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

Wednesday, August 28, 2013

Learning the rules of engagement


August 29, 2013
  • The Sri Lankan Government, in a rare show of restraint, has decided to adopt a temperate approach to the visit of UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay, granting her unprecedented access and attempting to put its house in order ahead of her mission
The small strip of coast beside the emerald waters of the Indian Ocean, in the Mullaitivu District, was a rapidly shrinking space between February-May 2009. The 12-kilometre beach strip that would become a lasting legacy of Sri Lanka’s protracted conflict lies on the left bank of a large lagoon known as Nandikadal.
Four years after the end of the war, the thick jungles, waterways and blue-green seas of the Wanni remains largely unexplored territory for the average Sri Lankan. But any Sri Lankan, whether a peacetime visitor to the Wanni or not, will speak with intimate familiarity of Nandikadal. In these bloodied and murky waters was found slain the country’s most dangerous criminal, creator of the human bomb, megalomaniac and sworn enemy of the nation, Vellupillai Prabhakaran, who had ruled land, sea and waterway in the Wanni uncontested for years.

Time for the TNA to step in

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By Kath Noble

One of the reasons people dismiss the support of Tamil Nadu politicians for Tamils in Sri Lanka is their complete lack of concern for the immediate welfare of the community. Where they are going to get their next meal doesn’t matter. Unless their problems can be used to blame the Government, they are ignored.

Last week, I said that Karunanidhi was right to focus on the need for a political solution and the full implementation of the 13th Amendment in recent protests aimed at getting India to boycott the Commonwealth Summit in November. It is an entirely reasonable demand, and he will be doing everybody a favour if he can marshal the emotions of 72 million Tamils in Tamil Nadu into a campaign that can actually deliver, rather than misleading them into thinking that they are helping by continuing to call for Eelam – and in the circumstances another devastating war.

Pillay meets families of the disappeared

By Ananth Palakidnar-Wednesday, 28 Aug 2013


United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navanethem Pillay, yesterday said in Jaffna that she was extremely concerned about the disappearances in the North and East and assured, her office would work towards seeking relief and justice for the families of the disappeared persons. Pillay met Ananthi Elilan, the wife of former Trincomalee Political Wing Leader of the LTTE, Sasitharan, alias Elilan, at a briefing held at the UN Office in Jaffna.


Ananthi Elilan told Ceylon Today that she met the Rights Chief along with four others representing the families of the disappeared persons in the North.


"It was a brief meeting where Pillay listened patiently to our grievances. She even hugged and consoled a mother of a political prisoner who was allegedly assaulted to death during a prison riot in Vavuniya last year," she said. Ananthi Elilan, who is also a candidate for the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) at the forthcoming Northern Provincial Council (NPC) polls, said, prior to the meeting with Pillay, the Association for the Families of the Disappeared together with affiliates, staged a mass protest near the Jaffna Public Library yesterday.
Thereafter, four of the representatives of the Association, including Ananthi Elilan, were invited by the UN office in Nallur, Jaffna, for the meeting with Pillay.


"I explained to her in detail about the disappearances. She was very sympathetic and said she would study our case in detail and take the necessary steps to bring justice to them. She also said her office has given priority to the issue of the disappeared," Ananthi Elilan said. Meanwhile, Pillay met the Governor of the Northern Province, G.A. Chandrasiri, and discussed various issues with regard to the post-war situation in the North, yesterday. She was also briefed on the post-war humanitarian activities carried out by the government in the North.


Pillay also travelled to Paranthan, Kilinochchi and Mullaitivu with a heavy escort via the A-9 highway.
A group of people from the families of the disappeared persons gathered on the roadside with placards were dispersed by another group of people who appeared in civil clothes, sources said.


Pillay travelled extensively in the Mullaitivu District where she met the people directly affected by the war. She also visited the areas where the final phase of the war had taken place.
In Jaffna, a memorandum was also handed over to her by civil society representatives, on the alleged land acquisitions, indefinite detention of political prisoners, the grievances of the war widows and the families of the disappeared persons.

Navi Pillay meeting Tamils in Jaffna ended in eyewash, say Tamil activists

TamilNet[TamilNet, Wednesday, 28 August 2013, 01:04 GMT]
The UN Human Rights Commissioner Navanetham Pillay met a group of 15 Tamil rights activists and civil representatives at the UN office in Jaffna. While she spent more time with the Sri Lankan State officials, the independent Tamil activists were given just 90 seconds each to present their cases under 8 different themes that included the cases of missing persons, detention of prisoners, land grab, colonization and attacks on religious institutions. 

The rights activists said they were not provided enough time to make their cases and complained that the entire tour has ended as another eyewash or even farce. 

The mother of Dilruxon, a Tamil youth, who was slain inside the prison in Vavuniyaa following a protest, narrated to Navi Pillay what had happened to her son in the Sri Lankan detention. 

In the meantime, the SL military and the Colombo Establishment had brought Sinhala protestors to stage counter-protests in Jaffna. 

The Sinhala gangs were held at standby at some halls in the city to launch counter-strikes. 

But, as Navi Pillay didn’t reach out to the Tamil victims who had gathered in front of the Jaffna Public Library, the Sinhalese ‘protesters’ didn’t have an opportunity to stage any counter-protest, informed sources told TamilNet.


Editorial-August 27, 2013

Visiting UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay went on record as saying immediately after her arrival on Sunday that she was here not to criticise but to raise human rights concerns. But, the following day itself at a meeting with Justice Minister Rauff Hakeem, she expressed displeasure at the police coming under the newly created Law and Order Ministry, among other things, and went so far as to ask why the police could not be brought under the Ministry of Justice.

Certainly, it is Pillay’s business to mind human rights in Sri Lanka or anywhere else for that matter and express her concerns. And her right to travel to any part of the world for that purpose cannot be questioned. Protecting human rights is one thing, but straying into the affairs that are best left to an elected Head of State and the national legislature is quite another.

True, there are allegations of human rights violations against the Sri Lankan police and military, and the UNHRC has a right to be critical of them. But, it should realise that the allocation of ministerial subjects is the exclusive preserve of the executive president whose right to do so has been enshrined in the Constitution whether one likes it or not.

The problem with most UN panjandrums and western diplomats is that they tend to act like viceroys in the developing world dictating to democratically elected governments while handling terrorist outfits with kid gloves. They also have no qualms about turning a Nelsonian eye to blatant human rights abuses in pro-western countries.

If the UN had told the LTTE what to do and what not to do and taken stern action to deal with noncompliance, perhaps Sri Lanka’s war could have been avoided and Pillay would have been spared the trouble of coming all the way here on a fact finding mission. The UN Security Council, it may be recalled, chose to skirt tough measures that human rights groups demanded against the terrorist groups, including the LTTE, on the UN List of Shame for harming children. Even when the LTTE abducted two UN workers in the North in 2007 the UN office in Colombo took it lying down and shamelessly tried to secure their release on the sly; the UNHRC never so much as made a whimper.

At the international level, when the UNHRC boldly issued a condemnatory statement on Bahrain over the violent suppression of pro-democracy protests influenced by the Arab Spring revolts the US and other western powers sympathetic to King Hamad bin Isa Al Khalifa brought pressure to bear on Pillay to eat her words. The UNHRC statement was recanted immediately and the matter ended there. So much for the UNHRC’s impartiality and independence!

Pillay is on official business here and, therefore, she has a right to carry out her duties and functions without let or hindrance though it is doubtful whether anyone will buy into her claim that she keeps an open mind, which is not possible in the realm of diplomacy and UN politics. The proof of the pudding, as they say, is in the eating. We should wait for her report.

There has been no complaint of any government interference with Pillay’s work as far as we know. She is moving about freely and being warmly received by government ministers. She ought to act with restraint without overstepping her diplomatic limits and having a finger in the political pie though her cheerleaders may encourage her to do so.

Demonstrators call on Navi Pillay to investigate disappearences

Tamil Guardian 27 August 2013

Hundreds of families of those who disappeared in Sri Lanka gathered in front of the Jaffna Public Library to voice their grievances to the visiting United Nations Human Rights Commissioner Navi Pillay.

 
Sources reported that Navi Pillay who attended a meeting in Jaffna Library, was forced, by government officials,  to leave through the back exit of the library, in what was seen as an attempt to nullify the voice of the protestors. 
Protestors wielded placards that called on Pillay to intervene and make sure that that Tamils were resettled into their own lands, whilst brandishing pictures of missing loved ones.
The demonstrators were contained by the local police force and kept at a distance from the public library.

  
Placard in Tamil reads "Madame we welcome you; Help us to resettle in our own land."

Sri Lanka President slams UN rights body while Nivi Pillay visiting the country

http://l.yimg.com/ea/img/-/130828/photo_1377674526231_1_0-191r98q.jpg?x=400&sig=NJy_4Jr50I_fXrry18QBLw--
Navi Pillay meeting the families of disappeared in Sri Lanka

SRI LANKA BRIEFWednesday, August 28, 2013

COLOMBO (AFP) - Sri Lanka's president has criticised the UN Human Rights Council as its top official toured the battle-scarred nation to probe alleged war crimes, according to state media Wednesday.

President Mahinda Rajapakse, who is on a trip to Belarus, has told his counterpart Alexander Lukashenko that both nations are being targeted unfairly by the UNHRC whose chief Navi Pillay is visiting Sri Lanka.
A banner headline in the Sri Lankan state-run Daily News branded the UNHRC an "anti-Lankan catspaw".
"President Rajapakse condemned the practice of certain countries using the UN Human Rights Council against countries such as Sri Lanka and Belarus," the paper said.
The state mouth piece Ceylon Daily News headline story


Pillay, who had earlier called for a war crimes investigation against Sri Lanka, told reporters at the start of her week-long visit that she was only holding Colombo to human rights standards agreed by all nations including itself .

"I am not writing my own statute. I am looking at the (human rights) framework that was also developed by Sri Lanka," she said.

"If I raise criticism, it is on whether they (Sri Lanka) comply with those standards," she added. "I have not come to criticise. I have come to raise human rights concerns."

Rajapakse left for Belarus on Sunday, the day Pillay arrived. But the two are due to meet in Colombo before she leaves on Saturday.

Both Sri Lanka and Belarus face a US-led censure resolution at the UNHRC and both have been asked to cooperate with investigators. They are accused of letting off rights violators and intimidating political opponents.

Pillay travelled to the island's former war zone in the north Tuesday and met relatives of people who disappeared during and after the government's crushing of Tamil separatists in May 2009, ending the decades-long civil war.

Pillay, who has previously been accused by Colombo of overstepping her mandate, is on her first official fact-finding mission since the government dropped its public hostility to her and promised free access.
Sri Lanka has resisted international pressure for an international investigation into what the UN says are "credible allegations" that up to 40,000 civilians were killed in the final months of the war in 2009.
AFP

SL forces chase out Tamils waiting to see Navi Pillay in Vanni

TamilNet[TamilNet, Wednesday, 28 August 2013, 00:47 GMT]
Sri Lankan military intelligence and SL policemen brutally attacked and chased out a group of 30 families and relatives of missing persons, who had gathered near Paranthan junction in Ki’linochchi district on Tuesday to express their message to the visiting UN Human Rights Commissioner Ms Navanetham Pillay. The families had come as they were told that Navi Pillay would be traveling through A9 on a visit to Mu’l’li-vaaykkaal from Jaffna. Commenting on the nature of the public response to Ms Pillai’s visit to the North, observers said that had Ban Ki Moon come, people wouldn’t have cared or even if they had gathered they wouldn’t have shed tears but would have responded differently. 

When the UN Secretary General Ban ki Moon thought of ‘visiting’ the Tamils in the barbed wire camps after the war, they didn’t even want to stand up.

Commenting on the outcome of public response to Navi Pillai, the observers said that every renewed faith shown by people towards global organisations meant for humanity are thwarted by the Establishments of vicious agenda that have hijacked those organisations. The course of the case of Eezham Tamils is one such that has to be carefully perused by human civilisation in planning for future on what to do with the culprits of humanity, the Tamil observers further said. 

In the meantime, a Colombo newspaper, The Island, on Wednesday, blatantly bared the genocide-shielding anxiety in the South, by reporting that the people who had gathered in Jaffna on Tuesday morning were “victims of LTTE violence” and the SL police only barricaded them off. 

In Vanni, on Tuesday afternoon, the SL policemen and military intelligence officers attacked the gathering using batons. 

Following the assault, the protesting families had to abandon their effort to express their feelings to the visiting UN Human Rights Commissioner. 

Ms Navi Pillay, who took part in some events in Ki’linochchi visited Ve’l’laa-mu’l’livaaykkaal and left for Trincomalee, news sources in Vanni said. 

Preparing for her visit, the occupying Sinhala military in a few days back removed all the remaining vestiges of war at Mu’l’li-vaaykkaal, such as abandoned vehicles etc., and dumped them elsewhere.

Raise War Crimes Committed by Sri Lankan President: TGTE Urges Visiting South Korean Prime Minister


tgte logo"According to a UN Internal Review Report, Sri Lankan troops killed over 70,000 Tamils in five months and raped hundreds of Tamil women"

WikiLeaks: ‘There Are Certain Pro-LTTE Elements In International Orgs Holding High Ranking Posts’ – Keheliya On Navi

Navi Pillay
August 28, 2013
Colombo Telegraph“Defense spokesman Minister Keheliya Rambukwella asserted that certain international organizations have been “infiltrated by the LTTE” and are helping to spread disinformation. In discussing the widely-publicized statement of UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navanetham (“Navi”) Pillay noting 2,800 civilian deaths and 7,000 injuries, the spokesman claimed: “There are certain pro-LTTE elements in international organizations holding high ranking posts. They are taking cover behind these organizations in order to support the LTTE.” (Note: Pillay, a South African national, happens to be an ethnic Tamil but to our knowledge, has never visited Sri Lanka.)” the US Embassy Colombo informed Washington.
The Colombo Telegraph found the related leaked cable from the WikiLeaks database. The “Unclassified” cable on March 19, 2009 by the US Ambassador to Colombo,Robert O. Blake discusses the situation in the conflict zone.
Read the cable below for further details      Read More


Response To Dr. Godfrey Gunatilleke


By S.Sivathasan -August 28, 2013 
Colombo Telegraph
S.Sivathasan
With all deference to a man of letters reputed for integrity and objective analysis, I address this communication from a public Forum.
The writer confined his critique to a thirty year frame from 1983. Prince Charles said quite correctly, that the most difficult thing for humans to do is to forget the past. Knowing full well that there is neither a picturesque outbreak nor a precise end, I wished that we turn a fresh leaf from 2009, at least when we express our thoughts and anxieties. But that was never to be. So only in passing, I want to touch on the Donoughmore era, since birthmarks on the body politic cannot be wished away.
Under the new dispensation of 1931, a declining voice in state affairs agitated the Tamils. Governor Caldecott’s perception on a major question bedeviling Ceylon in 1938 was “all our political fissures radiate from the vexed question of minority representation”. In this backdrop, GG Ponnambalam, found that weakening representational strength of Tamils  and the experience of the Pan Sinhalese Ministry in 1936 had alarming forebodings of marginalization. He seized the opportunity offered by the Reforms Despatch of 1938, to present  a convincing thesis about Balanced Representation for the minorities, encompassing  – Ceylon Tamils, Indian Tamils, Moors, Malays and Burghers – all taken as one entity. Even though a case was made out with great forensic skill, by the Tamil leader, it failed to cut much ice with Whitehall.
What results flowed thereafter in the next eight decades? A single ethnicity ‘Tamils’ enumerated as such with the same nomenclature till 1901, was bifurcated from 1911 census into Ceylon Tamils (CT) and Indian Tamils ( IT). This classification continuing to date has brought down the Tamil population by 2,293,000 (CT+ IT = 26.69% in 1901. It is 15.37 in 2011 a decline by 11.3 2%  = 2.293 million). Compulsive expatriation of the former and  legislated repatriation of the latter brought this debilitation of numerical strength.Read More
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Relatives of Sri Lanka's missing vent grievances at U.N.

JAFFNA, Sri Lanka | Tue Aug 27, 2013 1:23pm BST
U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay (in blue) arrives at Jaffna general hospital in Jaffna, about 400 kilometres (249 miles) north of Colombo August 26, 2013. REUTERS-Dinuka Liyanawatte(Reuters) - Protesters in Sri Lanka criticised the United Nations for a second day on Tuesday during a visit by U.N. Human Rights Commissioner Navi Pillay who is assessing rights in a country still divided by a 27-year war.Reuters
Angry members of the majority Sinhalese community protested in the capital, Colombo, on Monday, calling on Pillay to get out of the country and stop criticising its rights record.
Pillay visited the northern town of Jaffna on Tuesday, which was at the heart of a bid by members ethnic minority Tamil guerrillas to break away and where protesters criticised the United Nations for not protecting them.
"The U.N. failed in its responsibility," said Ananthi Sasitharan, a 42-year mother of three girls, who holds out hope her missing husband is alive, perhaps in a secret detention camp.
The husband, Velayutham Sasitharan, was a top Tamil rebel leader.
Sasitharan was demonstrating with about 300 other people outside the town's main library where the Pillay had a meeting.
They said they had protested after failing in their bid to meet Pillay to discuss their grievances over disappearances and what they see as land-grabs by the military.
The Sri Lanka government battled separatist Tamil guerrillas from 1983 until finally defeating them in 2009.
Tens of thousands of civilians were killed in the final months of the war, a U.N. panel said earlier, as government troops advanced on the rebels' last stronghold.
Many hundreds of people, most of them Tamils like Sasitharan's husband, simply disappeared.
INTERNATIONAL PRESSURE
Sasitharan said her husband had surrendered to the military on May 18, 2009, a day before the government declared victory over the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam rebel group.
"I am confident that he is alive. He is somewhere in a secret detention centre," she told Reuters.
Pillay's seven-day visit comes after a second United States-sponsored U.N. resolution in March this year urged Sri Lanka to carry out credible investigations into killings and disappearances during the war, especially in the brutal final stages.
A U.N. panel said earlier it had "credible allegations" that Sri Lankan troops and rebels both carried out atrocities and war crimes, and singled out the government for most of the responsibility for the deaths.
Sri Lanka has come under international pressure to bring to book those accused of war crimes and boost efforts to reconcile a polarised country. But it has rejected the accusations of rights abuses.
In July, President Mahinda Rajapaksa, under pressure from the United Nations and the West to address the question of rights abuses during the war, ordered an inquiry into mass disappearances.
According to human rights activists in Jaffna, more than 700 people disappeared in the final phase of the war between 2006 and 2009. Some said loved ones had been abducted by unidentified men in white vans.
Sasitharan and other relatives of the missing can only hope.
Sri Lanka's military spokesman, Ruwan Wanigasuriya, said he had no information about Sasitharan's husband.
"There are lists of all the detainees and the released people after the rehabilitation ... There are records of all of them," he said. "Anybody can get them from police."
(The story was filed to remove extraneous "for" from intro)
(Editing by Robert Birsel)

Navi goes to Nandikadal

  • Disappearances, state land grab and forced resettlement take centrestage in discussions with civil society reps in Jaffna
  • Vows to raise issues of northern people during her mission in Colombo
  • Pillay meets ex-LTTE commander Elilan’s wife for five minutes
  • Prageeth’s wife joins northern disappearances protest
  • Site of decisive battle cleared ahead of UN envoy’s visit
By Dharisha Bastians-August 28, 2013 
UN Human Rights Chief Navanethem Pillay concluded her visit to the formerly embattled Northern Province with a flying visit toPuthumathalan and Velamullivaikal, where tens of thousands of Tamil civilians were trapped during the final phase of the war, and pledged to raise issues faced by the northern people with authorities during her week-long mission to Sri Lanka.
The visiting UN High Commissioner for Human Rights landed in Jaffna on Monday (26) night.
Velamullivaikal, on the banks of the Nandikadal Lagoon where LTTE Leader Vellupillai Prabhakaran was killed in May 2009 is a controversial region of the Wanni, where the Government and the UN have traded charges about civilian deaths during the final battles of the war.
Tamil media reports ahead of the UN Envoy’s arrival in Sri Lanka claimed troops had cleared the debris and burnt vehicles at the site, that remained there for viewing by thousands of ‘war tourists’ to the former battle zones.
Enforced disappearances, land acquisition by the State and forced resettlement emerged as priority issues for people of the former conflict zones in the north during the UN Envoy’s meeting with civil society representatives at the United Nations Office in Jaffna town last afternoon.
“I can understand the issues you are facing. I will raise these issues with the relevant authorities during the discussions. I hope a solution can be reached to the issues faced by the Tamils very soon,” civil representatives reported the High Commissioner had noted after listening to their concerns.
Protests greeted the UN Envoy as she toured Jaffna, with scores of families of the disappeared making appeals to her to assist to locate their loved ones and blaming the UN for inaction. Among the protestors was the wife of missing journalist Prageeth Ekneligoda, Sandhya, who joined the scores of families from the north in their appeals.
Pillay did not stop to speak to demonstrators outside the District Secretariat, but did speak with the wife of ex-LTTE Commander Elilan, Ananthy Sasitharan, for five minutes, when she said she had attempted to raise concerns about disappearances. Sasitharan is contesting the Northern Provincial Council election under the TNA.
The UN High Commissioner visited the iconic Jaffna Library that was burnt in 1981 and has since been restored last morning. At the Jaffna District Secretariat Pillay held talks with Northern Province Governor Maj. Gen. G.A. Chandrasiri, Jaffna Government Agent Suntharam Arumainayagam and other Government officials.
Pillay flew to Trincomalee last night and returns to Colombo tonight. She has meetings scheduled with External Affairs Minister G.L. Peiris and Presidential Secretary Lalith Weeratunga in Colombo tomorrow.

Rajapaksa regime in Ostrich hiding style - Karu

Published on Wednesday, 28 August 2013 10:15
Print
Karu J 410px UNP MP Karu Jayasuriya says that the instant decision of the President to establish a ministry for "Law and Order" is like an Ostrich ring to hide is head in sand to hide from the world.
He emphasizes that if the Govt has a genuine desire to preserve the true law and order, then it must re-enact the 17h constitutional amendment an save the Police, state service and the judiciary from the iron grip of politics.
MP Karu Jayasuriya made these comments in a media announcement issued by him today (27).
The announcement is as follows.
The government has taken steps to remove the Sri Lanka Police from the Ministry of Defense and bring it under a new Ministry called Ministry of Law and Order. The government took this decision on the eve of the arrival of Mrs. Navanidan Pillai, United Nations Commissioner of Human Rights, also by this time the government had replied the people of Rathupaswela who asked for drinking water with bullets and three people were killed. Along with this incident the government inherits a history of killing five people who were engaged in protests, by shooting unarmed civilians, either by police or armed forces.
The government said a third party was involved in Rathupaswela shooting. Brother of Roshan Chanaka told the media at theincident at Rathupaswala that up to now nobody has been brought before the law for the murder of Roshan Chanaka who protested for his rights at Katunayake.
Independent Police Commission and other independent commissions were introduced by the 17th amendment. It was intended to depoliticize and remove political influence from the public administration by bringing in the 17th amendment. If there were any deficiencies in the 17th Amendment the government should have taken action to rectify those deficiencies instead of introducing the 18th Amendment and annihilating the 17th Amendment. Although proposals have been prepared by the select committee headed by Hon. Dew Gunasekera, which was appointed to look into the deficiencies and to strengthen the 17th Amendment, attention of the President has not been drawn to these proposals.
During the recent past the international community accused the government of failure to protect human rights, but the government, despite the accusations continued with the same attitude. The government underestimated the proposals made to offer advisory services internationally and showed the public that the international community is against the government which won the war.
Lastly through the attacks at Katunayake, Chilaw, Rathupaswela and Welikada Prisons, the government indicated that the government is prepared to subdue post war Sri Lanka through the bullets. In order to cover up this infamous past the government brought the police under the newly formed ministry of Law and Order on the eve of the visit of Mrs. Navaneedan Pillai.
This is similar to the act of an ostrich hiding its head in the sand to cover itself from the eyes of the outside world. We wish to stress that if the government is genuinely keen to protect law and order, what should be done is to re-enforce the 17th Amendment and release the whole of the state machinery including the police, public service and the judiciary from the grips of the political vise. Also we wish to urge the government that justice would not be fulfilled only by bringing the police under a separate officer, whilst keeping the attorney general’s department under the President.

Police cannot be streamlined only by a new ministry - UNP


unp logoThe UNP says that an independent police commission must be established and that the Police Department could not be streamlined and depoliticized only by bringing it under the purview of a new ministry. 

UNP spokesman, parliamentarian Gayantha Karunathilaka has said it was essential to set up an Independent Police Commission if the police department were to act independently.

“We cannot expect the police department to act independently, just by bringing it under a new ministry. Independent commissions as laid down in the 17th Amendment should be set up if the state sector is to be independent,” Karunathilaka has said.

The UNP has repeatedly asked the government to re-establish the 17th Amendment abolished by the passage of 18th Amendment which gives powers to the President to make appointments into key positions.

Karunathilaka has said the Independent Judicial Services Commission, the Independent Elections Commission and the Independent Police Commission should be set up immediately.

Second Wave Of Neoliberalism: Financialisation And Crisis In Post-War Sri Lanka

By Ahilan Kadirgamar -August 28, 2013
Colombo Telegraph
Ahilan Kadirgamar
Altering the economic and social landscape of Sri Lanka, the neoliberal policies pursued by the Mahinda Rajapaksa government have exacerbated inequitable development, indebtedness, and the marginalisation of the Muslim and Tamil minorities. Whether the crisis in the economy would lead to political changes that will reverse the economic slide and ethnic polarisation remains to be seen. 
The Galle Face Green, a promenade along the Indian Ocean surrounded by the bustle of Colombo, is a plural space where thousands of people congregate every evening; Muslims, Tamils and Sinhalese youth and families across social classes come to snack, fly kites and stroll on the boardwalk watching the waves as the sun sets. It has now regained its past energy with the fear of bombs fading into memory. The Galle Face Green is also the venue of national celebrations, including the triumphalist victory parades which are held annually with pomp and pageantry. In this shared space, the vigilant observer will note another transformation taking place. Across the road, with an array of neon sign boards of banks and hotels in the background, prime state land is now being developed into a massive hotel and mall. How long will the Galle Face Green remain a public space as finance, real estate and tourism eclipse Colombo?
Amidst the debates on accountability, elusive political solutions and militarisation, there is little discussion on the economic transformation underway and the emergence of new conflicts. If one drives from Colombo to Jaffna on the “highway of destruction”, the A9 Road, which was the site of major battles in the Vanni, there are new shops, offices and banks not different from the rest of the country. The traces of the war are disappearing except for the militarised monuments of war. Yet if one goes a few hundred meters away from the A9, one begins to see the abject social devastation and poverty plaguing the war-torn people. A deceptive prosperity, visible with the beautification of Colombo through slum demolitions and construction along the new highways and carpeted roads criss-crossing the country, hides the increasing inequalities and dispossession. Authoritarianism and militarisation‒ the country’s inheritance from the war‒ are crucial for transforming the economic landscape. Much of the emerging resistance to such repressive power    stems from bread and butter issues.
Second Wave of Neoliberalism                 Read More

Military meddling in Sri Lanka elections: What will the UN do?

The Sri Lanka Army has said it will vacate camps in the country’s northern Jaffna Peninsula before crucial provincial elections in September. Despite the international publicity the move has attracted, Jaffna’s residents say there is no significant downtick in overall levels of militarization.
Elections to the Northern Provincial Council (NPC) next month will be the first. Legislation setting up provincial councils was part of a power-sharing treaty between India and Sri Lanka, known as the Indo-Lanka Accord. Enacted in 1987, the legislation was primarily created to resolve conflict between the Sinhalese and Tamils, the country’s two largest ethnic groups.
Ironically, while elected councils functioned in the rest of the country, they never did in the north, in the only province that has a Tamil majority.
Following the military defeat of the LTTE, or Tamil Tigers, in May 2009, the international community urged the government of Sri Lanka to begin a process of reconciliation through power sharing with the Tamil political leadership.
An important instrument of conflict resolution, or so the international community seemed to believe, was holding elections to the NPC. As de-militarization was a prerequisite for elections, two resolutions — in 2012 and 2013 — moved by the United States at the UN Human Rights Council included such measures.
However, the military has continued to govern areas where the Tamil are the majority, inserting itself into aspects of life usually serviced by civilians, and forcibly taking over and controlling land.
Residents of northern Sri Lanka complain that the presence of the military is not confined to uniformed personnel patrolling the streets, guns in hand.
“[The military] are in our schools supervising public examinations, in our homes [forcibly inviting themselves even to puberty ceremonies] ... It was better when they were only on the streets; now the penetration is directed internally — into the core of community life,” says Kumaravadivel Guruparan, lecturer in law at the University of Jaffna.
The military involvement in the life of the community also has repercussions for the electoral process. As campaigning gets underway, the military is accused of supporting the government party against the popular Tamil National Alliance (TNA).
“When TNA candidates address public meetings you can be sure four or five military personnel will be hovering around in civvies,” said Suresh Premachandran, a leader of the Alliance party.
He also said there were instances of the military intimidating TNA candidates and barring the public from attending opposition election rallies. On March 30, well before elections were announced, a mob attacked a private meeting of TNA parliamentarians, injuring 13 people, despite a police guard.
The Associated Press reported on July 25 that Sri Lanka Army spokesman Brigadier Ruwan Wanigasuriya had announced that 13 military camps would be removed and the locations “handed back to original owners.”
The announcement that the military was closing its camps was an effort to neutralize the accusation that it was forcibly occupying private land. Many of its camps are built on private property, which has exacerbated Tamil grievances and enhanced barriers to reconciliation.
However, the Daily Mirror clarified that the camps the AP story mentioned were not closed entirely, but relocated to the “Palaly cantonment.” Moving troops from the 13 camps to Palaly cantonment, a former rebel stronghold, does not mean there will be any significant reduction of the use of private land for military use.
“[Military camps] are being relocated to Palaly High Security Zone, which is private land on a larger scale of anything these 13 camps may give up,” scoffed Guruparan, the University of Jaffna lecturer.
The High Security Zone is a vast area of land the government cleared in the 1990s by destroying homes, taking over fertile farmland and leaving residents to become “internally displaced people.”
The military is developing 6,500 acres of land it seized in the Jaffna peninsula into a huge base replete with a farm, a hotel, a golf course and other recreational facilities for its personnel. A lawsuit has been filed in the court of appeals on behalf of 2,176 displaced residents, as well as the Roman Catholic Bishop of Jaffna, which forfeited church property for the construction of the military base.
The need for the military to occupy private land is partly explained by a more fundamental problem: There are “150,000 soldiers encamped in the Northern Province,” claims Premachandran. “That makes it one soldier for every four or five civilians.”
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay arrived in Sri Lanka this week for a seven-day visit to review progress on demilitarization, the course of NPC elections and other human rights issues. She will report back to the UNHRC in September.
The question is whether the UNHRC and the international community will recognize that vacating private land is a façade by the military to persuade the UN that it is demilitarizing. What will the UN do? Will it impose strictures on the government for wriggling out of its commitments, or will they say sweet nothings and turn a blind eye?
Image courtesyvikalpa.org

JS Tissainayagam, a former Sri Lankan political prisoner, was a Nieman Fellow in Journalism at Harvard and Reagan-Fascell Fellow at the National Endowment for Democracy in the United States.