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

Thursday, November 21, 2013

Co-operatives as a means to uplift war affected women in Sri Lanka

SRI LANKA: An innocent businessman is tortured by Colombo Narcotics Unit officers in an attempt to extort money from him

ahrc logoNovember 21, 2013
ASIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION-URGENT APPEAL PROGRAMME
Urgent Appeal Case: AHRC-UAC-144-2013



21 November 2013
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SRI LANKA: An innocent businessman is tortured by Colombo Narcotics Unit officers in an attempt to extort money from him
ISSUES: illegal arrest; detention; torture; Justice; impunity; rule of law
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Dear friends,
The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has received information that Mr. Chithra Kumar (32) of Wattala in Nuwara Eliya District was arrested by officers from the Colombo Narcotics division and tortured in an effort to extort money from him. Kumar is a legitimate gold dealer who was arrested after returning from a business trip to Singapore. He was tortured over a period of five days and made to sign blank papers. Furthermore, his wife was placed under house arrest and forced to hand over a case which was likely used by the officers to plant evidence.
This case is yet another illustration of the exceptional collapse of the rule of law in the country.

Sri Lanka nationalist group protests against UK

LogoThursday, November 21, 2013 
A Sri Lankan Buddhist nationalist group today staged a protest against British Prime Minister David Cameron's warning to institute an international inquiry into the alleged human rights violations during the war against the LTTE. 

Activists of Ravana Balaya demonstrated in front of the 's embassy here demanding  must investigate the crimes of its own troops in British Ceylon in 1818. 

In a communique handed over to the embassy, Ittakande Saddatissa, a Buddhist monk and Ravana Balaya chief, said, "We have found very clear evidence to prove as to how British Army executed captured freedom fighters without going through a proper judicial process. 

"There were evidence that British Army had opened fire indiscriminately at civilians, including children while destroying paddy fields by setting fire to them." 

Cameron, on the sidelines of the summit, had warned  that his government would work with the UN Human Rights Council to set up an international inquiry if the country failed to address rights concerns by March next year. 

Rajapaksa had rejected Cameron's warning, saying countries should not "dictate" to Sri Lanka.
‘Ravana Balaya’ protest against war crimes inquiry


Sri Lanka nationalist group




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BBC News  But a prominent Muslim in the area said he was very sad and the sentiment was shared by many Sinhalese too.  
Full Story>>>

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Ganadeviya (deity) statue at Anurapura burnt down using tires


(Lanka-e-News -16.March.2011, 11.00PM) According to reports reaching Lanka e news, a Hindu Temple situated at Devanam piyatissa Mawatha, Anuradhapura had been set on fire by a violent marauding group on the 14th night.
This Temple which had been in existence since 1983, are visited by Tamil as well as Sinhala people for religious activities.
The picture herein shows the statue of Ganadeviya (the deity) within the Temple burnt down by setting fire to it using a tire.

  Full Story>>>
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‘Sri Lanka’s Killing Fields’

“You can bend it and twist it... You can misuse and abuse it... But even God cannot change the Truth.”
by Gareth Thomas
( July 02, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) I rise to raise two issues. 
                               Read More
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TamilNetBishop's House appeals to Vatican to urge Colombo to renovate Vanni churches


  
  

Rubert Soysa’s Exhibition At Paradise Road Galleries

RS
November 21, 2013 Colombo Telegraph
This will be Rubert Soysa’s sixth exhibition at Paradise Road Galleries. Soysa is one of Sri Lanka’s more established artists, best known for his abstract paintings depicting both figurative and abstract form. Born in Sri Lanka, Soysa studied art at the Government College of Fine Arts in 1973.
Rubert Soysa
Rubert Soysa
He held his first solo show at the Vansbro Public Library in Sweden and thereafter continued to exhibit his work in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Syria, Cuba, Bulgaria, India, South Korea, and throughout Europe.
In this, his latest exhibition, Soysa focuses more on the figurative with portraits and the female nude as his main subject. The artist has introduced new media into his work, incorporating layers and texture using cardboard and other materials. The composition of the canvas in some pieces play with proportion and geometrical shapes.
This exhibition will remain open until 13 December 2013. Paradise Road Galleries is located within The Gallery Café, 2 Alfred House Road, Colombo 3. Open 10am to midnight daily. Tel +94 112582162

Undercover soldiers 'killed unarmed civilians in Belfast'

Watch extracts from the BBC's Panorama programme-21 November 2013 

video

BBCThe aftermath of an IRA bomb in Belfast in 1972Speaking publicly for the first time, the ex-members of the Military Reaction Force (MRF), which was disbanded in 1973, said they had been tasked with "hunting down" IRA members in Belfast.

‘We know how to retaliate’

Death upon death in Lebanon Tuesday as in one stroke suicide bombers hit Iran and Hizbullah in the Shia district of Janah, southern Beirut, writes Gamal Nkrumah
The site of explosions near the Iranian embassy in Beirut (photo: Reuters)
‘We know how to retaliate’20-11-2013logo

The Shia factor in the Levantine body politic is increasingly metamorphosing into a dangerous debacle. The Lebanese news media do not agree on much. But they have been almost at one in condemning the suicide bomb blast that rocked the predominantly Shia suburb of Janah in southern Beirut. As Al-Ahram Weekly went to press, it became apparent that the death toll was no less than 40 and fast rising.


Why secularism must increasingly matte

r                                                                    

 
article_image
A Lebanese man runs in front of a burned car at the scene where two explosions struck near the Iranian Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, Nov. 19, 2013 
                                                                                                          
In fact, secularism must increasingly matter in the purported world of democracy if societies are to be spared murderous inter-religious violence and bloody disintegration. In South Asia, India has done well to obligate the state to maintain an equi-distance among the country’s religious communities.

                     ‘We know how to retaliate’ by nelvely

Wednesday, November 20, 2013



(Lanka-e-News-20.Nov.2013, 7.30PM) MaRa regime’s roller coaster has gone off the rails presaging the beginning of its inevitable disastrous end . Like the much hyped commonwealth heads of governments meeting (CHOGM) turned finally into a damp squib despite every effort made to inflate the deflated image of Medamulana MaRa through the CHOGM , the conspiracy by which the chief justice Shiranee Bandaranayake was ousted by MaRa to transform the judiciary into MaRa -crazy legal system , has also begun to backfire with the MaRa crazy legal system showing signs of cracks at its very foundation.
This disastrous trend towards MaRa’s end coincides with the resignation of the Law College Principal R .W.Rodrigo who was responsible for passing his son in the law college final exam fraudulently ,before he could be sacked from his post. 
Mohan Peiris better known as Mohan Pachoris (accomplished liar) who was appointed as the chief justice (CJ ) replacing Shiranee Bandaranayake (former CJ who was ousted on the basis of MaRa’s nefarious motives ) and Shiranee Burhan (Thilakawardena) the other Pachoris judge who is MaRa’s hidden ornament together bear a vituperative grudge against Rodrigo, and this is the underlying cause signaling this devastating end. 
The legal education council which is headed by the CJ had conducted an inquiry into the law College Principal’s son’s examination results and held there has been a fraud , and requested Rodrigo to resign before he is sacked. (read Lanka e news earlier report captioned ‘Law College Principal who passed Namal illicitly victim of condom theory’ )
However , MaRa who is grateful to Rodrigo for passing his own son Namal in the law final exam by orchestrating a racket at that time , had not been able to take action against Rodrigo at once. Hence , MaRa and his JaRa Attorney general (AG) Sarath Palitha Fernando had teamed together to appoint Rodrigo as an appeal court judge.
Mohan Pachoris and Shiranee Burhan who are bitterly opposing this move are determined to see to it a criminal action against Rodrigo is filed ahead of that appointment. Both of them are therefore these days slyly working hard towards this goal , according to reports reaching court inside information division of Lanka e news. On the other hand the AG who is on MaRa’s side is doing everything that militates against the filing of case against Rodrigo which has necessarily led to a conflict between the AG and the CJ though both are JaRas from the garbage bin of MaRa. 
This conflict only bears testimony to the truth that MaRa is beginning to drown in the backlash of his own travesty of justice which he is so craftily stoking, very much like a Frankestein monster devouring its creator. In the case of MaRa it is significant to note that though he is the creator , unlike Dr. Frankestein, MaRa himself is a most ruthless monster. 

Who Is Misleading Muthiah Muralidaran?


By S. Sivathasan -November 20, 2013 |
S.Sivathasan
S.Sivathasan
Colombo TelegraphThe interview given by Muralidaran to Channel 4, has rustled many a feather. Words apart, is the ease with which he has fallen a victim to the orchestration of the powers that be. Without remorse a whole community has been slandered as being without sense or any sensibility. This has earned him the wrath of everyone, severely affected by the government onslaught, not for days or months or years but for decades.
Having accompanied the UK Prime Minister and being in Jaffna for a few hours, he ventures to set aside all the considered representations of the most responsible spokesmen of the Tamil Community. Who were they? The Chief Minister and political leaders. In one sweep he trashes the agonizing words of the grief stricken mothers and says “these people also can mislead things”. What does Miller say? “Women pleading about the whereabouts of their loved ones, who are still missing”. Miller sees “The distress of these women crying. The unresolved disappearance of their loved ones”. Murali queries nonchalantly “Because of 20 0r 30 mothers crying to me, that means that is the truth”?
So much has he got tethered to the government, he treats the British Prime Minister as trifle. Tell him anything and he will believe. Muralidaran was telling reporters so, says Miller. When pressed he says yes, he was misled. Can a credulous charlatan ever go near Downing Street? He also suggests “anything could happen. So we also doesn’t know the answers”. If it is unknowable, why talk?
The following is a transcript of excerpts from an interview that Jon Snow of Channel 4 had with Muthiah Muralidaran.
Prelude
Prime Minister David Cameron visits the Colombo Cricket Club. After a few doosras by Murali, Cameron, Miller and Murali walk into a group of boys and girls, purported to be players. Miller says, these young cricketers are drawn from across Sri Lanka. Then he identifies one row seated in pre- arranged order by ethnicity and religion. What we have here – Tamil, Sinhala, Sinhala, Tamil, Sinhala, Muslim (a girl), Tamil, Tamil! Murali affirms
Interview                                                           Read More
Cameron urges President to work with Wigneswaran

Wednesday, 20 Nov 2013
British Prime Minister, David Cameron said, he made it clear to President Mahinda Rajapaksa that he now has a real opportunity, through 'magnanimity and reform,' to build a successful, inclusive and prosperous future for Sri Lanka by working in partnership with the newly elected Chief Minister of the Northern Province.


Cameron on Monday (18) said in the House of Commons...
."I met the new provincial Chief Minister from the Tamil National Alliance, who was elected in a vote that happened only because of the spotlight of the Commonwealth meeting."

He further stated that no one wants to return to the days of 'the Tamil Tigers and the disgusting and brutal things they did' and that Britain should show 'proper respect' for the fact that Sri Lanka suffered almost three decades of conflict and that 'recovery and reconciliation take time.'
"But I made it clear to President Rajapaksa that he now has a real opportunity, through magnanimity and reform, to build a successful, inclusive and prosperous future for his country, working in partnership with the newly elected Chief Minister of the Northern Province," Cameron said.

"I very much hope that he seizes that opportunity."

The British premier said he had a choice to stay away from the Commonwealth and allow President Rajapaksa to set the agenda he wanted, or to go and shape the agenda "by advancing our interests with our Commonwealth partners and shining a spotlight on the international concerns about Sri Lanka."
"I chose to go and stand up for our values and to do all I could to advance them. I believe that was the right decision for Sri Lanka, for the Commonwealth and for Britain," he said.

Bitter exchanges erupted in the UK Parliament when British Prime Minister David Cameron delivered a statement on his attendance at the Commonwealth Summit in Sri Lanka.

In a highly personal attack on the Labour Leader, Ed Miliband, who had urged the Prime Minister to join others and boycott the event, Cameron accused him of not knowing what he was talking about.
Cameron had made a good fist of explaining why it had been better to engage with Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa and 'shine the spotlight' on the issue.

"When I met with President Rajapaksa, I pressed for credible, transparent and independent investigations into alleged war crimes. And I made clear to him that if these investigations are not begun properly by March then I will use our position on the UN Human Rights Council, to work with the UN Human Rights Commissioner and call for an international inquiry," he said.

Later, the Prime Minister's spokesman confirmed that, in his role, Rajapaksa would be attending the Commonwealth games in Scotland next year.

"We will take the same approach as we have towards the Commonwealth Summit, which is, that international events offer the opportunity to shine the spotlight," he said.

Frances Is The Complainant: ‘Allocating Inappropriate Time To SL Military And Misrepresentation’ Under BBC Investigation!


November 19, 2013 
Colombo TelegraphColombo Telegraph can now reveal some details about BBC Sinhala Service’s alleged ‘editorial lapse’ that triggered the immediate suspension of the editor Priyath Liyanage and installing a thorough investigation. We understand Frances Harrison, a former BBC Colombo correspondent has made a strong protest about the programme in question to the highest BBC authority.
FrancesThe forty minute long BBC radio programme that looks into the ongoing abuses and human rights violations in Sri Lanka north has been the centre of the controversy, Colombo Telegraph learns. In contrast to several other World Service sections’ coverage of this documentary, the Sinhala Service is reported to have produced a roughly 3 minute programme that manifestly does injustice to the BBC documentary produced by Francis Harrison, a well-known authority on the subject.
Out of the three minutes, the Sinhala ‘Sandesaya’ has dubiously allocated just around one minute to cover the wide-ranging interviews of Tamil victims’ harrowing stories, using Sinhala voices. The programme in question was produced by the editor himself. The Sinhala programme produced by its head, Priyath Liayange, has been filled with his own interview with Sri Lanka’s military spokesman who merely used his time to attack Francis Harrison with allegations that are totally irrelevant to the issues raised in the main BBC programme. Francis Harrison herself has not been given the opportunity to respond.
Colombo Telegraph’s efforts to get reactions from Francis Harrison and the BBC press office to the above mentioned findings of the CT investigative team have failed so far.
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.

State Sinhala daily gets state ads worth Rs.13,320,000 ( 72 full pages) in one day



Tuesday, November 19, 2013

SRI LANKA BRIEF

Election propaganda has begun!-


Tuesday, November 19, 2013


Tuesday, November 19, 2013


Tuesday, November 19, 2013

Tuesday, November 19, 2013
Buying today’s (19th) ‘Dinmina’ would be beneficial for all those who take their lunch parcels for work or places of study. 
The 140 page newspaper with advertisements from 72 state institutions that are maintained from your tax money has been priced Rs.20 though it should have been made available free to tax payers. 

Law Society condemns Sri Lanka

 20/11/2013
The New Zealand Law Society has joined the voices of those concerned by the human rights situation in Sri Lanka.
More than 200 lawyers and diplomats were barred from attending a joint conference to discuss the rule of law and the independence of the judiciary in the Commonwealth.
The Sri Lankan government revoked speakers' visas, forcing cancellation of the meeting.
"The International Bar Association's Human Rights Institute and the Sri Lanka Bar Association were forced to cancel their planned joint conference ahead of the start of the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting last week," Law Society President Chris Moore said.
Prime Minister John Key had rejected calls to stay away from the Commonwealth summit in Colombo because of concerns over Sri Lanka's human rights record, but stressed he would raise the issues during his time there.
The leaders of India, Mauritius and Canada boycotted the summit.
"The New Zealand Law Society joins the International Bar Association in condemning the continued refusal of the Sri Lankan government to recognise human rights and the rule of law," Moore said.
The United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, visited Sri Lanka in August this year and expressed concern about erosion of the rule of law and lack of explanation regarding missing persons.
Western nations and rights activists are demanding that Sri Lanka account for thousands of civilians who are suspected to have died in the final months of a quarter-century civil war that that ended in 2009 when government forces crushed separatist Tamil rebels.