Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Saturday, September 28, 2013

U.N. calls on Sri Lanka to begin credible inquiry into alleged war crimes and ongoing abuses


ABC HomeAustralian Broadcasting Corporation
Broadcast: 27/09/2013
Reporter: Michael Edwards
The united nations has called on the Sri Lankan government to institute a 'credible' national inquiry into human rights violations, including alleged war crimes during the civil war, or risk a U.N.-mandated investigation.

Video

U.N. calls on Sri Lanka to begin credible inquiry into alleged war crimes and ongoing abuses    EMMA ALBERICI, PRESENTER: The United Nations this week called on the Sri Lankan government to institute a 'credible' national inquiry into alleged war crimes against the minority Tamil community, or risk a UN mandated investigation.

Four years after the end of the country's civil war, Tamils still complain of widespread intimidation and violence. 

Of those self-appointed global policemen


Editorial-


Many a world leader gathers in New York every year and gets on his or her soapbox, so to speak, at the UN. We hear speakers wax eloquent passionately one after the other with some of them even spewing out streams of invective against their enemies, both real and perceived. Interestingly, the views expressed by the newly-elected Iranian leader about Israel and Holocaust are markedly at variance with those of his predecessor who looked for the slightest opportunity to tear into the enemies of Iran, at the UNGA, making some leaders stage walkouts.

US President Barack Obama, as usual held his audience spellbound with his inimitable oratory the other day in New York. So did most leaders while others treated us to ponderous outpourings of emotions. But, after the grand show, the world will be back to square one.

President Mahinda Rajapaksa was among the leaders who had the courage to come out with some home truths at the UNGA even at the risk of ruffling the feathers of the world powers. He minced no words when he declared that the world needed no policing by a few states as the United Nations was mandated to ensure international security through multilateral engagement. Most of the heads of state, especially from the developing world, must have nodded in agreement. For, they have had enough of global policing by self-appointed custodians of morals and democracy to further the latter’s hegemonic interests.

Some of the western nations act in such a way, killing and maiming as they do people in other countries in the name of democracy that the world community’s confidence in the UN system has eroded to a great extent. Those crusaders for democracy and human rights have stood the oft-quoted Aristotelian maxim, ‘the whole is greater than the sum of its parts’, on its head. They have, by virtue of their military and economic prowess, become bigger than even the UN Security Council (SC) itself to all intents and purposes. They are apparently running a parallel SC to deal with countries which they think need to be ‘democratised’ (read coerced into toeing their line). It is also they who decide whether military coups, terrorism etc should be called such. The overthrow by the Egyptian army of the democratically elected Morsi government is not a military coup in their book!

At the UNGA or any other global forum, leaders of the developing world who are not in the good books of the western bloc, may cry themselves hoarse, giving vent to their pent up resentment and seeking remedies for various injustices, but the chances of their views being taken on board are zero. It is just water off a duck’s back.

Nations came together more than six decades ago after WW II to found the UN in a bid to build a better world free from wars, as is common knowledge. True, there hasn’t been a conflagration of the magnitude of WW I or WW II all these years, but the UN has manifestly failed to prevent other bloody conflicts where hundreds of thousands of people have perished. Worse, the Big Five are severally responsible for most of them.

President Rajapaksa has said the UN is mandated to ensure international security through multilateral engagement. Yes, it is! But, we are afraid, it has not been able to live up to the expectations of the world community.

Whatever the UN may flaunt as its motto, going by the way its powerful members drive a coach and horses through its charter, one wonders whether it has been based on the premise that ‘might is right’. If the leaders of the developing world get their act together on the political, economic and human rights fronts, they will be able to hold the meddlesome, hoity-toity global policemen at bay. That is the best way out.

Touting Sri Lanka’s Virtues To The Profit Hungry

By Tim Ferguson -September 28, 2013
Tim Ferguson
Colombo TelegraphSri Lankan honchos would like to be noticed, and in the right away. Hence their current post-war PR push, as the island nation’s representatives gear up for more engagement with the West. This was on display during a week in which South Asia generally caught increased if anxious attention.
Read more

Building A political A9 Highway To Connect The Old South And The New North

Colombo Telegraph
By Rajan Philips -September 29, 2013 
Rajan Philips
The best post-election comment in my view was in the statement of TNA Leader, R. Sampanthan, wherein he said that “the results of this election offers everyone an opportunity which should be fully utilized in a positive manner.”  The principal actors in the utilization of this new opportunity are of course the Rajapaksa government in the south and the newly elected and TNA-led Provincial Council in the north.  I am using the terms ‘old south’ and ‘new north’ merely in the context of the UPFA’s now routine victories in the Northwest Province and the Central Province, and the TNA’s overwhelmingly emphatic performance in the Northern Province.  The congenital devolution detractors do not have to see any ‘seeds of separation’ in my allusions to new north and old south.
Mr. Sampanthan’s statement has categorically laid to rest the canard that the TNA is still nurturing separatism with the assertion that: “The democratic verdict of the (Tamil) people is clear. Within the framework of a united, undivided country, they want to live in security, safeguarding their self-respect and dignity with adequate self-rule, to be able to fulfill their legitimate political, economic, social and cultural aspirations.”  It is time to move on and leave behind those who insist on barking and braying.  What is needed is a new political A9 highway allowing the free flow of two way political and administrative traffic between the government in Colombo and the new NPC in Jaffna.
The big question is if the Rajapaksa government will allow the new Northern Provincial Council (NPC) with C.V. Wigneswaran as the electorally mandated Chief Minister, to fulfill its constitutional purpose as a concurrent and co-ordinate arm of the state, created to enable provincial self-rule in an undivided country.  The constitutional purpose cannot be clearer, although the contours of that purpose and their extensibility are subject to administrative decisions, judicial interpretation and future political agreements.  These could go on forever, but nothing will go ahead unless the Rajapaksa government sincerely and honestly acts according to the constitution and allows the new Provincial Council to take office and function.
Democracy and Elections                       Read More

Sri Lanka president uses his time in U.N. spotlight to lash out

Mahinda Rajapaksa, under fire over human rights in Sri Lanka, says at the U.N. General Assembly that the U.N. is being manipulated.

UNITED NATIONS — From Moammar Kadafi's baffling fantasies to Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's room-emptying rants, almost every confab of world leaders at the annual United Nations General Assembly includes speeches that make people squirm in their chairs.
With the Libyan leader deposed and dead and the former Iranian president retired — and Sudan's Omar Hassan Ahmed Bashir, charged with committing war crimes in the Darfur region, staying away — one of the most awkward moments this year came when the president of tiny Sri Lanka, Mahinda Rajapaksa, used his speech Tuesday to bash the U.N. itself.
The world body has repeatedly chastised Rajapaksa, culminating in charges by its chief human rights official this week that he was turning his island nation, just four years removed from a three-decade insurgency, into a dictatorship.
The State Department's most recent human rights report blamed Rajapaksa's government for concentrating power in the hands of family members, bullying activists and journalists, incapacitating the judiciary and repressing minority Tamils, the ethnic group that launched the war. A 2011 U.N. report cited evidence that Sri Lanka's military had killed as many as 40,000 civilians, mostly Tamils, in the closing months of the conflict.
Rajapaksa has denied wrongdoing and accused critics of meddling in his country's affairs. At the podium Tuesday, he suggested that the U.N. was the victim of "manipulation" by foreign agendas and blasted "the growing trend in the international arena of interference by some in the internal matters of developing countries, in the guise of … human rights."
In an interview in his suite at New York's Waldorf Astoria hotel, Rajapaksa deflected criticism of his government's rights record and said the U.N. and Western powers seemed bent on harassing Sri Lanka.
"We are a small country, an easy target," he said.
Asked about human rights groups and others who accuse him of abusing power, he became angry, saying, "Who elected them?"
Rajapaksa has kept up a busy diplomatic schedule in New York, shuttling between meetings with the leaders of Pakistan, New Zealand and other nations. But if he returns to the U.N. General Assembly next year, he may face a more uncomfortable reception.
U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay demanded this week that the Sri Lankan leader take significant steps to investigate allegations of war crimes by military officers and government officials. If the government in Colombo fails to do so within six months, Pillay said, she would launch an international inquiry, something Rajapaksa strongly opposes.
"President Rajapaksa's hope is to fool everyone and rewrite history," said John Sifton, Asia director for Human Rights Watch. "He is not going to succeed."
In the interview, Rajapaksa played up his achievements. His government ended the insurgency by Tamil Tiger separatists, improved healthcare and the economy, and this month held the first regional elections in 25 years in the war-ravaged north, the seat of the insurgency.
But international monitors found that candidates and supporters of the opposition Tamil National Alliance faced intimidation by the army, which maintains a huge presence in the north. Men in military uniforms attacked the home of a female opposition candidate days before the vote, although army officials denied involvement.
Meanwhile, Sudan's strongman might never make it back to New York, despite saying for days that he would attend the General Assembly and even booking a hotel room.
Last week, U.S. officials confirmed that Bashir, who faces an outstanding arrest warrant from theInternational Criminal Court, had applied for a visa. The Sudanese Foreign Ministry issued a statement pointing out, almost gleefully, that the United States as host nation "does not have the legal right to object to the participation of any official from a full member state in the international organization in U.N. activities."
The legal argument was correct, presenting a dilemma for the United States, which isn't a party to the ICC but has backed efforts to prosecute Bashir on charges of genocide and other crimes in Sudan's Darfur region.
Still, Samantha Power, the U.S. ambassador to the U.N. and a longtime anti-genocide campaigner, pointedly suggested that Bashir should "present himself to the ICC and travel to The Hague" rather than New York.
In the end, U.N. officials said Bashir would not come to New York but gave no details.

President Mahinda Calls His Ex-Ambassador NGO Man; Dayan Challenges President To Name NGO

Colombo TelegraphSeptember 28, 2013 
President Mahinda Rajapaksa yesterday for the first time openly criticised his former Ambassador to the UN in Geneva Dayan Jayatillake, saying he was making political statements and claiming he was now working for a non-Governmental organisation.
Responding to a question by the Al Jazeera Interviewer about the fact that his former Ambassador had strongly criticised the Government’s actions in Weliweriya where the armed forces are accused of shooting unarmed civilians, the President accused Jayatillaka of making statements for political reasons.
Dr. Dayan
“But he was your Ambassador, Mr. President,” the Al Jazeera reporter said.
“Yes he was my ambassador, but now he is a member of a very powerful NGO so they have their own views,” the President retorted, adding that this was a “democracy and anyone could say anything.”
The Al Jazeera reporter was quoting from Jayatilleka’s comment on the shootings at Weliweriya in which he noted: “The obvious observations will be, if this is how the State authorities treat unarmed Sinhalese, largely Buddhist civilian men, women and children who are protesting against polluted water, how must that state have treated the Tamils in the closing stages of the war?”  Dr. Jayatilleka told Colombo Telegraph that the President’s assertion or allegation was completely and utterly without foundation in fact.
“Doubtless the President has been grossly misinformed,” he said.
The former Ambassador said the last time he was a member of a NGO was three decades ago, when he was a member of the now defunct Movement for Inter-Racial Justice and Equality in Sri Lanka.
“I can state unambiguously and categorically that I am not a member of any NGO, large or small, international or local,” Jayatilleka told Colombo Telegraph, adding, “I would also like to know which NGO I am supposed to belong to”.

A Terminal Crisis Of Electoral Existence

By Dayan Jayatilleka -September 29, 2013 
Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka
Colombo TelegraphThe steep decline of the United National Party (UNP), which failed to score even an average of 30% of the votes in the two provinces outside the North shows that the main democratic alternative is in the grip of a potentially terminal crisis. This has a very severe consequence for the equilibrium of the polity and the future of democracy.
In the North-Western and the Central Provinces, the incumbent administration has been able to secure an average of over 60% votes, which is a considerable achievement for any government, especially at a time of economic hardship. Since the campaign was led by President Rajapaksa, it is a personal victory and evidence of his continuing appeal among the Sinhala voters.
An impressive individual victory has also been scored by Dayasiri Jayasekara, who has seized the imagination of the public as a rising star in national politics.
The election has been a relative victory for General Sarath Fonseka, who even without his full civic rights and well-known names on his ticket has been able to emerge the third force, knocking the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) into the fourth place.
The biggest losers are the UNP and its leader, Ranil Wickremesinghe, as well as the JVP. In both cases, the issue is the leadership. Neither party has a personality as a national leader, who is capable of retaining, let alone attracting, votes.Read More

Lasantha Wickrematunge Memorial Lecture 2013: Presentations, photos and video

GroundviewsThe Lasantha Wickrematunge Memorial Lecture held recently featured, as noted on the website of Sri Lankans Without Borders (SLWB) website,
“…leading journalists from Canada and Sri Lanka [in] a panel discussion to examine press freedom in Sri Lanka in commemoration of the life and times of leading Sri Lankan journalist and human right activist Lasantha Wickrematunge.”
Co-hosted by Sri Lankans Without Borders and the South Asian Journalists Association, the event was held on Saturday, September 21, 2013 Ryerson University in Toronto, Canada. The panel discussion included,
  • Stewart Bell, Senior Reporter, National Post
  • Sanjana Hattotuwa, Founding Editor, Groundviews
  • J.S. Tissainayagam, award-winning journalist-in-exile
  • Malinda Seneviratne, Editor-in-Chief, The Nation
The written submission by Tissainayagam can be read here, and Seneviratne’s comments, which were read out at the event, can be seenhere. A video recording of the full event, lasting for over 2 hours and generating some very interesting questions and discussions, can be seen below.
Photos from the event, plus other events organised by SLWB around this event, can be seen on their Flickr page here.

“I Have Sinhala Extremists And Religious Extremists In My Cabinet”: President

September 28, 2013 
Colombo TelegraphPresident Mahinda Rajapaksa in a widely publicised interview with the Al-Jazeera network yesterday admitted to having religious extremists and right wing extremists in his cabinet of ministers.
“Right wing extremists are there, religious extremists are there – the Tamils, the Sinhala, the Muslims – we have all these people in the cabinet. They are all working together and I have to manage them,” President Rajapaksa told an Interviewer from Al-Jazeera.
The reporter was asking the President about charges by UN high Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay that some of his Ministers had abused her and called her the Tamil Tigress in the UN. “Even one of your own brothers she says,” the reporter said.
“This is a democracy. Individual MPs, Ministers and officials can say anything they want,” the President replied.
Rajapaksa said he had the world’s only Trotskyite cabinet member in his cabinet

Video: Talk To Al Jazeera – Mahinda Rajapaksa: ‘This Is All Propaganda’


Election Commissioner Mahinda Deshapriya must explain how 8 voters could cast votes every min.

(Lanka-e-News-28.Sep.2013, 6.30PM It has now come to light not only to the entire nation but even to the MPs of the government itself that like how every action and intention of the Rajapakse regime is a deceitful ploy so it is with the conduct of every election in the country following the Puttalam Andrew College voting racket exposure .

During a recent television debate , none other than Eric Weerawardena of the government clearly stated it was possible for a rigging in the preferential voting though a general rigging is unlikely. 

Sunil Handunetti M .P who participated in the debate then questioned , ‘if officers at the top like you were aware of such a potential vote rigging , why is it that you did not expose this ahead?’

Hence , it is now confirmed 100 % and even more that under this MaRa ( Main Racketeer) administration , the elections is also another racket and fraud in Sri Lanka (SL). Even if the people are not aware of this , the Elections Commissioner Mahinda Deshapriya is fully aware of it. This became clearly evident based on the outrageous over anxiety shown by him to suppress the Puttalam polling card discovery episode – the diabolic attempt to conceal the votes that had been cast allegedly after the time of voting . 

Lanka e news and the elections monitors questioned the Elections Commissioner (EC) about the number of votes cast at the last elections which was in excess of the total officially declared number of votes. The EC on the other hand without giving a proper answer dodged the issue. The EC, after the conclusion of voting at 4.30 p.m. , did not announce the number of votes cast , suppressed that information and waited until the votes were counted. It is possible for the elections department to officially announce at 4.30 p.m. the votes cast after the voting is over at 4.00 p.m. 

We are herein exposing just one of the many elections fraud committed by the shameless EC on the 21 st:

In Kurunegala district by about 12.00 noon ,only 27 % of the votes were cast. This was not only confirmed by the district elections officer but also by Derana in its news telecast. Hiru FM and Neth FM in their broadcasts announced that perhaps there was 30% votes polling in the Kurunegala district at about 3.00 p.m.

These were stark facts confirmed unequivocally by the district elections officer . However , after the voting ended at 4.00 p.m ., no official announcement was made regarding votes cast , while the media reported variously about it. After the counting of votes were over , based on district results it was officially announced there was 66.74 % voting in Kurunegala.

It is from this point of time all the issues proliferate :

The number of registered voters in Kurunegala district is 1,227,810 ,and there were 964 polling centers for them to cast their votes. Only 30% had voted by 3.00 p.m according to official reports- that is 368 343 votes. But. the total number of votes cast swelled to 819,394 by 4.00 p.m.- that is 66.74 % had voted, as announced after the polling count was done.

In other words , between 3.00 p.m. and 4.00 p.m. , 451051 voters have arrived at the 964 polling centers which means that at each polling center at least 468 voters had appeared ! Statistics wise based on this – 8 votes should have been cast every minute during that time !! A voter must have cast the vote and gone every 7 seconds . Mind you this is the least number statistically.

When a voter comes to cast his vote he has to follow the procedural wrangle :

Polling card identification
Name verification 
Identification by party representatives at the polling center 
Marking the finger with indelible ink.
Going to voting booth, making a cross against his candidate , casting the vote into the ballot box and leaving the booth .

The most intriguing question is , can all this be done within one min. by 8 voters , let alone one voter ? 
People cannot act fast forward like in the Charlie Chaplin comic films of the past. In any case Charlie Chaplin was not up to these tricks.

In the circumstances , the Elections Commissioner, our comedian Charlie Goblin is under a duty to explain how he could arrange all this for 8 voters within a minute. 

The monitors are also having an onerous responsibility to probe into this and reveal to the people how this feat was performed by MaRa’s hero Charlie Goblin ?

Meanwhile , this MaRa hero Charlie Goblin is also under a duty to explain how polling cards meant for voting were discovered left unattended at Andrews College, Puttalam.

Therefore Mahinda Deshapriya alias Charlie Goblin, please do not search for an escape route just because the producer of the film is Mahinda Rajapakse your ‘Charlie uding’.

It is your absolute duty to give answers to the people for all these egregious lapses .

Probe into ‘conspiracy’ against president in Kurunegala!


m J-DState intelligence has launched a special investigation on the orders of the Defence Secretary as to whether a conspiracy by several ruling party ministers of the government from Kurunegala had taken place during the election for the north western provincial council.
On the basis of a complaint by another government minister, the president has told the Defence Secretary to initiate an investigation. The group of ministers had plotted the conspiracy at a room of the home of the Kurunegala mayor on September 02 following the SLFP anniversary conference, the tale-carrying minister has told the president.

According to him, ministers S.B. Nawinna, Jayaratne Herath, Salinda Dissanayake, and two urban councilors and the Dodamgaslanda electoral organizer had reached agreement to defeat Johnston Fernando’s son Johan in order to teach a lesson to the president. All those present had also agreed to extend their fullest suport to Dayasiri Jayasekara to defeat Johan Fernando.

On the occasion, minister S.B. Nawinna has said, “The same thing that was done to Berty was tried on me as well. At this time, we should show our strength to the president. Without thinking, the president has placed the wrong trump card on the table. We must lay our hands on that trump card. Let us support Dayasiri secretly and defeat Johnny’s lad.”

All those present, in one voice, had approved of his suggestion. Unexpectedly, minister Basil Rajapaksa had arrived at the mayor’s residence, but none of those in the room had come out to receive him. Angered by that, minister Basil Rajapaksa had left and then told the president, “Our seniors are apparently going to play a game. They were having a secret talk inside a room. They did not care about me at all.” Since these remarks and the complaint by the friendly minister tallied, the president has told the Defence Secretary to launch an immediate investigation.

At their discussion, the ministers also decided that from Johnny’s seat, his son should be relegated to second place. Minister Salinda Dissanayake had said that he had the trump cards to do the needful. Accordingly, the caste of former PC member Nilantha Supun Rajapaksa was highlighted in order to promote him over Johan Fernando. Also, a decision was taken to use Kolambagama Podi Hamuduruwo of Panduwasnuwara Purana Rajamaha Vihara, a renowned monk of the area, to incite religious feelings. The objective of this operation was to tame the inappropriate powers of the president in the north western province. It is in light of these circumstances that even Mr. Dayasiri Jayasekara himself is surprized that he had been able to poll more than 300,000 preferential votes.

At several of the election rallies attended by the president, Mr. Dayasiri Jayasekara attempted to hand over his policy manifesto to him, but the president had avoided him on purpose. After coming to know of this, the group of ministers in question had organized a separate rally in Kurunegala on September 15, invited SLFP general secretary Maithripala Sirisena and other senior SLFP ministers, and handed over his election manifesto to them. In the end, unity among SLFP senior ministers enabled them to defeat president Mahinda Rajapaksa. Nowadays, president is seriously thinking what his fate would be like, if the other SLFP ministers and MPs in the country take this as a cue and follow the example given from Kurunegala, according to sources close to him.

Pillaiyan wants police, land powers for North

by Ananth Palakidnar- Saturday, 28 Sep 2013

Former Chief Minister of the Eastern Provincial Council, Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan alias Pillaiyan, said the Northern Provincial Council (NPC) should be vested with police and land powers.

Pillaiyan, expressing his views over the outcome of the NPC polls, said regardless of who came to power in the North, the police and land powers allocated under the 13th Amendment should be devolved to the Northern Province.

“People in the North have given their mandate to the Tamil National Alliance (TNA). While we insist that police and land powers should be... ...given to the Northern Province, the demands that have been put forwarded by the TNA in its manifesto cannot be achieved. We should also see how the TNA will respond to the credibility placed on it by the Northerners,” Pillaiyan said.

Commenting on the situation in the East, Pillaiyan said, since the Eastern Province is a multiethnic region, the TNA would find it difficult to obtain an overall victory as in the North.

Meanwhile, the TNA has given one of its two bonus seats to Ayub Asmin of the People’s Movement for Good Governance, representing the Mannar District. The member for the second seat is yet to be decided by the TNA hierarchy.
Informed sources said the seat would be offered in rotation for five years for five selected members.

Polling cards in classroom of Andrews College: EC rejects three valid complaints of election monitors- see photos
(Lanka-e-News-28.Sep.2013, 6.30PM) The election monitors have forwarded three complaints in connection with the conduct of elections at Putalam on the 21 st to the Elections Commissioner (EC), but the latter had rejected them under most suspicious circumstances inducing the monitors to cast doubts and suspicion on the EC’s action, and to question why he did so.

At the St . Andrews College Puttalam which was a counting center , on 24th large number of marked polling cards around thousand had been found left unattended. The monitors say , these marked polling cards in a bundle at this center which is located in the vicinity of the Puttalam police station were among those that had been discarded.

When the group of laborers were cleaning the classrooms they have discovered them whereupon they have reported it to the police and the monitors. By the time the monitors reached the venue , the police had already entered the place , and have refused to allow the monitors to come in triggering grave suspicions over this whole episode.

In any event the monitors had been able to confirm that there were marked polling cards at the venue as reported. They say among them were polling cards of UPFA candidates Sadath Chandrasiri(10) , Chinthaka Mayadunne (11) and Indrani Dassanayake (8).

It is to be noted that despite an authorized election monitoring Organization requesting permission to monitor the vote counting at this election , the EC had rejected the request.

The monitors made complaints of three instances of suspicious vote counting in the Puttalam district on election day to the EC. Yet the latter had rejected them which has led to doubts and suspicions to be cast on EC’s conduct. It is being furiously questioned why the EC did not take any action on those complaints?

A report submitted by an election monitoring Organization makes this abundantly clear thus :

‘ CAFFE has received four complaints by UPFA candidates and their associates in Puttalam ; and CAFFE has requested three times to monitor the counting ,the most vital parts of the election’

Apart from this , a recount on the Puttalam votes has also created grave suspicion. Even the counting of votes at Kandy had run into a storm of conflicts. In Kurunegala issues have cropped up when counting the preferential votes of UNP candidate Shamal Senaratne.

Since the EC had on three occasions rejected the requests of an election monitoring Organization to monitor the counting , it had been impossible for the latter to give a report , as the murky activities that were going on inside the center could not be detected therefore .

The most important aspect of an election is the counting of votes , and therefore any attempts at suppressing it from the monitors is most irregular and a cause for serious suspicion.

On an earlier occasion a number of polling cards were discovered at a counting center at Ratnapura district, which were collected by UNP deputy leader Karu Jayasooriya.and handed over to the EC . The EC had strangely still not conducted any inquiry into it or submitted a report in that regard. In other words here is a most responsible EC who has acted most irresponsibly , strangely, negligently and suspiciously in the discharge of his duties all along.

In the past , a large quantity of polling cards with the cross against party symbol swan was discovered at Kalagedihena . The answer given by the EC in that connection was they are cards that have fallen off a Van. This answer is as absurd as he is harebrained . 

All his actions and utterances have only contributed to arousing suspicions against him rather than reposing faith in him. The monitors pinpointed earlier too , there were malpractices at the polling centers in Matale and Anuradhapura .

The polling cards that were found this evening at the polling center in Andrews College , Puttalam, and a copy of the complaint made to the election monitors by the candidates ,of the irregularities and malpractices were been planned ahead when the counting was to take place at Puttalam are depicted in the photographs.

In the circumstances , only a stupid EC who has his headquarters in his hindquarters can still say the elections were fairly conducted.
Reveal the names, Minister Sirisena

EditorialSaturday, 28 Sep 2013


The battle against the butt it appears has now entered the realms of whodunit, with the Minister of Health, Maithripala Sirisena, introducing a subornment element to the saga of pictorial warnings on cigarette packets. Days after the Supreme Court issued a stay order halting the implementation of a special gazette notification, which would have made it mandatory for cigarette-manufacturing companies to print pictorial warnings covering 80% of the principal display area of each packet of cigarettes, he dropped a bombshell, alleging that the ‘tobacco industry’ tried to bribe him into blocking the said gazette notification.

Of course he didn’t name names, but he added mega bucks intrigue by insinuating that the money offered would have been sufficient for fourteen generations to live in the lap of luxury in a ‘first-world’ country without engaging in any other livelihood. Interestingly, the minister chose a ceremony felicitating him for dedicated services to the country, with the award being fashioned after the World Health Organization (WHO), to make the revelation.

There is no gainsaying that leading the national fight against smoking is a noble task. Smoking tobacco, as government warning indicates ‘causes heart attacks’ and is the leading cause of lung cancer. There are many heartrending stories of those inflicted with the disease. There are also many similar tales of woe caused by the ill effects of passive smoking,  Any attempt made, however feeble it might be, to discourage the health damaging habit, which also costs the government millions in terms of medical care, must be applauded. There should not be any compromise on the propagation of information, both educative and informative, and any attempt by any party to sacrifice tomorrow’s health for today’s profit must be severely condemned and rejected outright. If Minister Sirisena renders leadership to a movement dedicated to the stoppage of cigarette-smoking, he deserves every bit of help he could get.

The introduction of pictorial graphics, often times gruesome, depicting the ill-effects of tobacco smoking on the main body of cigarette packets is something many governments worldwide have resorted to in the past several years to both educate and scare the smokers into giving up the habit.  How much of an impact the graphic warnings have had in discouraging smoking, especially among newcomers, is another matter altogether. The only party that would have an objection to such display of anti-smoking graphics is those who stand to lose their profits, if such displays do adversely impact the sale of cigarettes. And that is obviously the tobacco industry. 

It is indeed laudable that the Minister of Health refused to cow down to the pressures, if in fact such pressures were applied by the industry and its agents. But as a responsible minister, Sirisena has an obligation to reveal the names of those who approached him to purchase his allegiance to the industry. For, to withhold the names and shout out the allegations, only amounts to beating of an empty drum, that may well have the public wondering if a piqued minister is simply venting his frustration at having a decision go against his wishes, or whether there is really any element of truth to the revelation.  The statement by the Ceylon Tobacco Company (CTC), denying the allegations made by the minister, adds to the public misgiving, and further compels Sirisena to come out with names.

The CTC, as per its own statement, has been in existence for the last hundred years and its reputation as an efficiently-run business enterprise is beyond dispute. In fact some forty years ago, the CTC was one of the two companies in Sri Lanka in which many a young person would yearn to secure employment.

It is going to be a clash between two giants. On one side is the Minister of Health who is also the General Secretary of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), the main controlling partner in the governing coalition and on the other side is a business giant making billions of rupees of profits year after year, and contributing a healthy portion of it to the government coffers, by way of tax rupees.  Who will remain standing at the end of the clash would be as interesting as the story of bribery and corruption.