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

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

The Blasphemy Brigade

Saudi and Egyptian officials walked arm in arm with the unity marchers in Paris. But the blasphemy laws they’re happy to push at home are hypocritical, cynical, and dangerous.
The Blasphemy Brigade
BY MICHAEL WAHID HANNA-JANUARY 12, 2015
Foreign PolicyOn  Sunday, as millions marched in France to honor those killed following last week’s terrorist atrocity on the satirical magazine,Charlie Hebdo, the Saudi state minister for foreign affairs, Nizar bin Obaid Madani, joined the more than 40 world leaders gathered in Paris. The timing was awkward: On Friday, Saudi Arabia proceeded with its scheduled lashing for liberal blogger Raif Badawi, who was previously convicted of insulting Islam and was sentenced, on appeal, to 10 years imprisonment, 1,000 lashes, and a 1 million Saudi riyal fine (roughly $266,000). The lashes are to be administered over a period of 20 weeks, with Friday’s public flogging of 50 lashes being the first.
The decision to proceed with the lashing only magnified the disparity between how Riyadh reacted to the attacks in Paris, and its treatment of dissenting opinions at home. Blasphemy, as distinct from incitement to violence or hate crimes motivated by bigotry, is a “thought crime” that ascribes personal and collective injury as a result of disrespectful or critical speech directed against God or religious beliefs.
Despite the medieval trappings of Saudi criminal justice, they are not alone in patrolling the sacred. Prohibitions on blasphemy have taken root in several Arab countries: On Monday, Egypt sentenced a 21-year-old student to three years in jail for professing his atheism via social media and for allegedly insulting Islam. The case was just one of a series of Egyptian blasphemy prosecutions in recent years that have targeted atheists, Christians, and Shiites, all with the ostensible aim of defending against potential sacrilege. In fact, the frequency of such prosecutions has increased since the fall of Hosni Mubarak in 2011, and has continued apace even after the military’s ouster of Muslim Brotherhood President Mohamed Morsi. The Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights released a report in August 2014 that documented 36 cases of religious defamation since the January 25 uprising.
These cases are not outliers. In post-Ben Ali Tunisia, amid the initial euphoria of the Arab uprisings, a television station was fined for airing a depiction of God when it screened the French-Iranian animated filmPersepolis. In Libya in 2013, blasphemy charges were brought against two Libyan National Party officials for campaign posters that included cartoons discussing the role of women in society that allegedly bore a resemblance to characters included in previous controversial Charlie Hebdo cartoons; the charges were later dismissed in 2014.
Needless to say, the territorial expansion of murderous groups such as the Islamic State and Jabhat al-Nusra in Syria and Iraq has seen the vigilant policing of blasphemy as a crime punishable by death. These prosecutions have often been justified as necessary steps to preserve social cohesion and uphold the public order. It should be no surprise, however, that such hostile attitudes to free expression and religious liberty are often linked with much broader forms of repression.
Blasphemy and apostasy laws in the Arab world have been used opportunistically by authoritarians of all stripes, including ostensibly secular rulers, to advance control. This is a problem that will not simply be solved by addressing clerical and theological disputes, although that is a must.
It’s not only governments that have moved against blasphemy — in recent years, several high-profile incidents of perceived blasphemy have sparked mass mobilization, violent protests, and attacks. Most significantly, this was the case in the wake of the release of the farcical anti-Islam Innocence of Muslims video, which precipitated widespread global protests and violence in a number of countries. Prior to that, violent protests erupted in Afghanistan following the 2011 burning of a Quran by Florida pastor, Terry Jones, and the accidental burning of Qurans by the U.S. military at the Bagram Airfield in 2012. In 2006, derogatory cartoons of the prophet Mohammed published in Danish and Norwegian newspapers provoked a massive outcry, protests, and strained diplomatic relations.
In the wake of those earlier incidents, numerous Muslim-majority countries have sought to push international restrictions on blasphemy. Speaking in 2012, Arab League Secretary-General Nabil el-Araby called for “the development of an international legal framework which is binding in order to confront insulting religions and ensuring that religious faith and its symbols are respected.”
During that same period following the uproar over Innocence of Muslims, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan further elaborated on this idea, saying that “when it is in the form of a provocation, there should be international legal regulations against attacks on what people deem sacred, on religion…. Freedom of thought and belief ends where the freedom of thought and belief of others start.”
The Organization of the Islamic Conference, which includes 57 member states, has promoted the notion of defamation of religion as a cognizable legal concept, and many of its member states have sought to mainstream the idea through a series of successful but non-binding resolutions at the U.N. General Assembly and the U.N. Human Rights Council. Despite a renewed push in 2012, such efforts have never gained significant legal traction and have not in any way begun the process of establishing international norms on this issue. International human rights law remains quite clear on the impermissibility of such discriminatory measures.
While the vast majority of blasphemy prosecutions and protests have taken place in Muslim-majority countries, the scope of blasphemy legislation is, in fact, quite startling. In 2011, the Pew Research Center’s Forum on Religion and Public Life found that nearly half of the countries in the world have laws or policies that penalize blasphemy, apostasy, or defamation. A shocking number of European countries — eight, including Denmark, Germany, Ireland, and The Netherlands — maintain some form of anti-blasphemy laws, while all countries prohibiting apostasy are Muslim-majority.
Prohibitions on defamation, on the other hand, are much more common. Thirty-six of Europe’s 45 countries have laws on the books that make it illegal, with the majority pinpointing religious hate speech. In contrast, the vast majority of Arab states within this category penalized defamation of religions not hate speech. The United States does not criminalize any of these categories, and blasphemy bans are unconstitutional (such statutes remain on the books in six states, however, but are very rarely invoked and are never enforced). Instead, American jurisprudence has established a high bar for criminalizing speech, hinging on whether it “is directed to inciting or producing imminent lawless action and is likely to incite or produce such action.”
As a general matter, restrictions on blasphemy are problematic on two levels. First, such infringements on expression and belief represent a fundamental chilling of free thought and inquiry. Second, and more practically, in authoritarian settings blasphemy is chronically abused by the states that pursue such crimes. In this sense, blasphemy is used as a vehicle to suppress minority rights and to punish non-conformist religious ideas. The stigmatizations and criminalization of blasphemy also creates a permissive environment for vigilante responses and violence against offending parties and individuals and heightens religious animus.
Separate and apart from discriminatory application, the mere existence of this body of law justifies the logic of the Charlie Hebdo attackers — merely diverging as to the manner and form of punishment. While officials from Saudi Arabia and Egypt might walk hand in hand with the good citizens of Paris, saying that they deplore these horrific vigilante murders, they clearly do agree on the proscribing of the underlying behavior in question.
Egypt’s President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi has premised much of his and his government’s legitimacy on his efforts to combat Egypt and the region’s proliferating Islamist militant groups. He has gone so far as to argue for the necessity of a religious revolution, declaring recently that it was “inconceivable that the thinking that we hold most sacred should cause the entire Islamic world to be a source of anxiety, danger, killing and destruction for the rest of the world.”
This revolution, however, is intended only to produce a more quietist version of state-enforced religion — and one in which Egypt’s institutions will press forward with blasphemy and defamation prosecutions. These prosecutions are reflective of a public discourse that is becoming more Islamic and efforts to inoculate the regime from religiously based critiques. But they are also part of a much broader approach in which the state has established its prerogative to limit individual rights and dissent in order to preserve social cohesion and stability.
Perhaps most ironic here is that the nature of current state administration is in many ways the vindication of Sisi’s Islamist foes, who have succeeded in altering the country’s social mores and legal practices. While the Muslim Brotherhood may languish in jail and suffer the heavy burden of repression, they and their Islamist fellow travelers have ultimately triumphed in shifting the constitutional and jurisprudential foundations of the state, which have become increasingly interlinked with religion.
Blasphemy prosecutions are simply one more tool for those more concerned with spurious notions of the public order than with individual liberties. As Egypt’s recent trajectory makes clear, such narrow conceptions of what is appropriate to say out loud offer only stifled thought that will undermine any possibilities for the establishment of an open society, enhance religious discrimination, and reinforce authoritarian impulses. For much of the Arab world and beyond, blasphemy prosecutions will bolster current efforts to preserve the status quo — but only by helping to freeze in place the region’s unattractive social order. While such efforts may further legitimate the wider range of repressive measures employed to preserve regime survival, they will also serve to legitimate the very intolerance that bred and nurtured last week’s tragic violence.

Ten civilians die in rocket attack at Ukrainian checkpoint

A bus driving near an army checkpoint in eastern Ukraine was hit by a rebel shell, killing at least 10 civilians and wounding 13
Pro-Russian separatists
Pro-Russian separatists from the Chechen ‘Death’ battalion during a training exercise in the territory controlled by the self-proclaimed Donetsk People’s Republic, eastern Ukraine. Photograph: Maxim Shemetov/Reuters
The Guardian home
Associated Press in Donetsk-Tuesday 13 January 2015
A bus driving near an army checkpoint in eastern Ukraine was hit by a rebel shell, killing at least 10 civilians and wounding a further 13, local officials said.
The Donetsk regional administration, which answers to the central government in Kiev, said in a statement that the rebels shelled the checkpoint near the town of Volnovakha in the Donetsk region while the passenger bus was passing through it.
The press office for military operations in the east said the rockets appeared to have been fired from a Grad multiple rocket launcher.
The Russian news agency Tass cited rebel officials as denying they were responsible for the attack, and saying the accusation was “disinformation”.
Civilian losses of life have occurred on a regular basis since fighting broke out in spring between government forces and Russian-backed militia in the east. The UN estimates more than 4,700 people have died as a result of the conflict.
Hostilities have intensified in recent days, jeopardising hopes for a peace deal.
Separatists and Ukrainian forces have traded accusations of violating a truce that had been in place since early December.

Boko Haram attack survivors flee as West criticised

MONDAY 12 JANUARY 2015
Channel 4 NewsOne refugee fled through three miles of bodies from a Boko Haram attack, one thousand fled to an island on Lake Chad, and an Archbishop is demanding the West responds as it did to the Paris attacks.
News
Nine days on, and more information has gradually emerged from the remote town of Baga in northeast Nigeria, as officials and journalists attempt to verify suggestions that as many as 2,000 people may have been killed in an attack by Boko Haram, an Islamist militia group.
Meanwhile, authorities from neighbouring Chad have asked the United Nations for its help to rescue around 1,000 people stranded on the island of Kangala, Lake Chad. They arrived there after fleeing the fighting.
Abubakar Gamandi, originally from Baga, told CNN that the people still trapped in the town are dying.
"‎I have been in touch with them on the phone. They told me ‎some of them are dying from lack of food, cold and malaria on the mosquito-infested island."
The United Nations has said that it is attempting to assist some 7,000 Nigerian refugees in total who have recently fled fighting in north of the country, who fled to Chad.

Five kilometres of bodies

One man who hid for three days between a wall and a neighbours' house amid the attack told AFP that he saw people who were killed as they fled.
"People fled into the bush while some shut themselves indoors. The gunmen pursued fleeing residents into the bush, shooting them dead," he told AFP from Nigeria's Borno state capital, Maiduguri.
He continued: "For five kilometres, I kept stepping on dead bodies until I reached Malam Karanti village, which was also deserted and burnt".
A bomb strapped to a '10-year-old' suicide bomber also killed 16 people in Maiduguri, a city in the north of the country, at a marketplace on Saturday.

Paris questions

Meanwhile, a Nigerian archbishop accused the West of ignoring the threat that Islamist militants Boko Haram pose to the region and to the world.
Ignatius Kaigama, a Catholic Archbishop in central Nigeria, said that the international community ought to respond to the massacre of hundreds of Nigerians last week with the same determination that it has done in the wake of the Paris attacks.
"It is a monumental tragedy. It has saddened all of Nigeria. But... we seem to be helpless. Because if we could stop Boko Haram, we would have done it right away. But they continue to attack, and kill and capture territories... with such impunity," he told the BBC's Newsday programme.
Hundreds of people, and as many as 2,000, are reported to have died in the attacks on Baga and the surrounding region. The UN says 850,000 people have been displaced as a result of the conflict.

Liberia: Trial of possible Ebola drug begins at MSF treatment centre in Monrovia

January 08, 2015
A clinical trial of a possible treatment for Ebola began on January 1 at ELWA 3, the Ebola Management Centre run by Médecins Sans Frontières/Doctors Without Borders (MSF) in Monrovia, the capital of Liberia.
Led by Oxford University, the trial aims to determine if the anti-viral drug brincidofovir is a safe and effective treatment for Ebola. While MSF hopes that brincidofovir might help patients survive infection, it is still not sure whether this will be the case.
The trial is designed without a control group, and efficacy will be determined by comparing the outcomes of the patients who participate in the trial with the outcomes of patients treated at ELWA 3 earlier in the outbreak. Randomizing patients to potentially receive a placebo was not considered ethical in the context of the current Ebola outbreak.

All new patients will have opportunity to take part

“We know that brincidofovir has been taken safely by over 1,000 people in clinical trials for other viral infections and we know that is has been shown to be effective in laboratory tests that use Ebola-infected cells. What we do not know yet is if it will be effective against Ebola in humans – this is why this trial is necessary,” says Dr. Jake Dunning, the trial clinical lead for Oxford University.
All new patients with Ebola-positive blood tests will be given the opportunity to participate, with informed consent. Those who do not wish to be given the trial treatment will receive the same standard supportive care as those who do, but without the administration of the trial drug.



'A crucial phase of the outbreak in Liberia'

“With every possible treatment comes hope, and we are very excited that we may be able to help our patients beyond symptom management and routine supportive treatments like IV fluid therapy,” says MSF medical coordinator Brett Adamson. “But this treatment, even if shown to be effective, will not end the epidemic. We are in a crucial phase of the outbreak in Liberia, and there are still multiple chains of transmission which means that the situation is still not under control. A coordinated and holistic response is required, but together we have a very real opportunity to bring the outbreak in Liberia to an end.”
If brincidofovir is shown to be safe and effective, it will be made accessible to Ebola patients in other Ebola treatment centres through advancing the trial to the next phase.
The trial is running with the approval of the Liberian Medicines and Health Products Regulatory Authority (LMHRA), and ethics committees from the University of Liberia, MSF and Oxford University.

Since July 2014, MSF has been responding to the Ebola outbreak in Liberia. Currently the organization is running a 50-bed Ebola treatment centre in Paynesville, Monrovia, a 10-bed transit unit at Redemption Hospital in New Kru Town, Monrovia, and health promotion activities across the city. MSF employs some 1,400 national and international staff on the ground in Liberia and has treated more than 1,600 Liberians confirmed to be Ebola-positive.  MSF is also involved in a clinical trial in Guéckédou, Guinea, and expects to begin another trial in Conakry, Guinea, in the coming weeks.
In Liberia, MSF ran emergency operations during the 14 years of civil conflict that raged until 2004, as well as during the post-war period, before handing over all projects to the Ministry of Health and other NGOS and leaving the country in 2012.

Monday, January 12, 2015

US offers to engage with Sri Lanka on human rights, inclusivity 
Days before the polls, the US Secretary of State had also spoken with former Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapaksa and highlighted "the importance of maintaining a peaceful process no matter what".
Days before the polls, the US Secretary of State had also spoken with former Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapaksa and highlighted "the importance of maintaining a peaceful process no matter what".The Economic Times

GANDHINAGAR: The US today offered to immediately engage with the new Sri Lankan government to address issues of human rights and inclusivity but cautioned that there are still "real challenges" in the country. 

US Secretary of State John Kerry, who is here to attend the 7th Vibrant Gujarat Summit, telephoned the new Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena late last night to congratulate him on his electoral triumph. 

Kerry spoke with him to say that the US now hoped to strengthen its ties with the island nation. 

Days before the polls, the US Secretary of State had also spoken with former Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapaksa and highlighted "the importance of maintaining a peaceful process no matter what". 

In that context, Kerry told reporters here that, "It is good that the people of Sri Lanka have been able to have an election that has been accepted and which has resulted in a peaceful change of power." 

However, Kerry also cautioned that "there are still real challenges in Sri Lanka." 

"We offered immediately to engage in a dialogue to begin to work at guaranteeing that the problems with respect to human rights, the problems of inclusivity, challenges with respect to governance are going to be addressed," he said of his telephonic talk with Sirisena. 

Ties between the US and Sri Lanka soured under Rajapakss after Washington secured a UN-led probe into the alleged war crimes committed in final stages of Sri Lanka's civil war that ended in 2009. 

Kerry also voiced optimism that there was "hope that we can now forge a different outcome in Sri Lanka." 

"The election hopefully will become a demarcation point for a new moment, a new chapter, a new set of opportunities for the people of Sri Lanka," he said. 

Rajapaksa had called the election two years ahead of schedule, hoping to win a record third six-year term before the defeat of the Tamil Tigers fades in the memory of the people of the island which saw a three decades war over the demand of a separate Tamil Eelam. Sirisena won the polls, ending Rajapaksa's 10-year-rule.

Rajapaksa’s Millions Dollar US Air Force One Yet To Be Delivered: What Next?

Colombo Telegraph
January 12, 2015 
Sri Lankan Airlines, the National Carrier placed orders for twelve aircraft with Airbus Industrie of which two A 330 planes have been delivered. Colombo Telegraph can reveal that one A 330 yet to be delivered from Toulouse, France is to be fitted in the fashion of USA’s Air Force 1 made to measure for the use of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa.
Sri Lankan Airlines placed orders for 12 air craft with Airbus Industrie consisting of six A 330 and six A 350 in a major re fleeting exercise, one of which was to be fitted in a tailor made fashion for former President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s use. The A330 was to be fitted like the Air Force 1 used by the President of USA costing millions of dollars. The fitting necessitates gear to be fitted permanently to the front end of the aircraft which would add at least one tonne in weight even when other interior fittings are taken off when in use for commercial transport. The added weight would inflate the cost per flown mile in addition to lesser yields for the troubled airline.
Colombo Telegraph understands that once delivered for use the down time for fitting is three working days and another three days for dismantling after each journey which would render the aircraft to be grounded for six days. The cost of fitting this aircraft in this fashion has been spread over the purchase price of all twelve airbus craft to avoid scrutiny.
The Chairman of Sri Lankan Airlines during the tenure of President Mahinda Rajapaksa was his brother in lawNishantha Wickremasinghe, who has since resigned from this post. The CEO of the troubled airline too resigned after President Mahinda Rajapaksa lost in a bid to seek re election for an unprecedented third term. To the surprise of many the Chief Operating Officer of Sri Lankan Airlines has remained in his position to date.
Colombo Telegraph reliably understands that a new Board of Directors, yet to be named would be going into the balance purchases of these aircraft in the coming week.
inside-plan-of-air-force-one

Court Ordered To Former President Rajapaksa: Come An Appear Before The Court

(January 12, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Colombo District Court judge Sujatha Alahapperuma today (12) issued notice to former President Mahinda Rajapaksa ordering him to appear before court on Jan. 26.
The order was issued after taking up a case filed by Mulleriyawa Pradeshiya Sabha chairman - Prasanna SolangaArachchi against the cancellation of his SLFP membership.
The former President was named as a defendant of the case.

Meanwhile; an attempt by former President Mahinda Rajapaksa to obtain the signatures of Sri Lanka Freedom Party members on blank sheets of paper to make him the head of the party has been averted by its Executive Council, reported by local media in Colombo, today.

The meeting took place at the residence of Western Provincial Council chairman Prasanna Ranatunga at Green Path in Colombo.

More than 125 members took part in the meeting.

Usually to hold an Executive Council meeting a period of three days notice must be given to members. But the meeting was held after serving notice on the members only yesterday (January 11) afternoon.

5 m dollar commission to petroleum minister!


anura ex-1Petroleum minister, attorney Anura Priyadarshana Yapa, has been paid a five million dollar commission by Swiss-Singapore Overseas Enterprises for having extended its crude importation contract for the next three years, after it had lapsed recently.

The minister was paid the commission in Singapore last week.
anura ex-2Yapa had spent October 03, 04 and 05 in Singapore at this company’s expense, and returned home on October 06. He has deposited the money in a bank in Singapore.
Lawyer Yapa was the chairman of the committee that inquired into the impeachment motion moved by the Rajapaksa regime against 43rd chief justice, Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake. The president had promised him, then the minister of environment, ‘a ministerial position that can earn him money’ for having sacked the CJ illegally and unethically. Accordingly, at the last cabinet reshuffle he was appointed the petroleum minister.
The pictures below show minister Yapa and the brokers holding initial talks with representatives of the company in Dubai.

Secretaries To New President, PM Under Scrutiny


Colombo Telegraph
January 12, 2015
A spate of preliminary appointments to the public administration sector under President Maithripala Sirisenahas raised serious questions about the new administration’s promises about good governance, transparency and a merit based public sector.
The appointment of P.B. Abeykoon a senior SLAS officer as Secretary to the President came as a rude shock followed closely by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe‘s own choice of secretary.
Maithri SAbeykoon who was at one time the Controller General of Immigration was later Secretary to the Ministry of Public Administration. He is believed to be a close confidant of Gamini Senarath, one of the key power brokers of the Rajapaksa administration.
Senarath who also controversially served as chairman of several companies owned by proxy by the Rajapaksas, is believed to have worked closely with Abeykoon – President Sirisena’s choice for his most senior official.
“Gamini Senarat is No 1 on the list to be investigated for fraud and all kinds of dealings during Mahinda’s reign,” said an enraged UNP member to Colombo Telegraph. “This is an unbelievable appointment because everyone knows Abeykoon’s links to Senarat,” the UNP member said.
Other Sirisena aides insisted that the new President had no idea of Abeykoon’s dealings with Senarat and the possible implication of the civil servant in nefarious activities under the previous regime. “The appointment is temporary. Maybe he knew this man and was comfortable with him. After all this is the officer that is always around you, in your home in your office – people want familiarity,” the aide said.
However President Sirisena has insisted that if there are sufficient grounds and the facts are placed before him in a credible way, he will ensure Abeykoon’s removal.
Meanwhile in a surprise move Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has appointed a mediocre civil servant as his Secretary.
Saman Ekanayake is a relatively junior officer of the Sri Lanka Administrative Service (SLAS) and is not known particularly for dynamism or efficiency. He served at the Ministry of External Affairs during the tenure of Minister Rohitha Bogollagama and secured a diplomatic posting to London for his loyal service.
On his return to Sri Lanka, Ekanayake was attached to the Ministry of Finance. Wickremesinghe in his previous avatars as PM had Bradman Weerakoon, the highly respect senior civil servant, as his Secretary.
The appointment of Ekanayake comes in the wake of several disappointing appointments to key administrative positions by the incoming regime. P.B Abeykoon and B.M.U.D Basnayake appointed as Secretary to the President and Secretary Defence respectively have somewhat chequered records under the recent Rajapaksa administration.
The newly appointed Secretary to the Ministry of mass Media, Karunarathna Paranavitharana also received lucrative positions within the previous administration due to his political maneuvering. Paranavitharana was a member of Prof. GL Peiris’ staff during the Chandrika Kumaratunga administration. When Kumaratunga took over ministries from the UNF Government in 2003 Paranavitharana was sent to Lake House as Editorial Director. He was then appointed as SLBC Director General and went on to hold the same position at Sri Lanka Rupavahini Corporation.

JVP to go to Bribery Comm. against Namal, Basil and Cabraal

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January 12, 2015
The Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) today said that they have no intention of joining the national unity government, despite an invitation from President Maithripala Sirisena and other parties.
Sirisena, in his first address to the nation in Kandy yesterday (11), invited all political parties in parliament to unite in forming the all-party government.
JVP to go to Bribery Comm. against Namal, Basil and Cabraal“We have no intention of joining this government. By government they mean their Cabinet. The JVP is not prepared to obtain ministerial portfolios in this cabinet or intervene in this cabinet,” the Marxist party’s leader, Anura Kumara Dissanayake, told reporters in Colombo.
He stated that the reason for their decision is due to the fact that they have immense experience of what a “100-day cabinet” can actually do.  
The JVP Leader further said that they will lodge complaints with the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption against a large group of individuals including MP Namal Rajapaksa, former Minister Basil Rajapaksa, former Central Bank Governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal and the individuals involved in the controversial ‘hedging deal.’

It’s Personal, It Should Be To Us All

GroundviewsSo you see, democracy is not just a system, a structure; it is also a feeling. It is a feeling within each one of us; a desire to be led, a desire to be led by the things we believe in and the people we see those things in. It is a desire to stand up, to feel powerful in our own way, to wield that power in the face of despair and frustration. It is a feeling that inspires other feelings; it gives us courage, it gives us hope. It allows for Army officials – men who have made their entire careers out of respecting rank and taking orders – to say ‘No’, when they are asked to deploy their troops to help a desperate and frightened man stay in power; best of all: the idea that they said ‘No’ with pride, that we all said ‘No’ with pride.
So, here we are. What many of us dared not imagine was possible, has happened. All our cynicism and nay-saying, all our criticism about what an illusion ‘democracy’ is, must, at least momentarily, be wiped clean. For that moment, for this moment, we must all try to be bigger and better than we have sometimes been – we must allow ourselves the optimism of which we have, for so long, been deprived. We must make ourselves believe. We mustmake ourselves ready.
For me, there is no way to argue that Mahinda Rajapakse does not deserve this. I have nothing to thank him for. I feel no need to reflect on all the ways in which his regime may have made our lives better. I don’t need to temper my unbridled joy and relief at his defeat, with a ‘balanced’ point of view. For those of you who feel you must, I say, ‘Don’t!’. Don’t let him take this from you, too. We don’t need to give him that. He has taken enough. This is our moment to take back the dignity they destroyed, to take back our nation that they stole from us.
Why? Because I was tired of how terrible it felt to belong to Sri Lanka. I was devastated to find myself feeling like I wanted to leave, and never go back. I am angry at how they took that from me, from us all – the right to enjoy that feeling of citizenship, the ability to embrace the place to which you belong, to live in it freely, to love it freely. I am angry at how impossible it became to enjoy Sri Lanka – how, every time, I felt joy or experienced beauty, I was immediately overcome by the feeling that I was doing something terribly unjust. I was tired – as you should have been – of having become so deeply complicit in all the awfulness. I was tired that we found ourselves living in a nation where we had no choice but to be complicit. No matter what we did – every road we took, every time we shopped for groceries – we were complicit.
Why? Because it was personal, too – I believe it was personal for us all, alike. The Rajapakse regime humiliated, intimidated and threatened my mother – and so many countless others like her, so many countless others less able than her to have stood up to it – and ensured that she lived what turned out to be the last years of her life away from Sri Lanka, much against her will; away from her family, friends, comrades and away from the work which was her life. The Rajapakse regime was responsible for the violence inflicted on countless journalists, in a variety of ways; my brother, who was beaten up and had his equipment taken from him while he was monitoring election violence at the previous Presidential election in just one incident, saw his friends and colleagues in the media being subject to things far worse. The Rajapakse regime cruelly punished FUTA (the University teachers’ union) – which included my father and so many others we know – and all its members by forcing them to go for months without salaries, for standing up to them, for demanding academic freedom.
If you think that it couldn’t be just as personal for you as it has been for me, I believe it just means you haven’t thought about it for long enough – if you feel you weren’t personally, directly affected by the Rajapaksas, then I ask you to just look around yourself. Someone you know, perhaps even someone you love, was. They took something from each one of us: freedom, money, courage. We came up against dead-ends trying to build normal, every-day lives. They took our vitality, our identity. They took away our right – and our urge – to think, to speak, to resist, to demand better. For me, Sri Lanka under the Rajapakses was a lie – not a country.
And that is why this moment is a moment not just wrought with the euphoria of rediscovering and transforming national identity and some amount of something I recognize as pride; it is also very, very personal: I feel a great sense of deeply personal joy and optimism. I think we all should.
But in the rapture of the moment, in the wake of the possibility of a brave, new world for us all, let’s not forget that our job does not end here. Let’s not be quick to let our democratic enthusiasm die out with the election-day selfies on Facebook. Because democracy is about us, too, not just the leaders we elect. Now begins the hard work; we must change the rotten political culture of Sri Lanka, by changing our role in this culture, as well. We need tobe democratic, we need to feel democratic: let’s not be quick to yet again place a human being on a pedestal, make a hero out of him, worship him and then be inevitably disappointed in some years. Let’s create the leaders, and the government, we want to be led by, and let’s continue to play a part in resolving the challenges they will face.
Let’s also not slide back into notions of nationalism, chauvinism and mindless triumphalism – these notions become dangerous quickly and make us get away from ourselves. Let’s not replace that sincere sense of pride for what we achieved, with overblown ideas about ‘Sri Lanka’ as a nation. We need to be humbled by this victory, not have nationalism yet again blind us to all the flaws, all the work there is yet to be done. Let’s not rally around ideas of ‘patriotism’, let’s instead rally around ideas of achieving equality and true social justice. Let’s not let the feelings of joy and optimism make us for a moment imagine that we are perfect: as we walk forward, let us celebrate, but let us create new things we can all celebrate, too. Let’s strive for equality, from which unity will follow naturally, I believe; let’s strive for integrity and transparency and accountability.
So if someone says, ‘Let’s forgive and forget, it’s time for a new Sri Lanka’, we should say to them: We can forgive, but we must never forget; there is no new Sri Lanka without the old; we cannot build a future that does not acknowledge the past; we will not live in a nation in which we have not all, without exception, been given the chance to rebuild our lives, and the very luxury of the choice to forgive.
Sri Lanka new central bank governor could be investment banker: Sources

Sri Lanka new central bank governor could be investment banker: Sources

 January 10th, 2015
Adaderana Biz English | Sri Lanka Business NewsArjuna Mahendran, a Sri Lanka born international banker is one of the candidates being considered as Central Bank governor, sources said.
Governor Nivard Cabraal resigned Friday shortly before Maithripala Sirisena was sworn in as President and Ranil Wickramasinghe of the United National Party as Prime Minister.
Mahendran was the head of the island’s Board of Investment under a previous administration headed by Wickramasinghe and has been with international lenders including Credit Suisse, HSBC as well as Sri Lanka’s central bank.
He is at the moment chief investment officer at Dubai-based EmiratesNBD’s wealth management arm.
Other names being mentioned in the market included Indrajith Coomeraswamy, who has served in Sri Lanka’s Treasury and the Commonwealth Secretariat.
Political sources say senior government officials would be replaced in the near term in consultation with other coalition partners. Sri Lanka is also yet to appoint a cabinet.
Ideally senior ministry secretaries should be appointed by a civil service commission or a constitutional council which is expected to be re-established by President Sirisena.
In Sri Lanka ministers are headed by ‘impermanent secretaries’ since the 1972 and 1978 constitutions which had led to a once=independent public service being made in to a rulers’ service undermining rule of law and justice, critics have said.
Sri Lanka’s central bank was created in the early 1950s when US interventionists established the Bretton Woods system of unstable pegged exchange rates allowing rulers to print money impoverish vast populations by generating inflation and currency depreciation with unsound money.
Its first governor was John Exter, a US citizen – who seemed to have become more convinced about sound money later in his life – but currency troubles emerged soon after his departure as interventionist rulers resorted to money printing to bridge deficits, making Sri Lanka a lagging nation in Asia.
A central bank which has a legal monopoly in money issue is the only agency that can keep inflation down and the exchange rate strong, safeguarding the real value of bank deposits and salaries of all citizens and saving of the old and pensioners.
economynext.com