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

Saturday, March 1, 2014

ICP Questions Ban Ki-moon On Colombo Telegraph ‘Ban’


March 1, 2014
The New York based Inner City Press has asked UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon about whether he has a view on the ban on the Colombo Telegraph in Sri Lanka.
“Ban vaguely supports free press,” was the response, ICP tweeted a short while ago.
Inner City Press also asked if the Sri Lanka country team to the UN had any comments on the ban.

On , ICP asks if or Team have a view of @ColomboTelegrap being banned. A: Ban is generally for free press

Ban vaguely supports free press. Video when I get it MT "@colombotelegrap @innercitypress Thanks Matthew, what'd they say?"

I also asked what Country Team has to say. Nothing? MT "@colombotelegrap @innercitypress Thanks, what'd they say?"

Inner City PressBy Matthew Russell Lee
UNITED NATIONS, February 28 -- While Sri Lanka's Mahinda Rajapaksa claims his government does not block websites, the Colombo Telegraph says (and shows) different. At the UN, Inner City Press on February 28 asked Secretary General Ban Ki-moon's outgoing spokesperson Martin Nesirky if Ban or the UN Country Team has any view in this regard. Video here.

  



 28/02/2014
Press HomeCorporatePortalChannel 4 has today taken the unprecedented step of publishing a detailed refutation of “an international propaganda offensive” launched by supporters of the Sri Lankan government against its reporting of events at the end of Sri Lanka’s bloody civil war. Channel 4’s News and Current Affairs journalists have led the way in exposing the country’s war crimes, culminating in the broadcast of the feature length documentary No Fire Zone - a forensic investigation into the final weeks of the bloody civil war in Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka: IBAHRI backs Navi Pillay’s call for United Nations inquiry into alleged war crimes and human rights violations

27/02/2014
International Bar AssociationThe International Bar Association’s Human Rights Institute (IBAHRI) urges the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) to establish an independent and international inquiry into alleged war crimes and past violations of human rights law in Sri Lanka as called for by the United Nations (UN) High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, in a recently published report.

Foreign Office responds to UN report on Sri Lanka








Hugo Swire welcomes report from the High Commissioner for Human Rights, and supports her call for an international investigation into Sri Lanka.
On Monday 24 February, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Navi Pillay, released her report on the promotion of accountability and reconciliation in Sri Lanka following her visit to Sri Lanka last August.
In response to the publication of the report, Foreign Office Minister Hugo Swire said:
The British Government attaches great importance to lasting peace and reconciliation in Sri Lanka. This is a message that the Prime Minister, Foreign Secretary and I gave when we visited Sri Lanka last year. We welcome the report of the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights on Sri Lanka, and share her concerns about the human rights situation in Sri Lanka and the lack of progress on accountability. These concerns include the undermining of independent institutions such as the judiciary, a ‘significant surge’ in attacks on religious minorities, reports of sexual harassment and violations, continuation of impunity, continued militarisation of former conflict areas and the continuing trend of restrictions on freedom of expression and association. It is deeply disappointing to note that the government of Sri Lanka have not taken any of the steps recommended following the High Commissioner’s visit in August 2013, and that they have failed to accept all offers of technical assistance on accountability from the UN.
We will continue to study closely both the report and the response of the government of Sri Lanka over the coming weeks. But we strongly agree with the High Commissioner’s assessment that the Sri Lankan government has ‘failed to ensure independent and credible investigations into past violations of international human rights and humanitarian law’ on both sides during the civil war, and we therefore strongly support her call for an international investigation. We agree that the failure of national accountability mechanisms is also ‘fundamentally a question of political will’, rather than the result of a lack of technical capacity, which has been offered repeatedly to the government of Sri Lanka by the international community.
The international community now has a duty to act, and we will be using our position on the UN Human Rights Council to actively press for an international investigation given the lack of a credible domestic accountability process to date. We acknowledge and welcome the progress which has been made by the government of Sri Lanka in areas including the reintegration of child soldiers, demining, and reconstruction of conflict affected areas. However, it is our strong belief that, without a credible investigation in to these very serious allegations of the past, it will be very difficult for the Sri Lankan people to move forward in the true spirit of lasting peace, reconciliation and unity and for Sri Lanka to reach its true potential.

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Sri Lanka's president denounces U.S. plan for rights resolution

Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa gestures as he speaks during a news conference at the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Colombo November 17, 2013. REUTERS/Dinuka Liyanawatte
ReutersBY SHIHAR ANEEZ- Fri Feb 28, 2014
(Reuters) - Sri Lanka's president denounced Washington's plan to move a U.N. human rights resolution against the island nation on Friday, comparing the U.S. move over alleged war crimes to a professional boxer taking on a schoolboy.
"There should not have been a resolution at all," Mahinda Rajapaksa said in his first news conference with the foreign media in Colombo for more than three years. "If they have evidence they should have given (it) to us."
Pressure has mounted on Rajapaksa's government ahead of a U.N. Human Rights Council debate next month, where the United States plans to propose a resolution that may call for an international investigation in Sri Lanka.
In a report released this week, U.N. human rights chief Navi Pillay said many thousands of civilians were killed, injured or remain missing after the 26-year civil conflict between government forces and separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in the north of the island that ended in May 2009.
She said the government had failed to do its own credible investigations and there had been little progress in establishing accountability for "emblematic" wartime crimes.
Rajapaksa, president since 2005, said he was at a loss to understand why Washington was pressing for an inquiry.
"God knows why," he told reporters at Temple Trees, an imposing brilliant-white palace built near Colombo's ocean front by British colonialists. "If they tell us, at least we can look at it."
He likened Colombo's stand-off with Washington to a fight between a schoolboy and Cassius Clay - the former world boxing champion better known as Muhammad Ali.
"This is like Cassius Clay playing against a schoolboy," he said.
"ARBITRARY" AND "INTRUSIVE"
A U.N. panel has said around 40,000 mainly Tamil civilians died in the final few months Of the war. Both sides committed atrocities, but army shelling killed most of the victims.
Pillay's report, which directed criticism at the rebels as well as the government, also focused on allegations of allegations of abuses since the conflict.
The West and rights groups say rights violations have continued, including abductions of anti-government critics, attacks on churches, mosques and the media, as well as curbs on freedom of association and labour union activity.
Rajapaksa's administration, in 18 pages of comments as long as the human rights chief's report, rejected her recommendations as "arbitrary, intrusive and of a political nature".
The president said Colombo has done its best to move ahead with a post-war reconciliation process, sometimes spending more money on infrastructure in the north - where the Tamil minority is concentrated - than the south.
He said support from Britain and Canada for the resolution proposed by the United States was the result of domestic pressure from Tamil diaspora in those countries. However, he noted that Sri Lanka could count on support from China and Russia at the United Nations, and possibly India too.
Aides say that Rajapaksa, who abolished the maximum tenure of two six-year terms for a president, may call an election later this year to seek a third term.
However, he said he had not yet decided whether to hold an election before his current term ends in 2016.

Sri Lanka transforms its killing fields into a tourist attraction

Sri lanka war dead missingA Sri Lankan activist wails during a candlelight vigil in Colombo on August 30, 2013, held to mark the International Day of the Disappeared. The vigil at Colombo's Independence Square came as UN human rights chief Navi Pillay visited the island to probe alleged war crimes. Some of the alleged sites have been transformed into tourist attractions for the victors. (Lakruwan Wanniarachchi/AFP/Getty Images)
Rewriting history, Sinhalese victors snap photos and eat ice cream at an alleged war crimes scene.


February 28, 2014
KARAIMULLIVAIKAL, Sri Lanka — Five years ago on this narrow strip of land along the Bay of Bengal, Sri Lanka’s military waged some of the most controversial but decisive assaults on its Tamil adversaries.

Conversation On The Problem Of Words

By Basil Fernando -February 28, 2014
Basil Fernando
Basil Fernando
You’ll never know how grateful I am for you listening to me. The reason for such great gratitude is the very reason that I have been telling you over and over again; that is, I am talking to you because among the human beings there is no one willing to hear the things I am thinking about, that I am now talking about.
I told you that in our species we use words to communicate. The problem today is that these words no longer carry common meanings. This simply means that what I say does not make any sense to anyone who is listening to me. When I hear words from others it is almost impossible for me to make sense out of what they say, no matter how much time I may be willing to spend pondering over what they said.
That is not merely regarding communication between one person and another as fellow beings, but also to communications between the Government and the people, the people and the Government. Therefore people don’t even want to be bothered about whether there is any sense in what the government says; nor does the government worry about whether there is anything sensible in what the people want to or do say.
Let me try to show this to you by way of an illustration or two. There was a man called Gerald Perera, who was a young man of about 40 years. He was arrested one day by a group of policemen and brought to a police station. Without saying a word, they hung him up on a beam and started beating him with iron and wooden rods. This affected him so much that he suffered renal failure and, at the end of it all, the policemen said that he was not the man that they were after.                                                         Read More

Sri Lanka Feels the Heat

arched soil on a field in Sri Lanka, which could face another cycle of drought and floods. Credit: Amantha Perera/IPS.
arched soil on a field in Sri Lanka, which could face another cycle of drought and floods. Credit: Amantha Perera/IPS.
Saturday, March 1, 2014
COLOMBO, Feb 28 2014 (IPS) - Sri Lanka is heading into a major crisis under extreme heat, as the rains stay away. Fears are growing of power cuts and interruption to the water supply because reservoir levels are running scarily low.
By the third week of February, the Ceylon Electricity Board said it was relying on expensive thermal generators for 76 percent of the country’s power supply.
Around August 2012, extended dry weather almost dried up hydro-reservoirs. The country spent over two billion dollars to import furnace oil. The drought impacted over a million persons, according to the Sri Lanka Red Cross.
Power supply and the vital paddy harvest are likely to be hit if the rains stay away for longer.
The 2012 dry spell was followed by heavy rains that allowed hydro-power to gain lost ground last year. That vicious cycle could be repeating itself.
Central Bank Governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal said last week that changing climate patterns have had a serious impact on the country’s fortunes. “Sri Lanka also is impacted by climate change in the form of droughts, floods and other natural disasters. We take these matters into consideration when framing monetary policy,” he said during a live Twitter interaction.
According to experts, power supply and the vital paddy harvest are likely to be hit if the rains stay away for longer.
Asoka Abeygunawardana, executive director of the Sri Lanka Energy Forum and Advisor to the Ministry of Technology, told IPS that Sri Lanka’s power supply was too dependent on hydro-power or on costly coal and furnace oil.
“We are too reliant on these sources; one can be unpredictable while the other two can be quite expensive,” he said.
In a normal year Sri Lanka looks to harvest half of its power supply through hydro and the remainder through a combination of coal furnace oil and a negligible content of renewable sources. When the rains fail, as they have now, there is no alternative but to turn to more coal and oil.
Abeygunawardana, who is also a board member of the Climate Action Network South Asia, a grouping of over 100 civil society groups that studies climate change and impact, told IPS that Sri Lanka should look at investing more in renewable energy sources. Sri Lanka’s future energy policy is skewed towards coal, which Abeygunawardana said is expensive and polluting.
He advocates wind and solar use which could be cheaper in the long run despite the initial high expenses.
“We get sunlight and wind both free of charge all year round, making running costs quite cheap. In the event of a drought, the strong sun will naturally fill the gap created by lack of water.”
The other important factor is managing the meagre water resources that feed both the power supply and the vast rice fields.
There is some level of dialogue that takes place between government agencies reliant on reservoirs like the Department of Irrigation, and the Electricity Board. But Abeygunawardana said that these discussions lacked scientific basis and planning.
“These agencies have to come up with a process where the release of water is integrated and not done at the wish of one agency.”
Such policy changes are vital given the potential impact the scorching heat is packing. The current dry spell is likely to reduce the main rice harvest by seven to 10 percent, according to the Department of Agriculture. Sri Lanka’s main cash crop, tea, is also likely to get hit with rising temperatures reducing leaf quality.
Riza Yehiya, a climate risk management specialist, warned that policy makers are still not taking shifting climate patterns and their impact seriously. “Current spell of extreme heat experienced in Sri Lanka is considered a passing cloud. It is not discernible to those in power and decision making in their air-conditioned chambers,” he told IPS.
He said that discussions were taking place at policy level but what was lacking was adaptation and implementation on the ground level. “In a practical sense, making society climate change resilient requires putting the society almost on a war footing to prepare them to proactively respond.”
Water management is one area where experts say the country’s policy makers need to show urgent attention.  Irrigated water for farming is provided free in Sri Lanka but officials at the Department of Agriculture complain that it is almost impossible to get farmers to use water sparingly or to shift to more climate resistant crop varieties.
Yehiya said that people’s behaviour from watering plants to washing their cars or how they used electricity needs an overhaul.
“What is required to forestall this threat is to change the behaviour of people, their societies and economies to reduce their carbon footprint, and enable them to live sustainably without affecting the natural eco-system.”
No such seismic shift is in sight. The country is still facing each new climate threat in isolation, without linking the dots.
Police media spokesman Ajith Rohana is torturer and criminal : SC verdict - Then why was he promoted ?

(Lanka-e-News-27.Feb.2014, 11.30PM) It is now revealed that SSP Ajith Rohana who is the Sri Lanka (SL) police media spokesman and therefore covering up all the Rajapakse regime crimes , atrocities and sinister activities is a criminal who while in service was punished by the supreme court (SC) for inflicting criminal torture on an innocent individual violating latter’s fundamental rights most outrageously and openly. Hereunder is the decision of the SC that confirmed and condemned Ajith Rohana’s criminal activities and brutalities:

Ajith Rohana who is now a father of two children joined the police force on 15 th March 1988 as a sub inspector. 1996 onwards he served as the OIC for two years of the Walasmulla police station. During that time the Walasmulla station was virtually operating as an SLFP party office. During that period a villager was arrested and brought to the station and tied to the roof beam allegedly for robbing some property. He was so ruthlessly assaulted that his two fingers of the left hand and thumb of his right hand were pierced with safety pins. Subsequently the villager who was innocent was admitted to the Karapitiya hospital. Believe it or not, this innocent villager had to take indoor treatment (warded) for 23 days , all because of Ajith Rohana’s cruel torture which made the innocent villager an invalid.

After the hospital police forwarded a report on the victim to the court, the Walasmulla magistrate court recorded this report under B / 103/1996. 

Subsequently, when a fundamental rights petition was filed in the SC against Ajith Rohana naming the latter as the accused, the court decided that Ajith Rohana is guilty of violating section 11 of the constitution , and ordered him to pay a compensation of Rs. 250,000 out of his personal funds , and a further sum of Rs. 500, 000 out of government funds to the victim. Moreover the SC instructed the IGP to take disciplinary action against Rohana via the police department.

Section 11 of the constitution is special from the standpoint of conferring fundamental rights on the people because it says no individual can be subjected to torture , cruelty , inhuman or humiliating treatment or punishment. Besides the department regulations makes it very clear that such a police officer who had been guilty of committing those wrongs is not eligible for promotions; no salary increases for 5 years ; no foreign training or studies ; and no appointment as OIC of a station.

When these are the express and explicit regulations, how was Rohana the torturer and criminal accorded an SSP promotion ? When he is not suitable even to be a station OIC, how could he be appointed as the police media spokesman ? By appointing this criminal torturer as the spokesman isn’t the country and the police force being degraded and disgraced owing to his profuse lying and cover ups on behalf of a lawless reign? 

Hereunder we give an account of how Rohana catapulted himself to this present position overlooking the sacrosanct laws :

During the period of Lord Buddha , Ambapali the infamous harlot and urban beauty who lived in Dambadiva became notorious for gratifying the sexual desires of the powerful. Now, it is Ajith Rohana the Ambapala (male prostitute) who has taken her place gratifying the perverted lust of the powerful of the present time. This Ambapala the male counterpart of Ambapali is gifted with a tongue by birth that can rotate in all directions to satisfy the perverted desires of a powerful relative of the Medamulana Rajapakse while also using it to serve his own prodigious lying. Ajith Rohana being the male counterpart of Ambapali the prostitute of the past is gratifying the sexual lust of a powerful relative of the Rajapakse regime of the present. That powerful relative who first recognized the extraordinary value of Rohana’s revolving tongue took full advantage of it to serve her perverted lust. Of course Rohana did not take fees for that service , instead he secured through this powerful relative his promotions and perks he was deprived of because of his misdeeds.

The powerful relative who was so entranced with Rohana’s revolving tongue and who had taken advantage of it to the full has intimated it to Medamulana MaRa her uncle (baappa) what uses can be made of Rohana’s versatile revolving tongue apart from the wonderful uses she makes of it.

Accordingly , Rohana the Ambapala was appointed as the police media spokesman so that he could twist his revolving tongue in all directions and utter falsehoods brazenly and blatantly on behalf of the Medamulana regime.

Hence, the versatile tongue of Ajith Rohana has only to make one twist when he utters the falsehood that the museum robbery was committed by ‘Kanagetta’; a second twist when he fabricated a story that Mel Gunasekera the renowned journalist was murdered by a paint baas; and a third twist when he lied that it was deserters of the forces who broke into journalist Mandana Ismail’s house. 

Moreover, not only Ajith Rohana’s tongue but even his entire body can do a ‘twist’ dance in order to make those who the Rajapakses want to be indicted as the accused ahead of filing legal action, and make media statements to suit the most foul aims and objectives of Rajapakses.

In the circumstances when Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe goes to Geneva human rights (HR) conference and brags ‘our government is tops when it comes to protection of human rights ,’ if somebody turns around and asks, ‘what is tops about the government when it has appointed a confirmed human torturer based on a SC verdict of your own country as police media spokesman, and who was found guilty of violating section 11 of the constitution and punished by the SC ?’ Can Samarasinghe flee from the venue and look for a place to hide his face? 

An individual who has been punished by the SC for violating section 11 of the constitution taking oaths before the same SC as a Lawyer is a serious issue .
How can Ajith Rohana who has been found guilty of human torture act as a lawyer on behalf of a client who is a victim of human torture ? Where on earth is there a legal system which permits a criminal found guilty by the judicial court to act as a lawyer for another in a court ?

Prior to taking oaths as a lawyer, there is time granted to raise objections against his appointment as a lawyer , in Ajith Rohana’s case raising objections may have been inadvertently missed. 

But now it is possible to cite grounds to the SC to show that this individual is not suitable to hold the post of attorney at law. In a parallel case, there exists a precedent that can be followed when Neville Samarakoon was the chief justice , the legal practice of lawyer Shelton Perera was suspended for two years . Based on this parallel, the non governmental lawyers organizations of the country should take action in the best interests of the country against this unlawful practice.

வட இலங்கையில் ஒரே இடத்தில் 9 மனித எலும்புக் கூடுகள் கண்டெடுப்பு

BBC
28 பிப்ரவரி, 2014
இலங்கையின் வடக்கே வீடொன்றில் தோண்டியபோது ஒரே இடத்தில் 9 மனித எலும்புக் கூடுகள் கண்டெடுக்கப்பட்டுள்ளன.
முல்லைத்தீவு மாவட்டம் உடையார்கட்டு, மூங்கிலாறு 200 வீட்டுத் திட்டத்தில் வீட்டு வளவை சமப்படுத்துவதற்காக உழவு இயந்திரத்தைப் பயன்படுத்தி உழுதபோது இரண்டு மனித எலும்புக்கூடுகள் பாய் ஒன்றில் சுற்றிய நிலையில் வியாழன் மாலை கண்டுபிடிக்கப்பட்டிருந்தது.
இதனைத் தொடர்ந்து வெள்ளியன்று பிற்பகல் நீதவான் முன்னிலையில் அந்த இடத்தைத் தோண்டியபோது 9 மனித எலும்புக் கூடுகள் கண்டெடுக்கப்பட்டுள்ளதாகத் தெரிவிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.
மூங்கிலாறு வடக்கு 200 வீட்டுத் திட்டத்தைச் சேர்ந்த பத்மநாதன் வனிதா என்பவருடைய வீட்டு வளவிலேயே இந்த எலும்புக் கூடுகள் கண்டு பிடிக்கப்பட்டிருக்கின்றன.
தகவல் அறிந்து சம்பவ இடத்திற்கு விரைந்த புதுக்குடியிருப்பு பொலிசார் பாதுகாப்பைப் பலப்படுத்தி முல்லைத்தீவு நீதிமன்றத்திற்குத் தகவல் தெரிவித்திருந்தனர்.
இதனையடுத்து, முல்லைத்தீவு மாவட்ட பதில் நீதவான் பரஞ்சோதி, யாழ் மாவட்ட பதில் சட்ட வைத்திய அதிகாரி டாக்டர் சின்னையா சிவரூபன், முல்லைத்தீவு மாவட்டத்திற்கான பிரதி பொலிஸ் மா அதிபர் ஆகியோர் முன்னிலையில் இந்த இடம் வெள்ளிக்கிழமை பிற்பகல் தோண்டப்பட்டு 9 எலும்புக்கூடுகளும், சிதைந்த நிலையிலான தேசிய அடையாள அட்டையொன்றும் கண்டுபிடிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளதாகப் பொலிசார் தெரிவித்திருக்கின்றனர்.
இந்தச் சம்பவம் தொடர்பில் புதுக்குடியிருப்பு பொலிசார் விசாரணைகளை நடத்தி வருகின்றனர்.

Lanka Made No Significant Progress On Reconciliation Or Accountability In 2013: Biswal


February 28, 2014 
Sri Lanka did not make significant progress on reconciliation or justice and accountability for alleged war crimes in 2013, US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Nisha Biswal tweeted a short while ago, even as Washington released its world human rights report for the year 2013 at the US State Department.
Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asia Nisha Desai Biswal
US Secretary of State John Kerry, who officially released the 2013 Human Rights Reports with country specific assessments, also tweeted that the “US supports UNHRC Sri Lanka resolution at the March session.
“Governments that protect human rights and are accountable to their citizens are more secure, bolster international peace and security, and enjoy shared prosperity with stable democratic countries around the world. Countries that fail to uphold human rights can face economic deprivation and international isolation,” Kerry said in the preface to the launch of the latest report.
did not make significant progress on reconciliation or on justice & accountability for alleged war crimes