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

Monday, November 4, 2013

Sri Lanka Hosting CHOGM 2013 : A Serious Problem

 by Brian Senewiratne 

  ( November 4, 2013, Brisbane, Sri Lanka Guardian)                                                           

This paper was written a month ago under a different title:
 “Sri Lanka hosting CHOGM is a joke. Is the (British) Commonwealth relevant any more?”


I argued that the Commonwealth was a farce, and the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) a joke. That is not correct. I have re-written it to draw attention to an entirely different ‘event’ associated with CHOGM, the Commonwealth Business Forum (CBF).

Value Of Indian And South African Support To Resolve Problems

By Jehan Perera -November 4, 2013 
Jehan Perera
Colombo TelegraphThe invitation to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh to visit Sri Lanka that was issued by Chief Minister of the Northern Province, C V Wigneswaran, has shown the positive side of the current reconciliation process in the country.   The first weeks of the new born provincial council have been marked by expressions of goodwill at the highest levels, most notably between PresidentMahinda Rajapaksa and Chief Minister Wigneswaran.  There was no better an example of goodwill at this time than the invitation extended by the Chief Minister to the Indian Prime Minister to visit Jaffna and therefore Sri Lanka.  The invitation came at a time when the Indian state of Tamil Nadu had passed a unanimous resolution in its legislature calling for an Indian boycott of CHOGM.   Chief Minister Wigneswaran’s invitation to visit Jaffna has given the Indian Prime Minister another legitimate reason come to Sri Lanka for the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.
Chief Minister Wigneswaran has come in for criticism by those who have been campaigning for an international boycott of CHOGM. He has himself being complaining of blockages in his provincial administration due to restrictive practices of the central authorities continuing even after the elections.  But his willingness to think of the larger interests at stake for the Tamil people who elected him is to be appreciated.  It is also clear that the wellbeing of the Tamll people in the North will be best assured if there is cooperation between the Northern Provincial Council and the Sri Lankan government. However, there are other sections that are more focused on issues of human rights and war-time accountability.  They have been campaigning hard to prevent the Commonwealth Summit being held in Sri Lanka and against Sri Lankan President Rajapaksa from taking on the Chairmanship of the Commonwealth after CHOGM.
The challenge in Sri Lanka is for the government to be able to show its detractors that it is serious about tackling the problems of human rights and accountability that accompanied the war.  The most recentChannel 4 video which shows the fate of an LTTE newscaster in the last phase of the war is an indication of the seriousness of a problem that refuses to go away. This is where the government’s relationship with South Africa has become important.  The South African example of reconciliation is today entrenched in the consciousness of the international community as a great success and a beacon of hope to other countries in conflict.  It may not have been a coincidence that the first Sri Lanka-South Africa Joint Dialogue on Post-Conflict Reconciliation took place a fortnight ago in the final run-up to the Commonwealth Summit.  The government’s partnership with South Africa in this event would go a considerable part of the way to win over many Commonwealth countries to support the Sri Lankan government’s position.
Difficult Road                                            Read More

2 more ministers oppose PM's Sri Lanka visit for Commonwealth summit

HT Correspondents , Hindustan Times  New Delhi/Chennai, November 04, 2013
Union ministers V Narayanasamy and Jayanthi Natarajan on Monday joined the chorus against Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s visit to Sri Lanka for a Commonwealth summit in view of alleged atrocities against ethnic Tamils.
 
If the PM attends the November 15-17 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), he risks rubbing his ministers and leaders from Tamil Nadu the wrong way.
 
His visit may also alienate potential allies, which the Congress may need before or after the Lok Sabha polls due in 2014, from the state.
 
Alleged abuse suffered by ethnic Tamils in the island nation is a hugely emotive issue throughout Tamil Nadu.   &n
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“I have conveyed my opinion to the Prime Minister that he should not visit Sri Lanka,” Narayanasamy, minister of state in the Prime Minister’s Office, said.   
 
Narayanasamy represents Puducherry, which has a substantial Tamil population, in the Lok Sabha. 
 
Environment minister Natarajan said in Chennai she would write to the PM and urge him not to attend the summit.
 
“With the atrocities against Tamils in Sri Lanka and the sentiments of people in Tamil Nadu, I hope the Prime Minister will take a good decision.”
 
However, another Congress leader from Tamil Nadu, S Natchiappan, the minister of state for commerce, struck a different note.
 
“He (PM) should travel to Jaffna and other Tamil-dominated areas before reaching Colombo. Perhaps this is the demand of the elected government in the Northern region of the island nation,” said Natchiappan.
 
Defence minister AK Antony, finance minister P Chidambaram and shipping minister GK Vasan have opposed top foreign policy advisors who want the PM to attend the biennial meeting in Colombo.
 
They argue that the PM should respect the sentiments of many Indian Tamils who believe that Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government crushed the LTTE-led Tamil movement by large-scale human rights violation.
 
The Tamil Nadu assembly has already passed a unanimous resolution opposing the PM’s participation in the summit.
 
While Chidambaram and Vasan’s reservations are understandable, as both are MPs from Tamil Nadu, Antony’s opposition gives their view more weight.
 
The defence minister wants the Cabinet Committee on Security (CCS) to consider the sentiments of 90 million Tamils worldwide.
 
The issue of human rights violations in Sri Lanka has seen Canada’s Prime Minister Stephen Harper boycott the summit. Incidentally, for the first time in 40 years, Queen Elizabeth II too will not be present at the meet.

Commonwealth apathy over Sri Lanka is only to be expected

The Guardian homeDavid Cameron has been urged by shadow foreign secretary Douglas ­Alexander, and others, to boycott the meeting next week in Colombo. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA
David Cameron armed forces
Priyamvada Gopal
Sunday 3 November 2013
As the Commonwealth summit approaches, the shadow foreign secretary, Douglas Alexander, among others, has urged David Cameron to boycott the meeting next week in Colombo, while the Canadian prime minister, Stephen Harper, has withdrawn. At issue are the war crimes alleged to have been committed under the host government in Sri Lanka, for which there is mounting evidence. Thousands of Tamil civilians were killed during the bloody civil war. President Mahinda Rajapaksa is also accused of attacks on the press and violence against government critics. With the UN too calling for an independent investigation, refused so far, it is certainly depressing that Commonwealth leaders show so little appetite for challenging his intransigence.
This collective moral apathy has led to suggestions that the Commonwealth risks irrelevance, a fear as old as the organisation itself. Critics of the Sri Lankan regime understandably accuse the Commonwealth of not being fit for purpose since democracy and human rights ostensibly constitute its "core values". Secretary-General Kamalesh Sharma's rhetoric of "behind the scenes" engagement suggests appeasement. Others, equating economic indices and moral capability, have hinted that only Britain and other "developed" (read white-majority) countries have human rights concerns, the Asian and African Commonwealth being more interested in aid.
The unpalatable truth is that the Commonwealth wasn't set up to address how its national leaders exercised state power or to ensure compliance to agreed values. It was based on the foundational fiction that British Empire – no model of universal human rights – was established to teach colonies self-governance and equip them to take their place in the global order. The ideal was "friendly co-operation" of member nations with each other and with British business and expertise (not least, military).
Whether or not the Commonwealth is "a neo-colonial institution", asGambian strongman Yahya Jammeh put it when withdrawing his tyrannised nation from the organisation this year, it certainly sought to consolidate British economic advantage and global influence. Honour among chiefs – who overwhelmingly represent the interests of the moneyed and powerful in their nations – ensures the Commonwealth's poor track record when it comes to challenging misdeeds.
Indeed, the collective pressure exerted on apartheid South Africa fifty years ago remains the most significant exception to prove the Commonwealth rule— achieved despite British unwillingness and continual refusal to impose sanctions. 'Human rights' remains an opportunistic game.
But neither war crimes nor domestic repression are the specialism of an errant few, even if not all governments are formally despotic or egregious to the same degree. Rajapaksa's elected regime must be held accountable, but questions should also be raised about the Indian army's atrocities in Kashmir and Britain's role in the illegal invasion of Iraq. Canada's critical stance on Sri Lanka is welcome but the former is accused of complicity in the systematic torture of Afghan prisoners whileHarper has allegedly tampered with democratic institutions and muzzled opponents. Without "blaming all ills on colonialism", it is worth remembering that alongside managed democracy, the empire also bequeathed repressive state apparatuses, including armies, and draconian anti-insurgency laws that have come in handy for postcolonial authoritarianism.
It is important to intensify international pressure on the Sri Lankan government, which is due to chair the Commonwealth for the next two years. But it seems unlikely that effective action will emerge from an organisation which, like others of its ilk, largely works as a networking forum for ruling elites and their professional managerial classes. Whether it should be taken more seriously or disbanded is a less interesting question than this: what kind of international network would truly serve to hold governments across the world accountable to the basic rights and aspirations of ordinary citizens? Such platforms would have to undo the longstanding geopolitical supremacy of the global north but not simply replace it with the emerging powers now fighting for influence.
Can we create egalitarian global organisations that might work with the democratic energies unleashed recently in so many places, enabling the powerless to demand redress and provoke change? There is no simple answer, but one thing is certain – the Commonwealth as it now stands has no stake in even posing the question.

More pressure on PM to miss Colombo Commonwealth meet

More pressure on PM to miss Colombo Commonwealth meet
Latest News by Deepshikha Ghosh | Updated: November 04, 2013 

New Delhi The Prime Minister faces a growing chorus within his Congress party to miss a Commonwealth summit in Colombo over Sri Lanka's alleged war crimes against Lankan Tamils, though his office has advised him to attend the event.

Union Environment Minister Jayanthi Natarajan has become the third union minister to voice her concerns over Dr Manmohan Singh's proposed visit to Colombo on November 15, after Finance Minister P Chidambaram and Shipping Minister GK Vasan.

"I have requested a meeting with the PM. I want to convey the strong sentiments of people of Tamil Nadu on his Sri Lanka visit. I will request him to factor sentiments against his visit when he considers his final decision," said Ms Natarajan, who is a Member of Parliament from Tamil Nadu.

Last week, GK Vasan had met the Prime Minister and asked him to boycott the event. 

Sources close to Mr Chidambaram said he, too, opposes the visit and feels that while the government can send a representative to the conference of leaders of Commonwealth nations, Dr Singh should not travel there.

Last month, the Tamil Nadu assembly unanimously adopted a resolution that said India must boycott the session to register its protest against the Sri Lankan government's failure to investigate and punish those who allegedly persecuted the island's ethnic Tamils in the final phase of the civil war that ended in 2009 when the military feared the rebel Tamil Tigers.

M Karunanidhi, the leader of regional party DMK, has warned that if the PM travels to Sri Lanka, "his party will have to face the consequences." The DMK quit Dr Singh's coalition in March, accusing it of failing to hold the Sri Lankan government accountable for alleged war crimes against Tamils.

Sources in the government have told NDTV that senior bureaucrats in the PM's office and the Foreign Ministry feel it is important to continue engaging with Sri Lanka's government  so that India can push for the Tamil cause.

The Prime Minister said recently, "We will consider the sentiments of the Tamil people."

To Kill A Sri Lankan


By Jagath Asoka -November 4, 2013 
Dr Jagath Asoka
Colombo TelegraphTo kill any Sri Lankan for criticizing Mahinda and Gotabaya is like killing a mocking bird. Have you read Harper Lee’s novel To Kill A Mocking Bird?
Should we kill our own citizens when they ask for a separate state? Should we kill them when they want to establish socialism or utopian-communism? How about when they criticize Mahinda and Gotabaya for creating a political system that is corrupt; has taken away the freedom of speech of all citizens; has made a mockery of the rule of law; has allowed their goons, thugs, drug dealers, rapists, laptop licking journalists, and murderers to make billions from development projects and casinos? If you are a Buddhist, a Christian, a Hindu, a Muslim, a Jew, an atheist, or an agnostic would you kill another person without any compunction? Would you kill a person for criticizing you, if you could get away with it? Would you kill another Sri Lankan for criticizing Rajapaksas, if you were paid to do so? Would you?Criticism is not treason.
If you are a journalist, would you keep prostituting for Rajapaksas, while deceiving the readers and keep throwing your feces at other journalists, because you are paid to do so. If you call yourself a journalist, would your conscience tie your tongue when you see murder, rape, and injustice? Who is prostituting the media freedom?
If you think of Sri Lankans as your own brothers and sisters, how do you feel when you kill your own brothers and sisters? Do you think Cain was right when he killed Abel because God preferred Abel’s gift, not Cain’s? Under what circumstances would you say killing your own brothers and sisters is a good thing? If you are an ardent supporter of Rajapaksas—a Buddhist zealot who firmly believes that Rajapaksas have rescued this country from Tamil terrorists—and if you think Rajapaksas are the guardians of Buddhism in our country, would you achieve nirvana when you kill another Sinhala Buddhist when he or she criticizes your paper lions: Mahinda and Gotabaya?                                         Read More

Prostituting Media Freedom

By Malinda Seneviratne -November 4, 2013 
Malinda Seneviratne
Colombo TelegraphMedia freedom, like all freedoms, is not something one can talk about in absolutist language.  There are always caveats.  There are always conditions.  There are lines imposed and there are limits that come from within, the latter kind being two fold, those birthed by fear and those that are spawned by ideological or political preferences.
For all the rhetoric about absolute freedom of expression and objectivity in reportage and comment, the truth is that everyone defines for him/herself an operational comfort zone.  There’s a lot of over-focus on pet peeves and a studious look-askance when friend or chosen ideology slips up.  Those who disagree are probably blissfully ignorant or consciously deceitful.
That said, there is nothing to say that the freedoms that do exist are adequate or those that don’t are not worth fighting for.  In short, things can always be better.
We live in a world that is made of surveillance. This world is people by humans and not gods. As such they are prone to error.  Systems may appear robust but there never impregnable. ‘9/11’ showed us that.  Wikileaks showed us that. There will always be people like Julian Assange and Edward Snowden.  There have been and will be the likes of Bradley Manning.  There will also be a Callum Macrae and Frances Harrison who in interpretive sleight of hand will string together fact and fiction, discolor by editing out context, frill with overindulgence in conjecture and such.  Only an informed, alert and intelligent public can sift fact from fiction, weed out ideological and political insert, and get something close to the true picture.
We live in a country that was a veritable media freedom horror story.  Those who are old enough or are interested enough about history will know what the 1980s were like.  They would know what kind of media culture existed during the Chandrika Kumaratunga regime.  Few would not be aware of the constraints inevitably imposed by a war of the kind necessitated by the brand of terrorism unleashed by the LTTE.
These are better times.  But times can be infinitely better, this should also be recognized.  While facts don’t bear out the horror stories trotted out by those who want easy passage to greener pastures or are experts at manufacturing lie for bucks, it is also true that the post-conflict media culture has been marked subtle forms of control.                                                                 Read More

(Lanka-e-News-04.Nov.2013, 5.30PM) Since beginning of the Rajapaksa regime, China expanded its role in Sri Lanka as a major donor, arms provider, trading partner and investor as well as protector of the regime in the international arena. China did not suddenly entered Sri Lanka but she developed a very strong relationship with Mahinda Rajapaksha even before he became the President. As a result, China heavily financed the election campaign of Mahinda Rajapksha. At the same time, through Minister Janaka Bandara Tennakoon Taiwan also financed the election campaign of Mahinda Rajapaksha. Millions of dollars given by Taiwan were not used for the first election campaign as he was not sure of his victory.

Dr. Gamani Corea’s Remains Will Be Cremated Today

November 4, 2013 
Dr. Gamani Corea passed away on November 03, 2013 after a brief illness, a day before his 88th birthday. His remains lie at his residence “Horton Lodge”, Horton Place, Colombo 7 for the paying of last respects, where a service will be held in the afternoon. His last mortal remains will be cremated at 4pm today, November 04, 2013 , at the Borella (Kanatha) Cemetery.
Dr. Gamani Corea
Colombo TelegraphAlthough he was perhaps Sri Lanka’s most distinguished international civil servant and a renowned economist, he remained a gentle and unassuming person with a cutting sense of humour. He used to joke of how he was at the time, the oldest (longest standing) member of the Royal Colombo Golf Club – where he used to play golf with the late Prime Minister Dudley Senanayake, and also had the oldest (longest running) car – an old Honda Civic which he did not feel the need to change, since it ‘worked very well’.
Here is a very telling quote on Dr. Gamani Corea’s stature in the North-South dialogue to secure greater benefits for the developing world from the developed Western countries, click here
His impressive biography published on Wikipedia

WikiLeaks: LTTE Stored Weapons At Hospitals – ICRC To US Mission To UN

November 4, 2013 
Colombo Telegraph“On the LTTE, de Maio said that it had tried to keep civilians in the middle of a permanent state of violence. It saw the civilian population as a ‘protective asset’ and kept its fighters embedded amongst them. De Maio said that the LTTE commanders, objective was to keep the distinction between civilian and military assets blurred. They would often respond positively when ICRC complained to the LTTE about stationing weapons at a hospital, for example. The LTTE would move the assets away, but as they were constantly shifting these assets, they might just show up in another unacceptable place shortly thereafter.” the US Mission to UN informed Washington.
Jacque de Maio
The Colombo Telegraph found the related leaked cable from the WikiLeaks database. The “Confidential” cable discuses what had happened on the ground during and since the conflict. The cable was written by the US Ambassador to Geneva Clint Williamson on July 15, 2009.
After a meeting with Jacque de Maio, ICRC Head of Operations for South Asia on July 9, 2009, the US ambassador Clint Williamson wrote; “De Maio said it would be hard to state that there was a systematic order to LTTE fighters to stick with civilians in order to draw fire. Civilians were indeed under ‘physical coercion not to go here or there,’ he said. Thus, the dynamics of the conflict were that civilians were present all the time. This makes it very difficult to determine though at what point such a situation becomes a case of ‘human shields.’

Packer and Park


Editorial-


International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) Asia-Pacific Director Jacqui Park and her deputy Jane Worthington arrived in Australia on Saturday after being detained and questioned in Sri Lanka for attending a media workshop while being in Colombo on tourist visas.

The treatment meted out to Park and her colleague is in sharp contrast to the way the government has chosen to deal with Australian gambling czar James Packer. It is going out of its way even to change the existing laws to grant Packer tax breaks and make him feel at home in spite of mounting opposition from some quarters to his grand plans to set up a star class casino resort in this country. It was only the other day that we saw several ministers dancing attendance on him. But, the same government worthies lost no time in pouncing on media activists Park and Worthington, as if they had landed here to commit some heinous crime.

The government should have allowed the media workshop to continue uninterrupted and the visa issue could have been settled diplomatically. But, it, true to form, acted like a bull in a China shop. If the IFJ officials had been planning to stay longer to attend any other media events they could have been issued with visas needed for that purpose.

This is a country where lawbreakers become lawmakers and criminals go scot free thanks to their political connections. On Saturday, we reported an incident where a gang of politically connected thugs assaulted a police sergeant who had prevented them from attacking some foreigners. But for that intrepid cop they might even have killed the tourists fleeing for their lives like the Briton put to a violent death in Tangalle in 2011, landing the government in another diplomatic soup ahead of CHOGM. It is such violent elements who need to be tracked. Time was when terrorists were given unbridled freedom at the behest of the international community to engage in political work while being armed and making preparations for war. But, intriguingly, foreign media activists here on tourist visas are promptly detained and grilled!

The two IFJ officials have, following their harrowing experience, claimed that by detaining them Sri Lanka has sent a clear message to others about the kind of treatment they could expect if they campaigned for freedom of expression. They are entitled to their opinion, but they should have admitted that they, too, were at fault as they had not mentioned the specific purpose of their visit in their visa applications thus allowing Sri Lankan immigration authorities to do what they did, however deplorable the manner in which the issue was handled may be. One of the cardinal rules of journalism is that the truth or part thereof must not be suppressed. We don’t think the government would have been able to deny the IFJ duo visas if they had mentioned the real purpose of their visit not because it is any great fan of IFJ but because it would not have been able to justify such action. There was absolutely no need for any undercover journalistic op.

That being said, it needs to be added that Sri Lanka is not the only country where journalists undergo harrowing experience over visa matters. Some of the journalists working for our newspaper group, have been detained at foreign airports and sent back home unceremoniously despite having valid visas and official invitations to the events they were to attend. A senior diplomat of an Asian country once threatened to deny visas to all Island journalists or even anyone connected to them because we had run some articles critical of his government. However, sanity prevailed and he changed his mind a few days later. A Sri Lankan Prime Minister was once held at a foreign airport for an inordinately long time a few years ago due to some protocol bungling. But, this does not mean tracking foreign journalists and looking for the slightest excuse to harass them should be taken for granted.

The government ought to stop viewing all foreign journalists or media rights activists as enemies on secret missions to destroy this country simply because there could be one or two propaganda hit men among them. The best way it could take the media, both international and local, off its back is to ensure that human rights and media freedom are protected here.

Rajapaksas happy over Yoshitha-Yasara separation!

yoshitha yasaraPresident Mahinda Rajapaksa and Mrs. Shiranthi Rajapaksa are overjoyed that their second son Yoshitha has separated from his longtime girlfriend Yasara Abeynayake, according to Temple Trees sources.
Yasara is the granddaughter of the late actor Gamini Fonseka and the daughter of film producer Ananda Abeynayake and Chamila Abeynayake.
She is presently the managing directress of Carlton Sports Network, owned by Yoshitha.
After the separation, six policemen and a backup vehicle that had been provided to Yasara had been withdrawn.
She came alone for a musical show by a Canadian songstress in Colombo last weekend.
In order to curtail her powers as a member of the director board of CSN, attorney Janaka Ranatunga has been appointed chief executive officer.
Yoshitha Rajapaksa comes to CSN office every day, goes to the room of Nishantha Ranatunga and leaves, without visiting the room of Yasara, said sources at the channel.
Happy that Yoshitha and Yasara have separated after living together for a long time, first lady Rajapaksa has told her relatives, “Yoshitha can marry from a family better than the Abeynayakes. The other thing is that Yasara is elder to Yoshitha. What has happened was for the better.”

LOVE

New Video of Sexually Assaulted and Murdered Captive Tamil Reporter is Bad News for Sri Lanka



UNP Meets To Adopt Historic Changes To Party Leadership


Colombo TelegraphNovember 4, 2013 
The United National Party has gathered at its headquarters in Pitakotte for a crucial Working Committee meeting that may see sweeping reform proposals adopted for the creation of a leadership council that will steer the party’s future course.
Ranil
Following a meeting between UNP Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe and MPs Karu Jayasuriya and Sajith Premadasa this morning, the Working Committee convened at 4 p.m. to give life to proposals agreed upon by the trio.
The meeting is currently underway at Sirikotha even as thundershowers rain down on Colombo.
Under the proposals, also mooted by Buddhist monks affiliated to the UNP, the Leadership Council will be chaired by Karu Jayasuriya, senior party man and former Deputy Leader of the UNP. The Council will comprise 9 members.
Colombo Telegraph reliably learns that Premadasa may not agree to be a member of the new Council. Following a meeting between Premadasa, Jayasuriya and members of the United Bhikku Front in Kurunegala yesterday, the monks put forward three more reform proposals. Premadasa told Wickremesinghe at today’s meeting in the morning that unless the Leader agrees to adopt all 11 proposals now presented by the monks, it would be better for the present status quo to remain.
The all or nothing attitude adopted by Premadasa, party sources said, was indicative of the fact that the young MP would prefer to let Wickremesinghe remain leader if all of his demands were not met.
Premadasa attended the meeting with the priests in Kurunegala yesterday with expelled UNPers Maithri Guneratne and Shiral Lakthilake in tow.
Wickremesinghe is expected to agree to take up the position of Senior Leader as suggested by the monks. He will make a special statement to the Working Committee today, UNP sources said.

Sajith Rejects Seat On UNP Leadership Council

Colombo TelegraphNovember 4, 2013 |
Sajith Premadasa the main proponent of reforms to the UNP leadership has refused to sit on the proposed Leadership Council, a solution presented by Buddhist monks affiliated to the party, Colombo Telegraph learns.
Sajith Premadasa
Premadasa has informed the Working Committee of his rejection of a seat on the Council during the meeting that is currently underway.
The Council will be headed by UNP MP Karu Jayasuriya and include MPs Kabir Hashim, Mangala Samaraweera, Thalatha Athukorale, Ravi Karunananayake, Lakshman Kiriella, Ruwan Wijewardane and Tissa Attanayake, the Colombo Telegraph learns.
The meeting at Sirikotha continues.

“I Can’t Go Against Buddhist Monks Proposals” – Sajith

November 4, 2013 |
UNP MP Sajith Premadasa who has refused a seat on the newly appointed Leadership Council said he was forced to bow out of the nomination he was given by the Working Committee out of respect for the Buddhist monks.
Premadasa told reporters that the monks had forwarded a 8 point proposal to the UNP leadership and at a special meeting between himself and Karu Jayasuriyain Kurunegala yesterday they had put forward three more points.
Colombo TelegraphPremadasa said the Working Committee had not adopted the three points put forward by the monks at the Sunday meeting in Kurunegala and added that he could not insult the monks by sitting on the Council.

Bhikku Front Calls On Karu To Quit As Council Chairman

Colombo TelegraphNovember 4, 2013 |
The United Bhikku Front that mooted the UNP Leadership Council has called on its just appointed ChairmanKaru Jayasuriya to quit his post immediately.
Karu Jayasuriya
The UBF said Jayasuriya has broken faith with an agreement reached with Buddhist monks on Sunday at Kurunegala.
UBF National Organiser Ulapane Sumangala Thero said Sajith Premadasa had done the right thing by refusing to accept a position on the Council.
The Thero said UNP Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe had hoodwinked the Party and appointed his henchmen to the new Council.