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, March 26, 2014

Sri Lanka: Motions & Emotions


| by NILANTHA ILANGAMUWA
( March 26, 2014, New Delhi, Sri Lanka Guardian) The battle is on the edge. Few hours are left. Hopes and despairs are mixed in the air. One of the important establishments after the Second World War is about to take a crucial decision as its next move. This is a decision that would affect over 20 million people. This is the decision affecting justice meted out to hundred thousands of dead people and their descendants. This is the decision affecting thousands of victims of torture, sexual assaults, and other forms of inhuman treatments which we have legally termed, “punishable crimes.” Time and again the country fought for real freedom but only achieved longer lists of dead men, women, and children while providing another opportunity to remain in old feudalism. This nihilistic practice has buried even the value of one’s rights to “have the body” known as a writ Habeas Corpus.

Lap Top Journalism And The Laptoppers


By R.A.Ratwatte -March 26, 2014 
R.A.Ratwatte
R.A.Ratwatte
With the local Government elections getting closer and speculation on bigger things to come in the near future, a well oiled military type operation seems to be swinging into motion.
Opinion leaders (mostly self styled – some with doctorates, others who claim to be professors and most of them involved with NGOs) are pontificating in SPADES. We have Colombians (to borrow a phrase coined by advocates of this regime) urging similar drawing room patriots to vote for the JVP. Doom and gloom about what is going to be done to us post the Geneva resolutionare rife, without any concrete scenarios.
Divisions are being promoted in even the lesser known political parties. The General has a lot of defectors who it would have been easy to buy out and “convince”. The JVP Western Province stalwart has died in a motorcycle accident. As if the current divisions in the main opposition party were not enough, we have a counterfeit currency scandal that has surfaced. Meanwhile feeble bleats are heard from the opposition asking the people to exercise their franchise.
As an expatriate confined to reading the product of “lap top journalism” in order to glean some sort of idea of what is going on in the debacle of Asia, I look at the emphasis given to the above incidents by the aforesaid “journalists”. My analysis is as follows:
A free Laptop from President to Daily News Editor Rajpal Abeynayake
A free Laptop from President to Daily News Editor Rajpal Abeynayake
The Geneva decree is given HUGE publicity but no one bothers to give any likely scenarios. The inference ranges from sanctions hurting just the ruling elite to India invading and creating Eelam on the lines of the recent Russian incursion to Crimea. The plan is to urge the people to be patriotic and keep the current regime in power.
Asking the “intelligentsia” (for want of a better term) to vote for the JVP is given coverage in most of media. This is simply a ham handed attempt to shift some of the ‘Colombians” to get off their posteriors and vote against the UNP. A clear sign that the incumbent regime is worried about the western province and the indigenous mostly unshakable UNP vote that lies therein.                                            Read More  

Sri Lanka extends probe mandate to cover IPKF stay

Return to frontpageMarch 26, 2014
The mandate of a Sri Lankan panel probing disappearances during the country’s civil war has been extended by another seven years, allowing it to review the period when the IPKF were deployed in the island.
The three-member Commission was initially mandated to probe disappearances of individuals from 1990 to 2009 in Sri Lanka’s former northern and eastern conflict zones.
“The time period of the Presidential Commission to inquire into cases of alleged disappearances of persons in the Northern and Eastern Provinces has been amended to cover the period from 1983 to 2009,” a statement from President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s office said on Wednesday.
The decision came a day ahead of a possible voting at the United Nations Human Rights Council on a US-backed resolution demanding accountability for thousands of deaths of ethnic Tamil civilians five years ago.
The conduct of Indian Peace Keeping Forces (IPKF) had figured in the public complaints received by the panel during hearing in the conflict zone.
The panel had dismissed complaints against the IPKF citing lack of purview as the prescribed period under their terms of reference was 1990 and 2009.
The IPKF was invited by the then Sri Lankan President J.R. Jayawardene as a result of the Indo-Lanka Peace Accord of July 1987.
Meant to be peace keepers supervising a truce between the LTTE and the Sri Lankan government, they were soon fighting the rebel group in bloody clashes. India lost nearly 1,200 troops during the conflict.
The 40,000 Indian troops had swelled to about 70,000 before they departed the island in March 1990.

Sri Lanka faces toughest UN censure over war crimes

Channel NewsAsiaSri Lanka faces fresh condemnation at the United Nations' top human rights body this week in a move that observers say could lead to an international criminal investigation for war crimes.

POSTED: 26 Mar 2014 

Sri Lanka faces fresh condemnation at the United Nations' top human rights body this week in a move that observers say could lead to an international criminal investigation for war crimes.


COLOMBO: Sri Lanka faces fresh condemnation at the United Nations' top human rights body this week in a move that observers say could lead to an international criminal investigation for war crimes.

Sri Lankans still searching for missing sons

UN considers independent inquiry into rights abuses in Sri Lanka war which left 100,000 dead and many missing.

Last updated: 26 Mar 2014 12:53

Jaffna, Sri Lanka - For the past six years, Perinparani Thirunavukkarasu, 46, has been searching for her son who was snatched in front of her eyes in Jaffna, the former war-zone of northern Sri Lanka.

Thirunavukkarasu is among thousands of people whose relatives disappeared or were killed during the final stages of the civil war between government forces and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

"My son was abducted by eight men in military uniform on field motorbikes in 2008," Thirunavukkarasu told Al Jazeera.

Sinhalese students protest against university shut down, caused by attacks on Tamils
25 March 2014
Sinhalese students protested against the cancellation of lectures, angered that they were put on hold indefinitely following attacks on Tamil students last week, reported Uthayan.
Students hold placards, most of which are in Sinhalese Pictures: Uthayan
The Sinhalese students at the Eastern University in Batticaloa demanded that the suspension of the perpetrators of the attacks on Tamils, who were also Sinhalese, be lifted and called for lectures to restart.
Tamil students from all over the island started leaving the hostels of the university, after Sinhalese students attacked a Tamil birthday party last Thursday, leaving 7 Tamils injured, reported TamilNet.
Sinhala students claim the university administration is biased, after students are suspended following attacks on Tamils
A student union representative had told TamilNet that Tamil students would boycott classes for the following two weeks.
“Only first year and last year Tamil students are provided hostel admission at the university while Sinhala students from all years are admitted to the hostel, making Sinhala students the majority at the hostel of the Batticaloa university,” TamilNet said.
International call for accountability in Sri Lanka 'is not going to go away' - Canada
Photograph Tamil Guardian

26 March 2014
The international community's call for accountability and justice in Sri Lanka is "not going to go away" warned Canada's Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Deepak Obhrai, at a press conference inside the UN Human Rights Council, hours before the Council is set to vote on a third resolution on Sri Lanka. 

Asked by the Tamil Guardian on how Canada would respond if the Sri Lankan government failed to cooperate with an investigation by the Office of the UN High Commissioner, Mr. Obhrai said, 
"It is very important that they address these issues, it is not going to go away, as much as they try, it is not going to go away."

"Therefore it is best that Sri Lanka addresses this issue, and Canada has already stated it is willing to help Sri Lanka to address the issue."
Reiterating Canada's support for the resolution being tabled at the Council, Mr. Obhrai told journalists that the main objectives were to ensure a credible investigation into human rights violations during the war and on-going human rights violations. 
"We want to make sure this issue is absolutely dealt with, and not thrown under the carpet, and this can only be done through the Human Rights Council adopting this resolution."
Asked how the Canadian government would respond if the Sri Lankan government rejected this resolution, as they had rejected the two previous ones, Mr. Obhrai warned, 
"The international community is very much concerned, which is why we are telling the government of Sri Lanka to address this issue. It is not going to go away."

"It has rejected it in the past, and it hasn't gone away."
Asked if he thought the Sri Lankan government would grant access to international experts and Special Rapporteurs, Mr. Obhrai said, 
"It is our desire. We hope they will."

Sri Lankan army heightens security

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MEERA SRINIVASAN-March 25, 2014

Northern Province CM says the ‘story’ of LTTE re-emergence is being floated to justify the heavy military presence

The Sri Lankan army has heightened security in the country’s Northern Province through a host of measures, including vehicle checks, it is learnt.
Jaffna Security Forces Commander Udaya Perera said the move was aimed at preventing a possible regrouping of LTTE sympathisers. “We hear that sections of the diaspora are funding some of those elements here,” he said. The “precaution,” he said, was also necessary to nab a suspect still at large, after a recent incident in Kilinochchi where he reportedly opened fire on a policeman.
The army has maintained that the suspect, Gobi, and an associate, Appan, had links with sections of the Tamil diaspora reportedly working on reviving the LTTE, the Tamil militant outfit defeated in Sri Lanka’s brutal war that spanned nearly three decades. “There is no popular support for such regrouping, but such forces may exploit vulnerable communities in the north. We will not allow that,” Mr. Perera told The Hindu on Monday.
Northern Province Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran said the story [of the LTTE re-emerging] was being floated in order to justify the heavy military presence in the north. Observing that the story was “very weak”, he said many unanswered questions remained about the suspect Gobi, the policeman said to have been injured when he reportedly opened fire, and the delay in nabbing him.
“We have been repeatedly asking the government to confine the military in the north to the barracks, but the government does not want to demilitarise the north. This story is only to justify that,” Mr. Wigneswaran told The Hindu.
Meanwhile, Sri Lankan police have announced a reward of LKR one million for anyone providing information leading to the arrest of the two, said the state-run Daily News here on Monday.
According to reliable sources in Jaffna and the Vanni, the heightened surveillance — coupled with an emerging refrain about a possible regrouping of the LTTE — has made people nervous.
It all began on March 13, when police arrested Balendra Jeyakumari, a resident of Tharmapuram at Kilinochchi, and her 13-year-old daughter Vidushika, on charges of sheltering Gobi. The mother and daughter were regular participants in rallies on disappearances, highlighting the case of Jeyakumari’s son who reportedly went missing in 2009. She still remains in custody while the daughter was put under probationary care.
On March 16, police arrested prominent human rights activist Ruki Fernando and Fr. Praveen, a catholic priest working the area, under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA).
They were released in a couple of days, following pressure from several international rights watchdogs. Coming on top of the arrests, the heightened security has created fear and panic among many in the north, according to an activist, working with women’s groups in the region.

The Need Of The Hour; Raise Our Voice Against Militarization And Lawlessness


By Upul Jayasuriya -March 26, 2014
Upul Jayasuriya -BASL President
Upul Jayasuriya -BASL President
Bar Association of Sri Lanka is a body completely apolitical. We respect the rule of law, independence of Judiciary and other democratic values. We have consistently opposed the gazette vesting Police powers on the Army, Navy and the Air Force on a continuing basis applicable for the entire country. We have moved resolutions at the Executive Committee of the BASL and the Bar Council and issued press releases. Other professional bodies too have condemned it. All our efforts have fallen on deaf years. In this back drop we decided to call this public Forum to place the issue before you. Rule of Law is defined as the restriction of the arbitrary exercise of power by subordinating it to well defined and established laws. It is the principle that all people and institutions are subject to and accountable to law that is fairly applied and enforced.
Aristotle flatly opposed letting the highest officials wield power beyond guarding and serving the laws. In other words, Aristotle advocated the rule of law.
The World Justice Project has proposed a working definition of the rule of law that comprises four principles:
  1. A system of self-government in which all persons, including the government, are accountable under the law.
  2. A system based on fair, publicized, broadly understood and stable laws
  3. A fair, robust, and accessible legal process in which rights and responsibilities based in law are evenly enforced.
  4. Diverse, competent, and independent lawyers and judges
The judiciary is the last bastion to a person who has been subject to injustice. It is in such a backdrop that it becomes an imperative concept in giving effect to Rule by Law as opposed to Rule by Men.Read More

Sri Lanka’s Tamils Are Still Facing Torture and Sexual Attacks

Tamil demonstratorsprotest Sri Lanka's human rights record outside Downing Street in London in November 2013.

Tamil demonstrators protest outside Downing Street in  London
Photo: Sri Lanka’s Tamils Are Still Facing Torture and Sexual Attacks
http://oneislandtwonationsblogspotcom.typepad.com/blog/2014/03/sri-lankas-tamils-are-still-facing-torture-and-sexual-attacks.html
Years after the civil war's end, Tamil survivors say they are subject to systematic violence from security forces

Years after the civil war's end, Tamil survivors say they are subject to systematic violence from security forces

damning new report alleges that Sri Lanka’s security forces continue to persecute the country’s Tamils minority five years after the ending of the country’s bloody civil war. It claims that the policy is “approved by the highest levels of government.”

The report, produced by South African human rights lawyer and U.N. adviser Yasmin Sooka, the Bar Human Rights Committee, England and Wales, and the International Truth & Justice Project, Sri Lanka, is based on the testimony of 40 survivors who fled to the U.K. seeking refuge. Nearly half tried to commit suicide.

The authors compiled harrowing tales of severe torture and sexual abuse in custody, almost all of which took took place after the war ended, some as recently as Feb. 2014.

“The cases of torture, rape and sexual violence described in this report are just a small sample of those crimes likely to have been committed against Tamils,” said Sooka in a statement. “The international community must act now otherwise such atrocities will continue to define post-conflict Sri Lanka.”

The United Nation’s Human Rights Council will vote today on whether to launch an international probe into Sri Lanka’s alleged war crimes during the three-decades-long ethnic conflict that ended in 2009.


article_image
by Zacki Jabbar-

President Mahinda Rajapaksa, in violation of guidelines set by the Elections Commissioner, was using provincial council polls campaign meetings to slander the UNP by making baseless allegations with regard to the accountability resolution to be presented against his government,at the ongoing UNHRC session, the party’s General Secretary Tissa Attanayake MP, said yesterday.

"I have brought the unethical conduct of President Rajapaksa in violation of established laws to the notice of the Polls Chief Mahinda Deshapriya and urged him to provide UNP National leader Ranil Wickremesinghe also an opportunity to make use of Western and Southern Provincial Council Election meetings to respond to the unfounded accusations and also to request the state and private media to give equal coverage to our response", he said.

The MP pointed out that the President as Head of State was debarred from campaigning for any political party. But,he had gone further by using the Geneva resolutions to tarnish the image of the UNP without any basis whatsoever.

The Rajapaksa regime was being pilloried at global fora due its dictatorial actions which included the repeated Human rights violations of Sri Lankans in general and not just the minorities.The absence of good governance and the rule of law had further compounded its plight, Attanayake said

CBK takes on religious intolerance in Sri Lanka

Photo courtesy Dinouk Colombage



GroundviewsPresident Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga has since her graceful retirement from office more than eight years ago after the completion of a constitutionally mandated two term limit, busied herself with an impressive portfolio of issues internationally, issues which are also crucial to our South Asia region. Her status as an elder stateswoman, allows her to address these issues with moral authority and at the highest levels of opinion and policy making. These issues have included the education of the girl child, HIV/AIDS prevention, universal access to potable drinking water, participation of women in conflict resolution, prevention of domestic violence and a range of other gender issues. She has done these through several institutional frameworks, all with the highest impeccable credentials, including the world renowned Clinton Global Initiative, the Club de Madrid, an exclusive association of former heads of state and government and her own Colombo based regional policy think tank, the South Asia Policy Research Institute (SAPRI).

Businessman accused of paying dividends to Dulanjalee in fake notes

Businessman accused of paying dividends to Dulanjalee in fake notes
logoMarch 26, 2014 
Sources have revealed that a garment businessman named Rolick Augustus Krishantha Perera had allegedly given the forged Rs.5000 notes worth Rs.2 million to UNP MP Sajith Premadasas sister Dulanjalee Premadasa.
Apart from the Rs. 2 million which Dulanjalee attempted to deposit at a private bank in Colombo 7, police found 471 Rs.5000 notes at his house as well as the machine used to forge the currency.
Dulanjalee and her husband had invested in Pereras garment business and were given this sum of money as the returns on their investment.
The businessman in question had maintained a close relationship with the couple.
Although the bank staff stated that MPs sister had acted in an aggressive manner when she was informed that the money had been forged, no information regarding her involvement in this forgery racket has been uncovered yet, police stated.
March 26, 2014
A police corporal of Negombo Police station who attempted to rob Rs. 50 000 has been arrested by Seeduwa police today.

Three including the police officer have been arrested in connection to this incident.

Suspects were produced before the Negombo magistrate court and remanded till 8th of April.

The Crimean Precedent!

  • A sequel to Finlandisation and Bhutanisation?-Wednesday 26th March 2014
On Monday 17 March 2014, Vladimir Putin, ex of the KGB, Communist Russia’s autocrat, recognised Crimea as an independent state. A referendum had been held in Crimea, condemned as contrary to international law by the world community, at which an overwhelming majority of Crimean’s had allegedly voted to secede from Ukraine and join Russia.

U.N. says mass Egyptian death sentences contravene international law

Reuters Tue Mar 25, 2014 
(Reuters) - The United Nations human rights office said on Tuesday an Egyptian court's decision to sentence 529 members of the Muslim Brotherhood to death contravened international law, and voiced concern for thousands of others facing the same charges.
Rights campaigners and lawyers described Monday's ruling as the biggest mass death penalty handed out in Egypt's modern history.
The Muslim Brotherhood's leader and 682 others went on trial on Tuesday in the same court.
"The mass imposition of the death penalty after a trial rife with procedural irregularities is in breach of international human rights law," U.N. human rights spokesman Rupert Colville said at a news briefing in Geneva.
"A mass trial of 529 people conducted over just two days cannot possibly have met even the most basic requirements for a fair trial," he said.
Some 398 of the defendants were tried in absentia, he said.
The exact charges against each defendant were unclear as they were not read out in court and not all defendants had a lawyer, Colville said.
Defence lawyers said that they did not have proper access to their clients and that the court did not consider evidence they had presented on their behalf, he said.
"It is particularly worrying that there are thousands of other defendants who have been detained since last July on similar charges. The Minya criminal court in southern Egypt is today trying more than 600 individuals for membership of the Muslim Brotherhood, among other charges," Colville said.

Search For Bodies Widens In Washington Mudslide

A searcher uses a small boat to look through debris from a deadly mudslide, March 25, 2014, in Oso, Wash.

Aerial photo shows the massive mudslide near Arlington, Wash., March 24, 2014.A searcher uses a small boat to look through debris from a deadly mudslide, March 25, 2014, in Oso, Wash.At least 24 people died in the weekend mudslide in Snohomish County, Washington, where a state official says residents knew of the “high risk” of disaster. The terrain has stabilized enough to allow a more intense search as rescue workers say 16 bodies have been recovered as of Wednesday morning, eight more have been spotted and more than 150 people are still missing



Rescue teams expanded their search in Snohomish County, Wash. on Tuesday in a desperate attempt to find survivors of the catastrophic mudslide that left an estimated 24 dead amidst ruined houses and countryside.
The Washington Army National Guard, and Federal Emergency Management Agency joined local officials in the search Tuesday, using specially trained dogs and sonar technology to scour the vast affected area, reports the Seattle Times. Two more bodies were discovered Tuesday, bringing the official death toll to 16, while an additional eight were located but not recovered.
Residents of the small town devastated by a massive mudslide knew that there was a “high risk” of this kind of disaster in the area, according to a Washington state official.
“This entire year we have pushed message after message that there’s a high risk of landslides,” John Pennington, director of Snohomish County Emergency Management said. “The dangers and the risks are known.”
That marks a change of stance from Monday, when Pennington stated, “This was a completely unforeseen slide. This came out of nowhere.” The Seattle Times reported late Monday that a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers report had warned as long ago as 1999 of the “potential for a large catastrophic failure” on the hill that collapsed at the weekend.
Approximately 176 people are still reported missing after the devastating mudslide, which took place over the weekend after a long period of heavy rain. A smaller mudslide hit the area in 2006, although Pennington said that adjustments had since been made.
Rescue workers are still scouring through the wreckage, 55 miles northeast of Seattle, to find survivors. Firefighters have reported difficulties with the terrain, that are slowing the process. “It’s like quicksand out there,” local fire chief Travis Hots said. “Some of my guys could only go 50 feet in five minutes.”
Pennington says that he believes in miracles and is reserving hope.President Obama asked Americans to send prayers Washington’s way.

5 vitamins and minerals that are actually worth taking

Science tells us that taking most vitamins is worthless -- but here's a few that buck the trend


5 vitamins and minerals that are actually worth taking
This article originally appeared on Smithsonian.com.
Smithsonian MagazineMONDAY, FEB 17, 2014
Recently, a number of studies published in the Annals of Internal Medicine underscored a fact that scientists have become increasingly sure of: The vast majority of vitamins and mineral supplements are simply not worth taking. “Enough is enough: stop wasting money on vitamin and mineral supplements,” declared an editorial that was published in the issue.

Opinion: Muhammad Yunus reaveals social business as powerful weapon against poverty

Bangladeshi Nobel Peace Prize winner Muhammad Yunus in a file photo. ( AFP PHOTO/Farjana K. Godhuly)
By Fakhruddin Ahmed-March 24, 2014
NJ.comyunus.JPGMuhammad Yunus pioneered microcredit loans to the poor without requiring collateral, empowered poor women worldwide and won the 2006 Nobel Peace Prize in recognition. Through his newest innovation, social business, Yunus has declared all-out war on the nefarious blight that is poverty.