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

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Packer Behind Mahinda-Abbott Friendship?


| by Upul Joseph Fernando 
( May 7, 2014, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Suspicion is building up with regard to the relationship between casino king, James Packer and the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime. The government introduced a Bill last year that facilitated Packer to start casino clubs in Sri Lanka. However, the Bill was withdrawn from the Parliament agenda due to protest by the Buddhist monks and the patriotic elements in the government.

Speaker in a huff threatens walkout 


article_image
By Saman Indrajith-May 7, 2014

Speaker Chamal Rajapaksa lost his temper in Parliament yesterday and threatened to walk out of the House if both government and Opposition MPs did not abide by Standing Orders during question time.

He took a tough stance against MPs spending too much time on one question and was perturbed by a lengthy answer given by Minister of Foreign Employment Promotion Dilan Perera to a question raised by UNP Hambantota District MP Sajith Premadasa.

Question time is restricted to an hour, from 1.00 to 2.00 p.m, but more than 20 minutes were spent on the first question itself which angered the Speaker.

The Speaker requested MP Premadasa to keep his supplementary question short but to no avail.

The Speaker then abruptly ended his turn and moved on to the next question.

Rajapaksa repeatedly asked members to keep their questions and answers short and to the point so as to save time, but most members chose to preface their questions with lengthy statements and the answers they received were also long.

Usually, around 15 questions are listed to be asked and answered during the question hour. The Opposition is also permitted to raise three supplementary questions on responses to each of the 15 questions.

VIDEO: Traffic obstruction between Kollupitiya and Galle Face

VIDEO: Traffic obstruction between Kollupitiya and Galle Face logoMay 7, 2014 
Traffic obstruction between Kollupitya and Galle Face reported due to a protest by the Inter University Student Federation near Temple Trees.

Vietnam’s appeasement policy in South China Sea backfires



A Chinese ship, left, shoots water cannon at a Vietnamese vessel, right, while a Chinese Coast Guard ship, center, sails alongside in the South China Sea, off Vietnam's coast, Wednesday. Pic: AP.
Beijng sends a deep sea drill ship deep into Vietnam’s coastal waters, writes Asia Sentinel’s David Brown 
By  May 08, 2014
Vietnam’s Communist regime has hoped that deferential behavior might temper its giant northern neighbor’s South China Sea ambitions. But by sending the deep sea drill ship Haiyang 981 to explore for oil just off Vietnam’s central coast, Beijing has dashed that hope and posed a terrible dilemma for Hanoi.
The Vietnamese were the fiercest critics of China’s expansive claim to sovereignty over the South China Sea (SCS) in 2009-2011, when Hanoi hoped to rally an Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) united front backed, at least implicitly, by US naval might. ASEAN’s collective disinclination to challenge China left the US with no foundation for a robust policy in the South China Sea. Nor did Washington ever seem keen to offer defensive assurances to the non-Chinese claimants, not even to treaty allies in Manila.
Under those circumstances, conciliation, however unpopular with public opinion, seemed more likely to sooth Beijing and induce restraint. Particularly since the Xi Jinping government was installed in November 2012, Vietnam’s leaders have made a determined effort to patch up relations with their hulking neighbor.
While China enforced its claim to reefs within Philippine waters in 2012 and 2013, Hanoi’s response was distinctly muted. When China sent a flotilla to plant a flag on the James Bank just off East Malaysia, Hanoi seemed unperturbed. When Chinese coast guard vessels swept Vietnamese fishermen from traditional fisheries near the disputed Paracel Islands, the fisheries hotline to Beijing did not hum with protest. When tensions flared between Japan and China over the Senkaku/Diaoyu Islands, Hanoi stayed studiously clear of even verbal involvement. When Manila asked Hanoi to join in suing China in the International Court of Justice, the Vietnamese government ducked.
Over the past two years, only two events – both in June 2012 – have provoked Hanoi to public wrath. The first was an egregious invitation to foreign oil companies by the Chinese National Offshore Oil Company (CNOOC) to bid for permission to explore blocks just off the Central Vietnam coast. The second was Beijing’s establishment of “Sansha City” on a Paracels islet as the administrative and military center for Beijing’s growing SCS presence.
When circumstances have permitted over these past two years, Vietnamese leaders have missed no opportunity to laud fraternal relationships with Chinese counterparts. Hanoi appears to have reasoned that relative detente was possible once Xi and his fellows had a good grip on the levers of power.
During the run-up to the generational succession in Beijing, Middle Kingdom chauvinists were strident in their anti-Vietnamese agitation. Hanoi doubtless hoped that as power settled at the center, Xi and his colleagues would instruct subordinates to throttle back anti-Vietnamese propaganda and eschew provocative actions. In earnest of its hopes for detente, Vietnamese internal security agencies stepped up pressure on dissident bloggers, a gesture to Beijing that did not succeed in stifling criticism of the regime’s allegedly “soft” policy vis-a-vis China.
At the Shangri La Conference last September, Prime Minister Dung urged China and other participants to cooperate in “building strategic trust.”  Dung’s eloquence was was warmly applauded but, now that the Haiyang Shiyou 981 has dropped anchor 120 kilometers off Vietnam’s central coast, will any of Hanoi’s long list of partners give more than lip service to Vietnamese protests?
News of the deepsea drilling rig’s deployment broke on May 4, when a Vietnamese Foreign Ministry spokesman reacted to a routine warning to mariners issued by China’s Marine Safety Administration. A map provided by the state oil company, PetroVietnam, showed the CNOOC vessel to be about 34 km south of Triton, the southwestern-most of the Paracel Islands group, and 221 kilometers due east of Ly Son Island (ironically the home port of the Vietnamese fleet that has for several hundred years fished the waters of the Paracels).

Rupee gains on corporate dollar sales; remains in tight band

A customer hands a bundle of rupee currency notes to a teller at a financial institution in Mumbai July 2, 2013. REUTERS/Vivek Prakash/Files
A customer hands a bundle of rupee currency notes to a teller at a financial institution in Mumbai July 2, 2013.

ReutersBY SWATI BHAT-MUMBAI Thu May 8, 2014
(Reuters) - The rupee hit a one-month high on Thursday on the back of corporate dollar sales and slight gains in domestic shares, but good greenback demand from oil firms and caution ahead of the election outcome next week limited further gains.
Traders expect the rupee to continue to hold in a tight 59.80 to 60.40 per dollar range. Markets could start moving once exit polls are unveiled on Monday evening, although they have proved unreliable in previous elections. Final results for the polls will be unveiled on May 16.
Markets have priced in a narrow victory for the opposition Bharatiya Janata Party and its allies in the 543-seat lower house of parliament.
"The exit polls should give some sense of direction to markets but the central bank will be present on either sides to curb excessive volatility," said Vikas Babu Chittiprolu, a senior foreign exchange dealer with state-run Andhra Bank.
The partially convertible rupee closed at 60.0650/0750 per dollar compared with its previous close of 60.135/145.
The rupee rose to as high as 59.9225 earlier in the session, its highest since April 9, on the back of dollar sales by various corporates, while a stronger rupee in the offshore non-deliverable market had helped the local unit in early trade.
The rupee also benefited as shares recovered slightly from their lowest close in 1-1/2 months on Wednesday.
But demand from oil firms and other importers limited the upside.
Traders will continue to monitor foreign fund flows and movement in other Asian currencies in the near-term for direction.
In the offshore non-deliverable forwards, the one-month contract was at 60.36 while the three-month was at 61.06.
(Editing by Anand Basu)

Pro-Russian separatists vow to proceed with referendum despite Putin’s plea







FBI agent faces charges in Pakistan for boarding a flight with weapons

Pakistani police escort arrested US citizen Joel Cox to a court in Karachi, Pakistan. Photograph: Imran Ali/EPA
Pakistani police escort arrested US citizen Joel Cox to a court in Karachi, Pakistan.
The Guardian homeReuters in Islamabad-Thursday 8 May 2014
A FBI agent arrested in Pakistan for trying to board a civilian flight with bullets and a knife in his luggage is being investigated on possible criminal charges, Pakistani authorities said on Thursday.
Joel Cox, confirmed by the US State Department as an FBI agent, was arrested on Sunday at the airport in the southern city of Karachi after trying to board a flight with the knife and 15 9mm bullets in his luggage, police said.
The case has revived memories of Raymond Davis, an American CIA contractor who was arrested in January 2011 after shooting dead two men he believed were about to rob him in the eastern city of Lahore.
Many Pakistanis were angry that Davis was released after compensation was paid to the families of the dead and they then pardoned him, a practice allowed under Pakistani law.
Police said Cox had been charged with weapons offences but could still be given bail. 
"He's on judicial remand. Questions are obviously being asked, what is he doing with bullets and a knife?" said foreign office spokeswoman Tasnim Aslam. "Police are investigating. Obviously they would like to get to the bottom of this," she said.
Cox appeared in court on Tuesday on what police said were charges of carrying unauthorised ammunition on a civilian flight and was remanded in custody. His equipment, including his laptop, has been sent to a forensic laboratory for testing. Cox is due to appear in court again on Saturday.
A State Department spokeswoman said Washington was working closely with Pakistan to resolve Cox's arrest.
"This individual detained is an employee of the FBI, who was on a temporary duty assignment to provide routine assistance to the legal attache at the US mission," spokeswoman Jen Psaki said in her daily briefing in Washington on Wednesday. 
"We are co-ordinating closely to resolve this with authorities, and we are hopeful in that regard," she said.
The Davis case demonstrated the deep suspicion on both sides that pervades the uneasy alliance between the United States and Pakistan. Both governments officially cooperate on fighting militancy but have traded public accusations in the past. 

Shoppers should know if meat is halal, say faith leaders

NewsChannel 4 News
THURSDAY 08 MAY 2014
NewsFood in supermarkets and restaurants should be clearly labelled, say Jewish and Muslim faith leaders, as Pizza Express and other chains admit the widespread use of halal meat.
GLOBAL OUTRAGE OVER KIDNAPPING OF NIGERIAN SCHOOLGIRLS

What is Boko Haram? 

by  -May 6, 2014
Al Jazeera America logoDozens of protesters rallied at the Nigerian Embassy in Washington on Tuesday against the kidnapping of 276 girls, and their alleged sale as "brides" for as little as $12, with the hope of pressuring authorities to take action against Boko Haram, the armed group responsible for their abduction.
They gathered outside the embassy, dressed in red and holding signs that read “Bring back our girls,” and “276 stolen dreams.”
Molly Alawode, a leader of the Bring Back Our Girls campaign, told Al Jazeera the protests would continue “if the government doesn’t live up to its duty of service and protect the Nigerian population.
“We think it’s really important to send this message today to let him [President Goodluck Jonathan] and other leaders know that the world is really watching,” she added.
On April 14, 276 girls were kidnapped from their dormitories at the Government Girls Secondary School in Chibok, a city in the northern state of Borno. On Monday, the leader of Boko Haram, an armed group that seeks to create an Islamic fundamentalist state in Nigeria’s north, claimed responsibility for the attack and said he would sell the girls as slaves.
“I abducted your girls. I will sell them in the market, by Allah,” Abubakar Shekau said, according to Agence France-Presse, which reported it had obtained a video from the group.
The rally comes after hundreds of protesters at Union Square in New York staged a similar demonstration on Saturday. The demonstrators, in solidarity with the parents of the missing girls, use the hashtag #BringBackOurGirls to raise awareness about the kidnapping.
Michael Ikotun, who is involved with the campaign, said its goal is twofold. 
“We want to know exactly how many girls were kidnapped, the names of these girls, [and] the actual steps being taken to bring [them] back,” he said.
“We want the U.S. government to be involved.”
World leaders, meanwhile, will gather for two days starting May 7 for a meeting of the World Economic Forum in Nigeria’s capital, Abuja. The event has local authorities focused on international concerns about the country’s security and military instability.
Activists are using the WEF meetings to highlight what they claim are a tepid government response to the kidnappings.
“It’s very rare in a country to have more than 200 girls kidnapped, and it’s business as usual,” Ikotun said.
A day after the April kidnappings, Nigerian authorities claimed that the number of abducted was just over 100 young women, and that most had already been rescued. But that number later rose, and the military was forced to recant its statement and acknowledge that it had not rescued any of the girls.
On Tuesday, three weeks after the abduction, suspected Boko Haram members kidnapped eight more girls ages 12 to 15 from a village in northeastern Nigeria, police and residents said.
Protesters have also organized marches in London and Los Angeles in the past days. In Germany, an online petition created by Nigerian student Ify Elueze, which calls on Jonathan and world leaders to bring the girls home, gathered more than 200,000 signatures in less than a week. Its signatories include supporters from South Africa, Canada and the United Kingdom.
“It started because I believe everyone feels the pain, and all you want is for these girls to be brought back,” Elueze said. “And I really hope that this would create awareness, which would ultimately bring them back.” 

Wednesday, May 7, 2014

Inner City PressBy Matthew Russell Lee, Exclusive
UNITED NATIONS, May 6 -- Rapes in Sri Lanka, about which the UN's Zainab Bangura, Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict, publicly expressed concern on April 24, were the subject of a session at Canada's Mission to the UN on May 6.
   Multiple sources tell Inner City Press that at the meeting, controversial Sri Lankan military figure, now Deputy Permanent Representative Shavendra Silva sought to deny the reports of rape by the Army.  He said for example that "certain organizations are propagating false allegations, they are repeated by different organizations and form an opinion."
   Soldiers under Silva's command were depicted engaged in war crimes in the UN's own Sri Lanka report; here is a story of Silva spinning at the UN, and some aftermath.
  At the May 6 session, Inner City Press is informed, Canadian Permanent Representative Guillermo Rishchynski spoke of a risk of further violence in Sri Lanka as none of underlying causes of conflict have been dealt with. He particularly regretted the harassment of civil society in wake of Navi Pillay's visit. (The Canadian Mission's spokesperson declined to comment when asked before the meeting by Inner City Press, saying the meeting was closed.)
  Also in attendance were representatives of Norway, the United States and United Kingdom, Nigeria, Japan, Pakistan, Montenegro and South Africa. The last of these said they would refer the concerns back to their capital to determine next steps. An attendee noted that the French Mission to the UN, which talks much about sexual violence in conflict, was not in attendance.
  It is a doubly-timely topic at the UN, the day after the 130 rapes at Minova by two Congolese army  units which still receive support from the UN's MONUSCO mission resulted in a mere two convictions and three dozen exhonerations. Inner City Press questions on how this relates to the UN stated Human Rights Due Diligence Policy, like its questions about the rapes for month to UN Peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous, were met May 6 by UN stonewalling, video here.
 The rapists in Sri Lanka have not even been prosecuted, or are being facilely cleared, as were the Sri Lankan "peacekeepers" repatriated from Haiti. We'll have more on this.
   Back on April 24 Inner City Press asked Bangura about the rapes in Sri Lanka and what if anything the UN is doing about it. UN video here from Minute 15:15, Inner City Press video here and embedded below.
   Bangura replied that she is "concerned, worried" and has spoken with Sri Lanka's Permanent Representative, Palitha Kohona, about it, urging him that Sri Lanka designate a "focal person" on the issue. It is not Kohona slated to attend on May 5, but his deputy Shavendra Silva.
  Inner City Press asked about the report authored by Yasmin Sooka, who previously served on one of the UN's panels looking at war crimes in Sri Lanka and who will give a briefing at the May 5 meeting, along with Kirsty Brimmelow. Here is a link to the report.

  Earlier in April, Inner City Press asked yet another former UN panelist on Sri Lanka, Marzuki Darusman, if he thought the UN's response to his report had been successful. Darusman cited the example of Cambodia, for the proposition that justice can take a long time. But how long?
  The UN can't even keep track of its own statements. On alleged rapes by UN peacekeepers in Mali, the UN told Inner City Press in January that the investigation was finished. Then on April 23, the UN's Mali envoy Bert Koenders said it won't be finished for two or three weeks, but predicted or pretold that the UN peacekeepers will be cleared. 
  Bangura, when Inner City Press asked, didn't know which was true, or any update on the rape charges against UN peacekeepers themselves.

  Combined with the UN's refusal to be accountable for, or even acknowledge service of legal papers on Ban Ki-moon about, bringing cholera to Haiti, how can the UN effectively push for accountability by anyone else? We'll see. Watch this site.

The Executive President – Public Office Above The Law


Colombo TelegraphBy Nagananda Kodituwakku - May 7, 2014
Nagananda Kodituwakku
Nagananda Kodituwakku
There are very serious allegations being leveled against the government particularly by the international community about the apparent lawlessness in the country. Some are of a very serious nature including that there is no Rule of Law in Sri Lanka, the fundamental constitutional norm respected by all democracies.
In response to these allegations, which include the lack of Good Governance, Separation of Power and Accountability, the government repeatedly states that there is a system of accountability in place, no one is above the law and all government actions are driven by the Rule of Law. Are these statements, mostly made by  Minister G L Peiris well-founded or grossly baseless and lacking any credibility?
In this backdrop the statement made by the Chief Justice Mohan Pieris at the KDU International Research Symposium – 2013, in this regard is very important.  The Chief Justice expressed the government view on the Rule of Law, Good Governance and Separation of Power, stating that Good Governance and Rule of Law are nice words but are not found in any part of the world and therefore one need not worry too much about it. The Chief Justice further stated that there is no clear line that demarcates the Separation of powers between the Legislature, Executive and the Judiciary.
Those who are concerned with the plight of the Judiciary in this country today are quite aware that Chief Justice Dr Bandaranayake lost the ‘pleasure of the executive’ as  the Supreme Court declared a number of bills presented by the government which were challenged before the Supreme Court, as unconstitutional and that prompted the government to take ‘corrective measures’ to ensure her removal, the process of which was held unlawful by both the Supreme Court and the Court of Appeal.
Thereafter, despite serious allegations of dishonesty and gross misconduct, leveled against Mr Mohan Pieris in a fundamental rights petition filed before the Supreme Court, which were hitherto uncontested, the Executive President installed him at the office of the Chief Justice.                               Read More
5 years today - Humanitarian situation worsens, LTTE welcomes ICRC, British Tamils enter second month of continuous protest

07 May 2014
May 07 2009 - Humanitarian situation worsens, LTTE welcomes ICRC, British Tamils enter second month of continuous protest

The LTTE in a letter to the ICRC, thanked the organisation for its humanitarian efforts despite facing shelling from the government and reaffirmed its commitment to the safety of humanitarian workers.

Deadly attackers of Jaffna Uthayan enjoy indefinite state impunity

05 MAY 2014
BY RAMANAN VEERASINGHAM
Eight painful years have whistle passed since heavily armed military and paramilitary operatives carried out a well-planned murderous attack on Jaffna Uthayan Newspapers, killing two media workers and wounding two more on May 02, 2006. Still, no one has been brought to book with regard to this attack, which ironically took place at a time when the journalists elsewhere in the world celebrated the World Press Freedom Day.
The newspaper's Marketing Manager Bastian George Sagayathas  - Suresh ( 36) and Circulation Supervisor S. Ranjith (25) were killed  when the masked men sprayed volley of bullets on everything at sight. S. Uthayakumar (48) and N. Thayakaran (24) were badly injured in the attack, which caused millions worth of damage to the computers and other equipment at the office.
The armed attack on the offices of the Tamil-language newspaper in Northern Sri Lanka came in the midst of three days of events organised by the Colombo government to mark UNESCO’s world press freedom day.
Addressing the grand award ceremony of the UNESCO-Guillermo Cano World Press Freedom Prize at the BMICH in Colombo, President Mahinda Rajapaksa condemned the attack and publicly claimed to have ordered the police chief to arrest the perpetrators within the next 48 hours.
Fake charges
Serving his political masters, the then police chief took into custody six innocent Tamil students within the next few hours and nearly succeeded in neutralising the negative publicity in the international media. Poor students were released a few days later as the police found it impossible to frame fake charges against these students, who had been arrested while returning from their tuition classes. 
Failing to arrest the true perpetrators of the newspaper office attack in the war-torn North and providing them safe heaven with full state impunity instead, have resulted in several media workers, journalists and media organisations facing the similar situation all over the island nation in the following years - such as the high-profile killing of the Editor of Sunday Leader Lasantha Wickrematunge, armed attack on Maharajah Television and disappearance of journalists Pregeeth Egnaligoda, to name a few. Waylaying and attacking a freelance journalist in the North, 29-year old Sivagnanam Selvatheepan on April 14, this year was the latest in the series.
'A point of no return'
The Uthayan Newspaper office itself has suffered numerous attacks thereafter, with the latest being in April 2013.  These attacks have virtually turned the Newspaper office a war museum for international media, envoys and world leaders. Whenever they get a chance to visit the North to witness the so-called post-war rehabilitation process, they make it a point to drop in at the Uthayan office and pose for selfies.
Several members of the international community and the international media watchdogs have vehemently condemned and repeatedly requested the incumbent government of President Mahinda Rajapaksa to end the prolonging culture of impunity and to ensure the media freedom and right to information. But the Colombo government appears to have either grossly ignored their condemnations and requests or taken them to its advantage to further stifle the media.
Editor of the Uthayan Newspaper, M.V. Kanamylnathan told the JDS on Friday (02) on the eighth anniversary of the brutal attack on his newspaper, "the situation is much worse than what it was during the war time, and is further getting worse to a point of no return".
'An Information Hero'
Coincidently, Mr. Kanamylnathan has been recognised by the Reporters Without Borders (RSF) as one of its "100 Information Heroes" for this year's World Press Freedom Day. The RSF said that through their courageous work or activism, these "100 Heroes" help to promote the freedom enshrined in article 19 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. It said these heroes, who constantly sacrifice their safety and sometimes their lives to their vocation, put their ideas in the service of the common good and serve as examples.
Sri Lanka is ranked 165th out of 179 countries in the RSF press freedom index for 2014. At least 40 media workers have been killed or abducted and made to disappear while many media institutions have been bombed and burnt, forcing many in the profession to flee the country to safety.

Sri Lanka: Hharassment and ill-treatment of prisnors amounting to the violation of their basic human rights

 Bishop. Norbert Andradi
”However, as we were about to go to the Prison we were informed by the local prison authorities that Bishop Rayappu could not be permitted to enter the Prison unless they have orders from higher authorities in Colombo. I contacted Hon. Minister Ravi Karunanayake again who was to obtain the required permission for him. We waited for about three hours and since there was no reply Bishop Rayappu Joseph returned to Mannar. I sent in the Chaplin of the prison of Anuradhapura and he performed the religious rites. 

Letter sent by Bishop. Norbert Andradi, Bishop of Anuradhapura to Chief Justice , Mohan Peiris  on obstruction of Bp Rayappu, Bishop of Mannar to visit the Tamil prisoners in Anuradhapura prison on Easter Sunday

Hon. Mohan Peiris
Chief Justice
Chamber of Chief Justice
Complex of the Supreme Court
Hulfsdorp
Colombo 12.
 
Your Honour,
 This is to keep Your Honour informed of some events in relation to the Prison of Anuradhapura.Yesterday, being Easter Sunday I was to conduct the Easter Religious Services in the Catholic Chapel situated inside the prison complex of Anuradhapura.

Meanwhile, His Lordship Most Rev. Dr. Rayappu Joseph, the Bishop of Mannar hearing that I was due to celebrate mass there, desired to  join with me and meet briefly the many Tamil speaking Catholics of the Diocese of Mannar who happen to be among the present inmates of the Prison.

With the consent of His Lordship, I contacted Hon. Minister Mr. Ravi Karunanayake and informed him of our intention. He, in turn, was to contact Hon. Mr. Chandrasiri Gajadheera and keep him informed of the planned visit. However, as we were about to go to the Prison we were informed by the local prison authorities that Bishop Rayappu could not be permitted to enter the Prison unless they have orders from higher authorities in Colombo. I contacted Hon. Minister Ravi Karunanayake again who was to obtain the required permission for him. We waited for about three hours and since there was no reply Bishop Rayappu Joseph returned to Mannar. I sent in the Chaplin of the prison of Anuradhapura and he performed the religious rites.

What I learned was that the local prison authorities appeared to have been fairly excited over this proposed visit which to some extent I could understand. We learrn that they appear to have given many instructions to the Tamil inmates that they should not speak to him for too long, not give him any letters or anything in writing, etc., etc.

What disturbs me personally is to see that the prison authorities appear to have so much to hide which they would not want others to know and find out. On Palm Sunday and Good Friday, most sacred to Christians, the female inmates had not been permitted to attend the religious services calming an absence of some security personnel. I have reasons to believe that there is quite a bit of harassment and ill-treatment of some of these inmates amounting to the violation of their basic human rights including their fundamental religious rights. We would thereby be only repeating the past errors giving way to creating new terrorists.

I thought of sharing this information with you. I also understand that these problems are much more complex than they appear. I am prepared to be guided by any advice or suggestions you may have.
    Thank you.
Bishop Norbert M. Andradi.
Bishop of Anuradhapura.
cc. 1. His Excellency S. Palitha Fernando, Attorney General, Attorney General’s Depatemnt, Hulftsdorp, Colombo 12.
       2. Justice Priyantha Perera, Chairman, Human Rights Commission, 165, Kynsey Road, Colombo 08.

        3. His Lordship Most Rev. Dr. Rayappu Joseph, Bishop of Mannar, Bishop’s House, Mannar.