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, July 14, 2014

120 Police Stations headless 
By Ravi Ladduwahetty- July 14, 2014 
 
One in four police stations in the country function without an Officer In Charge (OIC) due to the delay in making new appointments, the UNP charged yesterday.
 
There are no OICs of 120 Police stations as of now, the Party alleged.

"This is an absurd situation where 120 of the 448 police stations are headless, making one out of every four station headless," Colombo District UNP MP, Ravi Karunanayake, charged in an interview with Ceylon Today.

"This is one of the reasons why the crime rate is skyrocketing and it is moot that even key stations such as Mirihana, Avissawella and Dehiwela are without OICs," he said.
 
Karunanayake also pointed out that the malfunctioning of the National Police Commission (NPC) has exacerbated the current crime situation. Chairman of the NPC, Senaka Walgampaya when questioned about the shortfall of OICs and the role of the NPC said the appointments in the Police Department were beyond the mandate of the NPC, consequent to the 18th Amendment to the Constitution being introduced and it was the Public Services Commission and the Ministry of Law and Order which was mandated to effect such appointments.
 
Secretary to the Ministry of Law and Order, Major General Nanda Mallawaarachchi, said he could not talk as he was on his way somewhere.

However, Police Spokesman, SSP Ajith Rohana, admitted that Mirihana, Avissawella and Dehiwela were still headless, but, he said only 12 of the 120 stations had to have new OICs, and the rest of them had their vacancies filled.

Emerging China, Japan and Modi nexus: Should SL jump onto Modi’s bandwagon?


July 14, 2014 
Sri Lanka’s choice: whether or not to jump onto Modi’s bandwagon
Dr. Ganeshan Wignaraja, Director of Research at Tokyo-based ADB Institute, made a presentation on an apt topic to a selected crowd at a seminar at the Institute of Policy Studies or IPS recently. The main title of his topic was ‘Will South Asia benefit from Pan-Asia Integration?’ Implying that the answer to his question was in the affirmative, he went on to analysing a newly-emerging aspect of the issue under a subtitle ‘The Challenges for the Modi Government’.

Israel/Gaza: UN must impose arms embargo and mandate an international investigation as civilian death toll rises

A member of the Palestinian Abu Lealla family examines the damage to his destroyed house following an Israeli airstrike north of Gaza City on, 11 July 2014.
A member of the Palestinian Abu Lealla family examines the damage to his destroyed house following an Israeli airstrike north of Gaza City on, 11 July 2014.
Amnesty International is calling for a UN-mandated international investigation into violations committed on all sides amidst ongoing Israeli air strikes across the Gaza Strip and continuing volleys of indiscriminate rocket fire from Palestinian armed groups into Israel. 

Ukraine says it has made gains against rebels as Russia 'considers strikes'

Government forces have broken through blockade near rebel-held city of Luhansk, says Ukrainian president
Investigators near the site where a man was killed allegedly by Ukrainian shelling on Russian territory. Photograph: Arkady Budnitsky/EPA
Russian investigators
The Guardian homeAgence France-Presse in Kiev
Monday 14 July 2014 
Ukrainian troops say they have made gains around one of the main remaining separatist strongholds, as Moscow reportedly weighed up "targeted" cross-border strikes following the alleged deadly shelling of a Russian town.
Ukraine's western-backed president, Petro Poroshenko, said government forces had managed to break through a blockade by pro-Moscow rebels to reach soldiers camped out at the strategic airport in the insurgent-held bastion of Luhansk.
The industrial hub of 425,000 people is the capital of one of the rebels' two self-declared "people's republics" and – along with million-strong Donetsk – now finds itself in the cross-hairs of Kiev's reinvigorated military push to quash the three-month insurgency tearing apart the former Soviet state.
The defence ministry said on Monday that Ukrainian jets had carried out five air strikes against separatist positions close to Luhansk, but there was no confirmation of rebel claims that Kiev had massed tanks in the outskirts in preparation for a major push into the city.
Local authorities said three people had been killed and 14 wounded in various incidents around the city over the past 24 hours, adding to a bloody weekend that saw one of the highest two-day civilian tolls so far in the conflict, which has now claimed about 550 lives.
Ukraine's army has also seen its losses spike in recent days after militias – which the west and Kiev allege are being armed by the Kremlin – killed 19 soldiers and wounded 100 more in a multiple-rocket attack late on Friday.
The military losses have profoundly dented emerging hopes in Kiev that its recent string of battlefield successes had finally convinced the rebels to sue for peace.
The conflict risked spiralling even further amid reports that Moscow was considering strikes against Ukrainian positions after a shell allegedly crossed the border and killed a Russian civilian on Sunday.
The well-connected Russian daily Kommersant cited a source close to the Kremlin as saying that Moscow was weighing up "targeted retaliatory strikes", but was not planning any large-scale action.
"Our patience is not limitless," the source said, adding that Russia"knows exactly where they [Ukrainians] are firing from".
Moscow has repeatedly accused Ukrainian forces of shelling across the border but Sunday's incident saw the first claim of a fatality and the Russian foreign ministry said the incident risked "irreversible consequences".
Kiev has denied that its forces were behind the shelling and on Sunday Poroshenko called on the west to condemn "attacks by Russian soldiers on positions held by Ukrainian servicemen" in a phone conversation with the European council president, Herman van Rompuy.
Poroshenko has previously vowed to kill "hundreds" of gunmen for every lost soldier and ordered an airtight military blockade of Luhansk and Donetsk.
European leaders responded by joining forces with the Russian president, Vladimir Putin, in an effort to persuade Poroshenko to put the brakes on violence first sparked by the ousting in February of the Kremlin-backed president Viktor Yanukovych and fanned by Russia's subsequent seizure of Crimea.
Hopes of a truce rested on a meeting between Putin and Poroshenko – the second since the Ukrainian president's May election – that seemed on the cards on the sidelines of the World Cup final in Rio de Janeiro.
But the Ukrainian presidency said on Sunday that Poroshenko had been forced to cancel his attendance "considering the situation currently happening in Ukraine".
Putin instead met the German chancellor, Angela Merkel, for talks the Kremlin said had ended with a call on the warring sides to issue "a statement as soon as possible concerning a ceasefire, a prisoner swap, and the return of [international] monitors" to eastern Ukraine.
A German government spokesman said Putin and Merkel had suggested Kiev and the separatists could launch their discussions by video conference.

Bodies found north of Baghdad as Sunni insurgents turn on each other

Fighters of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) stand guard at a checkpoint in the northern Iraq city of Mosul, June 11, 2014. REUTERS/Stringer/Files
ReutersBY ISRA' AL-RUBEI'I AND MAGGIE FICK
BAGHDAD Mon Jul 14,
(Reuters) - Residents of a town north of Baghdad found 12 corpses with execution-style bullet wounds on Monday, after fighting between rival Sunni insurgent groups that could eventually unravel the coalition that seized much of the north and west of the country.

Palestinian minister: Israel has completely destroyed 560 homes so far

Israel has destroyed 560 Palestinian homes, including this one, the home of the Al-Raziq family
Israel has destroyed 560 Palestinian homes, including this one, the home of the Al-Raziq family
Middle East MonitorMonday, 14 July 2014 
Palestinian Minister of Public Works and Housing Mofeed Al-Hasayneh revealed that the number of Palestinian homes completely destroyed by Israeli strikes since the start of the current assault is 560.
Speaking to Anadolu news agency, Al-Hasayneh added that the number of residential houses that were partially destroyed during the last seven days of the war is 12,800.
Since the beginning of Israel's latest assault on Gaza, which it calls "Operation Protective Edge", Israel has killed more than 170 Palestinians and wounded more than 1,200. Most of the Palestinian casualties are civilians, with large numbers of children and women.
On the other side, there have been no reported Israeli deaths caused by Palestinian rockets fired from the Gaza Strip. The Israeli emergency department reported that the number of Israelis wounded is 208, including 11 hit by rocket shrapnel, 36 injured as they were rushing to shelters, six suffering in car accidents blamed on rocket alarms and 151 suffering from panic.
After a meeting of the Israeli security cabinet on Sunday night, Israeli leaders decided to continue and intensify their assault on the Gaza Strip, ignoring a UN Security Council statement on Saturday unanimously calling for both sides to agree to a ceasefire.

Netanyahu escapes during a press conference in Tel-Aviv


Middle East Monitor

Benjamin Netanyahu
Monday, 14 July 2014 

Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu suddenly ended his press conference on Friday in Tel-Aviv after he had heard a rocket alarm.
Palestinians announced that they fired homemade rockets with long ranges at Tel-Aviv while Netanyahu was delivering his press conference.
Qassam Brigades announced it launched 4 M75s at Tel-Aviv and other rockets at Dimona in Beer Shiva in the Negev.

Overweight? Consider surgery. And the NHS should pay - Nice

NewsChannel 4 News
FRIDAY 11 JULY 2014
Hundreds of thousands more overweight people with type 2 diabetes should be offered weight-loss surgery like gastric bands on the NHS, says draft guidance from Nice.
Weight-loss surgery is currently given to patients on the NHS if they are morbidly obese - with a body mass index (BMI) score of over 40 – or to patients with a lower BMI of over 35 but who have another serious health condition, such as type 2 diabetes.
Now the National Institute of Health and Care Excellence (Nice) wants more people to be considered for operations that promote weight loss: anyone with a BMI score of 30 to 35 and with type 2 diabetes, if they have been diagnosed within the last 10 years.
Around 10 per cent of the NHS budget is currently spent on treating people with type 2 diabetes.
More than half of people who undergo surgery have more control over their diabetes following surgeryProfessor Mark Baker
Bariatric surgery usually comes in two forms: either having a gastric band fitted to reduce the size of the stomach, or a gastric bypass, where the digestive system is re-routed past most of the stomach.
And the new rules mean an estimated 800,000 could now get the weight-loss surgery on the NHS, according to data from the National Diabetes.
It shows that around 71 per cent of people with type 2 diabetes were diagnosed in the last decade, and around half (47 per cent) of those with the condition have got a BMI over 30.
The draft guideline also recommends that people who have undergone bariatric surgery on the NHS should have a "follow-up care package" for at least two years after their operation.
In the UK around 2.9 million people have diabetes, with around 90 per cent of cases being type 2. There are also thought to be around 850,000 people with undiagnosed diabetes.

Fat and getting fatter

"Obesity rates have nearly doubled over the last 10 years and continue to rise, making obesity and overweight a major issue for the health service in the UK," said Professor Mark Baker, director of the Centre for Clinical Practice at Nice.
"Since the publication of the existing guidance in 2006, more information has become available on how best to tackle the issue. Updated evidence suggests people who are obese and have been recently diagnosed with type 2 diabetes may benefit from weight loss surgery.
"More than half of people who undergo surgery have more control over their diabetes following surgery and are less likely to have diabetes related illness; in some cases surgery can even reverse the diagnosis."
Commenting on the draft recommendations, Simon O'Neill, director of health intelligence at charity Diabetes UK, said that losing weight was very difficult for most people. But said he wanted people to remember that there were serious risks involved in surgery, and it should only be considered as a "last resort" alongside dieting and exercise.
The draft Nice guidance on obesity, which updates guidance published in 2006, also states that doctors should be "selective" about recommending very low-calorie diets to obese people trying to lose weight. Prof Baker added: "Very low-calorie diets have grown in popularity in recent years, so we now have more evidence to consider how well they work, if the weight loss can be sustained and the safety concerns, than we did in 2006.
"The new draft guidance now recommends that they should not be used routinely for people who are obese, only those who have who have a clinical need to lose weight quickly, such as before joint replacement surgery."
The draft guideline has been issued for consultation.
Full Story>>>

National Conspiracy Involved in Prescription Painkiller/Heroin Epidemic by FDA

Jul-13-2014
And again I ask -- how many pharma pockets was the FDA picking while they put blinders on their eyes and allowed this national conspiracy to ravage the U.S. and Canada?

OxyContin and Money
California and Illinois are holding pharma responsible and listed in their lawsuits "Defendants Knew That Their Marketing of Chronic Opioid Therapy was False, Unfounded and Dangerous and would Harm (California/Illinois) Residents." Photo Courtesy: oxycontin-abuse.com
(MYRTLE BEACH, SC) - My recent articles have referred to lawsuits filed by Santa Clara and Orange Counties, California and Chicago, Illinois against Purdue Pharma, the maker of OxyContin and several other pharmaceutical companies.

A highlight of the lawsuits references "Defendants" Marketing of Opioids for Long-Term Use to Treat Chronic Non-Cancer Pain was False, Misleading, Imbalanced, and Unsupported by Science."

California and Illinois are holding pharma responsible and listed in their lawsuits "Defendants Knew That Their Marketing of Chronic Opioid Therapy was False, 
Unfounded and Dangerous and would Harm (California/Illinois) Residents."

These lawsuits against pharma fortunately do contain pertinent information on the paid pharma physicians, their books and pain foundations or societies that misled the medical profession in all 50 states as well as Canada on the "safety" of prescribing opioids with relatively low risk of addiction and death.

And again I ask -- how many pharma pockets was the FDA picking while they put blinders on their eyes and allowed this national conspiracy to ravage the U.S. and Canada?

Did the FDA "play the stock market" or did they have their own private pharma stock portfolio?
In the California and Illinois lawsuits, Russell Portenoy, MD is quoted as saying "Addiction, when treating pain, is distinctly uncommon."

In the lawsuits, J. David Haddox, MD and Purdue Pharma executive was referenced as to his coined word "pseudo-addiction" which did not concern a population study at all, but rather, simply reported the possible phenomenon in a single cancer (leukemia) patient with pneumonia and chest wall pain. Haddox convinced the medical profession that if patients exhibited signs of addiction, it was "pseudo-addiction" and the patient required a higher dose of opioids.

Lynn Webster, MD advised in his book "Avoiding Opioid Abuse While Managing Pain" to give patients more medication when unsure whether a patient is showing signs of addiction.
Perry Fine, MD in his CME program sponsored in part by Purdue Pharma devoted the presentation entirely to opioid prescribing and, despite its title, presented no other potential treatments; rather it promoted opioid therapy as the only solution even for common chronic pain issues such as back pain.

Scott M. Fishman, MD in his book "Responsible Opioid Prescribing - a Physician's Guide" endorsed by the Federation of Medical Boards and distributed to physicians and medical boards all over the U.S. and Canada contained many misrepresentations notably the concept of "pseudo-addiction" and the claim that opioids improve function.

The American Pain Foundation (APF) funded by pharma wrote a "Policymaker's Guide 2011 and made a particularly callous representation that less than 1% of children prescribed opioids would become addicted. APF closed its doors the day after the US Senate launched an investigation into their questionable practices in fueling the opioid epidemic.

So where is the accountability? These lawsuits are a good start and holding the FDA complacent in this national crisis should be investigated...

Below is a piece written by Steve Berman. Steve Berman is founder and managing partner of national plaintiff-focused law firm Hagens Berman Sobol Shapiro, LLC. Mr. Berman's law firm is a named counsel in the lawsuits against pharma.

By Steve Berman Steve Berman , Law.com Contributor Published: Jul 8, 2014
Big Pharma's Love Affair With Opioids

I don’t know if it is human nature or a symptom of the increasingly chaotic nature of our lives that allows us to become accustomed – even accepting – of things that would have caused us angst, anger or frustration in years past. I could list a legion of things that fall into this category – the lack of civility in everything from rush-hour driving behavior to political discourse in Washington, to the now-common use of profanity as a part of civil society. Most of these things are minor annoyances; we can change the channel when the talking heads begin blathering on Fox News or CNN, we move over to the slow lane on the freeway. But our acclimation to once-troubling behavior can also be manipulated and used against the public interest. We believe that is exactly what Big Pharma has been doing now for years with opioids. Let me explain. Today, we don’t think twice when we hear of a friend or neighbor taking prescription pain medication for a bad back, or for any number of conditions or injuries. Trademarked words like Percocet, Vicodin and Oxycontin are as much a part of the layperson’s medical vocabulary as Tylenol and aspirin were for our parents. And our perception is borne out by the facts: Opioids have become the most widely prescribed class of drug in the U.S. But here is the alarming part: Opioids were never intended for use for long-term, chronic pain. Historically, physicians prescribed them for a very narrow window of uses, typically for pain around post-surgery discomfort or other short-lived situations. So what happened? In a recent court filing we made on behalf of a group of California counties, we believe five of the world’s largest narcotics manufacturers – Purdue Pharma, Teva Pharmaceutical Industries, Cephalon Inc., Johnson & Johnson, Janssen Pharmaceuticals and Endo Health Solutions Inc. – began a campaign to stack the deck in favor of wider use of opioids. One tactic was to tout the broader use of opioids to physicians by finding – and hiring – other physicians to write papers and speak at events.

At the same time, the drug companies mounted a campaign encouraging patients, including the elderly, to ask their doctors for the painkillers to treat common conditions such as back pain, arthritis and headaches. The results are toxic. The National Survey on Drug Use and Health reported that the number of first-time abusers of prescription opioids increased from 628,000 in 1990 to 2.4 million in 2004, that emergency room visits involving prescription opioid abuse increased by 45 percent from 2000 to 2002 and that treatment admissions for primary abuse of prescription opioids increased by 186 percent between 1997 and 2002. Opioid overdoses now account for more deaths in the U.S. than car crashes, cocaine, heroin and suicides combined. If you’re finding this a bit hard to stomach, know that this isn’t the first time a company has mounted a campaign of deception with such blatant disregard for the public’s well-being. Think Big Tobacco. It seems like common sense to us now that cigarettes contain harmful chemicals and are wildly addictive, but back when I led my firm’s work on behalf of 13 states against Big Tobacco, we saw these same tactics used to misinform the public.

We beat them then, and I believe we can beat this new incarnation – Big Pharma – today. At the end of the day, we may not be able to change how people drive, or the amount of venom the politicians spit at one another, but if we are successful with this case, we should be able to slow – or stop – the insidiousness of this scheme. Next week Scott M. Fishman, MD in his new role.

Desmond Tutu plea for 'assisted dying' before historic Lords debate

Archbishop calls for 'mind shift' on right to die and condemns as 'disgraceful' the treatment of the dying Nelson Mandela

Archbishop Desmond Tutu was speaking ahead of a debate in the House on Lords on Lord Falconer's assisted dying bill. Photograph: News Pictures/Rex Features
Archbishop Desmond Tutu
Saturday 12 July 2014 
Desmond Tutu, one of the world's most eminent religious leaders, has made an extraordinary intervention in the debate over assisted death, by backing the right of the terminally ill to end their lives in dignity.
Writing in the Observer, the 82-year-old retired Anglican archbishop, revered as the "moral conscience" of South Africa, says that laws that prevent people being helped to end their lives are an affront to those affected and their families.
He also condemns as "disgraceful" the treatment of his old friend Nelson Mandela, who was kept alive through numerous painful hospitalisations and forced to endure a photo stunt with politicians shortly before his death at 95.
Tutu, who calls for a "mind shift" in the right to die debate, writes: "I have been fortunate to spend my life working for dignity for the living. Now I wish to apply my mind to the issue of dignity for the dying. I revere the sanctity of life – but not at any cost."
Tutu's intervention comes at the start of a momentous week in theassisted dying debate. On Friday, the House of Lords will witness one of the most significant moments in its recent history when peers debate an assisted dying bill proposed by the former lord chancellor, Lord Falconer. A record number of peers – 110 so far – have registered to speak.
On Saturday the former archbishop of Canterbury Lord (George) Careyspoke out in favour of the bill. But in an article in the TimesJustin Welby, the current archbishop and head of the Church of England, reaffirmed the church's traditional hostility to any move that would endanger the principle of the sanctity of life. In a sign of the debate that has now been unleashed within the Anglican communion, the bishop of Carlisle, the Right Rev James Newcome, called for a royal commission to examine the "important issue" at length.
Falconer's proposed legislation would make it legal for a doctor to hand over a lethal medication to a terminally ill patient who is believed to have less than six months to live.
Tutu notes that Falconer's bill will be debated on Mandela Day, which would have been the 96th birthday of South Africa's first black president. He calls for his own country to follow Britain's lead in examining a change in the law.
"On Mandela Day we will be thinking of a great man," he writes. "On the same day, on 18 July 2014 in London, the House of Lords will be holding a second hearing on Lord Falconer's bill on assisted dying. Oregon, Washington, Quebec, Holland, Switzerland have already taken this step. South Africa has a hard-won constitution that we are proud of that should provide a basis to guide changes to be made on the legal status of end-of-life wishes to support the dignity of the dying."
Speaking to the Observer, Falconer, who said he was now confident that his bill would live on in parliament beyond Friday's debate, claimed that the intervention by Tutu illustrated that religious faith should be no obstacle to supporting a change in the law. He said: "I am really glad that someone of his stature is taking part in this important debate. It is a debate in which countries look to other countries for guidance. For someone of Archbishop Tutu's stature, understanding and human experience to speak out is really welcome. He is an Anglican bishop who has shown his moral strength to the world better than anybody. I very much hope that it will indicate that religion is not a bar to supporting this bill."
A London rabbi, Jonathan Romain, speaking on behalf of 60 religious leaders in support of the Falconer proposals, said he believed that backing the bill was the "religious response" to a situation where medical progress allowed people to live on in a physical and mental state that many felt was intolerable. He said: "I see no sanctity in suffering, nothing holy about agony."
Jane Nicklinson, widow of the campaigner Tony Nicklinson, a sufferer of locked-in syndrome who fought for the right to be helped to die in the UK, said she believed public opinion was now in favour of change, adding: "I hope that it is true among those that matter – the decision-makers."
Falconer's proposals are being fiercely opposed by key figures such as Welby, and campaigners for the rights of disabled people. Richard Hawkes, chief executive of the disability charity Scope, said he feared the bill would put some people under pressure to end their lives. He said: "Why is it that when people who are not disabled want to commit suicide, we try to talk them out of it, but when a disabled person wants to commit suicide, we focus on how we can make that possible?"
However, in his article for the Observer, Tutu says that he has been moved by the case of a 28-year-old South African, Craig Schonegevel, who suffered from neurofibromatosis and felt forced to end his life by swallowing 12 sleeping pills and tying two plastic bags around his head with elastic bands because doctors could not help him.
Tutu writes: "Some say that palliative care, including the giving of sedation to ensure freedom from pain, should be enough for the journeying towards an easeful death. Some people opine that with good palliative care there is no need for assisted dying, no need for people to request to be legally given a lethal dose of medication. That was not the case for Craig Schonegevel. Others assert their right to autonomy and consciousness – why exit in the fog of sedation when there's the alternative of being alert and truly present with loved ones?"
He also discloses that he has now had a conversation with his family about his own death. "I have come to realise that I do not want my life to be prolonged artificially," he writes. "I think when you need machines to help you breathe then you have to ask questions about the quality of life being experienced and about the way money is being spent. This may be hard for some people to consider.
"But why is a life that is ending being prolonged? Why is money being spent in this way? It could be better spent on a mother giving birth to a baby, or an organ transplant needed by a young person. Money should be spent on those that are at the beginning or in full flow of their life. Of course, these are my personal opinions and not of my church."
There was bitter controversy in South Africa in April last year when President Jacob Zuma and other African National Congress politiciansvisited Mandela at his home with a TV crew. The statesman looked weak, rheumy-eyed and uncomprehending. Mandela's family and personal assistant condemned the publicity stunt as exploitative and in poor taste. Tutu echoes that view. "What was done to Madiba was disgraceful," he writes. "There was that occasion when Madiba was televised with political leaders, President Zuma and Cyril Ramaphosa. You could see that Madiba was not fully there. He did not speak. He was not connecting. My friend was no longer himself. It was an affront to Madiba's dignity."
"People should die a decent death," he continues. "For me that means having had the conversations with those I have crossed with in life and being at peace. It means being able to say goodbye to loved ones – if possible, at home."
He adds: "I can see I would probably incline towards the quality of life argument, whereas others will be more comfortable with palliative care. Yes, I think a lot of people would be upset if I said I wanted assisted dying. I would say I wouldn't mind, actually."
Tutu, who chaired South Africa's Truth and Reconciliation Commission, and admitted he was "angry with God" during apartheid, has never been afraid to take unpopular positions or stir debate. Mandela once said of him: "Sometimes strident, often tender, never afraid and seldom without humour, Desmond Tutu's voice will always be the voice of the voiceless."

Sunday, July 13, 2014

A mix of comic theatre and deadly intent


It is a baffling question. Is the blundering of this government in almost every aspect of its domestic and foreign policy, deliberate or sweetly unintentional?
Percolator Talk blog imgManifestation of unholy chaos.
Is this part of the unholy chaos that we see with ministers speaking on every topic under the sun resulting in statements being issued by some and immediately refuted by others? And what about press statements that contradict each other with the English versions containing inaccurate translations of the original Sinhala statements leading to virtual international incidents on occasion?
This week’s ‘directive’ issued to non-governmental organizations by the National Secretariat for Non-Governmental Organisations under the Ministry of Defence is another excellent case in point. Taken verbatim, it declares with all the solemnity of a proclamation handed down by the historically infamous Inquisitor prior to torturing heretics in ancient times, that ‘it has been revealed’ that certain non-governmental organizations ‘conduct press conferences, workshops, trainings for journalists and dissemination of press releases.’
But the esteemed gentleman who put his signature on this document may do well to acquaint himself with the fact that no grandiose revelation is in fact, occasioned by such boring activities. Press conferences and the like are routinely engaged in by organizations when the same applies to the work that they do. These activities, by their very nature, are conducted in the open. And in what universe could the training of journalists possibly be seen as a sinister activity?
Offending the maxim of legality
Regardless, with appropriate ludicrous force thereafter, the directive announces that these activities are ‘beyond’ the mandate and that such organizations should therefore (sic) ‘prevent from’ such ‘unauthorised’ activities with immediate effect. But who determines what is authorized and what is not? And who defines what is within a particular mandate and what is not? Is it the Ministry of Defence, god forbid? The applicable act under which the Secretariat functions certainly does not authorize this.
At this rate, the people of Sri Lanka may soon be told that gathering at a wayside tea boutique to gossip over politics may also be ‘unauthorised.’ The first maxim of legality is that restrictions on freedoms if they are to be valid, must be clearly defined, they must be authorized by law and must, importantly, be proportionate. This directive offends on almost every count. Its wildly ungrammatical phraseology is incidental even though this renders it as something to be mocked rather than to be taken seriously.
But this mixture of comic theatre and deadly intent seem to be a toxic combination governing the policies (if they can be referred to as such) of the Rajapaksa administration. Colloquially put, one does not know whether to laugh or to cry.
Access to legitimate information
There are precedents for this type of nonsense even though then, there was a war raging and the excuse was that adventurist actions ought to be restrained. For example, censorship regulations imposed under emergency order by the Kumaranatunga Presidency prohibited any statement pertaining to the official conduct, “moral” or the performance of the Head or of any member of the armed forces or the police forces etc. The question was whether this meant that one cannot comment on the ‘moral conduct’ of the Head of the armed forces and so on? Or is it that “moral” should, in fact, be read as morale? And why should not public conduct be the subject of scrutiny if it is not linked to matters of national security?
These vague and over-broad directives were challenged before the Supreme Court and declared to be unconstitutional. Information that must legitimately be placed in the public domain has to be so placed. This is a first principle of the Sri Lankan Constitution and Article 19(3) of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) to which we are a signatory. These principles are still applicable. Restrictions on basic rights may be imposed only to the extent strictly required by the exigencies of the situation. In the alternative, we may as well publicly toss our Constitution to the gutter. Some may well argue that it is already in the gutter, of course.
Moreover this 7th July 2014 directive was issued at the precise point that Sri Lanka is being besieged by legitimate questions of creeping authoritarianism engineered by a one-family dominated administration. Does the Rajapaksa Presidency need more battles on its front? Charlatans exist in the non-governmental sector as they do in academia, the professional sector or the governmental sector. But this does not justify badly drafted directives lacking legal intent.
Was public life ever more  odious than this?
Indeed political charlatans predominate in public life to a worse degree. This week, an innocuous newspaper vendor selling his papers at a small kiosk in the Kurunegala town was (allegedly) hammered by supporters of the Chief Minister of the North-Western province after the kiosk sold newspapers headlined with the recent ugly brawl over a television chat show between this Chief Minister and a parliamentarian tipped to lead the main opposition in the upcoming Uva Provincial Council elections.
These newspaper headlines went amusingly albeit appallingly to the opposing rhythms of ‘he bit me’ and ‘I did not bite him’ on the part of the two brawling politicians. The aggrieved vendor has, with difficulty, lodged a police complaint though the end result of the inquiry is a foregone conclusion.
Was public life this odious even when the State was combating insurgencies in the North and in the South? The answer to this question is unequivocally in the negative.
It is time that we rid ourselves of starry eyed fantasies that the end of conflict in 2009 meant the dawning of a new era. It is time that we insisted on basic decency and the strict observing of legality on the part of politicians as well as powerful public servants who behave worse than politicians in the conduct of our affairs.
New laws to control NGOs 

BY Niranjala Ariyawansha-
 July 10, 2014 
 
The government is to incorporate new laws to register all not-for-profit or non-profit organizations (NPOs) as non-governmental organizations (NGOs) with the Ministry of Defence and Urban Development.
The ministry charged that NPOs presently registered under the Sri Lanka Companies Act No. 7 of 2007 are acting out the role of NGOs.
 
Director/Registrar of the National Secretariat for NGOs, D. M. Saman Dissanayake, speaking to Ceylon Today, observed that according to the new Act any organization that does not register with the Ministry of Defence and Urban Development will have their bank accounts closed and obtaining foreign funds will also be expressly forbidden.
The government will also be imposing financial regulations on banks to get this done.
NGOs are no longer permitted to conduct press conferences, workshops, trainings for journalists and disseminate press releases following a directive issued by the Ministry of Defence and Urban Development. The directive came into effect from 01 July.
 
Yet, in open defiance of this move, the Collective of Civil Organizations, with Chairman of Transparency International, Sri Lanka and Convenor of Lawyers' Collective
J. Chrishantha Weliamuna, Head of the Department of History of the University of Colombo Dr. Nirmal Ranjith Dewasiri,...
 
Executive Director of Centre for Policy Alternatives Dr. Paikiyasothi Saravanamuttu, President of International Movement Against All Forms of Discrimination in Sri Lanka,
Dr. Nimalka Fernando, Executive Director of Rights Now, Sudharshan Gunawardene, President of the Association for Families of the Disappeared Relatives, Brito Fernando, Attorneys-at-Law Ravi Ratnavel and Manjula Pathiraja, and Convenor of the Free Media Movement, Sunil Jayasekera, held a press conference at the Nippon Hotel in Slave Island yesterday.
 
The Collective of Civil Organizations said, while they rejected the undemocratic directive and would continue to carry on with their activities, if the Ministry of Defence and Urban Development attempts to turn the screws on, they would then consider Court action.
 
Dissanayake opined that no NGO representatives had participated in the press conference, adding that those who had organized it and participated in it were mere company representatives.
NGOs are only the organizations registered with the Ministry of Defence and Urban Development and there are only 1,416 in this country, he pointed out.