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

Monday, October 20, 2014

அநுராதபுரத்தில் மலேசிய பெண் ஊடகவியலாளர் மீது வல்லுறவு

Malaseja

JVP News

October 19, 2014
மலேசியப் பிரஜையான பெண் ஊடகவியலாளர் ஒருவரைக் கட்டித் தழுவியதுடன், துஷ்பிரயோகம் செய்ய முயன்றார் என்ற சந்தேகத்ததில் 19 வயதான சிங்கள இளைஞர் ஒருவரை நேற்று மாலை தாம் கைதுசெய்தனர் என்று அநுராதபுரம் சுற்றுலாத்துறைப் பொலிஸார் தெரிவித்தனர்.
அநுராதபுரம், லோலுகஸ்வெவ பிரதேசத்தைச் சேர்ந்த இந்த இளைஞர், பசவக்குளம் வாவிக்கரையில் அமர்ந்திருந்த மலேசிய யுவதியை நேற்றுக் காலை துஷ்பிரயோகம் செய்ய முயன்றிருக்கிறார். அந்த யுவதி அநுராதபுரம் சுற்றுலாத்துறைப் பொலிஸாருக்குச் செய்த முறைப்பாட்டையடுத்து நேற்று மாலை குறித்த இளைஞர் கைதுசெய்யப்பட்டார் எனப் பொலிஸார் தெரிவித்தனர்.

WikiLeaks: Family-Run Airline Manager Vass Links To Financial Impropriety


October 20, 2014
Colombo Telegraph
“The Government of Sri Lanka (GSL) is planning to launch a state-run airline aimed at providing low-cost travel for Sri Lankan migrant workers and tourists to the Middle East and India. The budget carrier, apparently conceived and advanced by close advisors to Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, is to be called Mihin Lanka, after the President (short for Mihindu, which is the Pali name for Mahinda). The non-transparent way in which the President’s coterie has advanced the airline has elicited extensive controversy.” the US Embassy Colombo informed Washington.
Mahinda and Vass
Mahinda and Vass
The Colombo Telegraph found the related leaked cable from the WikiLeaks database. The cable dated March 09, 2007 was written by the US Ambassador to Colombo,Robert O. Blake.
The US ambassador wrote “Critics argue that the carrier’s lack of transparency stems from its leadership – a handful of politicians and advisors close to the President. According to a Civil Aviation Authority gazette, the Board of Directors of Mihin Lanka will be composed of Defense Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa(the President’s brother), Finance SIPDIS Secretary P.B. Jayasundera, Air Marshall Roshan Goonetilake, and Presidential Coordinating Secretary Sajin de Vass Gunawardena. Gunawardena, who has been appointed ‘Accountable Manager in charge’ of the airline, has been linked to a number of past allegations of financial impropriety involving government procurement.
“The airline is to be a fully government-owned company utilizing state funds. The initial capital contribution is estimated at around 500 million Sri Lankan Rupees (approximately USD 4.6 million), with an estimated total cost set at Rs. 1.5 billion (approx USD 13.8 million). The government initially intended to tap the state-run Foreign Employment Bureau and the Employees’ Trust Fund for start up capital in the venture. After a strong public backlash supported by negative media reporting against using public funds, the government may be seeking financial backing elsewhere, but has not publicly identified possible alternate sources.
“President Rajapaksa sacked Minister of Ports and Aviation Mangala Samaraweera, who had opposed the Mihin Lanka arrangement (ref A). Rajapaksa did not appoint a replacement for Samaraweera, instead keeping the Ports and Aviation portfolio for himself. On February 17, Samaraweera, who had also served as Rajapaksa’s Minister of Foreign Affairs until he was removed in the January 28 cabinet reshuffle, sent a letter to the President listing a series of grievances (ref B). In this, Samaraweera stated his strong disapproval of the Mihin Lanka project due to the planned use of public funds and the rushed approval process that circumvented normal administrative and financial regulations.”
Placing a comment the ambassador wrote; “Civil Aviation Authority officials and representatives of Airport and Aviation Services Ltd. appear less than enthusiastic about the Mihin Lanka venture. In fielding Post’s queries, they seemed cautious and uncomfortable, repeatedly stating that they were not aware of many key operational details. Post also notes that local media coverage of the Mihin venture no longer mentions any of the earlier controversy around the airline. In fact, coverage disappeared entirely for about two months, and only resumed this week with brief and uncritical coverage of the test flight described in para 3. Many Sri Lankans view the Mihin Lanka venture as a sign that the populist and socialist President Rajapaksa may be tempted to practice crony capitalism if he can avoid press, opposition, and regulatory scrutiny.”

Silumina to be sued for falsely defaming that Ranil had talks with LTTE leaders : Rs. 500 million claimed in damages and sale of Silumina in UK to be banned

LEN logo
(Lanka-e-News- 19.Oct.2014, 11.45PM) While even in the Audit report it is stated that the secretary of the foreign Ministry of the Rajapakse regime had made an overpayment of Rs. 20 million slyly without duly following tender procedures to P. T. Thurairaja , an LTTE leader who was even under arrest of the Swiss Police , the Rajapakse regime that is remaining blind to all these anti national and perfidious activities , had used its Silumina newspapers to publish a most abominable news canard that Ranil Wickremesinghe the opposition leader during his recent London tour met with the LTTE leaders.
In the Silumina dated 19th was to be published under the caption ‘who is the opposition politico behind the lifting of the ban on the LTTE?’ supported by an article written by T. Chandrasekeran and a photograph. At the bottom ,this is related to a discussion supposedly held by Ranil with the Tamil Diaspora in London.
A detailed probe conducted into this by Lanka e news had proved this report is an absolute lie. In the photograph in question is a group of officers of the UNP branch , and all of them are Sinhalese out and out . In the left are :
Indika Kumara –UNP member of the London branch executive committee member.
Dharshana Denzil – UNP London branch secretary
Roshan Samantha Yapa – UNP London branch youth front treasurer.
Ranil Wickremesinghe – UNP leader
Harshaka Kannangara – UNP London branch President
In connection with this deliberate calculate falsehood concocted by the government published by the Rajapakse regime newspaper Silumina , steps have already been taken and legal advice sought to file court action in London claiming Sterling pounds 2 million (Rs. 500 million in SL rupees approximately ) as damages against this defamation and contumelia, the former President of the UNP London branch Harsha Siriwardena told Lanka e news. He also added that an injunction order against the sale of the Silumina newspaper in UK is to be shortly obtained . ‘The government Silumina newspaper which does not expose anything , nor write a word against the government’s mollycoddling and pampering of the LTTE leaders KP, Karuna , Thamalini and Daya master has deemed it right to write defamatory and vilifying reports about us falsely linking us with the Tigers,’ Siriwardena bemoaned.

Ranil Meeting Sri Lankan Diaspora


| by Rajasingham Jayadevan
( October 20, 2014, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) Campaign orchestrated by the wings of the Sri Lankan government against the Opposition Leader Ranil Wickramasinghe is clearly a calculated, diabolical and depraved drive of harassment to gain petty parochial mileage to overshadow the political setbacks experienced by the Rajapakse family.
Mr. Wickramasinghe with group of the Tamil Diaspora in London
I write as one of those who had the opportunity to meet the Opposition Leader in London. I together with Tamils representing diverse Tamil polity excluding the LTTE met Mr Ranil Wickramasinghe and discussed wide ranging issues centred on the authoritarian governance in Sri Lanka. We were one of the Tamil groups. He was frank and forthright in his comments and reflected the maturity of a seasoned and an educated politician to explain the way forward to overcome the difficulties.
He said thirteenth amendment is in the statute and affirmed the need to implement it properly and sincerely. He confirmed his priority is to implement the 13th amendment for the people of Sri Lanka to enjoy the devolvement already available in the constitution.
Those who met Ranil had engaged with President Mahinda Rajapakse, former President Chandrika Kumaratunge, and many other leaders of the Sri Lankan polity. The meeting we had did not reflect any sectarian discussions and issues of progressive decay in the governance and being the Opposition Leader, he very well articulated the need to redeem Sri Lanka from its gloom.
We came to know through the UNP organisers, that Ranil could not meet the exhaustive demand for meetings with the diverse Sri Lankan community due to time constraints. They expressed their overwhelming enthusiasm that cross section of the Sri Lankan community had met him.
According to the report in the Sunday Times, Global Tamil Forum refused to meet Ranil Wickramasinghe on the grounds that he had appointed Sajith Premadasa as the Deputy Leader whom they branded as an anti-Tamil racist. When I contacted the GTF to explain the opportunity missed to meet the Opposition Leader, Suren Surendran was categorical that their decision was justified.
I came to know members of the TNGT or BTF did not meet the Opposition Leader. The decaying political thinking of the government only confirm its lack of farsightedness to reason out whey these groups will not meet the Opposition Leader.
When I spoke to few from the Muslim and Sinhala community who met Ranil, they all confirmed the same views we held.
The anti-Ranil campaign only confirms that the government is panicking. One Sinhalese who was until recently associated with the government was disgusted with the progressing failures in governance and confirmed to me in writing that ‘the Sinhalese, are beginning to say Ranil is a good man, not a hora (thief) and they would vote for Aliya (Elephant) and that the UNP should swim with this tide and strengthen itself to correct the malaise experienced under the present Mahinda rule’.

Video: Wimal acts savior for accused Kshenuka

lankaturth
The Member of the Central Committee of the JVP Wasantha Samarasinghe, presenting an audit report, revealed to the country that the Secretary to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs Mrs. Kshenuka Seneviratna had direct dealings with LTTE organization.
Minister Wimal Weerawansa, representing the Secretary who has been charged with this fraud, says the audit report regarding the procurement process in the Permanent Mission of Sri Lanka to the UN in Geneva was regarding a process that had been carried out before Mrs. Kshenuka Seneviratna was appointed the permanent representative but the person before her.
Mr. Dayan Jayatilleke , who was a permanent representative before Mrs. Seneviratna has spoken to the media saying he never carried out the repairs to the building where the mission is housed.
However, Mr. Wasantha Samarasinghe quoting the audit report confirms that the repairs had been carried out during Mrs. Seneviratna’s time.
Related news:

What’s in a ban?

Editorial-


The European Union (EU) General Court has recently held that no thorough examination had preceded the imposition of sanctions on the LTTE and ‘the contested measures [proscription etc.,] are based not on acts examined and confirmed in decisions of competent authorities, as required by Common Position 2001/931 and case-law but on factual imputations derived from the press and the internet’. (Emphasis added) Far be it from us to question the learned judges’ wisdom. But, one sees that the very same modus operandi has been adopted unflinchingly by the EU, the US and international human rights groups in making war crimes charges against Sri Lanka. The much-touted claim that 40,000 civilians were killed during the concluding stages of the Vanni war against the LTTE in 2009 is a case in point. This figure simply plucked out of the air is now being liberally used the world over!

Worse, the Darusman report which paved the way for the UNHRC-led war crimes campaign against those who slew the Tigers is based on information derived from some persons and organisations whose identities will remain classified for 25 years!

The EU court has expeditiously determined that the EU ban on the LTTE does not stand up to legal scrutiny. The US and the UK with the help of their allies waged a bloody war against Iraq on the basis of factual imputations derived not from the press and the Internet’ but from some falsified intelligence dossiers. However, the conclusions of the Chilcot inquiry into that illegal conflagration have not yet been made public. Why?

What’s in a ban which is not properly implemented? European politicians openly further the interests of the LTTE which has access even to the British Parliament. It receives this kind of preferential treatment in spite of a ban because it is believed to be able to deliver tens of thousands of votes to political parties of its choice in Europe and has the wherewithal for lobbying. Why the EU itself did not annul the LTTE proscription without leaving it to the judiciary is the question.

Sri Lanka also has a history of proscribing and de-proscribing the LTTE and negotiating with the outfit while bans were on for political reasons. Both the UNP and the SLFP have made a mockery of LTTE proscription; the former went so far as to provide Prabhakaran with money, arms, ammunition and shelter in the late 1980s in spite of his crimes against civilians and political assassinations.

Now that there is no war to fight, the LTTE has enough and more funds and time to wage costly legal battles against international bans. The lifting of sanctions in Europe is no mean achievement for it. Whether its relentless efforts to regain international legitimacy will reach fruition in countries like the US remains to be seen.

The Sri Lankan government lost no time in expressing its concern about the EU court decision which is certainly a comedown for it on the diplomatic front. The LTTE will gain a great deal of legitimacy in time for the next UNHRC session in Geneva, where some countries are openly campaigning for sanctions against Sri Lanka. However, paradoxical as it may sound, the court ruling has stood President Mahinda Rajapaksa in good stead with a snap presidential election on the horizon.

No sooner had President Rajapaksa declared, in an obvious bid to justify his seeking a third term, that he was ready to scrap the executive presidency if the Tiger sympathisers renounced their separatist ideology than the EU court decision was announced. Politically speaking, this ruling could not have come at a better time for President Rajapaksa; it has helped bolster his claim. He will make the most of it during the next few months.

The EU court decision has, no doubt, perturbed all victims of LTTE terror, but it has certainly made the EU look less hypocritical.

It does not make sense to retain a ban on an outfit which has enjoyed unbridled freedom to operate in Europe all these years, does it?

When the engine of growth gets into a comfort zone, it is the engine driver who gets into trouble


October 20, 2014 
Private sector is the engine of growth and public sector is the engine driver
Private sectors in modern economies are branded as ‘Engines of Growth’. They have earned this brand name due to their innovative power, resilience, foresight and ability to assess and mitigate future risks. In the opposite, the government sectors lack these attributes. As a result, when they take part in economic activities, they very often end up in disasters requiring taxpayers to put their hard-earned money into them continuously to keep them afloat.
When the Engine of Growth Gets Into a Comfort Zone, It is the Engine Driver Who Gets Into Trouble by Thavam

Are We Poisoning Our Children With Fonterra Produce?


| by Pearl Thevanayagam
(October 20, 2014, Bradford UK, Sri Lanka Guardian) This is serious and begs the question that the future of our children whose parents are oblivious to the dangers posed by Western interests and mesmerised by advertisements which promote Australia and New Zealand. The government has also ordered 50,000 milch cows to supplement our own dairy needs.
Is it not possible to enhance our local dairy industry rather than import cows fed with dangerous chemicals? Sri Lanka is quite capable of feeding its animals with organic vegetation and if only it could promote indigenous methods of farming then we would not have to cow-tow to conglomerates who dump their chemical-laden products on to our shores.

In September 2012, traces of 2-Cyanoguanidine, a fertiliser commonly referred to as DCD that is used to slow down nitrate leaching, was found in some milk samples from Fonterra Federated Farmers and the Government moved quickly to reassure the public and overseas buyers there was no risk to health. Fonterra has received praise for its handling of the DCD issue. The levels were very low and attempts were made to prevent the test results from being reported in the media.

On the 16th of August 2013 Sri Lankan court banned the sale and advertising of all Fonterra products in Sri Lanka. The health ministry has said tests by Sri Lanka’s Industrial Technology Institute found DCD in some Fonterra milk powders and it had ordered their recall.

On 3 August 2013, authorities in New Zealand announced a global recall of up to 1,000 tonnes of dairy products after tests turned up a type of bacteria that could cause botulism. Products included were infant formula, sports drinks, protein drinks and other beverages. The countries affected were New Zealand, China, Australia, Thailand, Malaysia, Vietnam, Sri Lanka and Saudi Arabia.

Fonterra’s head of its milk products business, Gary Romano, resigned over the scandal on 14 August 2013.

There is no doubt milk is an essential component in a child’s growth but many a child in Sri Lanka does not get his sufficient quantities due to dearth of this vital part of the nutrient which would nurture them physically and mentally.

Media reported that children would be given free milk in the South. How about the children of lesser God in the rest of the island and how much has the government allocated to feed our children with this essential food. Who are we kidding? Kraft cheese imported from New Zealand is a must during Christmas but how much do we know what it contains. We serve them with cheese-bits but do we realise the chemicals which go into their production could cause irreparable damage.

This is akin to soya products which Canada introduced to developing countries including Sri Lanka as an alternative of animal protein but which contains lead that affect babies causing their mental retardation.

Sri Lanka is second to none in feeding their populace with organic produce but Stassens and like-minded corporate businesses such as Unilevers would spread their tentacles into developing countries dumping their toxic laden chemically saturated foods in the developing world while the West, US and Australia revert to organic produce importing from the same developing countries their quota .

As children we were fed goat’s milk fresh still warm in chembu (copper pot) and cow’s milk sans pasteurisation and we are still alive. When mother bought Blue Band margarine (Lever Brothers product) my father was livid and accused her of poisoning his children and threw it away. My mother only wanted to manage her budget and since she was not eactly literate she did the best she could.

Sri Lanka has plenty of rainfall and vegetation and its traditional farming practices sustained it for over centuries. Starvation was never heard of in this land of aplenty until conglomerates descended on our shores and dumped their produce and took away our organic produce.

It is high time we spurn the West’s overture and put in first place our own national interest over short term profits which only fatten the coffers of conglomerates and local businesses who sell our assets for their selfish motives and profits.

When will we ever learn?

(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)

Jewish settler runs over two Palestinian children in West Bank, killing one

Inas Shawkat KhalilSunday, 19 October 2014 
Middle East MonitorA Jewish settler ran over two Palestinian children near Ramallah in the occupied West Bank, leaving the two girls in a serious condition, eyewitnesses a Palestinian medical official said Sunday.
According to the witnesses, the settler hit the two girls, both aged 5, on the main road near Sinjil town, leaving them badly injured.
Eye witnesses added that the fled the scene after running over Toleen Omar Asfour and Inas Shawkat Khalil, who were returning from kindergarten.
According to the Director of Ramallah medical complex, Ahmed Bitawi, the girls arrived in a coma and medical teams had scrambled to save their lives.
While Toleen Omar Asfour condition is currently stable, a few hours ago, Inas Shawkat Khalil succumbed to her wounds.
Palestinian and Israeli authorities have not yet commented on the incident.
Recent months have seen a rise in attacks by Jewish settlers on Palestinians across the occupied West Bank with the Palestinian officials accusing Israeli army and police personnel of turning a blind eye to the assaults.
Last week, Palestinian Prime Minister Rami Hamdallah slammed Israel for failing to bring to account Jewish settlers responsible for a recent wave of vandalism against Palestinian property in the occupied territory.
In the gallery below, the first three pictures are of Inas Shawkat Khalil; the fourth and fifth pictures are of Toleen Omar Asfour


US drops weapons and ammunition to help Kurdish fighters in Kobani
John Kerry says it would be ‘morally very difficult’ not to support Kurds as Turkey allows fighters from Iraq to help defend town from Isis
Tracer rounds light the sky over Kobani during an airstrike, seen from the Mursitpinar crossing on the Turkish border Photograph: Kai Pfaffenbach/Reuters

Tracer rounds light the sky over the Syrian town of Kobani during an airstrike, seen from the Mursitpinar crossing on the Turkish border

 in Istanbul and agencies-Monday 20 October 2014
The US military has dropped weapons, ammunition and medical aid to Kurdish forces defending Kobani against Islamic State (Isis) militants, while Turkey has said it will allow Iraqi Kurdish fighters to reinforce the Syrian border town.
Following several weeks of air strikes by the US-led coalition in and around Kobani, the air drops were the first time weapons and ammunition had been provided to local Kurdish forces.
US Drops Weapons and Ammunition to Help Kurdish Fighters in Kobani by Thavam
Brazil's Election Illusion

The heated presidential race between Rousseff and Neves conceals the most important fact: There's not much daylight between the candidates.

telenovela. To be sure, there has been no shortage of high drama: the tragic, accidental death of a major candidate, the spectacular rise and fall of his vice preBrazil's ongoing presidential election has been described as electrifying and unpredictable, suitable for a sidential pick who took his place, and the late surge of a candidate who most pundits not long ago had written off. Given the volatility, few dare predict with confidence what will happen in the Oct. 26 runoff between incumbent President Dilma Rousseff of the Workers Party (PT) and former Minas Gerais governor Aécio Neves of the Social Democratic Party (PSDB).

In Japan, two female ministers quit, dealing a blow to Abe and ‘womenomics’

Yuko Obuchi, Japan’s economy, trade and industry minister, announces her resignation at a news conference at her office in Tokyo on Monday. Obuchi resigned over claims she misused political funds. (Yoshikazu Tsuno/AFP/Getty Images)


 Two of Japan’s new female cabinet ministers, appointed just last month as part of Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s plan to let women “shine,” resigned their posts Monday amid allegations of financial impropriety.

PM Modi steps up economic reforms, eyes privatisation

People watch the results of Maharashtra state elections outside Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) party office in Mumbai October 19, 2014. 

People watch the results of Maharashtra state elections outside Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) party office in Mumbai October 19, 2014. REUTERS-Danish SiddiquiA technician opens a pressure gas valve inside the Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC) group gathering station on the outskirts of Ahmedabad March 2, 2012. REUTERS-Amit Dave-Files
A technician opens a pressure gas valve inside the Oil and Natural Gas Corp (ONGC) group gathering station on the outskirts of Ahmedabad March 2, 2012. 
ReutersBY MANOJ KUMAR-NEW DELHI Mon Oct 20, 2014 
(Reuters) - India moved a step closer to selling a stake in a state-run oil company on Monday, keeping up Prime Minister Narendra Modi's momentum on economic reform after bringing the prices of diesel and natural gas more in line with the market's.

This hero doctor died helping to make Nigeria Ebola free

Channel 4 News
MONDAY 20 OCTOBER 2014
Nigeria has today been declared Ebola free by the World Health Organisation. The country's swift reaction has saved many lives, but could not help the doctor who stemmed the outbreak.
News
Ebola had spread from a dying Liberian-American, Patrick Sawyer, to 19 other people in Lagos, a city of 21 million people.

Despite Nigeria being a transport hub for western Africa, with the ebola epidemic out of control in countries a few hundred miles away, it has now managed to contain the outbreak.

Africa's most populous country has now been clear of the virus for 42 days, so can be considered "free" of the disease.
The WHO said it was a "spectacular success story".

Hero doctors

Dr Ameyo Stella Adadevoh is the doctor credited with helping prevent the disease spreading much more widely at the early stages.

She and her colleagues quickly identified a victim who came to Nigeria as having Ebola and placed him in quarantine.

Without any help from the national government, and little knowledge of the disease, Adadevoh set up precautions to disinfect the hospital, quickly educate staff, and ran part of the hospital as an isolation unit.

She and the hospital refused to release the patient despite what doctors described as "intense pressure" to allow him to attend a meeting of regional governments.

Dr Adadevoh, whose great-grandfather was a founder of the modern Nigeria, died on 19 August, having herself contracted the disease.

Her son told the Guardian newspaper: "If anything comes of this, all we want is an improvement in healthcare, especially public healthcare, in Nigeria."

How Nigeria beat Ebola

The lessons from Nigeria are not immediately replicable across Liberia, Guinea and Sierra Leone, but its outbreak can provide a model for the rest of the world.

After the patient was bought to a hospital, staff initially suspected malaria, and a number contracted the disease themselves treating the patient.

But after Dr Adadevoh controlled the local outbreak, international organisations acted quickly. The American Centers for Disease Control's experts had already trained 100 local doctors and assigned 40 to Ebola.

These doctors led an enormous effort to trace anyone who had come into contact with people who had had the disease.

Local health workers made 18,500 visits to take the temperature of 894 such people. Those living near these households were also checked.

A Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation emergency command centre, created to fight polio, became an emergency operation centre for Ebola.

As a result of all of this work, there have been only 19 cases and eight deaths in the country.
John Vertefeuille, from the US Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) told AFP: "Nigeria acted quickly and early and on a large scale. They acted aggressively, especially in terms of contact-tracing."

Senegal, which is much closer to the countries particularly badly affected, was also declared Ebola free on Friday.

Its government similarly reacted very quickly, and identified 74 people who had close contact with the patient, who travelled by road from Guinea.