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, April 6, 2014

Gota now encroaching on Muslim burial ground


gota 24Defence and Urban Development Ministry Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa after evicting many people from Colombo has now turned towards the Muslim burial ground in Maligawatte.

Businessmen with links to the Ministry have been allowed to illegally encroach into lands in the Maligawatte burial ground.
JVP’s newly elected Western Provincial Councilor K.D. Lal Kantha has said the party will stand by the Muslim community in Colombo to help them win their rights.
Lal Kantha has observed that the Muslim community in Colombo has been affected by illegal encroachments into the Muslim burial ground in Maligawatte.
Participating in a protest in Colombo organized by the Muslims, he has noted that the members of the Muslim community have held several protests to stop the illegal encroachments in their burial ground.
“Despite an order by the Colombo Municipal Council to stop the illegal construction work in lands that belong to the Muslim burial ground, the businessmen engaged in the construction work have ignored the directive,” Lal Kantha has said, adding that the Muslim community believes that the businessmen were acting in arbitrary manner due to the backing from the Defense and Urban Development Ministry.
According to the JVP senior, the party will resort to legal action to safeguard the rights of the Muslim people.
Lal Kantha has added that people needed to take action against the continuous acquisition of lands in an illegal manner by the government.

The UNHRC Resolution: A Critical Interrogation


Colombo Telegraph
By Krisna Saravanamuttu -April 6, 2014
Krisna Saravanamuttu
Krisna Saravanamuttu
The struggle for liberation sharpened only because the people realized that they were being taken for a ride. Those same realizations helped keep our struggle on track. If these are to be blunted we will become a race prepared to give up its ideals in return for concessions.” – Taraki Sivaram, former senior editor of TamilNet
Five years after the international community, the co-chairs to the peace process, and the United Nations failed to stop Sri Lanka’s 2009 genocide, Tamils appear to finally be upon a new beginning in the decades long struggle for justice. The US sponsored resolution passed an intense session of the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) last week. The motion carried and supposedly sets up an international investigation into wartime abuses.  The fact that some Tamil activists lobbied for this resolution at the Human Rights Council does not preclude a closer, critical, and more constructive interrogation. The question remains, how exactly will the resolution advance Tamil freedom in the international arena?
A political solution to end Tamil genocide
A cursory glance at the text of the resolution tabled by the United States leaves something conspicuously absent. Besides a vague insinuation to the Sri Lankan campaign to “combat terrorism,” there is not a single mention of the word ‘Tamil’ (not even once). Instead, the resolution declared “its commitment to the sovereignty, independence, unity and territorial integrity of Sri Lanka.” Upon closer scrutiny, minorities and religious groups are mentioned, but still no mention of the unique oppression Tamils suffer.
Tamils qualify as a Nation of people, not a minority group, with their own identity, language, culture, history and an identifiable territorial homeland. So any reference to minorities in the UNHRC resolution is irrelevant to the Tamil Question. Indeed, the Tamil People today resist Sri Lanka’s attempts to make them into a scattered minority across their homeland, for the struggle has always been about the survival of the Tamils as a Nation. There are minorities in the island like the Berghers, the mixed descendants of Europeans. What makes us, the Tamils, the target of genocide is that we are a nation with a specific claim to a homeland in the NorthEast. Of course, such arguments are nothing new to the policy makers behind the resolution. Although political will to recognize Tamil Nationhood leaves much to be desired, it is a prerequisite to resolving the island’s conflict.Read More

Peace Studies philosopher advises Tamils to tell the story with a vision

[TamilNet, Sunday, 06 April 2014, 11:37 GMT]------Professor Johan Galtung
Johan GaltungTamilNet“Let us say you have one million Tamils in the Tamil diaspora. They used to collect money for the LTTE. They collected a lot of money. Let me put it in very plain simple terms: these one million work on the media of the world and make the story better known,” said 84-year old Peace Studies Professor Johan Galtung, in an interview to TamilNet-Palaka'ni last month. Acknowledging that the Eezham Tamils face genocide and structural genocide, identifying the Mahavamsa mentality in the Sinhala-Buddhists as the impediment for solutions, and at the same time blaming the armed struggle of the LTTE as a mistake, Galtung stood by “federation with a high level of autonomy,” which he had advocated and failed during his 34 visits to the island at the time of the peace talks. 
Tamils should come out with a campaign of vision that doesn’t threaten anyone, especially the Sinhala Buddhists, Galtung underlined.
Further comments of Professor Galtung summarised, full transcript follows at the end:

Full transcript of the interview with Professor Johan Galtung follows:

Rajapaksa govt. taken aback by PC results


The Sundaytimes Sri Lanka
Concerns for the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) Government last week outweighed all others in its decade-long existence.  The outcome of the two provincial elections, just after the adoption of the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) resolution, reverberated in the dovecotes of power. This is the first time since the military defeat of Tiger guerrillas (in 2009) that the UPFA’s vote base has slid from 60 to just more than 50 per cent. It lost 17 seats in both councils in the Western and Southern Provincial Councils. The sombre message was strong though some embarrassed stalwarts tried to downplay it. Different ministers gave different views, not surprisingly, some contradictory.

War On The Diaspora

By Easwaran Rutnam-Sunday, April 06, 2014
The Sunday Leader

A new war has now began, a war between leading Diaspora groups and the Government. The war of words began after the Government had decided to proscribe 15 Tamil groups operating overseas over their alleged links with the LTTE.

Modi Must Bring About Serious Foreign Policy Change

Colombo Telegraph April 6, 2014
Rajasingham Jayadevan
Rajasingham Jayadevan
The current Indian parliament (lok Sabah) will end its constitutional term on 14 May 2014. The expectations are, BJP coalition will win comfortably. BJP's Narendra Modi is the Prime Minister in waiting and EXPECTED As seen
to take forward in an outright Way From the Foundation laid for BJP during the Economic upturn Its Last term in Office. 
The demand for change in political direction is much felt, as India remains regionally and internationally a subdued state. Its non-assertive foreign policy is ravaged by its inability to articulate its regional authority. This is boomeranging on India, thus facilitating China to extend its spears without any check and balance. Never in the history of independent India has it been bullied by all of its neighboring states. State of Sri Lanka is taking even the Little fearless comfort and dictating terms to lozenges with teasing On MANY issues-thus after the Indian Fishermen From
abstained voting
 in the UNHRC. India's foreign policy is in deadlock and it is surely non assertive and submissive.  
India's muted approach is permitting Sri Lanka to enforce its will without any fear - a predicament of an elephant becoming highly allergic to ant venom. Continuation of this unreceptive foreign policy will eventually kill India's stakes, as the fast changing international circumstances will lead to unredeemable consequences.
All the hopes are on the popular BJP leader Narendra Modhi to revive and reignite a commanding Indian foreign policy to assert its stakes in the global politics. BJP's foreign policy based on its nationalist principles is expected to be different to that of the present pathetically weak Congress lead coalition. There is dire need for a change in the policy direction.
The Pakistani Daily in its editorial of 21 January 2014 asserted: "It could be that considering the BJP's candidate for the top slot Narendra Modi's election campaign momentum and his track record in Gujarat .... that could outshine Rahul's political career so far, Sonia decided not to take the plunge, ". Such a binocular view from a country contagious to India speaks volumes of Narendra Modi's chances to become the Prime Minister of India.
The party will also try to focus on states like West Bengal, Kerala, Odisha and in the northeast where it does not have a presence.
When I had a long meeting with Narendra Modi on a five mile drive to the infamous Swaminarayan temple in Neasden in London some years ago, I presented him with a memorandum on the political resolution to the conflict in Sri Lanka. It was a useful engagement and he made his candid comments. The Rajiv Gandhi factor was at peak at that time and he expressed his difficulties in carrying out an outright campaign. But he promised to do whatever within his limits.
                                                                             Read More

 April 4, 2014
The government this week banned the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam and 15 other Tamil Diaspora organizations under the UN Security Council Resolution 1373, which sets out strategies to combat terrorism and terrorist financing.
Sixteen groups were designated as terrorist groups and front organizations in an order signed by the External Affairs Minister G.L.Peiris and a gazette notification is expected to be issued to that effect in the near future. Customarily, it is the President who is also the Minister of Defence who has authority to designate terrorist groups. That the external affairs minister, who is meant to handle international affairs of the government, signed the decree on domestic security may add to confusion over the overlapping powers of the Cabinet portfolios.



Court action to election Commissioner

mahinda deshapriyaSri Lanka Muslim Congress and Democratic Party to initiate legal action against Elections Commissioner Mahinda Deshapriya regarding the controversy surrounding preferential vote count at the Provincial Council poll.
Both parties complained to the Elections Commissioner for changing the preferential votes.
Accordingly, a mistake had occurred while listing the preferential votes where the officer had mixed-up the order of the candidates. The preferential votes of some candidates had changed owing to the mistake.
The Democratic Party said that it was not reliable poll results as consequences

Not A Single Person Got Elected From Minority Communities As A Member Of Rajapaksa Alliance: UNP

April 6, 2014
“The whole state machinery was used blatantly for the election campaign for the election victory of the United Peoples Freedom Alliance. The ground was prepared in this manner for the election of the Western and Southern Provincial Council elections. We have to analyze the election results taking into consideration all above mentioned facts.” says the United National Party.
UNP acting leader Karu Jayasuriya
UNP acting leader Karu Jayasuriya
“What is the message conveyed by the reduction of the voter base of the United Peoples Freedom Alliance by 247,103 in the election which was conducted by controlling majority of the media, intimidating editors, media personnel, violating election laws, perverting the minds of the people by showing threat of international conspiracies?  This is the most important fact that we should realize and understand.” issuing a statement Sri Lanka’s main opposition party said today.
We publish below the statement in full;
Results of the Western and Southern Provincial Councils have given important signals. Before we analyze the results we wish to take this opportunity to thank the voters for casting their votes bravely amidst many obstacles, despite false propaganda and despotic behavior of the Government.  We also extend our thanks to all candidates of the UNP Organizers of the Electorates and Representatives of the people who devotedly worked hard to establish the message of the United National Party in these two provinces during this election.
We wish to extend the respect of the United National Party to Mr. Mahinda Deshapriya, Commissioner of Elections, who made an attempt to conduct the election successfully and all state officials who supported him.
Before analyzing the election results it is important to draw attention to the background under which it was conducted.
                                                                           Read More
Research reveals-95% Colombo residents carry dengue virus 

By Umesh Moramudali-April 6, 2014 
 
Recent research has revealed that 95% of the population living within the Colombo Municipal area is inflicted with dengue virus, giving rise to doubts about the effectiveness of the dengue prevention programmes carried out by the health authorities.
 

Chief Medical Officer of the Colombo Municipal Council (CMC), Dr. Pradeep Kariyawasam, said this had been revealed after tests being conducted on a group of people living in the Wanathamulla area.
"Only 10% of those affected by communicable diseases are identified, because 90%, who are affected by the disease or are carriers of the virus do not show any of the symptoms of the disease," he said.He noted that most people in the Colombo area have been stung, at some time, by a dengue mosquito, but due to the high immunity level they are not identified as dengue patients.
 

"Most people just get little headache or muscle pain which vanishes within one or two days," he said.
Dr Kariyawasam said approximately750 persons in the Colombo Municipal area have been affected by dengue from the beginning of the year to date and five deaths had been reported. He also noted that 75% of reported dengue patients are below 20 years of age and out of the five deaths three were children below five years.
 

In recent the past dengue had adversely affected the Colombo Municipal area and many lives had been lost due to that. According to Dr. Kariyawasam 3,900 persons in the Colombo Municipal area were affected in 2013 and 17 deaths had been reported. The matter came to light with a death of a Law Faculty student of the University of Colombo.
According to the Epidemiology Unit of the Health Ministry, within the first three months of 2014, 6,627 suspected dengue cases have been reported from all over the country. Interestingly, 58.65% of dengue cases were reported from the Western Province.
 

Commenting on the high rate of dengue reported in the Colombo district Dr. Kariyawasam noted that the population density in the Colombo District is higher thanother areas and that is the main reason for the speedy spread of dengue.
 

He added that proper clean up processes were not followed by most households as well as institutions which resulted in increasing the number of dengue breeding places.
 

Dr. Kariyawasam pointed out that most dengue breeding places are found in government institutions and construction sides. Schools and State institutions in Colombo do not follow a proper cleaning plan, he added.
"They wait till inspectors come and instruct them or fine them for not destroying mosquito breeding places. There have been places where the owners had been fined three or four times for not destroying mosquito breeding places," he noted.
 

He also said, most dengue patients were reported from Central Colombo, Colombo North and Borella areas. He noted that there has been a reduction in the numbers of dengue patients reported within the first quarter of the year.

Dilith Jayaweera’s ‘Citrus’ likely to be 

forfeited to Dhammika Perera!

dilith dhammikaThe Citrus Group, owned by Colombo share market mafia’s convener and Triad Advertising co-owner Dilith Jayaweera, is likely to be forfeited to wealthy casino businessman and Transport Ministry secretary Dhammika Perera’s Pan Asia Bank.
Citrus Group comprises of three star-class hotels in Waskaduwa, Kalpitiya and Hikkaduwa, George Steurt Finance Company and several other ventures. Dilith Jayaweera has obtained loans of more than Rs. three billion, which is much higher than the worth of the total assets of Citrus Group.
On the instructions of the president, the Bank of Ceylon has given another Rs. 500 million loan to the already-indebted Dilith Jayaweera. The BoC management is puzzled over the basis for the granting of the loan. According to internal sources of the bank, no loan granting procedure or yardstick was followed when giving the loan.
Dilith Jayaweera has mortgaged shares of his Citrus Group to Dhammika Perera’s Pan Asia Bank and to Royal Ceramic Company.
If he fails to obtain the backing of his boss, defence ministry secretary Nandasena Gotabhaya, it will be unavoidable that Dilith Jayaweera’s Citrus Group will be forfeited to Dhammika Perera.

Thonda expels president’s media spokesman!

arumugam thondaman 1Ceylon Workers’ Congress leader and minister of livestock and rural development Arumugam Thondman has lectured and driven away president’s media spokesman Mohan Samaranayake, who had gone to the ministry seeking a personal favour recently, said ministry sources.
The president’s media spokesman had gone to the Thondaman’s ministry to ask for support to obtain a job for his brother’s daughter at Milco.
Minister Thondaman had intentionally treated Samaranayake in the same manner he is treated when he visits the Presidential Secretariat. After spending several hours in the queue of persons wanting to meet the minister, Samaranayake was permitted in, and he had mentioned that he is the president’s media spokesman, but the minister has ignored him, saying that was irrelevant.
Coming to the matter, Samaranayake has told Thondaman about his requirement, and the latter has told him to apply for the job in question in the normal procedure as a large number of applications have already been received. Not satisfied with that reply, the president’s media spokesman has asked that his request be given preference.
Angered by that, minister Thondaman has said, “When we come to the Secretariat, you don’t care us a red cent. Now, you are coming here expecting help from us. Please, go. Apply in the normal procedure. I cannot do anything special for you,” and showed him the door. Severely embarrassed this disgrace, the president’s media spokesman has returned to his office and with tearful eyes, related to his colleagues about the manner he was treated by minister Thondaman.
The Conflation: A New Book on Sri Lanka
(Lanka-e-News- 04.April.2014, 9.30PM) The Conflation is a new book edited by Niantha Ilangamuwa, which contains a collection of interviews with scholars, activists and institutional officers that he conducted during the last few years as a career journalist.

On reviewing the book, Dr. Binoy Kampmark, who was a Commonwealth Scholar at Selwyn College, Cambridge, pointed out, “This emotional, powerful work primarily examines the war-torn past of Sri Lanka and the role of the Tamils in their struggle for self-determination”.

“It features various interviews conducted by the author over the past decade. While focusing on Sri Lanka, the author also broadens his discussion in these interviews on subjects such as torture, the erosion of civil liberties in the West, and the role of the International Criminal Court. The wide array of powerful interviews will provide readers with a valuable historical document,” he added.

Ilangamuwa frequently writes on Sri Lanka and his views have appeared widely in publications such as Counter Punch, Counter Currents and the national and international media.

The book is available on Amazon at http://www.amazon.com/Conflation-politics-politrics-beyond-ecstasy/dp/1496075528/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1396625555&sr=1-2&keywords=nilantha+ilangamuwa

US Optimism Ebbs Over Burma Reforms

US President Barack Obama gives a speech at the convocation hall in the University of Yangon on Nov. 19, 2012. (Photo: Reuters / Minzayar)
Myanmar, Burma, The Irrawaddy, US, United States, Barack Obama, Thein Sein, reform, democracy, Congress
The Irrawaddy Magazine
WASHINGTON — Two years after the United States announced the normalization of diplomatic relations with Burma, optimism in Washington over the nation’s embrace of democracy is waning and concern over the plight of minority Muslims is growing.
What has been viewed as a foreign policy success story for the Obama administration, supported by both Democrats and Republicans, faces a rocky road ahead as the pace of political reform slows and US congressional criticism intensifies.
Lawmakers are frustrating the administration’s efforts to engage the nation’s powerful military, and antipathy will likely increase if opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi, long revered in Washington, is unable to run for the presidency next year and complete a Mandela-like transformation from former political prisoner to head of state.
Suu Kyi is ineligible to be president because she was married to a foreigner. While the United States says it remains hopeful the Constitution can be amended so Suu Kyi can run, congressional aides say US officials are pessimistic about that happening before the national elections at the end of 2015. Constitutional reforms would also be required to dilute the political power of the military and meet ethnic minority demands for autonomy.
US officials tell The Associated Press that constitutional reform is an evolving process and the boldest changes may not happen before the election, a key staging post in Burma’s transition from five decades of repressive army rule.
But the most pressing concern for the United States, and the one on which the Obama administration and lawmakers have been most outspoken, is communal violence between majority Buddhists and Muslims, and the rising tide of Buddhist nationalism that many expect will intensify in the run-up to the election.
The House Foreign Affairs Committee called last week for an end to persecution of stateless Rohingya Muslims in one of the strongest congressional criticisms yet of Burma’s reformist government. The committee’s Republican chairman, Ed Royce, questioned whether the United States should embrace diplomatic reconciliation with Burma while human rights deteriorate.
The country regards Rohingya as illegal immigrants from Bangladesh, although many have lived in Burma for generations. Some 140,000 Rohingya displaced by the violence since mid-2012 live in overcrowded, dirty camps that segregate them from Buddhists. Tens of thousands of Rohingya have fled the country by boat.
A month ago Burma suspended the operations of Doctors Without Borders, the main health care provider in the strife-hit state of Arakan. Other relief agencies fled this week because of attacks by Buddhist mobs that the United Nations said threatened the entire humanitarian response in the state.
State Department spokeswoman Marie Harf on Wednesday voiced deep concern about the “humanitarian crisis” there.
“Currently, large segments of the population do not have access to adequate medical services, water, sanitation, and food. The government has so far failed to provide adequate security and the travel authorizations necessary for the humanitarian aid workers to resume their life-saving services,” she said.
That strong statement came almost two years to the day that then-Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton announced the United States was appointing its first full ambassador to Burma in two decades, ending a policy of diplomatic isolation. That rewarded the fair conduct of special elections in which Suu Kyi won a parliamentary seat.
By November 2012, the United States had suspended most of its restrictions on aid, trade and investment, and Barack Obama became the first US president to visit Burma—hugging Suu Kyi outside the lakeside villa where she was once imprisoned.
Obama’s visit crowned a rapid transformation in relations, and US officials say they remain optimistic about Burma’s path. They point to the releases of hundreds of political prisoners, economic reforms, and easing of restrictions on media and labor unions. The government is also trying to reach peace with armed ethnic groups that have fought central rule since independence in 1948.
A US-funded poll released Thursday by the International Republican Institute found that 88 percent of respondents sampled across Burma thought things in the country were heading in the right direction, and 57 percent thought their economic situation was going to improve in the coming year. The margin of error is plus or minus 2 percentage points.
In the latest diplomatic landmark, US Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel this week hosted Burma’s defense minister at a gathering of top Southeast Asian defense officials in Hawaii.
The administration views military engagement as a way of getting Burma’s army to adopt international norms, and there’s support among lawmakers who oversee defense policy for that approach, starting with non-lethal US training of Burma’s military on human rights, rule of law and disaster relief.
But that push is stymied by lawmakers overseeing foreign policy who are swayed by human rights groups. They fear the start of a formal training program without clear benchmarks on actions required by Burma could lead to a creeping expansion of military ties and bestow prestige on an army still implicated in abuses like rape and torture.
While Burma is far more open than it was under military rule, it has yet to permit the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to establish an office in the country, as it promised to when Obama visited Burma in November 2012.
As a result, the UN’s top rights body last week voted to appoint another special rapporteur to monitor the country, as it did for Iran and North Korea.

Fifteen million tonnes of food waste in UK is 'repugnant'

Fifteen million tonnes of food waste in UK is 'repugnant'Channel 4 News
SUNDAY 06 APRIL 2014
A House of Lords committee report has said it is "absolutely shocked" at the scale of food waste in the EU and calls on supermarkets, farmers and individuals to do more to stop it.

Kidnapped Ukrainian journalist's body found near Kiev

Friends of Vasily Sergiyenko, who was also a member of the right-wing Svoboda party, say he was tortured before being killed
Vasily Sergiyenko took part in protests against Ukraine's ousted president Viktor Yanukovych. Photograph: Viktor Drachev/AFP/Getty Images
People shout slogans during a protest against Viktor Yanukovych
The body of a kidnapped journalist who took part in protests againstUkraine's president Viktor Yanukovych has been found dumped in a forest 60 miles outside the capital Kiev.
Vasily Sergiyenko – a local journalist and the member of the right-wing Svoboda party – was abducted from his home in the city of Korsun-Shevchenkivskyi on Friday evening Three men reportedly grabbed him and bundled him into a white Lada car, which neighbours had spotted previously. A trail of bloodstains were found outside his house.
Police said on Sunday his body had been discovered in a shallow grave in a wood, 15km from the city. According to friends from his self-defence unit, one of dozens of local organisations that sprung up in the wake of Ukraine's anti-Yanukovych protests, Segiyenko had been brutally tortured then killed.
"We found a place that looked like a freshly dug pit. We waited for prosecutors to arrive then begin digging. The spot was covered with rubbish. Under it was a body. The man had been handcuffed. The guys recognised this was the missing Vasily Sergiyenko," Oleg Sobchenko told Ukrainian media.
Sobchenko said the were wounds to the journalist's knees, as well as stab marks to his kidney, heart and back. His killers had severed his head, he said, adding that there were indications the murder had been planned in advance. "Fresh earth was mixed in with dry. The grave had been dug earlier," he said.
Svoboda said that Sergiyenko's killing had all the hallmarks of a politically motivated hit. The journalist worked for the local Nadrossia newspaper and was an active member of Automaidan – a movement of car drivers who opposed Yanukovych. One of its leaders, Dmytro Bulatov, was kidnapped in late January by unknown assailants. They eventually released him, but only after cutting off part of his ear.
Svoboda's leader Oleh Tyahnybok said that Sergiyenko and other Svoboda representatives had received menacing threats over the past week. Tyahnybok's party is nationalist in orientation and took an active role in the street protests in February that saw Yanukovych flee to Russia. The pro-Ukrainian party, which was previously in opposition, has four ministerial posts in the new government.
Russia has seized on Svoboda's official political role as evidence that "fascists" supported by the EU and US have grabbed power in Ukraine. Western officials and analysts say that Svoboda has disavowed its earlier radicalism, and note the party's electoral success reflects a reaction to Yanukovych's Russification policies. Tyahnybok is running for president in the May 25 election but is unlikely to win.
Speaking on Sunday, Svoboda's spokesman Yury Syrotiuk said he believed the journalist's death was linked to a feud with a local businessman, Hennady Bobov – a prominent deputy in Yanukovych's Party of Regions. The party has dissociated itself from Yanukovych and gone into opposition in the Rada, Ukraine's parliament.
"Sergiyenko was a very calm man, who was looking after his elderly mother. He wasn't interested in confrontation," Syrotiuk said. "The only thing he was doing that might have provoked an angry response was a series of investigations into corruption allegations involving Bobov. This was a very savage killing."
Syrotiuk added that Svoboda also had a longstanding dispute with representatives of Party of Regions in the Cherkasy region where in the last week alone there were three attacks on Svoboda's activists.
Bobov has denied any involvement in the murder. The businessman offered a reward for information after the journalist vanished and urged the authorities to take the matter under their personal control, local media reported.