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, January 5, 2014

Hulugalle Affair: Those Who Watched Through Key-Hole Are Back Again

January 5, 2014 |
The security personal assigned to former Director General of the Media Centre for National Security(MCNS), Lakshman Hulugallewho was recently caught in a storm of controversy over an illicit liaison and a suicide attempt have been restored.
Colombo TelegraphGota-Hulu“On Wednesday, hours after staff at the National Livestock Development Board (NLDB) marked the dawn of 2014 with kiribath and kavun, Mr. Hulugalle turned up at his Deputy Chairman’s office there. He was accompanied by two STF commandos and six Police officers from the Ministerial Security Division (MSD). All were armed.Lakshman Hulugalle, at the centre of many a controversy, has been removed from the only other post he held under the Ministry of Defence. This was the post of Director General of the Directorate of Non-Governmental Organisations (NGO) Secretariat. Yet, he continues to retain other positions.” the Sunday Time’s Cafe Spectatorreports.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa dissolved the MCNS retroactively from November 1st after racy details about Hulugalle’s liaison with businessman Gamini Nethikumara’s spouse came to light and he was found to have abused his power in a bid to rescue his paramour.
We publish below the relevant part of the column;                                      Read More

Dayasiri slaps president in the face!

daya 1
daya 2North western province chief minister Dayasiri Jayasekara, in an apparent tit-for-tat targeting the president for all the stepmotherly treatment he has been receiving from the president, has described at a function on January 03 that defence secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa as the only government leader with a backbone, political sources in the province say.

His remark came at a foundation laying and urban development observation tour by the defence secrerary in Kurunegala.

The chief minister has gone on to say, “Previously, when I was walking at Torrington, I used to meet the Mr. defence secretary. He was inspecting the UDA activities. We have been waiting to see a leader with a backbone arriving in Kurunegala. Mr. Secretary, under your leadership, I will build a beautiful Wayamba within the next two to three years.”

At the WPC polls, president Mahinda Rajapaksa and his son MP Namal Rajapaksa openly supported Jehan Fernando, the son of internal trade minister Johnston Fernando. However, in order to teach the president a lesson, all SLFP leaders in the province supported Mr. Jayasekara, who polled a record-breaking preferential votes of more than 300,000. After bidding his time, the chief minister has slapped the president in the face, said the sources.

From Siddhartha Gautama To God

By Jagath Asoka -January 5, 2014 
Dr. Jagath Asoka
Dr. Jagath Asoka
Colombo TelegraphBefore I write my thoughts on this topic, I want to emphasize that all these articles that I have written are just my opinions that are based on my profound pondering and constant reflections. These conversations and exchange of ideas with my readers have only one purpose: As the Buddha explained, “To liberate my mind from clinging.”
I want all of you to know that I have borrowed the phrase “God Buddha” fromSharmini Serasinghe. Sharmini’s and Tisaranee Gunasekara’s writings concretize one of my long-held thoughts, based on my own experience as a medical/technical writer, over the last thirteen years: I personally think women are better writers than men; since 2001, I have not worked with a male medical/technical writer here in the USA, yet.
The commenters who identify themselves as ”Dude,” “Sirimal,” “Gamini,” and, of course, the others who make cogent and cohesive comments and contributions to this website must contribute their own articles toColombo Telegraph because all of you are much better than some of the learned and professional writers who appear on this website. I am sorry to say that most of them are boring, but I am happy to say that they have cured my insomnia!
I don’t know about you, but I contribute to Colombo Telegraph because it is banned in Sri Lanka, because Rajapaksas have taken away our precious freedom of expression, and because they have hired sycophants and thugs to kill, harass, and intimidate journalists and dissenters. I sincerely believe that Rajakapsas will stop all these nonsense because if they don’t, they will not survive. They will end up like Prabakaran. It is just a matter of time.
Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka belongs to a different category; I sometimes disagree with Dr. Dayan Jayatillakae, but I admire his cogent and cohesive arguments, analyses, and predictions. I sincerely understand his predicament. So, Dayan, keep entertaining, educating, enlightening, and edifying us with your impartial, erudite, fair, and scholarly articles and analyses, not with their antitheses.                 Read More

God In Buddhism? A Response To Dr Jagath Asoka

By Shyamon Jayasinghe -January 6, 2014 
Shyamon Jayasinghe
Shyamon Jayasinghe
I read with profound interest the long piece written by Dr Jagath Asoka (JA) captioned “From Siddhartha Gautama to God,” that appears in the Colombo Telegraph today.
JA displays a creative ingenuity that is a consequence of a mind that has got off the hook of the conventional framework he had inherited. JA suggests a pertinent point, namely that popular Buddhism hasn’t done away with the concept of an almighty God. I like to develop on that idea and assert that early Buddhism failed to take root in India and disappeared from the land of its birth due to its rational rejection of a Brahma who supervises us from the sky and who gives us good return for being good while punishing the bad.  The masses were not ready for the Kalama sutra. How many of them are ready for that now? People reverted to the Hindu gallery of deities as that gave them solace, which pure reason could not deliver. Buddhism survived later and spread to other lands only by reincorporating the spiritual vacuum filled by the lost divine.
Sri Lanka practices a popular form of Buddhism that seems to assume a spiritual subtext. Buddha is worshipped as a God in our temples by the vast majority of the population. Our people say: “Budu Saranayi,” as the Christians invoke: “God bless!” How could a mortal Buddha who is dead and gone give us protection or sarana?

VIDEO: PROTEST AGAINST PRIME MINISTER IN EMBILIPITIYA

                                                     
Ada DeranaVIDEO: Protest against Prime Minister in Embilipitiya
January 5, 2014 
A large gathering of Buddhist monks and laymen marched through the streets of the Embilipitiya town this morning protesting against Prime Minister D.M. Jayaratne.

The protest march commenced at 8.00am today from the Kawantissa Rajamaha Viharaya in Embilipitiya while shops located in the town were reportedly closed and black flags hoisted in support of the stir. 

The protesters condemn the Prime Minister’s allegedly derogatory comments regarding the Leader of the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), Ven. Omalpe Sobitha Thero and demand that a new minister be appointed for the Ministry of Buddha Sasana and Religious Affairs. 

President’s target is premier’s son!

namal anuradhaThe president, who has ordered all and sundry in the government to attack prime minister D.M. Jayaratne over the heroin container seized by the customs, is targeting not the premier, but his son, lawyer Anuradha Jayaratne, say Temple Trees sources. 

On the president’s orders, the police Anti Narcotics Bureua interrogated the junior Jayaratne for more than 2 ½ hours and questioned him about his connections with the owner of the container and the previous dealings between the two, and also regarding the photographs of the two. As an up and coming Sinhala Buddhist, Govigama caste political leader from the upcountry, he polled more than 108,000 preferential votes at the last central provincial council election. The president, disregarded his own promise that the highest preferential vote taker will be appointed the chief minister, reappointed Sarath Ekanayake to the position in order to prevent Mr. Jayaratne from becoming a challenge to his son MP Namal Rajapaksa.

The intention of the president’s operation is to implicate the PM’s son in the heroin container issue, destroy him politically and remove him in advance from becoming a challenge to his son Namal Rajapaksa in the future, internal sources in the government say.
(Lanka-e-News- 19.Dec.2013, 11.30PM) Sri Lanka's one and only synthetic lawyer Namal Rajapakse who participated in the night motor car race held in Colombo last Sunday , had when racing at Kotadeniya on 8 th night (Sunday) , in preparation for the night race in Colombo been responsible for the killing of an innocent individual while another who was also a victim of the accident has been rendered invalid for life , according to reports reaching Lanka e news inside information division.

Namal Rajapakse who was on his way to Colombo from Divulapitiya along with two other supporting vehicles closely behind his were traveling at reckless speed .when this fatal accident occurred. At Koradaminda belonging to Kotadeniyawa police division , one of the vehicles of his fleet following him had run over two innocent pedestrians on the road .                                       Full Story>>>

Sun, Jan 5, 2014, 10:13 pm SL Time, ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka. 

Lankapage LogoJan 05, Colombo: Sri Lanka's China-built Lakvijaya Power Station in Norochcholai broke down again today for the 25th time since its commissioning in March 2010.
The malfunction occurred two days after the power station was re-started following a lapse of over fortnight.

The reason for the latest breakdown has been identified as a water leakage in the boiler.
The Lakvijaya coal power station broke down on December 14 also and Chinese engineers were called on to repair it. The power station was restarted on January 02.

The repairs are to commence in two days and the date for restarting the power station is expected to be predicted on that day.

The current phase I of the coal power plant adds 300 MW to the national energy grid and with the completion of next phase the plant will add up to 900 MW.


Phase II with capacity of 2X300 MW was scheduled for to commission in October 2013 but it has been delayed and no date for opening has been given yet.
Tropical storm ‘One’ hits North-East
05 January 2014
A tropical storm struck the North-East in the early hours of Sunday  morning, battering the area with sustained winds and causing evacuations from coastal areas.


Picture: Tropical Storm Risk


The tropical storm “One” has led to families lviing within 100m of the sea across Jaffna, Mullaitivu and Mannar to be evacuate from their homes, as winds of around 46 mph swept through the region.

The US Navy and Air Force Joint Typhoon Warning Centre earlier forecast that the storm would strike Jaffna, withing warnings that sea levels could rise above 3 metres.

See more from the Tropical Storm Risk here.

TSR logo
London Market Innovation Award 2004 and Risk Management Award 2006Tropical Storm Risk (TSR) offers a leading resource for predicting and mapping tropical storm activity worldwide. The public TSR web site provides forecasts and information to benefit basic risk awareness and decision making from tropical storms. The new TSR Business service and web site offers real-time products of unrivalled accuracy for the detailed mapping and prediction of tropical storm impacts worldwide. TSR has won two major insurance industry awards - the British Insurance Awards for Risk Management (2006) and for London Market Innovation (2004).
 CURRENT TROPICAL CYCLONE ACTIVITY

Storm Tracker Global Map
 SEASONAL FORECASTS AND VERIFICATIONS
Seasonal Forecast or Verification TypeIssue DateDescription
Atlantic Hurricanes 201412th December 2013Extended Range Forecast for Atlantic Hurricane Activity in 2014
NW Pacific Typhoons 20136th August 2013August Forecast Update for NW Pacific Typhoon Activity in 2013
Atlantic Hurricanes 201110th January 2012Summary of 2011 Atlantic Tropical Cyclone Season and Verification of Authors' Seasonal Forecasts
NW Pacific Typhoons 20113rd January 2012Summary of 2011 NW Pacific Typhoon Season and Verification of Authors' Seasonal Forecasts
 PAST SEASONAL FORECASTS

Past Seasonal Forecasts

Bribery Enforcer Accused

By Nirmala Kannangara-Sunday, January 05, 2014
The Sunday LeaderWhile the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption looks to enforce the law against corrupt officials, the Chairman of the Commission has been accused of misusing his position for personal gain.
Death threats to Sports Director General 

    January 5, 2014 

The Sports Director General Mrs. Ranjani Jayakody has made a complaint to the Cinnamon Gardens police today. She has complained that she has been receiving death threats.

She has made this complaint to the Cinnamon Gardens Police around 11.05 am today, the police media spokesperson SSP Ajith Rohana told Ceylon Today Online.

Gang rape, killing of teen in India sparks outrage

Asian Correspondent
By  Jan 05, 2014
KOLKATA, India (AP) — The father of a teenage girl who was allegedly gang raped and later died after being set on fire in eastern India is demanding a federal inquiry into the case, which has renewed public outrage over sexual violence in the country.
Hundreds of people protested Friday in the West Bengal city of Kolkata, accusing state authorities of failing to protect the family after the 16-year-old girl went to police in October to report she had been raped twice by the same gang.
The state’s urban development minister defended the police response, noting that six suspects had been arrested in the rapes and another two for allegedly setting the girl on fire.
Activists of Indian National Congress block traffic during a protest against a gang-rape and murder of a 16-year-old girl at Madhyamgram, about 25 kilometers (16 miles) north of the city, in Kolkata, India, Friday, Jan. 3, 2014. (AP Photo/Bikas Das)
“The state government has taken appropriate action in this case,” said the minister, Firhad Hakim.
The girl reported being gang raped and left in a field near her home in late October in the Madhyamgram suburb of Kolkata, formerly Calcutta. The next day she was allegedly abducted by the same gang and raped again before being left unconscious by railway tracks, police said.
The girl’s father, a taxi driver, said last week that his daughter was set on fire on Dec. 23 after being threatened with violence if she did not withdraw her police complaint. She died from her injuries on Wednesday.
The father is demanding that federal investigators take charge of the case. Neither the girl nor her father is being named by Indian media under laws guarding the identity of rape victims.
Last month, India marked the one-year anniversary of the fatal gang rape of a 23-year-old woman on a moving bus in New Delhi that triggered nationwide protests.
The outrage spurred the government to adopt more stringent laws that doubled prison terms for rape to 20 years and criminalized voyeurism, stalking, acid attacks and the trafficking of women. Fast-track courts have been created for rape cases.
Four attackers in the New Delhi case were sentenced to death and a juvenile was sent to a reform center for three years.

Cambodia Steps Up Crackdown on Dissent With Ban on Assembly




New York Times
By -January 5, 2014

PHNOM PENH, Cambodia — Seeking to quash one of the most serious challenges to the nearly 30-year rule of the country’s authoritarian leader, the Cambodian authorities have banned all public gatherings and summoned two opposition leaders for police questioning.
After months of inaction in the face of growing public dissent to his rule, Prime Minister Hun Sen appeared to signal that he was entering a more aggressive posture toward his critics. The crackdown, including the clearing of protesters from a public square on Saturday, came after a clash on Friday between protesting garment workers and the Cambodian police that left at least four demonstrators dead. The workers have been at the forefront of growing protests against Mr. Hun Sen’s government.
Mr. Hun Sen’s party claimed victory in July elections, which the opposition and independent observers say were riddled with irregularities. Since then, the opposition has called for him to step down and has boycotted Parliament.
The two opposition leaders wanted for questioning, Sam Rainsy and Kem Sokha, said Sunday that they were suspending any protest activity. Mr. Sam Rainsy decried what he called a “facade of democracy” in the country.
Late last month, the opposition staged a protest march of tens of thousands of people through the streets of Phnom Penh, an act of defiance on a scale rarely seen during Mr. Hun Sen’s more than 28 years in power.
Many parts of Phnom Penh were unaffected by the crackdown, including the main tourist area along the Mekong River. But elsewhere, hundreds of police officers and soldiers blocked roads, broke up crowds of bystanders and cordoned off the public square, known as Freedom Park, where the protesters had been gathering.
On Saturday, the United States Embassy in Phnom Penh advised American citizens in the city to “limit any unnecessary travel away from their residences and avoid large crowds and immediately leave any area where crowds are gathering.”
The dispersal of demonstrators from Freedom Park by the police and others was highly symbolic. In 2009, the government officially designated the square as a place where Cambodians could express themselves freely, roughly modeling it on Speakers’ Corner in London. The square has been the center of protests led by the opposition since the elections in July. Protesters who have camped out there since mid-December have included Buddhist monks, elderly farmers and human rights advocates.
The Cambodian Center for Human Rights, an independent advocacy organization, accused the government on Saturday of a “violent clampdown on human rights” and said protesters were chased out of the square by “thugs dressed in civilian clothes” who were armed with steel poles and other makeshift weapons, an observation corroborated by journalists who were present.
A number of protests during Mr. Hun Sen’s time in power have been broken up by shadowy groups. In 1997, a grenade attack on a protest led by Mr. Sam Rainsy left at least 16 people dead.
On Saturday, Cambodia’s Ministry of Interior issued a statement saying that the eviction of protesters “was conducted in a peaceful manner without any casualties.” Recent protests, the statement said, “led to violence, the blocking of public roads and the destruction of public and private property,” an apparent reference to the clashes between garment workers and soldiers on Friday, among other recent episodes.
The statement said all protests and public assembly were banned “until security and public order has been restored.” It also advised “all members of the national and international community to remain calm and avoid participating in any kind of illegal activity that could have negative consequences on the national interests.”
Mr. Hun Sen has been credited with stabilizing the country after the brutality of the Khmer Rouge, whose genocidal policies led to the deaths of 1.7 million Cambodians. But in recent years, he has accumulated highly centralized power, including a praetorian guard that appears to rival the capabilities of the country’s regular military units.
Economic growth that has brought modernity and prosperity to Phnom Penh has exposed stark inequalities in the country, where well over a third of children are malnourished. Only one-quarter of the Cambodian population has access to electricity. The streets of Phnom Penh are shared by luxury cars and families of four squeezed onto dilapidated motorcycles.
Garment workers, who number in the hundreds of thousands, have been the most aggressive in seeking higher wages. Striking workers are demanding a doubling of the monthly minimum wage to $160 from $80, an increase that the industry says would make it uncompetitive.
In the clash on Friday, garment workers confronted officers with rocks, sticks and homemade firebombs. The police fired into the crowd with assault rifles, witnesses said. In addition to the protesters killed, at least 20 people were injured.

UPDATE 3-Bangladesh ruling party set to win poll hit by violence, boycott

Sun Jan 5, 2014
Reuters* Opposition boycott means fewer than half of districts were contested
* Impasse between two dominant parties fuels worries of economic stagnation
* Polling day violence kills 18 - media reports (Updates with polls closing)
By Ruma Paul and Tony Munroe
DHAKA, Jan 5 (Reuters) - Bangladesh's ruling Awami League was poised on Sunday to win a violence-plagued parliamentary election whose outcome was never in doubt after a boycott by the main opposition party.
With fewer than half of the 300 seats being contested, voters cast ballots in modest numbers amid heavy security in polling that lacked the festivity typical of Bangladeshi elections and was shunned by international observers as flawed.
Low voter participation could pile new pressure on Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina to find a compromise with the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party (BNP) for holding new elections.
Results in constituencies that featured a contest were expected late on Sunday or early on Monday. Hasina is expected to form a new government sometime this month.
Either Hasina or BNP chief Begum Khaleda Zia has been prime minister for all but two of the past 22 years. The two are bitter rivals.
"The immediate fallout of this dismal voter turnout will be the Hasina government coming under greater pressure to hold talks with the opposition," said Hossain Zillur Rahman, an economist and adviser to a former "caretaker" government tasked with overseeing an election.
"It is the ultimate sign of protest by Bangladeshi people and tells us that they are unhappy with the way elections have been held in this country."
The impasse between the two main parties, which showed no sign of easing, undermined the poll's legitimacy and is fuelling worries of economic stagnation and further violence in the impoverished South Asian nation of 160 million.
Abul Kashem, who works as a driver and is a supporter of the BNP, was dismayed at the political standoff.
"This is a suicidal election as it will not bring any peace in the country," he said outside a Dhaka polling station.
The country's $22 billion garment industry, which accounts for 80 percent of exports, has been disrupted by transportation blockades ahead of the election. BNP officials said party supporters would maintain the blockade and called another in a series of general strikes starting from Monday.
Eighteen people were killed in separate incidents on election day, according to media reports, and voting was halted at more than 150 polling stations. More than 100 people were killed in the run-up to the ballot, mostly in rural areas, and fears of violence had been expected to keep many voters away.
Police said they had been forced to fire on opposition activists in six incidents.
Apart from a handful of crude bomb explosions, Dhaka was calm. In Satkania, near the port city of Chittagong, a poll official's arms were broken and police were attacked.
FUTURE ELECTION?
Hasina has spoken of holding talks with the opposition on the conduct of future elections which, if successful, could lead to another poll. The BNP had demanded a halt to the current electoral process.
Turnout figures were not immediately available, though election officials acknowledged that they had anticipated low numbers and voting appeared slow at Dhaka polling stations.
At one, in the Lalbagh area, 626 of 2,274 voters, or 28 percent, cast ballots. At another nearby site, final turnout among male voters was 21 percent.
The BNP said low turnout vindicated its denunciation of the poll as a farce.
"The turnout is a clear indication that the common people rejected this election and it is almost an election without voters," Shamsher Mobin Chowdhury, a BNP vice chairman, told Reuters.
Junior Law Minister Mohammad Quamrul Islam said the election was necessary for the democratic process and repeated that another poll could be held anytime in agreement with the BNP.
"But they must stop violence before dialogue for the next elections could start," he told reporters after voting.
The BNP denounces Hasina's scrapping of the practice of having a caretaker government oversee elections. The Awami League says the interim government system has proved a failure.
Many BNP leaders are in jail or in hiding, and Khaleda says she is under virtual house arrest, which the government denies.
The European Union, a duty free market for nearly 60 percent of Bangladesh's garment exports, refused to send election observers, as did the United States and the Commonwealth, a grouping of 53 mainly former British colonies.
"The elections have to happen to ensure a government is formed and the country can start functioning again normally," said Mehedi Rahman, 43, a schoolteacher voting in Dhaka.
"The unfortunate part is there is hardly any meaning because the opposition has boycotted it and the outcome is known." (Additional reporting by Nandita Bose and Serajul Quadir and Reuters Television; Editing by Ron Popeski)

Saturday, January 4, 2014

உலக குற்றவியல் அலுவலக அமெரிக்க தூதர் இலங்கை விஜயம்; கலக்கத்தில் அரசாங்கம்

news
04 ஜனவரி 2014, சனி
உலகளாவிய குற்றவியல் அலுவலகத்தின் அமெரிக்காவுக்கான தூதுவர் ஸ்டீபன் ஜே ரெப் எதிர்வரும் 6ம் திகதி  இலங்கைக்கான விஜயம் மேற்கொள்ளவுள்ளார்.

அமெரிக்க இராஜாங்க திணைக்களம் இதனை தெரிவித்துள்ளது. ரெப் இலங்கைக்கு மேற்கொள்ளும் இந்த விஜயம் அவருடைய இரண்டாவது விஜயமாகும்.

இந்த விஜயத்தின்போது இலங்கை அரசாங்க அதிகாரிகள், அரசியல்வாதிகள் சிவில் சமூகத்தினர் நீதித்துறையினர் உட்பட்டவர்களை சந்திக்கவுள்ளார்.

ஏற்கனவே 2012 ஆம் ஆண்டு பெப்ரவரி மாதத்தில் ரெப் இலங்கை வந்திருந்தார். இந்தநிலையில் எதிர்வரும் மார்ச் மாதம் ஜெனீவா அமர்வை முன்னிட்டே ரெப்பின் விஜயம் இடம்பெறவுள்ளது.
- See more at: http://onlineuthayan.com/News_More.php?id=180982554504792182#sthash.HOvlalV8.dpuf

Ambassador-at-Large, Office of Global Criminal Justice, Stephen J. Rapp travel to Sri Lanka

Media Note
U.S. Department of State - Great SealOffice of the Spokesperson
Washington, DC
January 3, 2014

Ambassador-at-Large, Office of Global Criminal Justice, Stephen J. Rapp will travel to Sri Lanka, January 6–11, 2014. This is Ambassador Rapp’s second trip to Sri Lanka as Ambassador-at-Large. During this trip Ambassador Rapp will meet with a broad cross section of government officials and political and civil society leaders on a range of issues focusing on Sri Lanka’s justice, accountability, and reconciliation processes.
For more information on the Office of Global Criminal Justice, visit our website and our Facebook and Twitter pages.

Wonder Of Asia: Pictures Of A First Class Railway Carriage In Sri Lanka

Colombo TelegraphJanuary 5, 2014 
The pictures posted on Facebook show the real condition of a First Class railway carriage in Sri Lanka.
Train5
Posting a few pictures on his Facebook, a Visiting Lecturer at both the Colombo University and the Open University Sri Lanka, Chanuka Wattegama says; “This is a FIRST CLASS carriage in Sri Lanka Railways. I don’t know when it was built but the warning (A Fine of Rs. 20 for pulling the train) gives an indication. Unbelievable is that this comes from a country that heavily depends on tourism.”
Pictures below show a first class carriage of Meena Gaya Intercity Express train – Colombo to Batticaloa. Baticaloa is a major tourist destination in Sri Lanka. The Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority says; Pasikuda and Kalkuda are unspoilt beaches in the East coast of Sri Lanka, close to the town of Batticaloa. The white sands, clear blue water, and the stillness of the sea are both captivating and unparalleled by far.
Train Sri Lanka

Train 2

Train 3

Train 4

Train 5