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 30, 2014

Counting drugs and prostitutes - a political gift?

Channel 4 News
FRIDAY 30 MAY 2014
Britain's economy will get a £10bn boost when prostitution and drugs are included in GDP figures. But is there a moral equivalence between such services and sectors like agriculture and publishing?
News
Drug dealers and prostitutes will have their economic contributions included when Britain calculates its gross domestic product (GDP) from September this year. It is one of a series of changes to how Britain accounts for its GDP, bringing Britain in line with international standards and adding a potential 5 per cent growth.
The Office of National Statistics (ONS) estimates that drugs and prostitution generate a sum of £5bn per year. The move to include such calculations is part of new EU ruling which aim to bring Britain's accounting system in line with other countries including US, Canada and Australia, which have already adopted them.
Others financial contributions, including charities, universities and trade unions, will also be included.
But counting the contributions of dealers and brothels has generated the most headlines. Some argue that there is a moral flaw in doing so: including them gives the impression that they hold the same levels of economic validation as other sectors, such as agriculture, the hotel industry and publishing - which each contribute around the same sum, according to the ONS.
However, there could be gremlins ahead. When the US adjusted to this system last year, the calculation automatically added 3.6 per cent to the size of 2012 GDP. Italy introduced the rules last week, estimating that sex and prostitution added between 1 and 2 per cent to its GDP.
And in 2006 when Greece revised its figures to include drugs and money laundering, it saw an overnight growth of 5 per cent, a figure that Brussels subsequently rejected. A few years later its economy collapsed.

Political leverage

Whatever happens, the move will be something of a political gift for the Tories. Basing their appeal for re-election on the idea that they have repaired the economy, this adjustment in September - which, granted, will be reflective of 2009 - will nonetheless play to the mood music.
"The timing is, of course, has convenient political implications that will help the government's argument," Phillip Blonde, of the think tank ResPublic told Channel 4 News.
But he suggests that for it to be truly accurate, it should not just include the "black market of the criminal economy" but also "the levels of tax lost to offshore wealth".
For voters, though, the changes should serve as a timely caution. The cacophony of backslapping may be heard in Westminster, where on Friday it emerged that Britain's economic prospects are at their brightest in more than a decade.
George Osborne will want to persuade the country he is the only safe pair of hands to steer the economy in the years ahead, while Ed Miliband will argue that the growth is simply not being felt.
When these new rules take effect in September, voices will invariably louden. But it should also remind that numbers are only as useful as the lens through which they are viewed. As Mark Twain famously remarked: "Facts are stubborn things, but statistics are pliable."

Thursday, May 29, 2014

Honeymoon with Modi?


Thursday 29th May 2014
President Mahinda Rajapaksa may have metaphorically leapt into new Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s arms this week, but in the beginning there was Sonia Gandhi and Manmohan Singh.
The Congress Party won Parliamentary elections in 2004, returning the Gandhi family dynasty to the helm of Indian politics after a hiatus of eight years and heralding a new dawn for Sri Lanka’s battle against terrorism.
UNDERSTANDING RULE OF LAW FINAL

29/05/2014
AHRC humanrightsasiaIn this extensive interview, Basil Fernando of the Asian Human Rights Commission explains what it means to be a Rule of Law system and why it is important for human rights defenders to understand these concepts. All countries in Asia have laws, but very often the laws are not implemented consistently; people are not equal before the law. Often the state uses violence, like torture and extrajudicial killings, with impunity despite the law clearly proscribing such acts.

Mr Fernando explains what basic rights and freedoms all citizens must have and what legal procedures must be in place and fully functioning in order for a country to call itself a Rule of Law system. As he explains, this fundamental normative framework cannot be compromised by the powers of the executive branch of government. Neither can it be revoked by tradition, culture or religion that dictates inequality, or usurped by "national security" concerns, except with what is absolutely necessary in order to keep people safe during a period of civil unrest. Watch the interview to learn more.

வவுனியா கல்மடு மகா வித்தியாலைய கலைப்பிரிவு மாணவனை காணவில்லை!

வவுனியா கல்மடு மகா வித்தியாலைய கலைப்பிரிவு மாணவனை காணவில்லை!
வவுனியா கல்மடு மகாவித்தியாலயத்தில் க.பொ.த. உயர்தரத்தில் கலைப்பிரிவில் கல்வி கற்று வந்த மகாலிங்கம் றஜீவன் எனும் 17 வயதுடைய மாணவன் நேற்று (27.05.2014 அன்று) காணாமல் போயுள்ளதாக அறிய முடிகின்றது. 
கடந்த 27.05.2014 அன்று தரணிக்குளம் சாஸ்திரி கூழாங்குளம் எனும் முகவரியில் அமைந்துள்ள தனது வீட்டிலிருந்து, அதிகாலை 5.00 மணிக்கு பத்து கிலோ பயிற்றங்காய்களுடன் புறப்பட்டு, வவுனியா நகரப்பகுதியிலுள்ள தினசரி சந்தையில் வியாபாரியிடம் கொடுத்த பின்னர், தான் பயணித்த மிதிவண்டியை குறித்த வியாபாரியின் மரக்கறி விற்பனை நிலையத்துக்கு முன்பாக நிறுத்தி விட்டு, எதிர்ப்புறமாகவுள்ள காகிதாதிகள் (பாடசாலை உபகரணங்கள்) விற்பனை நிலையத்துக்கு சென்று வருவதாக கூறிவிட்டு சென்ற மாணவன் காணாமல் போயுள்ளதாக கூறப்படுகின்றது. 
இந்த சம்பவம் தொடர்பில், வவுனியா பொலிஸ் நிலையத்திலும், தரணிக்குளம் பொலிஸ் நிலையத்திலும், மனித உரிமைகள் ஆணைக்குழுவிலும், வன்னி மாவட்ட நாடாளுமன்ற உறுப்பினர் சிவசக்தி ஆனந்தனிடமும் மாணவனின் பெற்றோரால் முறையிடப்பட்டுள்ளது.

Our "Crimes Against Humanity" report now available in Tamil and Sinhala

Sril Lanka Campaign for Peace and Justiceසිංහල -29/05/2014

தமிழ்

We are pleased to announce that the executive summary, introduction, and selected excerpts of our Crimes Against Humanity report have now been translated into Sinhala and Tamil.

Click here to read it in Sinhala

Click here to read it in Tamil

The report presents credible allegations pointing to the commission of crimes against humanity by Sri Lankan security forces during the five years since the civil war ended. 

This report was the first to allege that the Government's subsequent actions after the war and through to the present day also point to the commission of such crimes. These findings underscore the urgent need to demand accountability now, for both post-war and wartime violations. Yasmin Sooka's subsequent report on sexual violence backed up these findings.

This report makes the legal case for an investigation into post-war violations using the framework of international criminal law. It relies on public source reports of post-war violations that have been assessed as credible, corroborating these reports with 26 in-country interviews with survivors, attorneys, journalists, and human rights campaigners.

Some of these stories are truly horrible. The report documents 20 incidents involving rape, and two further incidents involving sexual assault, 12 incidents involving torture, eight other incidents involving severe violence, nine incidents of arbitrary arrest, four incidents involving murder, and two incidents involving disappearance. In all cases the perpetrators were members of the Sri Lankan Armed Forces or the Police, and the victims were Tamils from the Northern Province. These incidents have all previously been reported upon, but this report demonstrates that they can be linked together as part of a systemic attack on the civilian population of the Northern Province by members of the Sri Lankan Security apparatus. 

Click here to read it in Tamil

Click here to read it in Sinhala

Australian HC visits the North, meets Wigneswaran


Wig mdie robinAustralian High Commissioner to Sri Lanka Ms Robyn Mudie has visited Jaffna and met with Northern Province Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran.
The Australian High Commissioner has discussed the latest developments in the North with the Chief Minister.
A wide range of issues were reportedly discussed, but the details were not immediately made available to the media.
Australia has been a strong critic of attempts to launch an international investigation in the country over the human rights issue.
However, the Australian government has also said it will push Sri Lanka to implement the recommendations of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) and to engage with domestic and international stakeholders to advance an effective and transparent reconciliation agenda.

Sri Lanka Not Honoured Commitments Made To India – TNA Tells Jayalalithaa


Colombo TelegraphMay 29, 2014
“We are thank full to you for the continuing concern you have shown towards the resolution of the Tamil question in Sri Lanka and we look forward to working closely with you and your government to future strengthen our ties.” Leader of the Tamil National Alliance wrote to Chief Minister of Tamilnadu, J Jayalalithaa.
jaya-mainSending a congratulatory message to Jayalalithaa theTNA leader said;The Tamil People in Sri Lanka do not desire a recurrence of violence. Their desire is that they and all other Sri Lankans are able to carry on their lives in the territories they live in, based on equality and justice.”
He also said “Sri Lankan government has not honoured the several commitments made to India and to the International Community to evolve an acceptable political solution to the national question;
“The agenda being aggressively persued by the Sri Lankan government through the several actions stipulated in the said letter to radically alter the demographic composition of the majority Tamil speaking territories, the Northern and Eastern provinces and also change the ethnic, linguistic and cultural identities of the said territories;
“The aforesaid actions of the Sri Lankan government are clearly indicative of the lack of genuine commitment on the part of the Sri Lankan government to evolve an acceptable political solution”
We publish below the letter in full;
Chelvi J Jeyalalitha,
Chief Minister, Tamil Nadu,
Chief Minister’s Office,
Tamil Nadu.
Dear Chief Minister,
I write to you as the Leader of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), democratically elected to substantially represent the Tamil People, particularly in the North East of Sri Lanka, for instance in the last election held for the Northern Provincial Council (NPC), despite the election being held under the intimidatory presence and invlovement of the armed forces as concluded by both international and local observers, the TNA secured 30 out of 38 seats in the NPC.
We extend to you on behalf of the Tamil People of Sri Lanka our warmest congratulations on your resounding victory in Tamil Nadu at the recently concluded elections to the Lok Sabha. By winning 37 out of 39 seats in Tamil Nadu, you have become the third largest party in the whole country in the Lok Sabha, next only to the present and former ruling parties. This indeed, is an astounding acheivement and is indicative of the influence which you have the capacity to weild. We extend to you and your government our very sincere best wishes for the successful performance of your multi-facted responsibilities.
We are thankful to you for the continuing concern you have shown towards the resolution of the Tamil question in Sri Lanka and we look forward to working closely with you and your government to further strengthen our ties. The Tamil People in Sri Lanka do not desire a recurrence of violence. Their desire is that they and all other Sri Lankans are able to carry on their lives in the territories they live in, based on equality and justice.
Following the anti-Tamil pogrom of 1983, Sri Lanka accepted the good offices of India to bring about a final and acceptable resolution of the national conflict in Sri Lanka. This has been a continuing process, though at times interrupted. India has and continues to play a role.
With the end of the armed conflict in May 2009, violence terminated and every opportunity came about to bring a permanent end to the conflict based upon equality, justice and genuine peace.
Both during the armed conflict and after its conclusion Sri Lanka made commitments to India and the International Community to bring about an acceptable political solution. Unfortunately this has not been honoured.
We annex herewith for your kind attention a copy of a letter addresssed to Shri Narendra Modi, Prime Minister of India. We have stated therein: 1. The Sri Lankan government has not honoured the several commitments made to India and to the International Community to evolve an acceptable political solution to the national question; 2. The agenda being aggressively persued by the Sri Lankan government through the several actions stipulated in the said letter to radically alter the demographic composition of the majority Tamil speaking territories, the Northern and Eastern provinces and also change the ethnic, linguistic and cultural identities of the said territories; and 3. The aforesaid actions of the Sri Lankan government are clearly indicative of the lack of genuine commitment on the part of the Sri Lankan government to evolve an acceptable political solution.
Such actions of the Sri Lankan government undermine all efforts towards reconciliation, permanent peace and harmony, create an environment that promotes hostility and further cause irreparable and irreversible damage to the Tamil speaking peoples in the territories historically inhabited by them.
We have appealed to the Prime Minister that India’s continued role should ensure that an honourable peace based on justice and equality should be brought about in Sri Lanka.
We appeal to you for your continued and fullest support to achieve the above.
We look forward to meeting with you at your earliest convenience and earnestly request that an opportunity be afforded to us.
With our warmest regards and very best wishes,
Yours Very Sincerely
R. SAMPANTHAN
Member of Parliament, Trincomalee / Sri Lanka.
Leader, Tamil National Alliance.
In Memoriam - Songs from the Purananuru - Song 192
29 May 2014

During this month of May, as Tamils remember their loved ones that were killed as the armed conflict ended in 2009, we publish selected Poems from the classical Tamil anthology, the Purananuru (the 400 Puram poems) as we have done in previous years. This is the last in our collection this year.Song 192 - Kaniyan Poonkunran sings
Tinai – Potuviyal (General heroism)

Every Town a Home Town

Every town a home town
every man a kinsman.
Good and evil do not come
from others.
Pain and relief of pain
come of themselves.
Dying is nothing new.
We do not rejoice
That life is sweet
nor in anger
call it bitter.

Our lives however dear,
follow their own course,
rafts drifting
in the rapids of a great river
sounding and dashing over the rocks
after a downpour
from skies slashed by lightnings –
we know this
from the vision
of men who see

So,
we are not amazed by the great
And we do not scorn the little.

Collection: In Memoriam - Songs from the Purananuru

Song 112 (26 May 2014) 

Song 256 (24 May 2014)

Song 356 (22 May 2014)

Song 191 (19 May 2011)

Song 216 (18 May 2011)

Song 74 (17 May 2011)

Song 226 (16 May 2011)

Song 245 (15 May 2011)

Song 255 (14 May 2011) 

Notes - Puram refers to the exterior, public or outer – and so the Purananuru contains the Poems of War, and external life, as opposed to the Akam which refers to the interior, including the Poems of Love.

Tangled Webs


| by Tisaranee Gunasekara
“History, despite its wrenching pain,
Cannot be unlived, but if faced
With courage, need not be lived again.”
Maya Angelou (On the Pulse of Morning)
( May 29, 2014, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The Rajapaksas will not devolve power; not unless they are pushed to the wall, and left with no way out, not even a peephole.

The Formidable Jayalalithaa – Unrivalled Leader Of The Tamils

By Usha S Sri-Skanda-Rajah -May 29, 2014
Usha S Sri-Skanda-Rajah
Usha S Sri-Skanda-Rajah
Jayalalithaa’s Incredible Tenacity – Part 2
Colombo Telegraphjaya-mainThe Chief 
SMinister of Tamilnadu, the formidable J Jayalalithaa is on a roll.  In my article,  Jayalalithaa’s Incredible Tenacity part 1, I said Jayalalithaa “is sitting pretty”.  That was before the elections. [1] Now after her “historic and unparalleled win’ at the Lok Sabha elections, capturing 37 seats out of 39, Jayalalithaa, “Tamilnadu’s Lady”, the name she gave herself, has reached a highpoint in her illustrious political career with a high popularity rating to match – she has indeed reached the pinnacle. Yet some might disagree, when she has yet another goal to achieve, that of Prime Minister of India. Why does she need that although we won’t discount it.  Why does she need that, when she is the indisputable, inimitable, unrivalled and proven leader of all Tamils the world over, not just India.
In modern parlance Jayalalithaa “rocks” meaning she astounds.
It’s not just Jayalalithaa’s incredible tenacity that stands out more and more – add consistency, reliability, dependability and loyalty to the list. Unquestionably these are the attributes that make a great world leader and she has got it all!
Not only that, with her determination, resoluteness and indefatigable spirit, Jayalalithaa stands out and outshines her rivals.                                                                                   Read More

Modi’s call for 13A implementation: UNP willing to assist government

We will not play politics with national issues


article_image
By Zacki Jabbar-

Urging President Mahinda Rajapaksa to fulfil his written assurances to the United Nations and India to fully implement the 13th Amendment to the Constitution, the UNP said yesterday that unlike the SLFP it would not play politics with national issues or set the country on fire.

Vice Chairman of the UNP Lakshman Kirielle MP addressing a news conference in Colombo, said that even the new Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi had told Rajapaksa in New Delhi on Tuesday, that he should without any further delay devolve power to the North and East of Sri Lanka in terms of the 13th Amendment.

"When the UNP tried to implement the 13th Amendment in 1987, the SLFP set the country on fire by damaging public property worth billions of rupees. On returning to office in 2001, we once again attempted to devolve power, but the SLFP was back on the streets accusing us of dividing Sri Lanka.

The current crop of rulers had learnt a bitter lesson by trying to play ‘tricks’ with the international community including India by giving bogus pledges which had worked with a majority of Sri Lankans, the MP said. "When President Rajapaksa asked the former Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh about two months back why his country had not opposed the US led UN resolutions against Sri Lanka, the latter replied that he would have done so, if the former had implemented at least 10 percent of his pledges to the UN and India."

Kirielle accused President Rajapaksa of having assured New Delhi in early 2009 that he would implement 13A Plus, fearing that India would intervene in Sri Lanka’s war.

Shortly after the war had ended on May 18,2009, the governments representative Dayan Jayathillake went to Geneva and appealed to the UN not to pass strictures on Sri Lanka since it would without fail fully implement 13A. It was a time buying exercise which backfired badly on the country, MP Kirielle observed.

The UNP would wholeheartedly help the government devolve power, Kirielle said, pointing out that there was no need for sitting through another Parliamentary Select Committee process to discuss issues which had been debated for decades, since the solutions were clear to any person with an iota of common sense.

President pacifies P.B.!

pbAfter playing havoc at Temple Trees yesterday morning (28) upon his return from the swearing-in ceremony of the new Indian prime minister, the president set aside his differences and attended the launch of the finance ministry’s annual report for 2013 at the Financial Studies Institute auditorium in Colombo Fort later in the day in order to show that there is no antagonism at all between his government and finance ministry secretary P.B. Jayasundara.
Participating in the function, the president said that it was the finance ministry that is blamed most, and its secretary has to face the brunt, as the finance minister cannot be blamed politically. “I too, as a government minister, not only scolded the finance ministry secretary, but also tried to assault him. The finance secretary of the government then got excited when ministers scolded him. But, the present finance secretary does not get excited like that. What he does is sending his resignation letter to me,” he said with a smile.
Satisfied with the president’s response, the finance ministry has told participants having refreshments after the launch, “whatever the mediamen say, the president knows about me. He knows that I do all of these for the betterment of the country and not for any personal gain. There was a rumour making rounds recently that the president had scolded me in filth.  Had he done so, would he have made such a statement today? Those in the media and the ministers do not understand the seriousness of this. I run the economy with practical theory, more than economic theories. World’s best banking governor today Mark Carney cannot do what I am doing.”

Sri Lanka monks occupy ministry building


Buddhist nationalist group Ravana Balaya stages sit-in at religious affairs ministry against religious police unit.

Ravana Balaya has been accused of attacking mosques, churches and Muslim shops [File: AP]
Last updated
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AlJazeeraEnglishColombo, Sri Lanka - Protesters led by Buddhist monks from the right-wing Ravana Balaya group have occupied the Ministry of Buddha Sasana and Religious Affairs in the Sri Lankan capital, Colombo.
The Sinhalese Buddhist nationalist group protested on Wednesday against the creation of a new religious police unit, which was created in April this year in the wake of rising number of religious conflicts in recent years.
The general secretary of the group, Iththakande Saddhatissa Thero, said that they were protesting against the formation of the unit as it undermined religion in the island nation located at the southern tip of India.
"Nowhere else in the world has there been a special police unit setup to investigate religions. This is a conspiracy led by the Western powers. As the complaints increase, organisations such as the United Nations will say that religious freedom does not exist in the country," he told Al Jazeera.
Saddhatissa said that he and his supporters were ready to occupy the ministry until the new police unit was dissolved.
"They will have to arrest us and drag us out of here. We will not leave until this unit is shut down."
The protesters had earlier this month demanded that the police unit be disbanded by the end of the Buddhist holiday, Vesak, which takes place on various dates across the world.
However, the secretary to the ministry, MKB Dissanayaka, said that neither the inspector general of police nor the ministry had the power to disband the police unit.
"I explained to the priests that we would submit their grievances with the president's office and organise a meeting with relevant parties in the near future," he said.
Dissanayaka added that the police unit would continue to operate as normal unless the president instructs them to shut it down.
Police spokesperson Ajjith Rohana told Al Jazeera that more than a 1,000 complaints had been lodged with the religious police unit, of which nearly 60 of them are currently being investigated.
He added that this unit had been formed with the sole intention of maintaining religious harmony in the Budhist majority country, with Hindus and Muslims comprising a quarter of the total population. He dismissed speculation that it would undermine the religious integrity of the country.
The last couple of years have seen an increase in attacks against Muslims and Christians in the country. Groups such as the Bodu Bala Sana and Ravana Balaya have been accused of attacking mosques, churches and Muslim business establishments.
Sri Lanka: Sifting the earth of the killing fields 
Sri Lanka: Sifting the earth of the killing fieldsThe Economic Times

By Raghu Menon-29 May, 2014,

It has been five years since the end of one the bloodiest conflicts in recent memory. A state of armed hostility and political instability that embroiled Sri Lanka for decades ended when the Sri Lankan forces claimed victory over the outlawed Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in May 2009.

The Lankan government declared a peaceful and prosperous future was about to dawn for their people and promised to heal the wounds of the conflict. However, the Sri Lankan government has failed to deliver much peace or justice to the hundreds of thousands of Sri Lankans affected by the war.

The last stages of the war in 2009 were conducted in near-secrecy amid concerns of human casualties and rampant war crimes. The UN and International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) were asked to leave the war zone and independent media were denied access as well. The large civilian population trapped in the so-called "no-fire zones" in the north had almost no access to humanitarian aid.

In the immediate aftermath of the war, gruesome stories started emerging of what had transpired behind the curtains. The army occupied swathes of land in these areas under the pretext of keeping a close watch and preventing the rise of the LTTE.

AUN probe panel estimated that at least 40,000 Tamil civilians were killed in the last few months of the war alone. Allegations have been made that during the final stage of the armedarmed conflict, government forces intentionally shelled civilians, blocked food and medicine from reaching communities, and executed prisoners.

Meanwhile, witnesses say the LTTE recruited child soldiers, used civilians as human shields and killed those who tried to escape. The Lankan government has not initiated a credible investigative process and has not made any demonstrable progress towards prosecuting alleged perpetrators of the crimes committed under international law.

The government has even refused to accept the weak recommendations of its own Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Committee (LLRC). Instead, the government has claimed there hasn't been a single "civilian casualty" during the war.

The Sri Lankan authorities aggressively campaign against those who advocate accountability and an end to impunity for human rights violations throughout the country. Since the end of the conflict, human rights defenders, activists, journalists and civil society members critical of the government are regularly threatened and harassed.

This past weekend, the Sri Lankan government organised a "Victory Day" parade in the southern coastal town of Matara to celebrate its victory over the LTTE. President Mahinda Rajapaksa presided over the military parade with senior government functionaries and foreign dignitaries in attendance. Meanwhile, in the Tamil-majority north and east, the Lankan army blocked all attempts by people to publicly remember those who died in the war.

Despite two resolutions by the UN Human Rights Council in 2012 and 2013, Sri Lanka has failed to take effective steps to deliver justice for the victims of its civil war. This year, after a historic resolution was passed at the council calling for a UN Human Rights Office-led investigation, the Sri Lankan government announced its refusal to cooperate with the UNled probe. The independent investigation is key for an impartial probe into allegations of human rights violations and war crimes during the final phase of the armed conflict.

India has been heavily invested in Sri Lankan politics, playing a crucial role during many decisive moments in the last three decades. However, after reluctantly pressing the Sri Lankan government for human rights accountability, lately, India seems to have completely withdrawn from its responsibility as a UNHRC member and important south Asian country.

The new government in Delhi needs to recognise the fact that there has been no movement on justice delivery in Sri Lanka. As a responsible and emerging global power, India should own up to its responsibility and facilitate a UN-led independent probe into alleged war crimes that would begin to tell us what exactly happened in those horrific last months of the war.

The writer is with Amnesty International India

MR orders quickening of India power plant project

Mahinda-Rajapaksa-017
Photo: Dailymirror Cartoon By Gihan De ChickeraMR pushes Sampur plant after meeting Modi
President Mahinda Rajapaksa asked the Power and Energy Ministry to expedite work on the Sampur coal power plant in Trincomalee following his recent visit to India where he met with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
The Sampur plant is to be constructed with Indian assistance.

Modi during his meeting with Rajapaksa had asked for an early completion of the power project.
The Hindu has reported that in the seven months following its agreement with Colombo, New Delhi repeatedly voiced concern on the lack of progress in the project.
The 500-MW plant is NTPC India’s first international joint venture with the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB).
While the plant promises to meet a power shortfall, residents around Sampur are worried about displacement.
In December 2013, The Hindu reported that 800 families were affected after their land had been reportedly taken over by the government.
CEB authorities had then told The Hindu that only 500 acres were earmarked for the plant itself, and that the seven families that lost land were being compensated. But, there has been no progress since, say residents.
“Before the foundation stone is laid, we request India to look into our displacement,” said K. Nageswaran, TNA member and chairman of the Displaced Sampur Residents’ Welfare Organisation.