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

Sunday, July 27, 2014

The children of Gaza - video.

Channel 4 NewsSUNDAY 27 JULY 2014
Jon Snow - returning from Gaza - recounts the scene inside al-Shifa hospital, where doctors struggle to treat adults and children wounded by Israeli attacks.


Gaza destruction revealed in UN satellite image

Click on the image above to see the full Unosat/Unitar report. Credit: Unosat/Unitar 
Channel 4 News
SUNDAY 27 JULY 2014
The image, released by Unosat/Unitar, shows an area in the northeastern Gaza Strip, including areas of Gaza City - Shajaiyah, Toffah and Shaaf.
Unosat analysis has identified 604 destroyed structures, 236 severely damaged structures and 46 moderately damaged structured.
The image, taken on 25 July, also shows 66 craters on roads and in agricultural and "non-urbanised" areas.

Thursday, 24 July 2014
Dr. Mads Gilbert, a Norwegian surgeon volunteering at a Gaza hospital, has invited U.S. President Barack Obama to spend a night in Al Shifa’a Hospital to see the consequences of Israel’s deadly assault on the Palestinian enclave. 

Speaking to Al Arabiya News Channel, he described the Israeli offensive as “merciless” and “murder.”

“By seeing the suffering of the children, wounds of the women, amputations … by seeing that all of this is preventable, all of this suffering is manmade by the hands of the Israeli government which is so strongly by Mr. Barack Obama and that’s why I invited him.”

Earlier this week, Gilbert invited Obama in an open letter to visit Shifa’a Hospital to see the impact of the Israeli offensive on Gaza that has so far killed more than 640 Palestinians, mostly civilians. 

Saturday, July 26, 2014

12 Northern Sri Lankan Tamil Journalists impeded

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[photo:Free Media Movement protest in Jaffna for protection of Tamil journalists]
Sri Lanka in Brief26/07/2014
Northern Province Journalists were impeded by Sri Lankan Police, Army and intelligence joint operation while travelled to attend a workshop and a discussion on digital security. This workshop facilitated by some media organization from south and Jaffna Press Club. Jaffna Press Club is an independent collective of media personal and registered organization mandated for journalist welfare and empowerment in north.
Yesterday evening, eleven selected media personals from north hired a private vehicle and stared their journey to Colombo to attend that workshop. Those entire 11 journalists are active in reveling militarization, atrocities of Sri Lankan Sinhala Buddhist chauvinism.
Their Names are listed below
1. Venthan
2. G.sabthasangari
3. Pontasa
4. Paskaran
5. Kajeepan
6. Kamsan
7. Nitharsan
8. Raveenthirarasa
9. Thayabaran
10.Parameswaran
11.Newman
According to the journalist’s information first they were followed by unidentified people (Suspecting Military Intelligence) at Jaffna town,  when they departed from Jaffna. Later, while they were travelling to Colombo after passing Kilinochchi first stopped at Maankulam, police officers at the patrolling shouted that their vehicle failed to stop at Elephant Pass check post for screening, police officers tried to check the vehicle. Later, those journalist identified them as journalists and said that travelling for a workshop to colombo they(Police) released the vehicle and let them to travel. Notably, Screening and vehicle checking at Elephant Pass Check post was stopped many months before, further journalist said that their vehicle or vehicles travelled front and back of them also not been stopped according to their observation and knowledge.
While they pursued the journey they were stopped again at Oomanthai check post by two civil clothed (without uniform) police officers and three army personals in Uniform. This is an unusual practice, officers not in uniform never deployed for checking or questioning at Oomanthai before. They tend to check the vehicle, at the same time one journalist observed that a small parcel dropped under the driver seat by a soldier while they checked the vehicle. That journalist passed that information to other colleagues and driver as well. Before that driver and travelled journalists checked that white coloured parcel police had taken it out and accused that that was a cannabis parcel which is a banned illicit drug in Sri Lanka. More police support for arrest called from Oomantha police station.
When police try to arrest all those journalists and driver of the vehicle journalist said to police that if you arrest all us then we would be compelled to say that particular soldier only dropped that parcel under the seat of driver to make up the case and will request the court or relevant government to check the fingerprint and more.
After the heated arguments Officer in Charge of the Oomanthai police Station released those entire journalists and detained the driver for further inquiries. Now journalists are again on the way to attend the workshop by a public transport bus service. They concerned about their security and detained driver’s security. Journalists are urging right activists and media to voice over this new trend of impending by fabricating cases.
Further those victimized journalists said that “again Oomanthai Check post had proved that it can act as a brutal torture point with the name of screening check post”. They added that these form of intimidation conducted with the intention of pressuring the service providers and general public or activist to refrain from supporting to activist and activism.
Note: This is the third time that Tamil journalists are been threatened and impeded from attending journalism workshops and discussion. First Incident recorded at Mihinthala and second at Negombo in the recent history.
Those two incidents were involved with Sri Lankan Sinhala extremist Buddhist organization Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) and this one purely Sri Lanka security forces and police.
[This post was written by a Sri Lankan HRD]

Sri Lanka Muslims at the cross roads – 9


Image result for Izeth HussainBy Izeth Hussain-

The focus of this article will be on the external dimension of the Sri Lankan Muslim ethnic problem. Way back in the seventeenth century the great English poet John Donne declared in one of his sermons, "No man is an island". It has had much vogue as a quotation over several decades for more than one reason. It figures in the epigraph to Hemingway’s best-selling novel For Whom the Bell Tolls, which was followed by an enduringly popular film starring Gary Cooper and Ingrid Bergman. More importantly, the quotation could have been expected to have much resonance during a period when the perception was growing that the West was suffering from an excess of individualism. Even more importantly, the vogue of the quotation corresponded to a time when the greater part of the world was going through a process of modernization, which among other things entails a loosening of traditional social bonds. In that situation there was a deep need to affirm collective solidarity.
Military stop Tamil journalists travelling to press workshop, driver detained


26 July 2014
The Sri Lankan security forces stopped and interrogated a group of 11 Tamil journalists travelling from Jaffna by road to a press workshop in Colombo on Friday evening for over six hours, before releasing the journalists and detaining the driver for further questioning. 
Unidentified men, suspected to be military intelligence, followed the group as they travelled through Jaffna town in a hired private vehicle, sources in Jaffna told the Tamil Guardian.

Shortly after passing through Kilinochchi, the vehicle was stopped by police officers at Maankulam, who accused the occupants of failing to stop at the Elephant Pass check point.

Questioning the occupants, officers attempted to search the vehicle, only allowing the group to continue the journey after they had identified themselves as journalists and informed the police of the details of the workshop they were due to attend.

The check point and routine screening of vehicles at Elephant Pass stopped many months previously, locals told the Tamil Guardian.

Shortly after, two plain clothed police officers and three army personnel stopped the vehicle at the Oomanthai check point, interrogating the journalists and inspecting the vehicle once again, when one of the soldiers was seen placing a small bag under the driver seat of the vehicle, the journalists said.

As the group were due to depart again, police officers produced a parcel containing white powder from under the driver seat, and accused the driver and passenger of possessing cannabis. Calling more police officers from the local Oomanthai police station, officers detained all eleven journalists and driver.

The journalists were eventually released, following a dispute with the Officer in Charge where the journalists accused the soldiers of framing them, and warned they would reveal what they had witnessed. The driver was detained however, for further questioning. 

The journalists, Venthan, G. Sabthasangari, Pontasa, Paskaran, Kajeepan, Hamsan, Nitharsan, Raveenthirarasa, Thayabaran, Parameswaran and Newman, known for their coverage of militarisation in the North-East and crimes by security forces, were travelling to a workshop arranged by a Colombo based media organisation together with a network of journalists based in Jaffna, the Jaffna Press Club (JPC), on digital security.
"Again the Oomanthai check post has proved that it can act as a brutal torture point, with the name of 'screening check post',” a journalist said, speaking anonymously for fear of reprisal, and expressing concern at for the safety of the detained driver and the increasing trend of military personnel incriminating activists and media workers through setups.

Last month, a workshop in Colombo for Tamil journalists from the North-East was disruptedafter a mob of Sinhala protesters, including members of the Buddhist monk group, Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) and military personnel, gathered outside the venue, demanding that the building be evacuated immediately.

Condemning the incident, the workshop organiser, Transparency International, said the “journalists were labelled as LTTE agents because they are Tamils and since they work in the Tamil language”.

“This is the kind of power that some organizations have to influence the civil administration. These journalists went back home after sleepless nights due to the hardships they faced. It has since come to light that people from the Military were among protesters,” TI added in a statement.

Earlier this year, the Jaffna based journalist, Sivagnanam Selvatheepan, was forced to flee the country, after he was attacked with iron bars, following death threats. 

Let’s stand together; Death threats will not deter us –FMM

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[Photo left to right: A. Nixon (SLTMA) Sunil Jayasekara, Sampath Samarakoon, Delesha Abeysundara (FMM) at the press conference, 26.07.2014]
Sri Lanka in BriefBy Sunil Jayasekara -26/07/2014
We, the Free Media Movement (FMM) and  Sri Lanka Tamil Media Alliance (SLMTA)  are here to day to inform you about the harassments faced by out fellow Tamil media journalists yesterday and today (26 July).  Sri Lanka Journalists Association, the Muslim Media Forum, Sri Lanka section of the SAFMA are unable to present here today but they all have endorsed this press conference.
Before going to the main topic I would like to inform you about another threatening development. It was only two hours before We, the FMM informed media institutions about this press conference. One hour after we informed the media I received a  call form caller ID hidden phone and asked  my name. I introduced myself. Then in a threatening and clear voice I was told that if FMM go ahead with this press conference they will not allow me to live. The voice said clearly  that I will be killed.
Sri Lanka human rights activists and independent journalists have been living with these kinds of threats for long years now. We know the situation is dangerous and the gravity of these threats. We are holding this press conference today knowing very well this situation.
I was born in this country and will die in this country. We are ready to face the challenge.
Last night around 1.30 am 16 Tamil medium journalists form Jaffna were on there way to Colombo to attend a training workshop. They were checked by a group in military uniforms on two occasions and on the second check point they were detained allegedly having Cannabis (Ganja) in their procession. Later they were released and allowed to proceed to Colombo.
We have come to know that a person called Sogha behind this incident. According to our information this person goes with code name Sogha is either related to or a member of the security forces.
The workshop was to be held at the auditorium of the Sri Lanka Press Institute. Before the workshop commenced a group of around 40 people came in front of the SLPI and stated a protest against the workshop. They made unfounded allegations against the workshop and the participating journalists.
This is a continuation of suppression of media freedom in Sri Lanka and we all should stand together in condemning these dastardly acts.  This is the third time in recent times Tamil journalists were prevented by disruptive elements together the  security forces, attending training workshops in the South of Sri Lanka.
Training is a necessary in order to practice good journalism. Then why Tamil Journalists in Sri Lanka is prevented in obtaining more skills in their profession? Who is behind this insidious scheme?  We want the government to find out answers. If not naturally it is the government will be held responsible.  This is the first message we like to deliver today.
Secondly this is an another instance, which shows that post war Sri Lanka has failed to usher promised peace and democracy. Today we even do not have the rights we enjoyed during the war.
If we do not stand together and oppose these violations of peoples rights we too will beheld responsible for this degeneration.  Even the Information Department which is duty bound to protect our rights have become a puppet of the Ministry of Defence.  It keeps a complete salience in the face of harassments and intimidations faced by media and journalists today.
We like to tell the government and security forces not to violate our rights as journalists. Security forces have their own duties so please leave us alone to carry out our profession.
We like to reiterate that we are not naïve and know very well that threading situation we face today. The Free Media Movement will face the challenge together with the other press freedom organizations in the country.
(This article is based on the views expressed by Sunil Jayaekara at the press conference held at the SLPI on 26th July 2014)

வட இலங்கையில் பெரும் அழிவுகள்: நேரில் பார்த்தவர்கள் அதிர்ச்சி


BBCகடைசியாக பிரசுரிக்கப்பட்டது: 24 ஜூலை, 2014 
இலங்கையின் வடக்கே யாழ்ப்பாணம் வலிகாமம் வடக்கு பிரதேசத்தில் இராணுவத்தின் அதியுயர் பாதுகாப்பு வலயமாக உள்ள பல கிராமங்களில் பொதுமக்களின் வீடுகள், ஆலயங்கள், பாடசாலைகள், பொதுக் கட்டிடங்கள் என்பன எதுவுமே இல்லாமல் வெட்டவெளியாக இருப்பதாக அங்கு சென்று திரும்பியவர்கள் கூறுகிறார்கள்.

மயிலிட்டி வீரமாணிக்கந்தேவன்துறையில் அமைந்துள்ள முருகன் ஆலயம் மற்றும் கண்ணகை அம்மன் ஆலயங்களில் அந்தப் பகுதி மக்கள் வழிபாடு செய்வதற்காக இராணுவம் அனுமதி வழங்கியிருந்தது.
இதனையடுத்து, மயிலிட்டி பிரதேசத்தைச் சேர்ந்த நூற்றுக்கணக்கான மக்களை இராணுவத்தினர் அங்கு அழைத்துச் சென்றிருந்தனர்.

'காணவில்லை'

நொறுங்கி விழும் நிலையில் ஒரு ஆலயத் தேர்
இவ்வாறு மயிலிட்டி பகுதிக்குச் சென்று திரும்பியுள்ள வலிகாமம் வடக்கு மீள்குடியேற்ற, புனர்வாழ்வு சங்கத் தலைவர் அருணாசலம் குணபாலசிங்கம் அந்தப் பகுதிகளில் முன்னர் இருந்த பல ஆலயங்களையும், பாடசாலைகளையும் காணவில்லை என கூறுகின்றார்.
அங்கு மயிலிட்டி எது பலாலி எது என்று அடையாளம் காண முடியாத வகையில் அந்தப் பிரதேசம் முழுவதுமே சிதைந்து உருமாறிப் போயிருப்பதாக அவர் பிபிசி தமிழோசையிடம் விபரித்தார்.
கடற்கரையோராமாகவும் அழிவுகள்
அந்தப் பிரதேசம் தற்போது இருக்கின்ற நிலையில் அங்கு மீள்குடியேற்றம் சாத்தியமாகுமா என சந்தேகம் எழுப்பியிருப்பதாகக் குறிப்பிட்ட அவர், எப்படியாவது தமது சொந்தக் காணிகளை மீட்டு.
அங்கு மீள்குடியேற வேண்டும் என்ற மன உறுதி அங்கு சென்று திரும்பிய மக்கள் மனங்களில் தோன்றியிருப்பதாகவும் அவர் கூறுகின்றார்.

SL HR commissioner lies re India and UNHRC

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Sri Lanka in Brief 
un-probe

26/07/2014 
Contrary to media reports, the UN investigation panel inquiring into human rights accusations against Sri Lanka has not applied for visa from India to visit that country, an UNHRC official has told BBC Sandeshaya. The claim is based on a remark made by Sri Lanka Human Rights Commission’s commissioner Prathibha Mahanamahewa.
The UNHRC official said the panel has not applied for visa from India so far.
A spokeman at the the UNHRC office in New Delhi too, confirmed this to BBC Tamil Service.
In a letter to Indian prime minister Narendra Modi, Tamil Nadu chief minister Jayalalitha Jayaram has strongly objected to the reported Indian decision not to grant visa for the panel.
TN opposition leader M. Karunanidhi too, has expressed similar sentiments.
Sri Lanka has already declared that it would not allow the panel appointed by UNHRC chief Navi Pillai to enter the island.
( Orginal Caption: No Indian visa sought by investigation panel  ) Photo: Aljaeera

All in a week: BJP at BMICH, a barber shop Cabinet, Basil’s move on the SLFP, and new rainbow alliance to abolish presidency


Rajan Philips-July 26, 2014
Image result for Rajan PhilipsThe tittle should suggest what an agenda packed political week in Colombo now looks like. Sadly, however, the political agenda gets packed every week but political realities remain stubbornly the same. Hopefully, the figurative rainbow that was publicly aspired last Thursday at the Colombo Town Hall will turn out to be politically consequential unlike the real one that tantalizes and disappears. Going by the title’s order, India’s BJP stalwart Subramanian Swamy had a captive audience at the Colombo BMICH last week. Good for him. The Bandaranaike Centre for International Studies (BCIS) has found a newer Ram Sethu in Swamy. 

Emerging Alternative President Of Sri Lanka


Colombo Telegraph
By S. Sivathasan -July 26, 2014 
S. Sivathasan
S. Sivathasan
Rarely in history do we see leaders of various hues seeking to fuse together for a singular purpose. Rarer still is for a very wide political spectrum to secure a Presidency through a consensus candidate only to terminate it. It is a mode chosen advisedly to obtain a mandate from the polity and to have legality in addition. Strange as it would seem, this is a course to seek and to destroy. Stranger still the endorsement will be given. Such is the level of rejection to which the Executive Presidency has been trashed by the present incumbent. He had the mandate, the authority and the goodwill to make a heaven of hell.
The President is neither angel nor brute as the people know him. “And the unfortunate thing is that he who would act the angel acts the brute”. This truth became incontrovertible and it has made abrogation inevitable.
‘Force of 9’
Five political formations, a respected monk and a former Chief Justice, all with credentials for nationwide appeal are now together and in the forefront. Two more weighty entities, Muslim and Indian Tamil may be in the process of discarding their sold away spokesmen in a bid to select responsive leaders, burn the dross and to join the new national leadership. With such solidarity the ‘Force of 9’ will be too formidable to retract at a show of force. It will be adequately powerful to galvanize the masses and to break the government’s current monopoly of the street.
CBK RanilThe amalgam of 7 has taken about 8 months to form. The ‘Force of 9’ may take a month more. Nothing unnatural. From pollination to fruit, puny coffee takes 9 months. SWRD’s MEP took but a few months to assail and to dislodge the UNP which seemed to many to be immovable then. Sir John ridiculed the MEP as achcharu (pickle) but it gave him a good taste of resounding defeat. Just 3 months were enough for Modi to give a foretaste of his mettle in the 5 state elections. In May, 5 months of electioneering placed him in unprecedented power.
Modi and Executive Premiership                        Read More

A Roadmap for Abolishing the Executive Presidency

Untitledaaa
[Speech made by Dr. Jayampathy Wickramaratne, PC at the ‘Vidwath Kathikawa’ organized by the National Movement for Social Justice, 24 July 2014]
26/07/2014 
Sri Lanka in BriefWe have before us today, a wide spectrum of people from both civil and political society – religious leaders, politicians, academics, professionals, artists, trade unionists, civil society activists, media persons, students- agreed at least on one issue, namely that we need more democratic space.
The National Movement for Social Justice (NMSJ) headed by Ven. Maduluwawe Sobitha has put forward proposals as the minimum necessary for such democratic space- namely, the abolition of the executive presidency, a return to a parliamentary form of government and a national consensus on appointments to high positions including the judiciary and to the independent institutions.
Comprehensive constitutional reform is the ideal; there is no question about it. But constitutions are not made in vacuums; they are made in the theatre of hard politics, on very rough surfaces.
How practical is comprehensive constitutional reform today? I would like a new bill of rights, electoral reform, a political solution to the ethnic issue etc as was attempted in 1994-2000. But how practical is it? Is even a sane discourse possible today on some of these issues?
Take electoral reform. During 1994-2000 there was no agreement even within the People’s Alliance. Since then there have been many attempts, including two Parliamentary Select Committees, but parties have failed to agree.
During the period 1994-2000, Tamil, Muslim and Indian Tamil parties were against the abolition of the executive presidency. They said they would support abolition only as a part of a new constitution which provides for a political solution. That is one reason the process dragged on; the delay contributed ultimately to the abortion of the process.
But if we can agree on other issues as well in the short time available – but subject to the main issue, namely the abolition of the executive presidency- why not?
The abolition of the executive presidency is seemingly a single issue, but it has wide ramifications, especially in today’s authoritarian environment. The undermining of the rule of law, break-down of law and order, impunity, assaults on the independence of judiciary, interference with institutions such as the public service and police, lack of accountability, intolerance of dissent, pressure on the media, religious intolerance all have a relationship to the authoritarian environment. Corruption, wastage and extravagance contribute to the depletion of public coffers. The money so lost is being recovered from ordinary citizens by way of taxes, adding to the cost of living.
We believe that the democratic space that will open up with the abolition of the executive presidency will be conducive to a sane discourse on comprehensive constitutional reform.
The National Movement for Social Justice proposes a clear road map for the abolition of the executive presidency, a return to a parliamentary form of government and bringing back the Seventeenth Amendment with suitable changes, including those agreed to in the DEW Gunasekera Select Committee.
We propose that rather than giving a promise to bring a constitutional amendment to effect the above changes, the constitutional amendment should be published as a legal draft along with manifesto of the common candidate so that the country knows exactly what it is voting for or against.
The whole process should be completed within six months counted from date of the presidential election. The Bill should be presented to Parliament within one month and the exact date on which it will be presented should be given in the manifesto. For example, if the election is to be held on 03 January 2015, the manifesto will state that the Bill will be presented on 02 February. The draft Bill would also give the exact date on which it will be effective, namely 03 July 2015. The date on which the constitutional amendment will take effect would not be left to the discretion of the new President.
Such an amendment would require a 2/3 majority in Parliament and how such a majority could be obtained is a valid question. A significant number of MPs of the main party of the present Government as well as several coalition partners are certain to support a common candidate committed to the above amendment. Further, the common candidate winning means that those who opposed the common candidate go into opposition. Once in the opposition, they are most likely to support abolition; otherwise they will have to suffer under the executive presidency as the present opposition does. Also, they would have a better chance of coming back to power in a parliamentary form of government. Therefore, it is reasonable to expect them to vote for the amendment if brought before Parliament soon. But lapse of time will bring new factors into play and that is why we propose that the amendment should be brought within one month.
Going by past decisions of the Supreme Court, a referendum would not be necessary for the proposed amendment. However, if the Supreme Court so decides, a referendum would be held. Once a 2/3 majority is obtained, approval by the people would not be difficult.
Taking the above example, the executive presidency would stand abolished on 03 July 2015. The common candidate who has become President thus goes out of office, having fulfilled his duty. A new President without executive powers, like Mr. William Gopallawa under the 1972 Constitution, would be elected by Parliament. The new Prime Minister would be the person who commands the support of the majority of the members of Parliament.
We also propose that primacy should be given to the ‘candidacy’ and not a ‘candidate’. We should ‘deconstruct’ the notion of a candidate and instead build up the concept of a candidacy. This will make possible a wider ownership of the process and the active participation of the masses.
We need to build a rainbow alliance to succeed in our efforts towards creating democratic space. Today, we have taken an important step towards that. Let us strengthen and widen this alliance.

Gandhi In Asterix Land, A Story For These Times!


Colombo TelegraphBy Ravi Perera -July 26, 2014

Ravi Perera
Ravi Perera
“When Gandhi was studying law at the University College of London, there was
a professor, whose last name was Peters, who felt animosity for Gandhi, and
because Gandhi never lowered his head towards him, their “arguments” were
very common.
One day, Mr. Peters was having lunch at the dining room of the University
and Gandhi came along with his tray and sat next to the professor. The
professor, in his arrogance, said, “Mr. Gandhi: you do not understand… a
pig and a bird do not sit together to eat “, to which Gandhi replies, “You
do not worry professor, I’ll fly away “, and he went and sat at another
table.
Gandhi_and_MountbaHTMtten_drink_tea
Mr. Peters, green of rage, decides to take revenge on the next test, but
Gandhi responds brilliantly to all questions. Then, Mr. Peters asked him the
following question, “Mr. Gandhi, if you are walking down the street and find
a package, and within it there is a bag of wisdom and another bag with a lot of money; which one will you take?”
Without hesitating, Gandhi responded, “the one with the money, of course”.
Mr. Peters, smiling, said, “I, in your place, would have taken the wisdom,
don’t you think?”  “Each one take what one doesn’t have”, responded Gandhi indifferently.
Mr. Peters, already hysteric, writes on the exam sheet the word “idiot” and
gives it to Gandhi. Gandhi takes the exam sheet and sits down. A few minutes
later, Gandhi goes to the professor and says, “Mr. Peters, you signed the sheet, but you did not give me the grade.”                                       Read More
“Star of Palestine” Rajapaksha supports Israel Military action against Palestine - Azath Sally writes to GL

(Lanka-e-News- 26.July.2014, 5.30PM)

Prof. Hon. Gamini Lakshman Peiris,
Minister of External Affairs,
Ministry of External Affairs 
Republic Building, 
Colombo 1.

Dear Minister,
The Ambassador to Israel, former Chief of Staff Donald Perera, recently stated that “ Lanka is a staunch supporter of Israel’s fight against Palestinian terror”. His Excellency the President, who is also the President of the Sri Lanka-Palestine Friendship Society was awarded the “Star of Palestine” by H. E. President Mahmoud Abbas during his visit to Palestine, reflecting the strong bonds of friendship, solidarity and goodwill between Sri Lanka and the State of Palestine. Therefore, the statements made by the Ambassador which appear to support full scale military action against the people of Palestine are both contradictory and unacceptable. 

We unreservedly deplore the statements made by Mr. Perera and demand that the Foreign Ministry recall him immediately. We further demand that the Foreign Ministry immediately release a new statement to prevent any further damage to our deep ties of friendship with the people of Palestine.

Thanking You,

Yours Faithfully

M. Aazath S. Salley
Leader & Central Provincial Councilor
National Unity Alliance (NUA)Lanka backs Israel’s war -Ynet News Report

Wednesday, 21 July 2010 22:34 

Sri Lanka’s Ambassador to Israel and former Chief of Staff Donald Perera says Lanka is a staunch supporter of Israel’s fight against Palestinian terror. He also says the Palestinians should be offered direct negotiations, without preconditions.

"No one wants bloodshed. The other side (Palestinians) should be offered direct negotiations, without preconditions, to determine its level of seriousness. These talks should focus on trying to reach a compromise that would allow both sides to sign an agreement," he said in and interview with Yedioth Ahronoth.

"In case the other side shows it is not interested in a compromise, (Israel) must move on to the military phase with full force. (The government) will have to explain to the citizens that (Israel) is headed for a long and difficult struggle that will exact a heavy price, but at the end of this struggle the country’s situation will be much better," says the ambassador. 

"Once you have the public’s support, you should fight relentlessly until all of the terror hubs are destroyed. There is no going back." 

"For years Israel has aided our war on terror through the exchange of information and the sale of military technology and equipment," says Perera. 

"Our air force fleet includes 17 Kfir warplanes, and we also have Dabur patrol boats. Our pilots were trained in Israel, and we have received billions of dollars in aid over the past few years. This is why I asked to be assigned to Israel – a country I consider a partner in the war against terror. Many Sri Lankans admire Israel," says Perera, a native of the capital Colombo.

Addressing the deadly May 31 commando raid on a Gaza-bound Turkish ship, Perera says, “As a military man I can understand that Israel had to protect itself. Due to Sri Lanka’s vast experience in fighting terror, I can say that it will always support countries that also oppose (terror).” 

Despite its warm relations with Israel, Sri Lanka has also managed to maintain close ties with the Jewish state’s biggest threat – Iran. “Sri Lanka is a developing nation in need of assistance. Iran helps us in the civilian realm,” he says. “As to the sanctions imposed on (Tehran), these things should be discussed in the different forums. The Sri Lankan government is in favor of imposing military – not civilian – sanctions.” 

(Ynetnews)