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 29, 2013

YOUTH STAGES ABDUCTION TO GAIN ASYLUM IN AUSTRALIA


Youth stages abduction to gain asylum in Australia
Ada DeranaDecember 29, 2013
A 22-year-old youth has been arrested in Mullaitivu for allegedly misleading police by staging his own abduction, with the intention of seeking asylum in Australia.


The youth’s father had lodged a complaint with Point Pedro Police on December 26 alleging that his son had been abducted by an unknown group.

Following investigations conducted into the complaint, police found the youth hiding at the residence of a friend in Mullaitivu.

He was arrested and interrogated, upon which it was uncovered that he had ridden the bus to his friend’s home on December 26 and that a false complaint was made through his father, in order to portray a threat to his life, with the intention of seeking asylum in Australia.  

Point Pedro Police is conducting further investigations, Police Spokesman SSP Ajith Rohana said. 

Gota Becomes Dog Abductor: Inside Story Of The Cruel Massacre Of Dogs In Sri Lanka

Dog 3
December 29, 2013 
Secretary to the Ministry of Defence and Urban Development
Secretary to the Ministry of Defence and Urban DevelopmentColombo TelegraphSeveral months prior to the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) was held in November 2013 in Colombo, a massive operation to make the city of Colombo look clean and attractive for the event, was implemented by the Ministry of Defence and Urban Development.
Dog 4Part of this operation was to remove nearly 300 homeless dogs from the streets, and house them in temporary shelters.  The organisation for Animal Rights and Welfare ‘Ahinsa Sri Lanka’ was told by the Colombo Municipality, that the dogs will be released in the areas they were taken from, soon after CHOGM ended.
Dog 2This assurance was made public, through newspapers and websites prior to CHOGM. But at the latest news conference held in this regard, Animal Rights Activist and the Chairperson of the Animal Welfare Trust Iranganie de Silva,( wife of Minister Nimal Siripala de Silva) disclosed, that these dogs numbering 280, had been taken in vehicles belonging to the Armed Forces to Halavatha. ” we can assume that the dogs were killed as they have disappeared from the Dematagoda slaughterhouse without any trace and there was no transparency on the part of the CMC on what they did to the dogs” she said.   Read More

2013 Top 20: Our Most Popular Posts of the Year

Photo courtesy Vikalpa
GroundviewsThe 20 most read posts on Groundviews over the course of 2013. Numbers in italics indicate pageviews since the article was published, accurate at the time of publication.
  1. CHOGM 2013: A lie well told 14,463 
  2. Coercive Population Control in Kilinochchi 13,476 
  3. Mohammed Irshad’s story and the banality of violence in the Rajapaksa regime12,485 
  4. The niqab and the University of Moratuwa 11,320
  5. A Guide to Colombo for CHOGM 2013 10,611
  6. A letter to President Rajapakse from Nelson Mandela 9,550
  7. Bodu Bala Sena: A Threat To Sri Lanka’s Future 9,513
  8. Sunila Abeysekera: 1952 – 2013 8,138
  9. The Al Jazeera interview with Mahinda Rajapaksa: Calling the bluff 7,822
  10. Bodu Bala Senā and Buddhism’s militant face in Sri Lanka 6,564
  11. Police in Sri Lanka show their true saffron colours 5,868
  12. Sheep No More… 5,707
  13. Gotabaya Rajapaksa: Are you listening? 5,109
  14. The Numbers Never Lie: A Comprehensive Assessment of Sri Lanka’s LLRC Progress 4,443
  15. Helping the Police arrest brutish “monks” in Sri Lanka 3,853
  16. Sri Lanka’s Numbers Game 3,709
  17. A Tolerant Sri Lanka: How far will we go? 3,594
  18. Nepotism visualised: The Rajapaksa tentacles in Sri Lanka 3,580
  19. An unprecedented constitutional crisis in Sri Lanka elicits a yawn 3,510
  20. The Numbers Never Lie: A Quick Look at Sri Lanka’s LLRC Progress 3,493
For a round-up of content published over 2013, please read this post.

Sri Lanka Report On March 26

By Easwaran Rutnam-Sunday, December 29, 2013

The Sunday LeaderThe report on Sri Lanka by the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay will be submitted to the UN Human Rights Council on March 26, the provisional agenda for the session states.
According to the agenda, the report on Sri Lanka will be open for discussion after it is presented and the Sri Lankan government is expected to express its views on the report at that time.
The 25th session of the UN Human Rights Council will commence on March 3 and go on till March 28 and any resolution presented will be adopted on the final day.
In an oral report on Sri Lanka submitted to the Council last September, Pillay set a deadline for the government to address human rights concerns by March 2014 in the absence of which she said the international community will have a duty to establish its own inquiry mechanisms.
Pillay had said that she had not detected any new or comprehensive effort to independently or credibly investigate allegations on Sri Lanka which have been of concern to the Human Rights Council.
She also called for continued attention on Sri Lanka by the UN Human Rights Council.
Britain has so far indicated it may sponsor a resolution on Sri Lanka during the March session if there is no progress on the human rights issue.
The government has however, said there has been progress and refused to agree to any deadlines.

Mass Graves Haunt Ranil, Premadasa And Douglas

By Pearl Thevanayagam -December 29, 2013 |
Pearl Thevanayagam
Pearl Thevanayagam
Colombo TelegraphApart from war massacres there lies the question of the military burying bodies of 2000 university students under Batticaloa stadium circa 1990 and in a cemetery in Chemmani and Mannar.
Fr. Harry Miller, an American missionary priest, attached to St Michael’s College told this writer in 1995 that the stadium was built over the bodies of these students and a military zone barred from the public.
Fr. Miller arrived in Ceylon in 1947 and was a witness to events unfolding since then. Ensconced in his top floor of St Michael’s he relentlessly recorded events as they unfolded. He is visited by foreign correspondents and his word is Bible truth in that he neither supports the LTTE or the government. He tells it as it is.
He returned to the US a few years ago and I am not sure whether he is still alive.
Which leads us to the Batalanda Commission kick-started inquiries into Ranil Wickremasinghe’s alleged torture chambers in Kelaniya ( a block of housing flats) during the late ‘80’s when JVP youth were hunted down and shot in the middle of the night during the Premadasa regime by Black Cats led by DIG Udugampola and their bodies displayed in junctions and Kelaniya river.
This commission was conveniently placed in cold storage like all other Presidential Commissions.
I personally witnessed at least six bodies per day in ‘89/’90 at Enderamulla Junction where Bus 261 stops to take passengers to Gaspara Handiya in Pettah. On the way I saw bloated bodies of youth floating on Kelani River down Peliyagoda way.
I still recall the horrors of the night when dogs howled as jeeps sped past Keells Housing Scheme in Enderamulla and gunshots were heard before we saw blood splattered bodies lining the public road-side where Bus 261 stopped.                                               Read More     

Attack on the Human Right's Campaigners on the International Human Rights Day - 2013


dessapearenceThe Committee for Investigation of Disappearances staged a protest at 11am on the 10th of December 2013, to coincide with International Human Rights Day, near the Trincomalee bus station. The protesters, comprised of the families of the disappeared, human rights activists, social workers, and representatives from Nava Sama Samaja Party and Tamil political parties, demanded the release of the disappeared and political prisoners, implementation of LLRC recommendations and the resettlement of the displaced, especially the people who were displaced from Sampoor.
Chanting slogans such as “The abducted is my son,” “The abducted is my daughter,” “The abductor is the state,” “The white van too is from the state,” “Release political prisoners immediately,” “You have imprisoned the people extra-judicially,” and “Grant power to the Tamils,” “Implement LLRC recommendations”. The people gathered near the bus station participated in a peaceful protest. Police officers were also present, When the protest was in progress, a Sinhala chauvinist arrived at the protest site and insisted that we stop the protest immediately and started an altercation with us. We told him patiently that our protest had nothing to do with politics based on ethnic or religious chauvinism and if any of his relatives went missing, he could take part in the protest and articulate his opposition to the disappearances that have happened in the country. Shortly after he had left the protest site, again he came back towards us, accompanied by a group of more than twenty-five chauvinists. They tore up and threw away our banners and the photographs of the disappeared that the mothers who participated in the protest were holding and attacked the protestors ruthlessly. The group specially assaulted me and Kusumasiri Jayawardane (NSSP), who took part in the protest. Two members representing the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) in the Eastern Provincial Council, Janarthanan and Nageswaran, and Thiruchelvam, former Leader of the Opposition, Muttur Pradeshiya Sabha, were also beaten during this incident while NSSP members Saranapala, Ranjith, Nnandasiri, Jenagan bravely faced the trhugs.   Thiruchelvam former Leader of the Opposition, Muttur Pradeshiya Sabha, and I, the Secretary of the Committee for Investigation of Disappearances, were assaulted so brutally that we, later on, had to admit ourselves to the Intensive Care Unit of the Trincomalee Hospital to receive medical treatment. All this happened in the presence of police officers.
We went to the Trincomalee police station to report the attack on the protestors to the police. We were shocked to notice that the Officer-in-charge of the police station gave instructions to his subordinate officer in a tone implying threat to our lives. Instructing his junior officer to submit a report to the court, the OIC rudely said that he would deal with me in the court and took down my name and address in his journal. Even though I included in my statement that the police force deployed to give protection to the protestors, looked on as the chauvinists assaulted us and did not do anything to safeguard the protestors;  that the Chief Officer threatened me when I brought the incident to his concern; the Recording Officer declined to record my statement. Then I added to my statement that the manner in which the police officers treated me and acted on my complaint was not satisfactory and that I would file a complaint with the Inspector General of Police and the Human Rights Commission. Police officers started to take down the complaint only after the intervention of  SSP Mark, who was informed of the issue by Dr Vickramabahu from Colombo.
On the same day, many television channels reported the attack on the protestors in their newscasts with video footages. Many local and international online media sites also published news items on this attack immediately. The banner headlines of all the Tamil newspapers published on the 12th of December 2013 drew everyone’s attention to the attack on the protestors. A few Sinhala and English newspapers also covered the incident.
While vehemently condemning this attack on our organization, the mothers who participated in the protests and regional political leaders, we call for the intervention of all those who are concerned for Human Rights Council to ensure that a proper investigation into the attacks is conducted and to create an atmosphere that would enable us to continue our activist work without the interference of chauvinist forces and the repressive apparatuses of the state.
Thank you,
Suntharam Mahendran
Secretary
The Committee for Investigation of Disappearances
17, Barrack lane, Colombo - 02
Sri Lanka

Video: How Does Sri Lanka Answer For Its Human Rights Records?

Colombo TelegraphDecember 29, 2013 |
After 26 years of bloody civil war, how does Sri Lanka answer for its human rights records?
Despite government claims of peace, torture and abductions continue to be used to stifle ethnic and political dissent, Aljazeera reports.
Lasantha

A Lone Voice In A Volatile North

By Waruni Karunarathe-Sunday, December 29, 2013

The Sunday LeaderHighlighting issues faced by the public in the North, particularly when they are sensitive issues, is not easy. But there are some newspapers which have continued to be the voice of the voiceless despite facing threats and intimidation.
The northern based Uthayan newspaper was recently awarded the prestigious International Press Freedom Award for 2013 by the France-based Reporters Without Borders (RSF). Uthayan Editor Vallipuram Kaanamylnaathan and its proprietor Eswarapatham Saravanapavan received the award last month from the RSF at the award ceremony held in Strasbourg, France.
Reporters Without Borders had also nominated Uthayan for their bravery in continuing to report in the year 2006 despite an incident where some gunmen entered the Jaffna newspaper office and killed two of their journalists. The very next day, the paper reported the incident and continued its work. The RSF award was given to Uthayan for its years of resilience during and after the war and promoting media freedom in a volatile environment.
Speaking to The Sunday Leader, Chief Editor of Uthayan, Villipuram Kaanamylnaathan said, “It is indeed a prestigious international award. However, I cannot say we are proud to receive that – because it is a negative remark of the atrocities that we as media had to endure in this country.” According to Villipuram, who has served as a journalist in the field more than 52 years, the responsibility of a journalist would be to speak on behalf of the people against the misdemeanours and Uthayan had always acted on behalf of its readers.
According to Uthayan newspaper, the police squad of seven policemen were deployed to provide security to the institute after the incident in 2006. However the amount was gradually reduced to one unarmed policeman.
Following the incident on 13th April 2013, where their main printing machine was burnt down by three unidentified gunmen, two armed policemen were deployed at the security gate.
Between 2009 and 2013 the Uthayan newspaper has been subjected to several attacks that included a grenade attack in 2009, several assaults directed at their journalists and media workers, burning incidents of newspapers and the printing machine. No one has been charged for any of these crimes.
“After 2010, murders related to media personalities have not been reported. Yet assault and threats directed at the media continue especially in North and East. For example, there have been several attacks directed at a Jaffna-based newspaper. Burning stacks of papers and assaulting journalists continue in this area,” Convenor and Media Spokesperson of the Free Media Movement Sunil Jayasekara said.
Jayasekara also said some websites registered under the Ministry of Mass Media have been censored and are regularly monitored which places a barrier on media freedom. He added, “No explanations are provided for such actions taken against those websites. On the other hand, there is fear among journalists that the government could be tapping their phones and computers which is supported by several incidents.
The government has done nothing to promote media freedom in the country. No charges are being made yet to any of the previous incidents where journalists were murdered and attacked.”
“We have constantly and consistently brought up these issues related to media freedom and communicated them to the government and requested relevant authorities to help promote media democracy. When the government acts against certain agreements signed in international forums violating media freedom, we highlight the incidents. There is nothing else we can do other than making requests. The socio-political context of the country needs to be changed. In the existing system, we cannot expect much,” he said.
The government, however insists there is no issue with media freedom in the North or the South. Speaking to The Sunday Leader, Secretary to the Ministry of Mass Media and Information Dr Charitha Herath said the government is ready to face constructive criticism.
“Media is completely free in this country. There are no threats to media. When we were fighting against the brutal terrorists before 2009, there had been a few issues which we could not quite figure out as to what really happened. Media is a common platform which is important for democracy,” he said.
He also said that 50 percent of the electronic and print media in the country belonged to the private sector and the government could take pride in that. While welcoming criticism directed at them, Dr Herath emphasised that the media should also be able to take criticism directed at them and act unbiased and impartial.
With reference to media freedom, he said that there were three things to look at – developing a good ethical framework among media institutes and media personnel, giving proper training to media personnel and understanding the real context while being a part of the development.
He added that the government had invested in giving proper training to government media workers while many private media had neglected the matter, which he says had deteriorated the professionalism in the field.

A radically new political critique needed in the New Year

The Sundaytimes Sri LankaAt the close of a year that has proved to be disastrously negative for Sri Lankan democracy, Sri Lankans should look to the Indian people to see the manner in which democracy is defended by bold action on the ground.
Lessons from across the Palk Strait
This Saturday, India’s unassuming anti-corruption activist Arwind Kejriwal assumed office as Delhi’s seventh – and youngest – Chief Minister after resoundingly defeating his predecessor, seasoned front-liner of the Congress Party Sheila Dixit in assembly polls earlier this month.
This was just one year after he formed his own party, fittingly called the Aan Aadmi or the common person’s party. Greeted by ecstatic supporters as he gave his induction speech, Kejriwal warned that the fight was only beginning and asked the public not to bribe officials. ‘Come to us and we will get the job done’ he said. Colorfully terming the Indian political arena as a ‘cesspool of political horror,’ among his very first acts was the banning of VIP convoys for politicians.
These are sentiments which find resonance on this side of the Palk Strait. Certainly, Indian and Sri Lankan politics are characterized by similar horrors of huge corruption, bad governance and non-accountability of the State. But the comparison ends there, of course.
The vitality of India’s anti-corruption movement, encompassing activists, lawyers, academics, judges and ordinary citizens cannot be matched in any way in Sri Lanka. And while it may be easy to blame an authoritarian Presidency, post-war militarization, a pathetically defunct opposition or manifold other factors, the truth of the matter is that the blame lies very much on ourselves, none other.
What is the role of the judiciary?
Indeed, this logic applies in many other spheres as well. The Indian Supreme Court has been a powerful ally of the anti-corruption movement in that country and has been so bold as to put ministers in jail for manifest bribe-taking.
In comparison, what has been the role of our legal system? This year has seen not only the witch-hunt impeachment of a Chief Justice but also scandalous controversy over the sacking of the principal of the law college allegedly over charges that he favoured his son during the holding of examinations. As is an open secret in Hulfsdorp, similar allegations had been leveled in respect of President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s son at a time when this former principal was in office. So we recall that old complaint, namely when the head is corrupt, what can the body do?
Indeed, Sri Lanka’s top to bottom spiral of bribery and corruption is now so stupendous that grim forebodings of financial crisis are articulated by former officials of Sri Lanka’s state financial institutions. Corruption scandals include the ethanol racket, massive road and expressways commissions and the building of uselessly extravagant airports and zoos. Meanwhile the price of sprats and dhal is increased even as the government devises more ways to extract money from the hapless citizenry. When is this nonsense going to stop? Yet these are the very same politicians who are elected to power, time and time again.
In contrast to disgruntled Indian voters teaching their political rulers some sharp and telling lessons, we have not even been able to enact a Right to Information (RTI) law. To date, the government has not been able to offer a reasonable justification as to why an RTI law will be so harmful for Sri Lanka. To add insult to injury, Sri Lanka’s bribery and corruption commission proceeds with zest against the former Chief Justice even as its office bearers stoutly deny allegations of corruption on their own part and further, turn coyly away from dealing with corrupt politicians.
But to return to the role of the courts in combating bribery and corruption in Sri Lanka, we may remind ourselves that the degeneration of the judicial role in this regard was not sudden. A decade ago, (or as it seems now, an eon ago), I remained continually troubled by the question as to how Sri Lanka’s legal systems could have been so effortlessly stripped of their integrity without so much as a whimper from the majority of law academics and practitioners. But these are not questions that one needs to ask any more as the answers are all too patently evident, emanating from reasons of self-interest, cynicism and absence of real commitment.
Reasons for the potency of India’s anti-corruption movement
Except for a brief period when the doctrine of public trust in relation to tackling corruption was deftly developed by Sri Lanka’s judges of the caliber of the late Mark Fernando and ARB Amerasinghe, judicial responses have either been pro-executive or needlessly adventurist. A useful observation was made for instance by a visiting team of jurists from the International Bar Association in measuring the functioning of Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court under retired Chief Justice Sarath Silva, when they remarked that the Court’s reasoning in many judgments delivered, was not based on ‘any proper rationalization of the law in this area but appears to be a tool to provide the Chief Justice with the opportunity to pronounce on populist issues’, (see ‘Justice in Retreat: A report on the independence of the legal profession and the rule of law in Sri Lanka” May 2009, at p. 35).
This column has said it countless times and will say it again; responsibility for the manner in which the Supreme Court became a tool to be manipulated by power hungry politicians needs to be borne by those who remained silent a decade ago when principled resistance by the legal community may have made a difference. Lawyers parading on the streets in protest some months ago came as far too little, too late.
In contrast, the Indian Supreme Court has retained its public image, refusing to be involved in the political thicket as it were and disassociating itself from one or two individually corrupt judges, in whose exposure moreover the Indian legal community and the Indian media played a vital role. These were all hugely potent factors as to why the anti-corruption movement in India grew to such heights that, in 2013, it was able to unseat Delhi’s Chief Minister within an unbelievably short period.
Broad-based resistance movements
In any event and unlike Sri Lanka, Indian resistance has traditionally come from broad-based peoples’ movements that take governments head-on. The RTI movement is one striking example. India’s push towards an RTI law was not by special interests groups such as the media but by ordinary villagers who demanded the right to probe the use of local government budgetary allocations. Persistent public demand resulted in provincial laws and then a national law which was effectively used to expose government corruption. This was not easy with many drawbacks along the way as politicians fought back. Even now, RTI campaigners continue to be killed in the course of their struggles.
In that backdrop, a national anti-corruption movement was perhaps inevitable. Led by Anna Hazare, this movement confounded Delhi’s patronizing political elites who promised concessions only in theory. So when Kejriwal broke away from Hazare’s movement to enter politics, he effectively tapped into the strong yearnings of Indians who wanted a change, not the same old tired political rhetoric. And there was further reason to celebrate as the Indian parliament this week, passed the anti-corruption bill which puts an anti-corruption ombudsman into place and prescribes time limits for the completion of corruption investigations.
The ombudsman has the authority to probe complaints of corruption against the prime minister, current and former members of Parliament, civil servants and employees of corporations and commissions funded by the government. India’s primary investigative agency, the Central Bureau of Investigation is mandated to act on all cases referred to it by the ombudsman. Though law has been criticized as not being strong enough by anti-corruption crusaders, there is little doubt that this signifies a seminal moment in the struggle. Taken together with Kejriwal’s victory, the coming year promises to be one of rejuvenation as well as challenge for the Indian public.
Irreparable damage done to our moral spirit
On the other hand, Sri Lankans are confronted with far more depressing realities. The very idea of democracy, which was alive even at the worst of the North and East conflict, seems most at risk now. A Constitution engineered to ensure the continuing political fortunes of one family, the profound deterioration of basic democratic freedoms and the degeneration of a multi party system has framed unprecedentedly corrupt practices by a select few. Sri Lanka’s democratic systems of governance have been pushed to the very brink. The damage done to the collective moral spirit has been irreparable.
As we usher in a new and dangerously unpredictable new year, it is time that the critique of Sri Lanka’s political and legal systems take on new and radically honest forms. Assuredly, that responsibility remains in us, not in the government or the opposition both of which have spectacularly failed this country.

The Return Of The (Domesticated) Tiger?


"The key to wisdom is this — constant and frequent questioning … for by doubting we are led to question and by questioning we arrive at the truth."
Peter Abelard (Sic et non )
( December 29, 2013 – Colombo – Sri Lanka Guardian) In 1964, a joint session of the US Congress passed the Gulf of Tonkin Resolution giving the President carte blanche to wage war in South-East Asia.

HRCSL Seeks Greater Powers

  • Proposed amendments include right to hold national probe
By Waruni Karunarathne-Sunday, December 29, 2013
The Sunday LeaderThe Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (HRCSL) has sought greater powers including the right to hold National Inquiries in a proposed amendment to the Human Rights Act submitted to President Mahinda Rajapaksa.
Speaking to The Sunday Leader, HRCSL Commissioner Dr Prathiba Mahanamahewa said the draft was approved by the Board of the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka that consists of five members.
“The proposal has already been taken up in Parliament during the budget proceedings. In general, this has to go through a Line Ministry. Since we do not have a Line Ministry for the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka, the proposal has to go through the Presidential Secretariat,” Mahanamahewa said.
In the amendments, the Commission has included several new subsections and it has also renamed and rephrased several other sections.
The five new subsections include one which seeks approval for the Commission to make special fact findings, and/or hold national inquiries in relation to any matter with a public and/or national interest, systematic and/or gross human rights violation, weak and vulnerable groups that need special attention, the protection of women, children, elders, disabled, migrant workers, internally displaced persons or any such group that may be identified upon such a complaint made or an issue identified under section 14 of the Act.
Other new subsections include the Human Rights Commission making interim recommendations, as it may think fit, to the appropriate authority or person or persons concerned with a view to preventing the continuation of such infringement until a final determination is made by the Commission.
After receiving a final determination by the Commission, any authority or persons to whom such recommendation under the preceding provisions is addressed fails to comply with such recommendation within the stipulated period, the Commission shall submit a certificate to the Court of Appeal or Provincial High Court, as appropriate in the circumstances, for the purpose of implementing such recommendation.
In special circumstances identified by the Commission, the Human Rights Commission wants powers to issue summons upon any person named therein, and, if such person without any valid reason fails to attend the proceedings of the Commission, the Chairman of the Commission shall issue a warrant under his hand to ensure such attendance. Such warrant shall be final and conclusive, and such person would be liable to be dealt with, under the Act.
The Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka has also sought to include additional clauses to some parts of the Act.
This includes:
1.  To intervene in any proceedings relating to the infringement or imminent infringement of fundamental rights or human rights pending before any court with the permission of such court or if referred by such court;
2.  Without any distinction, monitor the welfare of persons detained either by a judicial order or otherwise, including persons in detention in prison or elsewhere under Prevention of Terrorism (Temporary Special Provisions) Act, No. 48 of 1979 or regulations made under the Public Security Ordinance (Chapter 40), or in any other circumstances, by regular inspection of their places of detention, and to furnish quarterly reports with recommendations;
3.  Where upon an investigation and/or inquiry conducted by the Commission under section 14 the infringement or imminent infringement of a fundamental right by executive or administrative action or by any person referred to in paragraph (b) of section 14 is disclosed, the Commission shall have the power to refer the matter, where appropriate, for conciliation or mediation.
4.  Subject to rules as may be prescribed, to admit notwithstanding the provisions of the Evidence Ordinance to admit any evidence, whether written or oral, which might be inadmissible in civil or criminal proceedings, provided that such evidence could reasonably ensure justice;
5.  Where a person is arrested or detained under the Prevention of Terrorism (Temporary Provisions) Act, No. 48 of 1979 or a regulation made under the Public Security ordinance, (Chapter 10), or in any other circumstances, it shall be the duty of the person making such arrest or order of detention, as the case may be, to forthwith inform the Commission of such arrest or detention, inform the Commission of such arrest or detention as the case may be and the place at which the person so arrested or detained is being held in custody or detention. Where a person so held in custody or detention is released or transferred to another place of detention, it shall be the duty of the person making the order for such release or transfer, as the case may be, to inform the Commission of such release or transfer, as the case may be, and in the case of a transfer, to inform the Commission of the location of the new place of detention forthwith.
6.  Any person on whom a duty is imposed by subsection (1), and who willfully omits to inform the Commission as required by subsection (1), or who resists or obstructs an officer authorized under subsection (1) in the exercise by that officer of the powers conferred on him by that subsection, shall be guilty of an offence and shall on conviction after summary trial by a Magistrate, be liable to imprisonment for a period not exceeding one year or to a fine not exceeding twenty five thousand rupees, or to both such fine and imprisonment.
The Commission has also sought to submit an annual report within the first quarter of every year to Parliament, which shall also be posted on the website of the Commission documenting the action taken in the discharge of its duties, setting out all its activities during the year to which the report relates, including a list of all matters referred to it, and the action taken in respect of them along with the recommendations of the Commission in respect of each matter.
If approved, the Commission will also, whenever it considers it necessary to do so, submit periodic or special reports to Parliament in respect of any particular matter or matters referred to it, and the action taken in respect of the status of human rights in Sri Lanka during the preceding year and information relating to any research conducted by the Commission and its findings.
The Commission also seeks regulations for the purpose of carrying out or giving effect to the principles and provisions of the Act, or in respect of any matter which is required by the Act to be prescribed, or in respect of which regulations are required to be made.
Another amendment sought by the Commission is that it make regulations prescribing the procedure to be followed in the conduct of investigations under the Act, every regulation made by the Commission be published in the Gazette and come into operation on the date of such publication, or on such later date as may be specified in the regulation.
Dr Mahanamahewa said that it took nearly one year for the Commission to draft the proposed amendments and it was done after consulting members of the civil society, the Attorney General and all the stakeholders. He emphasized that, if the proposal is accepted, the Commission would be able to give greater protection to people and would be able to expedite the procedures to solve the cases.
He added that even though the duties of public servants are being stated in Article 4(d) of the 1978 Constitution as to promote, respect and protect human rights, it is not often being practiced and through the proposed amendments to the Human Rights Act, the moral obligation would be made a legal obligation enabling a better environment to protect human rights in the country.

Dipped Products throws in the towel

Editorial- 


It is now ten days since Dipped Products PLC (DPL), the Hayley’s subsidiary which has over a period of more than 30 years built up a world class manufacturing business producing rubber gloves used for a multitude of hand protection purposes, announced that it was moving its factory at Rathupaswala, near Weliweriya, to the Biyagama Export Processing Zone. This is being done although the available evidence strongly suggests that the problem of polluted/substandard well water in the area has nothing to do with the factory. Over five months have elapsed since the closure of the factory, followed by military shooting to disperse protestors blocking the Kandy road that led to the death of three young people, and the halt in production has cost the country about Rs. 1.5 billion in foreign exchange. The factory owners even offered to truck in the water used in the production process until an industrial water connection is obtained and truck out effluent for safe disposal at Biyagama until the issue is resolved but the protestors would have none of it. The government too has done little to settle the problem and ensure that production resumes. Thus an industry that has been good for this country, earning one percent of its export income, has been forced to cut its losses and relocate. This is despite the loud professions of making Sri Lanka an export and manufacturing hub and hugely expensive promotional efforts to attract foreign direct investment into the country.

It is abundantly clear that the government’s impotence to act decisively to help an important industry to resume production is its eventual responsibility for the over-reaction of the military in shooting unarmed protestors. There has been talk of court martialing those responsible, but whether that will come to pass remains an open question. Complicating matters is the forthcoming Western Provincial Council election and the government will not risk losing votes by siding with the factory owners despite the biggest shareholder of Hayleys being a strong loyalist of the ruling establishment. The end result is that DPL appears to have thrown in the towel and decided to move to the Biyagama EPZ. That makes sense from the company’s point of view. When the well water problem at Rathupaswala will be resolved is anybody’s guess. There is every possibility of the arguments being lobbed back and forth with no decision either way. Meanwhile the company is losing Rs. 300 million a month in export revenue and customers painstakingly acquired over a period of over three decades by the day. It is obviously better to get ready to manufacture elsewhere rather than wait interminably for a hoped-for favourable outcome.

At a November press conference Hayleys Chairman/CEO Mohan Pandithage said that it would not be difficult for them to pull out of Rathupaswala altogether and relocate in Malaysia. That country, being among the world’s biggest natural rubber producers, is anxious to attract businesses such as DPL’s utilizing a domestic raw material. According to Pandithage, as the necessary buildings were already available in Malaysia, all they had to do was to dismantle their plant, load it into containers, reassemble at the new location and ``plug in.’’ But he was not willing to take that course, he said, ``because I am a nationalist.’’ Obviously other reasons including the need to consolidate the production of its various factories in Sri Lanka at a single location to serve customers dispersed in over 70 countries is very much a factor in the equation. Setting up a new factory overseas may be a negative in this context. But it is not unlikely that when further expansion is contemplated, there will be good reason to look at options outside Sri Lanka where too many things go wrong too often. DPL said in a Stock Exchange filing earlier this month that it hopes to resume commercial operations of its subsidiary, Vengros Ltd. based in Rathupaswala, by next April. Only time will tell whether this is an overly optimistic timeline. Getting the buildings ready, dismantling the existing plant and reassembling it at a new location can throw up unforeseen problems. It is not like buying a brand new plant off the shelf and setting it up and DPL’s managers would obviously be alive to these dangers. Yet, given the way the original issue was playing out and government pussyfooting over taking a firm stand had left them no option.

Although DPL has posted fairly satisfactory results for the first half of the current financial year ended September 30, 2013, the factory closed at the end of July and only two months of the closure is encompassed in these results. Nevertheless, hand protection which is the vital segment in DPL’s earning stream in normal circumstances, had contracted sharply and this impacted on the bottom line. Results up to end December this year which are yet to be published will, no doubt, better reflect the Rathupaswala closure. It is clear from the interim financials that the company has lost its growth momentum and this will be a continuing process. Even if the move to Biyagama is successfully accomplished, regaining lost custom will be protracted. It will also be hard for employees living in the vicinity of the factory to travel for work to Biyagama. In addition to the actual production, many local people were employed in the packing process and it may be necessary to move this activity too to Biyagama. In addition to the foreign exchange that Sri Lanka has already lost as a result of the factory closure, and this loss will continue to grow exponentially, the country’s competitiveness as an investment destination has been seriously undermined. Given what has happened to a local company which is a shining star in the export industrial firmament, will not other industries think twice about coming here?

DPL is on record saying that other countries in the region ``are benefiting at the expense of Sri Lanka’s incapability to solve a problem that not even has a proper basis.’’ It has asserted that it is not responsible for low pH or any other groundwater quality issue at Rathupaswala or anywhere. Having built up an excellent business using locally produced rubber latex to become the world’s biggest non-medical rubber glove producer with production and marketing facilities at home and abroad, who can fault the company for complaining that it has not been fairly heard with a sense of urgency? There is no escaping the fact that keeping the factory closed for these five long months is both a national tragedy and a crime. It is the responsibility of the government to ensure the necessary peaceful environment and enforce law and order to allow businesses like DPL that had engaged its stakeholders ethically and responsibly to function without hindrance. This, unfortunately, has not been done with the situation aggravated by the unnecessary shooting. Mobs blocking roads certainly cannot be countenanced. Neither can over-reaction by the military deployed for what was essentially a police matter. We can only hope that DPL will be able to restore its business to what it was as quickly as possible. But indecisive and lackadaisical governance has taken a heavy toll not only of a company in which the EPF is a major shareholder but also on the national economy.
Inner City PressBy Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, December 25 -- After a "mass grave in Bentiu" was announced by the UN's High Commissioner on Human Rights Navi Pillay, the UN Mission in South Sudan has a day later denied the existence of the mass grave in Bentiu.

  But even before Pillay's announcement, French Permanent Representative to the UN Gerard Araud on December 20 was asked by Inner City Press about Dinka soldiers seeking shelter with the UN in Rubkona, which is directly across the Bahr al Ghazal river from Bentiu, in Unity State. Video herefrom Minute 12:54.

  Araud replied curtly that Rubkona wasn't discussed in the briefing by UN Peacekeeping -- but the French Mission to the UN it is transcript misspelled it as "Rupkona.  CompareFrench transcript to UN Video at Minute 13:10.

  Earlier in the week, the head of UN Peacekeeping, former French Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN Herve Ladsous, had understated the death toll in Juba, putting it at 400 to 500 when multiple reports now put it substantially higher.


  All of this takes place after UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has said that following the UN's failure in Sri Lanka in 2009, in which as Inner City Press exposed the UN even concealed and denied its own reports counting the civilians dead -- what is its credibility after that? -- now the UN will put "Rights Up Front" and sound the alarm on human rights violations, even in countries whose government's the UN is supporting.

  In South Sudan, lead UN envoy Hilde Johnson is closely aligned with Salva Kiir; little was heard in terms of calling for restraints during the "re-taking" of Bor, and prospectively of Bentiu.


It's one thing for a government to dismiss what UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Pillay says - but for UN Peacekeeping and its mission to dismiss the human rights report? To this has UN Peacekeeping under Herve Ladsous sunk. Rights Up Front? Hardly.

Footnotes: When Inner City Press reported Kohona's previous financial relationship with the president of the United Nations Correspondents Association, as background for UNCA's screening inside the UN's Dag Hammarskjold Library Auditorium of his Sri Lankan government's film purporting to rebut a expose of war crimes which itself was never shown in the UN, leaders of UNCA -- now the UN's Censorship Alliance -- ordered Inner City Press to remove the factual report from the Internet.

When Inner City Press refused, at least three of these leaders moved and supported moves to throw Inner City Press out of the UN: the UN bureau chiefs of Voice of America,Agence France Presse and Reutersalso spying for the UN


 Yet just last week this group's 2013-14 president Pamela Falk of CBS, who has done nothing to reform it, was for example automatically given the first question even about the UN's post Sri Lanka failure Rights Up Front plan on December 19. And the UN erased from its transcript even the mention of the new anti-censorship Free UN Coalition for Access, like another attempted erasures. This is how the UN works -- or doesn't. Watch this site.