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 27, 2014

Sri Lanka: Cheran

BBCDURATION: 05:03
TELEPHONE CALL
by Cheran



We have raised up our white flags.

No sign yet
of the promised message
for which we wait.

Darkness spreads
even as the sun rises, slowly, slowly.
We look once more at our friends
who were denied the peace of a painless death
whose blood flows as they breathe their last.

Our satellite telephones will go with us
to the cremation ground, to the very end.
But this is my final call:

We must leave now. 

This Great Idea Of Minding Other People’s Business


By Sajeeva Samaranayake -May 27, 2014 
 Sajeeva Samaranayake
Sajeeva Samaranayake
Colombo TelegraphWe are all familiar with this archetype – the infernal ‘busybody’ who runs around raking rubbish dumps becoming a hero and public nuisance. Mankind has always had these characters and of course the world would be a rather boring place without them.
However the world itself changed as Europe transformed its economic outlook in the 18th and 19th centuries and started casting its predatory eyes all over the world for profit and limitless wealth. Karl Marx has described what happened very well as the new bourgeoisie became our driving force. They tore up all bonds and relationships the people had to their religions, history and lands. In those countries where their writ had absolute force (including the colonies) they sought to accomplish 3 things:
1. Turn all productive lands into saleable commodities. This deprived the peasantry of their ancestral rights, livelihoods and natural economy. In fact it destroyed their very identity so that they were forced to create new ones.
2. These lands had to be placed in the hands of new entrepreneurs who would make them efficient and productive with new agricultural and industrial technology
3. The people who were turned out of their lands had to be converted to cheap wage labour and those who could not fit in were accommodated in the new institutions – the prison, lunatic asylum, workhouse or orphanage.
Thus the people were made to fit into the new economic order. Their freedoms were taken away. To compensate for what they lost they were offered and promised the crumbs off the table of the new rich and powerful who exercised and enjoyed their ‘human rights’ in full measure. In Europe where the French Revolution and its ideals were spread by Napoleon until the British defeated him in 1815 the ideal of political freedom had a ring of truth about it and the people actually understood some of these ideals of “liberty, equality and fraternity” so that they participated to some degree in creating the new institutions of their societies.
In the colonies the people lost their liberty to the foreigner and lost their fraternity with their own native superiors who based their new power on social distance and a superficial paternalism based on forms of cultural dependency both western and eastern. They were educated in stages to become peaceful and law abiding subjects of a top down society which offered formal equality but little else. The actual relationships however were not based on equality but the more familiar patronage system that would be exploited by the middle classes. These educated leaders of society would satisfy their foreign masters that they followed the western norms; and they would also use appropriate devices like the national dress and expensive merit making ceremonies to keep the locals happy about their allegiance to native traditions. In truth they subscribed to neither: simply to the overriding ideal of self advancement which the West legitimized through its transformation of economics in the 19th century.
The sales pitch of both ‘new economics’ and ‘new politics’ followed the same logic. “You will no longer go hungry. There will be enough food for all of us when we use these new methods. We can ALL be very happy and we will not need to lead a life of drudgery. With rights we will all be EQUALS. You will not have to grovel before your superiors. Ours systems and laws will administer justice fairly. You will be the sovereigns…..”
In reality what happened was that this smart middle class deprived the freedom of the people and wrote up a deed promising all kinds of conditional rights. On the one hand they would accumulate untold power and wealth by robbing and plundering the poor. On the other they would create institutions headed by their own kind to ‘dispense justice.’ Both the problem and solution sides would be ‘growth industries’. We have seen how many young professionals have benefited with their ‘careers in human rights.’ The UN in particular has been a glorified foreign employment agency for the children of the rich countries to go around the world minding the business of other people and looking after them.
As is obvious the new economics and new politics created a whole lot of useless junk in the form of goods and services and also professions. The profession of politics is another good example. These pseudo professions exploit the people mercilessly with a benevolent justification to boot.
Where then does mankind go from here? What is required is not another revolution; not another system. In fact all religions, philosophies and traditions including the capitalist system have been true and good. Only the human being with his/her ignorance, greed and hatred has failed them. There is something of value to be learned from every branch of learning. What we lack is humility and also moderation. We must start moderating the sales pitch of both problems and solutions. A public praxis is not enough. There must at the bottom be a personal praxis to help us achieve integrity as human beings, as mothers and fathers, sisters and brothers. We can then live the dream of fraternity of the French Revolution.
It is very important to mind our own business.
இனியொரு டாட் கொம்(சம்பவம் – இலங்கை, எல்பிடிய பிரதேசத்தைச் சேர்ந்த பல்கலைக்கழக மாணவி செல்வி.டிமாஷா கயனகி, தனது கல்வி நடவடிக்கைகளுக்காக கொழும்பு செல்வதற்காக 24.05.2014 அன்று விடிகாலை 3.30 மணிக்கு, எல்பிடிய பஸ் நிலையத்துக்கு வந்தவேளை, அங்கு நின்றிருந்த இராணுவ வீரனொருவனால் அருகிலிருந்த பாழடைந்த கட்டிடமொன்றுக்கு இழுத்துச் செல்லப்பட்டுள்ளார். மாணவி அங்கிருந்து தப்பிக்க முற்பட்ட வேளையில் இராணுவ வீரனால் கத்தியால் பல தடவை குத்தப்பட்ட நிலையில் மரணமடைந்துள்ளார். மோப்பநாயின் உதவி கொண்டு தப்பித்துச் சென்ற குற்றவாளியைக் கைது செய்துள்ள போதிலும், குற்றவாளி இராணுவத்தினன் என்பதால் ‘இராணுவ வீரனது காதலை மறுத்ததால் அவனுக்கு ஏற்பட்ட சடுதியான கோபத்தின் காரணமாகவே கொலை நிகழ்ந்துள்ளது. திட்டமிட்டுச் செய்ததல்ல’ என இராணுவத்தரப்பும், இலங்கைக் காவல்துறையும் சம்பவத்தை மூடி மறைக்கவும், குற்றவாளியைத் தப்பிக்கச் செய்யவும் முயற்சிக்கிறது.)
கடந்த 24.05.2014 அன்று ஒரு இராணுவ வீரனால் படுகொலை செய்யப்பட்ட 21 வயதான பல்கலைக்கழக மாணவி செல்வி.டிமாஷா கயனகி மரணிக்க முன்பு இறுதியாக எழுதிய கவிதை இது.
dimasha
எப்போதேனுமொரு நாள் இவையெல்லாவற்றையும்
விட்டுச் செல்லவேண்டியிருக்கும்
எவரும் மகிழ்ச்சியாகச் செல்லும் பயணமல்ல அது
எனினும் அதை
துயரமின்றிச் செல்லமுடிந்தால்
எவ்வளவு நன்றாகவிருக்கும்
அந்நாளில்
நினைவில் வராதோர் அனேகர்
எனினும்
நினைவில் வரக் கூடிய சிலரில்
நீங்கள் இருப்பீர்களென்ற நம்பிக்கை எனக்கிருக்கிறது
நான் மரிக்கும் நாளில் வாருங்கள்
என்னைப் பார்க்கவென்றே வந்துசெல்லுங்கள்
ஒருபோதும் சிந்திராத கண்ணீரில்
ஒரு துளியை விட்டுச் செல்லுங்கள்
இரு விழிகளும் இறுக்கமாக மூடப்பட்டிருந்த போதிலும்
குளிர்ந்த சரீரத்துடனிருந்த போதிலும்
முன்பு பழகியதையெண்ணி
நெற்றியிலொரு முத்தமிடுங்கள்
ஆயிரம் கண்கள் பார்த்திருக்கும்
எனது நற்குணங்களை விமர்சிக்கும்
பதிலாக எதுவும் பேசாது
ஒரு பிடி மண்ணிட்டுச் செல்லுங்கள்
கல்லறையிலிருந்து நீங்கள்
நீங்கிச் செல்கையில்
மாபெரும் தனிமையை நான் உணரக் கூடும் – எனவே
ஒரு பூவை மட்டும் வைத்துவிட்டு
நீங்கள் செல்லுங்கள் திரும்பிப் பாராது
- செல்வி. டிமாஷா கயனகி
தமிழில் – எம்.ரிஷான் ஷெரீப்
Believe it or not..! Dracula in charge of blood bank..!!


(Lanka-e-News-27.May.2014, 5.00PM) It is unfortunate that the people of the country even after knowing very well that it was none other than Mahinda Rajapakse who fraudulently transferred into his sister’s account funds received by him to provide relief to Tsunami victims , yet made him the leader of the country. This was tantamount to entrusting the human blood bank to a Dracula going by the present plight and predicament of the people and the country. 
Since that day , every appointment made by the Rajapakse regime was akin to feeding his blood sucking Draculas through the blood bank .

P.B. Jayasundara who was found guilty of a fraud and held by the court that he shall not be entrusted with any official responsibilities was made the Finance Ministry secretary; Mahinda Rajapakse appointed his own advisor as the chief justice of the country ; while appointing grade nine qualified Weerawansa (Modawansa) as Minister of housing , he appointed Donkey Johny (Johnston Fernando ) another grade nine qualified moron as the Minister of trade and commerce. Despite this list of appointment of incompetent nincompoops is already long , yet another similar appointment has been made recently to swell this list of Draculas who are sucking the life blood of the people and country’s economy .

The latest contribution to the series of debacles is via the appointment of Prof. Kshanika Hiramburegama, chairperson of the University Grants commission to the post of Director of Malambe private medical College , which is currently the center of a storm of controversy, and had drawn flak from every quarter including the students, academic staff and scholars.

The former President of the University academics federation Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Devasiri expressing his views on this to Lanka e news said, this appointment only fuels the raging controversy and is creating more irritants to the burning issues. Moreover this appointment offends against all ethics and logic, and It makes a huge conflict of interests, he lamented.

The Democratic Route To A Third Term


By Somapala Gunadheera -May 27, 2014
Somapala Gunadheera
Somapala Gunadheera
Colombo TelegraphTNA’s proposal to make Wigneswaran the common candidate at the next Presidential Election was a pleasant surprise to me. It was pleasant because it echoed my belief that with the expanding vistas and liberalism of our younger generation, a Northerner would become our Head of State by the middle of the century. But it is clearly evident that we have not attained that level of maturity as a Nation, so far.
Mahinda RIf the TNA’s nominee is not acceptable, Sumanthiran wants to know the reason why. Evidently he is kite-flying on the communal response to the choice. But ethnicity is not relevant here. Not only the TNA, but also any other Party offering a politician in practice as the common candidate is bound to be disappointed. The reason is that any such candidate will naturally ignite rivalry, because of the potential in him to upstage himself and his Party in the process. The advantage gained by the selection would finally accrue to his side to the detriment of others.
There appears to be a confusion here between the terms ‘common candidate’, (CC) and ‘single issue candidate’ (SIC). A CC is selected to represent the interests of Parties with common interests and after election, he continues his assignment. On the other hand, a SIC is one who comes forward to pool the votes of all opposition Parties, irrespective of differences among themselves, for the sole purpose of defeating a seemingly invincible personality in power.
   Read More

OVERCOMING THE POST-WAR MALAISE: WHY SRI LANKA NEEDS A REFORM MINISTRY AND WHAT IT SHOULD DO

DS Photo in Empire Youth Annual 1952
The High Priests of Liberal Conservatism: Edmund Burke and D.S. Senanayake are the paradigms of thought and action for the Reform Ministry
 [Photo credit: The Empire Youth Annual, 1952]
“For centuries the Sinhalese and the Tamils have lived together in peace and amity. We have been governed by their kings and they by ours … I put this question bluntly to my Tamil friends.
Edmund-Burke-portrait-600
Do you want to be governed by London or do you want, as Ceylonese, to help govern Ceylon? Shall the most ancient of our civilisations sink into the level of a dull and dreary negation? We all know and admire their special qualities. They are essential to the welfare of this Island, and I ask them to come over and help us.”
“Nobody made a greater mistake than he who did nothing because he could do only a little.”

PB Jayasundara Should Not Be Publicly Insulted, Rajiva Writes To Mahinda


May 27, 2014
Sending a letter to the President Mahinda Rajapaksa, ruling coalition MP and the leader of the Liberal Party of Sri Lanka Prof.Rajiva Wijesinha today urged not to insult the Secretary to the Treasury PB Jayasundara.
Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP, Leader - Liberal Party of Sri Lanka
Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP, Leader – Liberal Party of Sri Lanka
Colombo TelegraphHe said that he hope “suitable action will be taken to make it clear that the Secretary to the Treasury should not be publicly insulted when following government directives and that such conduct is not acceptable in a Member of the Cabinet.”
We publish below the letter in full;
Your Excellency
Last year, when I did not vote for the impeachment of the Chief Justice, instructions had been given, before I even returned home, to reduce my Security. I did not see this as a problem, since I have long argued that we now deploy far too much security, which makes a mockery of your great achievement in getting rid of terrorism from Sri Lanka in 2009. Two officers, as I now have, are quite enough for Members of Parliament, with perhaps one more for Constituency members. And certainly Ministers too could do with far less security, given the numbers and the expense involved.
I was happy therefore to contribute even in a small way to reducing government expenditure, and I realized that such a token reprimand made sense given the general requirement to support government in votes. However it is generally accepted in all parliamentary democracies that votes of conscience are acceptable, and certainly so when there is no threat of instability for government.
                                                                                                            Read More

‘Sri Lankans deported secretly’


Suaram PC
 | May 27, 2014
Free Malaysia TodayPETALING JAYA: Human rights watchdog Suaram today claimed that the Malaysian government had deported three Sri Lankan refugees secretly to their homeland without adhering to the proper legal channels.
“Yesterday the government secretly deported the three Sri Lankan refugees to Sri Lanka,” said Suaram’s spokesperson R Thevarajan at a press conference today.
Thevarajan said the three refugees – Kirubaharan, Kirubanathan and Gushanthan – were not given the avenue to appeal but were indeed subjected to forced deportation which could put them at risk in the hands of the Sri Lankan government.
“The government is violating the non-refoulement principle of the international customary law by sending the refugees back to their persecutor, Sri Lanka,” he said.
“The government is putting all three refugees at great risk in the hands of the Sri Lanka government,” he added.
Thevarajan said that Suaram tried to get in touch with the police and the Inspector General of Police, Khalid Abu Bakar last Sunday but to no avail.
But around 4.30pm yesterday, Suaram received a notice from the police informing them that the refugees have already been deported to Sri Lanka.
Suaram also questioned the statement made by the IGP in a press release on May 25 that the three refugees were terrorists, and the role played by the immigration department in deporting them hurriedly.
Also present at the conference was lawyer New Sin Yew, representing one of the deported refugees.
“They were detained for 11 days before being deported. That is far too short of time to receive legal advice,” New said.
“The refugees need to be declared as prohibited immigrants by the court in order for deportation, and to give refugees the right to appeal to the court,” stressed New.
“No notices were given to the refugees’ families, UNHCR and Suaram even though we have been communicating well with the police regarding this case,” he said
Meanwhile Suaram executive director K Arumugam said that the police also ransacked the refugees’ house and confiscated their belongings.
“It was strange that the police confiscated all their belongings due to an offence under the Immigration Act though on May 25 Khalid claimed that they were suspected terrorist restarting the Liberation of Tamil Tiger Eelam (LTTE),” he said.
“If Khalid has evidence, then charge them in court. Khalid should prove his claims,” he said.
Arumugam said that Suaram will take legal action against the government, the immigration department and the police for violating the immigration laws and international conventions.
“There are due processes of the government, immigration department and police to follow but they did not,” he said.

Intellectual Prostitutes


mediaThe attached is most true
if one was to read newspapers such as the Sri Lanka Daily News, the Australian and the Adelaide Advertiser - an independent, balanced and fair press, I certainly do not think so!!!!
John Swinton, the former Chief of Staff at the NEW YORK TIMES was asked to give a toast before the prestigious New York Press Club in 1953. Below is his candid confession [it's worth noting that Swinton was called "The Dean of His Profession" by other newsmen, who admired him greatly].
"There is no such thing as an independent press - at this date of the world's history. You know it and I know it. There is not one of you who dares to write your honest opinions, and if you did, you know beforehand that it would never appear in print. I am paid weekly for keeping my honest opinions out of the paper I am connected with. Others of you are paid similar salaries for similar things, and any of you who would be so foolish as to write honest opinions would be out on the streets looking for another job.
"If I allowed my honest opinions to appear in one issue of my paper, before twenty-four hours my occupation would be gone. The business of the journalist is to destroy the truth; to lie outright; to pervert; to vilify; to fawn at the feet of mammon, and to sell the country for his daily bread. You know it and I know it and what folly is this toasting an independent press. We are the tools and vassals of the rich men behind the scenes. We are the jumping jacks, they pull the strings and we dance. Our talents, our possibilities and our lives are all the property of other men. We are intellectual prostitutes."

In conversation with Gihan de Chickera: Cartoons, politics and theatre

Gihan de Chickera, who I’ve known since our halcyon days at S. Thomas’, is an actor, with experience in both stage and film productions, though perhaps even more loved and followed for his political cartoons, published in the Daily Mirror. Gihan is humble about his work to a point of fault and dare I say, for someone not unaccustomed to being on stage in front of hundreds, rather shy, which makes this interview – the first he’s done for TV – rather special, giving viewers a glimpse into a person that we only otherwise see as a character on stage, or as the creator of a gripping cartoon on a page.
We begin, as we must begin, by going into how Gihan got around to nurturing his aptitude for drawing when he was around 10 years old. Gihan puts it down to his elder sister (renowned theatre director Ruwanthie de Chickera), and drawings first inspired by Asterix and Tin Tin comics, and subsequently by the great Wijesoma’s cartoons that appeared in The Island. Gihan goes into why he kept drawing cartoons, and why he now does it for a living.
We talk about how Gihan developed his critical gaze, which in addition to drawing skills, is what makes an editorial or political cartoonist tick. Looking at how his own skills have developed over time, Gihan talks about how with maturity, the political cartoonist focuses on not just what is said by political and other leaders, but also what remains unsaid.
We then go into the actual production of a cartoon and how Gihan still likes to draw using his hand, and also uses digital tools like Adobe Illustrator and Photoshop in the process of production. He is asked whether cartoonists in the future will continue to physically draw (on paper), or if he belongs to the last generation that will not use digital tools from initial concept and production to final publication.
Gihan is asked whether he has got any pushback for what and who he’s depicted in his cartoons. When asking him this question, I had in mind the fact that not a single cartoonist in Sri Lanka has depicted, much less lampooned, the brutish Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa. Gihan’s answer is an interesting one, suggesting that cartoonists have the space to critique polity and society to a greater degree than others in the media. “For all our faults”, he says “we Sri Lankans can laugh at ourselves”. He also talks about how visual metaphors and innuendo, in the service of political cartoons, can help get a message across that in another form may be censored, or result in violent reprisals.
Gihan also notes how even though it’s been the worst of times for journalism in Sri Lanka, political cartoons in particular have seen a healthy growth.
We go on to talk about whether Gihan in particular, and a political cartoonist in general, is more reactionary or revolutionary. In response, Gihan goes into how editorial and political cartoons are very different to journalism, in that they don’t have to give equal weight to all sides or perspectives of what they choose to depict.
Given Gihan’s talent on stage, we switch gears to theatre, and begin by looking at why contemporary Sinhala theatre, to a far greater extent than English theatre, robustly and creatively tackles challenging and contentious political issues. Gihan struggles to answer this, but in the next couple of minutes, he does touch upon some very interesting differences between the two theatre traditions, including the socio-economic backgrounds of the creators, the audiences they play to and the economics of theatrical productions. On that last point, Gihan is asked how theatre can be, in his words, “made more economically accessible to people without compromising on quality”.
Gihan played a lead role in (the brilliant) Machan, yet is on record as saying that he prefers the stage to film. When asked why, he goes into how as an actor, the process of producing a play for him is more appealing than preparing for a role in a film.
Given that Gihan is unique – in that he is an experienced actor as well as gifted cartoonist – he is asked whether the two talents fertilise each other, or whether they are very different aspects of his life that he keeps separate from each other.
Towards the end of our brief conversation, we talk about the Cartoonist of the Year award, which Gihan won in 2012, for his work over 2011. Gihan shares his feelings about the award and whether such awards help, in any way, to increase the appeal and reach of his work in print. Gihan also talks about the team of cartoonists at the Daily Mirror newspaper, and how their approach is different to the common perception of cartoonists as being solitary individuals, drawing away in isolation.
Gihan is asked whether, in drawing so frequently what he chooses to focus on, he doesn’t get depressed by the issues, individuals and institutions he chooses to depict.
His answer is an interesting one.

UNPers mull meeting the AG....


unp police 1The UNP Parliamentarians who were attacked during their fact finding mission in Hambantota have decided to meet Attorney General Palitha Fernando and discuss legal steps that could be taken against those who were accused of attacking them, UNP General Secretary Tissa Attanayake told journalists.
unp police 2“The decision was made by the MPs after they were informed by IGP N. K. Illangakoon that he had sought Attorney General’s advice on taking action against those who are accused of attacking the MPs,” he said. Attanayake said that the IGP had informed of this decision to the MPs when they met him at the Police Headquarters today. Mr. Attanayake charged that the investigations on the incident had become complicated as the Hambantota Police had referred the incident to a Samatha Mandala (Mediation Board) while the IGP had decided to seek the advice of Attorney General.

Sobhitha Thera-Champika discussion continues

sobitha champika
The National Movement for Social Justice, led by Ven. Maduluwawe Sobhitha Thera, and the Jathika Hela Urumaya held a very successful discussion yesterday (26), and both agreed to continue discussion futher, said JHU media spokesman Nishantha Sri Warnasinghe.

Ven. Sobhitha Thera had requested the JHU for a meeting to discuss his proposals for constitutional reforms.
Mr. Warnasinghe told to the media that the talks at the official residence of JHU secretary, minister Champika Ranawaka, lasted for more than two hours.
The prelate has stressed the need for the abolition of the executive presidency, to which minister Ranawaka expressed total agreement.
The minister has gone onto say that the executive presidency was not the only reason for the prevailing sociopolitical crisis, and that changing the electoral system and the introduction of a mechanism to minimize corruption, wastage and bribery were essential through constitutional reforms.
Implementation of the 17th amendment too, came under discussion.
Ven. Sobhitha Thera said the common opposition candidate would be revealed once the presidential elections are announced.
The NMSJ was also represented at the talks by Dr. Jayampathy Wickremaratne and attorney Ravi Jayawardena, while Ven. Rathpanwila Wimalaratana Thera, Udaya Gammanpila and Nishantha Sri Warnasinghe too, attended on behalf of the JHU.

IGP tells UNP MPs assaulted in H’tota to pursue case with AG 


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by Zacki Jabbar-May 26, 2014, 10:10 pm

The Inspector General of Police N. K. Illangakoon yesterday told the UNP MPs who were manhandled by UPFA mobs in Mattala and attacked in Hambantota during a fact finding mission they undertook on the 17th of last month, that they could pursue their case with the Attorney General,if they so wished.

Eran Wickremeratne, one of the five parliamentarians who were threatened and man handled by a UPFA mob at the Mattala International Airport and attacked with stones and eggs by a gun wielding Hambantota UPFA Mayor Eraj Ravindra Fernando, at the Magampura Mahinda Rajapaksa Port, told "The Island", that a delegation led by UNP General Secretary Tissa Attanayake had met the IGP at Police Headquarters, to inquire about the investigations into their complaints. "The other victim MPs Ajith P Perera ,Nalin Bandara and Ajith Mannamperuma were also present .R.Yograjan was not in Colombo yesterday."

The IGP said that investigations were in progress and an interim report along with available evidence had been submitted to the Attorney General,the MP revealed. "While requesting for more time to complete inquiries,the IGP told us that we could also pursue the case with the AG."

Asked, if the UNP would file a separate motion with the AG,he replied that they were considering various options and would take a decision shortly.
While Mody swears in , protests are staged against MaRa – ekel broom attack in Chennai and Delhi
(Lanka-e-News-27.May.2014, 5.00PM) While Indian new Prime Minister Narendra Mody was taking oaths as the new Prime Minister (P.M.) of India, Vaiko a colleague of his was reportedly arrested by the Indian police for staging protests against the invitation extended to Sri Lanka President Mahinda Rajapakse for the ceremony. During the protests , an effigy of Mahinda Rajapakse too was burnt to ashes.

After the new Indian P.M. was sworn in before the President of India Pranab Mukherji , the other Cabinet of Ministers were sworn in. Arun Jaitley ,a close associate of Mody took oaths as the Finance Minister while the former opposition leader Sushma Swaraj was sworn in as the foreign Minister .

M.D.M.K. leader Vaiko was arrested by the police for staging protests in Delhi , the capital city against the invitation extended to Sri Lanka’s MaRa for the swearing in ceremony. BBC reported that Vaiko and his group were arrested by the police when they were engaged in protests shouting slogans and the crowds were attempting to move out of the city.

Prior to staging the protest Vaiko had sent a letter to Mody and expressed his deep resentment against the invitation extended to MaRa. He had also stated in the letter that in the year 2004 and in 2009 during the swearing in ceremonies , SL President Mahinda Rajapakse was not invited to attend the ceremonies.

Tamil nadu chief Minister Jayalalitha and Karunanidhi of the opposition too have opposed the invitation extended to SL ‘s MaRa. While Vaiko was leading a crowd in thousands in protest at Delhi , it is reported the protestors of Jayalalitha and Karunanidhi were staging protests in the city of Chennai against Rajapakse. The demonstrators have burnt an effigy of Rajapakse while women have attacked it with ekel brooms.