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

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

The Pacification That Never Ends


| by Ron Jacobs
( August 12, 2014, Virginia, Sri Lanka Guardian) The sense of déjà vu in Iraq is not imaginary. With US bombers attacking positions held by Sunni militants and a client Iraqi government apparently unable to fight on its own, the detritus of the US invasion and occupation of Iraq is creating what could end up being the third phase of direct US involvement in at the bloody sinkhole it did plenty to create. 

The air strikes and special operations undertaken by the US have a greater likelihood of dragging the US further into this war than they do of furthering a long term solution. The Islamic State (IS) fighters are the progeny of Washington’s bloody mischief in the region. They are even using weapons provided by the CIA to rebel forces in Syria, of which IS is but one element. Like the Taliban in 2003, IS could very likely gain strength once US forces engage its fighters.
Although the differences in strength seem at first glance too great for such a scenario to occur, a friend asked me in an email: “If the Americans bomb “IS” in Iraq could a historical similarity with the US bombing of Cambodia which helped lead to the Khmer Rouge triumph be made?” While this is certainly a possibility, the Taliban comparison is more accurate. After all, the Taliban are a well-armed minority inside Afghanistan and are often the lead fighters in attacks on occupation forces and other Afghans, but they are not necessarily a popular force in even the sense that the Khmer Rouge were. Similarly, IS seems to be relatively small in numbers, funded and armed by outside forces including elements in Saudi Arabia and other Sunni regimes, very socially reactionary, and is the lead force in the resistance to Baghdad and the US-funded regime there. The Taliban was also funded by elements inside Saudi Arabia’s royalty and by Pakistan’s intelligence apparatus.

Another acquaintance suggested that the goings-on with IS are actually part of a proxy war between the Saudis and Iran and are an over-reaction by the Saudis to the nuclear talks between U.S. and Iran. When they financed IS, the forces in the Arab world and the West that did so thought Assad would lose his battle in Syria. However, when that didn’t happen, it was too late. IS had begun to consolidate its power, if only through sheer ruthlessness. ISIS is not fascist, but some of its tactics certainly bring to mind fascist soldiers. Then again, the same can be said regarding US tactics in its wars and Israel’s in its.

Patrick Cockburn, one of the more honest journalists reporting from the Middle East, addresses these and a multitude of other questions in his soon-to-be-released book, The Jihadists Return: ISIS and the New Sunni Uprising. Looking at the re-emergence of the phenomenon of Sunni fundamentalist militancy Cockburn emphasizes those who fund and support it (various royals in Saudi Arabia, Pakistani intelligence services and some Qatari royals), their religion (Wahhabism) and its socially reactionary theology, and the refusal of Washington to go after these people. Writing plainly, Cockburn says the US went after the wrong countries when responding to the events of 911. Instead of attacking Afghanistan and allowing numerous Bin Laden family members and associates to leave the US after those attacks, the US should have taken a closer look at the connections of those associates and pursued them for their criminal activities related to 9-11. Nowadays, the extremists of IS are now targeting Saudi royals on their websites and videos because those same royals are now attempting to distance themselves from the very groups their money helped create. Apparently, writes Cockburn, the actions of IS are too extreme even for their previous supporters.

The imperial desires of the US to remain involved in the Middle East are a consistent part of the context IS and similar extremists exist in. The tendency of the US to label the extremist groups it wishes to help as moderate is also a contributing factor to IS current success. Cockburn writes that by arming these “moderate” groups Washington has created a means for IS to get some of those weapons through the alliances it forms with those groups, either by buying them from corrupt members or through outright theft. One would think that after a very similar scenario played itself out in Afghanistan under Carter and Reagan—a scenario which resulted in the rise of the Taliban—that Washington would have learned. After all, the reactionary, misogynistic and sectarian mujahedin funded by Carter and Reagan and heralded as freedom fighters by were essentially no different than those called the Taliban in their philosophy and intolerance. Yet, because they opposed the Soviet Union, they became Washington’s allies. In a tale oft-told, Washington conspired with Riyadh and Pakistan’s ISI to create Al-Qaeda, with arms coming from Washington, military training from Pakistan and extremist ideology from Saudi Arabia. The rest is history. Other than Washington and Riyadh’s current opponent being Iran instead of the Soviet Union, there is a similarity that runs through the histories of the Afghan mujahedin, the Taliban, Al-Qaida and IS. Both groups serve(d) as soldiers in a proxy war against Washington and Riyadh’s competition for supremacy in the countries affected.

The Jihadis Return is an important book. Albeit a bit too brief to cover the ever-changing situation in Iraq and Syria, it does provide a fairly comprehensive look at the non-state forces in the region, who they are backed by, the motives of those backers and the sectarian desires of those Cockburn calls jihadis. The picture that arises from this text is one whose primary characteristic is bloody and uncertain. As Cockburn makes clear, it is also a picture originally drawn by Washington with its support of the current government in Baghdad and now being redrawn by individuals and groups who feel they were left out of the picture. Their perception holds some truth; Washington’s client regime in Baghdad is seen as a Shia regime, in large part because its leaders have not only ignored Sunni demands for funds and fair treatment, but because it has attacked peaceful protests by Sunnis, locking up the participants and killing dozens.

As the US bombs Iraq more than twenty years after it first did so, one wonders what the next permutation in the century long attempt by the West to pacify Iraq will look like. If the past twenty years serve any predictive function, the future will only get uglier.

The Jihadis Return by Patrick Cockburn is available exclusively from OR Books.
Ron Jacobs is the author of the just released novel All the Sinners, Saints. He can be reached at: ronj1955@gmail.com.

Gaza ceasefire talks 'difficult' but truce holds

BY NIDAL AL-MUGHRABI AND STEPHEN KALIN-Tue Aug 12, 2014 
Reuters(Reuters) - Talks to end a month-long war between Israel and Gaza militants are "difficult", Palestinian delegates said on Tuesday, while an Israeli official said no progress had been made so far.
As a 72-hour ceasefire held for a second day, Palestinian negotiators began talks with Egyptian intelligence after a meeting on Monday that lasted nine hours. The Israeli delegation returned to Cairo on Tuesday.
Hamas and its allies are seeking an end to an Israeli and Egyptian blockade of the Gaza Strip.
"We are facing difficult negotiations," Hamas' leader in Cairo, Moussa Abu Marzouk, said on Twitter.
Egyptian state news agency Mena quoted Khaled al Batch, a leader of Hamas ally Islamic Jihad, as saying the present round of talks was "the most serious, intensive and difficult."
"The gaps between the sides are big and there is no progress in the negotiations," said an Israeli official who declined to be named. There was no immediate comment from Hamas, the Islamist group that dominates Gaza.
A Palestinian official with knowledge of the Cairo talks told Reuters, on condition of anonymity: "So far we can't say a breakthrough has been achieved ... Twenty-four hours and we shall see whether we have an agreement."
Hamas also wants the opening of a seaport for Gaza, a project Israel says should be dealt with only in any future talks on a permanent peace agreement with the Palestinians.
Israel has resisted lifting the economically stifling blockade on Gaza and suspects Hamas will restock with weapons from abroad if access to the coastal territory is eased. Neighboring Egypt also sees Hamas as a security threat.
Israel pulled ground forces out of Gaza last week after it said the army had completed its main mission of destroying more than 30 tunnels dug by militants for cross-border attacks. It now wants guarantees Hamas will not use any reconstruction supplies sent into the enclave to rebuild those tunnels.
The Palestinian official said the Palestinian delegation had agreed that reconstruction in Gaza should be carried out by the unity government of technocrats set up in June by Hamas and the more secular Fatah party of Western-backed Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas, who is based in the West Bank.
Israeli representatives are not meeting face-to-face with the Palestinian delegation because it includes Hamas, which Israel regards as a terrorist organization. Hamas for its part is sworn to Israel's destruction.
WAR CRIMES INVESTIGATION
In Gaza, many families have returned to areas they had been forced to leave by the Israeli army, but some found their homes had been shelled or bombed. Some people pitched tents, while others spent the night in their homes if they could.
Children looked for toys in the rubble. One boy was happy to find his bicycle, pushing it along even though the tires had been punctured.
"It is not safe yet but we miss our homes, we miss our neighborhood, so we come to sit with friends and chat about our fate," said Abu Khaled Hassan, 50.
Israeli naval forces fired warning shots at a Palestinian fishing boat which broke the naval blockade on Tuesday, the military said, and Gaza officials said no one was hurt. The incident did not appear to threaten the truce.
Gaza hospital officials say 1,938 Palestinians, most of them civilians, have been killed since the July 8 launch of Israel's military campaign to quell rocket fire from the enclave.
Israel has lost 64 soldiers and three civilians, while the heavy losses among civilians and the destruction of thousands of homes in Gaza, where 1.8 million Palestinians are squeezed into a narrow enclave, have drawn international condemnation.
According to the United Nations, at least 425,000 displaced people in the Gaza Strip are in emergency shelters or staying with host families. Nearly 12,000 homes have been destroyed or severely damaged by Israeli air strikes and heavy shelling.
In Geneva, the United Nations named an international commission of inquiry into possible human rights violations and war crimes by both sides during the conflict.
The commission, which will be headed by William Schabas, a Canadian professor of international law, was hailed by Hamas and condemned by Israel.
"Hamas welcomes the decision to form an investigation committee into the war crimes committed by the occupation (Israel) against Gaza and it urges that it begin work as soon as possible," spokesman Sami Abu Zuhri said.
Israel's foreign ministry said the Human Rights Council was biased against Israel. "The Human Rights Council long ago turned into the 'terrorist rights council' and a kangaroo court, whose 'investigations' are pre-determined," Foreign Ministry spokesman Yigal Palmor said in a statement.
"If any more proof were needed, the appointment of the chairman of the panel, whose anti-Israel bias and opinions are known to all, proves beyond any doubt that Israel cannot expect justice from this body, whose report has already been written and all that is left is to decide who will sign off on it."
Schabas rejected those claims. "As far as I am concerned they're not written at all. That's the whole point of an investigation," he told Israel Radio.
"I am not anti Israeli. I've frequently lectured in Israel at universities. I am a member of the editorial board of the Israel Law Review. I wouldn't do those things if I was anti Israel," Schabas said.
"The more Israel participates in the inquiry by providing us with specific information about targeting and selection of targets, that will assist the commission in making more fair and accurate judgments about proportionality," he added.
(Writing by Maayan Lubell; Editing by Mark Heinrich and Giles Elgood)

Senior Iranian official

congratulates new Iraqi PM Haider al-Abadi

Support for prime minister effectively removes any hope Nouri al-Maliki may have of regaining power amid insurgency
Iran's Ali Shamkhani (above) congratulated Iraq for choosing Haider al-Abadi as the new prime minister. Photograph: Reuters
Iran's Ali Shamkhani congratulated Iraq for choosing Haider al-Abadi as the new prime minister
 in London and  in Sydney
Tuesday 12 August 2014 
A senior Iranian official with close links to the country's president and supreme leader has offered his congratulations to Iraq's prime minister-designate, suggesting Tehran has abandoned former ally Nouri al-Maliki amid the current Sunni militant insurgency.
Ali Shamkhani, the secretary of Iran's powerful Supreme National Security Council, was quoted by the official IRNA news agency congratulating the Iraqi people and their leaders for choosing Haider al-Abadi as their new prime minister.
Abadi, a veteran of Iraq's post-Saddam Hussein governments, was appointed on Monday after the country's president effectively deposed Maliki in an effort to break the political deadlock that has paralysed the government while jihadists sweep through the north of the country.
Shamkhani, a close ally of President Hassan Rouhani and a representative of Ayatollah Ali Khamenei on the council, said Iran supported "the legal process for choosing the new Iraqi prime minister".
The US secretary of state, John Kerry, said earlier on Tuesday that Washington was ready to "fully support a new and inclusive Iraqi government". While attending the annual Ausmin talks in Australia, Kerry urged Abadi to form a functional cabinet "as swiftly as possible" and said the US was ready to offer more military and economic help.
"We are prepared to consider additional political, economic and security options as Iraq's government starts to build a new government," he said in Sydney.
Hossein Rassam, a London-based Iranian analyst, said Shamkhani's statement reflect Tehran's hand in al-Abadi's appointment: "His appointment could not have materialised without Iran's cooperation. This is the result of a series of negotiations and bargaining for the past number of days, it's not something that has been decided overnight."
According to Rassam, Iran's top priority in Iraq has been to avoid a power vacuum in Baghdad and ensure the appointment of a prime minister sympathetic to Tehran. "With Abadi's appointment, Iran has achieved both," he said.
Ali Alizadeh, an Iranian political analyst, said Iran's welcome of the new government, and tacit support of the western governments, was "a correct pragmatic compromise".
"It shows Iran's priority is to contain Isis rather than wasting time to haggle over the amount of its influence on the Iraqi government," Alizadeh said.
Hayder al-Khoei, an Iraq expert at the London-based Chatham House thinktank, said it also signalled the death of Maliki's political life, but that he could still cause problems for the incoming government.
"We can't predict how he is going to react," he told the BBC. "He can still cause a lot of problems for the political process and his rivals. He is framing this as an illegal, unconstitutional attempt to unseat him. And he is being pushed into a corner."
Khoei said that even if Abadi succeeded in forming a unity government, Iraq still faced a grim and fragmented future.
"Iraq as a nation state, as we have known it, is not going to return. The best-case scenario is a much more decentralised country. The worst-case scenario will be de facto partition, more civil war, more bloodshed and ethnic cleansing on a much wider scale."
Kerry made it clear that US offers of military assistance to an Abadi government did not mean a return of US troops.
"There will be no reintroduction of American combat forces into Iraq," he said. "Nobody, I think, is looking forwards to a return to the road that we've travelled.
"What we're really looking for here is a way to support Iraq, support their forces with either training or equipment or assistance of one kind or another, that can help them to stand on their own two feet and defend their nation."
The international community has repeatedly put pressure on Maliki to step down since the start of the jihadist insurrection in June that saw Mosul, Tikrit and much of western Iraq fall to Isis, and Kirkuk fall to the Kurds.
The Iraqi army abandoned its posts in the north in one of the more spectacular routs in modern military history. The retreating forces left behind US-made military equipment which Isis used to launch another assault this month.
A week of devastating gains resulted in the jihadists taking the country's largest dam while attacks on Christian, Yazidi, Turkmen and Shabak minorities around Mosul saw the number of Iraqis displaced this year rise to more than 1 million.
US air strikes, which began last week, have reinvigorated Iraqi Kurdish forces battling the Islamic State. On Sunday, the Kurdish peshmerga fighters retook two towns from the Sunni militants in what was one of their first victories after weeks of retreat. But in the eastern Diyala province, Kurdish forces were driven out on Monday from the town of Jalula after fierce fighting with the militants.
US and British military jets have begun air drops of humanitarian aid to displaced Iraqis, including Yazidi refugees besieged by Isis on Mount Sinjar in northern Iraq.

America's rescue mission in Iraq is going to be messier, longer, and more expensive than the White House wants to admit.

During his recent hour-long interview with the New York Times's Thomas Friedman, President Barack Obama mentioned something in passing when he described the need to be better prepared for post-conflict rebuilding and reconstruction before authorizing an intervention: "Our participation in the coalition that overthrew Qaddafi in Libya. I absolutely believed that it was the right thing to do." Note the phrase I've italicized above -- it's an unnoticed but entirely remarkable acknowledgment from the commander-in-chief, because it is directly at odds with what he told the American people prior to, and just after, the start of the Libya intervention in 2011.
America's Rescue Mission in Iraq is Going to Be Messier, Longer, And More Expensive Than the White House Wa... by Thavam
Iraq: piles of aid lie idle as Yazidis starve and crews battle militants 
Tuesday 12 Aug 2014
Channel 4 NewsI am in northern Iraq, which has become a magnet and haven for many different kinds of refugees (Iraqi Christians, Kurds, Turkmen, Muslim Arabs) – let alone those who fled here from Syria‘s civil war in the hope that Iraq was a safer bet.
Most notoriously right now, untold numbers of Yazidis marooned for up to 10 days in the deadliest natural sanctuary imaginable: a bleak range of mountains south of here, a barren wasteland scorching in thirty to forty degree heat.
Yesterday I reported on the harrowing scenes we witnessed when an Iraqi military helicopter rescued as many Yazidis as it could carry.
Only four helicopters are available for this work, which is dangerous on two counts: firstly, the aircraft come under attack from Islamic State militants, as happened to us yesterday; and secondly, helicopters risk being mobbed by Yazidis fighting one another to climb aboard.
So far today I have only seen one Iraqi helicopter take off; the others were deployed on bombing missions against IS jihadists. Instead of being loaded with water, biscuits and dehydration salts, they were armed with rockets.
From @jrug in : only 1 Iraqi military helicopter reached Mt Sinjar this morn.The rest deployed on bombing missions against IS militants
The Kurd nominally in charge of coordinating this mission is beside himself with anguish. The helicopters don’t belong to him or to Kurdistan but to the government in Baghdad, which decides what the priorities are; either killing jihadists currently occupying large swathes of the country – or rescuing a little known Yazidi minority in Kurdistan, a region which wants to break away from Iraq and become its own country.
And so it is that I watch large piles of bottled water, and carrier bags full of bread and bananas, sitting idle on the tarmac of a military base, waiting for the brave Iraqi air crews to return from their bombing missions and carry the aid up the mountain instead.
View image on Twitter
From @jrug in Iraq - water destined for refugees on Mt Sinjar. It can't get there now as no helicopters to take it.
There could be a fairly rapid solution to this humanitarian disaster: a helicopter airlift, with the aircraft provided by the Americans and possibly the French, who I am told have been showing signs of interest.
But the mantra of the Obama White House is that there are no American military solutions to Iraq’s problems. The question, I suppose, is when do you make exceptions to that guiding principle. If you were a Yazidi trapped on Mount Sinjar, you would answer “right now”.
Follow @jrug on Twitter (his signal is unreliable in Iraq and some tweets are currently being posted through @channel4news)
- See more at: http://blogs.channel4.com/jonathan-rugman-on-foreign-affairs/iraq-piles-aid-lie-idle-yazidis-starve-brave-crews-battle-militants/#sthash.MwczBgyI.dpuf

Russian aid convoy 'will not be admitted into Ukraine'

Ukrainian spokesman says convoy not certified by Red Cross, raising fears that Russia could use initiative to send in troops
Russian aid convoy heading to eastern Ukraine, one day after agreement was reached on an international humanitarian relief mission. Photograph: AP
Russian aid convoy heading to eastern UkraineThe Guardian homeTuesday 12 August 2014 
A Ukrainian security spokesman has said that a humanitarian convoy Russia has dispatched to eastern Ukraine will not be admitted into the country.
Andriy Lysenko, a spokesman for Ukraine's national security and defence council, said the convoy had not been certified by theInternational Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).
A convoy of 280 Russian trucks headed for Ukraine early on Tuesday, a day after agreement was reached on an international humanitarian relief mission.
But the ICRC, which was due to coordinate the operation, said it had no information on what the trucks were carrying or where they were going. That has raised fears in Ukraine and the west, where leaders have voiced concerns that Russia could use the initiative as a pretext for sending troops into separatist-held territory.
An aide to the Ukrainian president, Petro Poroshenko, said Kiev would require the ICRC to reload the aid onto other transport vehicles at the border if it was to enter. "We will not allow any escort by the emergencies ministry of Russia or by the military. Everything will be under the control of the Ukrainian side," Valery Chaly said.
Earlier on Tuesday, the Itar-Tass news agency said the convoy has departed from near Moscow, meaning it would take it a couple of days to arrive in east Ukraine, about 620 miles (1,000km) to the south-west. "It has all been agreed with Ukraine," Business FM radio quoted President Vladimir Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, as saying.
Thousands of people are said to be short of water, electricity and medical aid because of the fighting. The US president, Barack Obama, has said any Russian intervention without Kiev's consent would be unacceptable and violate international law.
The European commission president, José Manuel Barroso, warned on Monday "against any unilateral military actions in Ukraine, under any pretext, including humanitarian".
The Russian state television channel Rossiya 24 showed several white trucks setting off from the town of Alabino near Moscow. A correspondent at the scene said the convoy should arrive at the Ukrainian border in two to three days, where it would meet ICRC representatives.
Russia has said it would deliver the aid with the ICRC.
The ICRC said on Monday that it had submitted a document to Russian and Ukrainian officials, but that it needed agreement from all parties and security guarantees to carry out the operation, as it does not use armed escorts.
"The practical details of this operation need to be clarified before this initiative can move forward," said Laurent Corbaz, ICRC's head of operations for Europe and central Asia.
According to UN agencies, more than 1,100 people have been killed including government forces, rebels and civilians in the four months since the separatists seized territory in the east and Kiev launched its crackdown.

Japan and China compete for Latin America clout

Cuba's President Raul Castro, left, and China's President Xi Jinping at a welcoming ceremony at Revolution Palace in Havana, Cuba last month. Pic: AP.
Abe plays catch-up to Xi’s bundle of handouts, writes Asia Sentinel’s Paul Shortell
By  Aug 12, 2014 
Asian CorrespondentChinese President Xi Jinping’s fruitful visit to South America, which included a proposed US$20 billion fund to finance infrastructure projects in Latin America and the Caribbean and a cornucopia of other benefits, has thoroughly overshadowed a similar trip to Latin America by Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe.
Abe hailed his own five country visit as “the opening of a new chapter” in his country’s relations with the region. But further progress will be hampered by competing foreign policy priorities in Tokyo and China’s growing influence in the Western Hemisphere. The Abe mission – the first by a Japanese head of state in a decade – comes on the heels of the mid-July trip by Xi, the sixth journey since 2004 to the region by a Chinese head of state.
Beijing’s commitments to Latin America dwarf those announced by Abe. In addition to the infrastructure bank, Xi also announced plans to increase China’s stock of investment in Latin America to US$250 billion over the next decade. His country’s trade with the region was valued at more than US$255 billion in 2012, with China accounting for the greatest share of commerce in Chile, Peru and Brazil.
Nonetheless, while in Latin America, Abe looked to forge new economic ties and strengthen Tokyo’s geopolitical position. Accompanied by dozens of Japanese business leaders on his circuit of the region, the prime minister pledged to accelerate trade negotiations and signed off on approximately US$700 million of financing for Brazil. Greater access to the region’s growing markets and plentiful natural resources would boost exports, create new opportunities for Japanese firms, and bolster the country’s energy security in the wake of the Fukushima disaster.
Abe has also stepped up efforts to garner international support as antagonism increases between Tokyo and Beijing. Defending controversial reforms of Japan’s pacifist constitution, he deplored attempts to “unilaterally change the status quo” in East Asia and emphasized the need to “respect rule of law of the seas” while meeting with presidents of several Caribbean Community countries in Trinidad and Tobago.

Ashraf Ghani rejects sharing power if he wins Afghan presidential recount

 August 12 at 9:58 AM 


Monday, August 11, 2014

அரசியல் தீர்வு : மஹிந்த கருத்துக்கு சம்பந்தர் பதிலடி

talks between tna and govt reach deadlockRadio


மஹிந்த ராஜபக்ஷவுடன் சம்பந்தர்
இலங்கையில் இனப்பிரச்சினைக்கு தீர்வு ஏற்படாமல் இருப்பதற்கு தமிழ்த் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பே காரணம் என்று ஜனாதிபதி மஹிந்த ராஜபக்ஷ கூறியுள்ளதை கூட்டமைப்பு மறுத்துள்ளது.
அரசியல் தீர்வு குறித்த பேச்சுவார்த்தைகளை அரசே முறித்துக் கொண்டது என்றும், கொடுத்த வாக்குறுதிகளைக் காப்பாற்ற அரசு எந்த நடவடிக்கையும் எடுக்கவில்லை என்றும் பிபிசி தமிழோசையிடம் கூறினார் கூட்டமைப்பின் தலைவர் இரா சம்பந்தர்.
"இனப்பிரச்சினைக்கு தீர்வு காண்பதில் கூட்டமைப்பினரே இழுத்தடிக்கின்றனர், தனது பொறுமைக்கும் ஒரு எல்லை உண்டு, அதனை தனது பலவீனம் என்று எவரும் கருதினால், பாரதூரமான விளைவுகள் ஏற்படும்" என்று ஜனாதிபதி அண்மையில் ஊடகவியலாளர்களை சந்தித்தபோது தெரிவித்தக் கருத்துக்கள், அரச சார்பு ஊடகம் ஒன்றில் வெளியாயின.
இதையடுத்தே சம்பந்தர் இக்கருத்துக்களை பிபிசி தமிழோசையிடம் தெரிவித்தார்.
அரசு இதயசுத்தியுடன் பேச்சுவார்த்தைகளை நடத்த முன்வந்து, நாட்டுக்கு எந்தவிதமான குந்தகமும் ஏற்படாமல், ஒன்றுபட்ட இலங்கைக்குள், நியாயமான, நிரந்தரமான, நடைமுறைபடுத்தக் கூடியத் தீர்வுகளை அது முன்வைத்தால் தமது தரப்பு அதை ஏற்றுக் கொள்ளும் எனவும் சம்பந்தர் கூறுகிறார்.
நாடாளுமன்றத் தேர்வுக் குழுவின் நோக்கம் குறித்து தாங்கள் நன்கு அறிந்துள்ளதாகவும், அது தொடர்பில், அரச தரப்பில் வெளியாகியுள்ள கருத்துக்களும் தங்களுக்கு ஏற்புடையதாக இருக்கவில்லை என்றும் அவர் மேலும் தெரிவித்தார்.
அவர் பிபிசி தமிழோசைக்கு வழங்கிய பேட்டியை இங்கே கேட்கலாம்.

GOVERNMENT ACTIONS NEED TO BE CONSISTENT LOCALLY AND INTERNATIONALLY - JEHAN PERERA

On Created  11 August 2014
The government has criticised sections of the diplomatic community for getting involved in events targeting a particular region and community which lead to volatile situations and urged the diplomatic community to be more conscious of local sensitivities when attending events of an emotive nature. This has followed the growing interest that some embassies have been demonstrating in ensuring that civil society space for dissent is not restricted by the government. When an event organized by a civil society group to give voice to the grievances of family members of those who had gone missing in the war was held in Colombo last week, it was broken up by outsiders. This led to several embassies issuing an unprecedented joint statement.

The embassies of France, Germany, Great Britain and Switzerland condemned the disruption of the meeting in which families of disappeared Tamils ​​were briefing Colombo-based diplomats and civil society activists. Issuing a joint statement, the embassies stated that "an organized group including monks" had disrupted the civil society meeting, on the theme "Sharing and listening session with families of the disappeared" organized by Families of the Disappeared in the Centre for Society and Religion . The statement said that the organized group made forced entry into the room where the discussions were taking place, shouting violently and "All those present felt that their security was under threat."

The joint statement urged the Sri Lankan government to ensure and respect freedom of assembly and expression in Sri Lanka and to ensure the safety of those who participated in the meeting. In addition, the US Embassy in Colombo also expressed concern over the incident while claiming that the initial reaction of the local police to this disruption appeared to be in "support of the mob's efforts to shut down the meeting." In the case of forcible disruption of events, especially by extremist Buddhist groups that are seen to be linked to the government, it has become the unfortunate practice of the Police to ensure that the event is abandoned and the parties dispersed, with both sides being summoned to the Police Station to lodge their respective complaints.

In fact the government took the statement by the foreign embassies so seriously that the External Affairs Minister Prof GL Peiris summoned all diplomatic missions to inform them about the limits of their mandate. The Ministry also issued a strong statement that "a certain section of the diplomatic corps appears to be involved in a manner lacking in objectivity, in events organized for a particular region and community." It is clear that what was being referred to was the North of the country and the Tamil community who were the main victims of the last phase of the war. The singling out of the Tamil minority and the North of the country would be in conformity with the government's domestic priority of affirming national pride and continuing to receive the political support of the ethnic majority in a time of elections.


INTERNATIONAL ROLE
The meeting that was broken up was convened by the Right to Life Human Rights Center and sought to give voice to the sentiments of t hose who had lost their loved ones over five years ago. While the larger Sri Lankan society may be willing to forget what happened during the war time and enjoy the fruits of peace, those who lost their loved ones can not so easily forget, especially when they are unsure as to the fate of their missing ones. The timing of the meeting was appropriate, as it coincides with the government's surprise appointment of three international advisors to guide the proceeding of the presidentially appointed commission on missing persons, which has recently also had its mandate expanded.

Unfortunately the meeting, which was attended by civil society activists, media and foreign diplomats could not proceed for long as it was disrupted by a group led by Buddhist monks. The intervening group from outside claimed that the meeting was to provide secret information to the international community and also that it was not providing information on those who went missing due to the activities of the LTTE. In their statements the embassies made the point that action of the Police in preventing the break-up of the meeting of the Families of the Disappeared was inadequate. They noted that all those present felt that their security was under threat.

It was not only the foreign embassies that registered their protest. The head of the Centre for Society and Religion Fr Rohan Silva also issued a statement. He said "The CSR, founded by the late Fr. Tissa Balasuriya, OMI, has earned the respect and recognition of all political parties and all religious denominations as an institution that promoted the values ​​of democracy and for years had stood for the defence of social justice, peace, equality for all citizens in every sphere of life. Even during some of the darkest moments of the Nation's history, the CSR remained an oasis where a modicum of sanity prevailed. It is indeed most unfortunate that these time tested values ​​of the CSR were transgressed and its hallowed precincts violated by a group that forced itself into the premises uninvited and instilling fear and intimidation among those participating in a meeting on purely humanitarian grounds. "


INTERNATIONAL ROLE
The CSR statement also made the relevant point that "We live in a world where humanitarian concerns transcend national boundaries, hence the presence of non-Sri Lankans should not be construed as external interference. "The government's domestic imperative of showing a strong hand to the ethnic majority population and obtaining their backing goes counter to another important government priority. The government's main foreign policy concern is accountability in regard to what happened during the war. The issue of war crimes is particularly serious because it gives the international community the power to punish according to international law. Unlike other issues of abuse of power, for which there are no international laws, where war crimes are concerned there are international laws. This explains why the government is investing heavily in opposing the ongoing UN investigation into the last phase of the war.

The media has reported that the government has recently been hiring lobbying agencies in Western countries. It has also employed the services of international experts to advise the Commission of Inquiry into missing persons. However, it is important to note that the international community is not only present in the capitals of countries. It is also present in Sri Lanka in the form of embassies and high commissions. The diplomats attached to them also represent their countries. In fact, as they are on the ground in the countries to which they have been sent, the government in the home country may take the views of their own diplomats more seriously than those of lobbyists and other international experts. It is therefore as necessary to win the support of the diplomats of foreign missions based in Colombo, as it is to woo foreign government officials in their capital cities.

It is possible that the initiatives that the Sri Lankan government is taking to gain international goodwill and support abroad is being severely undermined by what is happening within Sri Lanka itself. It would be a miscalculation to believe that it is possible to separate what is happening locally with the lobbying that is done internationally. There needs to be a consistency between the government's conduct of its affairs locally and what it says through its lobbyists internationally. Any sharp contradiction between the two would not be helpful to the government.

In this context it is to be welcomed that a second meeting by the same organization, the Right to Life Human Rights Centre at the same venue of the Centre for Society and Religion on the issue of torture by the Police took place without disruption, although the organizers received threats not to go ahead with the meeting. The foreign diplomats were there once again. It appears that the government did not wish to be at the receiving end of more such strictures, especially when there is an ongoing UN investigation into human rights failures during the war. On this occasion the Police were present and the mischief makers had been warned off. The role of the international community, it appears, has become more important. The international community, of which Sri Lanka is a member, has come to play at least a limited role in being a check and balance in favour of protecting democratic rights.