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, August 2, 2013

President commends Thonda for reprimanding the Indian High Commissioner


thondaman 1Minister Arumugam Thondaman has created a stir in the Indian High Commission in Colombo recently when the Indian High Commissioner had not met with him immediately upon his arrival at the high commission, it is learnt.
The Indian High Commissioner was engaged in a discussion with representatives from the Up Country’s People’s Front, Digambaram’s party and Mano Ganeshan when Thondaman had made his way to the High Commission. The Minister had ordered the receptionist at the High Commission to immediately inform the High Commissioner of his arrival. The receptionist after informing the High Commissioner had requested the Minister to take a seat in the VIP room for a few minutes.
Angered by the request, Thondaman had shouted that he is Cabinet minister and that he was not willing to sit and wait until someone decides to speak to him. He had shouted in English and then walked out of the High Commission with his representative.
When Thondaman was leaving, the President had telephoned his mobile and said, “That’s right Thonda. What you did was right. Always safeguard the dignity of a Cabinet minister. We should not bend down for any one in our soil.”

However, Thondaman has got another appointment to meet the Indian High Commissioner through Provincial Councillor Senthil Thondaman. It is learnt that Thondaman had informed his supporters that despite the comments made by the President, it was only India and the Indian government they would have to depend on in times of trouble.

Politicos’ aversion to STF


Editorial-


People of Deraniyagala who have, at long last, plucked up the courage to rise against the criminal gangs led by some UPFA politicians following the brutal killing of a popular estate superintendent, are demanding that the Special Task Force (STF) be deployed in their area for their protection. They say they have lost their faith in the regular police. It may be wrong to tar all police personnel with the same brush as there are honest, efficient officers and men among them, but there has emerged irrefutable evidence that the criminals who terrorised Deraniyagala worked hand in glove with the police in the area.

Criminals enjoying government patronage often get away with their illegal operations because the ordinary people are too scared to give evidence against them. The situation has become so bad that a case where Tangalle PS Chairman (UPFA) Sampath Vidanapathirana and seven others have been charged with the murder of a British national and the rape of the victim’s girlfriend in 2011 has had to be shifted to Colombo from Tangalle in view of threats to witnesses, as the CID has told courts. This is a damning indictment of the government and the police, to say the least. In Puttalam, a female teacher, harassed by a provincial councillor who made her kneel down in full view of her colleagues and students, has complained to courts that she has come under threat. In Deraniyagala, too, criminals are trying to frighten witnesses into silence.

All government bigwigs who boast of having defeated terrorism and their khaki-clad lackeys must hang their heads in shame! This country has become a paradise for the pro-government criminals.

Meanwhile, Ministers John Seneviratne and Vasudeva Nanayakkara have taken umbrage at the deployment of the Special Task Force (STF) to prevent illegal gem mining in their home district, Ratnapura. They want that task assigned to the ordinary police in the area. We thought Minister Nanayakkara was a sensible politician!

True, an illegal gem miner fell into a pit and drowned while fleeing during a recent raid. How could the STF be blamed for that incident? The death of any man diminishes us, but the victim would not have met his fate if he had not violated the law. Illegal gem mining is a nuisance to the public and poses a serious threat to the environment. Ratnapura has come to be dubbed Kota Uda Nagaraya or the town on wooden props. For, underneath it lies a labyrinth of haphazardly excavated gem mining tunnels supported by logs and planks.

A few years ago we reported that the children of a school in Godakewela, also in the Ratnapura District, ran helter-skelter, scared out of their wits, as they felt the earth rumbling and shaking under their feet. Everybody panicked, thinking it was an earthquake. But, later, they realised that the sound emanated from a tunnel gem miners were digging under the school playground!

Abandoned deep gem pits brimming with water are ideal breeding places of mosquitoes and pose a danger to people and animals alike. Ratnapura teems with such death traps. Haphazard gem mining also causes severe erosion of river banks and triggers earth slips. Do the government politicians want these disastrous consequences overlooked because the culprits are their supporters?

The regular police are malleable and powerful politicians keep them under their thumb. That was why it took so long for the police to put an end to the Kahawatte killings. The psychopathic serial killers would still have been at large but for the special police teams dispatched from Colombo to take over investigations. Among those taken into custody are drug dealers with links to the UPFA. The STF is capable of acting independently to a considerable extent. Hence, the government politicians’ antipathy towards the police commandos deployed in their areas for special operations!

Only those on the wrong side of the law have reason to fear the STF. The law-abiding citizens have no problems with the elite paramilitary outfit which is the most potent weapon the police have at their disposal to combat organised crime. If politicians care to rein in their goons responsible for murders, robberies, extortion, narcotics trade, illegal gem mining, brewing hooch, running shebeens, land grabbing, illicit felling etc, then there will be absolutely no need for the police commandos to be deployed in their areas.

Is it that Ministers Seneviratne and Nanayakkara want the unauthorised gem miners handled with kid gloves by the lily-livered ordinary police so that the culprits could carry out their illegal operations unhindered?

Let the government be urged to retain the police commandos deployed in Ratnapura, where they are doing an excellent job, and deploy them in sufficient numbers in Deraniyagala in Kegalle to ensure the protection of the vulnerable public.
Australia grants political asylum to former SSP Prishantha Jayakody
[ Friday, 02 August 2013, 09:46.48 AM GMT +05:30 ]
It is reported that Australia has granted political asylum to former former SSP of Rathnapura division Mr. Prishantha Jayakody, sources said.
It is said that Mr. Jayakody's son is also living in Australia and he is also a police officer there.
However, Mr. Jayakody has obtained leave saying that he needs to go visit his son in Australia.
Although his leave period was over on the 10th July, he did not return to Sri Lanka.
And it is now being revealed that he was being pressurized unduely by the political authorities during his execution of police duties.

Cultivating a Partnership Culture of Compassion

Image from Lanka Standard
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 -1 Aug, 2013
As we lament the brutish culture that has taken root in our lovely paradise, it is interesting to delve deeper at the underlying physiology, norms and values that promote war and violence. Terror and violence stem from a macho alpha male driven culture. The current regime reeks of it – the rhetoric, the swagger of the politicians, the supporting monks, political off spring are all a testosterone driven overflow of sexual repression.
Our biology informs us of the stronger sexuality of a woman – her Yin essence is virtually inexhaustible where as man’s Yang energy has limitations.   The woman has to bear the strain of producing and nurturing children.  She is both emotionally and physically superior to do so, as she has a limbic capacity for unconditional love and compassion to carry and then nurture a helpless infant.
This superiority, as well as the woman’s infinite sexual capacity terrify and fascinate us men.
A mind that is not evolved, lacking of emotional and spiritual intelligence will be insecure with this biological fact.   This insecurity manifests itself in seeking physical, political, financial, intellectual and religious advantage over women.
Riane Eisler in her seminal book, The Chalice and the Blade goes back in history to examine how compulsive masculinity has wreaked havoc in our civilization.  She also points to times of peace in history when there were feminine, peaceful and compassionate values.
Eisler goes onto state that two contrasting social models – partnership and dominator – have affected our cultural evolution.    These are essentially two different ways of structuring the relations between the male and the female halves of humanity that profoundly affect the totality of a social system.[i]
Eisler describes times in history where a partnership culture – a true female-male alliance existed resulting in peaceful times.    Archaeological studies coupled with carbon dating technologies have unearthed civilizations that have lived in harmony for long periods.  They have lived without walled fortress cities, and evidenced by graves where men and women were buried as equals.
Contrast this to dominator periods where the cities were martial states led by strong violent men – their graves often adorned by pomp and design to show superiority in death as it was in life.   These were periods in history full of suffering, from invasions, wars and dominance over many by a few mean men.
David McClelland in his well researched book In Power: The Inner Experience states that periods of war or peace can be predicted by the writing, statements and rhetoric of the time.
Modern right wing ideologies like Bush’s America or Rajapakse’s Sri Lanka promotes masculine values which lead to injustices and inequalities illustrating a systemic relationship between male dominance, warfare and authoritarianism.
The current militarized nature of the country makes it difficult to imagine a shift towards apartnership culture.   The macho male dominance at the political level has permeated through the nation by glorifying the war.
Yet at the core, most Sri Lankans sit uncomfortably with this, having been for centuries the guardian of the most compassionate of religious teachings – hospitality, generosity and loving-kindness is embedded in the DNA of the people.   At the deeper level, Sri Lankans live apartnership culture.   Just that they are the silent majority.
The sad irony is that some of the very men who should be promoting compassion and a partnership culture, the Buddhist monks are exerting their repression through violence driven by fear and insecurity.   If they practiced what is core to the teaching – meditation and mindfulness, they may not behave this way.
It is also ironic that the West, realizing the folly of external gratification through material wealth driven through male dominance, is looking inward seeking meaning of life.  True to the West’s need for empirical proof, much research is done now on meditation and its impacts on the mind and the body.
The Center for Compassion and Altruism Research and Education (CCARE) at Stanford University School of Medicine founded in 2008 is one such institution conducting rigorous scientific studies on compassion and altruistic behaviour along with meditation and mindfulness.
A number of studies have now shown that a variety of compassion and “loving-kindness” meditation practices, derived out of traditional Buddhist practices, help cultivate compassion.  Sri Lankans knew that for 2500 years even though we are not leveraging that wisdom.
We may dream about a transformation – imagine if our arrogant politicians, their spoilt off spring and the xenophobic monks practiced mindfulness meditation, we may just see a transformation from the volatile nation with low social esteem, led by a few through fear, to celebrate what is inherent to being Sri Lankan – the smile, gentleness, hospitality, generosity, graciousness, all housed in a container of compassion and love – a true partnership culture.
It is better to conquer yourself than to win a thousand battles. Then the victory is yours. It cannot be taken from you, not by angels or by demons, heaven or hell. - Buddha

[i] Eisler Chalice and the Blade pp 105

US concerned about Weliveriya incident

FRIDAY, 02 AUGUST 2013
The United States said that it was ‘concerned’ about the violence in yesterdays protest and urged for restraint from all sides.

Following is the brief statement posted on its website.

The U.S. Embassy is concerned about the violence in yesterday’s protest in Weliweriya, and urges the Government of Sri Lanka to respect the rights of people to protest peacefully, and urges restraint from all sides.



Daya warns of new threats

August 1, 2013
daya
Newly appointed Army Commander Lieutenant General Daya Ratnayake has warned that as as the country heads towards political reconciliation, new forms of threats may emerge against national security.
Threats emanating from overseas separatist extremists are leading, the army media unit quoted him as saying after assuming duties today.
He said that in order to overcome these challenges, he believes the army should undergo a restructuring programme to suit to new technological needs and innovative strategies that would help to meet with those challenges, and similarly to enhance knowledge, using the sea of experience acquired from the battlefields.
Ratnayake said that a fully-fledged professional Army, rich with exemplary conduct and different skills at all levels that can face any challenge at anytime is the timely requirement.
“I visualize the need to follow a policy, based on national priorities, adopting a “preserve the good, discard the bad and acquire the new” approach while working in brotherhood and unity. Today’s army is not simply a labour force but a motivated, diverse and qualitatively productive, “human resource” and I firmly believe our human resource as a formidable strength could add a special value to national development as members from the most disciplined and well-organized workforce in the country,” added.
He also said that over a thousand soldiers have been deployed in UN peace-keeping missions and their service has been commended by both UN officers and other foreign officers.
“It is my intention to further expand this project and enable more and more members to serve such peace-keeping missions by implementing necessary plans while providing guidance and leadership in this direction,” he said.
He said that the army has come a long way not only in structure, numbers and military hardware, but also in professionalism and its reputation and sustaining the image and its dignity, gained through unparalleled sacrifice, is therefore the most sacred duty of every serving member.  (Colombo Gazette)

Court refuses to shut down Hayleys Weliweriya factory


August 2, 2013  
The Gampaha Magistrate yesterday refused to shut down the Hayleys Group glove making factory in Weliweriya which residents in the area are claiming has contaminated the ground water, even as the military was deployed last evening to disperse a major public demonstration over the issue.
The Magistrate said it cannot issue an order to close the factory in response to a report filed by the Gampaha Police. The Police are seeking the court’s assistance to determine whether the factory waste was the cause of the contamination of ground water resources in the area.  The military moved in last evening to disperse the residents’ protest which was blocking part of the Kandy Road at Balummahara. Several people were injured in the process, including journalists. 
Tense situation prompted Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa visit the scene yesterday. He also met with Hayleys Directors.
Residents have been protesting against the factory for days, demanding its closure and pure drinking water facilities from the authorities. Yesterday, a black flag protest was conducted in the area, with many shops and business enterprises shutting their doors for the day. At least 10 villages in the Gampaha District have been affected by the water crisis.
Four petitions were also filed in court yesterday regarding the contamination issue.
The Magistrate said that the claims were not sufficient to issue interim orders to shut down the factory. Reports will be submitted to court tomorrow on tests conducted to ascertain the cause of the contamination in the area.
In a filing to the Colombo Stock Exchange and released by the CSE yesterday, Dipped Products PLC said villagers in the area of Weliweriya have been engaging in a campaign to draw the attention of the relevant authorities with regards to the quality of their well water.
“Dipped Products is confident that according to technical reports and other research material available on water quality in the Weliveriya area, the said issue is in no way connected with our factory operations in Weliveriya. Although as a precautionary measure, the factory operations were suspended yesterday afternoon, the company hopes to resume operations at the earliest,” the DPL filing said.
“We further wish to inform that DPL is fully cooperating with the relevant Governmental authorities and other stakeholders for an early settlement of this matter,” it added.

Video: One dead, 15 injured in clash

THURSDAY, 01 AUGUST 2013 
One person, who was injured due to gunshot injuries during the clash between the army, police and protestors, succumbed to his injuries this evening at the Gamphaa Hospital, sources said.

They said that fifteen more persons are being treated at the Gampaha and Watupitiwala hospital.

Four more persons are currently receiving treatment for gunshot injuries.

The situation is currently regaining normalcy.
THURSDAY, 01 AUGUST 2013

Video: Ranil in Weliweriya

FRIDAY, 02 AUGUST 2013

Opposition Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe visited Weliweriya and the surrounding areas where the army is alleged to have assaulted unarmed villagers while they were demonstrating against the contamination of ground water.

UNP politicians including MPs John Amaratunga and Ruwan Wijewardena visited the area and spoke to some of the villagers who were alleged to have been assaulted by the army.

“We condemn what happened in the area,” Mr. Amaratunga said. Even the villagers who were inside St. Anthony’s Church, Weliweriya were also said to have been assaulted by the army.

“As a Catholic I feel sad at the manner in which the army had behaved inside the church,” Mr. Amaratunga said.

Meanwhile UNP MP Karu Jayasuriya addressing a news conference condemned the alleged attack on the villagers. “The people had only asked for water but the army responded with bullets,” Mr. Jayasuriya said.

He said according to the information they had received, villagers who were inside their houses and inside places of worship were also assaulted.

Daily Mirror reporters who were in the area said there were blood stains inside the church.

The Colombo Crime Division (CCD) are carrying out investigations. (Lakna Paranamana and Sarasi Paranamanna)

Witnesses say 1 dead, 15 hurt as Sri Lanka military shoots on protesters demanding clean water

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — One person has been killed and about 15 wounded when Sri Lanka’s military shot at protesters demanding clean drinking water, according to television footage and demonstrators.
The shooting happened Thursday evening in Weliweriya, 12 miles (20 kilometers) northeast of the capital, Colombo, when more than 4,000 protesters had gathered to demand action after chemical emissions from a factory had polluted drinking water in about 15 local villages, said one protester, who spoke on condition of anonymity, fearing reprisals.
Residents have been demanding for more than a month that authorities close the factory, the protester said.
He said police used tear gas to break up the protest, but when protesters clashed with police, the army shot at them. He said soldiers shot at some protesters as they tried to flee.
Military spokesman Brig. Ruwan Wanigasooriya said Friday that the army did not aim their guns at the protesters but shot in the air to disperse them. He said “people with other agendas” were behind the protesters and had armed them with firearms and petrol bombs. He did not say who the instigators were or what their motives were.
However, footage from a local television station showed soldiers shooting at running protesters. One scene shows a wounded man being dragged away by another. Another man appears to be hit by a bullet while he tries to rescue a man lying on the ground.
Protesters are shown hurling rocks at the army.
Police spokesman Buddika Siriwardene confirmed that one person had died and 15 were hospitalized but declined to comment on the nature of the injuries.
Siriwardene said the situation arose because protesters blocked a main road, obstructing traffic, despite agreeing with authorities to call off the demonstrations until investigations into the possible chemical leak were complete.
He said the demonstrators struck police with stones and bottles.
Reporters said soldiers beat up several reporters and photographers covering the incident and smashed their cameras.
Kanchana Dissanayake, editor of Sinhala-language “Ada” (Today), said a photographer from the newspaper was admitted to a hospital after being beaten by soldiers.
Human rights activists have accused the Sri Lankan government of reacting sharply to any opposition to its rule since defeating Tamil Tiger rebels in May 2009, ending a nearly three-decade civil war.
The incident is the third in two years in Sri Lanka where police or military have used firearms on protesters. In 2011, a factory worker was shot dead during a demonstration, and in 2012 police shot and killed a fisherman who was protesting against rising fuel prices.
Copyright 2013 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

WELIWERIYA, GAMPAHA: BLACK THURSDAY 2013

Photo courtesy Colombo Telegraph
weliweriya
Groundviews
Who deployed troops, clad in flak jackets (body armour) and armed with T-56 assault rifles to confront and disperse a crowd of protestors blocking a highway? Who was the ultimate decision-maker? The protestors were not armed, certainly not with lethal weapons. Therefore, no real harm could have come to soldiers in body armour. A ‘clash’ between lethally armed soldiers and protestors with stones and slippers is not a clash that warrants in any way, the use of lethal force.
The crucial question must then be posed: who gave the order for a military unit armed with deadly force to be deployed against an unarmed civic protest, in a situation where the normal law prevails and a state of Emergency has not been declared because it was manifestly not warranted? What was the chain of command responsibility? Why was the task not left to the riot police? The question of who gave the order to shoot and for what reasons is a secondary one.
I find it impossible to believe, that on his first day as Army commander, the able and sophisticated Gen Daya Ratnayake, a thinking soldier, would have made this decision. I find it no less implausible that Mahinda Rajapaksa, whose mode for decades has been to use the strengths of his personality for dialogue and dissembling, to charm Southern constituencies, would have opted for martial methods, at the commencement of an election campaign. So the mystery remains, if mystery it is.
What was the logic of sending in troops? Why were they wearing body armour? Why were they carrying T-56 assault rifles? Since when are troops sent in crowd control situations in which there are men, woman, children and clergymen, none of whom have been spotted as carrying lethal weapons? It is not as if the protestors were tossing Molotov cocktails at the police who could therefore not control the crowd.
What are the implications of the decision to deploy troops with assault rifles, when there is no State of Emergency? Is it that the army will henceforth be used against unarmed demonstrators in the South? In an earlier step on the escalation ladder, the STF had been used, against a protest by fisher-folk. Specialised army units were then used to suppress, with an entirely one sided result and massive casualties, a prison riot. Now the army has been deployed against unarmed demonstrators in the South or shall we say the non-former conflict zones.
Ah, but could it have been a conspiracy against the country? Doesn’t the shooting come just on the first of the very month that UN High Commissioner for Human Rights visits Sri Lanka, in fact just three weeks before the visit? Could it not been a force hostile to Sri Lanka that spread the rumour of toxic waste, brainwashed the protestors into excessive concern about the quality of their drinking water and the health of their children, bribed them into protesting on the streets, and armed them lethally with slippers and stones? Perhaps it was all part of an Arab Spring ‘regime change’ strategy—the crucial move of which was to send in the indispensable ingredient for the crime: troops with assault rifles and body armour. Thus we must be unafraid to ask ourselves whether it was the CIA, the NSA, the RAW, the ‘13A Nazis’, the Halal imposing Koran thumpers, Justice Wigneswaran, Karunanidhi and Jeyalalitha, or Fr Emmanuel and Lawrence Rudrakumaran who gave the order.
How will the world view Sri Lanka after the events of yesterday? Having known and sparred successfully in defence of our country’s sovereignty with two, not just one, UN High Commissioners for Human Rights – Louise Arbour and Navi Pillay—I can say with confidence and dismay, that Weliweriya would only substantiate the call for an international inquiry and the demand for the opening of an office of the High Commissioner in Sri Lanka. When I opposed it in 2007-2009, we could credibly claim to hold the moral high ground since we were fighting a fascistic foe. The demonstrators in Weliweriya who faced lethal force hardly fall into the same category as the suicide-terrorist Tigers and therefore our refusal of an office of the High Commissioner to monitor human rights abuses would lack the moral credibility it once had.
The obvious observations will be, if this is how the State authorities treat unarmed Sinhalese, largely Buddhist civilian men, women and children who are protesting against polluted water, how must that state have treated the Tamils in the closing stages of the war? How could authorities who didn’t care about possible casualties when sending in armed troops into unarmed crowds, care enough about Tamil civilians in the last days of and the morning after the war? If Weliweriya demonstrates the policy of the State and how the forces of the state behave towards the Sinhalese, how must they have conducted themselves in the North and East for thirty years and how must they be functioning in the former conflict zones today?
The argument of national sovereignty as currently deployed by the state and its ideologues, has a hole shot through it after the Gampaha killing. National sovereignty and popular sovereignty are twins. National/state sovereignty refers to external threats, those from outside our borders, and does not confer license to override popular sovereignty, the sovereignty of the citizen, most especially in a state constitutionally defined and designated a democratic Republic since 1972.
Coming in the run-up to the Northern Provincial Council election, the question cannot but be posed as to whether the Establishment which sent lethally armed soldiers to confront a crowd of unarmed civilians in the Gampaha district yesterday, will do otherwise, or deploy less force, if faced with peaceful protests over, let us say, issues of land seizure in the North. What if school-children, nuns, or elected members of the Provincial Council are shot or disappeared? Will that not trigger a surge in Tamil Nadu, followed by a demarche from Delhi in an election year? Will this not open the road to R2P?
30 years after Black July 83, a disturbing thought strikes me: Was Kuttimani right when he said 30 years ago, in his final speech in the Colombo High Court– months before he was slaughtered in Welikada jail– that the brutal methods used in Gurunagar army camp would come home to the south one day?
[Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka was Sri Lanka’s Ambassador/Permanent Representative to the United Nations in Geneva 2007-9 and Vice–President of the United Nations Human Rights Council, 2007-2008] 

Thursday, August 1, 2013

Facing Death Threats Ahead Of Visit To Commonwealth Meeting


By Callum Macrae -August 1, 2013 
Callum Macrae
Colombo TelegraphWhen you announce that you are going to apply for media accreditation for a routine international political event like the bi-annual Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) you don’t normally expect a rash of death threats – or to find a senior diplomat from the host country threatening on twitter that he will “make sure you don’t get a visa”.
But this year’s CHOGM is no ordinary event.  It is being held in Sri Lanka – whose government is accused of some of the worst war crimes of this century.  A country marked today by increasing repression of its Tamil minority and a brutal clamp-down on any government critics, particularly among the press and the judiciary.
When David Cameron controversially announced that he would be attending CHOGM despite calls for a boycott, Alistair Burt, the foreign minister with responsibility for Sri Lanka, went on record to say:  “We will make it clear to the Sri Lanka Government that we expect them to guarantee full and unrestricted access for international press covering CHOGM”
The omens for that “guarantee” do not look good.
I have now directed three films looking at the events of the last few months of the civil war.  The first two were commissioned and broadcast by Channel 4, building on the work of Channel 4 News.  The latest, effectively the culmination of three years of investigation, is No Fire Zone: the Killing Fields of Sri Lanka, a 93 minute feature documentary, supported by C4, BRITDOC and others. The films have had a huge impact, winning a number of awards, being cited by the UN and even seeing the team nominated for the Nobel Peace Prize.
We shall see – and the world’s press will now, I hope, be watching very carefully.
*Callum Macrae – Director - No Fire Zone: the Killing Fields of Sri Lanka, www.nofirezone.org Twitter: @nofirezonemovie

CHOGM dictates moderation to  the Rajapaksa administration


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By Harim Peiris-July 31, 2013


The Rajapaksa administration is gearing up to host the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting (CHOGM) later this year, in November. Last weekend’s newspapers carried an interesting comment attributed to President Rajapaksa that his government must be cautious that it does not face a repeat of history of a previous SLFP government, under Madam Sirimavo Bandaranaike, which also very successfully hosted a significant international conference, the Non Aligned Movements’ (NAM) heads of government summit in 1976 but thereafter comprehensively lost the general elections, shortly thereafter in 1977. The SLFP did not come back from the political wilderness for seventeen long years, until under former President Chandrika Kumaratunga the SLFP led People’s Alliance, in 1994 defeated the UNP. A state of affairs which except for a brief and rather unsuccessful co-habitation experience for two years in 2002 and 2003, continues nineteen years hence, of which the past seven years have been under President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Fight For Clean Water Turns Deadly: Army Fires On Weliweriya Demonstrators


Sri Lanka: No Justice in Aid Worker Massacre
Sri Lanka: No Justice in Aid Worker Massacre
JULY 31, 2013
The Rajapaksa government is good at throwing bones to the international community, but not at taking serious measures to find and punish those responsible for serious abuses. If the families of 17 aid workers can’t get justice for their loss, it’s hard to be hopeful for anyone else.
James Ross, legal and policy director
HRW(New York) – The Sri Lankan government has made no real progress in holding accountable those responsible for the execution style slaying of 17 aid workers seven years ago despite renewed international calls for action.

On August 4, 2006, gunmen executed 17 Sri Lankan aid workers – 16 ethnic Tamils, four of them women, and a Muslim – with the Paris-based international humanitarian agency Action Contre La Faim (Action Against Hunger, ACF) in their office compound in the town of Mutur in eastern Trincomalee district. The killings occurred after a several-day battle between government forces and the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) for control of the town. The ACF team had been providing assistance to survivors of the December 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.