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

Saturday, June 15, 2013

Former War Zone Craves Democracy


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Friday, June 14, 2013
COLOMBO, Jun 14 (IPS) - For the first time since Sri Lanka’s 30-year-long civil conflict drew to a bloody finish in May 2009, casting an eerie hush over the Northern Province that had grown accustomed to the sounds of war, there is a buzz in the air generated by the prospect of provincial elections that hold the promise of radical change.
Though it is yet to be announced formally, political circles in the capital, Colombo, are fixed on the prospect of an election in September.
The most pressing question is whether or not the government of President Mahinda Rajapakse will allow the devolution of power from the centre and the creation of the country’s first-ever Northern Provincial Council (NPC).
It was exactly this question, and politicians’ inability to resolve it, that tore this South Asian nation of 20 million people apart for three long decades as the island’s two peoples – the Sinhalese and the Tamils – came to blows over national sovereignty.
Based primarily in the northern and eastern provinces, Tamils in Sri Lanka have long demanded some degree of autonomy and independence from the rest of the island, citing economic exclusion and discrimination by leaders who favour the interests of the majority.
An unbroken line of Sinhala-led governments has ignored the demand, insisting on maintaining a single, unified state.
In 1983, demands for political autonomy coalesced around a rebel group, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, which launched a campaign of armed guerilla warfare against the government.
The group sought to create a separate state for Tamils in the northern and eastern regions of the country in an area covering 7,390 square miles.
In 1987, in an effort to reconcile what was then a four-year-long battle that showed no signs of abating, India brokered a peace accord between the government and the Tigers that provided for the devolution of power to Sri Lanka’s nine provinces and the creation of independent provincial councils endowed with the power to oversee industries like agriculture, manage the police force and collect funds through provincial taxes.
This provision, the 13th amendment to Sri Lanka’s 1978 constitution, was the country’s first attempt at decentralisation since it gained independence from British rule in 1948.
Despite initial signs of success, the process unraveled within two years when the then Provincial Government declared an independent Eelam, prompting Colombo to reinstate direct rule over the province.
In the next few decades, the region was torn asunder in the war between the LTTE and government forces. Power over the north and its 1.1 million people remained in Colombo’s hands - until now, perhaps.
[pullquote]3[/pullquote]While there is much excitement over the prospect of an NPC, political parties know that elections will not bring change overnight.
At most, according to Rajavarothayam Sampanthan - leader of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), the largest Tamil party in Sri Lanka and the one most likely to win the NPC - the elections signal a new beginning.
“Elections could provide political parties with the opportunity to have their policies democratically endorsed,” Sampanthan told IPS. How effective that endorsement will be depends on how much power the central government is willing to devolve.
A lot also rests on the provincial governor, a presidential appointee endowed by the constitution with tremendous powers that can override decisions made by the elected provincial council.
Sampanthan admitted that the chances of power being devolved to an opposition-run council are limited. Without the ability to at least control job creation and industrial development, two areas currently controlled by the government in Colombo, the success of a TNA-controlled NPC will be limited, he said.
However, political commentator Jehan Perera, who heads the National Peace Council, sees another role for the NPC: as a regional forum that can represent the province both nationally and internationally.
“The body can better articulate the interests of the people,” Perera told IPS, referring to issues like unemployment, transport and water management that only get addressed in relation to international complaints.
The eight functioning councils are currently all under the control of the government and unable to give voice to their constituencies. An opposition-held council, on the other hand, can be more aggressive should it feel the government is putting curbs on its powers and “has the chance to be a very vibrant forum,” Perera said.
People in the Northern Province, however, are not so sure. Jegan Murthy, a 27-year-old shopkeeper in the northern town of Jaffna, the cultural and political nerve centre of the Tamils in Sri Lanka, said that if the war-battered community is to regain any hope, the NPC has to be more than just a platform for discussion and protest.
Referring to issues like a lack of housing for the 13,000 residents of the north still living in temporary camps, as well as widespread unemployment - especially among the region’s 40,000 war widows - he told IPS, “We have so many problems and we have been discussing about them in so many forums, one more would not make that much of a difference. What we need is someone who can deliver results.”
In the battle-scarred town of Kilinochchi, 330 kilometres north of Colombo, people mention the election only in passing, like something they have to endure, akin to the skin-searing heat that bears down on them all year long.
“Elections? What elections?” 22-year-old Shanthini Kumar asked when IPS sought her opinion on the subject. She is grateful to have made it alive through the six months of the Sri Lankan army’s final surge against the LTTE, between November 2008 and May 2009, a battle which saw heavy civilian casualties and exposed the government’s human rights record to worldwide scrutiny.
Over 460,000 persons have returned to the Northern Province since the end of the war, but found hard times waiting for them.
“We need houses, jobs and transport; we need money in our hands. Then we can think of elections,” Kumar said.
Jobs are hard to come by and donor assistance is largely drying up: the latest U.N.-Sri Lanka joint funding appeal for 147 million dollars in 2012 fell short by 73 percent. The U.N. estimates that there is a need for over 100,000 houses.
Officials from the Sri Lanka Red Cross Society, which is constructing the largest number of houses in the former war zone, says over 170,000 homes are needed, but according to U.N. data existing funds will provide no more than 55,000 humble dwellings.

Event Invitation: Sri Lanka And The Culture Of Impunity


Colombo TelegraphJune 15, 2013 

Sri Lanka and the culture of impunity: human rights challenges in a post-war and post-conflict environment
Sri Lanka’s civil war, which spanned more than a quarter of a century, ended in 2009. With more than 100,000 war casualties and one million refugees, it represented one of Asia’s most violent, destructive and intractable conflicts. Four years since active military hostilities ended, there has been no progress towards constitutional and political reforms addressing the problems of pluralism and democracy that lay at the heart of the conflict, nor a legitimate process of truth and accountability for war-time abuses. Instead, Sri Lanka is steadily moving in the direction of becoming an authoritarian state, with the rule of law and governance under attack, the ascendance of majoritarian ethno-religious intolerance, and an overall decline in democratic and human rights standards. This event will explore the pervasive culture of impunity in Sri Lanka, both with regard to past abuses as well as post-war governance. The broader challenge of transition from a post-war to a post-conflict situation will be discussed in relation to ongoing efforts regarding peace and good governance.
The speakers
Dr Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu has been the Executive Director of the Centre for Policy Alternatives (CPA) since its exception in 1996.
He is a Convenor of the Centre for Monitoring Election Violence (CMEV) and is a founder Board member of the Sri Lanka Chapter of Transparency International. Currently he is on the Board of the Berghof Foundation for Peace Support and a Member of the Transparency Advisory Group on The Right to Information in South Asia. In June 2003 he made the Civil Society Presentation at the Tokyo Donor Conference on Sri Lanka at the invitation of the Government of Japan and in March 2009, he served as a Member of the External Review Panel of the World Bank’s Post-Conflict Performance Indicators. In 2010, he was awarded the inaugural Citizens Peace Award by the National Peace Council of Sri Lanka. He has been quoted widely in the international and local print and electronic media and presented papers at a number of international conferences on the
situation in Sri Lanka, on governance and security issues.
Asanga Welikala is a doctoral candidate and ESRC Teaching Fellow in Public Law in the School of Law, University of Edinburgh.
He is also a Senior Researcher in the Legal & Constitutional Unit of the Centre for Policy Alternatives (CPA), Sri Lanka. His most recent publication is the edited collection, A. Welikala (Ed.) (2012) The Sri Lankan Republic at 40: Reflections on Constitutional History, Theory and Practice (Colombo: CPA)
Uvindu Kurukulasuriya is a Visiting Fellow in the Department of Media and Communications at LSE. He has been a journalist for more than two decades and also the co-editor of the Media Monitor.
He is a freedom of expression activist, researcher and artist. At the time he was forced to leave the country he was the Convenor of the Free Media Movement and a Director of the Sri Lanka Press Institute and Press Complaints Commission of Sri Lanka. He was a Council member and executive committee member of International Freedom of Expression Exchange (IFEX) and Co-Convener of the Centre for Monitoring Elections Violence. He has also co-authored the book “Reporting on Human Rights in Sri Lanka: A Handbook for Media Professionals” (Colombo: Centre for Policy Alternatives and International Federation of Journalists, 2008)
Coming to the event
This event is free and open to all with no ticket or pre-registration required. Entry is on a first come first served basis. We suggest arriving 15-20 minutes in advance of the start time. General information about coming to an event at LSE
For more information click here

Sinhala military wants ‘Kappan’ from Batticaloa Tamil farmers

TamilNet[TamilNet, Friday, 14 June 2013, 22:38 GMT]
Aiming at totally bankrupting the Tamil farmers of Koa'raippattu South (Kiraan) division in Batticaloa district, the occupying Sri Lankan military, which schemes Sinhalicisaton and colonisation of the pasturelands in the division, now demand 3,000 rupees per 10 cattle from the Tamil farmers. The ‘Kappan’ military of Sri Lanka has instructed the Tamil farm-owners to pay the money before 25th of this month. The extortion is taking place in the name of providing ‘housing’ to disabled Sinhala soldiers, the farmers from Alli-oadai village told TamilNet on Friday. 

The location of newly established checkpoints of the Sri Lanka Army at Allai-oadai and Maavaddavaan junction [Photo: TamilNet]

Location of Kudumpimalai


Earlier, Tamil paramilitary personnel operated by the SL military were demanding money. 

But this time, the extortion has reached a larger proportion. 

The SL military now wants the Tamil farmers to give up grazing their cattle and farming in the area, the Tamil farmers complain. 

The officers of the occupying Sinhala military have earlier registered the number of cattle owned by the Tamil farmers in the division. They are now using these figures to demand large sums of money from the Tamil farmers.
 Shown within the red circle is the Alli Oadai junction where 5 acres of land has been appropriated to construct a Buddhist stupa. Local people are prohibited from going to that area and beyond it to Kudumpimalai
Alli Oadai
Already, more than 500 Sinhalese brought from the South have encroached into the pasturelands and the Sinhala ‘Civil Defence Force’ paramilitary operated by Colombo has been killing and stealing the cattle of Tamil farmers. 

The Tamil name of the village Alli-oadai (lotus pond) has also been changed to ‘Aliayaa-oadai’ in Sinhala by the occupying military.

Two months ago, the Sri Lanka Army soldiers at the nearby Koaddaik-kallaa'ru were harassing the Tamil villagers for money, showing a letter in English and Sinhala that they were constructing houses for disabled Sri Lankan soldiers. 

Kappan in Sinhala, related to Kappam in Tamil and meaning taxes or tribute, is widely used today as a word for extortion of money. 

Dividends Of Rural Mobilization

By Emil van der Poorten -June 16, 2013 
Emil van der Poorten
Colombo TelegraphShortly after I returned to Sri Lanka, in an effort to protect vulnerable crops from all kinds of vermin, I sought, with the assistance of a schoolmate of mine, a permit to purchase a single barrel shotgun (SBBL).
This was one of two requests I had of this old friend, a senior cabinet minister then (and now).  The other was a request that “something” be done about the now-notorious and completely illegal garbage dump in our vicinity.  Better than ten years have passed since the latter abomination was set up by aPradeshiya Sabhawa (outside its own boundaries, no less!) and nothing has happened to alleviate a situation where the headwaters of the Deduru Oya are being contaminated by everything inclusive of hospital waste, two drinking water springs have been polluted beyond belief and the approach road has now reached the status of a stream whenever there is anything resembling a shower of rain!
However, in fairness to my friend the Minister, he warned me at the get-go that he was not going to be able to do anything about the garbage disposal cum neighbourhood devastation issue.
He did, however, assure me that given the fact that I had not recently waged war against anyone, least of all the Government of Sri Lanka, I would have no difficulty in obtaining the necessary clearance for the most basic of firearms.
Did I have a surprise coming!
I spent an inordinate amount of time and effort obtaining character certificates, spending time in the local police station, visiting a Senior Superintendent of Police in Kandy etc. etc.  I also succeeded in meeting the Government Agent (I don’t now recall his current designation) in Kandy on more than one occasion and that was batting .500 in baseball parlance because I visited his office more than twice as often as he would deign to see me.
In any event, having been put through more hoops than any self-respecting circus performer would care to remember, crunch time arrived when I succeeded in “cornering” the head of Kandy’s Administrative Service, asking him why there was this inordinate delay in issuing me a permit for a weapon that not even a village idiot would employ in any effort to unseat the duly-elected government of Sri Lanka.  At last a simple straightforward question got a simple straightforward answer.  He could not, not “would not,” Issue me the required permit as a Senior Citizen I was prohibited from owning a firearm.  I was told that this stipulation was not in the Firearms Ordinance or whatever the document that dealt with qualifications or disqualifications of those seeking to own a weapon for a legitimate purpose and that it was an insertion by the Defence Secretaryhimself.
Given my friend, the Minister’s, assurances, I challenged the G. A. and after a bit of a heated exchange where I quoted the Minister – his Minister at the time – he agreed to commit the ruling to paper.  In all fairness to the man, he did and that was the end of my attempts to safeguard any crops we might try to grow on our land which I expect the government could now “acquire” because of its reduced productivity!
A little footnote to that chapter was the suggestion that, since I was “too old” to possess a Single Barrelled Breech-Loading shotgun, the problem could be solved by one of my progeny making application for the required permit.  When I informed them that since both my progeny were gainfully employed in a country, literally, on the other side of the world from which I doubted they’d be prepared to pull up stakes in order to deal with marauding wild pigs, giant squirrels, porcupines and monkeys in Sri Lanka, the response was an “Ohhh……………!’
Anyway, all of the preceding is relevant background to what I am about to relate.
The man who acts in a supervisory capacity in our agricultural enterprises, phoned me one evening to inform me that his wife (a grandmother) had been hospitalized due to a knife attack by a neighbourhood thug.  Even in a country where the rule of law is conspicuous by its absence, the circumstances of the attack on this woman were more than ordinary.
The victim’s granddaughter, a pre-teen, and her mother, while on the way from their home to the home of the little girl’s grandmother had been subjected to a sexual attack by an inebriated man.  They had escaped by running as fast as they could and, when they got close to their destination, where there were a few other houses as well, the attacker had retreated.  The grandmother had then accompanied the little girl’s mother on her return journey because the young woman was, understandably, very apprehensive about another attack.  Lo and behold, the molester jumps out of the bushes and tries to attack the younger woman again.  The grandmother tries to fend off the rapist with a stick she picks up from the side of the path.  The flimsy stick breaks and the man proceeds to slash her with a knife he is known to always carry with him.  Many of the cuts required several stitches at the district hospital where her husband took her on his motorbike when he returned home after work and found her bleeding at home.
When the police showed up to make an arrest, the slasher was gone and couldn’t be located at his place of residence – his mother’s home.  Subsequently, after yet another abortive effort, I understand that a seven-man posse apprehended the man two days later.
The interesting part of this tale is that the man, nicknamed “Ahinsakaya” by someone in the community with a particularly warped sense of humour, was, not so long ago, spending time in an army camp and boasting that he had had weapons-training.  His attempt at sexual assault is also not without precedent.  He is a violent criminal and on several previous occasions has accosted schoolgirls returning home along a quite lonely road that serves us as well.  On one of those occasions, he had held a knife to the throat of a little boy who was with the schoolgirls and threatened him with death if he was to corroborate any complaint that the girls might make to anyone.
Not on that or any of several similar occasions did these girls ever complain to the police.  Their explanation to me was simple, “We are Tamils, sir.”   I would leave it to readers to draw their own conclusions about what that simple statement meant given the circumstances.
“Ahinsakaya” is not some rare “no-goodnik” who slipped into an army camp due to some sentry’s oversight.  He is one of the three known thieves with a propensity for violence and alcohol abuse from this neighbourhood who were known to frequent army camps – at least one of whom was recruited into that force – with access to  combat-weapons during the times they were away from their homes.
I expect defenders of the status quo in this country will find some twisted logic in the fact that a law-abiding citizen without anything resembling a criminal record is refused permission to own a single-barrelled shotgun for the protection of crops, by virtue of his age, while three individuals from the same neighbourhood with criminal records as long as the average citizen’s arm have access to combat weapons of a sophistication and destructive capability that most of us can only imagine.  That logic not only escapes me but seems to escape every one of those sane adults with whom I’ve discussed this episode.
Welcome to bucolic rural Sri Lanka!

Sri Lankan Government Must Reconsider Move to Introduce Ethics Code for Media

Media release: Sri Lanka
June 14, 2013
The International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) joins partners and affiliates in Sri Lanka in calling on the Government of Sri Lanka (GoSL) to reconsider its move to introduce a code of ethics for the country’s media.

Early in June, the Ministry of Mass Media and Information in the GoSL introduced a three-thousand word document titled “Code of Media Ethics” in Parliament. There is as yet no official explanation on the exact status of this code. Media commentary in Sri Lanka though sees this initiative by the GoSL as the prelude to enforcing an intrusive set of norms that could considerably worsen the environment for free journalistic practice.

The Sri Lanka Press Councils Act of 1973 has a provision which enables the government to notify a code of ethics for the media. A code was in fact introduced in 1981 though never enforced since the Press Council itself lapsed into a phase of inactivity. The newly introduced code is seen by media observers in Sri Lanka as a refurbished version of the 1981 version, though this has not been acknowledged by the GoSL.

The introduction of this code comes in the wake of the revival of the Press Councils Act in 2010, despite serious concerns among Sri Lanka’s journalists about its many harsh provisions, including the power to prosecute under criminal law for any perceived violation of the laws in force.

Despite active government efforts to reconstitute the Press Council as a functioning body, it remained inactive for long, since few journalists were willing to accept the invitation to join. This changed in 2012 and in October, the Press Council issued a directive that was promptly acceded to by the Sunday Leader, to publish an apology for a story it had done on the Defence Secretary in the GoSL.

This newly introduced code covers the print and electronic media, news websites and advertisements published in all forms of media. It incorporates strong language requiring that it should be “honoured in letter and spirit” and introduces thirteen specific grounds on which media content could be prohibited. Well over half of the code deals with explicit prohibitions on advertisement content. Many of its clauses are vaguely phrased and would allow for broad interpretations.

The IFJ observes that the Press Complaints Commission of Sri Lanka (PCCSL) which is in its tenth year of fairly successful operation, has been promoting self regulation and a Code of Professional Practice written up by the Editors' Guild of Sri Lanka. This code is reviewed every two years and is adopted by the independent print media and online newspapers.

“We fail to see how the GoSL effort to introduce a media code to supersede the existing practices in the profession will contribute to the public interest”, said the IFJ Asia-Pacific.

“From our partners and affiliates in Sri Lanka, we gather in fact, that the immediate priority lies elsewhere: in reforming the government-owned media so that it functions truly as a public service”.

“Much of the deterioration of the media environment in Sri Lanka today could be attributed to the government’s tendency to use the platforms it controls for launching partisan political attacks against opponents and the independent media. This has created a climate in which the news websites have felt themselves free of any obligation to play by a fair set of rules”.

“We urge the GoSL to withdraw the proposed code of ethics and instead lend its support to the professional code drawn up by the Editors’ Guild and endorsed by IFJ partners and affiliates”.

Sri Lanka: A ‘Guided Democracy’, A Euphemism For A Totalitarian State?


By Eran Wickramaratne -June 16, 2013 
Eran Wickramaratne MP
Colombo TelegraphThe reactivation of the Press Council Law and the government-proposed Code of Ethics for journalists have to be viewed with great suspicion for many reasons.  Ethics is beyond the realm of legal codification. Ethics is about moral principles that govern a person or a group’s behaviour. While some philosophers suggested that it should exemplify justice and charity, and benefit the person and society, others later introduced the idea that ethics entrains one’s duty towards others and respect for others. The attempt to encourage better ethics or behaviour amongst journalists, while being laudable cannot become coercive.  

LSSP: 13A ‘very weak’ as it is, so why panic?

 

article_image
by Zacki Jabbar

The LSSP said yesterday that there was an undue haste to dilute the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, but it was ‘very weak’ as it was, since none of the powers that mattered such as land and police had been granted.

LSSP leader, Technology and Research Minister, Tissa Vitharana told The Island that a lot of hot air had been expended over nothing, since the President had the final say in all matters including policy issues.

Even if the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) won the Northern Provincial Council Election (NPCE) it could not exercise land and police powers without it being implemented through the required legal channels, he noted.Asked what the LSSP’s view was on an urgent Bill to abolish the power of Provincial Councils to merge into one unit, which was to be presented to Parliament next week, the Minister said that they had requested President Mahinda Rajapaksa to hold the NPC polls under the existing law.

Whatever amendments to the 13A, could be presented to the legislature after the polls were over, Vitharana said, adding that the people’s representatives could take a decision at that stage.

The Minister observed that if the Northern Provincial Council was stripped of its more important powers, even though it was still confined to the law books, prior to the Councils first democratic election, the Tamil people could say that the same treatment had not been meted out to the other provinces.

The Northerners, who had undergone enough suffering over the last three decades, should be left in peace to exercise their franchise at a free and fair election without creating unnecessary issues and confrontations, the minister observed.

The Assaults On Democratic Rights And Personal Freedoms

By Shanie -June 15, 2013 
We must pay a tribute to the Sri Lanka cricket team

Colombo Telegraph“A device that is regularly exploited is the fear of imminent destruction by an enemy of boundless evil. Such 
perceptionis  are deeply rooted in  (Amercan) popular culture, coupled with faith in nobility of purpose – the latter, as close to a universal as history provides. … Whatever the roots of these cultural features be, they can easily be manipulated by cynical leaders, often in ways that are hard to believe.”  - Noam Chomsky in ‘Failed States’ – The Abuse of Power and the Assault on Democracy’ 
In his latest book ‘Failed States’, Professor Noam Chomsky, the distinguished academic and writer from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, was of course referring to the United States. But his insightful analysis is true not only of US but of many other countries as well. Among the hardest tasks that anyone can undertake, and one of the most important, Chomsky says, is to look honestly in the mirror. If we allow ourselves to do so, we should have little difficulty in finding the characteristics of ‘failed states’ right at home. That recognition of reality should be deeply troubling to those who care about their countries and future generations. Often we find ourselves unable to differentiate between what we preach and what we practice. Take terrorism for example. We wax eloquent about the terrorism of our opponents, about their terror against us while our terror against them does not exist. We claim that our assaults on the democratic rights of our opponents are entirely appropriate. These are the double standards that many nations, big and small, employ.

A way out of the 13th Amendment trap

 

By Neville Ladduwahetty

Several prominent civil society members are opposing attempts of the Government to introduce revisions to the 13th Amendment. The issue is not whether there is merit or not in the contemplated revisions. The issue is that the constitutional procedures that need to be followed in the case of a Bill to amend/repeal provisions to the 13th Amendment or any matter set out in the Provincial Council List, makes progressive revisions a daunting undertaking. This makes the 13th Amendment a fetter to progress, and a trap from which the only escape is to repeal it altogether.

A Way Out of the 13th Amendment Trap by nelvelyv>

Now, It Is Thirteen Minus


By Dayan Jayatilleka -June 15, 2013 
Dr Dayan Jayatilleka
Colombo Telegraph“Machiavelli… brusquely remarks that a state undergoing these changes would fall victim to a stronger neighbour before it could have time to complete the cycle.” - Introduction to ‘Niccolo Machiavelli, Discourses on Livy’, University of Chicago Press, 1996, p. xxxviii
It is good of Prof GH Peiris (‘Prophesies on Sri Lanka’s Global Vulnerability: A Critique’, The Island, June 14-15, 2013) to “spell out the essence of [his] perceptions on the issue” of province-based devolution. He writes that: “I believe that any constitutional provision which conforms to or perpetuate the ‘Two Nation Theory’ and the idea of the northern and eastern parts of the island constituting an ‘exclusive traditional Tamil homeland’ is detrimental to the sovereignty and territorial integrity of the nation-state of Sri Lanka.”
NPC: Polls Chief to get down foreign monitors

http://www.caffesrilanka.org/images/3.jpg
15 June 2013
Elections Commissioner Mahinda Deshapriya today assured he would strive hard to obtain the services of foreign monitors for the Northern Provincial Council (NPC) Elections.

He gave this assurance to representatives of several opposition political parties when they met him at the Elections Secretariat.

United National Party (UNP) General Secretary Tissa Attanayake said the opposition parties were keen to obtain the services of monitors from the commonwealth union and elsewhere to control the use of state resources by the ruling United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA).

He said the polls chief had assured the political party representatives that it was possible to get down foreign monitors and to issue various directives with regard to use of state resources but insisted that the action he could take was limited under the present electoral laws.(YP & LSP)


Deputy Inspector-General Vaas Gunawardena, file image

Twitter Q&A with Secretary to the President

  June 15, 2013 
Lalith Weeratunga, Secretary to the President, will answer questions on a Twitter Q&A on Wednesday, 19 June, from 2:30 p.m. to 4:00 p.m. Sri Lanka time. The chat will take place via the official Twitter account of President Rajapaksa (@PresRajapaksa). Submit your questions with #AskLW. www.twitter.com/PresRajapaksa.

India And The 13th Amendment


By Rajiva Wijesinha -June 15, 2013
Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP
Colombo TelegraphI am grateful for the request to write about India and the 13th Amendmentbecause, while I have referred to the subject in different contexts, it would be useful to assess precisely what Indian priorities are, and how we should respond to these. In doing this, we should be clear about the principles involved –