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, November 9, 2013

Hague to meet Karu

karu jayasuriyaBritish Foreign Secretary and 
First Secretary of State, W
illiam Hague is to meet with the Chairman of the UNP leadership council, Karu Jayasuriya during his visit to Sri Lanka to attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM).
Jayasuriya who maintains cordial ties with the international community and the diplomatic community in the country is to meet with foreign dignitaries to brief them about the current political situation in the country and the latest developments in the main opposition UNP.
Jayasuirya is also expected to travel to India to meet with members of the Indian government as well.

Keheliya hopes Callum will change

November 9, 2013
Keheliya
Media Minister Keheliya Rambukwella says he hopes controversial producer Callum Macrae will get a different picture about Sri Lanka following his visit to the country for the Commonwealth summit.
He said that Macrae will be visiting the country together with some 30 other British journalists and they are likely to accompany British Prime Minister David Cameron to the North.
The Minister said that despite India refusing to grant Callum Macrae a visa to attend the premier of a Sri Lanka war crimes video, the Sri Lankan government had no issues on granting him the visa despite having reservations about him.
“Our stand on him has not changed but we hope by coming to Sri Lanka he will see the real picture and have a change of opinion,” the Minister said.
The Minister however noted that the government is ready to face the possibility of Macrae and Channel 4 using the opportunity to arrive in Sri Lanka for the summit and produce another video negative towards the government.(Colombo Gazette)

Thonda acts against Mahinda and Namal

arumugam thondamanCWC Leader, Minister Arumugam Thondaman is engaged in pushing communalism among the people in Nuwara Eliya and carrying a campaign against President Mahinda Rajapaksa.
Thondaman started to incite communal feelings among the estate community during the Central Provincial Council election. During the election campaign, he has told the estate workers that Mahinda Rajapaksa and his “low caste supporters” (referring to Digambaram) were trying to destroy the CWC.
Thondaman has said that the government headed by Mahinda Rajapaksa were trying to take over plantation lands like the government is doing in Jaffna and asked the estate community to vote for the CWC if they wanted to save their lands.
“You will be thrown on the road and I will have to go to India,” the CWC Leader has told the voters in the Central Province.
Thondaman is supported in this campaign by Senthil Muthuvinayagam and Muttu Sivalingam.
Meanwhile, a Tamil businessman and Director of the NLDB has revealed details to senior members of the government about an illicit affair Thondaman was having with an Indian lady.
Identified as Roopa Rammohan Maganthi from Hyderabad, she is the consultant of the Thondaman Foundation. The businessman has said that the Roopa Rammohan hails from a shanty in Hyderabad, but she and her sister Divya have both become millionaires now due to their close ties with Thondaman.
Roopa Rammohan has allegedly swindled millions of rupees due to the poor people in the estate sector.

Whither Higher Education?

By Sumanasiri Liyanage -November 9, 2013 |
Sumanasiri Liyanage
Sumanasiri Liyanage
Colombo TelegraphCrisis is a strong word that I prefer to avoid using although many tend to use it to describe any dis-equilibrium. When a situation is in a crisis, it means the direction towards which the situation would develop may not be predicted. This seems to be similar to a situation when medical practitioners describe ‘critical’. Nonetheless, social systems may go through a prolonged period of crisis with no radical transformation for multiple reasons. I believe the Sri Lankan education is in a prolonged crisis. Solutions that were introduced by the government as well as university system in the past and that are being tried today are not based on a serious diagnosis of the situation that in turn caused to generate the present prolonged crisis in education. A survey on education by Transparency International has revealed that education has been one of the most corrupt sectors in Sri Lanka. However, my attention here is not education in general but higher education. Many seem to believe that the present situation is primarily due to lack of adequate resources. The government tends to think that bringing in private capital would resolve this crisis of resource inadequacy. The Federation of University Teachers proposes that increasing the government expenditure to 6 per cent of the GDP would be a solution. I accept that the public expenditure on education is not adequate and it is even less than what the government spent on education in the pre-1977 liberalization phase. However, I submit that the prolonged crisis of education should not be reduced to the issue of lack of resources. In the present situation, mere increasing resources would not be a solution to this multi-faceted crisis. Let me give an example. Some years ago, the universities except medical faculties introduced semester and continuous assessment system with the argument that it would raise the quality of the degree. In my view, it is an utter failure in social science and humanities and become a mere weapon of disciplining students. Do we teachers need to review this system? So crisis is within as well as without. It is in this context, the Ministry of Higher Education has been trying to establish private universities. I have no objection to setting up of private universities per se if that comes under and within a national plan of higher education that ensure not state but public/social control. Nevertheless, if that suggestion comes as a part of a plan of commodification of higher education, it should be resisted.
               
          Read More
                                                     

To Whitewash Regime’s Sins UGC Arbitrary Decides To Close Universities

November 9, 2013 |
“We are extremely displeased with the arbitrary decision of the UGC to announce a ‘vacation’ for universities during the CHOGM.  We are not at all convinced by the reasons provided by the UGC Chair for this sudden decision.” says the President of the FUTA, Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri.
Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri
Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri
Colombo TelegraphIssuing a statement he says; “There is no justification for disrupting the academic activities of several thousand students in this way.  In fact, we believe this arbitrary decision was taken due to the insecurity and fear of those in authority generated by their sustained failure to address the needs of university students in this country.  This is part of the general programme of deception that has been launched by this regime to use the CHOGM to whitewash its sins at considerable cost and inconvenience to its citizens.”
We publish below the statement in full;
FUTA Statement on closure of universities for CHOGM
In a move that definitively indicates that the regime has lost all sense of proportion, sense and logic in the whirlwind of CHOGM-mania, yesterday the University Grants Commission (UGC) announced a vacation for universities from the 9th to the 17th of November.  UGC Chair Prof Kshanika Hiriburegama was reported by the media as having explained the vacation being declared due to numerous requests from undergraduates participating in CHOGM activities who did not want their academic activities to be disrupted.  According to another media source, Prof Hiriburegama reportedly granted the vacation so that university students could ‘study’ about CHOGM.

 
article_image
By Shamindra Ferdinando-November 8, 2013,

Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa yesterday said that the UK-based LTTE rump had been engaged in an expensive project to embarrass Sri Lanka ahead of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) next week.

Rajapaksa was reacting to representatives of three organisations, namely the Global Tamil Forum (GTF), British Tamil Forum (BTF) and Tamils against Genocide meeting British Prime Minister David Cameron on Thursday (07) to pressure Britain to boycott the 23rd CHOGM summit in Colombo.

London-based sources told The Island that having met British premier Cameron and some of his top aides, all three organisations expressed disappointment that the UK leader would go ahead with the planned visit. The Queen would be represented by Prince Charles at the Colombo summit.

Sources said that some of those who had been demonstrating outside No 10 Downing Street, in support of the boycott call, carried LTTE flags.

The LTTE also organised a hunger strike.

Noting that the LTTE had re-launched a Channel 4 documentary, which alleged that the then General Officer Commanding (GoC) 58 Division Maj. Gen. Shavendra Silva executed surrendering LTTE cadres, on the Vanni front at his behest, the Defence Secretary told The Island that the report was based on two eyewitnesses whom the television described as men attached to the 58 Division. The Defence Secretary said: "Channel 4 released the report in July 2011. If the British outfit is sure of its sources let them be produced before judicial authorities in UK or some other country in Europe. Otherwise, their identities can be revealed in Geneva or The Hague. If they are not prepared to substantiate such allegations, they should shut up."

Rajapaksa pointed out that a three-member Panel of Experts (PoE) which investigated accountability issues in Sri Lanka, too, recommended that the identity of its sources should remain confidential till 2031. The PoE appointed by UNSG Ban ki-Moon released its report on March 31, 2011. The PoE also recommended that the revelation of their identities even in 2031 should be subject to the approval of the UN.

The Defence Secretary challenged the British media outfit to produce those claiming to have witnessed large scale atrocities committed by the Sri Lankan military before international judicial authorities without further delay. Recollecting the PoE claim that it had received hundreds of submissions from Sri Lankans regarding atrocities on the Vanni front, in addition to two eyewitnesses whose identities were known to Channel 4, the Defence Secretary challenged them to justify war crimes allegations.

In The Lucky Country Of Australia Apartheid Is Alive And Kicking

November 8, 2013 
Colombo TelegraphThe corridors of the Australian parliament are so white you squint. The sound is hushed; the smell is floor polish. The wooden floors shine so virtuously they reflect the cartoon portraits of prime ministers and rows of Aboriginal paintings, suspended on white walls, their blood and tears invisible.
The parliament stands in Barton, a suburb of Canberra named after the first prime minister of Australia, Edmund Barton, who drew up the White Australia Policy in 1901. “The doctrine of the equality of man,” said Barton, “was never intended to apply” to those not British and white-skinned.
By  - Read more in the Guardian
Aboriginal elders playing cards in their camp near Alice Springs. 'A typical, dilapidated house in an outback Indigenous community must accommodate as many as 25 people. Families, the elderly and disabled people wait years for sanitation that works.' Photograph: Anoek De Groot/AFP/Getty Images / via Guardian

Private And International Schools Can Be More Responsive To Change Than Govt Schools

By Gotabaya Rajapaksa -November 9, 2013 
Gotabaya Rajapaksa
Gotabaya Rajapaksa
Colombo TelegraphIt gives me great pleasure to address you this evening at the Inaugural International Conference of the Heads of Schools, organised by The International Schools in Sri Lanka. I understand that this is the first international conference for Heads of Schools being organised in Sri Lanka, and that representatives from Government schools as well as private schools are attending this event, which is organised under the theme “Leadership to Inspire Learning”. This theme is an especially appropriate one, considering the country’s present development drive, which envisages that Sri Lanka will become an education hub in the region by 2020. It is important that the Heads of Sri Lanka’s schools discuss ways and means of improving the country’s education system to achieve this bold vision. I trust that this conference will contribute a great deal to the current national discourse in this regard.
Formal education in Sri Lanka has a history of more than 2,000 years. Early inscriptions record the existence of specialised knowledge and professions that were sustained, disseminated and developed through individual teaching and educational institutions. Early in our history, education was centred on large monasteries and specialised academies. Some of these were reputed throughout the region, and even attracted foreign students from distant nations. Like the ancient universities of Taxila and Nalanda in India, these ancient Sri Lankan academies flourished in the early pre-Christian era and during the first millennium. As Sri Lanka’s demography shifted away from the large ancient cities and to smaller and more dispersed settlements, education came to be centred on village temples and pirivenas, which imparted knowledge to both novice monks and lay youth. Many pirivenas continued their work throughout Colonial times but came under increasing pressure from succeeding colonial administrations, which sought to suppress Buddhist oriented education and instead encouraged the establishment of missionary schools                    .Read More

London Review of Books: Rajapaksa's Rule

Nov-08-2013 

The problem is that Rajapaksa, for all his eagerness to seize the Commonwealth’s helm, has spent years undermining those values and principles.

Sri Lanka President Majinda Rajapaksa
Sri Lanka President Majinda Rajapaksa
(LONDON) - Sri Lanka’s authorities are in buoyant mood. As Prince Charles prepares to open the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Colombo, the Defence Ministry is helping to organise celebrations. But it isn’t the queen they are honouring.
The CHOGM is gathering to acknowledge the Sri Lankan president, Mahinda Rajapaksa, as chairman of the Commonwealth, a position he will occupy for the next two years. His allies at home are delighted.
Rajapaksa himself has high hopes. Four years after he led the national army to victory over the Tamil Tiger guerrilla movement, he wants to show the world that Sri Lanka has left its troubles behind. He was already on the case at the last CHOGM, held in Perth in 2011, when he strained to conjure up the sense of a paradise regained.
Sri Lanka, he observed, had ‘famous beaches’ and ‘lofty mountains’, with ‘an amazing variety of flora and fauna and safari parks teeming with wildlife’. Having seen off ‘thirty years of violent terrorism unleashed by the world’s most ruthless terrorist organisation’, it was now a place ‘full of promise, with an economy poised to take off’.

Most of that is true, as far as it goes. Sri Lanka is indeed bountiful; it suffered enormously from the murderous depredations of the Tamil Tigers; and the end of the war has been followed by economic recovery. But none of this says much about Rajapaksa’s fitness to act as chair of the Commonwealth.
The only attribute he brings to that position is his zeal to occupy it, while the institutional damage his elevation could cause is immense.
Stung by suggestions that the Commonwealth is just a relic of empire, officials and leaders who believe in its continued relevance have been trying to establish that member states have more in common than loyalty (or disloyalty) to the British monarchy. Last year, a charter was drafted to bring together ‘the values and aspirations which unite the Commonwealth – democracy, human rights and the rule of law’.
The document goes on to list no fewer than 16 ‘core values and principles’, among them ‘tolerance, respect and understanding, freedom of expression, the separation of powers’ and good governance’, which the Commonwealth’s 53 member states are all now pledged to uphold.


The problem is that Rajapaksa, for all his eagerness to seize the Commonwealth’s helm, has spent years undermining those values and principles. Though democratically elected, he has relied on his popular mandate to sidestep or get rid of all the safeguards that ordinarily stop democrats from turning into demagogues.
Soon after winning his second presidential term, he abolished a law that would have prevented him standing for a third; two of his brothers, Basil and Gotabaya, head powerful ministries, while another one, Chamal, has become the speaker of parliament. His government refuses to acknowledge, let alone investigate, allegations of serious official misconduct: the claim, for example, that the Defence Ministry, run by Gotabaya Rajapaksa, bundles away – ‘white-vans’ – those it perceives as opponents in unmarked white vehicles.
There is compelling evidence that tens of thousands of civilians died during the army’s final onslaught against the Tigers; and according to the UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances, Sri Lanka has more citizens who have vanished without trace than any other country except Iraq.

Free expression has suffered as much as all this suggests, with at least 22 outspoken journalists killed over the last seven years, all of them murdered by unidentified persons who remain at large. And the situation is not improving.
The UN Human Rights Commissioner Navi Pillay reported last August that ‘surveillance and harassment appears to be getting worse… Critical voices are quite often attacked or even permanently silenced.’
That state of affairs sits uneasily with the aspirations set out in the Commonwealth Charter. It oughtn’t to be a surprise, therefore, that the organisation’s secretary-general, Kamalesh Sharma, showed some concern after Rajapaksa made his boldest power-grab yet at the beginning of the year, removing the country’s most senior judge, Shirani Bandaranayake, when she ruled against a law that gave the minister of economic development, Basil Rajapaksa, control of a fund containing 80 billion rupees (roughly £380 million) of public revenue.

The proposed fund would have been exempt from parliamentary controls on spending, and the uses to which it was put would have been covered by official secrecy laws: anyone who disclosed how the moneys were spent would have been exposed to criminal charges.
Chamal Rajapaksa, the parliamentary speaker, duly arranged for the troublesome chief justice to be impeached.
The move against Bandaranayake clearly boded ill for good governance and the separation of powers, but the steps taken by Secretary-General Sharma have cast their own baleful shadow over the CHOGM.
Sharma, who is not himself legally trained, began by inviting two senior jurists to tell him whether removal of the chief justice was consistent with Commonwealth values and principles. Their responses were unequivocal.
Jeffrey Jowell, a QC who directs the Bingham Centre for the Rule of Law, found that the chief justice had been ousted by an unfair process that ‘did not comply with … Commonwealth values and principles’.
The second lawyer Sharma consulted, the late Pius Langa, a former chief justice of South Africa’s Constitutional Court, was even more forthright. Sri Lanka’s government, he concluded, had not merely contravened Commonwealth values and principles: it was ‘sowing the seeds of anarchy’ and ‘directly violating the rule of law’.


Alleged murderer, Sampath Chandra Pushpa
Vidanapathirana, in the company of Sri Lanka
President Rajapaksa. See: A Russian Lady's
Brutal Rape and the Injustice of Sri Lanka
Those conclusions shouldn’t have come as a shock to Sharma, echoed as they were by every independent legal organisation that gave an opinion on the impeachment, including the International Commission of Jurists and the Commonwealth Lawyers Association. But even if he was surprised, he was not spurred to action. He didn’t just ignore the opinions; he failed to show them to Commonwealth foreign ministers at a meeting they held in April to discuss plans for the CHOGM.
Even four months later, when Sharma’s office belatedly acknowledged requesting ‘a number of background reports and opinions’ about Sri Lanka, his spokesman said nothing about the substance of the advice. ‘It would be injurious to the discretion, and ultimately the effectiveness of the secretary-general if information of this kind were to be released,’ he explained.
Discretion is no longer an option, however: the text of both legal opinions has leaked, which in itself reveals something about the secretary-general’s effectiveness. If his claim of confidentiality is to stand up, there needs to be evidence that he is protecting or repairing Sri Lanka’s decapitated Supreme Court – and there is none.
All that Sharma’s office even claims to have done to safeguard judicial independence is to have provided the government with ‘a compendium of Commonwealth practice’ and ‘technical assistance to make the necessary changes’.
Whatever that might have involved (which seems to be another secret), it has had no tangible effects. Bandaranayake was summoned to court in mid-September on charges that would be laughable if they weren’t so vindictive: her failure to disclose empty bank accounts, it is alleged, amounts to the corrupt concealment of valuable assets.
The pliant figure that Rajapaksa chose to succeed her, Mohan Peiris, a former attorney-general and cabinet adviser, is meanwhile supervising Supreme Court judges who are soon going to be asked to rubber-stamp Bandaranayake’s removal and his appointment. If, as looks likely, some of the judges prefer instead to retire, the president will get to pick their successors, at which point the last significant obstacle to executive domination will disappear.
It is for Commonwealth leaders to decide whether a man so little concerned with the rule of law should spend the next two years as the public face of their association – but all the signs are that Rajapaksa’s apotheosis is already a done deal.
The reasons for that are various: a hand-wringing timidity among Commonwealth bureaucrats; a strangely reverential attitude among developed nations towards emerging economies; and a simple sense in some quarters that Sri Lanka ought not to be singled out for criticism by countries that have failings of their own.
But scale matters.
If the Commonwealth chooses to reward blatant and sustained violations of its supposed values and principles, clearly identified by authoritative legal opinions obtained on its behalf, it should expect to be treated with contempt.
Special thanks to: London Review of Books

Arafat’s death – there’s really no mystery

Redress Information & Analysis

By Alan Hart-NOVEMBER 09, 2013
For once Israel is telling a part of the truth. It was impossible for any of its own (Israeli-Jewish) agents to get into the rubble of Arafat’s compound to administer the poison that killed him. But they didn’t need direct access. Israel’s role was to provide the radioactive polonium for one of its collaborators in Fatah’s leadership.
Yasser Arafat pointing his fingerI was convinced that Arafat was as good as dead before he died. What I mean is this.

Dead man walking

I was watching live on television as Israel prepared to announce that it was going to allow Arafat to leave by helicopter for Jordan and then on to a military hospital in Paris. Up to this moment Israel’s position was that if ever Arafat left Israel-Palestine, he would not be allowed to return.
The announcement that Israel was facilitating his departure was made by government spokesman Ranaan Gissin. One member of the assembled press corps asked him a question. “Will you allow Arafat to return?”
Gissin, who normally had to struggle to control the anger in his anti-Palestinian rhetoric and was often close to foaming at the mouth, responded with a big, warm and obviously false smile. Then he said: “Of course we’ll allow him to return. He’s the president of Palestine.”
I turned to my wife and said: “Gissin is only saying that because he and his masters know that Arafat will be coming back in a coffin.”

The suspect

As to who the actual assassin was, there’s no mystery about that either as far as many Palestinians are concerned.
Here is a clue.
He is the man who, with American endorsement and Israeli military back-up as necessary, was going to lead Fatah’s security forces in what he thought would be a short, sharp war to destroy Hamas in the Gaza Strip. It didn’t happen because Hamas got wind of the impending attack and launched an Israeli-like pre-emptive strike against Fatah’s forces and drove them out of the strip.
He is also the man who, today, is plotting and scheming to replace Abbas as Fatah’s leader and “President” of Palestine.
My own view is that Abbas should not be replaced by anybody and that the discredited, corrupt and collaborator Palestinian Authority should be dissolved in order to hand back to Israel complete responsibility for its occupation. That might make it less than a mission impossible for Israel to be called and held to account for its crimes.

Note

On other and current matters… I have reached the stage where I have to turn the sound down to off when Netanyahu and his spokesman Mark Regev are talking about Iran. I can’t take any more of their propaganda nonsense. In Regev’s case his body language suggests to me that he is inwardly uncomfortable with having to speak such rubbish.

Friday, November 8, 2013

Sri Lanka denies entry to IBAHRI delegation for the second time, ahead of major Commonwealth summit

Entry to Sri Lanka has been denied to participants of an International Bar Association’s Human Rights Institute (IBAHRI) high-level delegation which includes the United Nations (UN) Special Rapporteur on the Independence of Judges and Lawyers Gabriela Knaul, and the first UN Special Rapporteur on the Independence of Judges and Lawyers Param Cumaraswamy. The group has had its visas revoked officially, or de facto, notwithstanding the public assurance from Sri Lanka’s High Commissioner to the United Kingdom Dr Chris Nonis, on 30 April in a BBC interview, that representatives of IBAHRI ‘Are absolutely welcome to come in.’ And that ‘…if any institution is formally invited… naturally of course we would [let them in]’.

Attend CHOGM and come and see the outcome of the war - Bishop Rayappu Joseph tells Manmohan Singh

Bishop of Mannar, Rev. Rayappu Joseph

Friday, November 8, 2013

SRI LANKA BRIEFThe Bishop of Mannar, Rev. Rayappu Joseph, is urging Indian Prime Minister, Manmohan Singh, to attend the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM), and visit the Northern Province including Mannar during his stay in the island, as India had also promoted the war, and therefore he should see for himself, the outcome of the war. "I want him to participate in the upcoming CHOGM and thereafter pay a courtesy visit to the Northern Province, and meet the Tamils. He will then 'realize' the outcome of the war," he said.
He said what had happened during the war was known to everyone; yet the CHOGM is being held in Sri Lanka. As such, the Indian PM has a huge commitment and responsibility to state his stance on the problems the Tamils in the country are facing.

"The government still continues to say there were no disappearances and there were no human right violations, when the whole world knows that this was not the case. So India being the 'Mother of the Tamils' should 'wake up' and assist the Tamils, and boost their morale to live in harmony in the land they belong to. "India is powerful and they have done much for the Tamils like building houses. We therefore welcome Manmohan Singh, and trust that his visit would 'enlighten' him and the Tamil community as well," the Bishop said.

Speaking further, he said: "We, the Tamils, have doubts that CHOGM will bring relief to the suffering Tamils, or a political solution to the Tamil issue. Even now there are loads of corruptions going on in the Mannar District, including the misuse of fund allocated to the people of Mannar.

"We see every government official only placing their signature and executing the work the government wants done, denying all the essential facilities like education, houses as well as sanitary facilities for the people who were displaced and who had suffered during the war."


Bishop Rayappu Joseph also said they harbour hopes and have trust only in the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), and called on them to perform their duties, free of corruption or abusing power in the Northern Province.

"It's disgusting to see how the government ministers and officials attend to the needs of the people which leave much to be desired. I hope the government will give the allocated funds to the Northern Provincial Council (NPC) to run the affairs of the Province, instead of allowing the government officials who dance to the tunes of their superiors, disregard the responsibilities entrusted to them," he said.

CHOGM is just another event and they will come, talk and then leave, and it will not give equal rights to the people of this nation, he opined.

He also called the probing into human rights violations should be conducted by the intentional body and not by the local authorities as the Tamils have no trust in local investigations.
By Sulochana Ramiah Mohan

Why Cameron and Hague should cancel their round trip to Colombo

NOVEMBER 8, 2013
LabourListNext week the northern beaches of Sri Lanka will welcome planeloads of tourists on exclusive holidays replete with swaying palm trees and white sand. At the same time, over 50 world leaders will gather in the capital, Colombo, for the biennial Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM). This will signal the start of Sri Lanka’s chair of the Commonwealth.
The Commonwealth Shared Values Charter was signed in March by the Queen. This enshrines the core values and principles of the Commonwealth, including democracy; human rights; tolerance, respect and understanding; freedom of expression and good governance. Sri Lanka will have a lot to live up to.
It’s not all cocktails in coconut shells in Sri Lanka. President Mahindra Rajapaksa is personally accused of war crimes. In his effort to finally crush the Tamil Tigers, the 26 year civil war ended with 40,000 dead civilians. 12,000 disappearances, more than any other country bar Iraq. This includes opponents of the government, journalists and activists. In its role as Commonwealth Chair Sri Lanka would be responsible for addressing the human rights of other member states. I could see the irony if it wasn’t so chilling and tragically sad.
President Rajapaksa
Next week President Rajapaksa will shake hands with 50 world leaders; the ultimate legitimizing photo opportunity for the atrocities he has perpetrated.  Perhaps it is no coincidence that the Queen has bowed out of CHOGM; Prince Charles will be attending in her stead.  The meeting has also been boycotted by Canada because there has been no improvement in human rights. Oh, and the fact that the President unlawfully sacked his chief justice Shirani Bandaranayake on charges of misconduct – contravening the Commonwealth charter enshrining judiciary independence.  Her real crime? Not agreeing with the government. The Commonwealth Supreme Court ruled it unconstitutional. Yet only Canada stands strong, deciding a boycott makes a bold stand against Sri Lanka’s human rights violations. Bravo.
Should David Cameron attend? According to Douglas Alexander, no.
The Shadow Foreign Secretary has called for Cameron to show real leadership and reverse his decision to go.  This would show the Sri Lankan government that Britain will not support the violation of human rights.  You can sign an online petition here.
If Cameron and Hague aren’t convinced by Amnesty International’s reports of Sri Lanka’s appalling record on human rights or Grim Reaper demonstrations in London this weekend, I urge them to watchCallum Macrea’s powerful film ‘No Fire Zone’. It documents the final months of the Sri Lankan civil war in a shocking exposé of war crimes and crimes against humanity. The feature film is the result of three years of in depth investigative journalism with personal stories and eyewitness accounts of the atrocities. The government insists this video evidence has been faked, and it has been banned in Malaysia and Nepal after pressure from Sri Lankan authorities. All the more reason to watch.
Nick Clegg has promised that during the Commonwealth summit the UK Government will be highlighting the abuses that have taken place, and continue to happen, in Sri Lanka. How? Polite conversation over canapés is not only not good enough, it’s downright shameful.  And it could be a real missed opportunity for the UK Government to make a strong statement of leadership against war crimes and human rights abuse. What is missing from the UK government is a proper strategic action plan to protect human rights defenders and to prevent Sri Lanka chairing the Commonwealth for the next two years. Unless the UK are prepared to call for an international investigation into alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity, committed by the Sri Lankan government, Cameron and Hague should put down the coconut cocktails and cancel their round trip tickets to Colombo.

MANORANJAN: Genocidaire on Yale’s campus


In May 2009, after a carefully negotiated surrender, a ragged group of Tamil fighters and their wives and children attempted to surrender to the Sri Lankan government. They were told to raise a white flag as they walked slowly to the government.
They were all summarily executed within minutes. This tragic war crime is now infamously known as the “White Flag incident”. This crime followed months of Sri Lanka’s systematic bombing of hospitals, food queues and so-called “No Fire Zones.”
This Thursday, one of the key officials implicated in the White Flag incident will be speaking at the Yale School of Forestry and Environmental Studies. Sri Lankan Ambassador Palitha Kohona is Sri Lanka’s permanent representative to the United Nations in N.Y., and is the subject of an investigation by the Australian Federal Police. There have also been requests from NGOs to the International Criminal Court that Kohona’s involvement in these extrajudicial killings be investigated.
Kohona is the official representative of an authoritarian and oppressive regime. Yale is disturbingly granting him a platform to whitewash Sri Lanka’s genocide against Tamils on the island and normalize Sri Lanka’s role within the international community.
Sri Lanka endured a bloody half-century-long ethnic conflict in which credible estimates from the ground cite 146,000 Tamil civilians killed at the hands of Sri Lankan Armed Forces. Since the end of the armed conflict in 2009, Sri Lanka has come under scrutiny from the U.S. government, the United Nations and all major human rights groups for war crimes and crimes against humanity committed against Tamils. There is overwhelming evidence revealing the intentional shelling of civilian safe zones and hospitals by the Sri Lanka Army, and countless testimonies of torture, gang rape and gender-based violence during and after the peak of the fighting.
In March, the U.N. Human Rights Council passed a resolution calling on Sri Lanka to “credibly investigate widespread allegations of extra-judicial killings and enforced disappearance, [and] demilitarize the north of Sri Lanka”. This comes two years after Sri Lanka established a domestic “Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission” as a feckless front to circumvent the establishment of an international investigation into abuses committed.
In the meantime, the human rights situation on the ground has only deteriorated, as the U.N. high commissioner for human rights reported increasing “disappearances” or state-sponsored extrajudicial killings, assaults on journalists and free speech throughout the island, and escalating attacks on Christian churches, Muslim mosques, and Hindu temples. Even more troubling is the increasing ratio of one Sri Lanka Army solider for every four civilians, which engenders unprecedented Sinhalization and the erosion of the Tamil identity.
It is clear that Kohona unabashedly supports the Sri Lankan government in perpetrating an illegal war against Tamils. Kohona has categorically rejected allegations that Sri Lanka’s soldiers committed atrocities against Tamils, paradoxically characterizing the Army as pursuing a “zero civilian casualty policy” despite accounts of the widespread and systematic nature of attacks against Tamil civilians and society. Unsurprisingly, Kohona has wholeheartedly opposed the call for an independent international investigation. FES, an institution which carries Yale’s name and mission, should not grant him the opportunity to broadcast his regime’s propaganda.
As a Yale alum, I know firsthand of FES and the University’s efforts to instill a strong commitment to justice and integrity, in holding all governments — including our own — accountable for human rights violations. Inviting the Sri Lankan ambassador to speak is completely contradictory to the values that are so actively inculcated in Yale students. I expected better from Yale.
Tasha Manoranjan is a 2012 graduate of Yale Law School and the founder and executive director for People for Equality and Relief in Lanka .

Is History About To Repeat Itself?


By Elmore Perera -November 8, 2013 
Elmore Perera
Colombo Telegraph“Government to seek Direction on 18A from Supreme Court”; Under the above caption a local newspaper of 05.11.2013 reported that “the Government is to seek an interpretation on the 18th Amendment to the Constitution from the Supreme Court regarding the time period during which a Presidential election could be held during the second term of office of the incumbent. The Government is to seek a direction from the Supreme Court purportedly due to the fact that the 18th Amendment to the Constitution which removed the two term bar of a President, does not contain clauses which state the period during which a Presidential election could be called for during the second term  in office”.
It was further reported that “Prior to the passing of the 18th Amendment to the Constitution, the incumbent President could call for a Presidential election for the second term after concluding four years in office. However, the 18th Amendment does not specify the time period after which an election could be called for”.
There can be no doubt that “the Government” that is to seek an interpretation is none other than President Mahinda Rajapaksa who is himself a Senior Attorney-at-Law.
When confronted on 11th March 2008 with the explicit provision in Article 41C(1) as it then was, that “No person shall be appointed by the President to any of the Offices specified in the Schedule to this Article (which included the Chief Justice, the President of the Court of Appeal and Judges of the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal) unless such appointment has been approved by the Council”, the President nonchalantly stated that he had obtained legal advice on that matter and continued to violate that Constitutional provision until it was revoked in September 2010 by the 18th Amendment.
However, the fact is that paragraph (3A)(a)(i) of Article 31 of the Constitution has been amended in September 2010 by the 18th Amendment to read as follows:
“Notwithstanding anything to the contrary in the preceding provisions of this Chapter, the President may, at any time after the expiration of four years from the commencement of his current term of office, by Proclamation, declare his intention of appealing to the people for a mandate to hold office, by election, for a further term: