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

Sunday, December 15, 2013

Pettah Fire Reveals Protection Racket 

By Waruni Karunarathne & Indika Sri Aravinda
The Sunday Leader
The fire which broke out in Bodhiraja Mawatha on 6th December engulfed numerous shops in Pettah and left many vendors helpless. Around 94 shops were completely burnt to ashes even as the vendors were getting ready for the Christmas season. Even though the total loss has not yet been estimated, most of the traders claim that each shop contained at least Rs 30 lakhs worth of goods.

Some Notes On Gender Segregation Seating

By Imtiyaz Razak - December 15, 2013 |
Dr.Imtiyaz Razak
Dr.Imtiyaz Razak
Colombo TelegraphAs a human being first, and Muslim second, I strictly oppose the segregation of any kind: class, gender, sex, ethnicity, and you name it.  I have been following the recent developments related to segregation of lectures along gender line in the UK.  Accounts suggest that British Universities allow segregation “if the segregation represented the “genuinely held religious beliefs” of the hosts, separate seating could be upheld.”
The training course at Leicester University (left), featuring guest speaker Saleem Chagtai (right), was held by the same Islamic society which put up a sign separating women and men at a public lecture / Photo Daily Mail UK
The training course at Leicester University (left), featuring guest speaker Saleem Chagtai (right), was held by the same Islamic society which put up a sign separating women and men at a public lecture / Photo Daily Mail UK


Whether the decision the university took with regard to segregation is correct, I truly do not know. But I would like to share my experiences in seeing female students class seating both in China and the US, the two big countries where secularism rocks the society, and some notes on women agency and developments.
The classes that I have taught both in China and the US are mostly filled with non-Muslim students and some classes, female students dominate class population.  I found that female students both in male students dominated and female students dominated class rooms, mainly non-Muslim women many times choose not to sit next to male students. They would either prefer to sit behind the row where male-students sit or keep significant distance from male students.   Of course, there are no requests either from schools or from me as far as class seating are concerned. But I often find female students tend to sit separately from male students.Read More

Will the space between lagging development and devolution be occupied by ‘Prabahakaranism’?



GroundviewsThe current dialogue between development and devolution is taking too much time, getting too drawn out.  Very little information on the process is available for effective public dissemination.  In the meantime the space between the two positions is beginning to be occupied by ‘squatters’ with the Prabhakaran ethos.  Having spent so much time, money and energy to be rid of the reign of terror it would be foolhardy for want of a dose of realism to let the dreaded tiger enter the lair once again, quite effortlessly at that, only because of the lack of political acumen and foresight.

TGTE 2nd Parliament Inaugurated. Elects Prime Minister and Speaker.

tgte logoSeveral dignitaries from around the world, including legislators and political leaders, addressed the Parliament
1) Mr. Visuvanathan Rudrakumaran unanimously elected as the Prime Minister.
2) Dr. Thavendraraja Ambalavanar elected as the Speaker.
3) Rejects South Africa sponsored Truth & Reconciliation initiative.
4) Urges Sri Lanka to be expelled from the Commonwealth.
Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam (TGTE), which was formed after the mass killing of Tamils in the final months of the Sri Lanka war in 2009, completed its first Parliamentary term and inaugurated its second Parliamentary term on December 6, 2013. This Session was broadcast live on several media.
The newly elected 112 TGTE Members of Parliament (MPs) met from December 6th to 8th in New Jersey in the United States to take oaths and to inaugurate the second Parliamentary term. Some MPs joined via video conference from Zurich, Switzerland.
Several dignitaries from around the world, including legislators and
political leaders, addressed the Parliament.
During this session, TGTE MP’s unanimously elected Mr. Visuvanathan Rudrakumaran as their Prime Minister.
Dr. Thavendraraja Ambalavanar was elected as the Speaker of the TGTE Parliament and Mr. Thilai Rajah was elected as the deputy Speaker.
Several Resolutions were debated and adopted. Chief among them are urging Sri Lanka to be expelled from the Commonwealth and to reject South Africa sponsored Truth & Reconciliation initiative.
The newly elected MPs represented Canada, United Kingdom, United States of America, Australia, Germany, Switzerland, Ireland, France, Denmark, Norway and New Zealand.

Did The Commonwealth Summit Backfire On Sri Lanka?

By S. I. Keethaponcalan -December 15, 2013 
Dr. S. I. Keethaponcalan
Dr. S. I. Keethaponcalan
Although Commonwealth is an insignificant and inconsequential organization, the Sri Lankan government organized the 2013 Summit in Colombo with great expectations which involved political, economic as well as personal designs. The government expected the Summit to: (1) facilitate greater foreign capital investment in the country, and (2) help mitigate the Western isolation caused by allegations of serious human rights violations during the last phase of the war in 2009.
In terms of the first objective, the government, despite some of the shortcomings, has done a good job showcasing the resources and potentials of the country. One however has to wait and see whether the Commonwealth Summit will fetch more foreign investments. Immediately after the Summit, a news report suggested that the Chinese government has agreed to invest on new projects in Sri Lanka. The reality is that the Chinese do not need the Commonwealth to invest in Sri Lanka. Government and semi-government Chinese institutions are investing in Sri Lanka on a regular basis as Sri Lanka’s leading newspapers report about one or another Chinese project almost every week. Therefore, what we are talking about is non-Chinese, mostly Western investment. Time will tell whether the Sri Lankan Summit boosted foreign investments.
It is the second objective, i.e. beating the Western isolation and international condemnation of serious human rights violations that has become problematic. Some critics believe that the historically low attendance of heads of government in the Colombo Summit was a problem. Only 27 of the 53 countries were represented at the top level, which to a certain extent, would have disappointed the Sri Lankan government. There is however, no concrete evidence to suggest that the decision to send second tier leaders or lower level officials to Colombo by many member states of the Commonwealth was influenced by their attitude towards Sri Lankan. The insignificance of the Commonwealth itself could have been a factor.Read More

Against Duckspeak On Ethnic Reconciliation

Colombo Telegraph
By Izeth Hussain -December 15, 2013 
 Izeth Hussain
Izeth Hussain
“Duckspeak” is a neologism used by George Orwell in his novel 1984. The rulers of the totalitarian state depicted in the novel dream of reducing the people to automata whose speech will sound like normal human speech but be quite meaningless, inane like the quacking of ducks, since it will be produced only by the larynx without the cerebral cortex coming into action at all. That is Duckspeak. Some readers will hold that Sri Lankan politicians excel in it without being manipulated or coerced by totalitarian rulers, since what they say is usually meaningless. But that is true of politicians all over the world who to varying degrees say meaningless things to fool the people. That however is a voluntary process whereas Duckspeak is involuntary, something uttered by human beings who have been reduced to automata.
That is a preliminary clarification. I will argue in this article that there is a total incompatibility between investigations into alleged war crimes during the final phase of the anti-Eelam war and the process of ethnic reconciliation, and further, that the demand for investigations is a way of pressurizing the Sri Lanka Government into moving towards a political solution of the Tamil ethnic problem. For that purpose I will revisit my article The Ban Ki-moon conspiracy which was published in the Island of May 2, 2011. In that article I postulated what I called “a benign conspiracy” involving the US, Britain, and India, and it seems to me that we are witnessing the further unfolding of that conspiracy. The Government has not recognized that conspiracy. It is therefore glibly talking about holding our own investigations into alleged war crimes and at the same time moving towards ethnic reconciliation. It is so mindless that it amounts to Duckspeak.Read More

UPFA focuses on Geneva; UNP on common front for polls

Sunday, December 15, 2013
The Sundaytimes Sri Lanka
US team in Lanka for talks in Colombo and North-East; Govt. gives document to diplomats explaining action on LLRC recommendations Four major resolutions at UNP convention on Saturday; EPDP causing acute problems for Rajapaksa regime
The United States, which moved two successive resolutions against Sri Lanka at the Human Rights Council sessions in Geneva and the UPFA Government are both busy over the upcoming sessions of the UN body in March next year.

Facebook lifts spirits of Kosavars on State recognition

TamilNet[TamilNet, Saturday, 14 December 2013, 17:55 GMT]
Facebook provided a much needed moral boost to Kosovars as it granted legitimacy last month in the digital world by approving a number of changes, including giving users registering from the diamond-shaped area on the Balkan Peninsula the option to identify themselves as citizens of Kosovo, rather than the decidedly less attractive option for many there, Serbia. Kosavars call the changes important while they seek recognition from the United Nations, which confers legitimacy, and the European Union, whose members are divided on the question, ever since Kosovo proclaimed a separate state five years ago. Jubilant Kosavars say the Facebook's recognition is important as a matter of identity and economics. Kosovar businesses have been included on Facebook’s powerful advertising engine, helping companies target Kosovo’s small but growing consumer market. 

Kosovo is recognized by the United States and a majority of European Union members. But five, including Spain, which is battling separatist movements of its own, refuse to recognize it. Serbia is also vehemently against recognizing Kosovo’s independence, and Russia, a staunch Serbian ally and a veto-wielding member of the United Nations Security Council, has blocked Kosovo’s membership in the United Nations, stifling its economic and political development, according to New York Times.

Political observers on Sri Lanka's history and the authoritarian tendency in Sri Lanka after the civil war opined that Kosovo's Facebook struggle provides an illuminating example for Tamil eezham activists to fight for similar recognition by Facebook. "Facebook, as a fast evolving trendsetter to legitimate social changes, will be highly sympathetic to an Eezham addition to facebook," an activist noted.

Petrit Selimi, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of Republic of Kosovo
Petrit Selimi, Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs of Republic of Kosovo
“Facebook has grown to 1.2 billion users in eight years, faster than the growth of Islam, Christianity and the Internet itself,” New York Times quoted Petrit Selimi, Kosovo’s 34-year-old deputy foreign minister and the leader of the government’s digital diplomacy, as saying. 

Selimi added that having Kosovo fully included on Facebook had been a priority, along with the still-elusive goals of having Kosovo compete in the Eurovision song contest and in the European Champions League in soccer.

“Being recognized on the soccer pitch and online has far greater resonance than some back room in Brussels,” Mr. Selimi said. 

Online reaction to news of the Facebook changes was swift. “Facebook recognizes Kosovo as a state,” Kosovo’s minister for European Union integration, Vlora Citaku, wrote on Twitter. The American ambassador to Kosovo, Tracey Ann Jacobson, congratulated Kosovo on Twitter.

But some Serbs vowed to protest by deleting their Facebook profiles and posting fake ones; others mocked Kosovo for treating Facebook like a country. “Tomorrow they will say that the Smurfs and hobbits have recognized them,” commented one reader on the online version of Blic, a Serbian daily newspaper, NYT said in its article on the Facebook story on Kosovo.

Sri Lanka Police Force, Protectors Or Predators?


Colombo TelegraphBy Chandra Kumarage -December 15, 2013
Chandra Kumarage
Chandra Kumarage
It was reported in the media that a police constable and his wife were killed by unidentified persons in the Southern Province. It was also reported later that one of the suspects of that crime nabbed by the police when taken in handcuffed to recover some productions was shot dead by the police when he allegedly picked a bomb and tried to hurl it towards the police officers. A fourth and the last suspect Ketayam Chinthaka also died under same circumstances, when taken in custody in hand cuffs to show productions. But what is stranger than fiction is that two other suspects in the same murder case were drowned in a nearby lake whilst attempting to escape from custody, by swimming for safety in hand cuffs. The latest fable is much more surreal and Incredible, Aesop’s fables vanish into thin air compared to these fables a la the Police Department of Sri Lanka. Very funny isn’t it?
Conversely if these fables are to be believed one tends to question the competence of the police force to give protection to the general public, investigate crimes, and guarantee the protection of the lives of persons in their custody.  It is common knowledge that killing of alleged suspects immediately after assassination of someone will prevent the mystery of the murder being solved and the identifying of the other assailants and/or abettors if any. Soon after President Kennedy was shot dead the identified suspect Lee Harvie Oswald was also killed as a result of which President Kennedy’s killing remains an unsolved crime up to the present time.
In a report submitted to Parliament by the Additional Secretary of the Ministry Defence, Law and Order in December 2009 the  number of persons died in police custody from December 2005 till September 2009 had been 91 out of which 49 persons had died of the same cause namely, ‘when the suspect was taken out to recover hidden weapons he suddenly grabbed a bomb which was hidden at the spot and tried to throw it at the officers and the police officers had to shoot and kill him in the exercise of the right of private defence. According to a news report this modus operandi of shooting suspects when they were taken to discover hidden weapons has been recurring without the police top brass or the executives in charge of the police force taking any preventive action whatsoever. The killings at Kamburupitiya may not be the last such killings.
                                           Read More

The PM’s predicament


Editorial- 


Prime Minister D.M. Jayaratne, a veteran politician, is a disarmingly simple man who does not attract enmity or hatred towards himself as some of his colleagues do. Few, therefore, would have taken pleasure at his current embarrassment over a senior official on his personal staff writing a letter to the customs calling for the release of a detained container which was subsequently found to contain what has been described as the biggest single consignment of heroin ever detected in this country. The leader of the Jathika Hela Urumaya, a constituent of the ruling United People’s Freedom Alliance coalition, has called for the prime minister’s arrest. Quite apart from arresting the prime minister, not even the official who wrote the letter calling for the release of the container in which the heroin had been concealed had been arrested. The police say that they will record the statement of this official who is now reported to have resigned as well as the consignee. It is obvious that there is a lot of pussy footing around this whole business. Who can blame ordinary people for losing faith in the whole system in which the rich and powerful are protected whatever their crime and the less fortunate are brutally crushed underfoot?

Prime Minister Jayaratne went public last week telling Parliament that he had sought the Speaker’s permission to make a statement on this matter. However, he says he had been advised by both members of the government and the opposition from saying anything and he had therefore remained silent. He admitted his coordinating secretary had done wrong in trying to secure the release of the detained container. But we have not seen any report of Friday’s parliamentary proceedings where Jayaratne has specifically denied that he had any hand in impugned letter and that it was not written under his instructions. If this was the case, the prime minister should say so without any misplaced sense of loyalty to his official. In fact the PM should make a statement about everything he knows about this whole business to the police. He, after all, is on public record saying that politicians are involved in drugs. The concerned official has in a newspaper interview admitted that he, at the request of a Gampola Urban Councillor (Gampola is the PM’s constituency), did write a letter to South Asia Gateway Terminals Ltd. in an effort to get the demurrage on the long-held suspect container reduced. The official, Keerthi Sri Weerasinghe, had denied any knowledge of the heroin concealed in the container. He had been told that it contained ceramic and plastic-ware. He did not think that Urban Councillor Tharanga Vittachi who asked him for the letter knew of the heroin. The prime minister knew nothing about the matter until the scandal surfaced and he told the premier about it, he has asserted.

A disturbing feature about what Weerasinghe has said in the interview that issuing letters to ``ordinary people’’ for various matters is a common practice in the prime minister’s office and he would have issued thousands of such letters. There was a time when then Prime Minister R. Premadasa loudly complained that the prime minister did not even have "a peon’s powers.’’ Although commonly perceived as being the number two slot in the country’s political hierarchy, the prime minister does not enjoy any executive powers. That is why Premadasa, when he was made prime minister by President J.R. Jayewardene, retained his ministerial responsibilities for local government, housing and construction under which he enjoyed substantial executive power. Unlike Premadasa, Jayaratne is not an aspirant for presidential office though one never knows how that particular papadam can crumble. Remember the case of President D.B. Wijetunga. Premadasa selected this un-ambitious politician for the prime ministry over the heads of high-flyers like Gamini Dissanayake and Lalith Athulathmudali. When Premadasa was assassinated, Wijetunge had the presidency thrust on him rather like W. Dahanayake who succeeded the assassinated S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike as prime minister in an earlier era.

The point that must be made is that politicians from the prime minister, to ministers, deputy ministers and ordinary MPs write letters on behalf of their supporters directing that all manners of favours be bestowed on them. They know very little about the matters on which they make directions and, very often, the people to whom they give letters. They do not care a jot that by ensuring privilege for their friends, relatives and supporters, they do injustice to the deserving who command no influence. Time was when those to whom such letters were sent took scant notice of them and hopefully did the right thing. But sycophancy rules the roost today and there are far too many officials looking for advantages for themselves by pandering to politicians who rush to do their bidding. The result is the abysmally bad governance that the country is loaded with. While there are occasions when political interference is motivated by the desire to help a supporter, too often venal reasons like gratifications or a share in the loot play their part. Narcotics are a dirty business and that is why countries like Singapore have prescribed the death penalty for drug offences. Drug pedlars make addicts of people inveigled into the habit ruining lives and families with the drug lords making huge fortunes out of human misery. This case, therefore, is much more serious than an attempt to smuggle sarees or cigarettes.

The investigations are not yet concluded. There are many matters that have to be followed-up. Have there been other letters written by Weerasinghe to influence the release of detained containers? How often do customs and other authorities receive such requests and, more importantly, do they ordinarily comply? Highly placed personalities, conscious of not leaving any paper or electronic trail to their doors, generally write no letters. A mere telephone call would do the trick given the availability of sycophants and careerists ever ready to do the bidding on their bosses. In this case the media and the opposition, the so-called watchdogs, have done their jobs. Let us hope that they will keep snapping at the heels of all concerned to bring this matter to a speedy conclusion. Perhaps Prime Minister Jayaratne, now well past his prime and not in the best of health, should consider whether the time is not right for him to bow out of office. Various aspirants have been queuing for that so-called `peon’s’ job!

In conversation with Harsha Purasinghe: Tech entrepreneurship and innovation in Sri Lanka

New designation for Speaker following elections 
New designation for Speaker following elections

By Daya Perera and J.T. de Silva

 December 15, 2013 
Speaker Chamal Rajapaksa told Parliament yesterday that following the next general elections he will be granted a new designation.

The Speaker made the statement to Parliament members, in response to the question raised by UNP Colombo District MP Sujeewa Senasinghe with regard to the rumours surrounding the issue.

According to rumours in Parliament, Speaker Chamal Rajapaksa is in line to be appointed as the next Prime Minister.

Meanwhile, MP Sujeewa Senasinghe said that he believes that Chamal Rajapaksa would carry out his duties well if he was appointed as the Prime Minister. (Ceylon Today Online)
Body of missing Police sergeant found in a stream 

By Premalal Wijeratne -December 15, 2013

The body of a police sergeant, who had gone missing on 13 December, had been found near a stream in the Mahaweli Zone by the Aralaganwila Police today.

Police said they had found the motorcycle bike and the slippers of the missing sergeant on 14 December in the vicinity of the stream, today (15).   

The deceased was identified as Sarath Wijesiri, who was serving in the Aralaganwila Police.

He had gone missing after he had left his house on 13 December.

Police are conducting further investigations. (Ceylon Today Online)

Executioners deemed to have vacated posts 

By Umesh Moramudali -December 15, 2013 
 
The Department of Prisons, which had terminated the services of two recently recruited executioners who had failed to report to duty regularly, is now a dilemma over the vacant positions as it cannot appoint new recruits without the recommendation of the Public Service Commission (PSC).  
 
Commissioner General of Prisons, Chandraratna Pallegama, told Ceylon Today that the two executioners do not report to work regularly.
 
“We have formally informed them that they are deemed to have vacated their posts,” he said.
 
He said though the posts of executioners are vacant, the Department of Prisons cannot recruit new people to fill the vacancies as the previous executioners had complained to the Public Service Commission, claiming that they had faced injustice due to certain actions of the Prisons Department.
 
“We have to wait till the Public Service Commission makes recommendations in this regard,” he said. (Ceylon Today Online)


Even by North Korean standards, this announcement of Jang Song Thaek’s execution is intense

Footage shown by North Korea's KCTV and released by South Korea's Yonhap news agency shows Jang Song Thaek being removed from a Politburo meeting. (Yonhap/AFP/Getty Images)
Footage shown by North Korea's KCTV and released by South Korea's Yonhap news agency shows Jang Song Thaek being removed from a Politburo meeting. (YONHAP/AFP/Getty Images)
Max FisherNorth Korean state media are known for hyperbole, but even so, the official announcement of the execution of Jang Song Thaek is a step beyond. The state-run Korean Central News Agency released a long article detailing the alleged crimes and transgressions of Jang, a longtime senior regime official who was also the uncle of leader Kim Jong Un. 
North Korean Leader Kim Jong-un Has Uncle Executed

Sunday December 15, 2013
North Korean Leader Kim Jong-un Has Uncle Executed 
(Photo Credit: JUNG YEON-JE/AFP/Getty Images)video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player (PYONGYANG, North Korea) -- The North Korean official publicly purged by Kim Jong-un was set up by his own wife and has since been executed, according to experts and the North Korean state news agency.

The state news agency KCNA called Jang Song-thaek, who had been Kim's uncle and top deputy, "despicable human scum" and "worse than a dog" in a release announcing his execution.

The news agency said the country was outraged by the allegations that Jang betrayed the trust of Kim Jong-un and his later father Kim Jong-il, referred to as "peerlessly great men."

"Against the backdrop of these shouts rocking the country, a special military tribunal... was held on December 12 against traitor for all ages Jang Song Thaek," KCNA reported in a story that was headlined "Traitor Jang Song Thaek Executed."

Jang's execution was announced as fresh details emerged about Kim's surprising public purging of his uncle from a top position which indicate it was a family affair with his aunt and brother, armed with a pistol, taking part in the arrests of ranking officials.

Analysts who study the secretive regime also fear that the arrest and execution of Jang, the man widely known to have been the real power behind Kim, signals a generational change for North Korea as well as period of upheaval.

Jang was arrested this week for corruption, acts of treachery, and womanizing with state TV airing humiliating photographs of him being dragged out of the Party Central Committee meeting by uniformed officers.

Jang had supported a smooth transition of power to a young Kim Jong-un, who was 28 at the time of Kim Jong-il's death in 2011. He is the uncle of Kim and husband of Kim Jong-Il's sister Kim Kyong-hee.

"What you have to understand is that the North Korean dynasty is run by an absolute blood-based hereditary mindset," pointed out Lee Yun-keol, the president of North Korea Strategic Information Service Center.

The purge drama was designed by Kim Kyong-hee, Jang's wife, and Kim Jong-un, Lee said. "She has openly expressed to the political bureau members that Jang's power line is a threat to the royal family so she took an obvious choice."

Lee claims that Kim Jong-un's older brother Kim Jong-chul personally directed the arrest of Jang's two closest aides last month.

"He was even armed with a gun when he took the General Guard Bureau soldiers to arrest and execute the men," Lee said.

Lee is a former North Korean soldier who fled to South Korea from the North in 2005 while working as a science researcher at the same General Guard Bureau's special unit in charge of Kim family's health. He communicates with former colleagues inside North Korea on a regular basis.

The arrest of Jang was remarkable for several reasons, observers said.

"That purge was surprisingly earlier than expected. Kim's been in power for less than two years and he does not yet have a strong political base in the party. North Korea is likely to be unstable for the time being," said Park Chang-kwon, senior research fellow at Korea Institute for Defense Analyses in Seoul.

"What is surprising is the dramatic and public nature of the purge. It's different from what has happened in the past," according to Daniel Pinkston, deputy project director for Northeast Asia at the International Crisis Group. "It might be a representation of Kim Jong-un's personal nature."

The most important significance of Jang's downfall is that it signals the beginning of a generation change of power. "Kim is young. He has a long way to go and this was an inevitable step to consolidate power around him with young and fresh generals," said Koh You-hwan, professor of North Korean studies at Dongguk University in Seoul.

North Korean state media has been rallying up "eternal loyalty" to its "great leader Kim Jong-un" on a daily basis this week. Four pages were devoted on Rodong Shimbun detailing public reaction to Jang's downfall.

"How dare someone like Jang tries to cover up the mighty sun!" said a director of a North Korean science research center. Other statements on the daily state newspaper included "I want to grab Jang by the neck and shove him down a boiling pot", "Jang is worse than an animal, full of immorality, and ungratefulness."

The South Korean media have also been reporting that a high-level North Korean official close to Jang had fled to China carrying confidential documents on North Korea's nuclear program and Kim Jong-un's private financial assets. Citing unidentified sources from North Korea, SBS TV, one of three main terrestrial channels in South Korea, claimed that the dissident is currently under custody of the South Korean government.

Saturday, December 14, 2013

Four years after war, Sri Lanka's widows fear rape, abuse

Tamil widows fear rape four years on from the end of the war

Four years after war, Sri Lanka's widows fear rape, abuse


The Times of IndiaAFP Dec 13, 2013, 09.24AM IST
JAFFNA: They arrived suddenly on her doorstep pretending to be friends of her dead husband. Faceless men she suspects were security agents, they physically abused her and threatened to come again.
Scared and alone, Gowry did what she always does -- she packed in a hurry and fled with her two young children, the third time in recent years that she has moved house in Sri Lanka's former northern warzone.
"Two men introduced themselves as my husband's friends, so I invited them in," she said in Jaffna, recounting the most recent attack that scared her into hiding again. "They forcibly tore at my dress and pushed me into my room. I fell down and screamed.
"After that they ran away but they called me later saying they would come in the night," she told AFP.
Sri Lanka's decades-long civil war may be over, but many women from the island's ethnic Tamil minority still fear for their safety in former conflict zones amid ongoing reports of rape and sexual violence.
Gowry, who would not give her real name fearing reprisals, lost her rebel husband during the final months of fighting in 2009 when government forces crushed the Tamil Tigers fighting for a separate homeland.
She is among more than 89,000 war widows living in the former combat areas in the north and east. Like her, an estimated 40,000 of them are the sole wage earners for their households.
Many of them face chronic insecurity and increasing marginalization, according to a recent report by the London-based Minority Rights Group International (MRG).
MRG interviewed women in the former conflict zones who said sexual assaults and other abuses have been rising in the years since the war, largely due to the ongoing heavy military presence in the area.
"Because they are on their own, single women have to now more frequently enter the public space which makes them more vulnerable because they have to associate with the military and other officials," said Farah Mihlar, the South Asia expert for MRG.
Mihlar said that women feel similarly threatened by businessmen from other ethnic groups, many of whom are from the Sinhalese majority, now flooding into the area as investment booms in the former no-go regions.
"Even four years after the war there still is a strong sense of triumphalism, a feeling that 'we have won the war, so we can do whatever we want'," she said.
A local human rights activist who cannot be named told AFP there have been around 400 cases of rape against women in the Jaffna district since the end of the war, but that these "are just the tip of the iceberg."
He said most women never report abuses to authorities, and the MRG report blames the government for maintaining a "climate of impunity."
"There is no justice in the former conflict areas. There is not a single case of a military person being prosecuted for sexual violence against women since the war ended," said Mihlar.
"As a result, women find it pointless and dangerous to complain as doing so exposes them and only puts them under threat. The perpetrators continue to roam among them, which is extremely threatening and frightening for most women," she added.
Sri Lanka's army spokesman Brigadier Ruwan Wanigasooriya has condemned MRG's report and slammed allegations against his security forces as a "myth".
"We deny in the strongest terms that there is a prevailing culture of silence and impunity for sexual violence crimes," he said, blaming the Tamil diaspora and their "false propaganda machinery" for fueling mistrust and fear.
According to the army, 17 security personnel were involved in incidents of sexual violence in north Sri Lanka between 2007 to 2012.
"The military has taken strict action to either discharge or award other punishments to these personnel," he told AFP.
But another recent study -- by Human Rights Watch -- goes even further, suggesting that the ongoing use of rape as a form of torture by Sri Lankan security forces is widespread and systematic.
The report, released in February, documented 75 cases of alleged rape and sexual abuse against women and men in detention centres since the war throughout Sri Lanka.
Most victims were interviewed only once they had fled the country and their testimonies are likely just a fraction of real figures for custodial rape, the report says.
Its authors note that the first cases of rape of Tamil women and girls by the military were first raised by the UN rapporteur on violence against women back in 1997.
Since the end of the war, the number of troops in the country's northern peninsula has dropped from 45,000 to just 15,000 among a population of less than one million, according to the army.
But human rights experts are less concerned at the size of the military than the extent of its involvement in civilian governance and in the economy, from running hotels and golf courses to directly competing with women in selling vegetables.
"The attitude can't be of an occupying army," said Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu who heads the Colombo-based Centre for Policy Alternatives (CPA).
He said abuses against women can only be reduced through genuine efforts at reconciliation, pointing to a need to hand back powers to the local government in the north and employ a police force that recruits from within the community.
"These assaults are not done by the military alone, some of them are from within the community as well," he said.
But if the national government hopes to achieve reconciliation and unity, he warned that the military's heavy presence in the Tamil-dominated north must end, branding it "particularly poisoning".