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 23, 2013

UN rights chief stays open-minded ahead of Sri Lanka trip

Reuters

NEW DELHI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The United Nations human rights chief said on Friday she has an "open mind" and will not be "pre-judging anything" ahead of her first trip to Sri Lanka, which is under growing pressure from the international community to address alleged war crimes.

Investigate Militarization, Settlements And The Systematic Rape Of Tamil POWs – Global Citizens Writes Pillay

Colombo TelegraphAugust 24, 2013 
“Over 30 activists, human rights campaigners, lawyers and academics from Europe, Australia, New Zealand, India, and South Africa have signed onto a letter that brings her attention to the most immediate threats to peace and justice in Sri Lanka today. Tamil organizations, irrespective of their ideological differences, have signed under the broad banner of the Canadian Peace Alliance” says the Canadian Peace Alliance.
We publish below the letter in full;
Dear Dr. Pillay,
With your visit to Sri Lanka from August 25th-31st, we urge you, as global citizens concerned with the deteriorating situation in the island, to investigate militarization, settlements, and the systematic rape of Tamil prisoners of war. These three issues, the most immediate threats to peace and justice today, lay new seeds of dispossession, inequality and bitterness. Ultimately, an international investigation cannot delink the 2009 massacres from the ongoing suffering of the Tamil people in the here and now.
Navi Pillay
The Sri Lankan army is building military bases throughout the Tamil peoples’ lands. The Sri Lankan army presence of 85,000-86,000 in the North and East is contrary to peace building and amounts to a Tamil civil society under occupation. According to ground reports, armed soldiers control every area of civilian life from schooling to public meetings; soldiers even place restrictions on humanitarian, developmental and psychiatric work for the war ravaged Tamil peoplei.
Through the occupation, the Sri Lankan Armed Forces seize land from Tamil civilians while settlers from the South are brought in to colonize the land. From the Jaffna Peninsula in the North to the Trincomalee harbor and beyond in the East, the traditional homeland of the Tamil Nation is subjected to occupation and settlements. This situation exacerbates socio-economic deprivation, for Tamil people are denied the ability to cultivate their appropriated lands and must compete for fishing with the superior technology of Sinhalese settlers.                                 Read More

Cloud over sections of the military: US


  • US Govt. calls for credible investigations into allegations against military personnel to clear their record
  • Senior Army officials rejected for US training because of “credible allegations” against them
  • US cites State Department Report, UN Panel of Experts findings and additional sources as basis for vetting Lankan troops
  • Under Leahy Vetting laws, eligibility criteria for US military training directly linked to accountability: Embassy official
  • Says ineligibility is not permanent, can be reversed if credible investigation clears implicated military personnel
  • Hopes Lanka will seek Pillay’s expertise to formulate credible investigative mechanism
  • Former Army Chief says Army’s 53, 57 Divisions facing issues; likely to resurface until problems are cleared
By Dharisha Bastians-August 23, 2013 

By Eric Ellis -
Eric Ellis
Sri Lanka’s paradise betrayed by monks, thugs and smugglers 
Four years after its brutal victory over Tamil Tiger rebels that ended a 26-year-long civil war, Sri Lanka’s Sinhalese-led government is at pains to persuade the world that it has at last brought peace and unity to this troubled island. And the captain of the flag-carrying SriLankan Airlines flight 423 from Bangkok seems keen to do his national bit.
Easing his Airbus over the tea-studded plantations of the island’s central highlands for the approach into Colombo, the pilot primes those on board for landing.
“A warm welcome to Paradise for all our passengers….” he cheerfully intones in a voice as rich as the coconut curries ‘Mother Lanka’ is famous for. “That is, welcome to Paradise Regained.”
Which Sri Lanka certainly is if you’ve holidayed on its hedonistic beaches – arguably Asia’s most divine. It’s also been a political Shangri-La for the many members of the triumphalist Rajapaksa clan crowding government ranks, led by President Mahinda Rajapaksa and three of his brothers. They’ve ruled Sri Lanka since 2005 and, in South Asia’s dynastic style, are now positioning the family for yet another generation at the top. Ditto for the ruling brotherhood’s business cronies and military chums, as they pile into cosy government sinecures and the lucrative reconstruction deals that are spurring a modest economic surge now that the guns have been silenced in the Tamil north.
Read more in the The Globalmail
*Eric Ellis is an award-winning journalist who writes about the politics, economics and societies of South and South-East Asia. He has written for a range of international journals; Fortune Magazine, Forbes, the Financial Times, Time Magazine, The Times, The Bulletin/Newsweek, The Spectator,Institutional Investor, Euromoney, The Sydney Morning Herald, The Age, The Australian Financial Review and the International Herald Tribune.
Other stories;

How Not To Win A War

The Global Mail - Independent Journalism for Independent Minds
Four years after its brutal victory over Tamil Tiger rebels that ended a 26-year-long civil war, Sri Lanka’s Sinhalese-led government is at pains to persuade the world that it has at last brought peace and unity to this troubled island. And the captain of the flag-carrying SriLankan Airlines flight 423 from Bangkok seems keen to do his national bit.
Easing his Airbus over the tea-studded plantations of the island’s central highlands for the approach into Colombo, the pilot primes those on board for landing.
“A warm welcome to Paradise for all our passengers….” he cheerfully intones in a voice as rich as the coconut curries ‘Mother Lanka’ is famous for. “That is, welcome to Paradise Regained.”
Which Sri Lanka certainly is if you’ve holidayed on its hedonistic beaches – arguably Asia’s most divine. It’s also been a political Shangri-La for the many members of the triumphalist Rajapaksa clan crowding government ranks, led by President Mahinda Rajapaksa and three of his brothers. They’ve ruled Sri Lanka since 2005 and, in South Asia’s dynastic style, are now positioning the family for yet another generation at the top. Ditto for the ruling brotherhood’s business cronies and military chums, as they pile into cosy government sinecures and thelucrative reconstruction deals that are spurring a modest economic surge now that the guns have been silenced in the Tamil north.
But, as The Global Mail examines in this series on post-war Sri Lanka, the notion of paradise is moot for many on the island, particularly those who aren’t tourists, or lavishing at the Rajapaksas’ teat. Nor is post-war Sri Lanka a reconciled arcadia for many in its Muslim and Tamil communities.
PEOPLE SMUGGLING IS A LUCRATIVE TRADE, AND THERE’S NO CERTAINTY THAT AUSTRALIA’S “PNG SOLUTION” WILL STEM THE EXODUS, AMID SUSPICIONS THAT COLOMBO REGULATES THE BOAT CONVOYS LIKE A SPIGOT.
War’s end has unleashed a rampant Sinhalese nationalism that has many of the country’s Tamils – a community numbering around 15 per cent of the 21 million population – fearful that they are being subjected to a generational ethnic cleansing, a “structural genocide” as one Tamil community leader puts it, by a Sinhalese Buddhist regime they believe wants to breed centuries of Hindu-Tamil culture off the island.
Across the Tamil north-east, Colombo’s intimidating military has established scores of new military bases on seized lands. Australian government-sponsored billboards here warn desperate locals from fleeing on boats, but it’s a tough sell. There’s no certainty that Kevin Rudd’s “PNG solution” will much stem the exodus, amid suspicions that Colombo regulates the boat convoys like a spigot — opening the refugee valve whenever the Rajapaksas want to send a back-off message to their foreign critics.
There’s anxiety also among Sri Lanka’s Muslims, who make up 10 per cent of the population. Tamil-speakers who descend from Arabs who traded and settled here from the 7th Century, they’ve been a neutral voice of moderation in island affairs, caught between Sinhalese and Tamils in the decades of conflict. But many Sri Lankan Muslims now feel victimised, threatened by an outbreak of base chauvinism they believe has been unleashed by the Rajapaksas, who draw their support from the semi-literate rural poor of the Buddhist Sinhalese south. Buddhist-led hate groups are also proliferating online, while organised mobs have attacked Muslim targets, as in the August 10 assault on a Colombo mosque. More than 30 attacks by militant Buddhists on Muslim interests have been reported in the past two years.
As the Rajapaksas muzzle dissenting voices in civil society, and the media too, which has seen independent newspapers neutered, and journalists intimidated, forced into exile and even killed, Sinhalese moderates and intellectuals fret that the values and liberties of their unique multicultural ‘masala society’ are being eroded – that South Asia’s only uninterrupted post-colonial democracy is being turned into a dynastic ‘mafia state’.
HEADER IMAGE: LAKRUWAN WANNIARACHCHI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

Tamil parliamentarians protest against Sinhalicisation in Batticaloa

TamilNet[TamilNet, Thursday, 22 August 2013, 22:54 GMT]
Tamil National Alliance (TNA) parliamentarians in Batticaloa staged a peaceful protest in front of Paddippazhai Divisional Secretariat (DS) on Wednesday against the Sinhalicisation of Paduvaankarai, Kevu'liyaa-madu and Puluk-kunaavi. The SL police, operated by Colombo, was telling the protesters to leave the site arguing that a group led by the Buddhist prelate of Batticaloa Mangalarama vihara was coming to the site to stage a counter-protest. However, Tamil parliamentarians objected the explanation by the SL police and held the protest for one hour as planned. 

Following the protest by the Tamil parliamentarians, the Buddhist prelate of Batticaloa Mangalarama vihara came to the divisional secretariat with Sinhala encroachers and the officers of the occupying SL military to hand over an appeal to the divisional secretary not to block construction of houses to Sinhala settlers. 

Tamil protesters questioned why the divisional secretary had failed to evict the encroachers from the lands they were occupying. Was this due to the pressure exerted on the DS by the occupying government, they questioned. 

Protest in East


One of the placards held by the Tamil protesters questioned: “Is the Law in the hands of the Governor, Minister, Buddhist monks or the agents [of SL State]?” 

“Do not support land appropriation for posts,” another placard urged the officials in the civil administration, while some other placards stated: “Take legal action against encroachers”, “Do not violate law” and “Justice should prevail”. 

TNA parliamentarians of the Batticaloa district Messrs P. Selvarasa, P. Ariyanethran and C.Yogeswaran, provincial councilors R.Thurairatnam, Prasanna Indrakumar, Thurairajasingham, Krishnapillai, Nadarasa and Karunakaran participated in the protest. 

Protest in East
Protest in East

Ramifications Of UNHRC Chief’s Visit

By Pearl Thevanayagam -August 23, 2013 
Pearl Thevanayagam
Colombo TelegraphThis piece is rather a lengthy one intended for those observing UNHRC Chief Navi Pillai’s schedule in Sri Lanka for five days starting Sunday, August 25,1013.
Her visit should not be taken lightly. Whether the government likes it or not, she is after all the last word on what the future holds for the Rajapaksa Government and would sift through with a fine tooth-comb on what went on during the last stages of the war in 2008/2009.
She comes armed with enough tangible evidence of government soldiers committing rape, murder and torture on Tamil civilians fleeing for their lives caught between the advancing army and the stubborn LTTE which was using them as human shields. She would take the accusations of  the majority Sinhala government’s unleashing so much horror on Tamil civilians akin to Nazi Germany’s treatment of Jews and the following holocaust on par with ethnic cleansing of the Tamil population.
Then there is the complicated situation where the LTTE were said to be shooting fleeing civilians point-blank on the back according to eye-witness accounts of those who managed to enter army controlled areas and NGOs present. Would the government who is succouring active LTTE members now and rehabilitating them allow Ms Pillai unfettered access to these witnesses?
Could Ms Pillai garner evidence from former army chief  Sarath  Fonseka and the other military chiefs who conducted the dastardly operation from the frontline which killed 40,000 or more innocent Tamils?
The government would argue it conducted humanitarian relief for the fleeing Tamil civilians from the clutches of the LTTE. It has yet to prove this was the case. Even Bell Pottinger, an upbeat advertising firm engaged by the government at an enormous expense could not stop the salvos thrown in the direction of the government by international NGOS and media that the government was bent on eugenics annihilating Tamils to carve an exclusive conclave of a Sinhala Buddhist island.Read More

UN rights chief stays open-minded ahead of Sri Lanka trip

Reuters

NEW DELHI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - The United Nations human rights chief said on Friday she has an "open mind" and will not be "pre-judging anything" ahead of her first trip to Sri Lanka, which is under growing pressure from the international community to address alleged war crimes.

Navi Pillay, who arrives in Sri Lanka on August 25 for a week, is the first senior U.N. official to visit the country since the end of a nearly three-decade-long bloody conflict in 2009, despite Colombo extending an invitation to the body more than two years ago.
The Sri Lankan government, which defeated separatist Tamil Tiger rebels, has faced criticism for not doing enough to bring to justice those responsible for rights abuses and to foster reconciliation in the polarised nation.
The U.N. Human Rights Council urged the Indian Ocean island in a March resolution to carry out credible investigations into the deaths and disappearances of thousands of people. Many Western nations, including Britain and Canada, have also demanded an independent probe.
"I want to see for myself the reconstruction and rehabilitation effort, but also what progress is being made towards accountability and reconciliation," U.N. Human Rights Commissioner Pillay, a South African national of Indian Tamil origin, told Thomson Reuters Foundation in an email interview.
"I am not pre-judging anything. There are clearly plenty of issues to discuss, including some worrying ones, and some more positive developments. I am going with an open mind and I plan to give a balanced preliminary assessment of my own impressions at the end of my visit," she added.
As many as 40,000 civilians were killed in the last months of the conflict, as government troops advanced on the last stronghold of the rebels fighting for an independent homeland, a U.N. panel said in 2011.
It blamed both Sri Lankan troops and the Tamil Tigers for atrocities, but said the army was mostly responsible.
Colombo has rejected the allegations and resisted pressure to allow an independent commission to investigate its military, saying a wide range of recommendations made by its own body, the Lessons Learnt Reconciliation Commission (LLRC), are being implemented.
AID WORKER AND STUDENT DEATHS
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa has in recent weeks established a commission to investigate disappearances and criminal proceedings have begun against 12 elite police commandos who are suspects in the high-profile killing of five Tamil students during the war.
The government also plans to hold polls in the former war zone next month to help reconciliation efforts and has invited election observers from the Commonwealth and South Asian nations.
Pillay said she wanted to find out more about the commission and discuss what was being done about the massacre of 17 aid workers from the charity Action Contre La Faim (ACF) seven years ago.
"I will be interested to learn more about the plans for this commission, as well as long overdue investigations into the killings of the ACF staff and of the five students on the beach in Trincomalee which also took place in 2006," she said.
"I would like to see similar investigations into other grave violations of human rights that remain unresolved in Sri Lanka," Pillay added.
Colombo says it has been unfairly vilified by some sections of the international community and suggests that a powerful propaganda lobby of separatist Tamil groups based overseas is responsible for many of the allegations.
Sri Lanka's foreign minister earlier this week urged that the country be given the "space and opportunity" to move forward with the reconciliation process without "excessive pressure from abroad."
"Nobody must think that there has been any attempt on the part of the government to sweep unpleasant things under the carpet. That has not been the case," G. L. Peiris told journalists at a briefing in New Delhi on Sunday.
"It has taken time to collect the evidence, because it was a difficult task due to the violent conditions that prevailed in the country at that time. It was not a lack of political will."
"FOG OF DELUSION"
Pillay's visit comes ahead of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in November, and observers say Sri Lanka will be hoping her findings help Rajapaksa gain more credibility overseas on human rights issues.
During her visit, Pillay will travel to the war-ravaged Northern and Eastern Provinces, and is expected to meet with government officials, opposition parties, civil society groups as well as survivors of the conflict.
She will also be looking into reports of violent attacks on religious minorities and assessing freedom of expression and assembly, the difficulties faced by the media and human rights defenders, the independence of the judiciary and political participation.
Pillay will provide a spoken update on Sri Lanka to the Human Rights Council in September, and a full formal report in March 2014, in accordance with the resolution adopted by the Council earlier this year.
Foreign Minister Peiris said the government was looking forward to Pillay's visit.
"We hope that the exposure that she will have for the first time ... will make it possible for her to adopt a realistic and objective approach to the situation in Sri Lanka," said Peiris.

"We encourage people to come and see for themselves rather than being guided by propaganda. So let us cut through this fog of delusion and deception and get to the truth of the matter and what better way of doing it than to come and see."

The SAMAGI agreement against Executive Presidency

samagi 23 08 2013 1The conventional public agreement regarding the abolition of the 18h amendment, re-instating the 17th amendment and thereby strengthening the independence of the state institutions, establishing a new constitution protecting the rights of all the people in the country, was signed by its parties today (22) in the evening.
The agreement which Opposition leader Ranil Wickramasinghe along with other opposition political leaders and civil organizations is as follows..

The Ariya Sinhala Suit: A Plea For Clarification


By Robert Siddharthan Perinbanayagam -August 24, 2013 
Prof. R.S.Perinbanayagam
Colombo TelegraphIn recounting one of his heroic deeds  in a recent article in a newspaper, a government servant describes one of his contacts as wearing an “Ariya Sinhala suit”. I have seen this description of a particular style of clothing in other accounts as well.
What  exactly is an Ariya Sinhala suit? What is the origin of this form of dress and the provenance of this concept ? Did it originate with  what our history books call “the Ariyan immigration”? Did Vijaya and  his associates wear the Ariya Sinhala suit, since he was of course the first Aryan? Did they however wear  the bifurcated pajama which originated in Iran before ot migrated to other places? Incidentally what did the young prince’s first inamorata, the beautiful, and according to all accounts, quite irresistible Kuvenie wear? Was she clothed at all? Is an Ariya Sinhala  suit only worn by those to the manner born to be Ariyas? If the dravidians wear some version of  it does it then  become a Dravidian suit?
I wish some of the learned contributors to this website will explain the term,and its historical and sociological origins as well  describe its stylistic features.

Surge Of Tamil Nadu In Vehicle And Ancillaries Manufacture


Colombo TelegraphBy S.Sivathasan -August 23, 2013 
S.Sivathasan
Delivery of nearly 1.7 million vehicles a year, consisting of passenger cars and other types is the current performance in Tamil Nadu. By 2016, a figure of 2 million will be reached or surpassed. Most of the plants are clustered in Chennai. Adding strength to  manufacture of vehicles, is the fabrication of components. Another stream helping in high performance is the production of tyres. Tamil Nadu is now the automobile capital and the tyre capital of India. Together with components, where too she is foremost, an eminent position has been reached. In vehicle exports TN has an enviable share ranking first among the states. For vehicles  and components 35 percent in revenue is reported. With all these constituents, TN has emerged as the auto hub of India.
Attractions for Investment
From the fifties, Tamil Nadu (TN) enjoyed a reputation as one of the few well administered states of India. The Centre and the state being of the same political hue, they moved in tandem. On this account there was substantial funding from the centre for infrastructure and for industrialization. There was encouraging investment from other states as well. The most profound change in governmental policy came about in 1991 with liberalization and dismantling of much of license control constrictions. TN was advanced enough to profit by it and investment friendly policies came to be in place. They gave a spur to FDI and to the advent of MNCs, foreign technology and of personnel
With the green signal of liberal land allocation and fiscal incentives, discussions were initiated in 1995 for Ford and Hyundai to set up two major factories in proximity to Chennai. By late nineties they were on stream and both recorded remarkable performance. They became the template for other automobile investments to follow. Other prestigious names were BMW, Renault-Nissan Alliance and Mitsubishi. Except for the sixth, the other five have been on the growth mode ever since their inception.        Read More

Navi Pillay signals balanced preliminary assessment as Rajapaksa continues LLRC-farce

TamilNet[TamilNet, Friday, 23 August 2013, 16:41 GMT]
The AFP, Press Trust of India (PTI) and The New Indian Express on Friday gave significance to a story originating from Colombo that SL President Mahinda Rajapaksa on Friday ‘bifurcated’ the SL Defense Ministry, which has been in-charge of the police as well as the three armed forces, by bringing the Police under a new ministry. In reality, the announcement is just a farce as both Defence Ministry and the newly created ‘Law and Order’ ministry remain under the same powerful minister who is none other than the SL President himself. Former Chief of Staff of the genocidal SL military, Major General (retd) Nanda Mallawarachchi is to be the Secretary of the new ‘police’ ministry. Both the PTI and the New Indian Express reports have also noted that the LLRC had recommended the SL government to exclude the police from the Defence Ministry's control. 

In the meantime, Ms Navi Pillay in an e-mail interview to Thomson Reuters Foundation on Friday, said that she has an “open mind” and will not be “pre-judging anything” ahead of her visit to the island.

"I want to see for myself the reconstruction and rehabilitation effort, but also what progress is being made towards accountability and reconciliation," U.N. Human Rights Commissioner Pillay was telling the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

"I am not pre-judging anything. There are clearly plenty of issues to discuss, including some worrying ones, and some more positive developments. I am going with an open mind and I plan to give a balanced preliminary assessment of my own impressions at the end of my visit," she added.

Informed diplomatic sources in Colombo said key foreign missions of the West were busy in behind-the-scene negotiations with the representatives of the Sri Lankan State and that Ms Navi Pillay's interview was an expected gesture extended to the Sri Lankan State in order to create a ‘conducive environment’ for her visit to the island. 

Ms Navi Pillay is scheduled to provide a ‘spoken update’ to Human Rights Council Session in September and a full fledged ‘formal report’ in March 2014, while the US-tabled, India-fine tuned, UNHRC resolution upholding the LLRC has been rejected outright by Tamils and has been severely criticized by the global human rights groups.

Sri Lanka removes police from defence control

A Sri Lankan police officer keeps watch at parliament in Colombo on May 31, 2013. Sri Lanka's president has bowed to international pressure and relinquished the defence ministry's authority over the police department, an official said Friday. (AFP/File)
Fox News - Fair & Balancedphoto_1377271663796-1-HD.jpg
COLOMBO (AFP) –  Sri Lanka's president has bowed to international pressure and relinquished the defence ministry's authority over the police department, an official said Friday.
President Mahinda Rajapakse has created a new ministry for law and order, and placed it in charge of the 80,000-strong police which had been overseen by the defence ministry for the past nine years.
"The president has issued a gazette notification creating the ministry of Law and Order which will be responsible for the police department," the President's spokesman Mohan Samaranayake said.
There was no government explanation for setting up the new ministry, but an official source who declined to be named said the move was in line with the recommendation of a panel to improve the island's rights record.
The panel, which probed the final stages of the island's decades-long Tamil separatist war, recommended in November 2011 that the police department be de-linked from the defence ministry. This was strongly backed by rights groups and the international community.
The latest government move comes ahead of a visit to the island by the United Nations human rights chief Navi Pillay following two Human Rights Council resolutions censuring the island over its rights record.
Sri Lankan troops declared an end to 37 years of ethnic war after wiping out the leadership of the Tamil Tiger rebels in May 2009.
Sri Lanka has resisted international pressure for an independent investigation into war crimes despite what the UN calls "credible allegations" of up to 40,000 civilians killed in the final battles in 2009.
Instead it has conducted a number of its own probes into disappearances and extrajudicial killings during the conflict, which have resulted in few prosecutions or convictions.
Sri Lanka has maintained its forces did not kill civilians while battling Tigers who were known for suicide bombings.

Some Notes On Moors Religious Exlusivism

By Imtiyaz Razak -August 23, 2013 |
Dr.Imtiyaz Razak
Colombo TelegraphI would like to sketch some points about Moors to help readers to understand the trend. Note that I am neither hired by external forces, as some alledged, to criticize Moors nor do I hate my own community so I criticize it.
As I pointed on my facebook wall “We need to be critical of our own choices and paths. I know well about my own community, when we think that we are the perfect and others are always bad, we actually contribute to tensions. it is the time for Muslims to revisit their actions for better,… what we all need is space for self-critical. It is hard to get that done, but it should be done to promote peace at popular level. Failure from our parts helps political actors both at home and abroad. I love my country-Sri Lanka. This is the only space I can call confidently as MY country despite my deep respect and love for both China and the US.
Moors of Sri Lanka have been winning significant socio-cultural concessions from the successive governments since the organized rise of ethnic tensions between the Tamils and Sinhalese. These concessions from state were made possible due to Moor political elites’ explicit cooperation with Sinhala ruling elites. Introduction of the market economy by former President JR. Jayewardene opened the way for poor Muslims to seek jobs and other opportunities in the Middle Eastern countries. There was increase flow among Muslims of Sri Lanka, especially economically weaker sections of Moors to Saudi Arabia and other Middle Eastern countries from the North and East and other parts of Sri Lanka.  On the other hand, Sri Lanka also experienced growth of tensions and conflict beyond the Tamil-Sinhala. Actually, the conflict begun to transfer from the Tamil-Sinhala to Tamil-Sinhala-Moor conflict. Tamil–Muslim riots broke out in April 1985, apparently over an incident in the town of Mannar in the north where three Muslim worshippers were said to have been gunned down by Tamil militants inside a mosque, which ruined the Tamil–Muslim cordiality. During this period, there were religious increase activities by certain groups of Sri Lanka Moors. There were new Islamic organizations and groups. Some of them won generous support from the Middle Eastern Wahabists and their organizations. My interviews for my research on Eastern Muslims suggest that there were explicit helps and communications between certain Islamist groups based in the Eastern Sri Lanka and Sri Lanka’s neighbor country.  The sources outside of Sri Lanka wanted to advance their religious and political agendas among Moors.Read More

Fleadom Of Explession

By Arjuna Seneviratne -August 24, 2013 
Arjuna Seneviratne
Everyone knows the story of little Johnny and the flea.
Regardless of what sort of essay the teacher tells the class to write, this formidable brat always finds a way to very quickly tie the assigned topic through some marginal link to the flea and then proceeds to blast out his spiel on that redoubtable species and its critical importance to every single reason behind every single reason that underscores every single reason why Johnny, his peers, his educators and his examiners, his family, his community, his town, his country and his planet should or shouldn’t live. The local equivalent of Little Johnny of course, as everyone knows, is Amden and the story is “makkage kathaava”.  In fact, when someone constantly harps on a single idea regardless of the idea he/she is responding to or its direction or its worth or its relevance, we, in Sri Lanka say “mekata one uge mekkage ellena” (He just wants to spin his flea) or PMS (“Predetermined Mekka Spinning” – yeah, it was not what you were thinking but it is similarly annoying).
I was recently reading an article on Colombo Telegraph by Vangisha Gunasekera on the global problem of climate instability (to which, by the way, Sri Lanka contributed almost nothing) and found, both to my astonishment and day-long amusement that one of the responses was on Weliweriya (you see, the pollution of water bodies in Weliweriya are just as important to planetary climate stability as Amden’s mekka is to a fish right?). Another was just classic “what we are doing to mother earth at Weliweriya and other places is slow murder and therefore Sri Lankan women are fleeing to the middle east”! What the….?!