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

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Six Ukrainian soldiers killed in Donetsk ambush

Attack comes as separatists repeat assertion that pro-Kiev forces are considered to be an 'occupying force' in east Ukraine
Ukrainian soldiers stand guard at a checkpoint: Kiev said six of its soldiers had been killed and a further eight wounded in the ambush. Photograph: Roman Pilipey/EPA
Ukrainian soldiers stand guard at a checkpoint
 in Donetsk
Tuesday 13 May 2014
A solution to the crisis in east Ukraine seemed as far away as ever on Tuesday, as six Ukrainian army servicemen were killed in an ambush by rebels and attempts to get Kiev and the armed separatists to negotiate came to nothing.
Ukraine's defence ministry released a statement saying that six of its soldiers had been killed and a further eight wounded during an ambush outside the town of Kramatorsk, in Donetsk region. The attackers used grenade launchers and automatic weapons to fire at the Ukrainian column, hitting an armoured personnel carrier.
More than 50 people have died in Donetsk region since Kiev began its "anti-terrorism operation" in the area, but Tuesday's attack represents the greatest loss of life for the Ukrainian army in a single incident.
The de facto separatist government in Donetsk repeated on Tuesday lunchtime that the Ukrainian army was now considered to be an "occupying force", and the ambush appeared to be a bloody restatement of their case.
The "Donetsk People's Republic" was proclaimed on Monday, after a hastily arranged referendum resulted in nearly 90% of votes being given in favour of its creation. Critics have pointed out that there were no observers and that most of those who remain loyal to Kiev simply stayed at home. Nevertheless, the region announced independence and immediately appealed to Russia to accept it as a new region.
Russia is unlikely to annex the territory as it did with Crimea, and so far has merely called for talks between Kiev and the separatists in the east. However, Denis Pushilin, one of the separatist leaders, said on Tuesday that the only thing he could talk to Kiev about was hostage exchanges.
The region's Kiev-appointed governor said that he completely dismissed the claims of the separatists and added that preparations were under way for holding Ukrainian elections in Donetsk region.
"The Donetsk People's Republic does not exist," said Serhiy Taruta at a press conference in Donetsk on Tuesday. He said that he had been negotiating with some representatives of the separatists but that each time there were different interlocutors, so it was impossible to decide who was calling the shots.
Taruta has claimed that Kiev was still in control of the region but it seems unlikely that the elections will take place in the current climate.
"We are not going to hold elections for the president of a neighbouring state on the territory of the Donetsk People's Republic," said Pushilin on Tuesday.
The self-proclaimed republic took its first tentative steps on the international stage on Tuesday, slapping sanctions on three individuals – Barack Obama, Angela Merkel and Catherine Ashton – who are banned from entering the territory as well as flying over it. The reason given is that they support the Kiev government's "anti-terrorist operation" against armed separatists in the east of the country.
David Cameron is given a sharp warning by the document: "PS British Prime Minister David Cameron is on a provisional list (without the sanctions being enforced in practice) and is advised to think carefully about his attitude to the Kiev junta, especially given the traditional good relations between Britain and the Donbas Region). Donetsk was founded by a Welshman, John Hughes, in the 1870s, and for a time the city even bore his name.

Jordanian envoy to Libya freed, Jordan sends back jailed militant

Fawaz al-Itan, Jordan's ambassador to Libya, waves from a car upon his arrival at Marka military airport, in Amman May 13, 2014.
Fawaz al-Itan, Jordan's ambassador to Libya, waves from a car upon his arrival at Marka military airport, in Amman May 13, 2014. REUTERS/Majed Jaber/FilesBY SULEIMAN AL-KHALIDI-AMMAN Tue May 13, 2014
Reuters(Reuters) Jordan's foreign minister said the envoy's release was arranged in contacts with Libyan authorities, not with the kidnappers. But some Jordanian officials voiced concern at the precedent the handover of the militant could set for Amman, an important U.S. ally in the fight against al Qaeda.(Reuters) Kidnappers freed Jordan's ambassador to Libya and he said on his arrival home on Tuesday that in exchange his government had sent back to Tripoli a Libyan Islamist militant who had been serving a life sentence for a bombing plot.
A Libyan foreign ministry spokesman told al-Nabaa television channel that militant Mohammed Dersi was back in Libya. Asked repeatedly whether Dersi was in prison or free, he said only: "Dersi is in Libya and he is fine." Jordanian Ambassador Fawaz al-Itan was kidnapped last month by Libyan gunmen who demanded an Islamist militant be freed from a Jordanian jail in exchange for the diplomat's release.
Fawaz al-Itan told well-wishers including Jordan's prime minister on arrival at Amman airport that he had been swapped for Dersi, who he said had been removed from a maximum-security Amman prison and flown to Libya.
"The swap was concluded in a very civilised way. I shook Dersi's hand and welcomed his release and arrival in Libya," said Itan, adding that he was treated well by his captors.
Dersi and several other Qaeda suspects were jailed for life in 2007 for plotting to blow up Amman airport.
Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Joudeh denied any swap had been negotiated with the kidnappers, saying Itan's release had was part of a legal arrangement struck with Libyan authorities.
"There was no exchange or swap or deal," he told reporters.
Judicial sources said Amman had been quietly working out a face-saving deal that initially aimed to return Dersi to Libya to serve the remainder of his sentence at home.
But the kidnappers insisted on Dersi's immediate release, leaving Jordanian authorities with little alternative, according to the sources. "Yes we saved the life of Itan but the political cost of succumbing to the demands of terrorists in future might be higher," said a Jordanian official who requested anonymity.
Analysts said that agreeing to the kidnappers' demand could set a risky precedent for the U.S.-aligned Arab kingdom, which has been at the forefront of covert operations against militant Islamists in the Middle East.
Some Jordanian officials privately expressed worry that the release of a jailed al Qaeda militant would raise the danger to Jordanian targets abroad by emboldening other militants.
The kingdom has some high-profile radical Islamists in its jails, including cleric Abu Qatada who was deported from Britain, and Mohammad Maqdisi, a fundamentalist theorist.
Kidnappings have become commonplace in widely lawless Libya, with foreign diplomats often the targets used to press for the release of Libyan militants jailed overseas.
(Additional reporting by Ulf Laessing in Tripoli, Editing by Mark Heinrich)

ICC to probe claims British Army commited Iraq war crimes

The International Criminal Court is reopening an investigation into allegations of war crimes against the British Army in Iraq.
Iraq detainee
Channel 4 NewsTUESDAY 13 MAY 2014
New information was provided to the ICC at the start of the year, alleging "systematic detainee abuse", prompting the ICC's prosecutor to re-examine the case.

US planes begin air search for kidnapped Nigerian schoolgirl

Surveillance planes fly over remote forest area where more than 200 teenage girls are suspected of being held by Boko Haram
People in Abuja demand the release of the schoolgirls kidnapped from the Nigerian village of Chibok by Boko Haram. Photograph: Joe Penney/Reuters
Tuesday 13 May 2014
US surveillance planes have begun flying missions over a remote area ofNigeria as part of a mounting international effort to find and rescue more than 200 teenage girls abducted by Islamist militants almost a month ago.
The US has also sent expert advisers to Nigeria to "dig in on the search" and has provided the government with satellite images.
The plight of the schoolgirls and the desperation of their families has captured world attention, with abhorrence focused on Boko Haram, the violent jihadist group that is holding the girls. But there has also been widespread criticism of the Nigerian authorities, whose efforts to find the captives is perceived to be lax.
As well as US assistance, Britain, France and China have sent teams to Nigeria to help the search, and Israel has offered to join the international effort.
State department spokeswoman Jen Psaki said the US was "providing intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance support". Military and law-enforcement teams on the ground were "digging in on the search and co-ordinating closely with the Nigerian government as well as international partners and allies", she said.
A senior Obama administration official said: "We have shared commercial satellite imagery with the Nigerians and are flying manned ISR [intelligence, surveillance and reconnaissance] assets over Nigeria with the government's permission."
More than 270 girls were snatched by militants from their boarding school in Chibok, north-eastern Nigeria, on the night of 14 April. Some managed to escape, but most were taken into the remote Sambisa forest. Their families fear they have been forced into sex slavery, or will be trafficked to other countries.
On Monday, Boko Haram released a 27-minute video, showing about 130 girls in Muslim dress and reading from the Qur'an. Most of the seized girls are Christians. Two were singled out to tell the camera they had converted to Islam.
In the video, the Boko Haram leader, Abubakar Shekau, said the girls could be released in exchange for jailed militants. "I swear to almighty Allah, you will not see them again until you release our brothers that you have captured," he said.


Nigeria's president, Goodluck Jonathan, said on Sunday that he believed the girls were still in the country, and that international assistance had raised hopes of finding them.
The former British prime minister Gordon Brown, who called for international military assistance two weeks ago and travelled to Nigeria last week, said on Monday: "There will be worldwide condemnation of a new video showing Boko Haram cruelly and barbarically using 200 kidnapped girls to bargain for the release of prisoners and exploiting innocent young girls for political purposes.
"It is urgent that all religious leaders in every part of the world speak out against their perverted and twisted version of Islam which involves forced conversions and the sale of girls as sex slaves."
Binyamin Netanyahu, the Israeli prime minister, offered his country's help in a telephone call to Jonathan on Sunday. "Israel expresses its deep shock at the crime committed against the girls," he said. "We are willing to help assist in locating the girls and fighting the terror that is afflicting you."
High-profile figures around the world have backed the campaign for the girls' release, rallying behind the hashtag #BringBackOurGirls. Michelle Obama took over her husband's weekly presidential address to express "outrage and heartbreak" over the mass abduction, and to pledge US government support for the rescue effort.

Preventing the Next Genocide

Burma's Rohingya minority could fall victim to full-scale genocide if the international community doesn't intervene.

BY SIR GEOFFREY NICE FRANCIS WADEMAY 12, 2014

In conflicts that have potential to produce the worst of human atrocities, states and international actors must take action to identify the precursors of mass killing and stop it from ever happening. 

Burma's investment rush is leaving the poor majority behind

Fewer than 30% of people in Burma have access to electricity, and investment is vital. But the danger is this will come at the expense of the poor
A typical house in Thilawa with enough space for a small farm and some animals. People in the region are being relocated to make way for a new project. Photograph: Raphael Olschner
Farm in ThilawaThe Guardian home
Bobbie Sta Maria and Phil Bloomer
Tuesday 13 May 2014
Houses for relocated families in BurmaU Mya Hlaing sits on a bamboo floor in his rural home an hour down the river from Yangon, explaining how in a short time, he expects to lose it in the name of development. His fields of paddy rice, along with those of his village and neighbours, have been designated as a special economic zone. They will be bulldozed to make way for the flagship development project of the Japan International Co-operation Agency (JICA) in co-operation with the Myanmar government and Japanese and Myanmar companies. Electronics and garments factories will replace his homestead.
Houses for the families reocated from Thilawa. Photograph: Raphael Olschner

Monday, May 12, 2014

5 years today - Mullivaikal hospital bombed, satellite photos confirm shelling in No Fire Zone, US & UK call for cease-fire
Tamil Guardian 12 May 2014-12 May 2009 - Hospital bombed, satellite photos prove shelling in No Fire Zone, US & UK call for cease-fire
Aftermath of hospital shelling                   Photograph:TamilNet

47 civilians were killed during shelling of a No Fire zone hospital which was functioning at a school in Mullivaikal, reported TamilNet.

Regaining National Unity Five Years On


By Jehan Perera -May 12, 2014 
Jehan Perera
Jehan Perera
Colombo TelegraphThe government has made plans to celebrate the fifth anniversary of the end of the war with a “Victory Day” celebration in Matara in the Southern Province.  But at the opposite side of the country  there will be no such celebration.  The government has prohibited any public commemoration of the war’s end in the Northern Province.   Speaking on behalf of the government, the military spokesperson has said that “Individuals may have religious services to commemorate their loved ones killed in the fighting, but there cannot be any public events.”  The government has been concerned that public events could be used to praise the LTTE in the guise of remembering the war dead.
While the government’s concerns may be real, the contrasting manner in which the May 18 events will be remembered in the two extremes of the country will highlight the polarization that continues to exist in post-war Sri Lanka.   It is likely that only the government and its political allies will be present at the Victory Day celebrations, which include a victory parade by the military in Matara.  The rest of Sri Lanka’s political plural and multi-ethnic polity will be missing.  The failure of national reconciliation will be manifest in the government’s celebration and victory parade.  It makes it seem as if five years after the war, the war victory over the LTTE was the only real thing that happened.
The disparity between the government’s treatment of the North and South shows that the ethnic and political conflict remains, despite the end of the war.  The country is geographically and administratively unified but remains politically and ethnically divided and in a state of conflict.  In recent weeks there also appears to be some signs of opposition appearing from within the ranks of the government itself.  This might be seen as signs of a coming implosion, which is a scenario that has been speculated upon for several years, due to the increasing concentration of power within the government.  The danger for the government is that there will come a point where the forces of fragmentation, which is indicated by the growing internal opposition, will grow too strong to keep the government coalition together.
Muslim Community
With presidential elections widely anticipated by early next year, both the government and opposition are trying to attract support to themselves from as wide a constituency as possible.   The war victory celebration in Matara could be seen as an effort to remind the people of the government’s most important achievement, and consolidate their support for the electoral challenges that lie ahead.  However, an overemphasis on the nationalism of one ethnic community can prove to be a double edged sword.  An important constituency that the government seems to have lost in recent times is the Muslim community.   The attacks on them by Sinhalese nationalist groups, such as the BBS, have alienated them from the government.
There is a perception that these Sinhalese groups are supported by sections within the government.  It would be in the interests of the government to distance itself from these attacks in a manner that would restore the balance.   In a noteworthy development Minister Rishard Bathiudeen has filed action in the courts against one of these groups.  He has taken this action when the entire Muslim community feels helpless and vulnerable in the face of anti-Muslim sentiment which is being spread by these groups, and even against the violence perpetrated against the community.   Members of the BBS not only entered his ministry premises by force, they have also denounced him for allegedly resettling Muslims who were displaced during the war in an illegal manner in the Wilpattu wildlife park.  Minister Bathiudeen has rejected these allegations and has demanded either an apology or a legal judgment in his favour.
                                                                                          Read More
SL military recruitment drive for young Tamil women
11 May 2014
Photographs have emerged of Sri Lankan military banners calling for unmarried Tamil women to join the army.
The banners, thought to have been photographed earlier this year, ask for Tamil women, aged between 18 and 24, with a height of at 5 ft 3 inches and offer a monthly salary of Rs 30,000.
The women would be joining nine brigades in the Mullaitivu district.

TRC Head Palpita ‘Selective’ And ‘Inconsistent’


May 12, 2014
After months of conspicuous silence over his position on the blockage of Colombo Telegraph, former diplomat and rights advocate Dr. Jayantha Dhanapala has decided to step down from his position as member of the Director Board of Dialog Axiata PLC., one of several internet service providers that has blocked the said website.
TRC head Anusha and the Dialog head Hans
TRC head Anusha and the Dialog head Hans
Although the site had been blocked by other prominent internet service providers, Dr. Dhanapala received criticism for remaining on the Board even as he advocated freedom of speech and democratic values in other forums.
The former diplomat’s contradictory position was first brought to light by Colombo Telegraph, which repeatedly sought clarification from him on the matter to no avail. The Nation too reported Dhanapala’s silence on the issue in light of his stature in the public sphere as a rights advocate.
However, Dialog in a stock market disclosure to the Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE) on May 9 (Friday) stated that Dr Dhanapala would retire from his position as Independent Non-Executive Director of Dialog due to personal reasons. The disclosure also said that he would retire after the conclusion of the next Annual General Meeting of the company scheduled to be held on June 10.
Colombo Telegraph rubbishes Palpita’s claims
Meanwhile, Editor of Colombo Teleraph, Uvindu Kurukulasuriya rubbished claims made by Chairman, Telecommunications Regulatory Commission of Sri Lanka (TRCSL), Anusha Palpita that if websites relating to media are registered with the Ministry of Mass Media and Information they would not be blocked.
“There is no law in Sri Lanka to register websites, it is only a circular which was challenged by many in the Supreme Court,” Kurukulasuriya said.
Palpita earlier told The Nation that websites were blocked based on complaints received by the TRCSL. In addition, he also stated that TRCSL also monitors websites and blocks them if the content was not suitable for the public.
He however stated that websites registered with the Ministry of Mass Media and Information need not be blocked as they are approved by the Ministry itself.
However, Kurukulasuriya refuted Palpita’s claim, pointing out that despite complaints, other sites remained unblocked.  He also asked whether other news websites based abroad were registered with the Ministry for them to be accessed in Sri Lanka? “Is BBC or Guardian or New York Times registered with Sri Lanka’s Media Ministry? BBC has a separate website called BBC Sinhala – is it registered?” he questioned.
Finally Kurukulasuriya alleged that Palpita appears to be the principal actor behind this blocking: ‘He has not denied TRCSL involvement in the blocking although he could have said, for example, that the question should be answered by Dialog. He is therefore implying complicity or even acknowledging directive responsibility.’
Mr Palpita was not available for comment while Secretary to the Ministry of Mass Media and InformationCharitha Herath did not respond to repeated calls and text messages.
Courtesy Arthur Wamanan/The Nation
The rot started with the repudiation of Section 29 of the Soulbury Constitution by the legislature and the executive first on citizenship and then on language, with the judiciary meekly falling in line rather than calling its companion branches into order. As asserted by the authors, the Sri Lankan Supreme Court failed to emulate its Indian counterpart in propounding a corresponding basic structure doctrine for Sri Lanka.
| by Rajan Philips
( May 12, 2014, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) What is mind? No matter. What is matter? Never mind. You might cynically apply this old aphorism to the judicial mind and judicial matters in Sri Lanka. Increasingly, the grey matter of intelligence, erudition, wisdom and independence is becoming too scarce in Sri Lanka’s judicial mind, and what can you do when you hear of judicial matters such as the now customary cavalier appointments to the Supreme Court, except shrug and sigh: Never mind!
But for lawyer and popular commentator Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena, and her co-authors, Jayantha de Almeida Guneratne and Gehan Gunatilleke, shrugging off judicial matters and saying “never mind” has never been an option. So they have brought out a new monograph entitled “The Judicial Mind in Sri Lanka; Responding to the Protection of Minority Rights”, in the midst of questionable and controversial presidential appointments to the superior courts.

The book’s focus is narrower and sharper in that it is limited to a critical analysis of court rulings involving minority rights. Yet, the book and its timing bring into broad relief the hugely troubled terrain of the Sri Lankan judiciary. At the same time, by chronicling and critiquing over forty individual court rulings in different areas of the law and in judicially significant historical periods, the book brings to light the surprisingly broad scope of judicial complicity in the undermining of minority rights by the legislature and the executive.

There may not be a direct correlation between judicial complicity on minority rights and the parlous state of the judiciary today, but the book illustrates that complicity on minority rights became the slippery slope for the judiciary to slide from the lofty potentials at the time of independence to today’s pathetic pits. The authors say that they chose the title “The Judicial Mind in Sri Lanka” to show that their “focus is unequivocally on the judicial role” and their purpose is “not to dwell on political failures.” The disturbing dialectic is that while political failures have contributed to the failure of the “Rule of Law”, the failure of judicial institutions have enabled the entrenchment of state authoritarianism and the erosion of minority rights.

The authors rightly point out in the introduction that political failure is only part of the story and that Sri Lanka like other British colonies “shared a fundamental contradiction”, as part of the colonial legacy, between the insistence on the force and universality of the law, on the one hand, and the accompanying reservations through the rules of exceptions and differences. They acknowledge, however, that despite this shared contradiction, the judicial trajectories in India and Sri Lanka have diverged quite differently in India and Sri Lanka, more positively upward in the former and disturbingly downhill in the latter. The divergence is associated with the “different directions that political liberalism has taken in India and Sri Lanka in the post-colonial period.”

What explains these differences? The authors raise the question but regretfully the answer is not elaborate, apart from pointing to “all the dissimilarities in socio-political contexts” and the “contrasting constitutional histories.” In fairness, the body of the book exposes some of these differences through the analysis of court rulings in specific cases but even a brief overarching summary would have been helpful to the reader.

The framework of “political liberalism” provides a useful analytical approach based on its three defining elements: a moderate state with its power fragmented by the counter balancing functions of the executive and the legislature and oversight by the judiciary; an active and able civil society; and basic legal freedoms which include “first generation civil rights” including freedom of speech, association, belief and movement, and property rights. It would seem that federalism in India has contributed to the positive fragmentation of state power, and it is to the credit of the Indian Supreme Court that it has conclusively established federalism as a basic structure of the Indian Constitution. This is a remarkable development considering that at its founding India’s constitution was far more pre-occupied with the threat of disintegration than any of Sri Lanka’s three constitutions.

Additionally, the principles of secularism and linguistic plurality were conscious political choices that have since been entrenched administratively and judicially.

Lack of Judicial boldness

Sri Lanka has gone in the opposite direction politically and judicially, starting with relative constitutional peace at the time of independence, sliding into public security and counter-terrorism pre-occupations, and finally falling into the current postwar quagmire. The book is thus divided into two parts. Five chapters in Part One deal with non-security cases involving language rights, employer-employee relationships, citizenship rights, land and housing rights, and religious rights. Although no cases appear to have been reported on the rights of minority religions to hold processions, a brief chapter (Chapter 5) is devoted to the practical application of the Police Ordinance in light of the foremost place given to Buddhism in the Constitution. Three Chapters in Part Two of the book address cases involving minority rights in the context of public security and emergency regulations, counter-terrorism, and the current postwar situation.

The analyses of individual cases in eight of the book’s nine chapters, including the detailed quantitative analysis of 24 landmark cases involving public security, offer critical insights into Sri Lanka’s judicial mind. I would limit myself to a few general comments about the book and the purposes it could serve. First, the number of cases identified as cases involving minority rights should be an eye opener to those who never stop asking the ignorant question – just what are the minority grievances? As the authors indicate, the book does not analyze all the reported cases and they had difficulties in accessing unreported judgments. Even politically informed people are mostly familiar with a few celebrated minority rights cases in the areas of citizenship, language and counter-terrorism. This book throws light on numerous other cases, including areas such as land and housing, employment and religious rights.

Equally remarkable is the authors’ conclusion that their comparison of the specific treatment of minorities in cases involving citizenship, language, employment, land and religion with the general jurisprudence on the corresponding issue revealed a fundamentally different treatment of minorities. In other words, “the judiciary appeared to have been unable to produce consistent jurisprudence across ethnic and religious lines on matters of language, employment, land and religious freedom.” The rot started with the repudiation of Section 29 of the Soulbury Constitution by the legislature and the executive first on citizenship and then on language, with the judiciary meekly falling in line rather than calling its companion branches into order.

As asserted by the authors, the Sri Lankan Supreme Court failed to emulate its Indian counterpart in propounding a corresponding basic structure doctrine for Sri Lanka. Counter factually it could be said that the Supreme Court might have altered the course of post-independence history by affirming the bold judgments delivered by District Court judges first in regard to citizenship and later in regard to language. In both cases, the District Court rulings were overturned. There were not many instances of judicial boldness in Sri Lanka according to the authors and few will disagree. The celebrated Bracegirdle case, in the last phase of the colonial era, “was a singular instance of judicial boldness”, and was rarely emulated by the Supreme Court after independence.
(To be continued)

Video: CJ 43 refuses to plead guilty or not guilty

MONDAY, 12 MAY 2014

Former Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake today declined to plead guilty or not guilty when the case filed by the Bribery Commission was heard in the Colombo Chief Magistrate’s Court on the grounds that her lawyers were not allowed full access to the bank accounts on which the case was based.

During the inquiry State Counsel Dilan Ratnayake informed Chief Magistrate Gihan Pilapitiya that the case was fixed to allow the prosecution to read out the charges and thereafter for Ms. Bandaranayaka to either plead guilty or not guilty.

Counsel Nalin Ladduwahetty PC appearing with a team of lawyers for Ms. Bandaranayaka informed the Magistrate that the NDB Bank had not allowed full access to the data on the two bank accounts of the suspect as ordered by Court and he said his client was not in a position to either plead guilty or not guilty without inspecting the data that are stored in the computers.
Ex-CJ in the dock

During the hearing which took heated turns at times, the ousted Chief Justice stood in the dock reserved for suspects and watched the entire proceeding.

The hearing was postponed twice during the morning session, and thereafter the Magistrate postponed the inquiry again for 2 pm in the afternoon, after the legal team representing the former Chief Justice flatly refused to enter a plea of either guilty or not guilty.



State Counsel Ratnayake said the date fixed was to read out the charges and therefore they had to proceed with the case. He said that was the procedure that had to be followed and the court could not veer from that process.


Counsel Ladduwahetty objecting said that inspecting the computer data of the accounts was part and parcel of the case and therefore the court had given an order allowing the suspect to inspect the data before pleading guilty or not guilty. The counsel said inspecting the computer data was a must before pleading to the charges.


Counsel Kalinga Indatissa watching the interests of the NDB Bank said the bank could not allow the suspect to inspect the entire data on the computers but could only allow the suspect to access certain data relating to the account.

After considering the submissions by both parties, Magistrate Pilapitiya ordered the bank to submit a report on May 20 stating as to what data the bank could allow the suspect’s lawyers to access. He also fixed the trial for August 4.

A host of local and international lawyers were present during the proceedings as observers. (T. Farook Thajudeen)

Matter of access and procedure

Nalin Laduwahetty PC: There were two Gestapo type officers who had said they were from the Bribery Commission during all four days we went to access the computers. The bank only gave what they wanted to give us and each time it was after the documents were shown to these officers.

Magistrate:  But you have to enter a plea, either guilty or not guilty.

Laduwahetty PC: I can’t because we were not given full access to the computers, if we were given full access we would have.

Magistrate:  This situation has never arisen before in this court and during my entire judicial career. There is a procedure you must follow and it is the regular procedure for everyone. There can’t be any extraordinary process.

WATCH

“No Wise Country Celebrates War Victory After A Civil War” Says NPC


May 12, 2014
Colombo Telegraph“No wise country celebrates war victory after a civil war. The American Civil War is not celebrated as the victory of the North versus the South where 600,000 Americans died.  After the battle of Gettysburg President Abraham Lincoln made his famous Gettysburg address.  He went out of the way to show that it was a common victory.  Unfortunately in Sri Lanka, the political leadership indulged and continues to indulge in triumphalism celebrating the victory over the LTTE.” says the National Peace Council.
Special Forces Combat soldiers ride in a parade during a war victory ceremony in ColomboIssuing a statement NPC today calls for religious observances islandwide in memory of all those who lost their lives during the war and restoration of normality for war-affected displaced communities. “The need for reconciliation between all communities must be foremost in the minds of all people and our political leaders.” the NPC said.
The NPC said; “The government will be having its “Victory Day” celebration in Matara in the Southern Province on May 18.  In preparation for this celebration the government ordered the closing over 40 schools in the Matara city area for over a week to facilitate the organizing of the logistics relating the celebratory events.  This is an indication of the importance that the government is placing on this celebration in which the bravery and sacrifice of the Sri Lankan security forces will be commemorated. Concurrently, the government has prohibited any public commemoration of the end of the war in the Northern Province.  The government has expressed its opposition to the occasion being used by political parties and separatist groups in the North to glorify the LTTE.  The diametrically different government positions with regard to public commemorations of the end of the war in the North and South reveals a chasm that continues to exist in the polity.
“The National Peace Council is saddened by the continuing emphasis on the divisions that exist within Sri Lankan society instead of on factors that could genuinely unify the polity.  Our country is once again leaving space to the people in the North to develop their own structures to deal with their sorrows and issues which will contribute to a separate state of mind. There is no peace when there is victory and defeat side by side on the same issue.  It was all of Sri Lanka that went through a thirty year war that saw large scale civilian casualties through offensives, bomb attacks and assassinations.  We should remember all who died in the hope that this bloodletting will never occur again.  This indeed is the message and recommendation of theLessons Learn and Reconciliation Commission appointed by His Excellency the President, which is yet to be implemented in full.”