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, January 5, 2015

Top Buddhist Prelates Call on EC To Ensure Free & fair Election

Top Buddhist Monks
05/01/2015 
Sri Lanka BriefThe leading Buddhist prelates of the Asgiriya and Malwatte Chapters have jointly signed a letter to the Elections Commissioner calling for a free and fair Presidential election on January 8.
Letter to EC by Top Buddhist Monks
The Ven. Thibbatuwawe Sri Siddhartha Sumangala Thera from the Malwatte Chapter and the Ven. Udugama Sri Buddharakitha Thera from the Asgiriya Chapter jointly signed the letter.
The two prelates also stated in their letter that they had taken note of the efforts of the Elections Commissioner so far to ensure a free and fair election devoid of any affiliations to candidates in the fray.
Letter to EC by Top Buddhist Monks

Monitors fear voter intimidation before Sri Lanka election

7166981744635703.jpgSri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa gestures toward party supporters during a rally in Jaffna. (AFP)
Arab NewsCOLOMBO: International observers said they had received complaints of voter intimidation before this week’s Sri Lankan presidential election, in which the incumbent faces a tough battle to win an unprecedented third term.
The 55-member panel of monitors told reporters they had already received complaints that the military had set up 400 roadblocks to discourage minority Tamils from voting freely in former war zones.
“According to the opposition these roadblocks are to keep away the voters... (but) we are told (by the authorities) that the military has no role to play in these election,” said the monitoring team leader S. Y. Quraishi. “We are yet to see that.”
He said international observers would Monday begin fanning out to the 22 electoral districts across the island to check out the final rallies.
They will also be present at polling booths on Thursday during a nine-hour period when some 15 million people are eligible to vote.
“The police have assured us that they will guarantee that the election is free and fair,” Quraishi said. 
“At the moment, we have to take their word.”
The monitors have been invited by Sri Lanka’s election chief Mahinda Deshapriya, who told them he was confident of conducting a fair election.
Even as they arrived in the island, gunmen opened fire at a meeting of the main opposition candidate Maithripala Sirisena on Saturday night and wounded one person.
On Friday at least 20 supporters of Sirisena were wounded when stones and rocks were thrown as he addressed crowds at Pelmadulla outside the capital.
Private local election monitors have said they received nearly 1,100 complaints since campaigning got underway in early December.
Police said they had received a much smaller number of complaints, but that 130 arrests had been made.
The private monitors, the Campaign for Free and Fair Elections, said the increasing violence was well organized and targeted the opposition, which is mounting a serious challenge against two-term incumbent Rajapakse.
Previous elections have been marred by violence, particularly against Tamil and Muslim voters who are the opposition’s major support base.
Sirisena left his health portfolio and quit Rajapakse’s administration in November to become the main opposition candidate.
Local media reports say the two men are currently neck and neck, although Rajapakse was considered the clear front-runner when he called the vote two years ahead of schedule.
The ruling party’s vote sank 21 points at a local election in September, suggesting that the president’s popularity may be waning five years after he ended a separatist war that had claimed 100,000 lives between 1972 and 2009.

Of gratitude, political prostitutes and political pimps

January 5, 2015
The most enlightened, most noble Ven. Galaboda Gnanasara Thero, the General Secretary of the Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) organisation, had a mouthful to spew at former Justice Minister and Sri Lanka Muslin Congress (SLMC) Leader Rauff Hakeem recently. He called him a political prostitute.
The most “eloquent” Gnanasara Thera said that Rauff Hakeem had defected to the opposition at the presidential elections in 2005 and 2010, however, later joined the Government once again. This, according to him, makes Rauf Hakeem a political prostitute.

Government Casting Stones Against The Rising Ride


| by Rajiva Wijesinha
( January 5, 2014, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) As the election campaign draws to a close, the government seems to be getting more desperate. Arjuna Ranatunge noted at today’s press conference that his brother had claimed he would go abroad before the election. He denied this categorically, but seemed sad also that the Rajapaksas had stooped so low as to involve a brother he had respected in such falsehoods.
We must be fully aware that the price of liberty is constant vigilance. All those who want a change cannot rest until the election has been conducted and the result announced, and the new President has taken office.
Other rumours are being spread, about Sajith Premadasa, about Sarath Fonseka. The former had to appear in the media to deny this, as Fonseka did some time back, using incisive language about the President. In Sajith’s case, he has been doing magnificient work in Hambantota, so much so that someone who came home from there today said that it was now 50/50. Six months ago, he said, it would have been 70% to the President.
This seems to be the trend everywhere, though I know that in a couple of Provinces our organization has been weak. But even in Hambantota, where some leaflets I send down last week were the first that had been seen in the area, the people have decided to vote for a change. Given the stranglehold of ruling party thugs in one or two areas, I can understand why people are not making their feelings clear. But unless there is violence on a massive scale, I have no doubt we will win decisively.
And such violence seems the less likely, given that so many elements in government are now willing to stand up against abuse. As I write, three cases are reported in the ‘Top Story’ section of the online Daily Mirror about courts checking government excesses. Two are about orders to arrest government politicians, one is about blocking media abuse. That is why I do not think government plans to rig the election can work. While there will always be a few public servants willing to follow illegal orders, the majority will refuse. However, often they keep quiet while a few pervert democracy and law. Now however they will not take things lying down, so the ugly few will have to restrain themselves.
Nevertheless, we must be fully aware that the price of liberty is constant vigilance. All those who want a change cannot rest until the election has been conducted and the result announced, and the new President has taken office.

Lasantha Was Murdered On The 8th Of January; Let Us Pray For Our Nation

Lal at Lasantha‘s grave site
Colombo TelegraphLal By Dushyanthi
By Lal Wickrematunge -January 5, 2015
Each year since 2009 friends, colleagues and family gather at Lasantha‘s grave site to pay homage to a fallen hero. It is human nature to revere a person after his death. This is more so in Sri Lanka. Whilst alive practicing his profession Lasantha was vilified, assaulted tied up in a myriad of litigation and finally assaulted. He died defending his right to express an opinion as is enshrined in our Constitution and to lay forth information before a public who paid to buy the Sunday Leader.
As Lasantha’s grieving daughter Ahimsa wroterecently it is ironical that President Mahinda Rajapaksa decided to seek an unprecedented third term on the 8th of January 2015. This third term is the stepping stone to trigger an incumbent President in seeking multiple terms in office consequent to the restrictions placed by bringing in the 18th amendment to the Constitution.
It is opportune to enlighten the reader that the incumbent President knows first hand the emotions of family members who have lost a parent, sibling or an offspring. I would rather say….almost, as far as he is concerned. His brother the Secretary of Defence, Gotabaya Rajapaksa was targeted by the LTTE whilst being driven in a bomb- bullet proof car in Colombo a few years ago. A badly shaken Gotabaya Rajapaksa raced to Temple Trees in blood soaked clothing to be hugged by a much relieved brother President Mahinda Rajapaksa. Massive bill boards dotted the country depicting this emotive moment. I believe President Rajapaksa yet relives that moment and the anxiety that he went through. I also believe that he as a consequence is aware of the emotions of Lasantha’s family and the need to bring closure into his murder. Therefore he nor his family will find fault with Lasantha’s family for insisting that justice is done or pursued till it is concluded as is required by law.
Many a friend and acquaintance tell me that I should forget, forgive and move on. I would. But Lasantha’s killers roam free. No bill boards nor cut outs can pacify a family seeking justice for a murder most cowardly. Not until there is legal closure.
President Mahinda Rajapaksa did tell me more than once that Gen Sarath Fonseka was behind Lasantha’s killing. That was at a time Gen. Fonseka had announced that he would contest President Rajapaksa for the Presidency. There was a time lapse between Lasantha’s murder and the Presidential election. I did ask him why he did not pursue action against the General for murder instead of using trumped up charges for seemingly innocuous offenses. The answer was incoherent but once he did say that i should bring forth evidence. Others in authority said that it would demoralize the Army.
It is implausible that the President of this country and others within the chain of command, who knew exactly where Prabakaran was, where KP was, is unaware as to who killed Lasantha. And who gave orders to do so. I have been informed by authority that the perpetrators did not mean to kill Lasantha but went “over the top”. This too proves that many are aware as to who killed Lasanatha, but dare not volunteer information into a murder as required by law out of fear. Or do they feel that Lasantha deserved to be murdered?
It is a fact that none of the assaults nor killings of journalists have been successfully prosecuted. Some even venture to pontificate that there is freedom of expression wafting through Sri Lanka at present. They believe so because no journalists are being assaulted or killed at present. There is no requirement to do so now. Journalists have resorted to self censorship or have fled the shores of the island.
The path the current regime could have been stalled was only through an implosion. Many wished to believe it would be through a split within the ruling family. I did not think so. The moment has come to pass and is before us. The implosion came through political party lines. It is but true that power without accountability should be abhorred. But power sans accountability without time limits?
The Singapore or Malaysian models maybe dangled before us to counter this argument. Politicians will scream out that we are a sovereign nation and essentially a proud people. Unlike the two models have we evolved into being Sri Lankans irrespective of race? That might be a first step towards national reconciliation.
Lasantha was passionate in his chosen profession. He was committed and fearless. Not all loved him. Not all hated him. He could sense a story well before many in his profession did. He was a caring elder to children and a good leader. The journalists who worked with Lasantha were jealously guarded by him as his prized possessions even against his own management. I should know that.
Time and tide goes by swiftly. It is six years since Lasantha was murdered. Six long years without the numerous squads assigned to handle investigations into the murder making any headway. Let us pray for him. Let us pray for the perpetrators. Let us pray for our Nation on the 8th of January 2015.

Violence Continues; While Police Looks On

Sri Lanka Brief
CaFFE Election Report # 58-05/01/2015
Campaign for Free and Fair Election (CaFFE) is dismayed by the increasing violence as election day approached and the lukewarm attitude of the Police to curb the violence. There were several incidents of serious cases serious violence on January 4-5 in Aralaganwila and Kahawatte using firearms.
CaFFE has continued to warn that the inaction of the Police would lead to an increase in election related violence and as predicted we see a number of politicians using firearms to intimidate political opponents.
If relevant authorities need to hold a free and fair election Police need to take impartial action against all perpetrators of election law violations.
Shots fired at Kahawatte Election stage of Common Opposition Candidate
Shots fired at Kahawatte Election stage of Common Opposition Candidate, where the last rally of Sirisena in Ratnapura district will be held, at around 2am today (05). The stage was being built at Kahawatte Public Ground and over 200 people including UNP MP Thalatha Atukorale were present when the incident occurred.
Assailants have arrived in eight vehicles and they were led by a UPFA MP known for violence in Ratnapura. After they started attacking the stage UNP supporters retaliated and it was at this point that UPFA MP’s group started firing at the crowd with a T 56 weapon.
Three UNP supporters were wounded and one person, who got shot in the abdomen is in critical condition. All are being treated at Ratnapura Hospital. Meanwhile two vehicles used by the assailants have also been damaged by UNP supporters.
After the incident supporters of Common Opposition Candidate blocked Kahawatte road and burnt down a number of election offices of UPFA MP Premalal Jayasekara aka Choka Malli were destroyed. The roads were closed for over four hours because of the incident.
police have not taken any action until two hours of the initial incident. They only reacted when the UNP supporters started attacking Jayasekara’s offices.
Election officers in Trincomalee attacked
A group of officers attached to Trincomalee Election Department Office were assaulted when they tried to stop the illegal use of giant digital screens for election propaganda. The assault was led by a coordinating officer of a Trincomalee District MP. One election officer was hit on the head with a chair and he has been hospitalized ude to neck injuries.
In addition a staff officer of UPFA Deputy Minister Susantha Punchinilame has also lodged a complaint against the election officers stating that they tried to steal items from election offices. The Election Officers have gone for the investigation with nine members of the police.
UNP supporter assaulted in Divlapitiya
A UNP supporter, Ranjith Wijesiri of Hunumulla, Thammita was assaulted at 4.30 am on January 4 by a group traveling from a Defender Jeep (no PE 6890). Wijesiri was on his way home on a motor cycle from Dunagaha UNP office. Among the assailants are Divlapitiya PS Chairman Indika Anuruddha. The victim is being treated at Gampaha hospital.
PM coordinating secretary’s house attacked
The residence of Prime Ministerial Coordinating secretary, PB Nugaliyedda, who joined the common opposition candidate, was attacked around 11.30 pm on January 3. The assailants arrived in a van and Nugaliyedda’s vehicle was also damaged. Tow persons in the house were wounded.
NDF supporter attacked
Residence of Wasantha Sisira Kumara, next to the Common Opposition Candidate’s election office in Galenbindunuwewa, Kekirawa was attacked around 1 am on January 3. The assailants arrived in a white coloured cab.
Journalist intimidated at a Common Opposition Rally in Kolonnawa
A Sirasa U-reporter who tried to document an attempt by a group traveling in a Black coloured jeep to disrupt a rally by the Common Opposition in Kolonnawa was threatened. His camera was taken and footage was erased.
Ratnapura common opposition supporter attacked
Two NDF supporters, returning home after a pocket meeting in Ayagama, Ketepola to support the Common Opposition Candidate, was assaulted on January 3. The three wheeler in which they were traveling in was stopped at Ketepola by Ayagama PS Member Neveille who assaulted the two men with a pistol. The three wheeler was also damaged.
Civil society activists intimidated
The Decapitated head of a dog was placed opposite the residence of well known civil society activist, Brito Fernnado today morning. The same occured at the house of Prasanga, an associate of Fernando. CaFFE considers this as a direct message to civil society activists who are engaged in dissenting politics.
-CaFFE Media Unit

The 2015 Presidential Election: A view from the village

For the last eight months I have been living in a village in the Kalutara district. The village is situated about 10 kilometres south of Kalutara the district capital and a kilometer or so east from the sea.. The village economy is based on paddy farming and services with many young men and women commuting for work in Colombo and the neighbouring urban centres. The village is well served by rail and road transport. It is almost entirely Buddhist with temples of all three Nikayas and most people claim to be of the farming community. The village is perhaps typical of the hundreds of self – identified village communities in this south west quadrant of the island.
The 2015 Presidential Election a View From the Village by Thavam Ratna

Shooting mars final day of Sri Lanka vote campaign

Gunmen shot and wounded three opposition activists on Monday (Jan 5) who were preparing a stage for Maithripala Sirisena, President Mahinda Rajapakse's chief rival, on the final day of campaigning in Sri Lanka's election.
Channel NewsAsia Singapore
 05 Jan 2015 
COLOMBO: Gunmen shot and wounded three opposition activists on Monday (Jan 5) who were preparing a stage for President Mahinda Rajapakse's chief rival on the final day of campaigning in Sri Lanka's election, police said.
The men were hit in a drive-by shooting as they erected a podium for Maithripala Sirisena to address a rally in the southern town of Kahawatte, around 130km (80 miles) from the capital Colombo.
"A vehicle convoy approached the site and at least one person travelling in one of the vehicles opened fire wounding three people," said Superintendent Ajith Rohana. "We have information about the identity of attackers and we are trying to make arrests."
A nearby ruling party office was smashed shortly after the shooting in what appeared to be a retaliatory strike, Rohana added. Sporadic violence was reported from other parts of the island, prompting Sirisena to appeal for calm as the campaign was due to end at midnight.
"I have conducted a peaceful campaign and appeal to my opponent (Rajapakse) to please also ensure that there is peace in the three days before the voting on Jan 8," Sirisena told reporters in Colombo.
He said he was confident of victory and promised protection for Rajapakse and his family members in what he called a "new post-election political culture I will usher in from Friday".
The ruling party has also expressed confidence of winning the election that the incumbent called two years ahead of schedule. Rajapakse, who oversaw Sri Lanka's 2009 victory over Tamil separatist rebels at the end of a 37-year ethnic conflict, had been seen as the overwhelming favourite at the start of the campaign.
But he has been undermined by defections from both within his party and other members of his ruling coalition, throwing into doubt his prospects of winning an unprecedented third term and extending a nine-year rule.
Private local election monitors have said they have received over 1,100 complaints since campaigning got underway in early December. Police said they had received a much smaller number of complaints, but that 130 arrests had been made.
The private monitors, the Campaign for Free and Fair Elections, said the increasing violence was well organised and targeted the opposition, which is mounting a serious challenge against two-term incumbent Rajapakse. Previous elections have been marred by violence, particularly against Tamil and Muslim voters who are the opposition's major support base.
Sirisena left his health portfolio and quit Rajapakse's administration in November to become the main opposition candidate. Local media reports say the two men are currently neck and neck, and the results are expected by the end of Friday.

Sri Lanka: Court Order Against 'Janapathi Janahamuwa' ( Updated - The Court Order)

( January 5, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) District court of Kaduwela today issued enjoining orders against ITN, Rupavahini, Swarnavahini, Derana from broadcasting JanapathI Janahamuwa or similar program today or any day upto January 08, 2015.

The court order notes that as the programme favors the incumbent president and common candidate was not afforded similar airtime, broadcasting such a programme would violate election commissioners media directives.


A Presidency Under Threat – Perversions Of Norms

Colombo Telegraph
By Rajiva Wijesinha -January 5, 2015
Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP
Prof. Rajiva Wijesinha MP
I had thought this would be the last article in this series, since the election will be held in a couple of days, and the threat would have been fulfilled then (or possibly averted, though that seems increasingly unlikely as I write). But the manner in which some characters in the President’s camp are behaving suggests we may still have a period of uncertainty after the election results.
First there is the extraordinary statement of Rev Nalaka that, even if he loses, the President can go on for another two years. I cannot believe that a priest could be so utterly ignorant of matters on which he presumes to speak, but that is a less worrying belief than thinking he is a liar, intent on deliberately deceiving the people. The Constitution is very clear on the fact that, if the incumbent President seeks early election, and wins, his term of office begins on the next date corresponding to the date of his previous election (ie he could get upto a year more, but certainly not two years). It is equally clear that, if another candidate wins, his term of office will begin immediately.
Mahinda Family
The pronouncement of the priest then is bad but, assuming he is ignorant, it is worse that television stations showed him making the pronouncement, without themselves providing a correction. Even private channels should have political commentators capable of making the correction, but it is worse that State Television should allow such statements to gain currency.
A second problem is the desperate efforts of government to curry favour with the forces. They were told just before the postal vote that they would be given motor cycles, while the police were informed of a loan scheme. Sadly the government does not seem to understand that servicemen are not foolish, and I was given several reasons by ordinary members of the forces as to why these promises had no credibility.

Warrant issued to arrest Senthil Thondaman

Warrant issued to arrest Senthil Thondaman
 2015-01-05 
Bandarawela Magistrate Court has issued a warrant today (05) to arrest the UPFA Uva Provincial Council member Senthil Thondaman.
He was accused of assaulting a postman on 03 January at Ella area.

Magistrate orders to arrest Deputy Minister

Magistrate orders to arrest Deputy Minister
2015-01-05 
Pelmadulla Magistrate has ordered the arrest of Deputy Minister Premalal Jayasekara over the shooting at Maithri's rally at Kahawatta today (05), Police Media Unit told Ceylon Today Online.

Police, after conducting further investigations in to the incident has produced a 'B' report to the magistrate court naming 3 suspects including the Deputy Minister and two local government members.
The Magistrate has issued the order to arrest all the suspects in connection with this incident after considering the 'B' report.

Immigration and emigration officers also have been ordered to prevent these suspects from leaving the country.

Workers sew prayer caps in a factory in old Dhaka July 29, 2013. Prayer caps are hugely in demand during the holy month of Ramadan. REUTERS/Andrew BirajWorkers sew prayer caps in a factory in old Dhaka July 29, 2013. Prayer caps are hugely in demand during the holy month of Ramadan.
ReutersBY KRISTA MAHR AND SERAJUL QUADIR-DHAKA Mon Jan 5, 2015
(Reuters) - Undaunted by a run of horrific factory accidents that have hit Bangladesh's garments industry, two entrepreneurs bought Adorn Knitwear Ltd earlier this year.
It is a small business not far from the rubble of Rana Plaza, a Dhaka suburb building that collapsed in April 2013 killing more than 1,100 people, most low-paid seamstresses, and prompting a costly safety overhaul at plants large and small.
Whether people like Rezaul Karim Chowdhury, one of Adorn's new owners, can afford those improvements will be critical for the future of a sector that accounts for over 80 percent of this South Asian nation's export earnings, industry leaders say.
Last month, Adorn's production lines were silent and its sewing machines gathering dust as the lengthy process of checking the building for structural weakness was underway.
"We're losing money every minute," said Chowdhury, 35, as he looked around his factory, which has a list of potentially expensive fixes to be completed before reopening.
Many high-volume factories depend on smaller firms, contracting out work to meet orders from big Western retailers under tight deadlines.
Today, up to 20 percent of the 3,500 exporting garment factories subcontract, says the Bangladesh Garment Manufacturers and Exporters Association (BGMEA).
If that support system crumbles, some factory owners worry Bangladesh's $24 billion industry could lose the agility that took it to number two in the global league of garment exporters.
Since Rana Plaza, nearly two-thirds of the country's exporting garment factories have been inspected.
Many have been handed lists of structural, electrical and fire safety fixes and upgrades that could cost hundreds of millions of dollars.
Larger factories can generally pay for those changes independently, or have access to a growing number of affordable financing arrangements backed by wealthy customers.
Hundreds of smaller factories do not, leaving them exposed at a time when owners say they are grappling with a slide in orders and an increase in minimum wages for the industry's workforce of more than 4 million.
Already about 450 factories have gone to the wall since last year's disaster, the BGMEA says.
"If all the factories are becoming big, who will do the smaller things?" said Anwar-ul Alam Chowdhury, chairman of Evince Group and a former BGMEA president. "Then who will come to Bangladesh?"
   
A STITCH IN TIME
At Adorn, labourers ripped up flooring to expose steel rods that needed testing. Above them, the word "crack" was spray-painted in red in three spots, all to be analysed by engineers in a weeks-long assessment.
Getting factories up to speed after inspections may cost owners from $100,000 to $1 million apiece, according to the World Bank's International Finance Corporation (IFC).
The Accord on Fire and Building Safety in Bangladesh and the Alliance for Bangladesh Worker Safety, brand-backed initiatives that have inspected some 1,700 factories, offer mechanisms through which members are helping suppliers compensate workers for lost wages due to closures and finance factory revamps.
Several major apparel firms belonging to the Alliance or the Accord said they had made significant investments to help suppliers improve safety. Not all factories have needed outside funding.
The U.S.-based VF Corporation, an Alliance member whose brands include The North Face and Wrangler, announced it would guarantee up to $10 million for the IFC and Bangladesh's BRAC bank to lend its suppliers. So far, three VF supplier factories have received $1.3 million in loans.
The IFC is in talks to do the same with several more Accord and Alliance brands.
"NATURAL CORRECTION"
Even with more help coming, there are fewer options for the exporting factories that do not sell to Accord or Alliance companies. According to the International Labour Organization, they number roughly 1,800.
The BGMEA says it has asked the government to help these factories get up to speed by setting up a fund offering them low-cost loans, but the government says it is up to owners to find a way to meet safety standards after inspections.
"It will be the responsibility of the owner to pay, or he'll have to close it," said Mikail Shipar, secretary of the Ministry of Labour and Employment.
Some suppliers may be too unhealthy to secure another bank loan to stay afloat, said Ian Spaulding, senior adviser to the Alliance.
"It's going to happen throughout the market, and that's a natural correction that needs to happen."
Saving smaller factories is crucial for the local industry to keep its edge, but also for the economy, said Mohammad A. Rumi Ali, a director at BRAC Bank.
"If 75,000 people lose their jobs, and the majority are women, it's a big cost," he said.
Down a dirt road clogged with bicycle rickshaws in Badda, a congested area on the edge of Dhaka, a small garment factory is squeezed into a row of buildings.
The owner, who requested anonymity, said he could not meet all the inspectors' requirements, primarily because his business is in a rented building and the landlord refuses to help.
"I can't do all of it," he said. "Lower-class factories aren't getting any help."
(Editing by John Chalmers and Mike Collett-White)

China complains to Pyongyang after N Korean soldier kills villagers

North Korean army deserter reported to have killed four villagers after crossing border into Jilin province
A North Korean soldier at the international border between North Korea and China on the Yalu river.
A North Korean soldier at the international border between North Korea and China on the Yalu river. Photograph: Dan Chung/Dan Chung
The Guardian home
 in Beijing-Monday 5 January 2015
Beijing has lodged a formal complaint with Pyongyang after a North Korean army deserter sneaked across the border and killed four Chinese villagers with a handgun.
While relations between isolated North Korea and China, its only significant ally, have grown strained in recent years, violent conflict along their 1,420km-long shared border is rare.
The 26-year-old soldier crossed the Tumen river from North Korea into north-eastern China’s Jilin province at about 7.30am on 27 December, South Korea’s Dong-A Ilbo newspaper and Yonhap news agency reported, citing an anonymous source.
The soldier broke into the home of a 60-year-old ethnic Korean villager surnamed Xu and shot the man and his wife, killing them. He then entered the home of Xu’s neighbours – an elderly couple called Li – and beat them to death with his gun.
The soldier then entered a third house, owned by a villager surnamed Che, and stole 100 yuan (£10) and some food.
That night, Chinese soldiers and police shot the soldier in the stomach as he fled to the upper reaches of the Tumen. He remains unconscious in a local hospital.
China’s foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying confirmed the incident at a press briefing on Monday afternoon, adding that China had “lodged representations” to North Korea and “will handle the case in line with relevant laws.”
Chinese media also reported the incident on Monday, underscoring the awkward, often self-contradicting nature of Beijing’s relationship with its northern neighbour. China has supported North Korea for decades, afraid that instability in Pyongyang could send waves of North Korean refugees streaming across the border.
Yet Chinese authorities also appear wary of the country’s 31-year-old leader, Kim Jong-un. Kim has ruled the country since his father, Kim Jong-il, died in 2011, and his early tenure has been marked by sabre-rattling and repeated nuclear tests.