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

Sunday, September 15, 2013

Thamil People Want Fundamental Rights Not Development Meant Largely For The Military


By Veluppillai Thangavelu -September 15, 2013
Veluppillai Thangavelu
Colombo TelegraphThe Northern Provincial Council (NPC) election is only a few days away. The election to the NPC is being held after a period of 25 years. The previous election was in 1988.
The Provincial Council (PS) system under 13th Amendment is in force from 1988. It was the by-product of the of the Indo-Ceylon Agreement singed between Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi and President J.R. Jayewardene in 1987.
The key features in the Indo – Ceylon Accord are as follows:
•Sri Lanka is a ‘multi-ethnic and a multi-lingual plural society” consisting, inter alia, of Sinhalese, Thamils, Muslims (Moors) and Burghers (section 1.2),
•Each ethnic group has a distinct cultural and linguistic identity which has to be carefully nurtured (section 1.3),
•Northern and the Eastern Provinces have been areas of historical habitation of Sri Lankan Tamil speaking peoples, who have at all times hitherto lived together in this territory with other ethnic groups (section 1.4),
•Merger of Eastern Province with Northern Province will be decided by a simple majority of the people of Eastern Province (section 2.3), conducting a referendum by the people.
Since 1988 elections have been held every 5 years, except in regard to the Northern and Eastern Provinces.
In 1988 there was an election to the temporary merged Northern and Eastern provinces. But the council was dissolved in 1990 by the then government. Thereafter, elections were held for the demerged Eastern Province in 2008 and again in 2012.
Although the three decades old war officially ended on May 19, 2009, the government kept on deferring election under various excuses like delay in demining and resettlement of the 300,000 Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs).
The parties contesting the elections have stepped up their campaign in all parts of the province.
For the 36 + 2 seats for grabs in the NPC a total of 906 candidates belonging to 11 registered parties and 9 independent groups have entered the fray. TNA is contesting all the districts with 51 candidates in the field. Each voter should cast his vote to the party of his choice and in addition cast his 3 preferential votes to 3 more candidates of his choice. He cannot cast all the preferential votes to a single candidate.
The main contest is between the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) and the United Peoples Freedom Front (UPFA). Quisling EPDP as usual is contesting under the UPFA beetle symbol.
                          Read More

Muslim Politicians And Muslim Community Today In Sri Lanka

By Rifai Naleemi -September 16, 2013
Rifai Naleemi
Colombo TelegraphSri Lankan Muslim community today goes through an epoch of political bankruptcy in Muslim history in Sri Lanka. Muslim community became  a voiceless community today in our time. This situation is unprecedented in Sri Lankan Muslim history. It is shame that those shameless Muslim politicians still go behind this ruling family in anticipation that they could secure some basic privileges and concessions in their political struggle. Yet, those hopes and aspirations have been shuttered in recent times.  Of course, in this system of excessive executive presidential power, minority politicians are vulnerable to demotions and relegation, even to loose their seats. That is the sad side of political life in the third world countries.  Yet, in Sri Lanka Muslim politicians could have acted collectively in this difficult situation. They have greatly failed to win the hearts and minds of Tamil politicians to meet challenges that our community faces today.
Muslim politicians have been totally marginalised today in politics. They can not raise their voice in parliament in any issue that concerns Muslim community today. They are really made dump-heads and can not do any constructive work in current political scenarios.  In recent time mosques have been vandalised by BBS thugs, Muslim cultural heritage and religious rites have been mocked, Muslim ladies have been humiliated for wearing Islamic code of dress and Muslim people are banned from praying in some mosques.  BBS and its cohorts continue to make mockery of Muslims and Islamic way of life and yet, Muslim politicians have done nothing constructively to stop BBS activities.  It is like your house is burning and yet, you are standing idle in front of it doing nothing. While mosques are being destroyed with support of security forces our politicians openly says that mosques have not been destroyed. Read More

VIDEO: WE HAVE NOT ASKED TO DIVIDE THE COUNTRY - TNA

September 15,
Rejecting allegations that the TNA’s election manifesto demands a separate state, the party’s leader today stated that they only ask for the right for self government in the Tamil Speaking North-East of the country within a united Sri Lanka. 
VIDEO: We have not asked to divide the country - TNA
We have very clearly stated, without any attempts to hide, that a solution should be found within the country without any obstruction to the country, MP R. Sampanthan told reporters in Jaffna.

He stated that the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) will demand “whatever is necessary” for such a solution and that it can be discussed and decided on.  

“We have not asked for the country to be divided,” he stressed, adding that the Tamil party has only called for a solution which ensures that the people can be united and live within the same country.
  
Sampanthan was addressing a press conference, to respond to allegation against the TNA’s 2013 Election Manifesto, which has been termed as ‘extremist’ and ‘separatist’ by the government and its coalition parties. 

He stated that sections of the government, expressing their views on the manifesto, have claimed that the TNA is attempting to divide the country. “This is wrong.” 

Rejecting the allegations he stated that the TNA has “no intention of doing such a thing” and that it can be understood if the election statement is “carefully read”.

We regret that the President, when he recently visited Vavuniya, had spoken in a manner which would create confusion within the people, the TNA leader said. 

The President had stated that the TNA is now asking for what the Tamil Tigers had demanded then and therefore it cannot be considered. 

“He doesn’t say what the Tamil Tiger had demanded and he doesn’t say what we are demanding,” the parliamentarian charged, adding, “it is wrong to speak in that manner without explaining what we are asking for and why they are unable to give it.”

Northern Province Election Violence: CMEV Update

September 16, 2013
The Center for Monitoring Election Violence (CMEV) has noted five incidents of polls related violence in the Northern Province, between September 13 and September 15. The Polls monitors report that TNA supporters had been questioned by the CID and at least four arrested for distributing leaflets.
Dr Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu - Co-Convenor CMEV
Colombo TelegraphAnother report states that in Chavakachcheri an unidentified group had accosted a group of TNA supporters and beaten them with polls. The monitors also report that agricultural cultivations belonging to TNA supporters had been uprooted and destroyed today in the Kopai electorate in the Jaffna District. The CMEV reports that in Point Pedro yesterday several individuals attached to military intelligence and the EPDP, a Government coalition ally had obstructed a TNA meeting.
The CMEV was formed in 1997 by the Centre for Policy Alternatives (CPA), the Free Media Movement (FMM) and the Coalition against Political Violence as an independent and nonpartisan organization to monitor the incidence of election related violence. Currently, CMEV is made up of CPA, FMM and INFORM Human Rights Documentation Centre.
The following is the full report by the CMEV:
Northern Provincial Council Election 2013 – Communiqué No 2
15 September 2013, Colombo, Sri Lanka: As at 4.30 pm on Sunday 15th September, the following reports of election –related violence in the Northern Provincial Council election have been received by CMEV:
13th September 2013, Kodikamaam Electorate, Jaffna Electoral District, Northern Province:  CMEV field monitor reported that CID officers had questioned TNA supporters about leaflets they were distributing and had informed the police to arrest them. Police arrested 04 supporters of TNA candidate Mr. Chandralingam Sugeerdhan (Candidate No 14). When contacted Kesawan Sajanthan (Candidate No 13) confirmed the incident and mentioned that the police had informed them that they were in breach of election law. Kodikamam Police Station confirmed the incident.
On 13th September 2013, A32 Road, Maravanpuli Junction, Chavakachcheri Electorate, Jaffna Electoral District, Northern Province: Ten supporters of Mr. Kajadeepan (Candidate No. 17), TNA were campaigning in the above mentioned area when at around 5pm an unidentified group accosted them and beat them with poles. The attackers fled the area in a vehicle (No: 59-3641). Gnanaprakasham Kishor and Raj Kumar Rajindan were admitted to the Chavakachcheri Hospital (Ward Number 6) at 7.55 p.m.  When contacted, Police Sergeant Arjan Sunil confirmed that such incident had occurred and that the Police was investigating it further.
by Tisaranee Gunasekara-September 15, 2013

“What is the source of our first suffering? It lies in the fact that we hesitated to speak”.
Seamus Heaney1
( September 15, 2013, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) What happens when arrogance weds ignorance?

Last week the media reproduced two entries from the Facebook-page of Namal Rajapaksa. The First Son talks about electioneering in the North, in the company of brother Yoshitha.


WikiLeaks: ‘Gota Uses My Name To Threatening people’ – Upset Karuna On Gota’s ‘Prostitute’ Editor Remarks

September 16, 2013
“Although the GSL has consistently denied supporting Karuna, on April 16 the Associated Press’ South Asia Bureau Chief Matthew Rosenberg (strictly protect) allowed PolOff to listen to tapes of his interview with Gothabaya. The Defense Secretary was effusive in his praise for Karuna and the benefits the GSL has obtained from Karuna’s rise.” the US Embassy Colombo informed Washington.
Gota and Karuna
Colombo TelegraphThe Colombo Telegraph found the related leaked cable from the WikiLeaks database. The cable is classified as “SECRET” and discuses Sri Lanka’s paramilitary operations. The cable was written by the Ambassador Robert O. Blake on May 18, 2007.
Also, on April 16, Gothabaya personally telephoned editor of the Daily MirrorChampika Liyanarachchi and told her thatKaruna was so upset by an article about the suffering of IDPs in the East that he thought Karuna would kill both her and the article’s author, referring to her as a “prostitute” (ref A). Liyanarachchi called Karuna, who assured her that he would not kill her and expressed displeasure that Gothabaya was using his name while threatening people.
2013-09-15
Introduction 
Sri Lankan election laws forbid the use of public property during periods when elections are held. Numerous circulars and establishment codes attempt to prevent such abuses during election periods. It is also prohibited for state employees to engage in party politics. However, interest groups and local and international election observers continuously point at instances of misuse of public properties like public buildings, manipulation of state media and vehicles and the misuse of state employees’ time including military and police personnel to support election campaigns as well as party campaigns in election-free periods. Apart from damaging electoral competitiveness, misuse of public property by the incumbent Government political party has a negative impact on the quality of governance as funds and resources earmarked for necessary projects are diverted for electioneering.
sign – Sanjeewa Madushan

Showpiece development in north but TNA victory inevitable

  •  Brisk business in whisky and luxury shops; most people don’t want another war but seek life with dignity
  • UPFA going all out this week to prevent two-thirds majority; large crowds at all political meetings
JAFFNA, September 14 – Business is booming in this northern capital. The contrast with the City of Colombo is striking.
Shops stocked with satellite dish antennas, some to view Tamil Nadu TV channels, overflow to the pavements. They are aired only a few hundred miles away from the Palk Strait, the thin but marine rich seas that separate Sri Lanka and India. Showcases display flagons of premium Scotch whisky and exquisite brands of Cognac. Large screen high definition television sets, placed on the roadside windows by electronic stores, show Tamil movies.

Major General Mahinda Hathurusinghe

A calf eating election posters on Delft Island. Pix by Lakshman Gunathilake


Rt. Rev. Thomas Savundranayagam

Sri Lanka Raised At UN Dialogue 

By Easwaran Rutnam-Sunday, September 15, 2013
The Sunday LeaderThe UN’s failure to make use of its resources and protect civilians in Sri Lanka during the war was mentioned during an informal dialogue at the UN General Assembly in New York last week.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon also attended the ‘Interactive Dialogue on Responsibility to Protect’ which was focused on the R2P concept.
The Ambassador of Switzerland to the UN in New York Paul Seger, in his comments at the discussion, said that Switzerland hopes the follow-up process to the Internal Review Panel-Report on UN action in Sri Lanka will result in a more targeted mobilization of the resources of the UN system in complex situations.
In the comments emailed to The Sunday Leader, the Ambassador’s office quoted him as saying that it is important to apply the concept of the responsibility to protect in a coherent and holistic way within the UN system. “In most cases, it is not necessary to create new tools – the prevention of atrocities needs to be better integrated into our day-to-day operations: the rule of law, security sector reform, the fight against impunity, transitional justice and mediation are all key components of prevention,” the Ambassador said.
Meanwhile, separately, the UN says it is still reviewing a report on UN actions during the war in Sri Lanka and the lessons it has learned from that. UN Associate Spokesman Farhan Haq said that follow-up action to the recommendations on Sri Lanka has continued. Asked at a UN press briefing if the UN report will be made public, Haq said that the UN will try to make some information public. “But ultimately, we will have to see what we can put out,” he said.
The report on UN actions during the war in Sri Lanka was compiled by a committee appointed by the UN following the end of the war in Sri Lanka. The UN had been accused of failing to intervene in Sri Lanka during the final stages of the war and prevent thousands of civilian deaths.

Northern Provincial Council Election: Good Governance and Women’s Representation

Image courtesy The Telegraph




The merged North-Eastern Provincial Council was an administrative unit that came into being and existed as a structure in Sri Lankan administration. Consequent to the 1987 Indo-Lanka Accord and the enactment of the 13thAmendment to the 1978 Sri Lankan Constitution a degree of devolution was granted to the provinces. In terms of the Provincial Councils Act No. 42 of 1987 the Northern and Eastern Councils were merged to form as one provincial council to function thereof. The first election to the said merged N-E Province was held on the 10th December 1988 and Mr. Annamalai Varadaraja Perumal was chosen as its Chief Minister. 

UNHRC Overshadows NPC Polls

By Easwaran Rutnam--Sunday, September 15, 2013

Navy Pillay, United ( right ) Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights with Kyung-Wha Kang ( left ) United Nations, Deputy High Commissioner for Human Rights during in the High-Level Segment of the 19th session of the Human Rights Council. Photo courtesy Jean-Marc Ferré
Commonwealth Secretary-General Kamalesh Sharma has termed it as a landmark election, but the events at the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) are threatening to overshadow the polls.
The Sunday Leader

Karu condemns recent violence against places of religious worship


article_imageSeptember 14, 2013
The UNP’s former deputy leader, Mr. Karu Jayasuriya, MP, has in a statement issued last week condemned unequivocally recent violence against places of religious worship, whether Islamic or Christian as ``deeply wounding to the sentiments of entire communities of people.’’

``Any Buddhist citizen of this country would empathize with this sadness and despair, having lived through the violent desecration of this country’s most sacred Buddhist shrine, the Dalada Maligawa by brutal terrorists in 1998.  As fellow sufferers, can we not empathize now, with the pain of others, who are facing similar terror at the hands of violent radicals who have become a law unto themselves?, he asked.  

``When 30 years of brutal conflict ended in this island four years ago, it was the fervent wish of most Sri Lankans that the new nation we would forge in the aftermath of that turmoil would be one in which ethnic, religious, gender and other differences were transcended.

``For too long, Sri Lanka had been a society divided and people from every community and walk of life, were crying out for healing and reconciliation. In the new Sri Lanka, after the end of the conflict, the only identity that should have mattered was the Sri Lankan one. I had hoped, like many of my fellow Sri Lankans, that we could evolve into a society that celebrates diversity, and rejoices in the multi-culturalism that defines us as a people, the next rainbow nation.``Yet four years later, Sri Lanka is staring once more down the abyss of communal and religious strife. Once more, our perceived differences are threatening to tear us apart. Where long ago it was ethnicity, today it is religion that threatens to become the great divide.

``I am a Buddhist by birth and upbringing. Throughout my life, I have strived to live the teachings of the Great Master. I find great dissonance in the rhetoric of hate, intolerance and anger that is currently being perpetuated in the name of Buddhism. I cannot comprehend this sense of deep insecurity that causes elements of our society to act out this way, when it was the Buddha himself who taught that the Dhamma is best protected by practicing it.

``I cannot understand the denigration of others whose culture and ways may be different to our own, when the Buddha spent a lifetime teaching that it is not birth that defines a man, but his deeds as he sought to end the injustice of the Indian caste system. The Buddha never singled out a chosen people, or granted a particular ethnic group special preserve of the Dhamma.

``The Teaching is universal, transcending culture and ethnicity, concerned only with the purity of intent and character.

Today, true Buddhists are struggling to find meaning in the events unfolding around us. Followers of the Middle Path see the futility of this anger and bitterness, they know how it will prolong samsara. To all those who express such great concern about the destruction of the Buddhist way of life and the erosion of Buddhist values, I have but one simple, fervent plea. It is an appeal from the heart. Let us temper our emotions and moderate our words. Let us practice the Buddha’s teachings. There is no greater way to protect and preserve the Dhamma.’’

Tribute to a stubbornly contrary voice

The Sundaytimes Sri Lanka
Sunday, September 15, 2013
When François-Marie Arouet (1694-1778), commonly known as Voltaire, one of the most influential French Enlightenment thinkers, peremptorily asserted that “I may disagree with what you say but I will defend to the death, your right to say it”, he may himself not have realized the great historical impact that this statement would have had, informing much of contemporary thought on freedom of speech and expression.
Employing crude tactics against dissenters
Particularly for those of us in countries where civil liberties are ruthlessly subverted by dictators masquerading as benevolent governors, this ringing assertion is a cruel irony. For too long we have had a vulgarly cacophonous state media and strategically located private media hatchet men and women demonizing dissenting voices as ‘Tiger’ supporters or as those living off the ill-gotten gains of the Tamil Tiger diaspora. Predictably when directed against dissenters of the female gender, such strikes have been cruder, more personalized and unashamedly sexist. 
The fact that this maliciousness had little accurate foundation or that it violated the most basic norms of decent journalism was of no matter to these attackers. Indeed it is a peculiar irony that, even as these propagandists swung into action, they themselves were (on the other hand) the beneficiaries of the most shameful perks and privileges awarded to them by their political benefactors.
Portraying a nation of semi-literates
True enough, before long, we descended from farce to ludicrous comedy as academics, judges and even religious leaders including leading Buddhist prelates, were labeled as traitors. Yet, the damaging impact of this on the national psyche should not be underestimated. Sri Lanka began increasingly to be perceived regionally and internationally as a nation of semi-literate caricatures trapped within a racist, chauvinist and zenophobic consciousness that reveled in parading its asininity in public, even though this was not true of the vast majority of decent ordinary Sri Lankans.
So those Sinhalese ultra-nationalists, (to abstain from more pejorative formulations), who cheered the regime on when it targeted civilians during the conflict and who were so arrogant enough, at one point, to boast that they brought the Rajapaksas to power and will henceforth function as the ‘legitimate opposition’ to the government, must surely now understand the monumentally pathetic character of their claims. 
Remarkably pronounced government ire
Certainly, these vulgar propaganda attacks fell far short of their targets in the main. As past experience should have indicated if this government was a bit more strategic (which, alas, it is most assuredly not), the critique only becomes emboldened, fiercer and far more intense when such methods are employed. We saw this well enough in the crisply beautiful response of the United Nations High Commissioner on Human Rights, Navi Pillay who was similarly attacked with references to her ethnic origin and her gender, not to mention a marriage proposal extended to her by a ministerial buffoon who should be more appropriately tasked with the subject of drainage if at all. 
Sunila Abeysekera, one of Sri Lanka’s most senior human rights defenders who passed away this week, was also among those so relentlessly demonized. Perhaps she was perceived as being more dangerous than most as her identity transcended the usual Colombo glitterati frivolities and pervaded Sinhalese music, song, film and literary streams. Perhaps it was also because when speaking of the loss and lament of the Tamil people, her voice resonated more as she had unimpeachable credentials in speaking out against the tyranny and murder practiced against the Sinhala ‘disappeared’ during the eighties, in the forefront of the movement of ‘mothers of the disappeared’ in the South.
Or perhaps it was more galling that she was a woman doing in a uniquely articulate way what few men dared to do or indeed had the capacity. Regardless of what the motives were, there was little doubt that the ire of this administration was remarkably pronounced against her. 
Futility of the democratic ideal
Meanwhile, the inherent limitations that Sunila ascribed to the position of the law in societies riven by conflict was always a matter of some spirited dispute for those of us trained to think that the law was the foundation of society, in conflict or otherwise. These were provocative debates, little seen now in the despairingly silent states that we have become accustomed to. 
Yet this profound cynicism on her part did not impede her, for example, from challenging the 1998/1999 censorship regulations imposed by the Kumaranatunga government. Bearing out her lack of expectations rather aptly in retrospect, the Court refused to intervene on the basis of the perceived arbitrariness of the regulations alone, while citing some hundred and sixteen authorities in a fifty-page judgment (2000, (1) SLR, 314). Several months later, when factual instances were evidenced of the arbitrary implementation of a succeeding and even more draconian censorship regulation in cases brought by the mainstream media, the same Court did intervene, ordering the government to withdraw it. No doubt such judicial advances would be unheard of today.
This was a voice that refused to be silenced by crude slander. It was a voice that would leave Sri Lanka poorer by its absence. In the final reckoning, as Sri Lankan democracy collapses upon itself in a sad negation of core values of constitutionalism, multi-party rule and rights protections and as stubbornly contrary voices fade away, we can only ruminate on the futility of the democratic ideal that was once aimed at despite formidable odds.
Tamil Nadu students forge resolution on Sri Lanka
15 September 2013

An international youth conference in Chennai last week hosted over 700 students and urged Commonwealth nations, to boycott the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Sri Lanka.

The conference, organised by the Students’ Struggle Committee for Tamil Eezham and the Save Tamils Movement, a coalition of college students and IT professionals in Tamil Nadu, brought together students, from London, Karapgur and other Indian districts to express Solidarity with the cause of Eelam Tamils.


Controversy over Langa report

September 15, 2013
Shirani
Controversy had arisen over the refusal by the 
Commonwealth Secretariat to make public a damning report on the impeachment of former Chief Justice Shirani Banadaranayake.

The ‘Langa’ report by former South African chief justice, Pius Langa which was commissioned by the Commonwealth Secretariat, has accused the government of precipitating a constitutions crisis of vast proportions.

Britain’s ‘The Sunday Times’ reported today that the report, which was handed over to the Commonwealth Secretariat in March, had been found in the belongings of the South African judge in July after his death.

Bandaranayake was impeached in January after she fell foul of President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s regime, which brought a series of corruption charges against her, all of which she has denied.
Two reports were commissioned by the secretariat, one from the former South African chief justice and the other by Sir Jeffrey Jowell, a London QC.

Britain’s ‘The Sunday Times’ quoted Canada’s special envoy to the Commonwealth as saying Canada was “deeply troubled” over the decision by the Commonwealth Secretariat not to release the Langa report to the Commonwealth member states.

“When you have an opinion from a former Chief Justice that is so categorical and so devastating, the notion that the Commonwealth just looks the other way and pretends it never happened is deeply problematic,” the newspaper quoted him as saying.

He said there was suspicion the issues was being “swept under the rug” as the Commonwealth did not want the Commonwealth summit in November to be jeopardised.

Let-Off For Sri Lanka On Axeing Of Judge


Colombo TelegraphBy Nicola Smith – September 15, 2013 
Nicola Smith
The Commonwealth’s secretariat has been accused of covering up a damning report that described the impeachment of Sri Lanka’s most senior judge as “unlawful” and “unconstitutional”.
The revelations will add to concerns about the human rights record of the island, which is controversially hosting this November’s summit for the heads of government of the 54-nation group.
Shirani Bandaranayake, Sri Lanka’s chief justice, was impeached in January after she fell foul of President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s regime, which brought a series of corruption charges against her, all of which she has denied. Her removal sparked an outcry: Britain, America and the United Nations expressed concern.
Two reports were commissioned by the secretariat, from a former South African chief justice, Pius Langa, and Sir Jeffrey Jowell, a London QC.
Read more in the Sunday Times UK