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

Thursday, September 4, 2014

Sri Lanka ranked 4th most suicide prone country in the world

Sri Lanka ranked 4th most suicide prone country in the world
logoSeptember 4, 2014  
A study conducted by the World Health Organization (WHO) has ranked Sri Lanka in the fourth position among 172 countries in terms of most suicide prone counties in the world.

The most suicide-prone countries were Guyana (44.2 per 100,000), followed by North and South Korea (38.5 and 28.9 respectively).

Next came Sri Lanka (28.8), Lithuania (28.2), Suriname (27.8), Mozambique (27.4), Nepal and Tanzania (24.9 each), Burundi (23.1), India (21.1) and South Sudan (19.8).

In their wake were Russia and Uganda (both with 19.5), Hungary (19.1), Japan (18.5) and Belarus (18.3).

WHO, which called suicide a major public health problem that must be confronted and stemmed, studied 172 countries to produce the report.

It said that in 2012 high-income countries had a slightly higher suicide rate—12.7 per 100,000 people, versus 11.2 in low- and middle-income nations.
But given the latter category’s far higher population, they accounted for three-quarters of the global total.

Southeast Asia—which in WHO-speak includes countries such as North Korea, India, Indonesia and Nepal—made up over a third of the annual.
Suicides in high-income countries, meanwhile, accounted for around a quarter of the global figure.

The most frequently-used methods globally are pesticide poisoning, hanging and firearms, but jumping from buildings is a common method in highly urbanised areas in Asia.

WHO cautioned that suicide figures are often sketchy, with less than half of those nations keeping clear tallies.

As a result, it said, it crunched a range of data to enable it to craft country-by-country estimates of the suicide rate.

The global rate was put at 11.4 per 100,000, with men almost twice as likely as women to take their own lives.

Confidence building important for Lanka reconciliation: UK

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Increasing trust between the Tamils and the civil administration in the war-scarred north is vital for achieving "long-term reconciliation", the British envoy here said today. 

John Rankin, the British High Commissioner made these comments during a visit to Puthukuduyrippu, a former LTTE nerve centre, to talk about the funded community policing programme. 

The programme, implemented in collaboration with The Foundation, focuses on building relations between local police personnel and the communities in which they serve. 

"I was pleased to speak to both the police personnel and the local communities involved in this programme. They spoke about the changes the community policing programme has brought to their villages; increased trust in the police; and the understanding of the role they can play to reduce crime. 

"Increasing confidence between the local community and the civil administration is an important part of long-term reconciliation," Rankin was quoted as saying by Colombo Gazette. 

Rankin further said that the project is aimed at increasing the numbers of Tamil police officers and women police officers in former conflict areas in order to ensure greater sensitivity towards minority communities. 

Since the conflict ended in 2009, Lankan police has enrolled hundreds of Tamil officers under this programme and deployed them in the former conflict zones, which are pre-dominantly Tamil speaking. 

The programme, initiated in 2012, works with 142 police stations across all 9 provinces, covering a third of police stations across the country.

War Is Over; Peace Is Yet To Come


| by Pearl Thevanayagam
Breathes there the man, with soul so dead,
Who never to himself hath said,
This is my own, my native land!
Whose heart hath ne’er within him burn’d,
As home his footsteps he hath turn’d,
From wandering on a foreign strand!
If such there breathe, go, mark him well;
For him no Minstrel raptures swell;
High though his titles, proud his name,
Boundless his wealth as wish can claim;
Despite those titles, power, and pelf,
The wretch, concentred all in self,
Living, shall forfeit fair renown,
And, doubly dying, shall go down
To the vile dust, from whence he sprung,
Unwept, unhonour’d, and unsung. - Sir Walter Scott
(September 03, 2014, Bradford UK, Sri Lanka Guardian)Tamils have been forced to flee their native land in indecent haste leaving behind their homes, possessions and loved ones due to intolerance of the majority Sinhalese who unleashed untold misery on them since independence.

Sri Lanka Dictates – New UN HCHR Must Work In Its Favour

Navi
By S. V. Kirubaharan -September 4, 2014
S. V. Kirubaharan
S. V. Kirubaharan
Colombo Telegraph
Currently, Sri Lanka is extremely frustrated about the UN investigation. Using 3rd grade tactics the usual slanders are being directed against ex-High Commissioner for Human Rights – HCHR, Ms Navanethem Pillay.
Sri Lanka should understand the fact that international law is not like the present judiciary in Sri Lanka. Whether the HCHR is Louis Arbour, Navanethem Pillay or Prince Zeid Ra’ad Zeid Al-Hussein, she or he will not work on the basis of their own ethnic identity. These human rights VVIPs look at every global situation through the lens of international law.
Louis Arbour was the first UN HCHR to bring Sri Lanka’s human rights violations to the attention of the international community.  For this reason, Sri Lanka slandered her. Then it was  Navanethem Pillay’s turn. Maybe later Prince Zeid Ra’ad Zeid Al-Hussein will face the same insults.
Sri Lankan officials are looking for venues where they can butter up the new HCHR. In fact they did the same with Navanethem Pillay. When she assumed her duties on 1st September 2008, Sri Lanka government representatives were the very first government team to meet her – within four days in office on 5th September 2008. They took photographs for their publicity. But her adherence to the standards of international law ensured that Navanethem Pillay never got caught to their buttering up. She never ignored the human rights violations, crimes against humanity and the genocide continuing in Sri Lanka.           Read More  

The Third Narrative; The Last Stages Of The War In Sri Lanka

Colombo Telegraph
By R.M.B Senanayake -September 4, 2014
R.M.B. Senanayake
R.M.B. Senanayake
On the 29th August the Marga Institute launched its book - Issuesof Truth and Accountability: Narrative III .The Last Stages of the War in Sri Lanka
It was reviewed by a panel of speakers some of whom were personally aware of some of the incidents or the underlying policies of the Government. Others had studied the book had studied them. Mr. Rajiva Wijesinha gave a critical view of the evolution of the policy dubbed the Second  Narrative which was the official stand of the Government and is contained in the report of the Ministry of Defense “Humanitarian Operation : Factual Analysis” .  The First Narrative reflected the thinking and views expressed or unpublished, of the UN Agencies, the Human Rights Organizations and other liberal thinkers in the West which constituted the Liberal perspective based on the UN Declarations and the Geneva Conventions. They are the Report of the Panel of Experts (POE) appointed by the UN Secretary General in 2011 and the Report by the International Crimes Evidence Project (ICEP) undertaken by the Public Interest Advocacy Center.  The book says both narratives were flawed. The Third Narrative says “each of the two investigating bodies was unable to gain full access to the evidence available to the other”. The witnesses who appeared before the UNSG’s Panel including the UN personnel, INGOs and others did not appear before the LLRC. The POE did not have access to the main actors as the Sri Lanka Government (GOSL) refused to allow in the POE. Hence the book says there is a need for a Third Narrative which seeks to take a more balanced view o the circumstances of the war and the alleged violations of the Humanitarian Law taking into account sources such as the reports of the University Teachers of Jaffna and secret diplomatic messages revealed by WikiLeaks.          Read More
MaRa’s power greed ! frantically seeks SC ruling for a third term - Hearing on 10 th in camera
(Lanka-e-News- 04.Aug.2014, 7.45AM) Medamulana Mahinda Rajapakse driven by his inordinate power mania had made frantic efforts to secure the opinion of the supreme court on whether he could go for a third term as the Executive resident of Sri Lanka (SL), according to reports reaching Lanka e news inside information division based on sources within the supreme court. In this connection the SC has received an official letter from the Presidential secretariat yesterday evening (3), though the SC has decided to keep this matter confidential.

The trial in this regard is to be taken up confidentially within the chamber of the chief justice in camera on the 10 th of this month. 

It is the practice from a legal standpoint to hear such matters of grave national importance openly and not secretly , and in the presence of lawyers . Despite this being the legal position and practice , it has been decided to hear this trial confidentially in much the same way as hatching a national conspiracy against the very people who elected him as the President.

A committee comprising chief (thief ) justice Mohan Peiris ,justice Eva Wanasundara and justice Priyantha Jayawardena who was recently appointed to the SC have been appointed to hear this proceedings.
It is worthy of note that these three judges are lickspittles and lackeys of the Rajapakses ,and additionally Priyantha Jayawardena is a very close bosom pal of Basil Rajapakse. Jayawardena’s sister is the present registrar of the SC .Since the cases for hearing had been fixed already until the 9 th , the next day , Wednesday the 10 th had been chosen for this confidential cum conspiratorial trial.

Basil Rajapakse had urged his pal Priyantha Jayawardena to give a verdict on this as early as possible. Priyantha had accordingly spoken to his sister and obtained the earliest date possible for the hearing. When Priyantha had inquired as to the reason for this (unholy) haste , Basil had replied , it has been decided that the Presidential election be held in December this year and not January next year.

Might we recall Lanka e news always first with the news and best with the views reported previously a legal consensus for the first time that Mahinda Rajapakse cannot seek a third term as President (because he had not gone for a people’s referendum with regard to the amendment ) .Former chief justice Sarath N. Silva too aired his legal opinion against this possibility while Wijedasa Rajapakse PC expressed an opinion on similar lines via the media that the Mahinda Rajapakse cannot legally seek a third term .

Operation Peeping-Tom

| by Tisaranee Gunasekara
“Oh! grandmother, what big ears you have!
The better to hear you with, my child.
But, grandmother, what big eyes you have!
The better to see you with, my dear….
Oh! but, grandmother, what a terrible big mouth you have!
The better to eat you with!”
Little Red-Cap (The Brothers Grimm)
( September 4, 2014, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Under cover of issuing electronic ID cards, the Rajapaksas are planning to place the entire nation under a giant microscope. Sinhala, Tamil, Muslim, Buddhist, Christian, Hindu, pro-UPFA, anti-UPFA, rich, poor, every Lankan will be treated as a potential criminal, to be fingerprinted and kept under close observation, all the time.
Operation Peeping Tom by Thavam

Anura seeks businessmen’s support to make Gota premier!

gota anuraNotorious businessman and senior DIG in charge of Colombo Anura Senanayake has undertaken a new task these days, say police headquarters sources.
His latest project is to see that defence ministry secretary Nandasena Gotabhaya Rajapaksa is brought into politics from Colombo district at the next general election and secure him the position of prime minister. For that, Senanayake is working day and night. He is saying publicly that he has been named the campaign manager of Gotabhaya.
The DIG’s office in Colombo Pettah has been used as the ‘premiership project’ of Gotabhaya Rajapaksa. Senanayake is using the conference hall at its fourth floor to hold meetings with businessmen. So, far five such meetings have taken place there, say police headquarters sources.
Jewellers of Chetty Street, dried fish traders, wholesalers, clothing sellers and other groups of Colombo businessmen have been invited to these meetings. Addressing them, Gotabhya has said that he would contest from Colombo at the next general election and that it was their obligation to give him the expenses for posters, cutouts, banners, newspaper and television advertisements and other requirements for his electioneering. The DIG has said that Colombo businessmen should be grateful to Gotabhaya who has done a unique service to Colombo city.
In order to lure businessmen into this project, the DIG has inquired from them as to whether they were facing any threats or there were problems with regard to claim their cash dues, and if so, to inform him about them. He has promised them to bring loan defaulters to them.
There is a big competition going on between the president’s brothers Basil and Gotabhaya to secure the premiership position in the next regime. The former is enjoying the support of ministry secretaries, while the latter is getting the backing of the business community.

Sri Lanka And China: Towards Innovation Driven Economies

Colombo Telegraph
By Asanga Abeyagoonasekera -September 4, 2014
Asanga Abeygoonasekera
Asanga Abeygoonasekera
September begins with summer Davos in Tianjin, China, themed, ‘Creating Value through Innovation’; and over 1,500 participants from 90 countries will be in attendance. The discussion will be on how innovation can generate more and better value for all stakeholders of our society. China has given top priority for innovation. Last year too, the theme for the same conference was on innovation. Recently, presiding over a meeting of the Central Politburo of the Communist Party of China, President Xi Jinping said the Chinese military must make great leaps in development and innovation so as to close the gap with its better-developed peers in the world. He urged the military to innovate in military strategies and management. This statement is a clear indication of China’s development of its military strength. Growth in innovation, research and development has become a top priority for the Chinese economy.
Last week, at the National IT conference, this author spoke on a similar topic: Sri Lanka’s journey towards an innovation driven economy. The topic was discussed along with talks on the bottlenecks, such as low budget allocation for research and development, plaguing the industry In Sri Lanka, a very nominal amount of annual expenditure – 0.5 per cent – is allocated for research and development purposes. There are many research institutes in the country without proper funding. While the country is moving towards a five hub development strategy, it is important to focus on improving the research and development sector.
According to Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa‘s policy statement, it has been envisaged to make the country a regional hub in five areas. This will transform Sri Lanka into a strategically important economic center. The five hubs are: knowledge hub, commercial hub, maritime hub, aviation hub and an energy hub. The idea is to use the geographically strategic position of the country as an advantage to achieve the five hub status. Sri Lanka’s post war economic growth rate is positive and the country is moving from a factor driven economy to an efficiency driven economy.                                                                      Read More  
Rawana Balaya protests in front of the Indonesian Embassy

Ravana 1Times OnlineSeptember 3, 2014
An organization known as the “Ravana Balaya” protested today, in front of the Indonesian embassy in Colombo against the Sunni Muslim extremist group who have threatened to destroy Boro Budur Buddhist temple Complex in Indonesia. 

The General secretary Ittakande Saddathissa thero said that the I.S.I.S Islamic terrorism group had threaten to destroy the temple which was built in the 14th century by a king named Selendu. Saddathissa thero. He added that they condemn the act of cowardly act of extremism.
 “If any Muslim extremist group attack the world heritage of which consists of 504 Buddha statues the extremist groups in Sri Lanka would have to face the consequences”, he said. The thero also said the Sri Lankan government must take action to close down slaughter houses, brothels and bars and pubs near Dalada Maligawa area. Related posts: - See more at: http://sundaytimes.lk/news/rawana-balaya-protests-front-indonesian-embassy.html#sthash.bQoniC3d.dpuf
Ravana 2ravana 3

Kumar Gunaratnam to Lanka on Sept. 12!

kumara gunarathnamKumar Gunaratnam, leader of the Frontline Socialist Party, is due to arrive in Sri Lanka on September 12, confirm reliable sources.
Kumar, who has obtained Australian citizenship, was abducted by the Rajapaksa government’s military immediately before the formation of the FSP. Owing to his Australian citizenship, Lanka was forced, due to Australian influence, to deport him to Australia,
According to reliable sources in Australia, Kumar is paying the visit in order to prepare the party for the presidential election and to field a candidate at the election.
After he was deported from Lanka, defence ministry secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa told the media that Kumar would not be allowed to enter the country under the assumed name Noel Mudalige, Kumar Gunaratnam or any other name.
Under such circumstances, political circles are curious as to why he is paying a visit to Lanka. Commenting on this, a former politburo member of a leftist party said Kumar’s visit might be due to an agreement reached between the FSP and the government.
However, he noted Kumar was having very strong political links, both locally and internationally, and that his return to active politics could disrupt the prevailing affinity in local politics.
Also, that if the FSP fields him or anyone else at the upcoming presidential polls, that could affect the vote base of the JVP which has decided to contest on its own.

The Incurability Of Religious Cure

Colombo Telegraph
By Shyamon Jayasinghe -September 4, 2014
Shyamon Jayasinghe
Shyamon Jayasinghe
It was recently reported that Dr Kent Brantly who contracted the killer disease, Ebola, in Liberia, West Africa has been surprisingly cured and says that God cured him by “answering to the thousands who prayed for him.” He is a medical doctor all right. But the hitch is that he is also a Christian evangelist. In a conflict of interest his religion has got in the way of his science. Let me explain.
SJP
Ebola is the latest lethal disease hovering the globe. From time to time, we get such new evil visitors coming in to plague man. At one time, it was AIDS. Much earlier in human history it was Small Pox. Many such diseases that swooped on humanity have now been found a cure by scientists. AIDS is still a work-in process. Most cancers are in the same category. The latest malevolent visitor appears so fatal that thousands have already died. Medical people are in a rush to find a vaccine. The vaccine ZMAPP is being tested. And so the process of occurrence, suffering and cure continues.
At each turn, until scientists came out with successful counter moves popular belief looked to supernatural origins and gods and deities were placated. I remember when I was small and attacked by Chicken Pox my elders would say it was an ‘Ammawarunge Lede.’ I cannot exactly translate that but I suppose it was a case of sourcing the disease to an entity outside the natural world. Today, it is common to hear even men and women of modern education attributing what seems a cure for a cancer here and a cancer there as the work of God. God has answered prayers! Australia’s only saint, Mackillop, was supposed to have been a specialist in bringing about miracles to cure disease. Other saints have specialized in other diseases. Just google the index of patron saints and you will find an amazingly long list there. Just a few examples: Saint Agatha looks after breast disease; Saint Dymphia, insanity; Saint George, Syphilis and Saint Benedict, kidney disease. This is a historical list and many of those saints have retired by now as the afflictions have found cures and preventions.Read More

Sri Lankan Muslims Call Upon IS Leader To Stop Killing Innocent Humans

September 4, 2014
Colombo TelegraphThe Muslim Council of Sri Lanka (MCSL) has called upon the leader of the terror group Islamic State (IS) – Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi to put an immediate stop to the massacre of innocent humans in the name of Islam.
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi
MCSL Vice President Hilmy Ahamed releasing a statement has condemned the continued executions of innocent civilians, journalists and aid workers by the IS of which the most recent victim is American journalist Steven Sotloff.
Describing these executions as ‘cheap and abusive students’ carried out by the brutal terrorists to intimidate the whole world, Ahamed has pointed out that these actions have no place in Islam or in the teaching of Prophet Muhammad.
“Islam forbids torture, harassment and murder of even combatants,” he has written, to further emphasize his arguments.
He has gone on to state that these actions of the IS are crimes that should be condemned by all nations and have called upon the international community including all Islamic countries to act decisively against the IS who have embarked on a killing spree that Islam forbids.
“We also call upon all Muslims around the word to engage in prayers for the victims,” the statement further read.

Henry Kissinger on the Assembly of a New World Order

The concept that has underpinned the modern geopolitical era is in crisis

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The concept of order that has underpinned the modern era is in crisis, writes Henry Kissinger. Above, a pro-Russian fighter stands guard at a checkpoint close to Donetsk, Ukraine in July. European Pressphoto Agenc.
 Aug. 29, 2014 
Libya is in civil war, fundamentalist armies are building a self-declared caliphate across Syria and Iraq and Afghanistan's young democracy is on the verge of paralysis. To these troubles are added a resurgence of tensions with Russia and a relationship with China divided between pledges of cooperation and public recrimination. The concept of order that has underpinned the modern era is in crisis.
The search for world order has long been defined almost exclusively by the concepts of Western societies. In the decades following World War II, the U.S.—strengthened in its economy and national confidence—began to take up the torch of international leadership and added a new dimension. A nation founded explicitly on an idea of free and representative governance, the U.S. identified its own rise with the spread of liberty and democracy and credited these forces with an ability to achieve just and lasting peace. The traditional European approach to order had viewed peoples and states as inherently competitive; to constrain the effects of their clashing ambitions, it relied on a balance of power and a concert of enlightened statesmen. The prevalent American view considered people inherently reasonable and inclined toward peaceful compromise and common sense; the spread of democracy was therefore the overarching goal for international order. Free markets would uplift individuals, enrich societies and substitute economic interdependence for traditional international rivalries.
In the Middle East, religious militias violate borders at will. Getty Images
This effort to establish world order has in many ways come to fruition. A plethora of independent sovereign states govern most of the world's territory. The spread of democracy and participatory governance has become a shared aspiration if not a universal reality; global communications and financial networks operate in real time.
The years from perhaps 1948 to the turn of the century marked a brief moment in human history when one could speak of an incipient global world order composed of an amalgam of American idealism and traditional European concepts of statehood and balance of power. But vast regions of the world have never shared and only acquiesced in the Western concept of order. These reservations are now becoming explicit, for example, in the Ukraine crisis and the South China Sea. The order established and proclaimed by the West stands at a turning point.
First, the nature of the state itself—the basic formal unit of international life—has been subjected to a multitude of pressures. Europe has set out to transcend the state and craft a foreign policy based primarily on the principles of soft power. But it is doubtful that claims to legitimacy separated from a concept of strategy can sustain a world order. And Europe has not yet given itself attributes of statehood, tempting a vacuum of authority internally and an imbalance of power along its borders. At the same time, parts of the Middle East have dissolved into sectarian and ethnic components in conflict with each other; religious militias and the powers backing them violate borders and sovereignty at will, producing the phenomenon of failed states not controlling their own territory.
The challenge in Asia is the opposite of Europe's: Balance-of-power principles prevail unrelated to an agreed concept of legitimacy, driving some disagreements to the edge of confrontation.
The clash between the international economy and the political institutions that ostensibly govern it also weakens the sense of common purpose necessary for world order. The economic system has become global, while the political structure of the world remains based on the nation-state. Economic globalization, in its essence, ignores national frontiers. Foreign policy affirms them, even as it seeks to reconcile conflicting national aims or ideals of world order.
This dynamic has produced decades of sustained economic growth punctuated by periodic financial crises of seemingly escalating intensity: in Latin America in the 1980s; in Asia in 1997; in Russia in 1998; in the U.S. in 2001 and again starting in 2007; in Europe after 2010. The winners have few reservations about the system. But the losers—such as those stuck in structural misdesigns, as has been the case with the European Union's southern tier—seek their remedies by solutions that negate, or at least obstruct, the functioning of the global economic system.
The international order thus faces a paradox: Its prosperity is dependent on the success of globalization, but the process produces a political reaction that often works counter to its aspirations.
A third failing of the current world order, such as it exists, is the absence of an effective mechanism for the great powers to consult and possibly cooperate on the most consequential issues. This may seem an odd criticism in light of the many multilateral forums that exist—more by far than at any other time in history. Yet the nature and frequency of these meetings work against the elaboration of long-range strategy. This process permits little beyond, at best, a discussion of pending tactical issues and, at worst, a new form of summitry as "social media" event. A contemporary structure of international rules and norms, if it is to prove relevant, cannot merely be affirmed by joint declarations; it must be fostered as a matter of common conviction.
The penalty for failing will be not so much a major war between states (though in some regions this remains possible) as an evolution into spheres of influence identified with particular domestic structures and forms of governance. At its edges, each sphere would be tempted to test its strength against other entities deemed illegitimate. A struggle between regions could be even more debilitating than the struggle between nations has been.
The contemporary quest for world order will require a coherent strategy to establish a concept of order within the various regions and to relate these regional orders to one another. These goals are not necessarily self-reconciling: The triumph of a radical movement might bring order to one region while setting the stage for turmoil in and with all others. The domination of a region by one country militarily, even if it brings the appearance of order, could produce a crisis for the rest of the world.
A world order of states affirming individual dignity and participatory governance, and cooperating internationally in accordance with agreed-upon rules, can be our hope and should be our inspiration. But progress toward it will need to be sustained through a series of intermediary stages.
To play a responsible role in the evolution of a 21st-century world order, the U.S. must be prepared to answer a number of questions for itself: What do we seek to prevent, no matter how it happens, and if necessary alone? What do we seek to achieve, even if not supported by any multilateral effort? What do we seek to achieve, or prevent, only if supported by an alliance? What should we not engage in, even if urged on by a multilateral group or an alliance? What is the nature of the values that we seek to advance? And how much does the application of these values depend on circumstance?
For the U.S., this will require thinking on two seemingly contradictory levels. The celebration of universal principles needs to be paired with recognition of the reality of other regions' histories, cultures and views of their security. Even as the lessons of challenging decades are examined, the affirmation of America's exceptional nature must be sustained. History offers no respite to countries that set aside their sense of identity in favor of a seemingly less arduous course. But nor does it assure success for the most elevated convictions in the absence of a comprehensive geopolitical strategy.
— Dr. Kissinger served as national security adviser and secretary of state under Presidents Nixon and Ford. Adapted from his book "World Order," to be published Sept. 9 by the Penguin Press.