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

Friday, May 23, 2014

BJP And Sri Lanka’s Ethnic Problem


Colombo Telegraph
By Izeth Hussain -May 24, 2014
 Izeth Hussain
Izeth Hussain
What does the BJP tsunami portend for Sri Lanka’s ethnic problem? I think we should first of all get our perspectives right on certain matters. Narendra Modi may have a ghastly record over the 2002 Gujarat massacre of Muslims, but haven’t there been men of power with even ghastlier records nearer home? In 2002 Modi made an injudicious speech, indeed one showing criminal irresponsibility, which led to anti-Muslim riots resulting in the deaths of 1000, may be more but not more than 2000. But over the years it proved impossible to inculpate him for anything more than that, and he has had a reasonable record in dealing with Muslims. I am not denying that he can justly be regarded as an anti-Muslim racist, Fascist, and a dangerous Hindutva bigot. My point is that we should not demonize him unnecessarily.
Consider by contrast the record of Sri Lankan men of power towards the minorities. Recently the JVP leader, in making an enlightened address to a Muslim gathering, referred to the fact that when 13 soldiers were killed by the LTTE in 1983, the bodies were not returned to their native villages for burial according to established practice, but brought to Colombo where they were buried with much fanfare. That inaugurated the July ’83 holocaust which resulted in the killing of about the same number as in Gujarat, possibly even more, and it inaugurated also the thirty-year war. The consequences were therefore infinitely more horrible than those of the Gujarat massacre. But, unlike in India where Modi had to face charges in Court, there was no attempt in Sri Lanka to inculpate the notorious racist leaders of the time, such as JRJ,Cyril MatthewLalith Athulathmudali, and Gamini Dissanayake. They were either directly involved in State terrorism or heartily approved of it. At the level of the people and the civil society there is a striking contrast between Indian activism over the Gujarat massacre and Sri Lankan indifference to July ’83. So, my point is that in dealing with Modi we should begin by assuming that he is just another leader with whom a mutual accommodation of interests should be possible, while bearing in mind the possibility that he could turn out to be a very dangerous person                                                       Read More

Can You Hear Sounds Of Fascist Jack-Boots In India?

| by Amaresh Misra
Courtesy: Times of India
An Intellectual’s Suicide
( May 23, 2014, New Delhi, Sri Lanka Guardian) In 1940, Walter Benjanim, the renowned literary critic of Germany, known all over the western world as one of 20th century greatest, liberal-left intellectual, was hounded to death by Hitler’s cohorts. Finding Germany’s illiberal atmosphere under Hitler arraigned against free speech and liberal arts, Benjamin wanted to emigrate; Nazi-fascist German authorities would not let him; finding all doors closed-even an attempted escape foiled-Benjamin committed suicide (Walter Benjanim).
Walter Benjamin

Chocolate tycoon heads for landslide victory in Ukraine presidential election

Petro Poroshenko has faced down protesters and rivals to lead the opinion polls before the first round of voting on Sunday
Presidential hopeful Petro Poroshenko meets supporters in Uma. Photograph: Reuters
petro poroshenkoThe Guardian home
For a man with presidential ambitions, it was not a propitious scene. Petro Poroshenko stood atop a bulldozer between a line of police and an angry crowd chanting expletives at him. Shouting into a loudhailer he urged calm, asking protesters to desist from storming the presidential headquarters in Kiev.
A job too far for Thailand’s new prime minister
Channel 4 NewsFriday 23 May 2014
23 prayuth r w A job too far for Thailands new prime ministerGeneral Prayuth Chan-ocha was supposed to retire in September - but it’s now safe to assume that the gold watch will stay in the box for some time longer. The commander-in-chief of the Royal Thai Army has selected himself for a new role - that of acting prime minister.
This important piece of news came under the heading of “Announcement No. 10″ – one of 19 announcements and two orders made by the junta over the last 24 hours. Each declaration is read out several times on television channels before they fade to black. The stations have been taken over by the military now - an institution not known for its programing nous.
The country’s new prime minister is not going to run the country on his own. We are expecting another announcement soon, listing the new members of an appointed cabinet – and the general will be breathing down their necks. He wants nothing less than the “reform of the political structure, the economy and the society”.
It is unlikely that General Prayuth’s new job at the top will herald some sort of transformational moment, though. Instead, what he’s really got himself is full ownership of Thailand‘s intractable political crisis - a long-running spat between rival elites that will be extraordinarily difficult to solve.
On one side you have Thaksin Shinawatra and family – political juggernauts who have managed to win every single election since 2001. They successfully tapped the political and social aspirations of the country’s majority rural population with popular policies like universal health-care and micro-lending schemes and they remain popular to this day.
Chief among their opponents are Bangkok’s upper and middle classes - the Thai establishment - who accuse the Shinawatras, among other things, of corruption and nepotism. The pro-establishment faction has a big problem, though: it can’t get itself elected. The party which best represents its views - the Democrat party - is impressive only in its political ineptitude.
Perhaps that’s why they have seemed pleased with General Prayuth’s coup. His brand-new “appointed cabinet” sounds a lot like the “council of experts” proposed by pro-establishment protest leader Suthep Thaugsuban  (currently being detained, along with a host of other political leaders, by the military authorities). Furthermore, both the military and the urban elite seem disillusioned with democracy, an awkward political concept which always seems to let wrong team win.
Democracy, however, is the only means of governance going - a process which by its very nature consists of open elections – and behind-doors horse-trading. Thailand’s top military official can’t replace it, nor will he be able to replicate it in the confines of Bangkok’s Army Club. The politicians will have to do it figure out the future for themselves.
Fixing Thailand is a job too far for General Prayuth. The problem is, he’s made himself the man to do it.
- See more at: http://blogs.channel4.com/world-news-blog/job-thailands-prime-minister/27395#sthash.HVF9Mc5c.dpuf

Former KGB general: Snowden is cooperating with Russian intelligence

Above: Russia's FSB is the successor to the old KGB.
Image Credit: Wikipedia
Former KGB general: Snowden is cooperating with Russian intelligenceichard Byrne Reilly-May 22, 2014
VentureBeat







Former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden probably never envisioned that he’d someday be working for the Russian federal security service, or FSB.

But according to former KGB Major General Oleg Kalugin, he is now, albeit as a consultant or technical advisor.
Former KGB General Snowden is Cooperating With Russian Intelligence by nelvely

China launches crackdown on "terrorist activities" after attack

Paramilitary policemen ride on a truck during a parade in central Urumqi, in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, in this photo taken by Kyodo on May 23, 2014.

Paramilitary policemen ride on a truck during a parade in central Urumqi, in the Xinjiang Uighur Autonomous Region, in this photo taken by Kyodo on May 23, 2014. REUTERS/Kyodo
(Reuters) - BY MICHAEL MARTINA-URUMQI China Fri May 23, 2014 
ReutersChina has launched a one-year crackdown to hunt down and punish terrorists in Xinjiang, state media said on Friday, after the the deadliest attack in years in the far western region with a large Muslim Uighur minority.

Five suicide bombers carried out Thursday morning's attack which killed 31 people at a vegetable market, according to state media.

"The campaign will make full use of political and legal forces, army and armed police in Xinjiang," the official Xinhua news agency said of the crackdown, citing local authorities.

The aim, Xinhua said, was to "focus on terrorists and religious extremist groups, gun and explosive manufacturing dens and terrorist training camps.

"Terrorists and extremists will be hunted down and punished. The government will prevent terrorism and extremism from spreading to other regions."

The drive, approved by the central government and a national-level group leading anti-terrorism activity, would last until June 2015 with Xinjiang as the "major battleground".

Thursday's bombing was the second suicide attack in the capital in just over three weeks. A bomb and knife attack at an Urumqi train station in April killed a bystander and wounded 79.

The government had already launched a campaign to strike hard against terrorism in Xinjiang, blaming Islamists and separatists for the worsening violence in the resource-rich western region bordering central Asia. At least 180 people have been killed in attacks across China over the past year.

The attackers ploughed two vehicles into an open market in Urumqi and hurled explosives. Many of the 94 wounded were elderly shoppers, according to witnesses.

"Five suspects who participated in the violent terrorist attack blew themselves up," the Global Times, a tabloid run by the People's Daily, the official newspaper of the Communist Party, reported on Friday. The newspaper said authorities "are investigating whether there were other accomplices".

"Judging from the many terrorist attacks that have taken place and the relevant perpetrators, they have received support from terrorist groups outside China's borders as well as religious extremist propaganda spread via the Internet," Foreign Ministry spokesman Hong Lei told a daily news briefing.

No group has claimed responsibility for Thursday's attack.

Pan Zhiping, a retired expert on Central Asia at Xinjiang's Academy of Social Science, said those behind the blast received training overseas from groups like the East Turkestan Islamic Movement (ETIM) and gained combat experience in Syria.

"They are now definitely organised and these small organisations are very tight," Pan said. "If it's not possible to crack a small organisation, then I think this kind of thing will continue to happen."


SPREADING "TERRORISM PROBLEM"

Exiles and rights groups say the real cause of the unrest in Xinjiang is China's heavy-handed policies, including curbs on Islam and the culture of Uighurs, Muslims who speak a Turkic language.

The Uighurs have long complained of official discrimination in favour of the Han people, China's majority ethnic group.

Residents said the morning market, where the attack occurred, was frequented mainly by Han Chinese customers, though many of the vendors were Uighurs.

A Han Chinese man, surnamed Zheng, said he had left the market 20 minutes before the attack occurred. He said after he heard the blast, he rushed back to see plumes of black smoke rising into the sky and people running away.

"How are people supposed to live life when you can't even go to buy vegetables? It's so terrible," he told Reuters.

"I just got here, but if I had the means, I'd consider leaving Urumqi for someplace safer," Zheng said, adding that other morning markets were also closed.

China has been grappling with a rise in suicide attacks. A car burst into flames at the edge of Beijing's Tiananmen Square last October, killing five people.

Chinese police blamed the ETIM for the Urumqi train station attack last month, state news agency Xinhua said this week, the first time the separatists have been directly linked to the assault.

The ETIM has been accused by the United States and China of having ties to al Qaeda, but there is disagreement among security experts over the nature of the group and whether ties with al Qaeda and other militant organisations really exist.

"It looks like (the Chinese authorities) have a metastasizing domestic terrorism problem," Kenneth Lieberthal, a China expert with the Brookings Institution, told Reuters.

"I think the evidence suggests to date that if anything, the rethink (on Xinjiang policy) will be to get tougher."


(Additional reporting by Li Hui, Sui-Lee Wee, Megha Rajagopalan and Paul Carsten in BEIJING and James Pomfret in HONG KONG, Writing by Sui-Lee Wee; Editing by Simon Cameron-Moore and Ron Popeski)

CNN HealthBy Elizabeth Landau, CNN-Fri May 23, 2014
(CNN) — This has been a big week for food product recalls and the risk of food borne illness.
Seven confirmed and three likely cases of E. coli infection linked to raw clover sprouts have been reported, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said Thursday.


Revealed: thousands of children in care disappear each year

NewsChannel 4 News
FRIDAY 23 MAY 2014
Children in care went missing on 24,000 separate occasions in two years, Channel 4 News can reveal, including babies and toddlers. Some of society's most vulnerable tell us why they disappeared.

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Vae victis


  • Thursday 22nd May 2014
  • The double-edged sword  that is ‘Victory Day’

Beside the aquamarine seas of Keerimalai, at the island’s northernmost tip stands a Hindu holy of holies. One of five Sivan kovils in Sri Lanka, the unique convergence of land, sea and freshwater have etched the significance of the Naguleswaram temple into the Hindu psyche for millennia.

Sri Lanka’s Greatest War Criminal (Gotabaya) is a US Citizen: It’s Time to Hold Him Accountable

By -Monday, May 19, 2014 

Just Security

Just Security
Monday, May 19th marks the five-year anniversary of the end of Sri Lanka’s civil war, which claimed the lives of 40,000 to 70,000 civilians in its “catastrophic” final phase. In 2009, Congress asked the State Department to report on the humanitarian law violations during the war, and those reports make for gruesome reading. If history is a guide, this week congressional representatives will publicly call for accountability for war crimes in Sri Lanka—as members of Congress have done on the past four anniversaries. (See accompanying post, “Honor Roll of US Congressional Members Who’ve Stood for Accountability in Sri Lanka”)

Northern Provincial Council remembers Mullivaikal massacre 5 years on
 22 May 2014
Photograph @Hamsanan
The Northern Provincial Council held a Mullivaikal memorial event this morning, during the NPC's 9th meeting in Kaithadi, lighting candles in remembrance of the tens of thousands that were slaughtered in May 2009. 
Photograph @Uthayarasashalin

Wearing black shawls around their necks several NPC members including Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran, Ananthy Sasitharan and M.K. Shivajilingham of the Tamil National Alliance, as well as NPC opposition leader, Thavarasa, took part in the remembrance event, the Uthayan reported.

Photograph Uthayan
Photographs @Uthayarasashalin

Good women and bad women of the post-war nation

Screen Shot 2014-05-14 at 7.32.25 AM
Photo by Anushka Wijesinha, 2011, via IPS



GroundviewsSince the end of war in May 2009, the United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA) government has sought to forge a new overarching Sri Lanka identity inclusive of all ethnic and religious communities. As articulated by the President himself in his first post-war speech to parliament: “the word minorities have been removed from our vocabulary” and “no longer are the Tamils, Muslims, Burghers, Malays and any others minorities.

Hague Is Hounding The President 

Victory Parade Not Withstanding

| by Pearl Thevanayagam
(May 22, 2014, Bradford UK , Sri Lanka Guardian) The President has every reason to be jittery after his victory parade and Vesak celebrations. Neither China nor Modi’s India would side with the President when it comes to the crunch no matter how much overtures he makes by harping on Modi’s connection with Lord Buddha and China’s interest in Sri Lanka for its commercial ventures. Neither have Sri Lanka’s interest at heart.

Fresh evidence of war crimes surface even as President brags at war victory celebrations - punish both parties
(Lanka-e-News-21.May.2014, 11.30PM) Even as Mahinda Rajapakse was celebrating the war victory , reports have once again emerged that during the war’s final phase , 'White flag organization' (http://white-flags.org ) had stripped naked some of the Tamil male and female youths who were taken into custody by the organization ( it was confirmed after their arrest they were LTTE cadres) , tied their hands behind and assaulted them .. Thereafter killed them . Many pictures of these scenes have been released confirming again that the Rajapakses did commit war crimes.

Human rights lawyer Ms. Yasmin Sooka , and advisor to UN secretary general Ban K Moon , had declared in her statement that there is evidence of over 100 eye witnesses testifying to the fact that those who were arrested and surrendered on the day (May 18 th , 2009) prior to the conclusion of the war , were killed thereafter . In addition , there are at least 38 sworn affidavits also confirming this, she had added.

She goes on to point an accusing finger at Basil Rajapakse and Palitha Kohona in relation to these murders .

In the latest pictures published by the White flag team , there are photos of Isapriya , the LTTE television announcer and another girl after being arrested alive , and also photos of them depicting them killed later. Among them are also pictures of nude and semi nude Tamil youths who had been assaulted , and photos showing them subsequently killed.

Terrorism must be destroyed no doubt. At the same time the government too has a right to prove that it is clean. A legally elected government has no right to kill so called terrorists who are arrested or have surrendered. Those constitute war crimes. Until and unless legal punishment is meted out to those who committed war crimes , neither the country nor the forces will become entitled to the honor that follows a war victory. . Whether they acknowledge this or not , this truth cannot be expunged or camouflaged. 

Former four star General Sarath Fonseka who was the commanding officer during the war categorically states , if war crimes were committed, punishment must be meted out and the honor and grace of the forces should be safeguarded. 

Unfortunately the Rajapakse regime have preferred to avert punishment being meted out to the few criminals and compromise the dignity and reputation of the entire forces. 

Soldiers act on the orders of the superiors. It is a pertinent question ,who gave the orders to kill those who surrendered and were arrested acting over and above the army commander ?

Be that as it may. Prabhakaran ,Pottu Amman and KP were considered as the three strongest pillars of the LTTE terrorist organization , yet KP who is the only surviving pillar today has till no been punished. It was KP who supplied all the necessary TNT explosive to the LTTE to bomb buses and kill the innocent civilians brutally. Karuna Amman another LTTE leader who killed over 700 police officers who surrendered , in cold blood , and also murdered Samanera monks at Aranthalawa ,has also not been meted out punishment under the law . 

If Karuna Amman had later helped the government to defeat the LTTE , the heinous crimes he committed and the subsequent service he rendered ought to have been weighed , and either he should have been punished or pardoned by bringing him before the law firstly and duly, rather than dispense arbitrary justice based on the jungle laws of the uncivilized Rajapakses .

Based on what canons of fair play , can the appointment of Karuna Amman to the post of SLFP Vice President be justified as depriving Nimal Siripala De Silva who is rightly deserving that post ? 

In the circumstances , it is well for the government in the best interests of the nation and the forces , to take due legal action against all the war crime suspects including the LTTE and punish them without further tarnishing the image of the country which is already moth eaten.
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Gota Under Red Alert In US


| by Beth Van Schaack
( May 22, 2014, Washington DC , Sri Lanka Guardian) Ryan Goodman’s post on Sri Lanka calls for the prosecution under U.S. law of Gotabaya Rajapaksa. In prior posts, we’ve discussed the way in which international crimes (including war crimes) have been incorporated into U.S. law. By way of background, this post offers a primer on the U.S. War Crimes Act, 18 U.S.C. §2441.