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

Wednesday, January 15, 2014

God In The Buddha: An Open Answer To Sharmini

By Kapila Abhayawansa -January 15, 2014 
Prof Kapila Abhayawansa
Prof Kapila Abhayawansa
Dear Sharmini Serasinghe,
Colombo TelegraphI respect your attitude so as to challenge even the teacher because of the fact that I also belong to the tradition which maintains that a good thing  even of the enemy and the mistake even of the teacher should be spoken (sastrorapigunāvācyadosāvācyāgurorapi). Therefore, in our tradition to which I respect, anyone has the right to criticize what one thinks as wrong.
I am really thankful to you for writing an open letter to me as I get the opportunity to clarify my opinions expressed in my letter and also to reply to the questions appeared in different comments to my article. I would like to mention here that my article entitled God in the Buddha has been written to publish in a newspaper considering the space available. So, I deliberately made it short and script. Though it was short, there were enough clues for a patient reader to understand my stand points over the present activities occurring in the guise of Buddhist activities. On the other hand, I do not like and also it is injustice in my opinion, to ascribe all the rubbish in the present society either to Mahawamsaor to original popular Buddhist activities.
You raised many questions in your letter on what I said about the popular Buddhist practices introduced by the ancient monks in Sri Lanka in order to implant the Buddhist virtues in the mind of the common people. Almost all your questions finally leads to a main question expressed as follows:  “Pray tell me then, why are there so many Buddhist monks in Sri Lanka today, besides those amongst the laity, with no “moral sense implanted in their minds” despite gazing at these ‘Buddhist symbols’, for so long?”
To this question what I have to say is already said by the Buddha himself to a question raised by a Brahamin called GanakaMoggallan. The question was “What is the cause, good Gotama, what the reason that; since nibbana does exist, since the way leading to nibbana exists, since the good Gotama exists as adviser, some of the good Gotama’s disciples on being exhorted thus and instructed thus by the good Gotama, attain the unchanging goal — nibbana, but some do not attain it?”       Read More

Social protection over domestic stability: lesson from China

 
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Chinese President Xi Jinping and his wife Peng Liyuan wave upon their arrival in California, the United States, June 6, 2013.(File photo)


It is most appropriate and timely that China should broach these issues which are central to a country’s development. As is known, China chose not to follow Soviet style development to the letter. On the contrary, China was the first country in the communist world to attempt an amalgam of the socialist path to development and a degree of market economics. The results are plain to see. China is experiencing phenomenal material progress and is a foremost global military power, but it is open to question whether she has ushered social peace, in the best sense of the phrase.

Domestic stability and the preservation of a country’s law and order are very important, but so is social protection or the safeguarding of a citizenry’s right to justice and equity. China’s President Xi Jinping is emphatic about this and the developing world in particular would do well to be receptive to this vital policy position. ‘People’s demands for their lawful interests must be properly handled, policies with a crucial impact on protecting people’s interests must be improved, the position of the law in solving conflicts should be strengthened, Xi was quoted as telling a forum of the Chinese Communist Party’s Political and Legal Affairs Commission recently.Those quarters worldwide which are impressed by China’s growth performance - and this aspect of China’s advancement does need to be admired - should focus on this valuable piece of advice from the Chinese Head of State. Social protection needs to go hand- in-hand with internal stability.


As the experience of most developed countries testifies, social protection and domestic law and order are not mutually-exclusive. In those countries where Social Democracy has triumphed to a degree, social development exists comfortably alongside internal stability. In these cases there is no trade-off between the two. Some Scandinavian countries are a case in point.


One is compelled to recollect, in this context, that threadbare figure of speech, ‘the peace of the graveyard’. Domestic stability could be achieved ‘through the barrel of a gun’ and this is the case in many developing countries which have opted for authoritarian governance, with a corresponding dismantling of democracy.


To be sure, they have stability and social ‘peace’ on account of their formidable armies and security agencies but it is an open question whether the rights of the people are respected and guaranteed by the state. This uneasy domestic calm is referred to as ‘the peace of the graveyard’. That is, stability without public contentment; which latter could come mainly through an enjoyment of their most fundamental rights by the people.


It is most appropriate and timely that China should broach these issues which are central to a country’s development. As is known, China chose not to follow Soviet style development to the letter. On the contrary, China was the first country in the communist world to attempt an amalgam of the socialist path to development and a degree of market economics. The results are plain to see. China is experiencing phenomenal material progress and is a foremost global military power, but it is open to question whether she has ushered social peace, in the best sense of the phrase.


The matter which could cause some unease among China’s admirers is that she has given rise to an embarrassingly high number of billionaires and business tycoons – things that do not blend well with socialism and equitable growth. Besides, public sector corruption in particular seems to be inordinate. So, the Chinese development model has some serious flaws which need to be set right.


It is for these reasons that the Chinese President’s policy prescriptions need to be welcomed. He is not shying away from the bald realities of Chinese society. There has been lop-sided development to some extent and this must be rectified. Growth and the generation of wealth must be even and the pressing material needs of the people must be met on an equitable basis. This is the answer to crime and corruption, for instance.


The Chinese authorities could have overlooked or glossed over these developmental bottlenecks. After all, they possess the military means and the required law and order machinery to maintain the ‘peace’ at home. But the use of force to keep the ‘peace’ would only aggravate the frustrations of dissatisfied sections and compel them to fight back. This is a lesson of history China’s rulers know only too well. Therefore, getting back to one’s social-democratic roots, to the extent possible, would be best.


Yes, the way to manage the issues of development is Social Democracy and not communism. The latter course implies a degree of totalitarianism and this would be the anti-thesis of Social Democracy which combines growth and equity, while ensuring the people their basic rights and freedoms.


Accordingly, China’s development debate would need to be followed closely by us in South Asia. If we think security should take precedence over social development, we are very mistaken. The bolstering of a country’s security forces and law-enforcers at the cost of social contentment could prove quite counter-productive because we would be left with fascist states whose only skill would be the oppression of the people.


Rather than see ourselves, in Sri Lanka, as a ‘five star’ democracy, we need to see ourselves as a fatally- flawed democracy. Sri Lanka is a democratic experiment which is coming undone. For Sri Lanka now, it is national security or ‘stability’ which is taking precedence over democratic development. Inviting foreign capital into this country for merely perceived wealth-generation would help enrich a few but the majority of the people are going to experience severe deprivation and this situation is a sound recipe for social unrest.


India is by far the most advanced and dynamic of South Asia’s democracies but she too would need to pay increasing attention to the need for greater social welfare. Today, the ‘Maoist’ threat is India’s number one security issue and this insurrection has its roots in rural poverty. Here too, equitable growth is the answer.


It is hoped that democracy would perpetuate itself in Pakistan, following the successful completion of a term in office by a democratic administration for the first time in that country’s post-independence history. Democracies usually do not wage wars against each other and one could only hope for increasing democratic stability in Pakistan. But like India, Pakistan too is showing a positive inclination for accountable governance and this too is gratifying to democratic opinion in this region.


One of the worst blunders we in South Asia could make is to bask in the illusion that wealth-generation and security alone could answer our needs. As in the case of China, we need to rest our hopes in growth with equity.
Prisoners killed by prisoners 


By Niranjala Ariyawansha-  January 16, 2014 


The three-member committee, appointed to probe the death of 27 inmates during the 9 November 2012 Welikada Prison riots, has concluded that the prisoners had died by shooting at each other.


The Committee Report further justified the summoning of the Special Task Force (STF) and the Army to control the tense situation that had erupted in the prison.


When contacted, Minister of Prisons and Prison Reforms, Chandrasiri Gajadeera, said he had studied the report and it clarified the fact that the prisoners had weapons and they had shot each other.
He also said the report was handed over to the Secretary of the Ministry, P.W. Witanage, the Commissioner of Prisons, Chandraratne Pallegama, and the...


Assistant Commissioner of Prisons, so that they could study the same, and make recommendations to him.
When contacted, Withanage said, although he had read the report of the three-member committee, he was not authorized to disclose its contents.
"If the Minister gives his approval we can release the report by next week," he said.


Three-member committee report consisting of 565 pages, was prepared by retired High Court Judge, Bandula Atapattu, retired Deputy Inspector General (DIG), Gunasena Thenabadu and Legal Officer of Prison Reforms, Lalith Andrahennadi.


According to a prison source, based on the information provided by the injured prisoners, the report had stated that the lack of knowledge in using weapons as well as private vendettas had led to the deaths of the prisoners.


Meanwhile, the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), yesterday urged the government to release the report of the three member committee. JVP Propaganda Secretary, Vijitha Herath, told Ceylon Today, the Minister of Prisons and Prison Reforms, Chandrasiri Gajadeera has a responsibility to reveal the contents of the report, which states that the prisoners shot each other. "On 9 November 2012, 27 citizens of the country were killed in the Welikada Prison. The public has a right to know as to how these prisoners were killed. It is over a year since the incident took place, and the report of the Committee had been handed over to the ministry one month ago. Why is the report not released as yet? The answer is that nobody will believe its contents," he said.

Nothing Newsworthy


By Pubudu Laksiri -January 16, 2014
Colombo TelegraphAs satellite television is now common in Sri Lankan households many of us enjoy the privilege of watching many international channels on news, sports, movies etc. I wish to make some interesting observations I noted in watching some of the Indian news channels and the stories carried by them; and despite how funny it may sound I feel that a comparison needs to be made with news reported in local media. The comparison shows to us different cultures of media reporting and also reflects different demands of society.
keheliya-and-mahindaAs televisions in Sri Lankan households are dominated by family from early evening thanks to the mega television culture, I always eagerly await that half hour of Sri Lankan news as it gives me a reason to join the family household. The expectation of watching news for me as well as any reasonable minded citizen would be to update themselves on the latest stories that affect their lives and the public large. But to my greatest frustration the leading stories reported by the news presenter features the ‘discovery of the mysterious white tortoise’ followed by the sensational story of how a female anaconda has eaten up the male anaconda in the national zoo. I watch these amusing stories jaw dropped at their irrelevance to the public and wondering to myself thinking of one good reason for these reports to be made the headlines of the day. Quite unsuccessful in that task I decide to move on and focus on the other story making news; and again I’m quite disturbed with the five minute long story on the latest ‘Reality Show’ produced by that news channel. And now… Oh for god sake !!! that hippie looking mohawk styled  gigolo is interviewed in the news studio for another five minutes. Unable to bear his interview any more I start cursing the channel, only to be silenced by my mom. And without even knowing it, news is over and the commercial break is followed by the usual soap opera at 8. 30 pm; and surprisingly its first five minutes of cliche drama and not to mention its stupidity makes me wonder how little difference it is from the previous hour and half of news I just watched.Read More

Sri Lanka on US Human Trafficking Watch List Human Development achievements noted by UN notwithstanding


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By Lynn Ockersz-


The US State Department’s Trafficking in Persons Report for 2013 has placed Sri Lanka in what is described as its Tier 2 Watch List. Tier 2 countries comprise those ‘countries whose governments do not fully comply with the US Trafficking Victims Protection Act’s (TVPA) minimum standards, but are making significant efforts to bring themselves into compliance with those standards.’


The US State Department’s Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons, which compiles the relevant report, describes Tier 2 Watch List countries as embodying the above features AND (emphasis in original information bulletin) the following :


(a) The absolute number of victims of severe forms of trafficking is very significant or is significantly increasing


(b) There is a failure to provide evidence of increasing efforts to combat severe forms of trafficking in persons from the previous year; or


(c) The determination that a country is making significant efforts to bring itself into compliance with minimum standards was based on commitments by the country to take additional steps over the next year.


The TVPA defines a Human Trafficking victim ‘as a person induced to perform labour or a commercial sex act through force, fraud or coercion. Any person under age 18 who performs a commercial sex act is considered a victim of Human Trafficking, regardless of whether force, fraud or coercion was present.’


Tier 1 countries are those whose governments fully comply with the TVPA’s minimum standards, while Tier 3 countries are those whose governments do not fully comply with the minimum standards and are not making significant efforts to do so.


Interestingly, the placing of Sri Lanka on the above Watch List coincides with the UNDP, in its Human Development Report 2013, placing Sri Lanka among what are described as High Human Development Countries. This country’s Human Development Index is currently 0.715. Offences such as Human Trafficking are generally not seen as conspicuous in countries noted for achievements in the area of Human Development.


The Principal Deputy Director of the US State Department’s Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons Nan Kennelly who was in this country last week for talks on matters relating to Human Trafficking with state officials and others, at a meeting with the press pointed out that Human Trafficking needed to be differentiated from Human Smuggling. They are not synonymous with each other.


Accordingly, Human Trafficking is defined as: ‘Sex trafficking in which a commercial sex act is induced by force, fraud or coercion, or in which the person induced to perform such act has not attained 18 years of age; or the recruitment, harbouring, transportation, provision or obtaining of a person for labour or services through the use of force, fraud or coercion for the purpose of subjection to involuntary servitude, peonage, debt bondage or slavery.


Human Smuggling is defined as the importation of people into the United States involving deliberate evasion of immigration laws. This offense includes bringing illegal aliens into the US as well as the unlawful transportation and harbouring of aliens already in the US.


Kennelly pointed out, however, that Human Trafficking is prevalent in almost every country, including the US.


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Jailing of an Alabama blogger: It’s worse than we thought

A New York Times report on the imprisonment of a journalist may have underplayed how chilling the case is

Jailing of an Alabama blogger: It's worse than we thoughtRoger Shuler(Credit: Shelby County Jail)
Salon.comOn Monday I highlighted the case of Roger Shuler, an Alabama blogger currently under indefinite detention in a state prison after refusing to remove items from his blog in adherence to an injunction ruling. His detention is a striking abrogation of First Amendment protections.
Shuler’s is the only name listed from the Western Hemisphere in the Committee to Protect Journalists’ list of imprisoned news workers around the world. While the presence of a U.S. blogger in a U.S. prison because of his work is troubling enough from a constitutional standpoint, there is even more to Shuler’s story than was first suggested in early reports. A New York Times report on Shuler may have underplayed some chilling factors relating to the blogger’s situation.
The Times story gave the strong impression that Shuler has regularly engaged in salacious and defamatory writing about Alabama lawmakers and policymakers. Carol Shuler, Roger’s wife, spoke to Salon and claimed this was an erroneous characterization. She noted that her husband had never been sued for defamation, until two suits were filed against him at the same time.
“This is our first defamation case since starting the blog in June 2007,” Carol Shuler told Salon, noting that one other defamation suit was filed at exactly the same time as the suit by Robert Riley Jr. (son of the former governor), which landed Shuler in jail. “They both hit at the same time and we think they are linked in effort to shut us down by the power brokers in this state. But other than that we have never been sued for defamation,” Shuler stated.
Shuler has a reputation for exposing corruption and hypocrisy within the Alabama state house and Legislature. It is certainly fair to say that his journalism has earned him some powerful enemies. With this in mind, it’s worth scrutinizing not only the blogger’s imprisonment, but the rulings that led up to it — a number of which have struck legal experts as overreaching.


For example, the judge issued a preliminary injunction against Shuler — a prior restraint order demanding that he write no more stories about the allegedly defamed parties. Prior restraint orders are rare and occupy a strange space with regard to constitutional law: They are a de facto muzzle; the burden of proof for issuing prior restraint must be high. It is not clear that the defamation claims against Shuler merited such a far-reaching preliminary injunction in the first place. Even before Shuler was jailed for contempt (for refusing to remove blog posts about Riley as ordered), the judge’s rulings may have crossed the line into First Amendment violations. That Shuler was then jailed for acting in contempt of the court’s contentious decision is thus beyond troubling.
Carol Shuler also strongly denied the Times’ suggestion that her husband was not helping himself out of prison by refusing legal counsel. “The Times article was entirely in error in suggesting that we are not seeking a lawyer,” she noted, adding, “My husband and I both told the [Times] reporter repeatedly that we were in fact very much wanting a lawyer and were in fact looking for one, however, we did not have the resources to pay an attorney. We hope to find a good First Amendment or constitutional law attorney who could represent us pro bono or by contingency.”
Thus while the Times stressed that Shuler’s imprisonment raised perturbing First Amendment questions, the characterization of the blogger as a gossip-monger with himself somewhat to blame for his predicament does disservice to the gravity of Shuler’s situation, while ignoring the possibility that Alabama power brokers may have had some hand in his severe punishment.
I will continue to keep close watch on this story as it develops and while Shuler remains indefinitely detained in an Alabama prison for exercising his purportedly protected right to free speech.
Natasha Lennard
Natasha Lennard is an assistant news editor at Salon, covering non-electoral politics, general news and rabble-rousing. Follow her on Twitter @natashalennard, email nlennard@salon.com.

UN reports on rights abuses in Central African Republic

French and African peacekeepers are manning checkpoints across Bangui
Soldiers from the African Union peacekeeping mission in Bangui
BBCA UN investigation into the conflict in the Central African Republic has found widespread sectarian killings of civilians and sexual violence.

Map showing the location of the Central African Republic and the countries that border itIn December, Christian militiamen killed many Muslims, which led to reprisal attacks by Muslim fighters, the UN report says.
UN human rights chief Navi Pillay said the situation was "extremely volatile".
She warned massive violations could re-occur without further significant international invention.
More than 1,000 people have died in sectarian violence, which erupted when Seleka rebels seized power in March last year and Michel Djotodia became the country's first Muslim leader.
Although he disbanded his Seleka, they continued to attack Christian civilians around the country, prompting the formation of vigilante groups, which targeted Muslims.
Mr Djotodia stepped down last Friday under intense pressure from CAR's neighbours.
Sporadic violence has continued, despite the presence of 1,600 French troops and 4,000 African Union peacekeepers.
A meeting of the transitional national council got under way on Tuesday, and is expected to choose a new interim president by the end of the week.
Mutilation and executions
The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) deployed a four-man team to CAR from 12 to 24 December 2013.
The investigators carried out more than 180 interviews with victims and witnesses to the violence. The report reveals a conflict that is increasingly sectarian in nature.
In early December, Christian anti-Balaka forces attacked Muslim ex-Seleka groups, killing many, while also targeting Muslim women and children.
In the reprisal attacks which followed, ex-Seleka forces killed civilian men and boys, including injured patients in hospitals.
In Christian sections of the capital Bangui, armed groups entered homes, and separated the men from the women, before executing them, the report says.
The investigators also documented several attacks on places of worship, in which anti-Balaka forces burned mosques, killing and mutilating those inside.
It is the first report on evidence collected by the UN, which is setting up a formal Commission of Inquiry to investigate human rights abuses, in a first step towards possible prosecutions.
It comes ahead of an emergency session of the UN Human Rights Council next Monday to discuss ongoing rights abuses in the country.
Hundreds of thousands of the capital's residents are said to have fled their homes.
Some 2.6 million people are in need of humanitarian assistance, the UN World Food Programme said on Tuesday.
Correspondents in Bangui say police have returned to the streets, and French and African peacekeepers are manning checkpoints all over the city.
Bangui is full of weapons and that remains a major issue, they say.
CAR has huge deposits of gold, diamonds and other minerals but has seen a succession of coups and rebellions since independence from France in 1960, leaving most of its people living in poverty.

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

வடக்கு ஆயர்கள் பயங்கரவாதிகள்; பிரதியமைச்சர் குற்றச்சாட்டு 


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logonbanner-112 ஜனவரி 2014, ஞாயிறு
வடக்கு ஆயர்கள் பயங்கரவாதிகள் எனச் சாடியுள்ள தொழில் மற்றும் தொழிலாளர்கள் உறவுகள் பிரதியமைச்சர் றியர் அட்மிரல் சரத் பி.வீரசேகர, ஆயர்கள் மீது சட்ட நடவடிக்கை எடுக்க வேண்டும் என்றும் கோரிக்கை விடுத்துள்ளார்.
போர்க்குற்றங்கள் தொடர்பான சர்வதேச விசாரணை நடத்த வேண்டும் என்று போர்க்குற்ற விவகாரங்களைக் கையாளும் அமெரிக்கத் தூதுவர் ஸ்ரீபன் ராப்பிடம், யாழ்.ஆயர் தோமஸ் செளந்தரநாயகம் ஆண்டகை, மன்னார் ஆயர் இராயப்பு யோசப் ஆண்டகை ஆகியோர் தெரிவித்திருந்தனர்.
இது குறித்துக் கருத்து வெளியிட்டுள்ள, கடற்படையின் முன்னாள் அதிகாரிகளில் ஒருவரும், தற்போது பிரதியமைச்சருமான றியர் அட்மிரல் சரத் பி.வீரசேகர, 'பயங்கரவாதிகள் என்றால் நாட்டுக்கு எதிரானவர்கள் என்பதே அர்த்தம். அதற்கு வேறு எந்த அர்த்தமும் கிடையாது என்று கூறியுள்ளார்.
இது குறித்து அவர் மேலும் தெரிவித்ததாவது:
பயங்கரவாதம் என்பதற்கு நடுவில் எவரும் வேறு எந்த அர்த்தமும் கூற முடியாது. எமது படையினர் மனிதாபிமானப் போரையே நடத்தினர். எமது கடற்படையினர் பலரைக் கொன்ற, கடற்புலிகளின் தளபதி சூசையின் மனைவி பிள்ளைகளையும் இறுதிப் போரில் கைது செய்தனர். 
இது யாருக்கும் தெரியாது. அவர்களை எதுவும் செய்திருக்கலாம். ஆனால் எமது படையினர் அவர்களைப் பாதுகாத்தனர். இன்று அவர்கள் மகிழ்ச் சியாக உயிர் வாழ்கின்றனர்.
அது போன்றே, இறுதிக்கட்டப் போரின் போது விடுதலைப் புலிகளின் தலைவர் பிரபாகரன் 250 பொதுமக்களைப் பணயக் கைதியாக வைத்துக் கொண்டு சுற்றிவர கண்ணி வெடிகளைப் புதைத்து இராணுவத்தினர் மீது தாக்குதல் நடத்தினார். 
எமது படையினர் நினைத்திருந்தால் பீரங் கித் தாக்குதல்களை நடத்தியிருக்கலாம். ஆனால் அதைச் செய்யவில்லை. மாறாக கண்ணி வெடிகளுக்கு மேலாக நடந்து சென்று பிரபாகரனைக் கொன்று மக்களை பாதுகாத்தனர். இதனால் எமது படையினர் 300 பேர் கால்களை இழந்தனர். 
கூட்டமைப்பு எங்கே?
விடுதலைப் புலிகள் பொது மக்களையும் புத்திஜீவிகளையும் கொன்ற போதும், சிறுவர்களைப் படைக்குச் சேர்த்த போதும் இந்த ஆயர்களும், தமிழ்த் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பினரும் எங்கே இருந்தனர். போர் முடிந்த பின்னர் புலிகள் புதைத்து வைத்த 5 இலட்சத்துக்கும் அதிகமான கண்ணிவெடிகளை எமது படையி னரே உயிரைப் பணயம் வைத்து அகற்றினர்.
மக்களுக்கு 3 ஆயிரத்துக்கு மேற்பட்ட வீடுகளை நிர்மாணித்துத் கொடுத்தனர். அடிப் படை வசதிகளை ஏற்படுத்தினர். இதன் போது தமிழ்த் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பினரோ ஆயர்களோ ஏதாவது உதவிகளைச் செய்தார்களா? ஒன்றும் செய்யவில்லை. 
அவ்வாறானவர்கள் இன்று அமெரிக்காவின் பிரிவினை வாதத்துக்குத் துணை போகின்றனர். பயங்கரவாதத்தை உருவாக்க முனைகின்றனர். இவர்கள் தமிழ் மக்களின் நிம்மதியான வாழ்வுக்காகச் செயற்படவில்லை. மாறாக அதற்கு எதிரானவர்களாகவே செயற்படுகின்றனர் - என்றார்.
- See more at: http://onlineuthayan.com/News_More.php?id=844162569912777660#sthash.PHA2AiCS.dpuf
Deputy Minister accuses bishops in North of being terrorists

13 January 2014
Sri Lanka's deputy minister for workers relations, and former Sri Lankan Navy official, Rear Admiral Sarath Veerasekar, accused bishops in the North of being terrorists, reports
Uthayan

Pointing to Bishop of Jaffna and the Bishop of Mannar meeting with the US ambassador at large for war crimes, Stephen Rapp earlier this month, Deputy Minister Veerasekar, said that there was only one definition of terrorist. 

Terrorists means everyone against the country, there's no other meaning to it," he explained. 

Colonization Schemes: What Did The B-C Pact Say?


R SampanthanJan-14-2014
These are lands on which these people have lived for generations and centuries.
(COLOMBO) - I am happy to follow the Minister, the Hon. Janaka Bandara Tennakoon, who, I think, in the course of his statement referred to the multifarious problems that exist in the North and the East pertaining to State land. I will be dealing with some of these issues in the course of my speech.
Lands, Sir, is a fundamental issue. It has enormous influence on vital aspects of human activity and it is crucial, particularly from the point of view of the affected people, like persons displaced during the war and so on. There are private lands. Large extents of private lands are to be acquired by the Government in both the North and the East. The owners are opposed to such acquisition. 
13 January 2014
British MPs and local councillors of the London constituency Ilford North met with members of the Tamil community today to discuss the issue of seeking ‘Justice for the Tamil people in Sri Lanka.'
Left to Right: Jim Murphy, Wes Streeting & Mike Gapes                                                     (Photo:John Howard)

Labour’s candidate for Ilford North, Wes Streeting chaired the event with local councillor T Jeyaranjan, the Shadow Secretary for International Development , Jim Murphy and Ilford South MP, Mike Gapes joining his panel.

Opening the event, Mike Gapes outlined that the continued subjugation of Tamils by the Sinhala majority had been the main cause of the ethnic conflict which ended with the brutal atrocities committed against Tamil civilians. Gapes went on to stress that recent documentaries and credible reports proved that an international investigation into war crimes was required as the Sri Lankan government did not have the capacity to perform their own. Arguing that calls for an international investigation should be immediate Gapes said,

“Sri Lanka do not deserve to be given yet more time to perform an independent inquiry by March.” 
Jim Murphy went on to reiterate that it was Labour’s responsibility to ensure that David Cameron delivered on his promises to the Tamil people of the North-East, of pushing for an International Investigation into war crimes at the United Nations Human Rights Council.

Streeting outlined the need to continue providing facts and figures about the situation Tamils faced in the North-East to the British government. Highlighting that there were extensive Sri Lanka propaganda efforts to lobby British MPs, he condemned MP’s that had spoken in favour of Sri Lanka after accepting all expenses paid trips and tours of the island.

Responding to questions on what the Labour party would do to stop the on-going land appropriation of Tamil land, rewriting of Tamil history and militarisation of the North-East, Gapes assured that these issues would be pushed strongly by the Foreign Affairs Select Committee.

Murphy expressed extreme concern over the fact that “Tamils were being taught history written by the Victors” and assured to raise the issues of appropriation of Tamil land at the next parliamentary discussion on Sri Lanka.

The event concluded with all three labour panel members reiterating that they took their responsibility of speaking out for the oppressed Tamils very seriously and ensuring that the current government did not falter on pushing for an international investigation into war crimes and crimes against humanity.

See @TamilGuardian Twitter page for live tweets from the event.
 

US Citizenship And Rajapaksas


By Jagath Asoka -January 14, 2014
Dr. Jagath Asoka
Dr. Jagath Asoka
Colombo TelegraphIf the US embassy in Sri Lanka is going to make a radio announcement tomorrow morning, saying “Apply for Citizenships; first come, first serve; only ten citizenships are available.” Guess what would happen?Gotabaya will find out tonight, and Rajapaksas will start assassinating each other to make the line tomorrow morning at the US embassy. All the cabinet members will be dead before dawn! No revolution needed! All problems are solved. This is not a joke; it will happen; just wait and see!
Before I write this article, I need to thank the commenter called “Bruz.” Bruz,thank you my friend; you are the only one who got it; I just woke up after a nap and read your comment on my previous article; Humor and wisdom are as rare as Kalunika these days, especially among Sri Lankans; I doubt that you live in Sri Lanka, both from your elegant writing style and cohesive presentations of your thoughts and arguments. Please contribute to this website—Colombo Telegraph—and tell us more about you, especially who you are. I genuflect to your wisdom as well as humor. Please see my last paragraph for more on this subject. Bruz, please give us the wonderful privilege of knowing you and entertain us with your humor because I cannot do this alone anymore; I need more help. To use a euphemism in a humorous way: Bruz, please come out of the closet. Professional journalists have inflated egos; an amateur like myself has an ego, too, but just a tiny one, like a tiny ant. 
I recommend “And Company,” a very popular Sri Lankan TV show. If you get a chance, watch it, because it is hilarious. These actors and actresses are brilliant; of course, the accolades also go to the producers and directors as well. The day “And Company” shows “Chinthaka Sabapathy (Mahinda Rajapaksa)” and makes fun of him, it would be the first clue that would demonstrate that Sri Lanka has gained its press and media freedom. So, watch it! In “And Company,” they do not even make any allusions to Gotabaya; I can come up with a plethora of names for Gotabaya. If you are interested please let me know; I will even write the script for this role. The epithet “Vitra” would not be a bad one. “And Company,” please give Mr. Ranil Wickremesinghe a break; I do not agree with him, but he is somewhat decent, compared to the other clowns. The actor who plays Ranil’s role is excellent, like the rest in that show. It is time to focus on Mahinda and Gotabaya. Come on, are you guys afraid of these charlatans? Some Sri Lanka Teledramas have figured out how to make fun of Mahinda by using people who are pretending to be lunatics; finally, they have figured out how to make fun of these megalomaniacs. It is very clever. Watch the TV drama Suravimana, the last 3 or 4 episodes: Mr. Walisundera, pretending to be a lunatic, making fun of Mahinda, a brilliant move. We need another character called Gotasundera or Podisundara.                                                                      Read More 

Four steps to secure lasting peace in Sri Lanka

By Maha Hosain Aziz, Special to CNN
CNN WorldEditor’s note: Maha Hosain Aziz is a professor of politics (adjunct) in the MA program of NYU’s Politics Department, a senior analyst at geopolitical consultancy Wikistrat and advisory board chairwoman of Afghanistan’s first university e-mentoring program (New Silk Road Generation). The views expressed are her own.
“While building the nation, we have set aside all differences and divisions.  As a result there is today a new political and development culture before the country,” Sri Lanka’s media reported President Mahinda Rajapaksa as saying in his New Year’s message. “Further consolidating this, we must forge ahead in the New Year. Having won freedom and peace for the people, we are committed to give them progress and happiness, too.”
The question many Tamils are no doubt left wondering, four years after the country’s brutal civil war ended, is whether this commitment includes their own happiness. And right now, many appear to have their doubts.
survey released in November by the Center for Policy Alternatives suggested that more than a quarter of those hailing from the country’s Tamil minority say the government has done “nothing” to address the root causes of the conflict, while half feel a little has been done, but “not enough.”
Yet the opportunity for Rajapaksa to fulfill his New Year’s pledge is there, if only he has the political courage to seize it. Indeed, by taking a four step, holistic approach that tackles the political, economic, social and psychological challenges of reuniting his country, President Rajapaksa will be able to regain the initiative and right the drift in what U.N. Human Rights Commissioner Navi Pillay has described as an “increasingly authoritarian” direction.
There are four steps Rajapaksa should look to implement as soon as possible:
Give the Tamil minority a legitimate role in politics. It’s no secret that politics is a Sinhalese-dominated and family business in Sri Lanka. Nothing can be done about that in the near-term. But the country can still work toward more inclusive politics now – in fact it’s already happening.
The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) won 30 out of 38 seats in the northern provincial council elections in September with a 68 percent voter turnout. This was a huge step forward to give the Tamil minority a legitimate political stake and a boon for the country’s ongoing democratic development.
But the perception of having power is simply not sufficient in a post-war Sri Lanka. A November 13 report from the International Crisis Group highlights the “reluctance” of the government to devolve power to the TNA. There were also reports of some citizens being intimidated by the military and certain party officials during the voting process (although officials denied this). Threats against journalists, activists and government critics do not help matters. Something has to change for lasting peace.
Give the Tamil minority a significant stake in the country’s post-war economic boom. Yes, the economy has been booming – an average GDP growth rate of 7.5 percent since 2010 is nothing to be sniffed at. But tackling ethnic inequality – real or perceived – should be the top priority.
Are all Tamil minority as a whole feeling the benefits of the island’s post-war economic boom? It’s not an easy question to answer. But we know the former conflict areas in the north have enjoyed over $3 billion in infrastructure investment and an average nominal annual growth of 20 percent since 2010.
Unfortunately, this hasn’t always led to job creation. One estimate suggests unemployment is as high as 30 percent in the region compared with the national rate of about 4 percent. In two northern districts still recovering from the war, almost seven in ten households are described as “food insecure.”
The CPA survey meanwhile, suggested more than 50 percent of Sri Lankans feel the economic situation is “somewhat bad” or “very bad.” These figures will hurt any chances of lasting peace – or at least serve to undermine the legitimacy of the Rajapaksa government.
Push to end the ethnic and sectarian violence that keeps bubbling up. Yes, the war is over. The Tamil Tiger rebels surrendered and many have been rehabilitated (even if many still feel lost in the shuffle). But there are still reports of Sinhalese-orchestrated violence against the Tamil minority (a little over 10 percent of the population). In April, the offices of the Tamil-language daily Uthayan were attacked in both Jaffna and Kilinochchi, according to global media watchdog Reporters Without Borders. And Tamil women continue to face sexual harassment and violence at the hands of the military in the north.
Meanwhile, there is also an extremist contingent of Buddhist monks who have been attacking the Muslim minority. Attacks have occurred at a number of sites, from a law college with Muslim teachers, to a slaughterhouse and a mosque. The Christian minority (about 7 percent of the population) has not been spared either – in Septembera mob led by Buddhist monks attacked a Christian church. There have been 45 anti-Christian incidents this year.
This violence is obviously not comparable to wartime levels, but the government should still do what it can to nip it in the bud to reduce the potential for greater social instability.
Publicize policies that can specifically benefit the Tamil minority. There have so far only been limited attempts to develop the Tamil-dominated north, both politically and economically, since the civil war ended. With this in mind, the government should make clear how the Tamil minority can benefit from the country’s democratic and economic development. A public communication strategy specifically directed at the minority could help ease existing concerns over ethnic discrimination that may no longer be rooted in today’s realities, at least not to the same extent.
It’s a deceptively simple strategy that would only help with the psychological component of post-conflict reconciliation.
Speaking in November, President Rajapaksa outlined his dual goals of attracting $2 billion in foreign direct as well as making the island nation a middle income nation by 2016. If such lofty economic goals are to become a reality, Sri Lanka will need all of its people on board.