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

Monday, June 2, 2014

Deviation Of Buddhist Philosophy In Sri Lanka


By Ayathuray Rajasingam -June 2, 2014
Ayathuray Rajasingam
Ayathuray Rajasingam
Colombo TelegraphBuddhism was established around 500 BC. The ultimate goal of Buddhism is to overcome conflict in the consciousness of the individual. Buddhist teachings maintain that under any circumstances (whether it be political, religious, cultural or ethnic) violence cannot be accepted in solving disputes. It asserts that violence is a perversion of Buddhism and a rejection of Buddhist heritage. As such it has become a questionable issue whether the conduct of the political leaders, religious extremists or the Military Forces had profound effect on the spiritual progress and culture of the Buddhist Sinhalese.
Even the most respected Maha Sangha at Kandy are unable to condemn the activities of the BBS and the Military forces.
Even the most respected Maha Sangha at Kandy are unable to condemn the activities of the BBS and the Military forces.
It is during the period of King Devanampiya Tissa, Sri Lanka saw the introduction of Buddhism. King Devanampiya Tissa laid aside his bow and arrow when Arahat Mahinda said that ‘we are the disciples of the Lord of Dhamma. In compassion towards you, we have come here from India’. Prior to the arrival of Vijaya, Nagas and Yakkas were inhabitants in Sri Lanka who are said to have been considered as aborigines. The origins of Nagas can be traced through the great epic Maha Bharath where there is reference about Arjuna’s pilgrimage to Keerimalai in Sri Lanka and worshipped at Naguleswaram. Further, Maha Bharath mentions that Nagas were a civilized people living in Central India and Sri Lanka while Mahavamsa mentions that both Nagas and Yakkas were Hindus. It is after the meeting of Arahat Mahinda, King Devanampiyatissa and his subjects embraced Buddhism because of its noble path, though the Nagas worshipped serpants signalling the presence of the worship of Lord Shiva, while the Yakkas were described as devil worshippers.                                                        Read More

Finance Ministry Annual Report 2013: Rich with data but poor in statutory compliance

Comprehensive progress report of the Government 
by Ministry of Finance-Monday 02nd June 2014
The Ministry of Finance and Planning has issued its Annual Report for 2013 which it says has been published in terms of Section 13 of the Fiscal Management (Responsibility) Act No. 3 of 2003 (the report is available at: www.treasury.gov.lk).
The report is rich with data, information and analysis of the work which the present Government has done during 2009-13 rivalling the other report published on the economy, namely, the Annual Report of the Central Bank. Its presentation style using advanced graphical and pictorial methods is reader-friendly and, therefore, it can reach the ordinary laymen more effectively.
Sri Lanka stalls on Indian vehicle assembly plants
02 June 2014
The Sri Lankan government has refused to grant permits to Maruti Suzuki India to open a vehicle assembly plant on the island, reported the Sunday Times, dashing the Indian company's plans.

Quoting  Investment Promotion Minister Lakshman Yapa Abeywardena, the Sunday Timesreported that foreign manufacturers could not open plants on the island, unless there was “local input”.

The announcement will also affect the local agent of Land Rover Defenders, where plans had been in place to bring in British engineers to help with the production process in their own plant.

Maruti Suzuki India had initially announced it was contemplating setting up a plant in Sri Lanka last year. The company had accounted for almost half of all the vehicles sold on the island from 2011-2012, until the Sri Lankan government raised import duties to combat a rising fiscal deficit, causing exports to drop.

Abeywardena added that a final decision was yet to be taken on whether all foreign manufacturers would be banned, stating that it rests on the report of a committee that the government has appointed. 

The latest announcement comes after Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi held a meeting with Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa in Delhi just last week, where Indian projects on the island, such as the Sampur power plant, were discussed. On his return, Rajapaksa reportedly ordered government officials to expedite work on that particular project.Disputes over several issues have led to continuous delays, with an initial MoU having been signed in 2006.  

Fishermen arrest: Jayalalithaa seeks ‘decisive action’ from PM

Tamil NAdu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa
Tamil NAdu Chief Minister JayalalithaaReturn to frontpageCHENNAI, June 1, 2014
Seeking a “decisive shift” in the Centre’s stance vis-a-vis Sri Lanka on the arrest of Tamil Nadu fishermen, Chief Minister Jayalalithaa on Sunday urged Prime Minister Narendra Modi to secure the release of 33 fishermen, arrested by the island nation’s navy, and ensure a lasting solution to the issue.

In a letter to Mr. Modi for the first time on the fishermen issue, Ms. Jayalalithaa said 33 fishermen from Rameswaram fishing base in Tamil Nadu, along with their seven fishing boats, were apprehended by the Sri Lankan Navy on Sunday.

Stating that the previous UPA regime’s response on the issue was “meek,” which “emboldened” Sri Lanka, she recalled that there were 76 incidents of apprehension and 67 incidents of attacks on fishermen of Tamil Nadu in the past three years by Sri Lankan Navy.

Her numerous letters to the former Prime Minister Manmohan Singh seeking “strong diplomatic action” was of “no avail,” she charged.

“I hope that there will now be a decisive shift in the Centre’s stance under your leadership and that India will now take necessary steps to find a lasting solution to this vexatious question,” she said in her letter.

The “resumption of abductions and detentions” by Sri Lanka had sent shock waves among the fishermen right at the beginning of the fishing season today, after a 45-day fishing ban, she noted.
“There was an expectation that, with the change of government at the Centre, there would be a reset in the relations with Sri Lanka and such attacks and apprehensions would cease.”

Seeking Mr. Modi’s intervention, she said, “we hope that the firmness of India’s response would ensure that such instances do not recur hereafter.”

The fishermen’s right to fish in their traditional waters of the Palk Bay was allegedly being infringed repeatedly and effectively abrogated by Sri Lanka, she said.

“This [infringement] is caused in no small measure because of India having entered into an ill—advised agreement, which ceded to Sri Lanka the islet of Katchatheevu, which was historically part of India’s territory and undisputedly an integral part of India.”

Referring to the bilateral fishermen level talks in Chennai (January 27) and in Colombo (May 12) this year, Ms. Jayalalithaa alleged that Sri Lanka’s stance in these talks was “obdurate.”
She alleged that the “meek and weak” response of the UPA government to the repeated instances of abduction of and attacks on Tamil Nadu fishermen in their traditional waters had “emboldened” Sri Lanka to act “brutally” against the fishermen.

Alleging that “an immobile policy paralysis” characterised the approach of the UPA on the issue, she said there was high expectation in Tamil Nadu that the new NDA government at the Centre would act decisively on the issue.

“To put an end to the systematic violence unleashed by the Sri Lankan Navy and to impress upon them that India would not tolerate brutality against our innocent fishermen, I request you to put in place a strong and robust diplomatic response and ensure that such instances do not recur hereafter.”

UPDATE: Death toll due to adverse weather climbs to 15


UPDATE: Death toll due to adverse weather climbs to 15logo
June 2, 2014 
The death toll from landslides and flooding due to the prevailing adverse weather condition affecting parts of the country has risen to 15 while one person has been reported missing, police said.

Twelve of the 15 deaths have taken place in the Kalutara District, the worse affected from flooding after heavy rainfall, while other 3 have been reported from Colombo and Matara districts.

Seven deaths have been reported from Mathugama, 3 from Bulathsinhala and one each from Meegahatenna and Welipenna. Three of them are said to be women (47, 45, 22) while two are children (8, 9).

The two deaths in the Colombo District were caused when a wall had collapsed on a couple at a residence in Malabe this morning.

A 27-year-old youth died in Hiniduma while am 35-year-old man has been reported missing from Akuressa in the Matara District.

The National Building Research Organization (NBRO) has issued a landslide warning for Kalutara and Galle districts in view of the inclement weather conditions in those areas.

Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF) had dispatched 2 helicopters to assist those affected by floods in the Kalutara District.  

Meanwhile the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB) says that the power supply to flooded areas such as Matugama, Kitulgoda, Bulathsinhala and Kukuleganga in the Kalutara District has been disconnected for public safety.

Several main roads and byroads in Colombo, Kalutara and Galle are inundated due to inclement weather conditions.

The Disaster Management Center (DMC) says that a large number of people have been affected by floods in Kalutara, Mathugama and Agalawatta and that many have been left strandedint heir homes.

Five teams have been sent to rescue them with assistance from the navy and air force, the DMC said.

Showery weather is expected to continue in the Colombo, Gampaha, Kalutara, Galle, Matara and Ratnapura districts. Heavy showers are also likely at some places (more than 100mm of rainfall)

A severe weather advisory issued by Early Warning Centre of the Department of Meteorology states that sudden roughness of the sea areas associated with sudden increase of wind speed (up to 70-80kmph) over the sea areas off the coast  extending from Mannar to Pottuvil via Colombo and Hambantota is possible, due to the active cloudiness in the Western sea area.

Heavy showers are also expected in the aforementioned sea areas. The Met Department requested naval and fishing communities to be vigilant.

Pakistan's slow but steady progress on ending child marriage

Law passed in Sindh province shows that despite religious opposition, steps taken to outlaw child marriage are taking effect
Pakistani students sing songs during a lesson. Child marriage often spells an abrupt end to pupils' education. Photograph: Nathalie Bardou/AP
Pakistani schoolchildren The Guardian homeMohammad Zia-ur-Rahman
Monday 2 June 2014
The Council of Islamic Ideology (CII), one of Pakistan's most influential religious and constitutional bodies, has announced that girls are ready for marriage the moment they reach puberty.
This is not the first time the CII has condoned child marriage. In April, it ruled that banning such unions was anti-Islamic. While the ruling does not have any bearing on policymaking, it could have a major influence on local religious leaders nationwide.
But the CII's controversial statements should not detract from the progress made on addressing child marriage in Pakistan. In fact, a new law that prevents under-18s, irrespective of gender, from getting married was passed unanimously by the provincial assembly in Sindh, raising hopes for the future for girls like Mehwish. The law also punishes those who facilitate, contract or perform such marriages with up to three years in jail and a fine of 45,000 rupees (£455).
Sindh has the highest rate of child marriage of any province in Pakistan. That such a law could pass in this region sets it out as a landmark piece of legislation. If the law is implemented in letter and spirit it will help to ensure girls' rights to stay in school and marry later. It will help to secure their right to choose.
It is also my hope that the law will act as a deterrent against the customary practice known as vani or swara, where girls are given in marriage to compensate for the crimes of a male member of their family. The law also counters the religious misinterpretations that promote early marriage, as the CII recently put forward.
We want to see similar action across Pakistan. A bill has been introduced in the national assembly to strengthen punishment against perpetrators of child §marriage but has met with opposition from religious parties. We may yet see change in Punjab, however, where a bill that raises the legal age of marriage and toughens sanctions is under discussion.
Nationally there are glimmers of progress too. At the open working group on the sustainable development goals, a major intergovernmental process that will help shape the next set of international development goals, Pakistan proposed to end child, early and forced marriage by 2030. It is an ambitious vision, but it will not become a reality unless commitments turn into action.
Take the example of Mehwish, who was just eight when she got married. A primary school pupil from a small town in Punjab, central Pakistan, she had no understanding of the meaning of such things. She was taken out of school shortly after her wedding day.
But Mehwish was determined to get an education. After years of pleading with her husband to let her enrol again, she was finally allowed to return to the classroom – or so she thought. The education authorities would not let her back in: married girls, they said, would ruin the environment for the other students.
Mehwish's story is not uncommon. In Pakistan, one in four girls is married before her 18th birthday, forced into adulthood while she is still a child. Early marriage often spells an abrupt end to a girl's education too.
Every child needs to know the impact of early marriage and their right to say no. We need a national awareness campaign to make sure that families are aware that such unions are illegal. The Child Marriage Restraint Act states that no individual under 16 should be wed, but many families in rural areas are unaware of this fact.
Families do not always understand the significance of having a national ID card and they often lack access to local government services to register their children at birth. The absence of such crucial information makes it difficult to verify the age of the bride and groom on their wedding day.
Preventing child marriage is virtually impossible without a fully functional birth registration system and systematic age checks before marriage ceremonies. This requires Pakistan to invest in developing a local government network that is operational and fully equipped to provide critically needed services across the country.
We also need to ensure that every child has access to education. When girls have safe, quality and accessible schooling, their parents are more likely to choose education over marriage.And the benefits are clear: justone extra year of secondary schooling alone boosts girls' earning potential by 15-25%, helping to break the cycle of poverty. And when mothers have at least seven years of education, their children are less likely to die before their first birthday (pdf).
The future for girls in Pakistan can be bright if the government backs up its recent outspokenness on ending child marriage with action. We need strong laws that make marriage before 18 illegal and a comprehensive plan to make this a reality. Anything short of this will simply be lip service.
Mohammad Zia-ur-Rahman is the founder and chief executive of the Awaz Foundation Pakistan, a partner of Girls Not Brides, a global partnership to end child marriage

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5 harsh truths about the U.S. withdrawal from Afghanistan

 May 29
A soldier interacts with an Afghan boy in a northeast Arghandab valley village in Khevejeh Molk, Afghanistan on September 24, 2010. (Photo by Karin Brulliard/The Washington Post)
With this week's news that U.S. military will scale down its operations in Afghanistan and eventually withdraw in 2016, a lot of people are wondering what this will actually mean. Here, The Post's Kabul bureau chief Kevin Sieff spells out five things you need to know.

1. This might be the Afghan military's war now – but only because 140,000 Western troops failed to defeat the Taliban.


Pro-Russia militia attack Ukraine border post, dead and wounded reported
An armed pro-Russian separatist sits outside the regional administration building in the east Ukrainian city of Donetsk May 29, 2014.

An armed pro-Russian separatist sits outside the regional administration building in the east Ukrainian city of Donetsk May 29, 2014. REUTERS/Maxim Zmeyev
Kiev Mon Jun 2, 2014
Reuters(Reuters) - A fierce battle was underway on Monday in Ukraine's rebellious east after a pro-Russian militia attacked a Ukrainian border post with automatic weapons and grenade launchers in the early hours.
Security sources said a force of separatists had occupied the upper floors of a nearby apartment block and were shooting into the border post on the southern edge of Luhansk, a city very close to the frontier with Russia.
"Shooting is continuing. There has been no let-up in firing for seven hours now," border post spokesman Oleh Slobodin said.
"We have 8 or 9 wounded. The attackers have five dead and 8 wounded," he said.
Ukraine's eastern region has been riven with separatist armed rebellion for the past two months which the Kiev government says is fomented by Russia. It says armed fighters from Russia and the Caucasus region are fighting alongside rebels who are fighting rule from Kiev.
Another statement from the Ukrainian border service said the separatists at the Luhansk border post were sniping from private apartments and had stopped people leaving the residential block they had occupied, making it difficult for the border guard forces to return fire.
The Ukrainian army is taking part in an "anti-terrorist" operation to try to crush the rebellions in the east. Border guards said on Monday that the army had not yet reinforced to help them fend off the attack in Luhansk.

(Reporting by Pavel Polityuk; Writing By Richard Balmforth; editing by Ralph Boulton)

Wooing Scotland: what are the pro-union parties offering?

RBS headquarters (Reuters)Channel 4 News
MONDAY 02 JUNE 2014
The Conservatives are offering the Scottish parliament the power to set income tax if Scots vote to the stay in the union. What are the other main parties putting on the table?

Sunday, June 1, 2014

The New Opium And Its Addicts


| by Tisaranee Gunasekara
“…people’s stupidity and people’s good intentions influence events no less than do the necessities of the economic struggle.”
Czeslaw Miloz (The Captive Mind)

( June 1, 2014, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Defence authorities have suspended paying disabled soldiers their salaries .

These soldiers became disabled – and therefore unemployable - because they fought in the Eelam Wars. According to Rajapaksa logic, these are ‘War Heroes” and ‘Patriots’. And they have been deprived of their monthly salaries, on which many of them – and their families – would have been dependent.

Looking beyond the political polemic

The Sundaytimes Sri LankaSunday, June 01, 2014
A particularly cynical colleague of mine, incidentally a practising Buddhist who is enormously scornful of cultural traditions which he maintains has twisted the essence of Buddhism, has long been preoccupied as to why, (in his opinion), the late President Ranasinghe Premadasa was demonized as the killer of children while President Mahinda Rajapaksa has escaped this tag in the ‘majority’ perception.
The dangers of sweeping generalizations
Both were/are Heads of State whose terms became indelibly stamped with deaths and disappearances. Under the first, the Sinhalese were killed in state terror countering Southern insurgent threats in the eighties. Under the second, defenseless Tamil civilians were trapped in a No-Fire Zone during the Vanni war with the LTTE in 2009, which incidentally should have been more aptly named as the All-Fire Zone. In his thinking, the ethnicity of the human targets is the crucial reason for this seeming differentiation in popular perceptions.
But as with all sweeping generalizations, this explanation which assumes that the Sinhalese people collectively fall into a racist mindset which equals the shrill tones of their post-war political leaders, is somewhat flawed. Perhaps this is an assessment which may be truer of the general articulations of the Sinhalese middle class in the public (and private) space/s rather than as an assessment of the Sinhalese people as a whole.
First, the assumed popular demonizing of President Premadasa does not conform strictly to the truth. The outpouring of public grief at his funeral and the constant recalling of him as a President who cared for the people, are notable factors. These are somewhat uncomfortable realities when set against condemnation of gross abuses of human rights in his time.
A mistaken assumption of wholesale approval
Last year in Komari, a locality bordering Pottuvil, a Sinhalese fisherman suddenly punctuated his conversation with an unexpected lamentation that after President Premadasa had taken steps to improve the lot of the people in that area, no other President had ever bothered since. These are stray strands of conversation which still disconcertingly emerge from rural localities.
Second, the assumption that President Rajapaksa has been given a clean slate by the Southern polity despite violations of human rights under his watch is likewise riddled with fallacy. Inferring wholesale approval solely through election victories is not a good measure. In fact, this only buys into the frequent complaint of the President himself when he protests that he is winning elections all the time, hence bothersome foreign interference is not needed.
These election triumphs need to be weighed against a host of countervailing factors, most importantly the utter absence of a credible oppositional candidate, the near total control of the media along with shrewdly placed government patronage systems using inducement coupled with threat.
Broader state reform should be a collective concern
I use these arguments to enter into a debate which has become quite fashionable in some circles regarding what is referred to as the hegemonic Sinhala Buddhist project. Such captivating terminology may be true of Sri Lanka’s political leaders along with their distastefully power hungry ideologues. Evidently, the current political dispensation represents the zenith of the same. For that matter, a justifiable critique may be made of Tamil political leaders and their ideologues which are problematic in their own way.
Regardless, in the present political climate, there are grave pitfalls in subsuming the entirety of the Sinhalese polity into such bogey-man collectivity. Moreover, this assumption is dangerously coupled by some to assert that in consequence thereof, the Tamil citizenry should not prioritise broad questions of state reform in Sri Lanka. Instead, as the argument goes, their focus should be exclusively on the fostering and building up of the Tamil nation.
This is nonsensical and counterproductive polemic. Reform of the Sri Lankan nation state should be an initiative across all ethnicities, now more than ever before. To be clear, this is not just to call for the demolition of the Executive Presidency, the rejuvenation of the 17th Amendment or even regime change. That is to be unconscionably childlike. Rather, our conceptions of equal rights, constitutional government and political consciousness need to be re-imagined and directed towards collective political accountability as well as the responsibility of those who for long, were called the intellectual elite.
Learning from trenchant histories
A recent book which I co-authored established a conclusive link between judicial failures and historic political failures in regard to minority rights across language, land rights and religious rights, not only due process guarantees. While the severity of this differentiation should not be underestimated, it would be the height of absurdity to maintain that the monstrously evolved Sri Lankan national security state has affected only the minorities. Supreme judicial conservatism in this respect has traditionally had a wider base.
This is indicated very well in an earlier study looking at comprehensive data which established an unacceptable percentage of dismissals (near to 80%) by Sinhalese judges of habeas corpus petitions relating to ‘disappeared’ Sinhalese victims in the eighties. In both these contexts, exceptional precedents had little impact on overall negative judicial outcomes. Important lessons can be learnt from these trenchant histories. This is not to downplay what the minorities have suffered in Sri Lanka or indeed what they are suffering now. On the contrary, this is to import an element of much needed commonsense rather than yield to intoxicating political polemic which makes for interesting reading but little else.
Put simply, while minorities have excellent reason for their extreme bitterness against the State, this is not an exclusive right. Political failure aside, our intellectual failures therein have been profound, again transcending ethnic boundaries. To hold otherwise is to be trapped into exactly the kind of narrow exclusivist corner that the promoters of this so-called Sinhala hegemonic project would like. Finally, as a question of pure political strategy, this is also a self-defeatist view which speaks to more of a disastrous attempt to run before a badly damaged people can tentatively and with great difficulty, learn to walk again.

Reconciliation, Identity & Security: Pact For Postwar Political Reconciliation


By Dayan Jayatilleka -June 1, 2014
Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka
Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka
Colombo TelegraphLike President JR Jayewardene before him, President Rajapaksa will win the (re) election and lose the crisis. In these days when ‘homespun’ is all the rage, one may well resort to the Sinhalese saying “do not fall in broad daylight, into the pit one plunged into at night”.  The Rajapaksa regime is about to take a long jump in broad daylight into the same pit that his most illustrious predecessor President Jayewardene plunged into at night as it were, in the 1980s, culminating in the traumatic events of 1987.
How does one define political reconciliation in Sri Lanka? I regard it as the problem of the reconciliation of collective political identities in a manner that permits a larger, shared political identity to be negotiated or evolve.
That definition was the easy part. The effort at political reconciliation must take place on the terrain of reality, not of abstract concepts or ideologies. How does one define reality? Reality in this case denotes the realities of power relations, which in turn derive from and reflect, in some considerable measure, external and domestic geopolitical realities. This must be the framework, parametric more than prescriptive, of the discussion.
The unreality and unreason of the Sri Lankan discourse, in both its (state/govt) policy and (civil society) critical commentary manifestations, never ceases to amaze me. Reading the opinions on political reconciliation and the obstacles to such, in the commentary on the fifth anniversary of the end of war, I am struck by the representatives or ideologues of the Sri Lankan state who take up postures which ignore that we are vulnerably located in a uni-polar South Asian region and on the doorstep of the pre-eminent (or hegemonic) regional power. I am similarly struck by the number of holders of postgraduate degrees as well as aspirants to them, who are able to pontificate confidently on what needs to be done in and by Sri Lanka, without mentioning, still less taking into very serious account, the factor of a 300,000 (Plus) strong battle-hardened military. These errors have tragic antecedents.