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, October 2, 2014

Ongoing Hate Muslim Campaign


Now reached Matara Issadeen Town?
| by Latheef Farook
( October 2, 2014, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) It appears that Islamophobia, devastating the island for the past three years and tearing apart communities, has reached the Matara Issadeen Town where Sinhalese and Muslims once lived like one family. The controversy began with some Sinhalese demanding the closure of a mosque without any valid reason.
The relationship between the two communities was so cordial once that late Rev Diviyagaha Gunananda Thero who was the chief prelate at the Buddhist Temple at Issadeen Town often advised monks and Sinhalese in the area to” always respect Muslims and never hurt or harm them”. He had given this advice even in his death bed.

Sri Lanka Pushes For Rapists To Marry Their Victims


Even underage victims of rape should marry their attackers, says president.

April 29, 2014, 
When Sri Lanka’s top gender official suggested that women marry the men who had raped them in order to reduce the number of sexual assaults in the country, he stumbled on a problem: what if the rape survivors are underage?
Tissa Karaliyadda, Sri Lanka’s (male) minister of child development and women’s affairs, suggested rapists would have to wait until their victims reach 18, the legal age of consent for sexual intercourse in the country.
But Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa thinks his minster is just plain wrong, according to reports in local media.
Wait until they’re 18? No way, he suggested on Friday. Marry them now.
“If under aged girls are statutorily raped and the sexual act was however with consent, it may be good to have legislation that allows the perpetrator to marry the ‘victim’ with her consent,” local media quoted Rajapaksa saying.
Their differing approaches were revealed after the the minister had suggested marriage would be a good idea — in language that portrayed the option as a kind of victim-centered justice.
“The idea is to ensure the victim gets justice. If she feels the rapist must marry her for what he did to her, then she must have that option,” Karaliyadda told local mediatwo weeks ago.
Sri Lanka’s President Mahinda Rajapaksa addresses the UN General Assembly last year Eduardo Munoz / Reuters
Sri Lanka is only the latest country to suggest that marrying the woman you rape annuls the crime you committed. The practice is commonly accepted in Pakistan; neighboring India does not consider rape within marriage a crime, even in its new “tough” anti-rape laws, and rape survivors are routinely pressed to marry their rapists. One such incident, in December, was oddly normalized by one of India’s leading English-language papers.
Morocco recently repealed a similar law when a 16-year-old girl committed suicide after she was forced by the government and her family to marry her rapist. In February, a similar bill in Malawi was dropped only after a raucous local civil society outcry.
Getting married in order to annul rape is the latest in a series of proposals Karaliyadda has made to combat Sri Lanka’s rape problem. A 2013 United Nations study of physical and sexual violence in the Asia-Pacific region found that 16% of Sri Lankan men admitted having raped or attempted to rape a woman at some point in their lives.
After proposals to sentence rapists to death or life imprisonment stalled last year, the gender minister suggested in September that public caning might be a better punishment.
That, apparently, has gone nowhere, leading to his latest suggestion.
In Sri Lanka, one’s marital status is the deciding factor as to whether or not one is the victim of a crime: It’s impossible to rape your wife in Sri Lanka, where marital rape is a crime only if a couple has been officially separated, according to the U.N.
Sri Lanka’s executive branch isn’t its only body of government to take a particularly patriarchal stand on women’s rights issues. Chamal Rajapaksa, the speaker of parliament, thinks it’s women’s responsibility to end violence against women.
“My opinion is that nobody can make men responsible for the violence against women. Women are responsible for it,” he said in March — at an event to mark International Women’s Day.
So far, there’s been no word from either side of the government in Sri Lanka on what to do with all those women who maybe don’t want to marry their rapists.

Dr. Jayewardene, What A Man You Were !

Dr H W Jayewardene
Dr H W Jayawardena
By Upul Jayasuriya -October 2, 2014 
Upul Jayasuriya -BASL President
Upul Jayasuriya -BASL President
This day will go down in the history of the Bar Association of Sri Lanka as an unforgettable one as we have enhanced the capacity and its sustainability whilst maintaining our much treasured and cherished independence of the Bar. I take this opportunity to place on record my sincere gratitude to your Excellency Michele Sison and Mrs. HW Jayewardene for the contribution you have made to make this dream a reality.
Colombo Telegraph

Permit me to take this opportunity to perform a duty on behalf of the Bar. Hon. The Attorney General, this will be the last official function of the BASL, you will attend as the sitting Attorney General. We attended the same school since year 1 during our tender years. In the AGs dept., You were a ranker. Two years of your stewardship as the country’s Attorney General was a period of tremendous pressure. During your tenure you conducted yourself well. The last decision of yours in filing an appeal in the Khurams Rape and Murder case is a feather on your cap. Let me wish you a successful career in the unofficial Bar.
It is even more important that we are able to name this conference hall as the Dr.H.W. Jayewardene Q.C. Auditorium after Dr. H.W Jayewardene the 1st ever President of the Bar Association of Sri Lanka. His courage and unparalleled leadership qualities at a time the legal profession was under tremendous pressure from an intrusively interfering Minister of Justice who did every thing within his means to undermine the bench and the Bar should be admired.                                                 Read More

News from Jaffna


A young reporter dares to cover press freedom in one of the world's most dangerous places for journalists - Sri Lanka.


30 Sep 2014
Despite the dangers involved in working for the Tamil newspaper Uthayan in Jaffna, young journalists like Thadsa still join their ranks.
Apart from the chief editor, Uthayan does not have a single news journalist over the age of 40. As they grow older, young journalists come under family pressure to find a safer job.
Thadsa is passionate about reporting and wants to cover a story on a journalist who disappeared in 2007, and look into the ongoing restrictions to press freedoms in Sri Lanka today.
Filmmaker's view
By Kannan Arunasalam
I first covered the remarkable story of the Uthayan  newspaper in 2010. I made a short film about the resilience of Jaffna residents and how they overcame the embargoes during the height of the war. ForUthayan , they had to overcome the scarcity of newsprint. Their ingenuity in the face of hardship and scarcity was awe-inspiring.
Kannan Arunasalam is a Sri Lankan born, British filmmaker and narrative journalist. This is Kannan's fourth documentary film.
His work has appeared in The GuardianThe New Yorker , broadcast on the BBC and screened at international film festivals.
Kannan has developed award-winning documentary projects under different grants, including the Ford Foundation and the US State Department.
He studied psychology at the University of Cambridge and international human rights at the University of Oxford, focusing on media and conflict.
Kannan is also a qualified media and human rights lawyer.
I was born in Jaffna so for me its stories take on a particular significance. My family left for England in the 1979s before the war started. We were very lucky to leave. For decades, Jaffna residents were trapped between a repressive regime and an even more brutal insurgency.
The war ended in 2009 with the obliteration of the Tamil Tigers, but people's freedoms are still under threat. Freedom of speech in particular is stifled and journalists face intimidation and the risk of being disappeared. This has been especially so for Tamil journalists in the north.
Uthayan has faced violence up close. In 2006, two workers were shot dead. More recently, in April 2013,  Uthayan's printing press was set ablaze. Today a policeman at the gate provides round-the-clock security but the threat of violence still looms large. Yet young reporters still join the ranks of Uthayan , undeterred by parental pressure to find a safer job.

Today Uthayan has just six news journalists and all of them are in their 20s, like Thadsa and Tharsan, the main characters in my film. They are supervised by the editor, Premananth, who navigates a fine line between encouraging his young reporters to find important political stories to write about, and at the same time making sure the parents do not worry too much about their safety to stop them from working there.
Like Prem, when working in Sri Lanka, I have also had to be strategic. Often it was better to tell stories from the past. In many ways, it was a form of self-censorship. If I am honest, I am not sure whether I could take the risks that the young journalists in my film face on a daily basis.
If the situation became precarious, I could always take a flight to my other home, the UK, but this is obviously not an option for your news reporter in the north.
Since returning to Sri Lanka, I often wondered what my life might have been like had my family not left. Would my life be so different from the journalists I met at Uthayan had my family stayed in Jaffna?
In pictures
ஊடகவியலார்,சட்டத்தரணிகளின் அச்சுறுத்தல்களுக்கு எதிராக ஆர்ப்பாட்டம்
​படங்கள் இணைப்பு
2014-10-02 16:51:04 | Jayasooriyan
இன்று கோட்டை புகையிரத நிலையம் முன்னால் 12 மணியளவில் சிரச ஊடகவியலாளர் தாக்குதல் மற்றும் சட்டத்தரணிகள் அச்சுறுத்தல் ஆகியவற்றுக்கு எதிராக  ஆர்ப்பாட்டம் ஒன்று இடம்பெற்றது.
சுதந்திர ஊடக இயக்கத்தின் ஏற்பாட்டின் கீழ் இந்த ஆர்ப்பாட்டம் நடந்தது.

Suppression of web-journalists – An attempt to create an information monopoly

caffe logo 1
 
Campaign for Free and Fair Elections (CaFFE) is deeply concerned about the recommencement of the suppression of media in the run up to the presidential nomination 2015. The most recent incident of the attack on expression is the obstruction of a workshop for web journalists on cyber security which was to be held on September 28, 2014 at Negombo.

Around 20 web journalists, representing all leading websites operating from Sri Lanka, were to take part in this workshop. However due to pressure applied by Negombo Police and Police HQ to the hotel in which the event was to take place; the workshop had to be cancelled fearing repercussions and security. Same tactics were used in previous occasions as well.
CaFFE sees this attack on web journalists as a part of a broader plan to cow the political opposition and dissenting voices into submission before the crucial presidential election in 2015. By suppressing web journalists the government will be able minimize the flow of sensitive information to a significant number of people, especially the youth, thus being able to create a monopoly of information.
In the last few years we have noted that it is often new media and social media that pick up issues and create a public opinion on sensitive issues. The recent brutal assault of a woman in Ratnapura by a policeman is a fine example of this. Earlier during the Uva Provincial Council elections, it was web based news sites that first carried CaFFE’s images of unmarked vehicles that were electioneering. News websites feed news to social media, even stories of banned websites reach massed through this mechanism. Thus they also assist mainstream media to push the limits of their reporting. CaFFE believes that web journalists have made a vital contribution to the free flow of information and have created a platform for dissenting voices.
Thus we see this obstruction as an attack on freedom of expression enshrined in our constitution and a part of post-election violence and harassment that has evolved into pre presidential election violence and harassment. Although elections are the ultimate expression of political rights of people, ensuring freedom of expression and the right to information has great significance on how people vote. CaFFE believes that if freedom of expression is not ensured, there can’t be a free and fair elections. CaFFE urges the relevant authorities to assure that journalists can improve their skills and become better at their craft.

Social Media Websites Given To Monkeys With Razors


| by Pearl Thevanayagam
(October 01, 2014, Bradford UK, Sri Lanka Guardian) Reading some social media websites from Sri Lanka is like eating three day old bread with four day old coconut sambal. Given the golden opportunity like never before, websites have easy access to news which are current and should be in essence displayed, broadcast or telecast in nano-seconds.
With the advent of email and internet, various mobile devices and technology fast developing by the minute, one would think we are on the cutting edge of modern media providing news such as the colour of the saree Shiranthi, the first lady, would wear for her New York trip one week before she left. Or that Sajin Vaas Gunawardene would kick Nonis in the butt long before it happened.

Many Sri Lankan news websites in provide news which are regurgitated from vernacular media and foreign agencies are at least two day old. Comparatively print media, both state and private (the latter cannot be called independent by any stretch of imagination), which comes out daily or weekly provide current with on the spot reporting however biased they may be.

At any given moment most Sri Lankan websites carry the same story verbatim. They are quite blasé into not bothering to rewrite. The social as well as mainstream media’s obsession with our politicians begs belief. The populace which voted our politicians into power has more earth shattering and human interest stories rather than those about which restaurants or massage parlours politicians, their offspring and henchmen frequent.

In his famous essay, A hundred years in 1921, in which his inimitable quotation Comment is free; facts are sacred, C.P.Scott, the legendary Manchester Guardian (now The Guardian) editor for almost 50 years , has this to say:

A newspaper has two sides to it. It is a business, like any other, and has to pay in the material sense in order to live. But it is much more than a business; it is an institution; it reflects and it influences the life of a whole community; it may affect even wider destinies. It is, in its way, an instrument of government. It plays on the minds and consciences of men. It may educate, stimulate, assist, or it may do the opposite. It has, therefore, a moral as well as a material existence, and its character and influence are in the main determined by the balance of these two forces. It may make profit or power its first object, or it may conceive itself as fulfilling a higher and more exacting function.

Politicians may come and go but the people who vote them into power remain a constant. Politicians are worse than beggars. Watch them canvassing on their hands and knees during election time and their arrogance after being elected. Their rise and fall in politics is mercurial and is comparable to the green shoots of paddy which stare at the sky in all its splendour and once ripe the golden grain laden paddy bows its head. Our politicians remain the green shoots and are out of the door before they deliver anything resembling a golden harvest to their people.

So why is it that the media bend over backwards to highlight every move of the politicians and hardly anything to do with the masses? There is a wealth of stories out there if you get off your butt and go into the villages; go to places of worship, visit factories which serve fat-cats and foreign investors in FTZ where impoverished youth from the villages are exploited.

Write about the drought caused by over-use of our war resources to feed hungry chemical factories to the detriment of depriving our farmers of irrigating their paddy lands and other crops which feed the nation. Tell about the mother who is sending her children to work breaking stones instead of attending schools.
What earthly use is modern technology if the user has no inkling on how to use it.

Could it be that these are run by the same lazy bums who used to draw salaries from state media institutions just for twiddling their thumbs and visiting the canteen for subsidised meals even when they are off duty. These media bums are the ones who form media organisations, trade unions and fight for media freedom by gathering outside Lipton Circus and Fort Railway Station. It is far easier to do the above than bring in a decent bit of news item fit to be published. They are not exactly the Occupy Movement or Flower Power.

When the government clamps down on some websites they cry fowl that the government is shaking in its boots for their earth shattering revelations and investigative journalism which earned them laurels from Burkino Faso and Pitcairn Islands.

Social websites are run by these goons and need we say more.

(The writer has been a journalist for 25 years and worked in national newspapers as sub-editor, news reporter and news editor. She was Colombo Correspondent for Times of India and has contributed to Wall Street Journal where she was on work experience from The Graduate School of Journalism, UC Berkeley, California. Currently residing in UK she is also co-founder of EJN (Exiled Journalists Network) UK in 2005 the membership of which is 200 from 40 countries. She can be reached at pearltheva@hotmail.com)

Election Season, External Affairs & Modi-Obama


Colombo Telegraph
By Dayan Jayatilleka - October 1, 2014
Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka
Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka
Forget the state of Denmark—something is rotten in the state of Sri Lanka, and our enemies, the secessionists in the Tamil Diaspora must be laughing, as they well might.
Three recent events indicate the future of Sri Lanka. Two are domestic and one, global. Of the two domestic events, one occurred in an international space. The three events are the Chris Nonis–Sajin Vass episode, the BBS–Wirathu nexus and the Modi-Obama meeting.
Sri Lanka’s external defenses are crumbling, largely due to undermining emanating from the heart of the state itself, in the shape of bad policy and worse practices.
One does not wish to speculate on or sensationalize the sad and shameful incident in New York. Instead the more serious dimensions and implications must be underscored. High Commissioner Nonis, who is certainly one of our ablest, most valuable envoys, will find himself placed in a most uncomfortable position when he next faces Stephen Sackur on the BBC’s Hard Talk. We hope that no British interviewer will pop the question of the UN episode to the High Commissioner, who would be placed on the back-foot through little fault of his own. The reasonable doubt cannot but arise to the treatment of Tamil detainees after the war, if the country’s own High Commissioner, a British educated medical doctor, has physical aggression visited upon him by a top official of the Sri Lankan state, and member of the presidential staff and entourage.
                                                                         Read More

Sri Lanka Asks Refugee Receiving Countries To Expedite Processes Of Finalizing Resettlement Claims

Colombo Telegraph
October 2, 2014 
Sri Lanka has called on refugee receiving countries to expedite the processes of finalizing resettlement claims and to also assist UNHCR to enhance its resource capacity, in order to overcome present difficulties being experienced in Sri Lanka on account of rapid influx of refugees/asylum seekers.
Foreign Minister Peiris
Foreign Minister Peiris
Deputy Permanent Representative to the UN in Geneva and CDA a.i. Samantha Jayasuriya in a statement to the  65th Session of the Executive Committee of the UNHCR on Thursday in Geneva (2 October 2014), said despite not being a signatory to the 1951 Convention Relating to the Status of Refugees, Sri Lanka has been accommodating refugees/ asylum seekers in the country. However, during the last two years Sri Lanka witnessed an almost 700% increase in the arrival of asylum seekers/refugees, resulting in serious law & order, security, as well as health related issues for Sri Lanka. While being sensitive to the humanitarian aspects of asylum seekers/refugees, the Government has sought UNHCR’s assistance in addressing related issues including establishment of a safe house/welfare centre for identified refugees until they are resettlement, regularization of the return of asylum seekers whose claims have been rejected, expediting the resettlement process; and ensuring adequate facilities and monetary assistance provided to Asylum seekers until their claims are processed or resettlement is found. However these issues remain largely unresolved and Sri Lanka urges UNHCR to work closely with the Government to resolve these issues.
The full statement can be read here.
*Statement by the Permanent Mission of Sri Lanka – Geneva

Vatican door closed for thug MP!

chriss-nonis popeColombo archbishop Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith has refused to accept external affairs ministry supervising MP Sajin Vaas Gunawardena into the presidential delegation that is in Rome to officially invite Pope Francis to visit Sri Lanka, say Vatican sources.
The most immediate reason for this rejection is that MP Sajin Vaas had inhumanely assaulted Sri Lankan high commissioner in Britain Dr. Chris Nonis. Dr. Nonis, a descendant of a respected catholic family in Sri Lnka, has been acclaimed by the Catholic Council of Sri Lanka.  The civilized world is unreservedly denouncing and criticizing this assault without any provocation or due to any acceptable reason.
According to sources at the president’s office, the president had invited Dr. Nonis to come to the Vatican in order to resolve this dispute. However, the HC has not yet arrived there, said several members of the presidential delegation. He is most likely to reach the Vatican in the course of today (02), they said.
Anyhow, if the matter is not resolved, the thug MP will not be allowed to be taken to meet with the Pope, the cardinal is insisting, say our sources at the Vatican further.

Attaack on Peace March in Aluthgama: No investigation yet

untitled
Sri Lanka Brief[By Srilanka Brief]-01/10/2014 
Issuing a joint media statement, the Nava Sama Samaja Party, Frontline Socialist Party, Socialist Party and United Socialist Party further pointed out that this incident has  accused  that, although two months have elapsed since the attack on the motorcycle parade for peace organized by the United Socialist Party in Aluthgama, no investigation has been undertaken regarding that incident till now. The leftist party collective consists of above mentioned political groups says that ‘This incompetent behaviour behind this investigation shows none other than the power of the political force behind this incident’
Full statement follows:
It is no secret who attacked this vehicle parade, carrying the massage of national harmony against chauvinism and religious extremism from Narahenpita to Darga town in Aluthgama, from the fact that no one has been arrested even after two months have passed after that incident. This is even after video images of those who attacked the procession on that day were shown through media channels, although in the past the police had been very efficient in arresting student leaders after looking at video images of student agitations. This incompetent behaviour behind this investigation shows none other than the power of the political force behind this incident.

Eyewitnesses in Nonis assault incident

lakshman kiriellaThe UNP has vehemently condemned the Sri Lankan High Commisioner in UK - Chris Nonis being assaulted by a government minister.

Speaking at a media briefing held at the UNP headquarters - Sirikotha yesterday ( 01), UNP Kandy district MP and leadership council member - Lakshman Kiriella condemned the incident.
"The incident had taken place in the presence of the President and officials of the External Affairs Ministry. There are eyewitnesses... As patriotic Sri Lankans, we urge authorities to take legal action over this assault."
"The government is being decorated with medals internationally over the lawlessness prevailing in the country. However, such an incident concerning a diplomat of an overseas mission is unheard of in the past. This arises the question whether a Parliamentarian is able to assault a diplomat," MP Kiriella said.
"Therefore, it should be stated that those who are remaining silent after witnessing the incident too, are wrong. The law should be enforced on them as well, for remaining silent, he added," MP Kiriella added.
Journalists at the media briefing had further questioned the MP whether the law in Sri Lanka included provisions to punish an individual for assaulting a diplomat.
To this, the MP has said, "diplomatic immunity cannot be exercised when it comes to criminal law. This has been proven in the past as well. Also, around 75% of those in Foreign Service are political appointees. They have no idea of diplomatic activities. However, the situation is different in countries such as US and India."

Clarification And Investigation Into Nonis’s Resignation Is Vital: Prof. Wijesinha


Colombo Telegraph
October 2, 2014
Clarifications and an investigation into the reports circulating with regard to High Commissioner Nonis’s assault and resignation is a must considering their implication for Sri Lanka’s international relations, UPFA MP and political analyst Professor Rajiva Wijesinha says.
 Rajiva Wijesinha MP
Rajiva Wijesinha MP
Professor Wijesinha, when asked about his opinion on the “Chris Nonis–Sajin Vass episodesaid; “The stories circulating with regard to High Commissioner Nonis’s resignation certainly need investigation as you suggest. What was reported of MinisterKeheliya Rambukwella’s comments on in his resignation suggests confusion and given the implications for our international relations, clarifications are vital.”
He also suggested this incident is in relation to the comments he has made concerning a concerted attempt to remove the most efficient and loyal non-career diplomats in the service and accused External Affairs Ministry Secretary Kshenuka Seneviratne of being behind many of the these attempts.
“There is an attempt to remove efficient and loyal non-career diplomats we have, Dayan in Paris, Tamara in Geneva, Asitha Perera in Rome, Palitha Kohona in New York, and later I believe even Sarath Kongahage in Berlin and Chris Nonis in London. So the alleged reasons for the assault of Chris are interesting, not least because one of these envoys told me some time back thatSajin thinks he runs Kshenuka but the reality is the other way round,” he told Colombo Telegraph.
He went on to state that despite these warning signs, it is unfortunate that the President continues to entrust foreign relations to Senevirathne, Vass and GL Peiris as Sri Lanka is bound to fail if the country’s foreign relations continue to remain in their hands.
“But those whom the gods wish to destroy they first make mad – and drink can contribute to this, if reports are correct,” he added.