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, February 16, 2014

Jeevan’s secretary threatened journalist

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mirrorappad-eng 
Friday, 14 February 2014 
The person who had issued death threats over the phone to ‘Randiva’ sports editor and political columnist K.A.C.S.K. Irugalbandara (Chaminda Samankumara) has been revealed.
The culprit is Mahinda Senarath Bandara, a secretary of minister Jeevan Kumaratunga.
He had threatened the journalist after he had exposed, through an interview he had conducted with former sprinter Susanthika Jayasinghe, an attempt by minister Dilan Perera to become the National Olympic Committee chairman.
An officer of Mirihana Police yesterday (13) interrogated the newspaper journalist and obtained a statement, and asked him whether he wanted to get the matter settled.
Soon after the policeman left, Chaminda Samankumara had received a call from the same number from which he received the death threats.
The caller had told the journalist that the IGP had asked him what trouble he had got into.

Mel Gunasekera, colleague and friend


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Mel Gunasekera. (AFP Photo/Ishara Kodikara)

By Amal Jayasinghe-

When a caller asked me if something terrible had happened to my friend Mel, my response was "No, it can’t be." If it had, she would have told me. But within minutes, I had the most devastating news in my 32 years as a reporter.

Gazette notification of Private universities license yet to be withdrawn

graduate
 Sunday, 16 February 2014
The controversial Extraordinary Gazette notification that unions claim gives private universities license to operate without obtaining verification from professional bodies, is yet to be withdrawn by the Government despite President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s order to do so last week. 
The Government Medical Officers’ Association (GMOA) yesterday charged that the Higher Education Ministry was engaged in delaying tactics in withdrawing the Gazette, which has now been sent back to the Legal Draftsman’s Department.
The GMOA had earlier stated the amendment introduced to the Universities Act through this Gazette, implies that registration with the Sri Lanka Medical Council (SLMC) was not compulsory for medical degrees offered by private universities.
GMOA Spokesman Dr. Naveen de Zoysa questioned as to why the Government had not issued a Gazette notification withdrawing the earlier Extraordinary Gazette notification, issued on January 31, 2014, despite the order issued after the President’s meeting with SLMC Head, Professor Carlo Fonseka.
He alleged that by seemingly ignoring the President’s order, officials at the Higher Education Ministry had launched a ‘strategic coup’ against the Government’s own objective of making Sri Lanka an ‘education hub’.
The issuing of the gazette notification was a reflection of the Government’s policy of removing obstacles that stand in the way of private degree awarding institutions, according to Federation of University Teachers’ Associations (FUTA) Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri.
Dr. Dewasiri opined the decision to withdraw the gazette was taken due to the sensitive nature of the issue, with the Government preferring not to antagonize the electorate at the upcoming Western and Southern Provincial Council elections.
The earlier requirement was for all degree awarding Non-State Institutes to obtain compliance certificates from their relevant specified professional bodies, and submit those certificates to the ‘Specified Authority,’ who is the Secretary to the Ministry of Higher Education. However, this requirement has now been made optional with the words ‘shall obtain’ being replaced by the words, ‘may seek’.
President of the Institution of Engineers, Shavindranath Fernando said they would not allow such regulations to jeopardize the standards they maintain, noting that the professional body would not grant compliance certificates to any institution that does not meet its minimum criteria.
While the amendment does not affect them directly, Fernando opined that it would be very detrimental to the country in the long run.
“You could have institutes mushrooming throughout the country, with parents and students becoming confused as to the standards that need to be met,” he pointed out.
Stressing that the Institution of Engineers cannot encourage this situation, Fernando said they would wait on the assurance given by the Government that the gazette will be withdrawn.
When contacted, Higher Education Ministry Secretary Dr. Sunil Jayantha Nawaratne, who had come under intense criticism for issuing the said gazette notification, dismissed allegations that the Government was engaged in delaying tactics.
“We have sent the gazette back to the Legal Draftsman’s Department. It is currently with the department and they have to send it to us,” he explained.
Dr. Nawaratne claimed certain sections had attempted to create a false impression among the public, and said the Medical Ordinance clearly states that any private institution that confers medical degrees should seek registration with the SLMC.
When asked why there was a delay in withdrawing the gazette notification, Dr. Nawaratne said it was because the Legal Draftsman’s Department needed time to study the gazette.
“These things cannot be done overnight,” he said.
Heading - LNW


By Charles Sarvan -February 16, 2014 
Prof. Charles Sarvan
Prof. Charles Sarvan
Colombo TelegraphSinhalese, a friend for over sixty years, recently suggested that I was a racist. I found that particularly ironic because in 1958 I went to his village with my notes to help him re-sit the first-year university examination, and was caught up in the anti-Tamil riot of that year. The denial of equality is not abstract theorising to me. Having been a ‘Para Dhemmala in Sri Lanka; a non-white in England in the early 1960s when “colourism” was unashamed, overt and crude; having been an Asian in Africa, and a ‘non-believer’ in a Muslim country, I am for human equality; for equality not in form but in substance, equality not in false protestation but in actual practice; for equality irrespective of ethnicity, skin-colour, sex, religion, language caste or class. All human beings are equal in dignity and rights, affirms Article 1 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It was worded as “universal” and not as “international” rights because, as Stephane Hessel clarifies in his ‘Time for Outrage’ (written when he was ninety-three), that is “how to forestall the argument for full sovereignty that a state likes to make when it is carrying out crimes against humanity on its own soil”. To deny human equality is to be left with, “We are superior”. If you are different and inferior, then you can be treated in an inferior manner, that is, normal ethical standards of conduct do not apply. This is how humanity has rationalised its inhumane and unjust conduct worldwide and throughout the centuries. If to take the essential equality of all human beings as axiomatic and sacred is to be a racist then I am guilty.
If to be for inclusion, rather than for exclusion and subordination; if to be for decency, as Avishai Margalit describes it in his ‘The Decent Society’ (Harvard, 1996), then I am a racist.

Are Our Universities Keeping Out Our Best?

Panel and Council Endorsing Abuse of Power
| by Arul K. Selvaratnam
( February 16, 2014, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) At a time when our universities badly lack qualified staff and are trying to rebuild themzelves, a Selection Committee meeting on Jan. 30 2014 found Prof. S. Ratnajeevan H. Hoole unqualified for the post of Professor of Computer Science on all the measures specified by the UGC’s Circular 916. So says the report of the Selection Committee consisting of Prof. V. Arasaratnam (VC), Prof. S. Srisatkunarajah (Dean/Science), Dr. E.V.A. Charles (Head/CS), Prof. N.D. Kodikara of Colombo and Prof. N.G.J. Dias of Moratuwa (Senate Nominees), Prof. Mrs. Pushpa Wijekoon of Peradeniya and Prof. D.D.S. Kulatunga of Kelaniya (UGC Nominees) and Mr. P. Thyagarajah and Mr. M. Balasubramaniam (Council Nominees). Their minute to the University of Jaffna’s Council on 8 February reads that they do not recommend his appointment because he has not, to quote exactly, “obtained required minimum marks for teaching, scholarship & Academic development and Contribution to University and National/International development.”
This is impossible say Prof. Hoole’s students: “Peradeniya assessed him as passing on the same measures 15 years ago. He has earned many more points since and even more in the last three years since his application. London saw fit to give him its D.Sc. degree. The IEEE made him a Fellow, the first from Sri Lanka. He has taught computer science at major US research universities. He was University of Jaffna’s, Eastern University’s and South Eastern University’s moderator and external examiner in Computer Science. To check I googled “Google Scholar Hoole.” This independent web site tracking research output lists 861 citations for him. At the 0.5 point per citation under Commission Circular 916 on recruitment of professors, this gives him 430.5 points for just one measure in the scheme of recruitment while the total required for all together in a successful application is 115! How can he fail on all measures?
The Council minute shows Prof. Hoole’s self-assessment in the three areas of assessment, namely 1) Teaching scholarship and Academic Development 2)Research, Scholarship and Creative Work and 3) Contribution to University and National Development, to be 50, 261.25 and 44, respectively.
A very upset Jaffna University academic had this to say: “We rely on the Council and the Selection Committee to check there is no wrong-doing by the administration. But here, senior responsible persons from the entire system are endorsing wrong doing and giving it the cover of respectability through their signatures. It then makes administrative manipulation more difficult to challenge. With such a big discrepancy I wish someone on the Council had queried how that was. They have failed us.” He pointed to International Development, not seen anywhere in Circular 916, as an additional requirement the system has required of Prof. Hoole.
According to Prof. Carlo Fonseka (“Returned academic excellence vs entrenched academic mediocrity,” Island, May 12, 2011) the President in 2010 ordered Prof. Hoole’s appointment and his wife’s at Jaffna and the UGC then asked Jaffna to advertise the post. The Hooles applied early in 2011. Mrs. Hoole was summoned to an interview last year and she came all the way from the US. She was not selected allegedly for not having the required points. It is said that they fiddled her categorization between internal candidate and external to disqualify her although she could have fitted under either.
Prof. Hoole himself was summoned at the end of January, three years after his application technically expired under UGC Circular 699 as amended by Circular 732. Is it a coincidence that the closing date for VC applications was Feb. 12? Contacted by email for this piece, Prof. Hoole wrote: “I only want to say that after my wife’s experience I did not want to cancel my classes and run suddenly for the interview. So I asked for a Skype interview. I was then asked to be ready between 10 AM and 2:30 PM which was 11 PM to 4:00 AM in the US. I waited in front of my computer all dressed up and went to bed at 4:30 when there was no call. I understand the committee dispersed in a few minutes and left without a message to me to go to bed. I wish we can cultivate greater courtesy towards people. The system will automatically get better.”
A student , now a senior engineer, was very sad: “I was in Trincomalee when the war and curfews prevented my admission letter from being delivered. I was denied admission because of being late. Prof. Hoole, a total stranger, befriended me, fought for me, took me to his home in Colombo to meet some pressmen and got my story published in the newspapers. The authorities had to change their mind. I am an engineer today because of him. We need academics like him to be our role models.”
Prof. Carlo Fonseka in his article admits to encouraging the Hooles to return and explains, “In a system with many mediocrities those of exceptional quality make the mediocre look ugly! So the mediocrities do their damndest to eliminate the truly exceptional.”

PB plays new game

pbSunday, 16 February 2014 
Payments due to State Banks as loans outstanding by Government Corporations and Statutory Boards are to be settled by the Treasury within the next two weeks, Treasury Secretary Dr. P. B. Jayasundera said. He said a Cabinet Memorandum has been submitted by the Treasury seeking permission to settle outstanding loans plus interest which Government Corporations and Statutory Boards owe to State Banks.

Dr. Jayasundera said the decision was taken with the long term well-being of the country's economy in mind. The Secretary said he was confident that Cabinet approval will be granted soon.
"Due to this action, both state banks, corporations and statutory boards will benefit. The latter will be able to conduct their affairs more vigourously and efficiently sans their debt," he said.
"We are doing it because now the Treasury has the capability do so," he added.
According to Dr. Jayasundera, the Ceylon Electricity Board, Ceylon Petroleum Corporation and many other state institutions are now making good progress while minimising their debt. He said the proposed action will further help boost such progress.
He noted the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation had paid Rs.30 billion which it owed to the People's Bank and the Bank of Ceylon last week and the Treasury intends to pay the outstanding loans of the Paddy Marketing Board, CWE and several other state enterprises.
He said due to these payments the capacity of State Banks will be further enhanced.

What has happened to the Weliweriya inquiry?


The Sundaytimes Sri LankaIn the Weliweriya incident where innocent bystanders died as a result of the army firing into the crowds asking for clean water, a military court of inquiry found that the soldiers had ‘exceeded the scope’ of their duties.
No consequential punishments imposed
This by itself is a remarkably understated conclusion given the level of aggravation which occurred, with soldiers chasing and assaulting journalists who were legitimately reporting on the fracas and abusing men and women of the cloth when panic stricken villagers sought shelter in a nearby church. Even so, what has happened in due course?
Reportedly the factory which had allegedly caused the contamination of ground water is due to be shifted but the military command line of responsibility is left unscathed. The public is not even informed of what consequential punishments have been imposed on the soldiers who ‘exceeded the scope of their duties” let alone their superiors who ordered such drastic action purely to demonstrate their power.
Probably if this same incident had occurred in the North/East and Tamil/Muslim villagers had been affected, the factory would have not got shifted, no inquiry would have been held even for cosmetic purposes. Those who protested would perhaps be languishing under the prevention of terrorism laws in some dark prison.
The ambiguous role of the Rule of Law
The Weliweriya incident encapsulates basic questions about the Rule of Law which unfortunately tends to get downplayed each time the sessions on Sri Lanka at the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) comes round, catapulting the country into what has become a familiar ritual on war crimes and accountability.
In this furore, the Rule of Law comes to occupy a somewhat ambiguous role, being all things to some people and none at all to others. This fundamental lack of unanimity in thinking, in turn, has made effective collective interventions in a way that actually changes government policy, difficult if not impossible. Let us see what some of these differences are.
On the one hand, there appears to be the assumption that talking of the Rule of Law is the ‘easy way out’ which avoids confronting ‘difficult’ questions such as the fate of the thousands of Tamil civilians in 2009. On its own part, (albeit with refreshing exceptions) Tamil political parties are marked in their reluctance to focus on the Rule of Law, preferring instead to talk of the historic grievances of the Tamil people.  The Rule of Law, from this point of view, appears to be looked upon as a problem affecting the majority in Sri Lanka with which the minorities need have little empathy.
Needless to say, these are extremely shortsighted views. They are also counter-productive in their essence for they shut out the majority of the country from concerns that are shared in common with the minorities.
The trajectory of the LLRC report
On the other hand, this government has demonstrably little understanding of what the Rule of Law means, even in its most basic sense. Its knee jerk reaction to the 2011 Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) Report which centered on Rule of Law concerns was first to say that the LLRC had exceeded its mandate. Then when the resolution of the United Nations Human Rights Council asking that the LLRC’s recommendations be implemented in 2012 came about, government spokespersons talked of a road map for implementation as if the implementation of the law needed a roadmap!
In fact, the energy that the LLRC report has generated in focusing on a serious Rule of Law crisis is interesting. For perhaps the first time in years, government propaganda that all those who criticize government actions or policy were traitors began to be perceived as distinctly ridiculous. It was soon realized at least domestically that debunking the LLRC report to rely solely on international pressure to bring about a war crimes inquiry beyond Sri Lanka’s shores was shortsighted and, in the long run, dangerous.
Essentially, where a despotic administration blind to all basic norms of internal governance is concerned, international pressure is well and good, perhaps even necessary. But this pressure must always be applied with care and caution so as to avoid giving domestic lift to a political leadership that is able to skillfully use such pressure.
The key to changing Sri Lanka’s pitiless non-accountability culture is in bringing about incremental and not instant change. To do this, public support needs to be garnered, based not merely on pressure from the outside but pressure from the inside.
The issue is not only about the law
So as Sri Lanka goes before the Council yet again, it is quite clear that hard core reforms recommended by the LLRC are yet to be implemented even though we are assured by one Commissioner of the Human Rights Commission (who seems to have taken on the task of chief spokesperson for the government in blatant defiance of his statutory role) that a Right to Information law and a Witness Protection law is on its way. Yet the issue is manifestly not merely about the law. Instead it is about political will in implementing the law. It should be assumed that this is not something that must be peculiarly said. But the sheer asininity of the defences mounted by government defenders provokes such tart responses.
Sri Lanka is an excellent example, in fact, where even good laws have been thrown to the proverbial dustbin. A salutary example is the 1995 Anti-Torture law which now apparently exists only on the statute books. Where are the prosecutions for grave human rights violations and torture that result in actual convictions? Where is the deterrent effect of the law? What is the government’s policy on prosecuting alleged torture perpetrators?
Called to account by the people
The ominous nature of the ‘security state’ that we are inflicted with is now without question. In fact, the Weliweriya incident is the clearest example of this post-war ‘security state’ which has displaced the Rule of Law.  It is this fundamental transformation that this Government must be called to account, by the people, quite apart from the annual convulsions at the UNHRC.

UNP Wants Gammanpila To Clarify Why He Launched His Campaign With Casino Gota

Colombo TelegraphFebruary 16, 2014 
The main opposition party today challenged the ruling party Colombo District Leader to disclose his stand on Casinos, political culture and political ethics. The United National party also questioned ruling party Colombo District Leader’s self-styled anti- Casino patriotism.
Writing to the UPFA Colombo district leader Udaya Gammanpila, the UNP candidate President’s CounselSrinath Perera said; “We are also interested to know why you – who stated to stand against establishing casinos in the country – chose to launch your campaign with the support of Mr. Gotabhya Rajapaksa, who explicitly favours casinos in Sri Lanka.”
We publish below the letter in full;
Mr Udaya Gammanpila,
District Leader of Colombo for the UPFA.
Dear Mr. Gammanpila,
We have come to know  – through media reports – that you have launched your election campaign under the auspices of Defense Secretary Gorabhaya Rajapaksa.
Gota and GammanpilaAlthough you brag about political ethics and adherence to election laws, you have launched your election campaign under the aegis of a government official, showing the level of your hypocrisy and duplicity.
It is an offence to use state officials and state property in an election campaign under any circumstance, and the fact that you have violated election laws in public at very outset of your campaign disqualified you from boasting about political ethics or “new political culture”
We are also interested to know why you – who stated to stand against establishing casinos in the country – chose to launch your campaign with the support of Mr. Rajapaksa, who explicitly favours casinos in Sri Lanka.
The Urban Development Ministry was the body that gave approval to start new casinos in Colombo, and Mr. Rajapaksa, in his capacity as the Secretary of the Defence and Urban Development Ministry, handles various key responsibilities in this regard. He has always been of the view that Sri Lanka should have an open policy towards casinos.
This brings into question your self-styled anti- Casino patriotism. It is clear that you have betrayed your policies, ethics and values for your new ‘position’ as the District leader for the UPFA.
We therefore challenge you to disclose your stand on several matters,
  1. Have you changed your policy on Casinos?
  2. Have you changed your view on ‘political culture’ and political ethics’ ?
  3. What is the reason for sudden shift of core beliefs?
We openly challenge you to answer the aforesaid questions.
Thank you
Srinath Perera PC
Colombo District UNP Candidate

Wanatha ill at ease over white van abduction

Saturday, 15 February 2014 
mirrorappad-engThe residents in the Wanathamulla housing scheme staged a protest at Baseline road today (15) against the abduction of an individual by a group of people that arrived in a white van.
The abducted individual has been identified as Samaraweera Sunil, a resident of Wanathamulla housing scheme and a father of five.
duminda wanatha 410px 15-02-14The residents of Wanathamulla who gathered to Dematagoda railway ground commenced the protest this afternoon demanding the authorities to find him and bring him back alive.
The protesters alleged that Samaraweera Sunil was abducted in connection to the dismantling of their residences and removing them.
The Police Special Task Force was deployed in the Baseline road and even though the protesters dispersed STF officer remained in the location.
Attorney-at-law Sunila Watagala who is appearing on behalf of the residents regarding the dismantling of Wanathamulla housing scheme was also seen at the location.
He stated that security officials, who visited the area on the day before yesterday have met Sunil.
The protesters vowed that they will not stop the protest until Sunil was handed back to them.
DIG Anura Senanayake also visited the location and there was a discussion on returning the abducted individual within 45 minutes.
The protesters blocked the road again around 4.00 pm and dispersed after a while.
Meanwhile, the media reported that the abducted individual was released short while ago.

Abducted person released after Anura’s assurance


anura senaneyekeThe Wanathamulla resident, Samaraweera Sunil, who was abducted yesterday morning, was released late last evening after Senior DIG Anura Senanayake assured the protesting residents in Wanathamulla that Sunil will be released.

Sunil was abducted by a group of unknown persons yesterday after he was asked to leave his premises by an army officer and a senior Defence Ministry official. These officials have spoken and threatened Sunil the day prior to his abduction.
Sunil and the Wanathamulla residents have rejected an order by the Urban Development Authority (UDA) urging them to vacate their houses.
However, soon after the abduction, residents in the Wanathamulla area took to the streets in protest demanding Sunil’s release.
Senior DIG Senanayake who arrived at the scene of the protest first requested for 45 minutes to find Sunil. The residents’ responded saying they will not give up the protest until Sunil was given back to them alive.
After the lapse of 45 minutes, Senanayake then requested for more time to bring Sunil back.
He asked the protesters to accept his word that Sunil will be returned and that he assured his safe return.
Hearing the comment, one of the protestors shouted, “So you know where he is? Is he in your house?”

Letter found from dead intelligence IP’s pocket

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Samarakoon 2 16-02-14Sunday, 16 February 2014 
Police have found a letter from a pocket of Inspector Milton Samarakoon Bandara, the OIC of western province intelligence unit (Mt. Lavinia), whose dead body was found in a paddy-field behind the Godagama filling station in Homagama.
The letter has purportedly been written by his wife.
At a media briefing in Colombo today (16), police spokesman SSP Ajith Rohana said the IP, a father of two, had committed suicide over a family matter.
Born in Gampola, Mr. Bandara had joined police in 1989 and became a member of its intelligence unit in 2005.
At the time of his death, was a resident of Jayamangala Mawatha in Nugegoda.
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Free speech in danger in India, world’s largest democracy: Siddiqui

Penguin India announced on Feb. 12, 2014, that it has withdrawn American academic Wendy Doniger's book, The Hindus: an Alternative History, and will pulp all remaining copies.

Penguin India announced on Feb. 12, 2014, that it has withdrawn American academic Wendy Doniger's book, The Hindus: an Alternative History, and will pulp all remaining copies.

The Toronto Star 

By:  Columnist, Published on Wed Feb 12 2014

In India the debate rages as to where to draw the line between free speech and provocative/hate speech that may light a fuse.

In its 2013 Press Freedom Index, Reporters Without Borders listed India 140th out of 179 countries surveyed. That’s the same league as Russia, ranked 148th for its draconian restrictions on free speech, including the “gay propaganda” law being highlighted by human rights groups during the Sochi Olympics.
India’s low ranking was a surprise. It is the world’s largest and most rambunctious democracy, with a free press and a thriving literary scene, in English as well as several regional languages. The famous Jaipur Literary Festival (Jan. 17-21 this year) has within eight years become the biggest in Asia-Pacific. Print and electronic media are enjoying record circulation and ratings.
Free speech is thriving, obviously. Yet, authors, journalists, cartoonists, screenwriters and artists are feeling under siege.
They are arrested, harassed and sued by governments, businesses and vigilante groups that want to silence what they don’t want to hear and ban what they don’t want to see. Media face restrictions in reporting sectarian riots or from the disputed territory of Kashmir and the insurgency-plagued northeast. Internet censorship is on the rise. Websites are being shut down, blogs blocked and Facebook pages removed.
The Indian constitution guarantees free speech. But, like Canada and many European nations, it also allows “reasonable restrictions” to maintain “public order” and interreligious peace. The latter is a priority for both the federal and state governments, given the tinderbox nature of Hindu-Muslim relations against the horrific history of one million Hindus and Muslims killed during the 1947 bifurcation of the nation into India and Pakistan.
India was the first country to ban Salman Rushdie’s novel The Satanic Verses in 1988, for portraying the Prophet Muhammad’s wives as prostitutes. That ban still draws sharp reactions, pro and con. While much of the literati sides with him, governments generally don’t. And public opinion is deeply divided. My mere mention of him at a dinner party in Delhi the other day evinced a sharp response from Mani Shankar Aiyar, a former federal cabinet minister, now a member of the upper house of parliament and as strong a liberal secularist Hindu as you are likely to find in India:
“Rushdie, that sod — he deliberately insulted and provoked Muslims but in the guise of literature. To us, keeping the peace in our complex, pluralistic society is more important than his preening about free speech.”
Rushdie — who was born in India, migrated first to Pakistan, then England and later the U.S. — had to stay away from the 2012 Jaipur festival because of threats on his life. In solidarity, four writers read excerpts from Satanic Verses, only to be disowned by festival organizers, who, in turn, were lampooned forcaving in too easily.
Co-organizer William Dalrymple, a British author (The White Mughals) who lives in India, said he had little choice, faced as he was with “a scary situation, since more than 100 Muslim activists had made their way inside the venue.”
Rushdie was also barred from entering Kolkata, with the state government there citing the potential for public disorder. Aiyar defended that travel ban: “Everyone in a democracy has the right to freedom of expression and everyone also has the right to be outraged. Such outrage, when shared by a large number of people, has to be taken into account by a democracy. To pre-empt protest that could turn violent is the duty of government.
“To be absolutist about the freedom to offend is absolutism, not democracy.”
He makes another argument — that while India’s democracy “is increasingly becoming more inclusive, the social system is growing increasingly exclusive. So people feel that if they create a fuss, the chances of their views being able to prevail are greater than they might be otherwise.
“This causes problems to freedom of expression. But we have to adjust.”
So the debate rages on as to where to draw the line between free speech and provocative/hate speech that may light a fuse.
Delhi-based author Nilanjana Roy sums it well:
“The conversations on free speech in India tend to move in predictable directions: the common belief that free speech is a western idea, which is easily rebutted considering India’s long tradition of dissent and debate. Or that India needs to be careful, given the very real possibility of violence/riots, which is not so easily combated because it is so true.”
That’s only part of the story, as shown by Wednesday’s announcement by Penguin India that it has withdrawn American academic Wendy Doniger’s book, The Hindus: an Alternative History, and will pulp all the remaining copies.

How Not to Get Aid Into Homs, Yarmouk, and to 9.3 Million Syrians Via a UN Resolution


Feb-14-2014 
The starving victims besieged in Syria, and all people of goodwill, are demanding immediate, non-politicized humanitarian aid without further delay.
Syria map
(EL NUBEK, Syria) - Who authored the seemingly designed-to-fail UN Security Council Draft Resolution on delivering urgent humanitarian aid into the Old City of Homs and other besieged areas of conflict-torn Syria? When we know this, much may become clearer with respect to the cynical politicization of the continuing civilian suffering.

The draft resolution was put forward by Australia, Luxembourg, and Jordan, and according to a UN/US congressional source—one who actually worked on rounding up the three countries to front for the US and its allies—none was pleased with the decidedly raw and undiplomatic pressure they received from the office of US UN Ambassador Samantha Power.

Thai police push out street protesters, briefly

By  Feb 15, 2014 
Asian CorrespondentBANGKOK (AP) — Riot police managed to clear anti-government protesters from a major boulevard in the Thai capital in a small but brief victory as authorities try to reclaim areas that have been closed during a three-month push to unseat Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra.
Hundreds of helmeted police with riot shields met no resistance Friday as they dismantled a sprawling protest camp in Bangkok’s historic quarter near the prime minister’s office compound, known as Government House. The office has been closed since December by protesters camped nearby.