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

Wednesday, June 25, 2014

Boko Haram suspected of kidnapping 60 more women. Does anyone care?

Fans hold a sign in support of more than 200 Nigerian schoolgirls kidnapped by Boko Haram at the Group F football match between Iran and Nigeria on June 16, 2014. (AFP PHOTO/JEWEL SAMADJEWEL SAMAD/AFP/Getty Images)
 June 25
From the outset, it was probably inevitable. What was once an international army of protesters that spanned both continents and the Twitterverse has dwindled.
Nearly three months have passed since Boko Haram kidnapped more than 200 schoolgirls from a dormitory. Boko Haram is suspected of kidnappingapproximately 60 more women and girls. And #Bringbackourgirls has, by nearly every measure, failed.
It’s not surprising. Internet activism has a finite life span. In a matter of days, it blinks into existence, then blinks into oblivion.
Still, the disinterest  now — even following additional Boko Haram kidnappings — has left some observers with a bad taste in their mouths. Teju Cole, a prominent Nigerian-American novelist who wrote a powerful essay called “The White-Savior Industrial Complex” in response to the 2012 Joseph Kony phenomenon, said the West’s fleeting interest in Nigeria conveys a “simple wrong.”

Tuesday, June 24, 2014






The theory that Sri Lanka is a recruiting ground for Islamic militants targeting India has gained traction again with the recent arrests of two Sri Lankans in India and Malaysia in connection with an alleged plot to attack U.S. and Israeli consulates in southern India. But this situation has another fallout: it upsets the Sri Lankan government’s playbook that the sole perpetrator of international crime on Sri Lankan soil today is the remnant of the Tamil rebel group, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

On Universal Human Rights: Navi Pillay, Prince Zeid, and Keeping a Strong Voice at the United Nations

2014-06-24-navizeid.jpg
Jack Healey

JackHealey- 

My first meeting with Navanetham ("Navi") Pillay was when she was studying law while at Harvard University along with Jessica Neuwirth. Neuwirth eventually became the legal advisor at Amnesty International USA and one of the producers of the Human Rights Now music tour. 

அடுத்த ஜனாதிபதி நான்தான்! 

குடும்பச் சண்டையில் கோத்தபாய ?


WE ARE TAMILS
ஜனாதிபதி பதவியின் அதிகார சுகத்தை அனுபவிக்கும் நோக்கில் அண்ணன் மஹிந்த ராஜபக்ஷவுக்கு குழிபறிக்கும் நடவடிக்கைகளை கோத்தபாய மேற்கொள்வதாக தெரிய வந்துள்ளது.

இது தொடர்பாக மேலும் தெரிய வருவதாவது,விடுதலைப் புலிகளுடான யுத்த வெற்றியின் பின்னர் பிரதமர் பதவி மீது கண் வைத்து கோத்தபாய காய் நகர்த்தினார். அதன் பின் மஹிந்த ராஜபக்ஷவின் பதவிக் காலத்தின் பின் தான் ஜனாதிபதி பதவியை அடையும் எண்ணம் அவருக்குள் இருந்தது. எனினும் அவருக்கு குறைந்த பட்சம் நாடாளுமன்ற உறுப்பினர் பதவி கூட கிட்டவில்லை.

இந்நிலையில் எதிர்வரும் தேர்தலின் பின் அவரை பிரதமர் பதவிக்கு நியமிக்க கொள்கையளவில் இணக்கம் தெரிவித்துள்ள ஜனாதிபதி, எவ்வாறாக இருந்த போதிலும் தனக்குப் பின் நாமல் ராஜபக்ஷவை ஜனாதிபதியாக கொண்டு வரும் வகையிலேயே காய் நகர்த்தி வருகின்றார். இது கோத்தபாயவிற்கு கடும் அதிருப்தியையும் ஏமாற்றத்தையும் ஏற்படுத்தியுள்ளது.

அது மாத்திரமன்றி சிங்கள பௌத்தர்களின் பெரும்பாண்மை பலத்தைப் பெற்றுக் கொள்ளும் வகையில் அரசாங்கத்தினால் உருவாக்கப்பட்ட பொது பல சேனா கும்பலை ஜனாதிபதி தனது நேரடிக் கட்டுப்பாட்டில் வைத்துக் கொள்வதற்கும் நடவடிக்கைகளை மேற்கொண்டுள்ளார். இவற்றை வைத்துப் பார்க்கும் போது கோத்தபாயவிற்கு அரசியல் எதிர்காலம் இல்லை என்பது தெளிவாகத் தெரியவந்துள்ளது.

இவ்வாறான நிலையில் கோத்தபாய ராஜபக்ஷ தனது பொறுமையைக் கைவிட்டுள்ளதுடன், தனது சகோதரன் மஹிந்த ராஜபக்ஷவுக்கு எதிராக காய் நகர்த்தல்களை மேற்கொண்டுள்ளார். அடுத்து வரும் ஜனாதிபதித் தேர்தலில் ஜனாதிபதி மஹிந்த ராஜபக்ஷவை ஒதுக்கிவிட்டு தான் போட்டியிடும் வகையில் அவரது செயற்பாடுகள் அமைந்துள்ளன.

மூன்றாவது தடவையாக ஜனாதிபதித் தேர்தலில் போட்டியிடுவது தொடர்பில் ஜனாதிபதி மஹிந்தவுக்கு சட்டச் சிக்கல்களை ஏற்படுத்துவது, பெரும்பாண்மை சிங்கள மத்தியில் பௌத்தத்தின் உண்மையான காவலனாக தன்னை இனங்காட்டிக்கொள்வது, சிங்கள பௌத்த சிந்தனை கொண்ட ஒருவரே அடுத்த ஜனாதிபதியாக வரவேண்டும் என்ற கருத்தியலுக்கு வலுச் சேர்ப்பது போன்ற விடயங்கள் ஊடாக அவர் தனது இலக்கை நோக்கிப் பயணித்துக் கொண்டிருக்கின்றார்.

இதற்காக அவர் சம்பிக்க ரணவக்க போன்ற சிங்கள இனவாதத்தலைவர்கள் மற்றும் மகாநாயக்கர்களின் ஆசீர்வாதத்தையும் பெற்றுக் கொண்டுள்ளதுடன், சுதந்திரக் கட்சிக்குள்ளும் படிப்படியாக தனது ஆதரவுத் தளமொன்றைக் கட்டி எழுப்பி வருவதாகவும் நம்பத்தகுந்த வட்டாரங்களிலிருந்து தகவல்கள் கசிந்துள்ளன.

A Presidency Under Threat – The Whims Of Wimal Weerawansa


Colombo TelegraphBy Rajiva Wijesinha -June 24, 2014 
Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP
Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP
For each man kills the thing he loves
By each let this be heard
The coward does it with a kiss
The brave man with a sword
The last few weeks have seen an appalling erosion in the image of the government. In a piece that traced our unfortunate decline from the great military and diplomatic successes of 2009, I had written of cracks within the government, but after that we had two Cabinet Ministers refusing to support the Government in a Vote of Confidence. This is unprecedented, and I believe has never happened in this country before. But there has been total silence from senior members of the government, and I suspect I am the only person who has written to the President pointing out the gross breaches of etiquette that have taken place.
What is ironic is that it is precisely the approach of those two Ministers that has so gravely dented the image of this government. I am not sure if the President has realized this as yet, and I do not suppose that he is in position to analyse the situation carefully. But he must realize now that much of what he has been pushed into doing over the last few years has contributed to the disaster that faces both the country and the government.
                                                                                 Read More

-JUNE 25, 2014

AS journalists around the world reel over lengthy prison sentences handed down to three Al Jazeera reporters in Egypt, a media freedom controversy has erupted in Sri Lanka after the editor of the Daily News called for the arrest of a local Al Jazeera journalist for reporting on inter-religious riots.
In a series of Twitter rants, the state-owned newspaper’s editor, Rajpal Abeynayake, accused Al Jazeera’s Colombo stringer, Dinouk Colombage, of inciting ­religious tensions by reporting on Buddhist-Muslim clashes last week in southwest Aluthgama in which four people died and about 80 more were injured.
He accused Colombage, an experienced Sri Lankan reporter who writes a Huffington Post column, of exaggerating the toll and being a “social media murderer”.
“Arrest Twitter murderers Groundviews, Colombage etc,” Abeynayake demanded in one tweet on Monday, referring also to a Sri Lankan citizen journalism website often critical of the Rajapaksa government. Several of the tweets copy in President Mahinda Rajapakse’s official twitter ­account and that of his son. In another tweet, in which the editor refers to the writer as a “Twitter murderer sicko scumbag”, he copies in Sri Lanka’s consul-general to Australia, Bandula Jayasekara.
On Monday three Egypt-based Al Jazeera journalists, including Australian Peter Greste, were jailed for at least seven years on charges ranging from aiding the Muslim Brotherhood and reporting false news — all denied by the reporters and Al Jazeera. Two Al Jazeera journalists were found guilty in absentia and sentenced to 10 years’ jail.
The latest attack on an Al Jazeera field reporter is being taken seriously by the Qatar-based news service, which told The Australian yesterday it would be seeking ­assurances of Colombage’s safety “at the highest level”.
The incident has raised renewed concerns generally over press freedom in Sri Lanka, one of Australia’s closest regional allies. The Committee to Protect Journalists ranked Sri Lanka fourth — behind Iraq, Somalia and The Philippines — in a list of countries where the murder of journalists is most likely to go unpunished.
Last week’s riots, following a street march by Buddhists from the radical Bodu Bala Sena, were subject in large part to a media blackout in Sri Lanka but were reported by international news agencies and on social media.
“Basically the government enforced a bit of a media blackout on what was happening so it was really myself and the BBC reporting what was happening,” Colombage toldThe Australian yesterday, adding his information on casualties was coming from police officials and hospital officials.
“It was the first time social media really played a big role in breaking news in Sri Lanka.”
While the Daily News has played down the unrest, accusing the US embassy and other Western “neocon” forces of helping to foment violence, the riots prompted a warning to Australian citizens from the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade to exercise caution in Sri Lanka.
Abeynayake said he did not know Colombage worked for Al Jazeera, and called for his arrest before the sentencing in Egypt.
However, he insisted he stood by his comments, telling The Australian: “In this country if you spread rumours, particularly when a dangerous situation is ­developing, you can be jailed.
“When you double the figures of people killed you incite further violence. This guy is an accessory to murder.”

Media Secretary Charitha Herath Deletes His Tweets


Colombo Telegraph
une 24, 2014
Publicly illustrating the present mindset of many civil servants in Sri Lanka, Media Ministry Secretary Charitha Herath yesterday uploaded a controversial tweet that condoned the sentencing of three Al-Jazeera journalists in Egypt – a verdict that has been heavily criticized worldwide, even by the UN Human Rights Chief Navi Pillay.
Twitter _ charith9_ #AlJazeera #journalists in ..Last afternoon Herath uploaded a tweet from his handle @charith9 that read:
#AlJazeera #journalists in Cairo sentenced to 7 years in jail. Reason was to help M/brotherhood. How many of that kind helped LTTE in #lka
However, few minutes later he deleted but it had already been recorded by Colombo Telegraph.
This tweet also seems rather ominous, seeing as the Rajapksa state-owned daily English newspaper’s Editor Rajpal Abeynayake in his editorials on Saturday and yesterday called for thearrests of journalists who updated the ground situation in Aluthgama and Beruwala in the wake of anti-Muslim clashes last week.
The three journalists Peter Greste, Mohammed Fahmy and Baher Mohamed were sentenced to seven years imprisonment today under charges of propagating false news and supporting the Muslim Brotherhood. They were detained on 29 December 2013.

Modi’s Sweet and Spicy Sri Lanka Strategy

India is likely to pursue a pragmatic approach toward Sri Lanka, one less shackled by Tamil Nadu politics.

The Diplomat
Modi’s Sweet and Spicy Sri Lanka StrategyBy June 24, 2014
Post-independence India’s foreign policy has been defined more by continuity than by change. India’s new prime minister, Narendra Modi, is unlikely to break from this tradition. He respects the bureaucracy and his foreign policy experience is minimal. But every government has its own flavor, and subtle changes in policy emphasis are inevitable. In the case of its relations with Sri Lanka, India’s engagement under Modi is set to become both sweeter and spicier. Pragmatically upgrading economic and connectivity links, combined with a possible de-emphasis of engaging through the UN Human Rights Council process, could sweeten ties. On the other hand, holding Colombo to past bilateral commitments, such as implementing the Thirteenth Amendment to Sri Lanka’s Constitution, could add a piquant note to the relationship.

Ominous signs: country headed for military administration -424 education officers too given military training
(Lanka-e-News- 24.June.2014, 7.00PM) 424 candidates who passed the education administration examination and were enrolled in the administrative service are being given military training at the Rantembe camp under the guise of ‘leadership training,’ Joseph Stalin , the secretary of the Lanka Teachers union revealed.

Stalin expressing his views to Lanka e news said : the 424 candidates who passed the administrative service exam were enrolled in the administrative service on the 16 th, and all of them are being given a military training preliminarily at the Rantembe camp. They have to be present there for 20 days on that account.

We are now confronted with a big question mark , whether these candidates were enrolled in the education administrative service or the military? 

Principals of schools are being given military training. University students are being given military training .Now even the education administrative service officers are being given military training. In the future all administrative officers may be given military training. These are most portentous signs that the country is headed for a military administration , Josef Stalin warned with concern.

“Any organisation inciting religious hatred should be banned”: Faiszer


Tuesday 24th June 2014
If precautions are not taken to prevent religious tension and to bring perpetrators to book, the incidents of such nature will dampen the economy and social fabric of this country, says Deputy Minister of Investment Promotion Faiszer Musthapha.
The Minister stresses that if the procession on 15 June had been prevented, the present developments in the country would have not occurred. “I wrote a letter to the IGP asking to take steps to prevent that march. I was assured that there would be peace and tranquillity. I believe that there was an error in that judgment,” points out the Minister, further adding, “What happened was inhumane and barbaric. As a Government Minister, I feel ashamed that this incident has occurred.”

Violence Against Muslims And The Character Of The BBS


| by Laksiri Fernando
( June 24, 2014, Sydney, Sri Lanka Guardian) After the organized violent attacks on the Muslim community in Aluthgama, Beruwala and Dharga town in mid-June, the political character of the Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) has come to the sharp focus. Some have condemned it as ‘terrorist’ and some others as ‘fascist’. All are fine as political rhetoric or words of strong condemnation of the heinous crimes that they have committed against the Muslim community. The acts in fact are both ‘terrorist’ and ‘fascist’ in soft meanings of the terms.

From Black July ’83 to Dark June ’14: A violent peace in Sri Lanka

AFP PHOTO/ Ishara S. KODIKARA via The Straits Times
Mobs on the streets, houses being burnt, people being attacked due to their race or religion, some being killed, the law enforcement and security services unable or unwilling to arrest the situation, that describes the streets of Colombo and the rest of the country in July 1983 and thirty years later, after a bloody civil conflict was brought to an end, we were at it again as a nation. Back then it was the Tamils, with a UNP President and administration, this time around it was the Muslims and the President and administration was SLFP. We seem to have a bi partisan problem with justice and social harmony. Paradoxically a nation which prides itself on an ancient history based on a tradition and religion of kindness and tolerance, has become an intolerant and violent society.  During the war with the LTTE, we blamed every atrocity on the exigencies of fighting a brutal foe. However neither the victims of July 1983 nor those of June 2014 were armed opponents of the state or civilians caught in the “fog of war”. They were ordinary fellow citizens and clearly we failed them and ourselves. The death and destruction was not on the battle field, it was on the streets of our cities.  Sri Lanka’s peace is a violent peace and we wonder why the world through the UNHRC keeps telling us in resolution after resolution, that our post war reconciliation is deficient and our democratic and human rights sadly wanting. The government acts indignant, but the reality of the ground situation is that the concerns are more than justified, not just internationally but domestically too.
The Sunday Times editorial of 22nd June 2014, put it this way. “It is the supreme irony of our time that, in claiming to defend Buddhism, a handful of monks with their hate speech and instigation to violence have managed to do quite the opposite. The mob attacks this week on Muslim houses and businesses in Aluthgama, Beruwela and Dharga Town drew international censure. Attracting equal if not more alarm was video footage of a radical Buddhist  monk spewing revulsion and animosity at the Muslim community during a public rally just hours before violence broke out. It is not the first time he has done this”.
Initial reports would indicate that there was certainly a clear enabling environment created for the violence to occur. An altercation which had occurred between a venerable monk or rather the driver of his trishaw and some youth was used several days later to spew venom and create the necessary background for an attack on the Muslim community. The altercation itself, was quite correctly handled by the local law enforcement,  suspects were in custody and the matter was before courts. However, the incident was used as a pretext for launching a hate campaign and a violent attack. That the violence was expected and anticipated by community and political leaders is made evident by the concerted efforts of Transport Minister Kumara Welgama, the UPFA leader for the Kalutara District, who did his best to get the meeting banned.
Again the Sunday Times, puts it this way, “In this country, brute force is used to crush labour and student protests, while court orders are secured at the drop of a hat to deprive the populace of their right to assembly. This time despite the very real prospect of violence, the precaution taken was pitifully inadequate and action came too late”.
The DIG of the area, refusing Minister Welgama’s request to ban the meeting, raises the very real question as to where the DIG got the guts to do so. Was there someone more powerful than a minster instructing the DIG to allow the meeting to proceed. Seemingly in response to that question, the UNP, through its Media Spokesman and director of political affairs, former Foreign Minister Hon. Mangala Samaraweera, has in a public and official statement claimed, that the BBS is a government backed organization and that it was fueling communal tensions.
The BBS is termed a “terrorist organization” by international defense analysts, Minister Vasudeva Nanayakkara wants them banned, Minister Rishard Bathuideen wants them brought before the law, Minister Rauff Hakeem is wringing his hands in public and supposedly hanging his head in shame at being in the government, Minister Kumara Welgama does not want them anywhere near his electoral district, almost all other Buddhist clergy and lay leaders disown their venom and their violence. Despite all this, the BBS rides on and rides high. Protected by an unseen hand, they spew hate against minorities, break up news conferences they disagree with, witness their opponents even in the Maha Sanga, such as Ven.Watarake Vijitha slashed with a blade, get prime land to build high rise headquarters in the heart of Colombo and clearly never fall foul of the law.
Paradoxically though, all this works to the political advantage of the Rajapakse Administration. Sadly in the world of real politic and especially in the run up to an election cycle, with crucial presidential and parliamentary polls expected early next year, after the Uva provincial poll, there is little reason to hope for a change. The Sinhala nationalist elements and their leaders, such as Ministers Champika Ranawaka and Wimal Weerawansa, who were dissenting  and distancing  themselves from the Administration on the issue of gambling and the casinos, flocked back to defend the Administration from criticisms by the Muslim ministers and left leaders. Nothing like a bit of minority bashing to get the hawks to flock together. In his defense, President Rajapakse did visit the affected areas, spoke with Muslim leaders and promised some form of compensatory redress, all of which was more than what President Jayawardena did after July 1983. But we should have learnt very much more since then. Those who fail to learn from the lessons of history are forced to relive them.

TURKEY CONDEMNS ATTACKS AGAINST MUSLIMS IN SRI LANKA

Turkey condemns attacks against Muslims in Sri Lanka

24.06.2014 
ISTANBUL – Turkey has condemned recent attacks against Sri Lanka's Muslim minority, which have led to concerns among minority communities about spreading violence. 

"We believe that necessary measures will be taken to make the people of Sri Lanka live in peace again after 2009, when the government successfully ends terrorist activities," said a statement issued by the foreign ministry on Tuesday.

Muslim places of worship and shops in different parts of Sri Lanka were attacked early Saturday morning, following anti-Muslim violence on June 15 that killed three Muslims and one Tamil in the country's southwest.

Buddhist mobs attacked a mosque in the village of Navanthurai in Jaffna district and a prayer room at the University of Jaffna, according to residents and students in the area.

A branch of No Limit fashion chain owned by Muslims was burnt down on Saturday in Panadura, 25 kilometers south of Colombo.

"6 petrol bombs were hurled at the store in a pre-dawn attack in which nobody was hurt but the building and the goods were damaged," sources told 
Anadolu Agency on condition of anonymity.

The current round of violence was sparked after a rally by Sinhalese Buddhist nationalist group Bodu Bala Sena in the town of Aluthgama on June 15. 
The group then marched through predominantly Muslim areas. 

Police in Sri Lanka have since banned all gatherings that promote hatreds towards other faiths, police spokesperson SSP Ajith Rohana said. 
BBS stoking racial terror in Kandy too: Police efforts to obtain injunction order halted by Gotabaya
(Lanka-e-News-23.June.2014, 11.30PM) The Bodhu Bala Sena (BBS) terrorist organization has organized yet another racial and religious fanaticism stoking meeting at Natha Devala premises ,Kandy in the name of ‘adishthana pooja’ tomorrow . Although the police have objected to it , the Sri Lanka (SL) criminal defense secretary Gotabaya had extended support to it, according to reports reaching Lanka e news. 

The police have received information that this rally is aimed at inciting and arousing the public to racial and religious violence targeting Muslims like the previous BBS Alutgama rally. Consequently , the Muslims of the area are gripped by a fear psychosis. They claim that the BBS had threatened to attack the Muslim Meera mosque , Kandy., while the BBS had written a letter to the police requesting security for the people who are arriving for the pooja from various regions of the country. Going by the putrid antecedence of the BBS terrorists who are wallowing in wanton racial violence and destruction against Muslims , this reference to ‘people from other regions’ are none other than the racial goons and gangs of the BBS , and not any other law abiding citizens , sources say. 

On the advice of the IGP , Kandy division DIG R.S.D. Peramuna and SSP in charge of the division C.R.K.Ehelepola , have instructed a team of police officers to obtain a court injunction against the rally , but senior DIG Anura Senanayake following Gotabaya’s instructions had called back the police officers who were in court to obtain the injunction order . Though there are reports that the police team that was called back was sent to court again , this story is untrue.

Finally , on Gotabaya’s directive , the injunction order that was to be sought from court had been halted.


Editorial-


The police now tell us that Ven. Watareka Vijitha Thera’s claim that he was abducted and assaulted by a group of persons in robes recently is false and his injuries are self-inflicted. Legal action will be instituted against him when he leaves hospital, Police Spokesman SSP Ajith Rohana has told the media.

Life and debt


Tuesday 24th June 2014
Recently in Colombo there was an event at which a research study entitled ‘Life and Debt’ was presented. The study was by the Centre for Poverty Analysis (CEPA), initiated and supported by the Swiss Agency for Development Cooperation (SDC).

Premadasa: ‘Swadeshaya’ & Social Democracy

Late President R. Premadasa
Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka
Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka
Late President R. Premadasa

By Dayan Jayatilleka -June 24, 2014
The 90th Birth Anniversary of Ranasinghe Premadasa
At the age of 18, Ranasinghe Premadasa had launched a monthly magazine called ‘SWADESHAYA’. He was a patriot. But that was not all he was, and his patriotism was different from that which is dominant today.
Colombo TelegraphAs the UNP struggles to recover as an opposition party and faces two national elections in less than a year, it is vital to understand Premadasa’s role in the UNP comeback of 1970-73 and its sweeping victory in 1977. The dominant interpretation is one of concealment by condescension. The 1977 effort is seen overwhelmingly as one of J. R. Jayewardene, assisted by ‘the best and the brightest’ – an elite of clever, well educated, tough- minded men of comfortable circumstance who endowed the masses with enlightened leadership, with Premadasa the upwardly mobile commoner, constituting a handy bit of camouflage and providing populist demagoguery. In this version, after the victory J. R. was ‘Machiavellian’ or ‘magnanimous’ in making Premadasa the Prime Minister. Upon becoming President, Premadasa is perceived to have marginalized such elements who contributed so much to the UNP–chafing as he obviously was, with envy at his social and intellectual betters! The pre-requisite for electoral success and the country’s salvation and progress today is therefore said to be to bring back ‘the educated’ and ‘the professionals’, giving them the pride of place they had in the winning UNP of ’77. This version is false in three fundamental respects. It obscures the dynamics and balance of forces within the UNP of ‘70-77, falsifies the nature of Premadasa’s contribution, and distorts the character of the ’77 victory itself.
                                                                      Read More

Elusive Economic Peace Dividend in Sri Lanka: ALL that glitters is not gold

Prof. N.Balakrishnan Memorial Oration delivered in Colombo on 21st June 2014
GroundviewsIntroduction
It is five years since the decisive end of the civil war in May 2009. The government’s approach to resolving the long festering ethnic conflict in the country has been reconciliation and peace through economic development. Although I do have reservations about the validity of the government’s mantra of reconciliation and peace through economic development, I do want to accept that approach as fait accompli and would like to investigate whether such an approach has resulted in real economic peace dividends in the two provinces most affected by the civil war, viz. Eastern and Northern provinces, and the Southern province of Sri Lanka.