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, July 9, 2014

Written evidence from GTF to the Foreign Affairs Select Committee inquiry


gtf-1GTF welcomes the opportunity to present written evidence to the Foreign Affairs Select Committee inquiry into the Foreign and Commonwealth Office’s (FCO) human rights work in 2013, taking as a starting point the Department’s 2013 Report on Human Rights and Democracy, published on Thursday 10th April 2014.

GTF’s submission focusses upon Sri Lanka – one of the FCO’s ‘countries of concern’ – and, in particular, the plight faced by the Tamil people on the island. The submission provides information on and recommendations to Her Majesty’s Government regarding

Editorial-July 8, 2014,


Kalutara District UNP MP Palitha Thevarapperuma vowed to resign from his parliamentary seat the other day, claiming that his call for the IGP’s resignation over police inaction during Aluthgama violence last month had fallen on deaf ears. The MP was injured while trying to save a group of victims in full view of a large number of police personnel who, he has said, did nothing to prevent the mob attack.

Politicians usually don’t resign. They cling on to their positions like limpets until they drop dead. MP Thevarapperuma is reported to have said he has changed his mind because the party leadership does not want him to resign. Nobody took his vow seriously.

Thevarapperuma is certainly not in his party leader’s good books. In fact, he has been accused of having insulted and even lunged at the latter at a parliamentary group meeting over a nomination dispute. The UNP contemplated disciplinary action against him. The party leadership would have been more than willing to accept his resignation over any other issue. But, it would have been too embarrassing for the UNP to let him resign owing to a row with the IGP.

The real issue, however, is not Thevarapperuma’s vow to resign or his volte-face. Instead, it is the serious allegation he has leveled against the police. Did the police personnel including the STF look the other way while he and the victims of ethnic violence were being assaulted? The onus is on the IGP and the government to find an answer to this question by conducting an impartial probe without going into the denial mode. There are witnesses including an Opposition lawmaker and it may not be difficult to identify the personnel deployed at the location where the alleged incident took place. The government ought to get cracking for two reasons. Firstly, it is duty bound to ensure that justice is done by taking stern action against dereliction of duty, if any, on the part of the police deployed to stop ethnic violence. Secondly, action against errant officers will have a deterrent effect on the police.

MP Thevarapperuma’s resignation letter is also an indictment of the Opposition, which failed to crank up pressure on the government to investigate his allegation. One expected the UNP to go on flogging the issue until the government gave in. But, nothing of the sort happened.

Police chiefs never resign unless they have ambassadorial ambitions as we have argued in these columns previously. (The one who willingly hung up his boots over a crackdown on a workers’ protest at Katunayake a few years ago must be watching FIFA World Cup matches in the host country.) The police are an institution where praise and credit for achievements always go to the top brass and the blame for lapses and wrongdoing is invariably pinned on lower rankers. MP Thevarapperuma’s consternation is understandable and his concerns need to be appreciated, but he was being extremely naïve when he said: "Either IGP or I will have to resign." If MPs were to resign because the police chief does not heed their calls for his resignation we would be left with no Opposition before long!

Suspects are still being arrested over the Aluthgama mayhem, the police tell us. The violent elements responsible for those savage attacks must be brought to justice. But, those who incited ethnic violence and errant police personnel who allegedly gave rioters free rein must also be dealt with in a similar manner. This, we reckon, is the point MP Thevarapperuma has sought to drive home with the help of his resignation letter and other theatricals. He deserves to be heard.

Courts Receives Independent Report Over Gnanasara’s Derogatory Remarks On Quran


Colombo TelegraphJuly 9, 2014 
Muslim Affairs Director General had notified the Courts yesterday that remarks made by Bodu Bala Sena(BBS) General Secretary, Galagoda Atte Gnanasara to the media outside the Slave Island Police in April contains derogatory remarks on the Quran – the Islamic holy text.
Gnanasara
Gnanasara
The DG of Muslim Affairs making a submission to the Colombo Fort Magistrate had made this statement yesterday. The submission of the report had been made in response to an order issued by Colombo Fort Magistrate Thilina Gamage to produce an independent and rational report into the content of the concerned video footage that contained Gnanasara’s comments to determine whether his statements contained derogatory comments.
The report had been referred to the Attorney General’s Department.
The footage in question contains a statement made to the media by Gnanasara upon his visit to the Slave Island Police in April. He visited the Slave Island Police over a complaint lodged concerning a disruption he caused at a media conference organized by the Jathika Bala Sena(JBS) in Nippon Hotel where he had also threatened the organization’s leader Watareka Vijitha thera.
The vedo published by the BBS

Fishermen issue: Jayalalithaa seeks quick steps by PM

Chief Minister Jayalalithaa

Only the retrieval of Katchatheevu would ensure the restoration of safety and security of Tamil fishermen’s livelihood in the traditional waters of Palk Bay, the Chief Minister said

Return to frontpageChief Minister Jayalalithaa
July 8, 2014
Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa has asked the Centre to initiate immediate steps to find a permanent and pragmatic solution to the fishermen issue in Palk Bay.

In a letter to Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Sunday, Ms. Jayalalithaa said she was confidently looking forward to early and decisive action by the Centre under his leadership to resolve this long-standing issue.
The right of livelihood of Tamil Nadu fishermen, who historically and traditionally fish in Palk Bay, was continuously infringed upon by the Sri Lankan Navy. And, the unlawful apprehension of the fishermen continued unabated.
On July 5, 20 fishermen from Rameswaram and Mandapam in four mechanised boats were again apprehended by the Lankan Navy and taken to Thalaimannar, Sri Lanka, she pointed out.
The historical rights were simply signed away as part of the ill-advised Indo-Sri Lankan agreements of 1974 and 1976, which also unilaterally ceded Katchatheevu to Sri Lanka without having any foresight or concern for the plight of Tamil fishermen, she said.
As already pointed out by her, the two agreements were a subject matter of a writ petition pending in the Supreme Court.
“In this context, the Tamil Nadu government continues to reiterate that the issue of the International Maritime Boundary Line [IMBL] and Katchatheevu can’t be treated as a settled issue.”
Only the retrieval of Katchatheevu would ensure the restoration of safety and security of Tamil fishermen’s livelihood in the traditional waters of Palk Bay, the Chief Minister said, urging the Centre to impress upon the Sri Lankan government to rein in its Navy and to refrain from apprehending innocent fishermen who were in peaceful pursuit of their livelihood in their traditional fishing waters.
Thanking the Prime Minister for his effective intervention that led to the speedy release of 184 fishermen from Sri Lankan custody since the new government took office at the Centre, the Chief Minister sought Mr. Modi’s immediate intervention to secure the release of 37 fishermen and 45 fishing boats currently in the Sri Lankan custody.

Australia: Handover of Sri Lankan asylum seekers a dangerous precedent

Sri Lankan asylum seekers on the first boat sent back by Australia queue to enter the magistrate's court in the southern port district of Galle on July 8, 2014.




The proposed handover of 153 asylum seekers to Sri Lanka's Navy would put Australia in blatant breach of international law and set a dangerous precedent, said Amnesty International. 
A hearing at the High Court in Melbourne on Tuesday has put the transfer in doubt, after an application was brought on behalf of the asylum seekers that were recently intercepted by the Australian Navy on their way from India.  On Sunday, Australia returned 41 aslyum seekers, that had tried to reach the country, to Sri Lanka's Navy.
Australia Handover of Sri Lankan Asylum Seekers a Dangerous Precedent by Maria Anderson

Australia must give 72 hours' notice before returning 153 Sri Lankan asylum seekers

A Sri Lankan navy boat (L) patrols after Sri Lanka transfered 41 would-be asylum seekers whose boat was turned away by Australia at the southern port of Galle

Tony Abbott's government has already faced international condemnation for sending back a group of 41 asylum seekers to Sri Lanka


The IndependentThe government of Australia has promised it will not return 153 asylum seekers to Sri Lanka without providing 72 hours notice – an undertaking activists said was a minor victory in a long-running battle.

Supreme Court grants land title to B.C. First Nation in landmark case

Toronto Star ePaper

A historic decision by the Supreme Court of Canada has restored a ruling that granted a broad declaration of land title to a British Columbia First Nation.

OTTAWA— Native groups across Canada hailed as a “game-changer” the Supreme Court of Canada’s landmark decision to grant aboriginal title to a B.C. native group over a large tract of land — the first award of its kind.

Afghanistan's war takes heavy civilian toll, says United Nations report

Number of civilians killed or injured in first six months of 2014 rises by quarter, with more than 1,000 of those children
Afghan girl in Helmand, Afghanistan
Wednesday 9 July 2014 
An Afghan girl in Helmand province: women and children have been particularly badly affected by the fighting in Afghanistan. Photograph: Mauricio Lima/AFP/Getty Images
Afghanistan's war is getting deadlier for its civilians with the toll from crossfire and ground battles rising sharply, the United Nations has said in a report.
The number killed or injured in the first six months of the year rose by a quarter from 2013 levels to nearly 5,000 people, the bloodiest total since the UN began keeping records in 2009. Women and children are particularly badly affected.
It was also the first time that ground fighting has proved more dangerous for civilians than the often indiscriminate homemade bombs that have become a key Taliban weapon, a worrying sign that the conflict may only get more bloody as Nato forces head home.
The withdrawal of well-equipped and heavily armed foreign troops from most districts has made it easier for insurgent forces to infiltrate towns and villages, so battles more often take place among houses, shops or government buildings, the report says.
Both sides often use weapons like mortars and rockets that allow them to keep their distance from enemy fighters, but are very risky for civilians in the area, the bi-annual Report on the Protection of Civilians in Armed Conflict says.
"In 2014, the fight is increasingly taking place in communities, public places and near the homes of ordinary Afghans, with death and injury to women and children in a continued disturbing upward spiral," said Georgette Gagnon, the UN's director of human rights in Afghanistan.
"More efforts are needed to protect civilians from the harms of conflict and to ensure accountability for those deliberately and indiscriminately killing them."
More than 1,000 of those killed or injured were children, about a third more than the previous year, and the number of women caught up in the violence rose by a quarter to 440.
Most of the casualties were caused by the Taliban, even though the insurgent group have officially ordered their fighters to avoid harming Afghans who are not fighting.
The UN called on the group to stop attacks from or in civilian areas including homes, restaurants and government buildings, and end the use of indiscriminate roadside bombs, the second biggest cause of death and injuries.
The government and its supporters have managed to nearly halve the civilian deaths they caused compared with 2009, to 158 people, mostly by being more careful when using air strikes, the report found.
The UN attributed three-quarters of the deaths and injuries to insurgent fighters and said just one in 10 were caused by Afghan forces or their foreign backers. Around 12% of victims were hit by unidentified attackers during battles between insurgents and government troops.
"The long-term trend shows that anti-government elements are responsible for an increasingly large share of civilian casualties in the conflict," said UN envoy Jan Kubiš, using the UN term for insurgent fighters.
"While all parties to the conflict – including Afghan national security forces – must do more to uphold their obligations under international law to avoid harm to civilians, the onus is clearly on the Taliban and other anti-government elements to reverse this trend."
The UN also said there had been a rise in the small but worrying number of attacks and abuses of civilians by pro-government armed groups, with 30 people killed and injured. There is a "lack of accountability" for human rights abuses by these groups, the report says, with local authorities turning a blind eye and "failing to investigate, prosecute and punish perpetrators".

Tibetan activist gets home arrest as Kerry arrives


Tibetan activist gets home arrest as Kerry arrives** HOLD FOR STORY CHINA TIBETAN POET BY GILLIAN WONG** In this photo taken Friday, June 27, 2008, Tibetan poet Tsering Woeser speaks during an interview at the Associate Press office in Beijing, China. The United States would like to present the outspoken Tibetan author with an award for courage but the activist will be unable to travel to receive the honor because Chinese authorities have routinely denied her a passport. (AP Photo/Ng Han Guan)(Credit: Ng Han Guan)
Salon
Salon
WEDNESDAY, JUL 9, 2014 
BEIJING (AP) — A well-known Tibetan writer said Wednesday that she and her husband have been placed under house arrest in Beijing as China plays host to U.S. State Secretary John Kerry for the latest round of U.S.-China talks.
Tsering Woeser, who has been advocating Tibetans rights, said state security officers arrived at her Beijing home late Tuesday evening, shortly after she and her husband Wang Lixiong returned from a trip.
The state security officers refused to give a reason for the home detention, but Tsering Woeser said she believes it is related to a dinner invitation she received from the U.S. Embassy, possibly with Kerry himself.
The U.S. Embassy in Beijing did not immediately reply Wednesday when asked for a comment.
Tsering Woeser was awarded the 2013 International Women of Courage Award by the U.S. State Department, but Beijing banned her from traveling to Washington to receive the award.
At the award ceremony, Kerry praised Tsering Woeser for her courageous writings on Tibetan people and their causes at a time of deteriorating human rights.
“Tsering Woeser has emerged as a clarion voice of the people, even as the Chinese government has worked to curtail the flow of information from Tibet,” Kerry said at the time, according to a transcript posted on the State Department’s website.
Tsering Woeser said the U.S. Embassy had called her while she and Wang were traveling outside Beijing to extend an invitation to a Wednesday dinner, which she said she accepted over the phone.
She said the embassy never said whom she would meet but she thought it could be Kerry, who wrote her a letter following last year’s award.
“If I were to meet him, indeed, I would like to reply to his letter in person and offer my thanks,” Tsering Woeser wrote on her Facebook page. “But regrettably, I am now under house arrest.”
Siege Mentality

While Israel pounds Gaza with bombs, the real battleground of East Jerusalem is ready to boil over.

JERUSALEM — As the sun sets on Shuafat and residents prepare to break the Ramadan fast, the Palestinian neighborhood goes dark and quiet. A once-busy main road is almost empty, littered with rocks and glass; streetlights and traffic signals are broken; and local men anxiously watch a contingent of black-clad border policemen.

Gaza rockets land deep in Israel as it bombards Palestinian enclave

4 OF 4. Palestinians stand atop the rubble of a house which police said was destroyed in an Israeli air strike in Gaza City July 9, 2014.

Palestinians stand atop the rubble of a house which police said was destroyed in an Israeli air strike in Gaza City July 9, 2014. REUTERS-Mohammed Salem
BY NIDAL AL-MUGHRABI AND JEFFREY HELLER-GAZA/JERUSALEM Wed Jul 9, 2014 
Reuters(Reuters) - Israeli air strikes shook Gaza every few minutes on Wednesday, and militants kept up rocket fire at Israel's heartland in intensifying warfare that Palestinian officials said has killed at least 44 people in the Hamas-dominated enclave.

Prof Lustig: Food industry worse than drug dealers - video


Channel 4 NewsTUESDAY 08 JULY 2014
The health effects of sugar - and its presence in so much of our food and drink has been steadily rising up the political agenda. And one of the men responsible for that is Professor Robert Lustig.

பேச்சுக்களுக்கு முன்னோடியாக இராணுவ ஆக்கிரமிப்பு நீக்கப்பட வேண்டும் - தென்னாபிரிக்க குழுவிடம் TNA

பேச்சுக்களுக்கு முன்னோடியாக இராணுவ ஆக்கிரமிப்பு நீக்கப்பட வேண்டும் - தென்னாபிரிக்க குழுவிடம் TNA
08 ஜூலை 2014
பேச்சுவார்த்தை ஒன்று ஆரம்பமாவதற்கு முன்னர் வடக்கு, கிழக்கில் காணப்படும் இராணுவ ஆக்கிரமிப்பு தளர்த்தப்பட்டு, இடம்பெயர்ந்த மக்களுடைய மீள் குடியேற்றம் உறுதிப்படுத்தப்பட வேண்டும் என்பதை தென்னாபிரிக்க தூதுக்குழுவிடம் வலியுறுத்தியுள்ள தமிழ்த் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பு, இதனை தாம் ஒரு முன்நிபந்தனையாக முன்வைக்கவில்லை எனவும், மக்களுக்கு நம்பிக்கையை ஏற்படுத்தும் வகையில் இதனை அரசாங்கம் செய்ய வேண்டும் எனவும் தெரிவித்திருக்கின்றது.

கொழும்பு தாஜ் சமூத்திரா ஹொட்டலில் இன்று காலை தமிழ்த் தேசியக் கூட்டழமைப்புக்கும் தென்னாபிரிக்காவின் பிரதி ஜனாதிபதி சிறில் ரமபோசவுக்கும் இடையிலான சந்திப்பு இடம்பெற்றது. காலை 7.15 க்கு ஆரம்பமான இச்சந்திப்பு 8.45 வரையில் நீடித்தது.

தமிழ்த் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பின் சார்பில் அதன் தலைவர் இரா.சம்பந்தன், மாவைசேனாதிராஜா, சுரேஷ் பிரேமச்சந்திரன், எம்.ஏ.சுமந்திரன் ஆகியோரும், தென்னாபிரிக்க பிரதி ஜனாதிபதி சிறில் ரமபோச தலைமையிலான குழுவில், முன்னாள் வெளிவிவகார அமைச்சர் இப்ராஹிம் இப்ராஹிம், ரோயல் கிளாக் உட்பட ஆறு பேர் இடம்பெற்றிருந்தனர்.


கூட்டமைப்பின் சார்பில் பேச்சுக்களுக்குத் தலைமை தாங்கிய சம்பந்தன், போருக்குப் பிந்திய நிலைமைகள் குறித்து விளக்கிக் கூறினார். 'வடக்கில் பாரியளவில் இராணுவம் ஆக்கிரமித்துள்ளது. பொதுமக்களுடைய காணிகளில் இராணுவம் ஆக்கிரமித்துள்ளதால் இடம்பெயர்ந்த மக்கள் பெருமளவுக்கு மீளக்குடியேற முடியாத நிலை காணப்படுகின்றது.

அதனால், இராணுவப் பிரசன்னம் நீக்கப்பட்டு மக்கள் மீளக்குடியேறி வழமையான வாழ்க்கையைத் தொடர்வதற்கான சூழ்நிலை ஏற்படுத்தப்பட வேண்டும்.  முன்னிரிமை அடிப்படையில் இதனைச் செய்ய வேண்டும். இதன் மூலமாக மட்டுமே மக்களுக்கு நம்பிக்கையை ஏற்படுத்த முடியும்' என சம்பந்தன் தெரிவித்தார்.

சமாதானப் பேச்சுவார்த்தை முயற்சிகள் மற்றும் பாராளுமன்றத் தெரிவுக்குழு குறித்து தென்னாபிரிக்க குழுவினர் கேள்வி எழுப்பிய போது பதிலளித்த சம்பந்தன், அரசாங்கத்துடன் மூட்டமைப்பு முன்னர் நடத்திய பேச்சுக்கள் தொடர்பில் விளக்கினார். 'அரசாங்கத்துடன் ஒருவருடகாலமாக கூட்டமைப்பு பேச்சுக்களை நடத்திய போதும் அரசாங்கமே பேச்சுக்களை முறித்துக்கொண்டது' எனக் குறிப்பிட்ட சம்பந்தன், இலங்கை இந்திய உடன்படிக்கை உட்பட முன்னைய உடன்படிக்கைகளை முன்னைய அரசாங்கம் நடைமுறைப்படுத்தத்தவறிய வரலாற்றையும் விளக்கினார்.

பாராளுமன்றத் தெரிவுக்குழுவில் நம்பிக்கை வைக்க முடியாததத்கான காரணங்களையும் தெரிவித்த சம்பந்தன், அரசுக்கும் கூட்டமைப்புக்கும் இடையில் காணப்படக்கூடிய உடன்படிக்கையை பாராளுமன்றத் தெரிவுக்குழுவின் முன்பாக கொண்டு செல்வதற்கு அரசாங்கம் தயாராக இருக்குமாயின் அது தொடர்பில் பரிசீலிக்கலாம் எனவும் தெரிவித்தார். 

இந்த நிலையில் கூட்டமைப்புடனான பேச்சுக்களைத் தொடர்ந்து தென்னாபிரிக்க குழு யாழ்ப்பாணம் புறப்பட்டுள்ளது.