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

Saturday, July 19, 2014

Top 10 Natural Remedies For Toenail Fungus


toenail-fungus1https://www.facebook.com/greenyatra?ref=profileGreen Yatra BlogOnychomycosis – commonly known as toenail fungus – is characterized by inflammation, pain, and swelling of the toe, as well as yellowing, thickening, and crumbling of the nail itself.  Toenail fungus can be the result of abnormal pH of the skin, continuous exposure to moisture, wearing synthetic socks, compromised immune system, sweat build-up in shoes, poor foot hygiene, or weak circulation such as that caused by diabetes.

Friday, July 18, 2014

VIDEO PROOF MH17 PLANE SHOT DOWN BY TERRORIST PRO RUSSIAN SEPARATISTS!

enterthearenaus

Published on Jul 17, 2014
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THE PLANE WAS SHOT DOWN BY THE PRO-RUSSIAN MILITANTS! Malaysia Airlines flight carrying 280 passengers and 15 crew members crashed in the Donetsk region of Ukraine, near the Russian border. Echoing Ukrainian officials, U.S. intelligence believes a surface-to-air missile brought the flight down, but they are divided on the origin of the strike, a source told Reuters.

There were no reports of survivors. Reuters pictures showed a scene of devastation with burning debris and body parts spread over a wide area near the village of Grabovo. Reuters is reporting that the dead includes 23 United States citizens, although the European head of Malaysia Airlines did not list any Americans in the most recent count.

Ukraine's intelligence agency has released footage of what they say are intercepted phone calls between Russian military intelligence officers and pro-Russia separatists. In the conversations, they appear to acknowledge the plane has been shot down, but sound shocked upon realizing it's a civilian aircraft completely devoid of any weapons. "Civilian items, medical equipment, towels, toilet paper" are some of the items they find on the ground.

The Ukrainian Prime Minister has ordered an investigation, while the Ukrainian president says that Ukrainian forces were not involved in bringing the plane down. Ukrainian officials said the plane may have been shot down by a Russian-made Buk, or Beech, antiaircraft system, according to a report in The New York Times. A Ukrainian interior ministry official blamed "terrorists" using a ground-to-air missile on the "catastrophe," Reuters reports.

'Fascists' in saffron robes? The rise of Sri Lanka's Buddhist ultra-nationalists

BBS general secretary Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara at a press conference in 2013.
BBS general secretary Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara at a press conference in 2013
CNNBy Tim Hume, CNN-July 18, 2014
(CNN) — Shortly before Buddhist mobs made a deadly rampage through Muslim neighborhoods near the town of Aluthgama, Sri Lanka last month, a man with cropped hair and glasses stood before expectant crowds to deliver an explosive speech.

Video footage of the rally, called following a traffic altercation between Muslim youths and a Buddhist monk in the coastal town, captures the speaker in full flight.
TNA rejects separatism To file affidavit accepting Sri Lanka a unitary State




BY STANLEY SAMARASINGHE- July 16, 2014 


Lawyers appearing for Mavai Senathirajah, Secretary of Illankai Tamil Arasu Kachchi (ITAK) and Tamil National Alliance (TNA), and President of TNA, R. Sampanthan, yesterday (15) agreed to submit an affidavit, to the Supreme Court, stating that Sri Lanka is a unitary State.
 
This was sequel to six cases filed in Supreme Court alleging that the political object of the TNA is to form a separate government in Sri Lanka.
Galage Don Punyawardana, Gunadasa Amarasekera, U. Abeykoon, Ven. Bengamuwe Nalaka Thera, U.K. Anura and Ravi Kumar were the petitioners in these cases.
In their petitions they stated that during the last Northern...
 
 
...Provincial Council elections, the ITAK and TNA distributed election manifestos among voters indicating that ITAK and TNA are in the process of planning to form a separate state in Sri Lanka.
The petitioners requested the Court to declare that ITAK and TNA objective was to form a separate state. The petitions were taken up by a Bench comprising Chief Justice Mohan Peries, Justices Rohini Marasinghe and Priyantha Jayawardane.
 
 
Counsels for respondents submitted to Court that the two parties accept that Sri Lanka is a unitary State and that they have no intention of formig a separate state. Counsels for the petitioners said that this must be declared by an affidavit to Court.
 

Respondents' lawyers agreed to submit affidavit to that effect. Court postponed the case to 22 September. Kanga Iswarn PC appeared with M.A. Sumanthiran and Luxman Jeyakumar for the respondents. Attorneys-at-Law Kaniska Wijeratna, Palitha Gamage and Kapila Gamage appeared for petitioners.

Single Issue, Common Candidate And The Thorny Question Of Sri Lanka’s Executive Presidency


Colombo Telegraph
By Manny Thain -July 18, 2014 
Manny Thain
Manny Thain
Your ongoing debate on tactics for a future presidential election is being read with interest far beyond the shores of Sri Lanka. All those – and there are many – who oppose Mahinda Rajapaksa’s regime are grappling with this question.
As some readers may be aware, campaigns such as Tamil Solidarity promote a strategy of linking up oppressed people from all backgrounds, and we are closely linked to the trade union and workers’ movement in Britain. As the joint national secretary of this campaign in the UK I can report that we pay very close attention to all developments in the movement of opposition to the current regime in Sri Lanka.
Naturally, the discussions in Sri Lanka are echoed in Britain, and it has been interesting to read Kumar David’s strategy for the future presidential elections: Single Issue, Common Candidate, Road Map (SI-CC-RM).
Given the nightmare facing the vast majority of the population in Sri Lanka – land grab and settlements in Tamil areas, attacks on Tamil Muslims, clampdown on the press, cutbacks and privatisation plans in the public sector, etc, etc – the need to find a way out is urgent. The desire for unity among all those in opposition to the current regime is strong.
It is not, of course, a simple matter. Clearly, Kumar David believes he has found the answer. His strategy raises a number of fundamental issues, including the thorny questions of how to unite disparate groups around a single issue, and who the common candidate could possibly be. Before raising some points for consideration on those, however, it might be worth looking at the ultimate aim.       Read More

Indonesia: The Example Of Joko Widodo


| by Laksiri Fernando 
( July 18, 2014, Seydney, Sri Lanka Guardian) The third largest democracy in the world, Indonesia, of around 240 million population and 190 million registered voters, went to presidential elections on 9 June Wednesday and the final results are expected on 22st or 23nd. Reliable sample counts of 80 percent show that Joko Widodo, 53, popularly known as Jokowi, and a ‘political newcomer,’ is heading the elections against the authoritarian former General and hardliner, Prabowo Subianto, 63, and let me add ‘a conservative and a traditionalist.’ 
Indonesia is also the largest Muslim country in the world however mostly with moderate religious temperament because of Abangan traditions in village areas mixed with traditional Hindu and partly Buddhist customs. It is also the biggest economy in Southeast Asia, and with a (monitory) GDP of $ 868 billion stand as the 16th position in the world. Its per capita is closer to present Sri Lanka. Indonesia is a member of G-20 and a founder of ASEAN. 

Fmr. Tangalle PS chairman sentenced over Khuram Sheikh murder


logoJuly 18, 2014 


khuram sampath victoris 1

Tangalle PS chairman gets 20 years RI...
Fmr. Tangalle PS chairman sentenced over Khuram Sheikh murder Former Chairman of the Tangalle Pradeshiya Sabha, Sampath Vidanapathirana, and three other defendants have been sentenced to 20 years Rigorous Imprisonment over the killing of British aid worker Khuram Sheikh and raping of his girlfriend at a resort in Tangalle. 

Six suspects including the PS chairman were charged over the incident, however two of them were acquitted when the verdict was delivered by Colombo High Court Judge Rohini Walgama this morning. 

The trial at the High Court in Colombo represents years of campaigning after Red Cross worker Khuram Shaikh was murdered in December 2011 and his partner brutally assaulted while they were on holiday at the tourist resort of Tangalle.

The verdict brings one of the most high-profile trials to an end more than 2 years since it was taken up at the Colombo High Court, amidst pressure from British MPs and Prime Minister David Cameron for Sri Lankan authorities to investigate the case more thoroughly.  

 Former Tangalle Pradeshiya Sabha Chairman Sampath Chandrapushpa Vidanapathirana (SLFP), the main suspect, had pleaded not guilty to the charges of murder.

The other accused in the case are  Obada Arachchige Lahiru Kelum alias Raveendra, Uduwanage Saman Deshapriya,  Weerappulige  Praneeth Chathuranga, Mohottige Sarath alias  Sahan and  Saranaarachchi Patabendige Chanuka Chathuranga.

They have been also accused of causing damages to the hotel to the tune of Rs. 160, 250  and robbery of bottles of liquor valued at Rs. 41,526.

It has been reported that officials from the British and Russian embassies as well as relatives of the victims were also present for the announcing of the verdict, which was postponed to today (18) after statement were delivered by both parties. 

SL Muslims Living In Australia Urge Authorities To Deny Visa To Gnanasara


Colombo Telegraph
July 18, 2014
Nine organizations representing Sri Lankan Muslims living in Australia have issued a joint statement urging the Australian government to reconsider their decision to allow Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) General Secretary,Galagoda Atte Gnanasara to visit the country.
Gnanasara
Gnanasara
The Collective of organizations representing Sri Lankan Muslims living in Australia, in a letter to Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, Australian Minister of Foreign Affairs Julie Bishop and Australian Minister of Immigration and Border Control Scott Morrison, has urged for a reconsideration of the decision to grant visa for Gnanasara to visit Australia under the pretext of a ‘spiritual awakening mission’ based on Buddhism.
The Collective that has drawn the Ministers’ attention on the recent anti-Muslim riots in Southern Sri Lanka that Gnanasara is accused of having instigated, points out he should not be allowed into Australia as he fails to pass the character test defined in Section 501 (06) of the Migration Act of 1958.
They have asserted that Gnanasara’s association with a group that has been suspected of criminal conduct and the possibility of his arrival in Australia inciting discord in the local community and resulting in a segment of the Australian community being vilified, have compromised Gnanasara’s credibility to enter Australia.
They have also shed light on Gnanasara’s close association with the extremist Burmese monk Ashun Wirathuand his infamous role in inciting hatred on the Muslim community in Sri Lanka since 2012.
Furthermore, they have stated that against the backdrop of several countries including the UK, US and France denying access for Gnanasara to visit the respective states, Australia too should follow the ‘well considered lead set by the other countries’.
Read the letter here

TIME TO SHAKE UP SRI LANKA’S ‘BUSINESS AS USUAL’ WITH INDIA – ANALYSIS

India - Sri Lanka
By -By Col. R. Hariharan-
Image result for R. HariharanTime has come for Prime Minister Narendra Modi to take a relook at Sri Lanka affairs under the leadership of President Mahinda Rajapaksa. He has continued for too long to bash on regardless of his unkept promises to India on implementing the 13thConstitutional Amendment in full. It was to be part of the resumption of the stalled political dialogue process with Tamil leaders which he promised to undertake.
Time to Shake Up Sri Lanka’s ‘Business as Usual’ With India – Analysis by Maria Anderson

Swords, Scales And Blindfolds: The Law Has Let Us Down Again


Colombo Telegraph
By Gehan Gunatilleke -July 18, 2014 
Gehan Gunatilleke
Gehan Gunatilleke
When injustice becomes law, resistance becomes duty- Thomas Jefferson
Justice stands boldly, armed with a sword and tempered with scales. Her blindfolds demonstrate her impartiality. She wields the Law and bends it to her will. Yet the Law is prone to misuse when stripped from its true mistress and usurped by tyrants. They use her sword to strike the innocent; manipulate her scales to subjugate citizens; and apply her blindfold to conceal atrocities. Law without Justice is perhaps worse than no law at all.
Throughout history, unjust laws have compelled resistance. The civil rights movement led by Martin Luther King Jr. sought to repeal or revise oppressive laws that deprived the African American community of basic civil liberties. Likewise, Anti-Semitism in Nazi Germany, apartheid in South Africa, and the statelessness of plantation Tamils in Sri Lanka were all once sustained by laws, and were therefore considered ‘legal’. The liberation of those victims became possible only when those oppressive laws were eventually abolished.
Sri Lanka is at a critical juncture in its own history, wherein citizens must pause to judge the Law. We must reflect on whether the Law, in its present incarnation, is our friend or foe.
The Sword
Time and again, the Law in Sri Lanka has been employed to torment the government’s opponents. It has been wielded like a sword to strike down dissenting voices. The Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), for instance, was enacted in 1979 presumably as a temporary measure to curb terrorism. Yet its preamble fails to offer even the courtesy of subtlety, as it presents the principal object of the Act as preventing ‘governmental change’. Consumed by fear, we permitted this Act to become a permanent fixture in our statute books. For more than thirty years thereafter, the PTA was selectively applied to target ethnic minorities.[1] In 2009, J.S. Tissainayagam was found guilty of committing an offence under Section 2(1)(h) of the Act. This provision criminalises words spoken or written with the intention of ‘causing the commission of acts of violence or racial or communal disharmony’. The prosecution argued that the Tamil journalist, by accusing a predominantly Sinhalese Army of committing atrocities, had intended to incite acts of violence by Sinhalese readers against Tamils. This argument was sufficient to convince the High Court. During the early 1990s, a middle-aged Tamil couple was found guilty under Section 5(a) of the PTA for failing to report a suspect to the police. The prosecution argued that the couple personally knew the suspect and that he was suspected of committing offenses under the PTA. Yet the suspect was never charged. In a bizarre twist of irony, he sat in the courtroom as a free man witnessing his so-called ‘supporters’ being sentenced for their failure to report him.  Read More

Hypocrisy & Human Rights


| by Ruwantissa Abeyratne
As I said, the first thing is to be honest with yourself. You can never have an impact on society if you have not changed yourself. Great peacemakers are all of integrity, of honesty, but humility.
- Nelson Mandela
( July 18, 2014, Melbourne, Sri Lanka Guardian) Hypocrisy has been defined as the practice of claiming to have moral standards and values that are not consistent with those of the person who claims to have such values and standards. Wikipedia defines hypocrisy as the claim or pretence of holding beliefs, standards, feelings, qualities, opinions, behaviours motives or other characteristics that one in actual fact does not hold. Hypocrisy is when one claims a virtue one does not possess and ascends to a level above others. It is said in Dhammapada 394: “What is the use of your matted hair, O witless man? What is the use of your antelope skin garment? Within, you are full of passions; without, you embellish yourself [with the paraphernalia of an ascetic]”.
A hypocrite who inwardly does not believe in human rights and wrongs another cannot be accepted as an enforcer and proponent of human rights since, simply put, a human right is a right not to be wronged. In other words, a right is not to be deprived wrongfully of a legitimate right. Therefore, hypocrisy and human rights are inextricably linked with the fundamental glue of “honesty” where human rights are made tangible, accessible and real by those who mean what they say and say what they mean.
A nation’s compassion inevitably flows from its recognition of its people’s rights. An individual’s rights flow not from an arcane institution, nor from God, but from an instinctive recognition of the various needs of that person not to be wronged. Today’s world is full of wrongs and there is no reason to believe that tomorrow is going to get any better. For every citizen of the world, rights have never been so important as they are today, although we tend to take them for granted until they are endangered or eroded. Instinctively, we are inclined to appreciate our rights even more when they are in jeopardy of being infringed. In this sense, the time honored adage that human rights are “inalienable” purely because they flow from a supernatural force is misguided and baseless, not because there is no such force but because such a force does not speak to humans in a single voice and rights should exist even if there were no God. Alan Dershowitz, Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law at Harvard University, in his book “Rights from Wrongs” states that rights do not come from nature, as nature is value neutral, nor do they come from logic or law alone because, if rights emanated from law, there would be no basis to judge a given legal system. Dershowitz maintains that rights come from human experience, particularly experience with injustice. Our experience has taught us never again to tolerate a holocaust, never to curb freedom of expression and freedom of faith, and from that experience has stemmed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the United Nations Charter. These documents, which embody fundamental rights are just pieces of paper if experience is not joined by logic. The marriage of logic and experience in the wisdom of human relations is ingrained in ancient Jewish philosophy, which, according to Isaac Abravanal, recognized that experience is more forceful than logic but logic and experience are not mutually exclusive. Without being applied to experience, logic tends to be hollow and directionless, but without the focus of logic, experience becomes multi directional and out of focus. Good decisions come from experience and experience comes from bad decisions. In other words, rights emerge from wrongs and not from ancient parchments or tomes of wisdom hidden away in a forgotten memory that is subsequently revived.

The essence of a nation should be founded on human rights that are contrived from single instances of wrongs committed against the people. According to this principle, a right becomes something that is legitimately due to a person which he can justly claim as secured to him by law, and which ensures that some wrong committed in the past is effectively precluded by the right so secured. A right should not be confused with power, the former being based on moral justification and expectation and the latter being based on enforceability. Protection by the state of an individual, freedom to attend church or temple, and freedom to educate oneself are examples of a right where as sovereignty of State, authority to censor speech and enforce martial law are examples of power. A wise nation distinguishes between the two and maintains a balance.

The hypocrites of the world are those who assume positions of power by giving the causal illusion that within their positions of power and in their puritanical benevolence, they are ensuring the rights and welfare of those who depend on them, while in fact the opposite is true. The leaders of some African States have been brought before the international courts for depriving their citizens of their fundamental right to life and liberty. Others have been done away with by those whose rights have been blatantly taken away. These are all people who preach one thing and do the exact opposite. They also preach religious doctrines to give an aura of saintliness and virtue.

Alan Dershowitz said: ” hypocrisy is not a way of getting back to the moral high ground. Pretending you are moral; saying you are moral, is not the same as acting morally”. There is an age old story of a “holy” man who had matted hair and wore old clothes and gave the appearance of a pious mendicant. A wealthy trader, who took pity on him, built him an abode, and for safe keeping kept his family wealth of 100 gold coins in the phoney old man’s abode for safekeeping. The old man stole the money one day and went to the trader saying he must now move along so that he would not abuse the trader’s generosity and hospitality further. The trader begged of the old man to remain, but the old man went away with the trader’s life savings tucked under his belt.

After he went some distance the old man thought he must return to the village and make sure the trader did not suspect him. So he went to his abode, plucked a blade of grass from the roof and placed it on his head. He went to the trader and said: ” Sir, I found this blade of grass in my hair which belongs to the abode you so kindly gave me and came to return it”. The trader said, “venerable sir, what an honest person you are to return even the blade of grass that stuck to your head”. Such was the old man’s hypocrisy.

Later, of course, the old hypocrite was caught and the trader’s wealth restored to its rightful owner.
The morale of the story is given as: ” be careful of a holy man who puts on a big show”.