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 19, 2013

Toronto torture victim takes Sri Lanka to UN rights body

A Toronto Tamil man who was detained and tortured in Sri Lankan jails for three years is taking his case to the United Nations.

Tamil Canadian Roy Samathanam, 43, is filing a complaint against the Sri Lankan government before the UN Human Rights Committee for torture. He was detained for three years from 2007 to 2010. He still suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder.

STEVE RUSSELL / TORONTO STAR Order this photo
Tamil Canadian Roy Samathanam, 43, is filing a complaint against the Sri Lankan government before the UN Human Rights Committee for torture. He was detained for three years from 2007 to 2010. He still suffers from post-traumatic stress disorder
By:  Immigration reporter, Published on Wed Nov 13 2013
A Toronto man who was detained and tortured in Sri Lankan jails for three years is taking his case to the United Nations, accusing Sri Lankan authorities of violating international human rights laws.

Minister SB still gratifies sister-in-law!

sbIn an attempt to tone down rising 
opposition to the casinos, higher education minister Sumanaweera Bandara (SB) Dissanayake recently told the media, “Casinos are good. I also played.” The reasons for his having gone public to whitewash casinos are now being revealed.
Minister Dissanayake’s son Narada was married to Lakshi Nettikumara, the daughter of Vajira Janaki Nettikumara, who runs the ‘Salaka Regino’ casino. That marriage took place following the mysterious death in 1999 of Vajira Nettikumara’s husband Lucky Nettikumara. Lucky was a very good pal of minister Dissanayake. And, that friendship led to the marriage between the two families.
When S.B. Dissanayake was a minister in the Chandrika Kumaratunga government, parliament passed a proposal to levy a Rs. 50 million annual tax on casinos. But, Vajira Nettikumara got minister Dissanayake to convince the Department of Inland Revenue that ‘Salaka Rejino’ is not a casino, but a rushino. The difference between a casino and a rushino is that the former bets with chips in lieu of paid currency, but the latter deals directly with currency. Accordingly, minister Dissanayake has told Inland Revenue officers that the Rs. 50 annual tax was not relevant to ‘Salaka Regino.’
In 2001, minister Dissanayake left the Kumaratunga government and joined the UNP, after which a complaint had been lodged at the Bribery Commission against him, which questioned as to how he had found money to build a palatial house at Hanguranketha. Vaijra Nettikumara came to his rescue, and said she had given the money in question as the dowry to her daughter. Some time later, the Lakshi-Narada marriage broke up, but it is clear minister Dissanayake has not yet forgotten the favour his sister-in-law had done for him

Blue Mountain Properties, yet another Ceylinco project?

blue mountainThere is suspicion that Blue Mountain Properties (Pvt.) Ltd., which is these days getting wide publicity as a real estate developer, is actually a devious project by Lalith Kotelawala, who has claimed himself to be bankrupt. Chairman of Blue Mountain Properties is Dr. Hiran Hettiarachchi, a doctor attached to Sri Jayewardenepura Hospital.
However, using Dr. Hettiarachchi as a front, the man who is really running the business is Vinesh Atukorale, a garment factory manager. Dr. Hettiarachchi knows next to nothing about what happens in the financial division of the company. Although Atukorale functions as the financial controller, he doesn’t have any professional qualification to hold such a position. He is being guided by an unseen hand, internal sources of the company say.
Blue Mountain Properties has acquired large plots of land across the island, mainly in Colombo, Gampaha, Galle, Matara, Kandy and Kurunegala. Without fully paying any of the original owners, the company has already obtained advances from buyers after partitioninig the lands. Last weekend, newspapers carried a full page attractive advertisement about a proposed ‘Blue Mountain Apartments’, asking prospective buyers to pay advances to own a property.
Such tycoons, knowing that Sri Lanka has no strong legal mechanism to monitor the mushrooming businesses of this nature are making maximum use of the situation.

Uma Will Be A First-Class MP Standing Up For The People Of Harrow East – Gareth Thomas

Colombo TelegraphNovember 19, 2013
Harrow campaigner Uma Kumaran has been selected as Labour’s candidate in the 2015 election to choose the next MP for Harrow East.
“My parents fled to Britain over 30 years ago in the midst of civil war in Sri Lanka and they worked hard to rebuild their lives and raise a family in Harrow.” she told Colombo Telegraph.
Gareth Thomas, Labour’s MP for Harrow West and the former Minister of State at the Department for International Development said; “Uma will be a first-class MP standing up for the people of Harrow East.  It will be a pleasure to campaign with her to reverse the cuts in police numbers in Harrow, for a better Northwick Park and to get more investment in our schools. Together we will be highlighting the pressure on the living standards of too many Harrow families as a result of unchecked energy bills and the squeeze on wages since David Cameron took office.”
Related posts;
uma-and-shopkeeper

Chamal Rajapaksa: An Incomplete Biography

By Jayashika Padmasiri -November 19, 2013 
jayashika padmasiri
Jayashika Padmasiri
Colombo TelegraphIf the “Mahawanshaya” can be considered as the biography of the ancient Sri Lanka, then certainly the latest ‘vanity publication’ in Sri Lanka “Chamal Rajapaksa” written by Punya de Silva (and sold for Rs.2000), can certainly be considered as Chamal Rajapaksa’s biography. It is a universally acknowledged fact that history is narrated and repeated in versions. However when considering history we must not forget that even ‘Mahawanshaya’ is also a version of history”: which boldly speaks the invisible worlds‘one point of view’. So with that cleared out from the picture, and getting the most obvious fact which is the writer sucking up big-time to please the main character or his family in the book (which in simple terms in Sinhalese is called as ‘kadde yamma’ these days) out of the way, the book “Chamal Rajapaksa” can be called as an informative book which is very well researched, and a book which not only relates a lot of information and incidents about Chamal Rajapaksa and his family, but also about the writer Punya de Silva as well in a none chronological order (since the book proves that the writer has lost all sense of order and organizational skills while writing this book.)

David Cameron Urged To Probe Tory Donor Lycamobile's Links To Sri Lankan President Rajapaksa

View image on Twitter
19/11/2013
uk-politicsDavid Cameron has been urged to investigate why the Tory Party took over £420,000 from the telecoms group Lycamobile, which has close links to Sri Lanka's controversial President Mahinda Rajapaksa.
Labour MP Tom Blenkinsop told the Huffington Post UK: "The Prime Minister knows his party has received over £420k from a company closely associated with the Sri Lankan regime. He was obviously so concerned that his own MPs were recently prevented from visiting there.

David Cameron Urged To Probe Tory Donor Lycamobile's Links To Sri Lankan President Rajapaksa


subasDavid Cameron has been urged to investigate why the Tory Party took over £420,000 from the telecoms group Lycamobile, which has close links to Sri Lanka's controversial President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Labour MP Tom Blenkinsop told the Huffington Post UK: "The Prime Minister knows his party has received over £420k from a company closely associated with the Sri Lankan regime. He was obviously so concerned that his own MPs were recently prevented from visiting there.

Chomsky: Fight Back Against NSA Spying Or Be ‘Complicit’


| by Chris Kanaracus
IDG News Servic
(November 18, 2013, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) Now that the extent of the U.S. National Security Agency’s surveillance programs has been exposed by former NSA contractor Edward Snowden, it’s beholden on the public to fight back or else find themselves “complicit” in the activities, according to Massachusetts Institute of Technology linguistics professor and philosopher Noam Chomsky.
The freedoms U.S. citizens have “weren’t granted by gifts from above,” Chomsky said during a panel discussion Friday at MIT. “They were won by popular struggle.”
While U.S. officials have long cited national security as a rationale for domestic surveillance programs, that same argument has been used by the “most monstrous systems” in history, such as the Stasi secret police in the former East Germany, Chomsky said.
“The difference with the totalitarian states is the citizens couldn’t do a lot about it,” in contrast to the U.S., he added. “If we do not expose the plea of security and separate the parts that are valid from the parts that are not valid, then we are complicit.”
He cited the still-in-development Trans-Pacific Partnership trade agreement, which critics say could have far-reaching implications for Internet use and intellectual property. Wikileaks recently posted a draft of the treaty’s chapter on intellectual property.
Now that the information is out there, “we can do something about [the proposed TPP],” Chomsky said.
What’s needed for sure “is a serious debate about what the lines should be” when it comes to government surveillance, said investigative reporter Barton Gellman, who has received NSA document leaks from Snowden, leading to a series of stories this year in the Washington Post. “Knowledge is power and it’s much easier to win if the other side doesn’t know there’s a game.”
“We can be confident that any system of power is going to try to use the best available technology to control and dominate and maximize their power,” Chomsky said. “We can also be confident … that they want to do it in secret.”
But there’s a crucial difference between the U.S. activities and that of the Stasi, Gellman said. “The Stasi was knowingly, deliberately and cautiously squashing dissent,” he said. “I don’t think that’s what we’re seeing here at all.”
A smartphone is an excellent tracking device “from my location, to who I communicate with, to what I search for,” he said while holding up his personal device. “I am paying Verizon Wireless on the order of $1000 a year for this.”
Meanwhile, although telcos are making money by selling phone users’ personal information to third parties, at the same time “the NSA could not do part of its job as efficiently if the companies weren’t selling and retaining [customer] data,” Gellman said.
Company disclosures and terms of service have limited benefit as well. “Generally the terms of service are written to say we can do whatever we want, in a lot of words,” he said. Even if a customer reads through carefully and notes what pledges are being made, “you have no way of monitoring what they do,” Gellman added.
Since publishing stories on the NSA surveillance programs, Gellman has stepped up his personal privacy efforts significantly, through “layered defenses” including “locked rooms, safes, and air-gapped computers that never have and never will touch the ‘net,” he said. The extra steps are “a giant tax on my time,” Gellman added.
It’s not clear how many more revelations will come to light from the materials Snowden gave Gellman and other journalists. Snowden reportedly gave reporters up to 200,000 documents.
“The [NSA] documents are far from complete,” often providing clues to things that end up being wrong after further investigation, Gellman said.

British PM David Cameron Talks to Northern Tamil IDP’s With TNA MP MA Sumanthiran’s Help

“Colorful glow of our soul”:
17

“Colorful glow of our soul”: Thanneer Vitto Valarthom ~ Bharathiyaar song & Tweet Digest to Mark David Cameron Visit to Jaffna

CHOGM 2013: Cameron’s visit boosts morale of displaced Tamils

SRI LANKA BRIEFMeera Srinivasan-Saturday, November 16, 2013

 British Prime Minister David Cameron visited the Sabapathipillai Welfare Centre at Chunnakam, about 10 km from Jaffna town, on Friday. He walked into the narrow lanes with tiny homes adjacent to each other and talked to some residents. Tamil National Alliance (TNA) MP M.A. Sumanthiran helped with translation.                                                    Read more »

The Commonwealth Summit: the aftermath

Sril Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justice
Attendance at Commonwealth Summits by Heads of Government
(it has not been possible to determine Heads of Government in attendance between 1977 and 1983
)

18/11/2013

The Commonwealth Summit has now ended. It was broadly seen as a complete disaster for both the Commonwealth and Sri Lanka.
The Commonwealth Summit the Aftermath by nelvely

Monday, November 18, 2013

What Is The Timeframe For War Crime Investigations Mr President?


An Open Letter by Laksiri Fernando
( November 18, 2013, Sydney, Sri Lanka Guardian) If the Island report today (18 November 2013), by Zacki Jabbar, is correct you have said that “time was of essence and the allegation of war crimes could not be investigated at the speed Britain wanted.” You may or may not be correct in respect of the time constraints, given the fact that the country and your support base are not being prepared for the necessity of conducting such investigations aftermath of the ‘war against terrorism.’ But the important fact is that you have not denied the need for such an investigation on an independent basis. I commend you on that.
The information regarding the alleged war crimes during the last stages of the war obviously by some security personnel is undeniable. I in particular would highlight the killings of Prabharakan’s son, ‘Colonel’ Ramesh and the LTTE TV announcer Isaipriya. They were all in custody when they were killed. There are more accusations on indiscriminate shelling into civilian areas or no fire zones, the denial of food and medical supplies etc. There are some numbers given and incidents recorded in the UN Specialist Report based on the evidence available to them and it is high time to investigate all side/s of the stories and allegations and establish the truth as much as possible.
You have also said at the same media briefing that “anyone found guilty, no matter who it was, would be dealt with under Sri Lankan laws.” I also commend you on that. It is good that you prepare the country for such an investigation. During the war against terrorism, you had an announced policy of ‘zero civilian casualties’ and upholding human rights. Therefore, it is high time that if there had been any deviation from those instructions and policies that they should be investigated. It is obvious from the information available (i.e. Channel 4 videos etc.), that those are given by some army personnel themselves. Most of them might be the same people who might have indulged in the atrocities. I am only highlighting a possibility. Punishing the perpetrators is necessary for disciplined armed forces. I also recollect the Secretary of Defence once admitting the possibility of deviations or violations given the large number of new recruits etc.
You have expressed the opinion that the whole of 30 years should be investigated. I have no objection for that. But we have to realize that for the purposes of reconciliation, particularly on the grief and the grievances of the Tamil community, that the last stages of the war should take priority. What could be done is somewhat the South African model where various sub-committees looking into various aspects and in this case various periods as well. The report on the last stages of the war could come as early as possible. Otherwise the whole investigation could be perceived as a delaying tactic.
It is high time that more is done for reconciliation. It is high time that as the President of the country that you make a public apology to the Tamil community and also to the Muslim community for whatever hardships and injustices that they have had to undergo in the past. A particular apology is in order to the families of the disappeared and the missing people of all communities.
It is also correct on your part to highlight that you alone cannot move in the direction of reconciliation. The leaders of the Tamil community in particular should extend their cooperation and assistance. To the credit of the TNA, I must say, that their responsible behaviour during the CHOGM is an indication of their moderation and possible cooperation. You have done the right thing by holding the elections to the NPC. The NPC deserves more funds and initiative within and beyond the 13th Amendment.
Sri Lanka has now become the Chair of CHOGM, you at the helm. Therefore, the responsibilities are to uphold democracy, human rights, rule of law and independence of the judiciary among other core values of the Commonwealth, of course eradicating the common poverty as you have already emphasised.
To come back to the issue of war crime investigations, it might be unreasonable to say that the British Prime Minister was asking Sri Lanka or you to complete the investigations before March 2014. The request was in my opinion was to initiate or appoint an independent commission before March. While it could be a national investigation, it could also incorporate at least few members from the international community at least from the region. It might also be possible to conduct immediate investigations into the alleged killings of Praphakaran’ son, Ramesh and Isaipriya and punish the perpetrators even before March 2013.

Sri Lanka: grim up north for the Tamil community

Sri Lanka: Tamils are still 'very scared and vulnerable' (picture: Getty)
FRIDAY 15 NOVEMBER 2013
Tamil war widows face sexual harrassment and violence at the hands of the military (picture: Getty)The displaced still number at least close to 100,000 in the north east of Sri lanka (picture: Getty)Channel 4 NewsPresident Mahinda Rajapaksa has made much of the development of Sri Lanka's north following the carnage of war - but has life really improved for the Tamil community living there?
Death threats on Sri Lanka government radio
Sat Nov 16, 2013
A well-known and highly regarded Sri Lankan human rights activist received death threats live on state radio last week. Ms. Nimalka Fernando knows journalists and activists who speak out against the government are murdered and disappear with mind-numbing consistency in Sri Lanka, but the discussion of her murder live on state radio was shocking even for this seasoned veteran activist.

The Challenge After Success Of CHOGM

By Jehan Perera -November 18, 2013 |
Jehan Perera
Jehan Perera
Colombo TelegraphThe Sri Lankan government can take satisfaction at the close of CHOGM.  It ended without any major mishap, although there were several controversial incidents, such as the laying of flowers at the killing fields of Elephant Pass by the Canadian government’s representative, and the speech targeting Sri Lanka given at the People’s Forum by a British Minister.   By and large, however, the organization of events went like clockwork.  Those who attended the various CHOGM events would have been impressed by the attention showered on them by the organizers of the various events.  There was the best of hotel accommodation and food for them, apart from brand new cars and buses to transport them around.  There were always a plethora of personnel around to attend to their needs.  It appears that no expense was spared, the hallmark of the gracious host.
There was also the human interest dimension of CHOGM for the larger Sri Lankan population.  Most of them would have been proud and happy to see the children at CHOGM events, dressed up prettily for the occasion, and dancing gracefully and singing beautifully.  The media images of CHOGM were positive ones with few exceptions.  The sight of Prince Charles and his wife Camilla visiting orphanages, hospitals, women’s centres and the tea plantations, was heartwarming again on account of their visible kindness and graciousness.  Prime Minister David Cameron playing cricket with Sri Lankan cricket legend Muttiah Muralitharan and Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbot jogging on Galle Face along with the President’s son was a show of engagement with the interests of the general population.  The hosting of the wives of the dignitaries by First Lady Shiranthi Rajapaksa brought out the family spirit that must underlie the spirit of the Commonwealth.
The hosting of the Commonwealth Summit in Sri Lanka was indeed a great triumph for the Sri Lankan government in the context of the strong opposition to it on the grounds of the government’s failure to live up to Commonwealth Values.  The fact that the heads of government of very important countries visited Sri Lanka and spent several days no less, would count for a great deal.  British Prime Minister David Cameron, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbot, Pakistani Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and South African President Jacob Zuma are all heavyweights on the world scene, who might never have visited Sri Lanka at all in the ordinary course of events.    But they did on account of CHOGM.   The challenge now is for the Sri Lankan government to build on these links and to utilize them in the best interests of the Sri Lankan people, and to resolve outstanding problems.  This will require a fundamental change of approach to issues of governance.
Future Challenges                                                   Read More


Cameron's coup
Illustration by Keera Ratnam
18 November 2013

Sri Lanka had intended its hosting of the Commonwealth leaders’ summit last week to burnish its international standing and, in particular, decisively crush the growing worldwide campaign for accountability for its wartime atrocities and ongoing human rights abuses. In actuality, the summit turned into an unmitigated public relations disaster, with these very issues eclipsing the conference and drawing wall-to-wall international media coverage. This unexpected and welcome outcome can be directly traced to the boycotts of the summit by leaders of Canada, Mauritius and, reluctantly, India, and, especially, the robust actions of British Prime Minister David Cameron. Rather than whitewashing the murderous regime of President Mahinda Rajapaksa as many had quite rightly feared, events at CHOGM have added impetus to the international campaign for accountability and justice. The most significant of these is Mr. Cameron’s pledge that Britain would press at the UN for an international investigation into Sri Lanka’s war crimes, if Colombo does not complete by March 2014, an ‘independent, thorough and credible’ one of its own.

In the lead up to the summit, Mr Cameron had rejected widespread calls to boycott, arguing that the' right thing to do' was to engage with Colombo. Yet despite his attendance, in the end his carefully scripted and pointed actions in Sri Lanka amounted, in fact, to a de facto boycott. His visit, far from Britain's customary 'engagement', was a string of deliberate snubs. Mr. Cameron left the summit immediately after its launch on Friday to fly to Jaffna, where he met 
amid the muddy lanes and fragile shelters of a refugee camp with displaced Tamils whose homes remain occupied by the military, and staff of the repeatedly attacked Uthayan newspaper in their bullet-pocked and arson scorched offices. The scenes of distraught relatives of Tamils disappeared’ by Sri Lankan forces hurling themselves against Mr. Cameron’s cavalcade with photographs of their loves ones were particularly poignant. In a final blow, Mr Cameron left early on Saturday, missing the remaining half of the three-day summit, but not before setting President Rajapaksa a March deadline and ultimatum. Indeed, it was not Mr. Cameron’s attendance of the summit, but his visible absences from its proceedings, as well as his historic visit to Jaffna, that upstaged the event and ignited the emerging focus on Sri Lanka’s human rights abuses into the defining issue of CHOGM.

The Rajapaksa regime however, remains defiant and unbowed. As we have long argued – and as no doubt became clear to Mr. Cameron himself during his reportedly heated meeting with President Rajapaksa on Friday - no amount of cajoling by the international community will persuade this regime to abandon its violent and repressive policies. This is precisely why Mr. Cameron’s forceful actions in the past few days, marking a welcome change from Britain’s approach of largely unconditional engagement with Sri Lanka, have both provided a fillip to the campaign for accountability and human rights protection, and been enthusiastically welcomed by Tamils the world over. At the same time, they have propelled Britain from being a follower, especially next to the United States, to a lead actor on the question of accountability, justice and stability in Sri Lanka. 

However, the corollary is that Mr. Cameron has sharply raised expectations of Britain, and himself. The Rajapaksa regime remains unwaveringly committed to the strategic and violent project of Sinhala nationalist reordering of the island. As repeatedly demonstrated, any ‘concessions’ or steps it takes at such moments are cosmetic and only intended to blunt, delay and ultimately escape international pressure. Mr Cameron's deadline is an important step in limiting Colombo's ability to obfuscate and delay. However, to be clear, nothing short of an international investigation will suffice: the crimes are simply too grave, Sri Lanka’s top political and military’s leaders are themselves implicated and, the country’s majoritarian order and institutions will not take seriously, let alone credibly address, Tamils’ grievances. As such, Mr. Cameron must stay the course that Britain has now charted. The UN Human Rights Commission session in March is the next checkpoint, but it cannot be the sole focus, it must be part of a broader and determined effort by Britain and rest of the international community - one that must begin now.

Sri Lanka, 'impossible journalism' and Channel 4 News

Channel 4 NewsNews
SUNDAY 17 NOVEMBER 2013
As the controversial CHOGM in Sri Lanka comes to an end, Channel 4 News Editor Ben de Pear reveals why he is pulling his team out of the country in the face of intimidation.
Channel 4 News Editor, Ben de Pear (@bendepear) writes:

Sinhala Story On Frances Harrison’s BBC Documentary In Question, BBC Confirms Removing Programmes From Its Web

November 18, 2013 |
The BBC has removed it’s Sinhala Service programme on the investigative report by former BBC correspondent in Colombo Frances Harrison.  Writing to Colombo Telegraph the BBC said; “There was a serious editorial lapse in a programme on the BBC Sinhala Service on Friday 8 November.
Frances Harrison
Frances Harrison
Colombo TelegraphResponding to Colombo Telegraph story BBC Sinhala Head Suspended: Non Sinhala Bosses Appointed, Liyanage’s Reports On Frances Harison’s Documentary Removed From BBC Web , the BBC World Service spokesman Paul Rasmussen said; “There was a serious editorial lapse in a programme on the BBC Sinhala Service on Friday 8 November.   We have removed the story from our website and are investigating how this happened to ensure nothing similar happens again.  While this investigation is underway, the Sinhala Service Editor will not be editing the output or managing the team.   A temporary editor will ensure the service will continue to broadcast.”
BBC didn’t deny our story. We wrote yesterday;
Head of the BBC Sinhala Service, Priyath Liyanage, has been suspended, the Colombo Telegraph can exclusively reveal today.
A non-Sinhala outsider has been specially appointed to look after all BBC Sinhala Service activities for the first time of its history and the Sinhala Service staff has been informed about Priyath Liyanage’s suspension in writing, the Colombo Telegraph learns.
Unprecedentedly, the BBC Sinhala Service reporters have been asked to translate all their reports into English to be checked by higher authorities.
The Colombo Telegraph sent an email to the BBC Press office [worldservice.press@bbc.co.uk] asking several questions related to the suspension of its head of Sinhala Service. Strangely, the message we received said: “Delivery has failed”.
Early this year the BBC Sinhala head was sent to follow a BBC course on Journalistic ethics after he was caught giving letters of recommendation to Sri Lanka government to approve interest free loans  to his deputy Chandana Keerthi Bandara and to the  Colombo reporter Elmo Fernando.
Colombo Telegraph reliably learns that the Sandesya programs related to Frances Harrison‘s recent BBC documentary on Sri Lanka have been removed from the BBC website after investigations.

'Assault on democracy' in Sri Lanka

November 18th, 2013
As many as 70,000 people were killed in Sri Lanka's war and in its final stage, which lasted from September 2008 to May 2009, the Sri Lankan army advanced into an area of the north where about 330,000 people were trapped by fighting. A U.N. report in 2011 said the government used "large-scale and widespread shelling" that left a large number of civilians dead.
The number of civilian deaths and injuries are unknown to this day, and U.N. figures greatly differ from those in reports from Sri Lanka's government and various nongovernmental organizations.
Sri Lankan President Mahinda Mahinda Rajapaksa told media Thursday he would "not hesitate to take action against any human rights violations, adding that he has nothing to hide and is very open," according to a Sri Lankan government website.
Chatham House's Charu Lata Hogg talks to Max Foster about her thoughts on the summit being held in Sri Lanka and the message it sends.

Tiran gets contract to bait BASL

 Monday, 18 November 2013 

thebar reporterMP Tiran Alles, owner of ‘Mawbima’ newspaper, has accepted a contract to turn the Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) into an organization biased to the government, BASL sources say.
Incumbent president, advocate Upul Jayasuriya and rest of the office-bearers of the BASL are strongly opposing the steps taken by the Rajapaksa regime to impeach chief justice Shirani Bandaranayake, and are giving no official recognition to her successor Mohan Peiris.
As the first step to bait the BASL, Tiran Alles has offered to print and distribute ‘The Bar Reporter’, the official publication of the BASL, free of charge through his institution.
However, the BASL has rejected the offer, as it had been forewarned about Tiran’s intentions.
‘The Bar Reporter’ is presently being published by The Independent Media Networks (Pvt.) Ltd.