port of Colombo, Peiris said. This is in addition to the construction of Hambantota Port with the multi billion dollar assistance of China.

ICC ‘regrets’ Hindi intro


MONDAY, 10 JUNE 2013 
The ICC while expressing regret over the playing of a Hindi song during the introduction of the Lankan team at the opening ceremony of the ongoing Champions Trophy tournament in England, said that it would take the up the issue with the event management company responsible for handling the opening ceremony.

Sri Lanka Cricket said that the International Cricket Council Tournament Director Chris Tetley has written to SLC regretting the incident, in response to concerns raised by Sri Lanka Cricket secrearty Nishantha Ranathunga in a letter sent to the ICC Chief Executive Officer.

Following is the full statement by Sri Lanka Cricket

This is with reference to the Hindi song which was played while the Sri Lankan National Flag was paraded onto the field, at the opening ceremony of the ongoing ICC Champions Trophy in England. As concerns raised by the Secretary of Sri Lanka Cricket, Mr. Nishantha Ranatunga to the ICC regarding the above matter, The International Cricket Council Tournament Director Chris Tetley has written to SLC regretting the incident. He further stated that the ICC will take this matter for discussion with the Event Management Company who were entrusted to handle the opening ceremony.

Saudi royal family intervenes over preacher released despite raping and killing daughter

Royal family reportedly 'stung' by the outrage over the case

JOHN HALL-TUESDAY 12 FEBRUARY 2013

The IndependentThe Saudi royal family has intervened to block the release of a ‘celebrity’ preacher accused of raping, torturing and killing his five-year-old daughter.
Fayhan al-Ghamdi was set to be released afteragreeing to pay “blood money” to the mother of his daughter Lama, who suffered multiple injuries including a crushed skull, broken back, broken ribs, a broken left arm and extensive bruising and burns. Social workers say she had also been repeatedly raped and burnt.
Al-Ghamdi, who regularly appears on Saudi television, admitted using a cane and cables to inflict the injuries after doubting his five-year-old daughter’s virginity and taking her to a doctor, according to the campaign group Women to Drive.
The case caused a scandal in Saudi Arabia, with public calls for the cleric to be put to death.
Despite the country’s notoriously strict legal system however, activists say the law protects fathers from being executed for murdering their children
Rather than getting the death penalty or receiving a long prison sentence for the crime, Al-Ghamdi served only a few months in jail before a judge ruled the prosecution could only seek ‘blood money’.
Albawaba News reported the judge as saying: “Blood money and the time the defendant had served in prison since Lama's death suffices as punishment.”
Today, however, the Saudi Justice Ministry issued a statement saying the cleric remained in prison and the case was continuing.
The Times reported sources in the Saudi capital Riyadh as saying the royal family had been “stung” by the outrage over the case, with senior members intervening to ensure a stricter punishment is given.
One source told the newspaper, “The royal court is now looking at the case. He [Al-Ghamdi] will stay in prison for a long time.”
The £31,000 blood money Al-Ghamdi agreed to pay is considered compensation under Islamic law, although it is only half the amount that would have been paid had Lama been a boy.
Formal objections to the ruling were initially raised by three Saudi activists, and the twitter hashtag #AnaLama (which translates as I Am Lama) was set up.
In response to the public outrage over the case, Saudi authorities set up a 24-hour hotline to take calls about child abuse.

Sunday, June 9, 2013

Media-Ethics And Reality Control


By Tisaranee Gunasekara -June 9, 2013 
“Only a free and unrestrained press can effectively expose deception in government” - (US Supreme Court on Pentagon Papers)
Colombo TelegraphIf the Rajapaksas succeed in turning their ‘media ethics proposal’ into law,Sri Lanka will have her very own Minitrue (Ministry of Truth). And the role of Lankan media will be redefined, from ‘watchdogs of democracy’ to ‘lapdogs of the Rajapaksas’.
In the consequent Orwellian reality, it will be permissible for Mervyn Silva to tie a public official to a tree andRohitha Rajapaksa to hammer a referee, both in full public view. But it will be impermissible for the media to report/comment on these (and other innumerable crimes and transgressions by power-wielders and their kith and kin) because that would “offend against expectations of the public, morality of the country or tend to lower the standards of public taste and morality[i].
It will be permissible for Chinato build a power-plant using systems unsuitable to Lankan conditions and outdated technology. But it will be impermissible for the media report/comment on it, because that would be “criticism affecting foreign relations[ii].

Sun, Jun 9, 2013, 10:55 am SL Time, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Lankapage LogoJune 09, Colombo: Sri Lanka's Criminal Investigation Department (CID) may arrest a senior police officer soon over the murder of a Muslim businessman in Colombo, a local newspaper reported.
The CID may arrest the Colombo North Deputy Inspector General Vass Gunawardena over the murder of Mohamed Shyam, a businessman in Bambalapitiya after he was abducted from the that area last month. His body with gunshot wounds was found in the Dompe area on May 22.
According to police sources, the CID is waiting for the instructions of the Inspector General of Police N.K. Ilangakoon who is scheduled to return to country tomorrow from a visit to Russia.
The CID already has arrested four police personnel including a sub inspector who were members of the special unit operating under DIG Gunawardena.
Preliminary Police investigations have revealed that the businessman's murder was a contract killing undertaken for a fee of Rs. 3 million.


Sri Lanka seeks $600 million loan from Japan to set up coal power plant in South
Fri, Jun 7, 2013, 11:01 pm SL Time, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.
Lankapage LogoJune 07, Colombo: Sri Lanka plans to set up another coal power plant in the Southern Province with assistance from Japan as a measure to lower the electricity costs while meeting the growing power demand.
The Power and Energy Ministry Secretary M.M.C. Ferdinando has told Reuters Friday that the country is in discussion with Japan to obtain a US$ 600 million loan to fund the construction of a 600 MW coal power plant.
"We have had discussions with the Japanese government and JICA (Japan International Cooperation Agency)," Ferdinando told Reuters.
According to Ferdinando, the Ministry is considering to set up a super critical coal power plant which produces no ash and smoke. The latest-generation coal-fired power plants are more efficient than conventional designs.
"The cost is estimated at $600 million. This will be from a 40-year concessional loan. We have proposed a 600 MW capacity plant. But all will be decided after the feasibility study," the Secretary has said.
A Japanese team is scheduled to visit Sri Lanka for the feasibility assessment in two weeks, according to the Secretary.
Sri Lanka raised electricity tariff sharply in April to cover the losses at the state-run power monopoly Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB). The rate hike set-off countrywide protests and agitations campaigns demanding to bring down the tariff hike.
As Sri Lanka's hydropower generation is no longer able to meet the country's daily requirement, the CEB increasingly relies on costly imported fuel oil for generating power and the losses incurred by the Board are mounting.
India's National Thermal Power Corporation and Sri Lanka's state-run electricity board are also in talks regarding construction of a 500 MW coal power plant in Sampur on the east coast.