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

Tuesday, November 12, 2013

Gota In Illegal Kidneys Trafficking Business – London Times Reveals

November 13, 2013 
A hospital run by President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s brother and Secretary to the Ministry of Defence Gotabaya Rajapaksa in Colombo is offering illegally trafficked kidneys by an international organ dealer, the UK basedTimes has revealed in an investigation.
The organ dealer promises to arrange surgery at Lanka Hospitals of which is chaired by Gotabaya Rajapaksa, the report reveals.
The government-controlled hospital in Colombo is being recommended to patients from Britain and elsewhere a suitable place to receive an organ purchased for tens of thousands of pounds on the black market.
Lanka Hospitals was previously Apollo Hospitals.
Times
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3 NPC members stage walkout during SL Governor’s keynote address

TamilNet[TamilNet, Tuesday, 12 November 2013, 01:16 GMT]
Three key members of the Northern Provincial Council (NPC) on Monday staged a walkout, when Sri Lanka’s colonial governor in the North, Maj Gen (retd.) G.A. Chandrasiri was about to deliver his keynote address at the NPC. The SL governor was formally invited by the NPC Chief Minister to address the council. Former parliamentarian and NPC member Mr MK Sivajilingam, Ms Ananthi Sasitharan and Mr S. Sugirthan walked out stating that they were obliged protest when a war criminal was addressing the elected council. More than 2,000 people disappeared in the peninsula under the military command of Chandrasiri and as the Governor of North he has done nothing for the real rehabilitation or reconciliation, the NPC members who walked out told media. 

NPC members stage walkout
NPC members stage walkout
“Several Tamil women were made widows under his military command in Jaffna. The well-known rape and murder of Jaffna schoolgirl Krishanthi Kumaraswamy took place under his command. As an elected candidate and activist voicing for the rights of women, I object his presence at the NPC,” Ms Ananthi told media. 

Mr CVK Sivagnanam chaired the second session of the NPC, which started after the SL governor came to the NPC secretariat where he received a parade by the SL Police. 

The SL governor who took to the podium was stunned for a while as the members staged the walkout. Then, he read the keynote address for 40 minutes. 

As the three prominent members walked out, the majority of the remaining NPC members also chose not to pay attention to SL governor’s keynote address. 

NPC members stage walkout


Chandrasiri started his address by paying tribute to ‘heroic Sri Lankan’ forces.

The Northern region received unprecedented development under ‘Vadakkin Vasantham’ during the last four years, the SL governor claimed. 

Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa had allocated 100,000 million rupees for the period from May 2009 till the end of 2013, which is much more than the funds that had been allocated for this region in the entire period since independent till 2009, Chandrasiri said. 

Chandrasiri was warning that “cooperation and consensus with the Central Government is essential for the PC to function.”

“For example, funds required for the function of the PC each year need to be appropriated from the national budget. Likewise, any foreign funds provided for any development or social project within the province can be channelled only through the Central Government,” he said and went on: “Similarly, the management department of the central government decides for the cadre of the provincial public service and the provincial councils are also required to consult the Government or the Parliament when making statutes for the Province for the subjects coming under concurrent list of the constitution.”







An economy that unites, reconciliation that divides in Sri Lanka

Photo courtesy Vikalpa
There are some issues that divide Sri Lankans and there are some issues that unite Sri Lankans. While the cost of living, unemployment and education bring the opinions of the four main communities together, topics such as reconciliation and identity continue to divide.
On the economy, the cost of living is what is mainly on people’s minds. A reduction in the cost of living is what most Sri Lankans would like to see as a result of the current development process along with creation of more jobs and better education facilities. These opinions are similar across the four main communities in Sri Lanka.
However, on the topic of reconciliation, divisions still persist. 26.5% from the Tamil community believe that the Government has done nothing to address the root causes of the ethnic conflict while 35.5% from the Sinhalese community believe that the Government has done a lot. 59% from the Up Country Tamil and 39% from the Muslim communities say that the Government has done a little but not enough.
Some of these key findings from ‘Democracy in post-war Sri Lanka’, an island wide survey conducted by Social Indicator, the survey research unit of the Centre for Policy Alternatives are presented in the infographics below.
Sri Lanka – post war
Download a high resolution version of this info graphic here.
Sri Lanka – economy
Download a high resolution version of this info graphic here.
Conducted for the second time, ‘Democracy in post-war Sri Lanka’ sought to record public perspectives on democracy in Sri Lanka today and the findings presented under seven key sections – Economy and Development, Post War Sri Lanka, The Government, Media, Tolerance, Identity, and Role of Religion and Ethnicity in Politics.
The survey captured the opinion of 2045 Sri Lankans from the four main ethnic groups in the 25 districts. The selection of respondents was random across the country except in a few areas in the Northern Province where access was difficult. Fieldwork was conducted from August – September 2013.

Uprooted Tamils in Jaffna brave harassment to protest militarisation land grab

TamilNet[TamilNet, Tuesday, 12 November 2013, 16:04 GMT]
Amid prevailing intimidation, threats and blockade by the occupying Sri Lankan military and its intelligence operatives, the uprooted people of Valikaamam North in Jaffna on Tuesday launched a protest at Thellippazhai, demanding resettlement in their own lands. The organisers have vowed to continue the protest till 18 November to get their demands across the foreign media through visiting journalists to the peninsula. The protest is being held in front of Maaviddapuram Kanthaswamy temple in Thellippazhai, just 200 meters from the barbed wire fence of the former 'High Security Zone'. The fenced area is being transformed into a permanent 'Sinhala Military Zone'. 



Vali North uprooted people protest Many temples, churches and schools situated inside the already appropriated lands have been already demolished. A few days ago, the SL military threatened Tamil National Alliance politicians and journalists at gunpoint when they visited Kadduvan area where the demolition was taking place. 

Despite the attention of foreign journalists on the on-going protest, the occupying SL military has put up roadblocks and deployed its intelligence operatives harassing and intimidating the uprooted people coming to the site of the protest. 

Knowing that international focus would be on what was taking place at Valikaamam North, the SL military had stepped up the demolishing of the houses inside the occupied zone. 

Vali North uprooted people protest More than 800 people managed to gather outside the temple on Tuesday. 

Vali North uprooted people protest Tamil National Alliance parliamentarians E. Saravanapavan, K. Sritharan, Northern Provincial Council ministers T. Kurukularajah, P Aingaranesan, NPC members Ananthi Sasitharan, MK Sivajilingam and T. Siththarthan, members of the elected civic body and Tamil national activists took part in the protest together with the uprooted people. 

Vali North uprooted people protest Fearing that the protestors could enter the fenced zone, the SL military had beefed up the presence of armed soldiers around the occupied zone. The SL soldiers and policemen were checking the identity of the travellers on KKS Road and they registered the personal details of the people crossing the check posts. 

Some foreign correspondents present in Jaffna were seen reporting the protest.

The Tamil Homeland Issue: The Red Herring Of Ancient Possession

By Rajan Hoole -November 12, 2013 
Rajan Hoole
Rajan Hoole
Colombo TelegraphSri Lanka: A Haunted Nation - The Social Underpinnings Of Communal ViolencePart 8
The spirit of the times has been such that these homeland papers have been enthusiastically received by the local press and quoted ever since in a bid to block any political accommodation on the Tamil Homeland issue. It is partly to do with a flawed academic tradition, which has either supported or not been critical enough of official history. Historical pro- cesses are so varied that it is often notoriously erroneous to try projecting back into the past as G.H. Peiris had explicitly tried. Language and religious practices can change within a genera- tion. When it comes to ancient societies, records left behind by the ruling class (e.g. the Mahavamsa of Ceylon and parts of the Bible) tend to give a picture of homogeneity that is radically misleading of societies lacking the centralising machinery of modern times.
When ancient Israel in the time of King Solomon (circa 960 BC) was at the height of its power, there was indeed a Jewish state. A care- ful reading of the Bible would show, however, that Israel was not then a Jewish country, as modern Zionists would insist.                                     Read More     

Smashing The Tamil Homeland-7

The Tamil Homeland Question-Part 7

Colombo suspends flights to Jaffna ahead of CHOGM

TamilNet[TamilNet, Tuesday, 12 November 2013, 10:47 GMT]
In an apparent move to make foreign diplomats and journalists attending Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting [CHOGM] in Colombo steer away from Jaffna and block them from witnessing the protest of uprooted people of Valikaamam North as well as meeting their representatives, Colombo government has instructed the only private passenger flight operator, FITS Aviation (Pvt) limited, to suspend all flights from Ratmalana in Colombo to Palaali in Jaffna till 18 November. On Tuesday, the Canadian officials visiting North had to travel by road to Jaffna. 

When the visiting diplomats and journalists in Colombo were trying to book tickets, they were told by the Fits Aviation, formerly Expo Air, that their flight service to Jaffna has been cancelled due to 'reconstruction' of Palaali runway.

But, the Sri Lankan Air Force (SLAF) flights are operating as usual, using the same run way, informed sources in Jaffna told TamilNet.

Five-day protest to greet British PM’s Jaffna visit


article_image
By Shamindra Ferdinando-

 A five-day protest campaign gets underway in Jaffna today (12) ahead of UK Premier David Cameron’s visit to the peninsula.

The British delegation is scheduled to visit Jaffna on Friday (15), on the first day of the three-day Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM). The delegation is scheduled to fly there and return on the same day.

Authoritative sources told The Island that some members of the newly elected Northern Provincial Council had been involved in the protest campaign, which was likely to be the biggest in the Jaffna peninsula since the conclusion of the conflict in May 2009. The Jaffna peninsula, however, was brought under government control in early 1996.

The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) led by the Illankai Tamil Arasu Kadchi (ITAK) won the Sept. 21 Northern Provincial Council polls.

Asked whether the government intended to block the campaign, sources said that security top brass had directed the military and the police, deployed in the Jaffna peninsula, to be extremely cautious in dealing with those engaged in the protest.

TNA sources told The Island that the government couldn’t challenge the right of the masses to protest to highlight the grievances and difficulties experienced by the northern population due to heavy military presence, particularly in the Jaffna peninsula.

Army headquarters emphasised that the strength of the army deployed in the Jaffna peninsula had come down to 14,000 from 45,000.

A protest campaign was scheduled to be held in Colombo on the day of the CHOGM inauguration at Nelum Pokuna Theatre. "We are aware of ongoing efforts to move a group of people from the Northern Province to Colombo ahead of Friday’s inauguration," a senior official said.

In addition to protests in Jaffna and Colombo, some relatives of LTTE cadres killed in combat too, are planning a protest.

Sources said that the international media focus would be on Jaffna due to British Premier Cameron’s visit. They said that the New Zealand delegation, too, would visit Jaffna, while the low level Canadian group at the CHOGM 2013, too, was most likely to visit the peninsula.

Asked whether Indian External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid would visit the peninsula, sources pointed out that he had flown to Jaffna early last month to meet newly elected Northern Province Chief Minister C. V. Wigneswaran and, therefore, another visit was unlikely.
The Rajapaksas: who are Sri Lanka's ruling dynasty?
TUESDAY 12 NOVEMBER 2013
Channel 4 NewsSri Lanka's ruling family are mingling with the Commonwealth's elite as they host this week's summit in Colombo. Yet some of them have been accused of war crimes. So who are the Rajapaksas?
The Rajapaksa brothers (left to right: Basil, Gotabaya, Mahinda, Chamal)
Above: the Rajapaksa brothers (left to right: Basil, Gotabaya, Mahinda, Chamal)
President Rajapaksa has been president of Sri Lanka since 2005, having been elected with just over half the country's votes. Since then his popularity has grown, largely due to the fact that, within four years of having come to power, he had ended the Sri Lankan civil war and had crushed the Tamil Tigers movement.
In 2010, President Rajapaksa secured just shy of 58 per cent of the vote. Since then the Sri Lankan parliament has voted for changes to the constitution which will allow the president to stand for a third term - something that has raised concerns from, among others, UN human rights chief Navi Pillay, of growing authoritarianism from charities and the government's critics.
Above: President Rajapaksa questioned on human rights by Jonathan Miller of Channel 4 News

Family ties

It is not just Mahinda who benefits from the popularity of the Rajapaksa brand - in total 29 members of Rajapaksa's extended family hold senior positions within the government, civil service, media and industry, the Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice says.
According to the group, President Rajapaksa and two of his brothers, Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa and Minister of Economic Development Basil Gotabaya, control at least 45 per cent of Sri Lanka's budget, and manage five government ministries.
Another brother, Chamal Rajapaksa, is the speaker of Sri Lanka's parliament. The Rajapaksa family has largely been elected into the positions they hold.

Home investment

And it is not just the family that has been helped by the president's rise to power. His home town, Hambantota, will be host to the Commonwealth Youth Forum.

CHOGM Delegates Should Hang Their Heads In Shame


 by Pearl Thevanayagam
(November 12,2013, London Sri Lanka Guardian) Isaipriya is but one of the targets of Sinhala soldiers.
I reproduce here an article I wrote three years ago and Chogm delegates should take this piece as an authentic documentation notwithstanding the fact that the president’s brother and Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa who is challenging that the war on ethnic Tamils was genocide. Gotabhaya wants those accusing the government of genocide should go to Hague and Geneva. Little does he know their records of war crimes are being processed in both countries.
Tamil Nadu activists speak out: Interview with Loyola College Students



12 November 2013
Students from Loyola College in Tamil Nadu remained steadfast in their call for a complete boycott of the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting in Colombo by the international community, and continued to call for Sri Lanka to be suspended from the Commonwealth.



Rajapaksa’s Rule

Sadakat Kadri

London Review of BooksSri 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.

FMM Report: Violations of the Freedom of Expression Rights in Sri Lanka (Aug – Nov 2013)

Free Media Movement, Sri Lanka / 11.11.2013/ Press release
FMM Report: Violations of the Freedom of Expression Rights in Sri Lanka (Aug – Nov 2013)
SRI LANKA BRIEFThe Government of Sri Lanka (GoSL) will be hosting the Commonwealth Heads of Governments Meeting (CHOGM) this week. Freedom of Express ( FoE) is one of the major values treasured by the Commonwealth.  Freedom of expression rights are the cornerstone of the democratic governance and essential tool in promoting and defending all human rights.

Tamil Nadu assembly reiterates call for total Indian boycott of Sri Lanka CHOGM

TamilNet[TamilNet, Tuesday, 12 November 2013, 16:06 GMT]
At a special session convened on Tuesday, the Tamil Nadu assembly unanimously passed a resolution moved by Chief Minister Ms Jayalalitha calling on India to completely boycott CHOGM in genocide-accused Sri Lanka. “By participating in the Commonwealth meeting, India will be sending a message that it stands by the dishonourable and inhumane actions of the Sri Lankan state,” the resolution read, also expressing regret over the Indian government’s decision to send a delegation to Sri Lanka disrespecting sentiments in Tamil Nadu. 



Tamil Nadu Assembly Resolution
[Library Photo]
The strongly worded preface of the resolution also argued that India, which had aided the Sinhala racist state to destroy the Tamils and betrayed the latter by giving training to Sri Lankan forces, should at least seek repentance by a total boycott of the CHOGM and send a message to those who committed genocide and war crimes. 

The resolution was unanimously approved by all parties participating in the Tamil Nadu assembly. 

This resolution follows on the heels of the unanimous resolution passed in the assembly earlier on 24 October that had also called for a complete Indian boycott of the CHOGM. 

The resolution passed on Tuesday expressed came down sharply on the central government of India for choosing to ignore the earlier resolution.

Claiming that the Sri Lankan government was shielding the perpetrators of genocide and war crimes, the text of the resolution asserted that Indian participation in CHOGM would tantamount to providing protection for such war criminals. 

Jayalalithaa moves resolution in TN assembly to fully boycott CHOGM


Nov 12, 2013
Chennai: Tamil Nadu Chief Minister J Jayalalithaa on Tuesday moved resolution in special assembly session demanding India boycott CHOGM completely. The assembly had passed a similar resolution earlier as well. The assembly stressed that they do not want even External Affairs Minister Salman Khurshid to attend the meeting.
Earlier in the day, Salman Khurshid said that India's growing presence in Sri Lanka should not be compromised and that India would not boycott the upcoming CHOGM.
Khurshid said Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's decision not to attend the meet in no way was a protests against the island nation's alleged war crimes against Tamils.
  
Jayalalithaa moves resolution in TN assembly to fully boycott CHOGM

Khurshid said India's growing presence in Sri Lanka should not be compromised and that India would not boycott the upcoming CHOGM.

"I am going to Sri Lanka, India is not boycotting the CHOGM," said Khurshid clarifying the he will participate in the meet.
Khurshid also added that the Centre is committed towards the rehabilitation of Tamils in Sri Lanka. "Our efforts in Sri Lanka have been a success. We have a huge commitment to the development of the north east province of Sri Lanka," he added.
The Prime Minister, under immense pressure from Tamil parties not to visit Colombo to attend the CHOGM, recently sent a letter to the Sri Lankan President expressing his unavailability for the meet. Tamil Nadu political parties and Congress leaders from the state have been pressuring the Prime Minister not to visit Colombo.
They have been campaigning that Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa has violated all human rights during the war with LTTE and the Lankan government should be charged with war crimes.
The meeting is scheduled in Colombo on November 15.
(Lanka-e-News-12.Nov.2013, 2.30PM) In 2011, the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) accepted the offer by the Government of Sri Lanka to host the 2013 CHOGM in Colombo. This is the first time that Sri Lanka is hosting CHOGM even though on an earlier occasion in 1980, Sir Shridath Ramphal requested President J.R. Jayewardene to host the 1983 meeting in Colombo. 

Mauritius PM is latest leader to boycott Commonwealth meet in Sri Lanka

In this photograph taken on January 30, 2011, Mauritius Prime Minister Navin Chandra Ramgoolam attends the opening ceremony of the 16th Ordinary Summit of the African Union (AU) in Addis Ababa. The Prime Minister of Mauritius announced on November 12, 2013, that he will stay away from this week's Commonwealth summit in Sri Lanka because of the host's poor human rights record. Mauritius joins India and Canada in refusing to send a premier to Sri Lanka, which is accused of widespread human rights abuses against its Tamil minority and the killing of tens of thousands of civilians during its 2009 defeat of Tamil Tiger rebels. -- FILE PHOTO: AFP

Nov 12, 2013 
PORT LOUIS (AFP) - The Prime Minister of Mauritius announced Tuesday he will stay away from this week's Commonwealth summit in Sri Lanka because of the host's poor human rights record.
Mauritius joins India by refusing to send a premier to Sri Lanka, which is accused of widespread human rights abuses and the killing of tens of thousands of civilians during its 2009 defeat of Tamil Tiger rebels. Canada is totally boycotting the summit.
"This is a decision taken by a sovereign Mauritius in the face of the absence of progress in Sri Lanka on the respect of human rights," Prime Minister Navin Chandra Ramgoolam told the Mauritian Parliament.
He said that Mauritius, which will host the next Commonwealth Summit in 2015, believed that "human rights are more important than everything else".

Prime Minister of Mauritius to boycott Sri Lanka CHOGM

[TamilNet, Tuesday, 12 November 2013, 12:18 GMT]
TamilNetNavin Ramgoolam, the Prime Minister of Mauritius, the country slated to host the next CHOGM at the conclusion of Sri Lanka's two year tenure, has reportedly decided to boycott the CHOGM meet in Colombo. Prime Minister Ramgoolam said that he made ​​the decision because "he is a man of principle,” and added that he had received information that the situation in the north of the island of Sri Lanka has not improved in the four years after the war ended, Le Défi Media Group, a news media based in Port Louis reported Tuesday. 

Navinchandra Ramgoolam, Mauritian Prime Minister
Navinchandra Ramgoolam, Mauritian Prime Minister





CHOGM – An Acid Test For Malaysian Prime Minister


By K. Arumugam -November 12, 2013 
K. Arumugam
K. Arumugam
Colombo TelegraphIf our Prime Minister steps on the soil of Sri Lanka for the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) later this week, he will be committing one costly political blunder. It will surely earn the displeasure of the Malaysian Tamils who had supported him in the last election. In a larger context Dato’ Seri Najib Tun Razak will be seen to have duped larger minorities within Malaysia for trading humanity and human dignity with hegemonic sovereignty that acted with impunity.
Sri Lanka is accused of war crimes and crimes against humanity for killing over 40,000 civilian Tamils in the last phase of war that ended on the 17th May 2009.  That military act was brutal and its conduct was without witness save for its own military personnel.
The ethnic Tamils of Sri Lanka were living as a distinct nationhood parallel to that of the Singhala Kingdom prior to colonization. Sri Lanka became a unitary state when it was colonized by the British.  Continuing the British system after independence the majority Singhala politicians introduced systematic marginalization, disenfranchisement of citizenships and discriminatory policies against the Tamils. Tamils fought back. When their non-violent struggle was met with the brute power of the state, the Tamils were pushed to take up arms in their right to self-determination. If the Tamils struggle was to take place right after the Second World War, it would have been called an independence struggle.  That was the setting.
Immediately after the war in May 2009, Sri Lanka diplomatically labelled the crushing of the Tamils as a military solution to liberate the Tamils from the control of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam calling them terrorist. A resolution was tabled at the Human Rights Council (HRC) on 26th May 2009 justifying the military solution as an act in line with the promotion and protection of human rights’ standards.  Malaysia was bought into that and voted for Sri Lanka, despite local Tamils crying foul.
However, soon after images of the war began to surface. These fueled worldwide condemnation. Various levels of compromise in the United Nations monitoring of the event were exposed. Sri Lanka tactfully handled it roping China and India as accomplices to the act with support from few allies in the region.