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

Saturday, November 15, 2014

South Korean naval ships dock at Colombo


Tamil Guardian 15 November 2014
  

A South Korea Destroyer and Combat Support Ship docked at Colombo port this week, where they were ceremoniously greeted by the Sri Lankan navy.

The Commander of the two vessels, Rear Admiral Chun Jungsoo, also met with the Commander of the Sri Lanka Navy Vice Admiral Jayantha Perera.


The vessels are currently on a ninety-six day deployment across 12 countries.

Sri Lanka: Quo Vadis?


| by Nilantha Ilangamuwa
(November 15, 2014, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) To say that the President of Sri Lanka is greedy is no lie. Having scammed billions of rupees out of various deals with arms sellers, investors and government funds there is no doubt that he and his brothers have earned the nicknames. Now he wants to continue his reign unchallenged. He will never give up his desire for a third term in order to control over 20 million people to fulfill his personal desires. He is spending near to a billion rupees of public funds for his pre-election campaign and millions more to buy people who, otherwise, might have had a real, authentic reason to oppose him.
At present the election in Sri Lanka is nothing than a money game. It is nothing more than a deception to show the international community that democracy exists in Sri Lanka. Of course, it is Mahinda Rajapaksa democracy, but the man himself is oblivious to the idea that anyone in the West might realise this. Such is his self-delusion.

One of the best examples is to look at our travel documents and the reputation earned over the years. It was not a plot designed by the imperialists to curtail our movements. It must be asked, if Rajapaksa is so well respected abroad why can we not travel to China, the mango-partner of the ruling party. 

Meanwhile, there are no surprises from the judiciary. It was to be expected that the Supreme Court would rule in favour of Rajapaksa contesting a third term. Today, Sri Lanka is harvesting what it cultivated in the name of phony patriotism. Now the citizens are being forced to eat ideological poison in order to protect the tyrant that they put in power. It is this tyrant who is using the rights of the people to protect his own evil power. 

Now it is our duty to find a way of get rid of the tyrant. It will not be the first time nor the last time in human history that the rights of the people have been used to uphold the tyrant.

Anything can happen in a society of distorted morality.

However, the only hope the people have of overcoming the tyrant will be if they stand together. This calls for a desire to overcome the situation once and for all.

The people have to eradicate self-justification by comparisons with extremely violent decades faced in the past. It requires a plan and the plan should be designed not to just hide the scars of the wounds of the nation but to cure the disease that the nation suffered since its beginning.

Giving a third term to the tyrant is testing the degree of distorted morality of the society, but the real cost of it will come years later as we are still paying the cost for the power produced in the late 70s.

What we are feeling and sensing now is that independence is fast becoming a very bad joke.
My query to my motherland is, Sri Lanka, Quo vadis?

Enemies Of The President’s Promise – Chapter II – Happy Part – IIII

Colombo Telegraph
By Rajiva Wijesinha -November 15, 2014 
Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP
Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP
The failure of politicians in the North who were close to government to command any respect led in turn to the forces having to play a more dominant role, for they were the most efficient representatives of government in the area. Had they instead taken leading citizens into partnership, and indeed given them the leading role, the situation would have been very different.
The contrast with what might have been was apparent in the Islands, where I found that the local bodies had done nothing to improve the prospects of the people they represented. In Delft, the only attempt to provide employment for youngsters was a garment factory run by the navy, which had provided training for the girls of the area. They seemed very happy with their lot, but nothing had been done for the young men.
                                       Read More

The East Erupts: Mossad Again?

Colombo Telegraph
By Rajan Hoole -November 15, 2014
Dr. Rajan Hoole
Dr. Rajan Hoole
A hartal by Muslims in the Eastern Province to protest the killings in Murungan was organised on 12th April 1985. A crew from state television was fortuitously present in the Amparai District to record a Muslim protest for the news broadcast. But more interesting things were happening about which there was total silence. The Tamil village of Karaitivu, which lies between Sainthamaruthu and Kalmunai to the north and Nintavur to the south, was attacked by Muslim mobs backed by armed men from the newly deployed Special Task Force (STF) and even an Air Force helicopter.
The STF was a British gift to Sri Lanka. Just as the US President gifted the Mossad so as not to get directly involved, the British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher sent the Channel Islands based Keeny Meeny Services (KMS), providing ex-SAS mercenaries to train policemen selected for the STF. The role of the STF and the Air Force in the Karaitivu attack was confirmed in the Paul Nallanayagam court hearing (see below) by an eyewitness whose own house was dam- aged and ‘Chairman’ Vinayagamoorthy, a mem- ber of the UNP who was chairman of the Amparai District Development Council.                  Read More

EPF incurs heavy losses, no income

epfThe parliament has been informed that the Employees’ Provident Fund (EPF) has incurred heavy losses and had not received any income by investing billions of rupees in the share market.
The EPF annual report for the year 2012 was tabled in parliament by Chief Government Whip, Minister Dinesh Gunawardena on behalf of the Minister of Labour and Labour Relations.
The Minister said that the EPF had not received any income from investments amounting to Rs 500,000,000 in an airline company, Rs. 205,489, 613 in 5,091,200 shares of a finance company and Rs. 810,321,611 in 23,712,200 shares of a hotel company in 2010.
“The EPF has not received any income from the investment of Rs. 8,793,951,889 in 14 companies as at December 31 2012. Out of those 14 companies, the investments made in six companies amounted to Rs. 7,358, 547, 720,” observes the Auditor General on the financial statements of the EPF for the year 2012. The Auditor General has made this servation on June 19, 2014.
Five companies in which the EPF has invested Rs. 2,412, 402,036 have incurred losses in 2012/2013. Out of those five companies, four companies in which Rs. 2,206,912,423 was invested have incurred losses in the year of accounts 2011/2012 as well. The EPF has not received an income whatsoever from the respective companies in the two years of accounts,” the report says.
The fund has made an overall investment of Rs. 63,102, 761, 384 as at December 2012 on long term and short term basis in 72 companies listed in the share market.
The report says that the EPF has invested Rs. 3,890,902,522, Rs. 6,877,822,908, Rs. 39,133,587,926, Rs. 73,948,947,927, Rs. 63,102,761,384 in share market in 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012 respectively. The income received from those investments in the years 2008, 2009, 2010, 2011 and 2012 was 8.93 per cent, 22.99 per cent, 5.08 per cent, 3.58 per cent and 3.77 per cent respectively.

More corrupt deals revealed


 
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COPE recommends removal of State Printing and National Paper Company chiefs
Rs 391 m squandered at Colombo port
Sri Lanka Cricket transaction questioned
Taj Samudra refurbishment questioned
Inadequacies at Oluvil harbour highlighted

By Saman Indrajith

The Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC), the National Paper Company Limited (NPCL) and SriLankan Airlines Limited had suffered a loss of Rs. 40 billion last year, according to the Second Interim Report released to Parliament by the Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE) yesterday.

The CPC loss amounted to Rs. 7,732,818,000 while the NPCL and Sri Lankan Airlines Limited incurred losses to the tune of Rs. 109,684,000 and Rs 32,357,980,000 respectively, said the report of COPE tabled in Parliament by its Chairman Senior Minister DEW Gunasekara.

Presenting the report Minister Gunasekara said that it covered the committee’s probes on 46 institutions. "During the course of the First Session of the Seventh Parliament, commencing from June 2010, COPE has been able to examine the audited accounts relating to all institutions coming under COPE thrice within a period of four years. This is an unprecedented record in the history of our legislature," he said.

Senior Minister Gunasekera said that COPE was of the view that provisions should be made available to stop the re-appointment of chairmen and the members of the board of directors of the institutions which have received adverse audit opinion for three consecutive years. COPE had recommended the removal of the top management of the State Printing Corporation and the National Paper Company Limited to which the government had responded favourably, he said.

The report revealed that the entire procurement process in relation to the grant of local television broadcast rights by the Sri Lanka Cricket in 2010 had not been transparent.

The tender notice had not been given an adequate publicity; only a small advertisement had been inserted in a newspaper. "Going by the design of the advertisement it is doubtful whether the attention of the interested parties was drawn to it. Sufficient time had not been given to respond to the tender notice. Only one bid had been received in response to the tender notice. No clauses had been entered in the agreement in relation to a bid bond and delayed payments." The fact that the Secretary of Sri Lanka Cricket is the Chief Executive Officer of the company which received the tender amounts to a clear conflict of interest, the report says.

Under the subheading of Major Transactions with inadequate accountability, the report observes: "In spite of the initial estimate of Rs 2.5 million, the tender related to the refurbishment of 13 hotel rooms in the Samudra Hotel, had been awarded by the Sri Lanka Institute of Tourism and Hotel Management for Rs 3.9 million per room. However, the selected contractor had failed to perform the refurbishment up to the standards and the final payment had been made ignoring the audit observations."

"Even though a stock distributor in Anuradhapura had been responsible for the misplacement of 5000 MT of fertilizer valued at Rs 388 million (without subsidy), given by the Colombo Fertilizer Company Ltd,. To be distributed among the farmers under the fertilizer subsidy scheme, the investigations into the fraud, taken place in 2008, had not been completed even by 2014. It was further observed that no agreement had been entered into when handing over the fertilizer stock to the particular centre which had been registered only as an NGO.

"The monopoly of selling soft drinks at Galle Face Green had been acquired by a trade union of the Sri Lanka Ports Authority by getting registered as a private company and later, it had been sold to an external company for Rs 5.5 million without obtaining the approval of the Authority.

"The National Paper Company Ltd had received only Rs 16 million for a stock of scrap iron worth of around Rs 40 million, sold in the year 2012 and a significant number of dishonoured cheques had also been obtained in respect of this transaction.

"Although construction work of the Oluvil Port had been completed by spending Rs 6,780 million received from the DANIDA Agency of the Denmark and Rs 444 million of the Sri Lanka Ports Authority, its operations had not commenced even as at the date of the examination held on 04.06.2014. Further, it has been revealed that the Port can accommodate only smaller vessels due to its low depth of around 9 meters.

"Rs 391 million, spent on the improvement of the efficiency of the Colombo Port, had become futile as the project, funded by the Asian Development Bank, had been abandoned since the Government policies had changed later.

"Rs 54,889,800 had been paid as fines by the State Printing Corporation in the years 2010 and 2011 for not handing over the printed books at the specified dates, and not printing the text books in accordance with the relevant specifications.

"Rs 1,494,543 had been made as the initial payment for the construction of an administration building for the University of Sabaragamuwa. Due to a legal issue, no construction had commenced as at the date of the examination held on 05.06.2014, even though the cabinet approval had been received in 2007.

"The contract for the construction of the Arch Bridge of Pussellawa-Ulapane road had been awarded by the Road Development Authority in 1999 at the estimated cost of Rs 42 million. Since the construction work had stopped by 2003 after spending Rs 34 million, the contract had been re-awarded to the State Development and Construction Corporation to complete the rest of the work at Rs 75 million on condition that it should be completed before 18.06.2009. However, the construction work had not been completed even by 31.12.2013."
Export revenue loss Rs 5 B 

By Sulochana Ramiah Mohan and Lankesh Gooneratne-

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 November 15, 2014
The 32-hour-strike, by the private container truck drivers and their assistants, at the Colombo Port on Thursday, caused a staggering export loss of Rs 5 billion.
Importers and exporters of refrigerated meat, crabs and jumbo prawns suffered, mainly due to the current supply to containers being left unplugged for 18 hours, claimed President of Eksath Lanka Container Transportation Owners' Association (SLPA) and Federation of Container Transport Owners' Association, Udeni Kaluthanthri.

Container drivers staged a protest on Wednesday night at the Ingurukade Junction, obstructing the entry point to the port, protesting against the work ethics of the Customs and Security officials at the Port, who were demanding heavy bribes from the drivers to let them leave the premises.
Kaluthanthri said, "I can't exactly say how many containers were left out without electricity supply but fish exporters suffered a major loss."

He also added that officials who take bribes were pointed out to Project Minister of Highways, Ports and Shipping Rohitha Abeygunawardena however, the minister didn't address that issue.
He said the minister promised to take precautions.

Another main issue was that the trucks take nearly nine hours to go from the Port gate to the loading point, which is only 5km, due to unnecessary checking and paper work.

Meanwhile,the Sri Lanka Ports Authority admitted that some of their officials have been involved in taking bribes from the truck drivers.

"We are aware of it and will be taking strict measures to see that it will not occur in the future. The matter has been resolved, a senior official at the Project Minister's office of Highways, ports and shipping told Ceylon Today.
The Eksath Lanka Container Transportation Owner's Association (ELCTOA) had tabled 11 demands and the minister had agreed to solve them all, the Association president said.

They have demanded effective solutions for the actions taken by the Port Ministry and officers from the Custom at the No.7 gate.

Furthermore, several agreements were reached on implementation of documentation centre around the clock, signal lamps at the Ingurukade Junction, easing the congestion at gate No.7 of SLPA and to ease traffic with the first come first served basis, Sanitary facilities for the truck drivers and regular port users and few other requests.

Ukraine to close state offices, bank services in rebel-held east

Armed people and military trucks are seen near a checkpoint outside a building in the territory controlled by the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic in Donetsk, eastern Ukraine, November 12, 2014.
Armed people and military trucks are seen near a checkpoint outside a building in the territory controlled by the self-proclaimed Donetsk People's Republic in Donetsk, eastern Ukraine, November 12, 2014. REUTERS/Maxim Zmeyev
BY ALESSANDRA PRENTICE AND PAVEL POLITYUK-KIEV Sat Nov 15, 2014
Reuters(Reuters) - Ukrainian President Petro Poroshenko issued several decrees on Saturday to shut state institutions and banking services in pro-Russian eastern regions, pressing a move to cut links with the rebel-held territory.
Ukraine has cut all state funding to separatist parts of Donetsk and Luhansk regions after separatists held elections in late October which Poroshenko condemned as illegal and in violation of a ceasefire agreement made in September.
The rebels, in turn, say Ukraine violated the deal by moving to revoke a law granting the regions autonomy, putting an already fragile ceasefire in doubt.
A decree posted on the president's website said all state companies, institutions and organisations should end their work within a week and "evacuate workers, with their permission, (and) where possible remove property and documents".
The ruling, which formally asks parliament to revoke the "special status" of the regions, also suggests Ukraine's central bank take measures to close down all banking services in certain parts of separatist-held areas, including card operations.
Ukraine accuses Russia of sending more soldiers and weapons to help rebels prepare for a new offensive and has cut off state funding to the war-shattered eastern regions as it refuses "to finance terrorists".
The Kremlin has repeatedly denied aiding the separatists, driving relations with Kiev to an all-time low.
A Reuters reporter saw an unidentified 40-vehicle column of military vehicles, including personnel carriers and artillery guns, travelling across separatist territory towards the rebel-held city of Luhansk on Saturday.
A Ukrainian military spokesman said seven soldiers had been killed in the past 24 hours, while the press service for the 'Donetsk People's Republic' said six civilians, including two children, were killed in shelling on Friday. More than 4,000 people have been killed in the conflict so far.
The presidential rulings, which are based on decisions made by Ukraine's Security Council, also require Ukrainian gas producers to supply all their output in the 2014-15 seasons to the population, rather than to industry.
Russia cut off gas supplies to Ukraine in June over a pricing dispute and while some flows may restart in the coming weeks after a EU-brokered agreement, Ukraine still needs to take steps to conserve its insufficient reserves for the winter.
Ukraine is also facing an electricity crisis as the conflict has disrupted coal supplies to thermal power plants, which provide around 40 percent of the country's electricity, and has left reserves critically low ahead of the cold winter months.
As a result of the latest decree, the energy ministry must now look into the possibility of buying electricity from Russia to help Ukraine shrink its gas consumption - a serious setback to the country's efforts to reduce energy dependence on Russia.

(Additional reporting by Anton Zverev in Krasniy Luch, Ukraine; Editing by Elizabeth Piper and Stephen Powell)

Afghanistan's Children of War

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The United Nations issued a report on Wednesday stating that the number of civilians killed or wounded in Afghanistan rose by 23 percent in the first six months of 2013, with women and children faring the worst -- killed by roadside bombs almost every day. An earlier UN report noted that "Afghanistan remains one of the most dangerous places in the world to be a child". Over a third of Afghans are living in abject poverty, violence is escalating as NATO forces withdraw, and years of international aid has done little to decrease the abuse of women and children. These children, growing up in a country torn by warfare for decades, do their best to live normal lives -- learning to cope with the dangers, finding time to play when they can, and learning lessons from the adults all around them. The photos below are part of the ongoing series here on Afghanistan[44 photos]
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An Afghan refugee girl, in a mud house built with help from the Norwegian refugee council in Ghorian district of Herat province, Afghanistan, after returning to her home country on May 27, 2008. Many Afghan refugees struggle to rebuild their lives in their shattered homeland after spending years, sometimes decades, in Pakistan and Iran where they fled over the last 30 years of almost continual war.(Reuters/Ahmad Masood) 


Afghan children run to school on September 24, 2012, in a village on the road to Naghlu, near the French army base.(Jeff Pachoud/AFP/Getty Images) 
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U.S. weighs expanded CIA training, arming of Syrian allies struggling against Assa


A rebel fighter readies a mortar during clashes with regime forces in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo on October 31, 2014. Syria accused Turkey on October 30, of a "flagrant violation" of its sovereignty, as Ankara allowed Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga fighters and opposition rebels to cross its border to battle jihadists. AFP PHOTO/KARAM AL-MASRIKARAM AL-MASRI/AFP/Getty Images (Karam Al-Masri/AFP/Getty Images)
 November 14 at 7:45 PM
The Obama administration has been weighing plans to escalate the CIA’s role in arming and training fighters in Syria, a move aimed at accelerating covert U.S. support to moderate rebel factions while the Pentagon is preparing to establish its own training bases, U.S. officials said.
U.S. Weighs Expanded CIA Training, Arming of Syrian Allies Struggling Against Assad by Thavam Ratna

From olive branch to big stick

Nov 15th 

Republicans want the president to get tougher abroad

2014 | WASHINGTON, DC
The EconomistBARACK OBAMA, Washington greybeards used to say, differs from other American presidents: he secured a place in world history merely by being elected. The agreed wisdom was that Mr Obama might thus devote his final, lame-duck years to domestic matters—unlike predecessors who headed abroad to escape frustrations at home. 

Nigeria’s Boko Haram seizes hometown of kidnapped girls

Residents forced to flee as extremist group takes town of Chibok in north-east of country
Boko Haram's Abubakar Shekau delivering a speech
A screengrab of a video showing a speech by Boko Haram’s leader Abubakar Shekau. The group has seized the town of Chibok. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
, Africa correspondent-Friday 14 November 2014 
The Islamist group Boko Haram has seized Chibok, the Nigerian town from which it kidnapped 276 schoolgirls earlier this year, in a show of strength that makes the teenagers’ safe release a more distant prospect than ever.
The militants attacked at about 4pm on Thursday, destroying communications masts and forcing residents to flee, according to witnesses. One described running past bodies strewn on a street.
The fall of Chibok is hugely symbolic. The town in north-east Nigeria became the centre of world attention in April when Boko Haram fightersstormed the government girls secondary school, forced students onto trucks and drove them into the bush. There was a global Twitter campaign, BringBackOurGirls, and criticism of the government’s response.
Tsambido Hosea Abana, a community leader from Chibok who has cousins and nieces among the 219 teenagers still being held, said on Friday: “Our girls are in the bush and they are killing the parents. We are talking about the lives of the parents and adults now. This thing has gone beyond anyone’s control.”
Speaking from the capital, Abuja, Abanda said he had sisters, aunts, uncles, nieces and nephews in Chibok. “I’ve only heard from one. He was on his way to Chibok and he met people running away so he turned around. A villager told me he saw corpses lying in the street; he could not count them because he was running.”
He joined criticism of the military’s handling of the crisis. “They are not doing well. How can they just run away when they hear ‘Allahu Akbar’? They are handing over weapons to these boys.”
Boko Haram’s leader, Abubakar Shekau, claims to have carried through his promise to marry off the teenagers still being held and said they had all converted to Islam.
Enoch Mark, a Christian pastor whose daughter and niece are among the kidnapped, told Agence France-Presse “Chibok was taken by Boko Haram. They are in control.”
Mark said the attack on the town, which residents have warned of for some time, appeared to come after Boko Haram overran the towns of Hong and Gombi in neighbouring Adamawa state. “They came in and engaged soldiers and vigilantes in a gunfight,” he added.
“Some of us managed to escape. All the telecom towers in the town were destroyed during the attack with RPGs [rocket-propelled grenades]. No one can say what the situation is in the town in terms of destruction to property.”
Pogo Bitrus, chairman of the elders forum in Chibok, also confirmed the attack but said Boko Haram may have had inside information about security. “The vigilantes use shotguns and cartridges and have been short in supply, so the leader left yesterday for Maiduguri to procure more in the event of any attack,” he told AFP.
“But Boko Haram launched the attack while he was still in Maiduguri. He was due to come today, so it looks like they knew what was happening.”
Bitrus said the vigilantes were preparing for a counter-attack and troops had been deployed from Damboa, 22 miles away by road to the north-west. “I can assure you they are going to retake Chibok,” he added.
Boko Haram – whose name means “western education is sinful” – have been waging a deadly five-year insurgency aimed at creating a hardline Islamist state in the north of Africa’s most populous country. In October the government announced a ceasefire had been agreed, but the group’s leader denied this and has intensified attacks since.
Last Monday, 58 boys were killed when a suspected Boko Haram suicide attacker detonated explosives at a school in Potiskum, Yobe state.
Two weeks ago it took the commercial hub of Mubi, killing dozens and torching houses, and renamed it “Madinatul Islam” (“City of Islam” in Arabic), residents told AFP. It introduced its strict version of Islamic law, including amputations for alleged thieves.
However, in a rare setback, about 200 vigilantes and hunters armed with bows and arrows, clubs, spears, machetes and home-made guns helped the Nigerian military regain control of Mubi, which had been the biggest town under the extremists’ control.
One resident, who asked not to be named, told AFP: “I saw the Boko Haram fighters fleeing in droves in their vehicles when the hunters and vigilantes entered the town.
“Their emir [leader] was captured by the hunters and made to sit outside the military barracks that he and his men turned into their base. He had his hands tied from the back and we swarmed to have a look but we were later dispersed by the hunters.”
Mubi is the first town Boko Haram has lost since August, when it declared a caliphate in areas under its control. But celebrations were cut short when Boko Haram fighters seized the towns of Gombi, Hong and the major prize of Chibok.
Earlier this week president Goodluck Jonathan, whose leadership during the crisis has been widely questioned, announced his intention to seek another term in office, pledging to defeat the insurgents and free the schoolgirls.

Riot police remove MPs from South Africa's parliament

Channel 4 News
FRIDAY 14 NOVEMBER 2014
Riot police enter the South African parliament to remove opposition MPs after they call President Jacob Zuma a thief and a criminal.
The chaotic scenes on Thursday night followed a vote to absolve President Zuma of any wrongdoing over his use of £14m of state money to upgrade his private home.
Ngwanamakwetle Mashabela, of the Economic Freedom Fighters party (EFF), repeatedly called the president a "thief" and a "criminal".
The MP refused to withdraw the comments or leave the chamber and riot police were brought in, at which point the parliamentary live video feed was cut. Punches were reportedly thrown and four MPs injured in the scuffles.
View image on TwitterView image on Twitter
The @SAPoliceService has just assaulted me and threw me over the @ParliamentofRSA bench
The EFF has been involved in heated debates in parliament on numerous occasions. In September, party leader Julius Malema was thrown out after accusing Deputy President Cyril Ramaphosa of being a killer.
His chief whip Floyd Shivambu was also removed for putting his middle finger up in Ramaphosa's direction.
The EFF blames the deputy president for the deaths of 34 striking mineworkers at Marikana in 2012. Mr Ramaphosa has always denied any wrongdoing.