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

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Did Mahinda Believe He Will Win?

Sri Lanka BriefC



by Vishawamithra 1984 -13/01/2015 
“Nationalism is power hunger tempered by self-deception.” -George Orwell
Yes, he did. It was not only a hope or wish. It was a strong conviction and belief that he would win and win convincingly. He was a hardened “street-smart“ politician with over 45 years of experience in politics. He had held office (power) since 1970 first as one of the youngest ever parliamentarians, then from 1994 onwards as a Minister and then as Prime Minister and from 2005 as President. He knew and could not think of any other life. Also he was battle-scarred after two successful Presidential elections in 2005 and 2010.

New ‘asses,’ same ‘liquors’

January 13, 2015 
This column is not about donkeys. It’s not even about the indigenous Mannar species we have on this once, late lamented, ‘Wonder of Asia’. Neither is it about alcohol. Not even about exotic beverages that were served, until recently, at the highest level – Johnny Walker Blue Label or Chivas Regal – we have heard, of ‘Mathata Thitha’ fame. Nor is it about the more mundane ethanol and the related moonshine a.k.a. the common or garden kassippu, which is the source of many a politician’s unaccountable wealth, busted up on elections to subvert the voter’s democratic choice.

WHAT DO WE DO WITH MOHAN PEIRIS?

GroundviewsAmong the countless blows struck by the Rajapaksa regime against the Rule of Law over the last decade, perhaps the most egregious was the illegal impeachment of Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake and her replacement with a lackey of the Brotherhood known as Mohan Peiris. His behaviour in office in the last two years confirmed our worst fears, by not merely reducing the judiciary to an appendage of the executive, but also by never missing a chance to parade shamelessly as the chief consiglieri to the Rajapaksa dons and sons. He was still lurking around in Temple Tress when his boss was finally given the red notice by the people of Sri Lanka, which perhaps exemplifies the way in which he has diminished the office he holds and the institution he heads.
Sri Lankans voted last week not merely to change their government, but also to fundamentally reform the state. The idea and discourse of ‘yaha paalanaya’ took on a life of its own, denoting a deep desire to restore our heritage as South Asia’s oldest democracy, and to reverse the despotic decline represented by the Rajapaksas. As Professor Jayadeva Uyangoda noted in a piece published just before the election,
“In the current political debate, all these elements of governance reform are there, being articulated in a language of protest. This very rich political conversation should continue after January 08. Perhaps, the greatest contribution the present election campaign has thus far made to Sri Lankan politics is the deepening of the democracy conversation, with the active participation of almost all citizens of the country.”
If, as I do, we agree with this assessment, then 8th January was without doubt a ‘constitutional moment’, the full promise of which is yet to be realised. It is the duty of us all as citizens to ensure that the reform process is protected, so that the constitutional moment is actualised. That means that the basic reforms outlined in President Maithripala Sirisena’s programme must be carried out in the manner contemplated, together with others to follow in the short, medium, and long terms. The success of the reform programme could be derailed, or at least delayed and inconvenienced, by a gremlin in the temple of justice.
Moreover, it is now becoming clear that, as Talleyrand said of the Bourbons, the Rajapaksas have learnt nothing and forgotten nothing. Contrition and reflection have not followed the meek departure. They seem determined to attempt a return in the forthcoming general elections, and again no doubt, using the methods they know best, which is to incite fear, hatred, and rank racism among the Sinhalese. This grim eventuality must at all costs be defeated, but the office of the Chief Justice therefore also assumes critical importance in the post-defeat Rajapaksa project as their last high-level hold on the apparatus of the Sri Lankan state.
The new government must be vigilant and decisive in addressing this threat, which means that Mohan Peiris must be removed from office sooner rather than later, and before he has the opportunity to create havoc with the on-going constitutional and political processes. But while there is not the slightest doubt about the substantive justice of removing Peiris from office, the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration is morally enjoined by the very nature of its mandate to act in ways that are in accordance with the law, procedurally just, and democratically legitimate. There are three options in this regard.
The first is a voluntary resignation, which so far has not happened, and in the light of the considerations mentioned above, may be unlikely to happen. The second is that the President requests the resignation of the Chief Justice, on the grounds that his very appointment is illegal by virtue of the fact that his predecessor was illegally removed from office. This is however highly problematic from the perspective of the applicable norms and international standards concerning the independence of the judiciary and the security of tenure of judges. However illegitimate Peiris’ position might be, it would be a thoroughly undesirable precedent to set whereby a newly elected President expects the Chief Justice to resign. The third option therefore is impeachment.
As we saw in the case of Chief Justice Bandaranayake, the current procedure that is established by Standing Order 78A for the impeachment of superior court judges seems at first glance to meet general legal standards of legality, rationality, procedural propriety (natural justice), and proportionality, but the major practical problem we have in enforcing that procedure is that our Members of Parliament simply do not seem to possess the moral and intellectual capacity to act in the quasi-judicial role that is required of them by this framework. This was amply demonstrated in relation to Dr Bandaranayake where even the basic elements of the procedure were not followed, and lamentably, she was even subjected to personal abuse by some MPs.
Under the new dispensation, Peiris must be held to account according to a process that meets much higher standards. It must in short be a showcasing of the return of legality to the task of governing Sri Lanka. From this it is clear that, prior to taking any specific action against Peiris, Parliament must first amend Standing Order 78A to ensure that the procedure conforms to general principles of justice and applicable international and Commonwealth standards. In 2003, a team of lawyers, academics, and researchers led by the late Desmond Fernando, P.C., considered how this might be done, and drafted an alternative form for Standing Order 78A, which contemplated two alternative procedures to be followed in impeaching a senior judge. While keeping the existing procedure intact, the alternative proposal envisaged an innovative way of ensuring better standards, that could be availed of by Parliament at its discretion (or more specifically the Select Committee appointed to investigate allegations against a senior judge). In this framework, once the Select Committee is appointed by Parliament, it can then appoint a Committee of Inquiry consisting of three persons, each of whom hold, or have held, office as a judge in the highest court of any Commonwealth country to inquire into the allegations of misbehaviour or incapacity, and report thereon to the Select Committee. The proposal went onto provide detailed rules about the conduct of the inquiry and how the report should then be dealt with by Parliament in accordance with its constitutional role in removing members of the senior judiciary.
There are two main advantages commending this approach. The first is obvious and it is that partisan and often ill-equipped parliamentarians are put at one remove from conducting a rigorous but fair process of enquiry themselves. For example, were Peiris to be subjected to the existing Select Committee process, extreme partisanship and much rancour can be expected to follow, with MPs dividing along party loyalties rather than discharging their constitutional functions dispassionately. The second advantage is that, once disinterested, experienced, and senior Commonwealth judges have concluded their judicial (rather than legislative) enquiry, it nonetheless maintains Parliament’s ultimate constitutional authority in deciding whether or not to sanction an Address of Parliament to the President recommending removal.
For many, what is recommended here could seem like procedural quibbling when less complicated methods would do, at a time when time itself is short. Mohan Peiris must be removed forthwith from the office of Chief Justice, of that there is no doubt, but if ham-handed methods are adopted, then it would represent nothing short of a betrayal of the hope and expectation of the democratic renewal that was generated in last week’s election. Democracy is messy and difficult, but as Churchill said, it is the worst form of government except for all the others. That is the lesson we must learn from Rajapaksa authoritarianism, the excesses of which we must never repeat.

Maithri to meet Mahinda tomorrow!

mr ms breaking newsA group of SLFP seniors has arranged a meeting between new president Maithripala Sirisena and his predecessor Mahinda Rajapaksa tomorrow (15), reports say.
The aim of the meeting will be to prevent a breaking up of the party, said a senior SLFPer who gave us details of this arrangement.
At the meeting, while discussing measures to prevent a division of the party, the incumbent president is to be accepted as the leader of the SLFP while his predecessor is to be appointed its patron. The importance of maintaining the status quo at all SLFP-led provincial councils will also come under discussion.
If the president is agreeable to these conditions, the Mahinda faction of the SLFP will extend support to his 100 day programme. The meeting will also aim to prevent either the JVP or the TNA from gaining the opposition leader position. If this succeeds, there will be a SLFP government and a SLFP opposition.
Commenting on this, political analysts say this is a political game planned by Rajapaksa, who aims to render prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe helpless and to politically sideline ex-president Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga, who led the change that has taken place.
One of the key conditions in the MoU signed by Mr. Sirisena with Ven. Athuraliye Rathana Thera’s Pivuthuru Hetak is that the elected president should be apolitical. However, president Sirisena’s becoming the SLFP president would violate that condition. Political analysts are unanimous in describing this as a conspiracy to sabotage the 100 day programme.
SLFP seniors, including Nimal Siripala de Silva, Susil Premajayantha, Anura Priyadarshana Yapa and John Seneviratne too, are due to attend tomorrow’s meeting.

Chris Nonis to be reappointed as the high commissioner!

chris nonisPresident Maithripala Sirisena has recommended to external affairs minister Mangala Samaraweera that Dr. Chris Nonis, who resigned after being assaulted by Sajin Vaas Gunawardena, the most powerful person in the ex-Rajapaksa regime, be reappointed Sri Lanka’s high commissioner in Britain.
Dr. Nonis, who is presently in Sri Lanka, is due to meet with the president and the external affairs minister after the pope leaves at the end of his current visit to the island. Sources at the external affairs ministry say it would be important to reappoint Dr. Nonis to the position, in order for him to assist the president, who is the chair of the commonwealth, as he has a vast knowledge and ties regarding affairs of the commonwealth.

Return Of Rajapaksa And Post-Election Politics


Colombo Telegraph
By S. I. Keethaponcalan -January 14, 2015
Dr S.I. Keethaponcalan
Dr S.I. Keethaponcalan
Sri Lanka successfully concluded the much anticipated presidential election on January 8, 2015. The New Democratic Front (NDF), or the opposition alliance candidate Maithripala Sirisena, won the election. He polled 51.3 percent of the total votes cast and his rival, former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, managed 47.6 percent of the votes. The successful conclusion of the election and the results were a victory for the people of the once vibrant democracy. The election was relatively free despite the abuse of resources and violence and the transition of power to the opposition coalition was smooth. Surprising many in Sri Lanka and abroad, President Rajapaksa left his official residence even before half of the results were formally announced.
Attempted Coup?-Return of Rajapaksa
Mahinda WimalInsiders, along with some leading members of the new government now claim that Rajapaksa, sensing the defeat, attempted to suspend the counting of votes with the assistance of the armed forces.
According to this theory, his brother who was the Defence Secretary, played a major role in this conspiracy or what some call the attempted coup. So far, military coups have not succeeded in Sri Lanka. This time also, insiders maintain that the commanders of the armed forces refused to collaborate. The military thus far has not refuted the claims that the president sought the assistance of the armed forces to suspend the election. If true, this is a serious issue, which needs to be investigated carefully. One could expect more details to emerge in the coming weeks.Read More

“Maithri” – We Do Want Justice

Colombo Telegraph
By R.A.Ratwatte -January 14, 2015 
R.A.Ratwatte
R.A.Ratwatte
The most hackneyed stanza of the Dhammapada…”nahi verena verani etc” is being bandied about once again with gay abandon. If you stop and check the number of times this verse (with so much meaning and relevance) has been used in speeches by people who have not the slightest intention of ever putting it into practice…the mind boggles.
The New President of the Country also used it and in this case we hope that proper interpretation of the verse will prevail. We the people don’t want revenge or anger but we do want JUSTICE !
Maithri

If all the petty catchers’, drug smugglers, rapist and vermin who robbed our Country blind and drove self respecting honourable people who were trying to make an honest living, to despair are allowed walk away , If all those relatives of the Rajapaksas who held down highly paid state jobs and denied qualified people, If those who blatantly abused their positions are not named and shamed and punished, it will constitute blasphemy and a total misinterpretation of the doctrine that governs the life of the majority of this Country.Read More

Putin avoids Auschwitz anniversary event amid tension with Poland

Absence at event to mark 70th anniversary of Nazi death camp’s liberation highlights damage of Russia’s relations with west
Vladimir Putin
Russia’s relations with the west have fallen to their lowest point since the cold war as a result of the Ukrainian crisis. Photograph: Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP
The Guardian home
, Europe editor-Tuesday 13 January 2015 
Russian president Vladimir Putin is to stay away from a major event at Auschwitz in two weeks, marking 70 years since inmates of the Nazi death camp were liberated by the Red Army.
Putin’s absence – he delivered a speech at Auschwitz at a similar event a decade ago – highlights the damage his Ukraine policies have done to Russia’s relations with Europe and presages what is likely to be a series of diplomatic snubs and boycotts in the months ahead as Europe commemorates the 70th anniversary of the defeat of Hitler’s Germany.
A Kremlin spokesman confirmed that Putin would not attend the Auschwitz ceremonies, saying that the Polish government had not invited the Russian leader while also admitting it was not up to Warsaw to issue invitations. The commemoration is organised by the international committee administering the site near Krakow in southern Poland. The committee includes Russian representatives. The Polish foreign ministry also confirmed it had not invited Putin, but it added that Moscow was welcome to send whomever it wished.
But a Putin trip to Poland would have been intensely awkward for Warsaw, which has been leading a hawkish line on Russia in the EU over the conflict in Ukraine.
The diplomatic tiff over Auschwitz is almost certain to generate further friction as Europe gears up to mark the end of the second world war 70 years ago in May. The Russians set great store by their role in vanquishing the Nazis in what they dub the great patriotic war. Victory Day on 9 May is a national holiday celebrated with pomp and circumstance on the capital’s Red Square.
Already two of the Baltic states, Estonia and Lithuania – fearful and intensely critical of Russian actions in Ukraine – have said they will stay away from the 9 May events in Moscow. The third Baltic state, Latvia – which has just inherited the rotating EU presidency – is trying to fashion a common European position on the Moscow ceremonies. But it is inconceivable that the German leadership would snub the Russians on such a sensitive issue.
Edgars Rinkēvičs, the Latvian foreign minister, said he would raise the topic at a meeting of EU foreign ministers next week. “Will we achieve a consensus? I don’t know,” he said. He suggested that all three Baltic states and Poland would boycott Moscow in May.
Auschwitz was the epicentre of the German genocide of European Jews, with about 1.5 million murdered in its gas chambers.
The resurgent nationalism of Russia under Putin and his territorial designs on Ukraine, however, have re-ignited hostility and fear across eastern Europe and sparked panic in western Europe and Nato.
While the Russians celebrate 9 May as their finest hour, the Baltic states struggle to share the sentiment as Russia’s victory coincided with their forcible incorporation into Stalin’s Soviet Union, while the Poles and the rest of eastern Europe were hauled into the Soviet bloc for the following 40 years.
The row over Auschwitz coincides with the collapse of diplomatic efforts in Berlin to convene Ukraine peace talks in Kazakhstan and an upsurge of pro-Russia separatist attacks in eastern Ukraine.
The foreign ministers of Russia, Ukraine, Germany and France failed to make any progress on a Ukraine settlement that would have paved the way for a summit of the national leaders in Astana.
Paradoxically, the second world war also figured in the putative peace talks, which were to be held under the so-called “Normandy format” – referring to the meeting of the four leaders last summer when they marked the anniversary of the D-Day landings in northern France.

France Is an Unequal Opportunity 

For all the talk of defending the right to blaspheme Mohammed, the French can be 
extremely hypocritical when it comes to making fun of others.
France Is an Unequal Opportunity Offender BY LEELA JACINTO-JANUARY 13, 2015
Foreign PolicyWhen it comes to giant displays of solidarity and defiance, it doesn’t get much bigger than the Jan. 11 demonstration in Paris. On that day, over a million people packed the streets to watch leaders and top diplomats from around the world advance, arm-in-arm, down Boulevard Voltaire to pay tribute to the victims of Islamist militant attacks in and around Paris. Even the sun behaved on that bright, chilly Sunday afternoon — a made-for-TV moment. The marcherépublicaine — a term rather prosaically translated in the English-language press as “unity march” or “rally against terrorism” — aspired to reaffirm the values of the French Republic, particularly the freedom of speech.

Defiant Parisians snap up copies of latest Charlie Hebdo issue

For all the talk of defending the right to blaspheme Mohammed, the French can be extremely hypocritical when it comes to making fun of others.







Residents of this traumatized city stood in long lines to snap up copies of the latest issue of Charlie Hebdo on Wednesday, defiantly affirming a commitment to freedom of speech a week after a terrorist attack on the newspaper’s offices left a dozen people dead and ignited days of violence and manhunts.
Intelligence officials say at least one of the Paris gunmen received training from an Al-Qaeda offshoot in Yemen. The Post's Greg Miller explains who they are, how they're connected to the Islamic State, and what happens next in Europe and the U.S. (Gillian Brockell/The Washington Post)

Benign inflation data fuels rate cut calls

 A worker unloads sweet limes from a truck at a wholesale fruit and vegetable market in Mumbai January 14, 2015. 
A worker unloads sweet limes from a truck at a wholesale fruit and vegetable market in Mumbai January 14, 2015. REUTERS-Shailesh AndradeA vendor waits for customers at his vegetable stall at a wholesale fruit and vegetable market in Mumbai January 14, 2015. REUTERS-Shailesh Andrade
 A vendor waits for customers at his vegetable stall at a wholesale fruit and vegetable market in Mumbai January 14, 2015. 
ReutersWed Jan 14, 2015 
(Reuters) - Plunging global oil markets helped India post slower-than-expected wholesale price inflation in December, raising hopes for an early cut in interest rates to help the economy out of its longest phase of sub-par growth since the 1980s.
The wholesale price index (WPI) rose 0.11 percent year-on-year compared with a 0.6 percent jump forecast by economists in a Reuters poll. Wholesale prices were unchanged in November.
Data released on Monday showed consumer price inflation quickened at a slower-than-expected pace of 5 percent in December, remaining well within the Reserve Bank of India's (RBI) medium-term target of 6 percent.
With a near 60 percent fall in global oil prices since last June and food prices remaining in check despite poor monsoon rains last summer, some analysts expect the RBI to reduce its repo rate at a policy review on Feb. 3. The repo rate has stood at 8.0 percent for the past year.
"Falls in commodity prices have brought down WPI, CPI (consumer price index) alike," said Aneesh Srivastava, chief investment officer at IDBI Federal Life Insurance.
Wholesale fuel prices fell an annual 7.82 percent last month, their biggest fall since September 2009. Month-on-month, the prices were down 2.4 percent.
Similarly, food prices recorded a 1.9 percent fall in December from a month earlier. However, they were up 5.2 percent year-on-year compared with a 0.63 percent gain in November.
"All indicators now point that the RBI should cut rates by at least 25 basis points in its next policy meeting on Feb. 3," said Srivastava.
However, some analysts say RBI Governor Raghuram Rajan may delay the rate cuts amid mounting concerns over the government's fiscal health.
Sluggish revenue receipts have driven up the fiscal deficit to 99 percent of the full-year target in just the first eight months of the year that ends in March, casting doubts on Finance Minister Arun Jaitley's ability to trim the shortfall to a seven-year low of 4.1 percent of gross domestic product (GDP).
Concerned over slow economic growth, some government aides are also pushing to row back on fiscal deficit targets when Jaitley announces the 2015/16 budget next month. They have advocated more spending on infrastructure projects that could lift growth.
Rajan, however, has set fiscal consolidation as a pre-condition for lowering rates.
"Given the uncertainties, the RBI might prefer to monitor the content of the end-February's budget and credibility of fiscal targets before easing rates," said Radhika Rao, an economist at DBS Bank in Singapore.
"This suggests rate cuts might begin April 2015 onwards, with a small probability of inter-meeting cut in March."
(Reporting by Rajesh Kumar Singh; Editing by Douglas Busvine and Simon Cameron-Moore)

The civil war that 'tore open heart' of Sri Lanka - Pope


WEDNESDAY 14 JANUARY 2015
Channel 4 NewsPope Francis visits a former war zone in northern Sri Lanka, preaching forgiveness at a Catholic shrine that was shelled during the country's long ethnic conflict.
It was the first visit by a pope to the predominantly Hindu region that contains a large Catholic minority and was the scene of fierce fighting between Tamil Tiger rebels and the Sri Lankan army for 26 years. Up to 100,000 people died before the war ended in 2009.
Earlier, Francis gave Sri Lanka its first saint at a waterfront Mass for more half a million people in Colombo, calling 17th century missionary Joseph Vaz a model of reconciliation after the war.
In a prayer at the church of Our Lady of Madhu, Francis denounced the "evil" conflict that "tore open the heart" of Sri Lanka, and drove home the central message of his two-day trip - that religions need to work together to heal the wounds of war.
News
"May all people here find inspiration and strength to build a future of reconciliation, justice and peace for all the children of this beloved land," he said. The shrine containing a 400-year old statue of Mary is the most venerated Catholic site on the island.
In 1999, shells slammed into the church, killing some 40 people who had sought refuge there. Since the end of the war, the north has undergone reconstruction, but divisions still run deep. The region gets few visits from world leaders.

Tuesday, January 13, 2015

இராணுவ ஆக்கிரமிப்பில் உள்ள தமிழ் மக்களின் காணிகளை விடுவிக்க விசேட குழு அமைக்கப்படும்:பிரதமர் ரணில் விக்னேஸ்வரனுக்கு உறுதி

SRI LANKA-TAMIL-VOTE JAN 13, 2015 
Athavan Newsவடக்கு மாகாணத்தில் இராணுவம் சுவீகரித்த காணிகளை மக்களிடம் வழங்குவது தொடர்பில் ஆராய்வதற்கு விசேட குழு ஒன்றை அமைக்க விரைவான நடவடிக்கைளை எடுப்பதாக பிரதமர் ரணில் விக்கிரமசிங்க வட மாகாண முதலமைச்சருக்கு விக்னேஸ்வரனுக்கு உறுதியளித்துள்ளார்.பிரதமர் ரணில் விக்கிரமசிங்கவை நேற்று முன்தினம் ஞாயிற்றுக்கிழமை அவரது அலுவலகத்தில் வட மாகாண முதலமைச்சர் சி.வி.விக்னேஸ்வரன் சந்தித்துப் கலந்துரையாடிய நிலையில் இந்த தீர்மானம் எட்டப்பட்டுள்ளது.
சந்திப்புத் தொடர்பில் விக்னேஸ்வரன் தெரிவிக்கையில் வடக்கு மாகாணத்தில் இராணுவத் தேவைகளுக்காக மக்களின் பெருமளவிலான காணிகள் சுவீகரிக்கப்பட்டன. இவற்றை விடுவிக்குமாறு நான் பிரதமர் ரணில் விக்கிரமசிங்கவைக் கேட்டிருந்தேன்.ஆனால் காணிகளை விடுவித்தால் எதிர்க்கட்சிகள் இன ரீதியான போலிப் பிரசாரங்களை மேற்கொள்ளும் என பிரதமர் அஞ்சுகிறார்.எனினும் காணிகளை விடுவிப்பது தொடர்பில் ஆராய விசேட குழு ஒன்றை அமைக்க நடவடிக்கை எடுப்பதாக பிரதமர் உறுதியளித்தார்.
இந்தக் குழுவில் காணிகளை இழந்த மக்களின் பிரதிநிதிகள், அரசியல் தலைவர்கள், வடக்கு மாகாண இராணுவத் தளபதிகள், ஊடகவியலாளர்கள் எனப் பல தரப்பினரும் இடம்பெறுவார்கள்.இதேபோன்று அரசியல் கைதிகளின் விடுதலை குறித்தும் பிரதமருடன் பேசினேன் இதற்கு அவர் உடனடியாக அனைத்துக் கைதிகளையும் விடுவிக்க முடியாது இருக்கும் என்றும், 2002ம் ஆண்டு சமாதான ஒப்பந்த காலத்தில் எடுக்கப்பட்ட நடவடிக்கைகளை மீண்டும் அமுல்படுத்தத் தேவையானவற்றை செய்வேன் எனக் கூறினார்.
இது தவிர வடக்கு மாகாண சபைக்கு இப்போதும் தொடரும் நெருக்கடிகள், இடையூறுகளையும் தவிர்க்கத் தாம் உதவுவார் என்றும் அவர் தெரிவித்திருந்தார்.மேலும் வடக்கின் இளைஞர், யுவதிகளுக்கு வேலை வாய்ப்பை வழங்கும் முகமாக ஒட்டுசுட்டான், பரந்தன், கிளிநொச்சி ஆகிய பகுதிகளில் தொழிற்சாலைகளை அமைத்துத் தருவதாகவும் பிரதமர் தெரிவித்திருந்ததாக முதலமைச்சர் மேலும் குறிப்பிட்டிருந்தார்.