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

Sunday, January 18, 2015

Prominent N. Korean defector Shin Dong-hyuk admits parts of story are inaccurate





Calling In the Formers

Can a team of retired American diplomats stop North Korea’s nuclear program?
Calling In the Formers
Foreign PolicyNorth Korea’s top nuclear negotiator will sit down with a team of former American diplomats in an undisclosed venue in Singapore this weekend to discuss one of the world’s most complex and dangerous problems: what to do about Pyongyang’s ever-expanding nuclear weapons program.

Pope Francis: 'You cannot make fun of the faith of others'

Pope Francis says there must be limits to free speech when it comes to religion, speaking in reference to the Charlie Hebdo attacks in Paris last week

Pope Francis waves as he boards a plane at Bandaranaike International Airport near Colombo. Pope Francis will immerse himself in the Catholic Church's passionate and chaotic Asian heartland as he lands in the Philippines for a five-day trip that is tipped to attract a world-record papal crowd.

By , Rome-15 Jan 2015
Pope Francis has weighed into the debate over freedom of expression in the wake of the murderous attacks in Paris, saying that anyone who insults a religion can expect “a punch in the nose”.
In provocative remarks which may cause consternation in France, the Pope said that freedom of expression had its limits, especially if it involved insulting or ridiculing religion.
He made the forthright comments to journalists on board his official plane as he flew from Sri Lanka to the Philippines, the two stops on his week-long visit to Asia.
Gesturing towards Alberto Gasparri, a Vatican official who organises pontifical trips and who was standing next to him on board the plane, he said: “If my good friend Dr Gasparri says a curse word against my mother, he can expect a punch in the nose.”
Throwing a pretend punch, the Pope said: “It’s normal. You cannot provoke. You cannot insult the faith of others. You cannot make fun of the faith of others.”
His remarks came a week after Islamic extremists stormed into the Paris offices of the satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo and shot dead 12 members of staff, including some of its best known cartoonists, who for years had poked fun at Islam as well as other religions, including Christianity.
On Wednesday the magazine released a “survivors’ issue” which featured an image of the Prophet Mohammed on its front cover.
The edition also included highly provocative cartoons about the Catholic Church.
The Pope did not refer specifically to the magazine but said that insulting religions was unacceptable and dangerous.
“There are so many people who speak badly about religions or other religions, who make fun of them, who make a game out of the religions of others,” he said.
“They are provocateurs. And what happens to them is what would happen to Dr Gasparri if he says a curse word against my mother. There is a limit.”
The Pope in no way condoned the attack on Charlie Hebdo, insisting that violence carried out in God’s name was “an aberration.”
“One cannot make war [or] kill in the name of one’s own religion, that is, in the name of God.”
But those who ridiculed another religion should expect some sort of reaction, he said.
The Pope received a rapturous welcome after touching down in Manila, with hundreds of thousands of people crowding the road from the airport to the city centre to see him pass by in a Popemobile.
Millions of Filipinos are expected to turn out to see him during the five-day trip to the heartland of Catholicism in Asia.
The visit presents a massive security challenge for the Philippine authorities, not just because of the huge crowds expected but because of the Pope’s refusal to travel in bullet-proof vehicles, which he says obstruct his contact with ordinary people.
Authorities have appealed to Filipinos not to turn “a moving target into a stationary one” by inadvertently blocking his vehicle to get close to him or to snap a “selfie” photograph.
“If someone blocks the convoy by trying to get near the Holy Father and the convoy stops, what was a moving target becomes a stationary target,” President Benigno Aquino said before the Pope’s arrival. “I ask you, do you want history to record that a tragedy involving the Pope happened in the Philippines?”
Up to six million Catholics are expected to attend a Mass to be given by the Pope in a park in Manila on Sunday.
The history of papal visits to the Philippines offers little reassurance – during the first-ever pontifical visit in 1970, a Bolivian man donned a fake cassock and swung a knife at Pope Paul VI as he arrived at Manila airport, wounding him.
In 1995, a week before John Paul II’s visit, police uncovered a plot by foreign Islamist extremists to kill him by bombing his motorcade route in Manila.
An assessment of potential threats against Pope Francis, compiled by the Philippines government, identified home-grown Islamist groups as well as al Qaeda and Isil, which has repeatedly threatened to “conquer Rome” and plant its black flag on St Peter’s Basilica.
Nearly 50,000 soldiers and police are being deployed to protect the pontiff during his trip to the Philippines, where around 80 per cent of the population is Catholic.
Gridlock is expected to be so bad in Manila that 2,000 traffic police have been ordered to wear adult nappies, so that they can answer the call of nature on the spot and not have to abandon their posts.

Boko Haram kidnaps 80 and kills three in attack on villages in Cameroon

Many children kidnapped in raid across border with Nigeria as soldiers exchange fire with militants for around two hours

Boko Haram attack Baga Nigeria
Burnt houses in Baga, northeastern Nigeria, after a Boko Haram attack. The group has kidnapped 80 people in neighbouring Cameroon. Photograph: AFP/Getty Images
The Guardian home
 Sunday 18 January 2015
Suspected Boko Haram Islamist fighters from Nigeria kidnapped around 80 people, many of them children, and killed three others on Sunday in a cross-border attack on villages in northern Cameroon, army and government officials said.
The kidnappings, among the largest abductions on Cameroonian soil since the militants began expanding their zone of operations across the border last year, came as neighbouring Chad deployed troops to support Cameroon’s forces in the area.
“According to our initial information, around 30 adults, most of them herders, and 50 young girls and boys aged between 10 and 15 years were abducted,” a senior army officer deployed to northern Cameroon told Reuters.
He said the early-morning attack had targeted the village of Mabass and several other villages along the porous border with Nigeria. Soldiers intervened and exchanged fire with the raiders for around two hours, he added.
Government spokesman Issa Tchiroma confirmed the attack, in which he said three people had been killed, as well as the kidnappings, but was not able to say with certainty how many people had been taken in the raid. Around 80 homes were destroyed, he said.

How Your Daily Caffeine Fix Is a Silent Killer of Success

How Your Daily Caffeine Fix Is a Silent Killer of SuccessJANUARY 15, 2015
This tip for improving your performance is one of the most simple and straightforward you're ever going to find. For many people, this tip has the potential to have a bigger impact than any other single action. The catch? You have to cut down on caffeine, and as any caffeine drinker can attest, this is easier said than done.
For those who aren't aware, the ability to manage your emotions and remain calm under pressure has a direct link to your performance.TalentSmart has conducted research with more than a million people, and we’ve found that 90 percent of top performers are high in emotional intelligence. These individuals are skilled at managing their emotions (even in times of high stress) in order to remain calm and in control.

The good: It isn’t really good

Most people start drinking caffeine because it makes them feel more alert and improves their mood. Many studies suggest that caffeine actually improves cognitive task performance (memory, attention span, etc.) in the short term. Unfortunately, these studies fail to consider the participants’ caffeine habits.
New research from Johns Hopkins Medical School shows that performance increases due to caffeine intake are the result of caffeine drinkers experiencing a short-term reversal of caffeine withdrawal. By controlling for caffeine use in study participants, John Hopkins researchers found that caffeine-related performance improvement is nonexistent without caffeine withdrawal.
In essence, coming off caffeine reduces your cognitive performance and has a negative impact on your mood. The only way to get back to normal is to drink caffeine, and when you do drink it, you feel like it’s taking you to new heights. In reality, the caffeine is just taking your performance back to normal for a short period.

The bad: Adrenaline

Drinking caffeine triggers the release of adrenaline. Adrenaline is the source of the “fight or flight” response, a survival mechanism that forces you to stand up and fight or run for the hills when faced with a threat. The fight-or-flight mechanism sidesteps rational thinking in favor of a faster response. This is great when a bear is chasing you, but not so great when you’re responding to a curt email.
When caffeine puts your brain and body into this hyper-aroused state, your emotions overrun your behavior. Irritability and anxiety are the most commonly seen emotional effects of caffeine, but caffeine enables all of your emotions to take charge.
The negative effects of a caffeine-generated adrenaline surge are not just behavioral. Researchers at Carnegie Mellon University found that large doses of caffeine raise blood pressure, stimulate the heart and produce rapid, shallow breathing, which readers of Emotional Intelligence 2.0 know deprives the brain of the oxygen needed to keep your thinking calm and rational.

The ugly: Sleep

When you sleep, your brain literally recharges, shuffling through the day’s memories and storing or discarding them (which causes dreams), so that you wake up alert and clear-headed. Your self-control, focus, memory and information-processing speed are all reduced when you don’t get enough -- or the right kind -- of sleep.
Your brain is very fickle when it comes to sleep. For you to wake up feeling rested, your brain needs to move through an elaborate series of cycles. You can help this process along and improve the quality of your sleep by reducing your caffeine intake.
Here’s why you’ll want to: caffeine has a six-hour half-life, which means it takes a full 24 hours to work its way out of your system. Have a cup of joe at 8 a.m., and you’ll still have 25 percent of the caffeine in your body at 8 p.m. Anything you drink after noon will still be at 50 percent strength at bedtime. Any caffeine in your bloodstream, with the negative effects increasing with the dose, makes it harder to fall asleep.
When you do finally fall asleep, the worst is yet to come. Caffeine disrupts the quality of your sleep by reducing rapid eye movement (REM) sleep, the deep sleep when your body recuperates and processes emotions. When caffeine disrupts your sleep, you wake up the next day with an emotional handicap. You’re naturally going to be inclined to grab a cup of coffee or an energy drink to try to make yourself feel better.
The caffeine produces surges of adrenaline, which further your emotional handicap. Caffeine and lack of sleep leave you feeling tired in the afternoon, so you drink more caffeine, which leaves even more of it in your bloodstream at bedtime. Caffeine very quickly creates a vicious cycle.

Withdrawal

Like any stimulant, caffeine is physiologically and psychologically addictive. If you do choose to lower your caffeine intake, you should do so slowly under the guidance of a qualified medical professional.
The researchers at Johns Hopkins found that caffeine withdrawal causes headache, fatigue, sleepiness and difficulty concentrating. Some people report feeling flu-like symptoms, depression and anxiety after reducing intake by as little as one cup a day. Slowly tapering your caffeine dosage each day can greatly reduce these withdrawal symptoms.

Saturday, January 17, 2015

When democracy stood upon a razor’s edge


January 17, 2015
By all accounts, Asia’s oldest democracy stood at grave risk one week ago. The courage of a few public servants and military chiefs, who decided at the eleventh hour that the time was right to speak truth to power, may have saved the day. Without their determination, Sri Lankans may well have woken up in a very different country on 9 January. From palace intrigue to the high stakes involved in victory and defeat, this was surely one of Sri Lanka’s landmark elections
“They called us terrorists, traitors and thieves; we called ourselves citizens” – CPA statement on the presidential election 2015
தமிழ் அரசியல் கைதிகள் விரைவில் விடுதலை 
news
logonbanner-116 ஜனவரி 2015, வெள்ளி
நீண்டகாலமாக தடுத்து வைக்கப்பட்டிருக்கும் அரசியல் கைதிகள் அனைவரும் விரைவில் விடுதலை செய்யப்படவுள்ளதாக சிறைச்சாலைகள் ஆணையாளர் நாயகம்  சந்திரானந்த பல்லேகம தெரிவித்துள்ளார்.
 
கொழும்பு வெலிக்கடை மற்றும் புதிய மகசின் விளக்கமறியல் சிறைச்சாலைகளில் நேற்று நடைபெற்ற தைப்பொங்கள் நிகழ்வில் கலந்து கொண்டு உரையாற்றும் போதே அவர் இதனை தெரிவித்துள்ளார்.
 
அங்கு அவர் தொடர்ந்து உரையாற்றுகையில், 
உங்களின் ஏக்கம் எனக்கு நன்கு தெரியும். உங்கள் கண்களே அதற்கு சாட்சியாக இருக்கின்றன. நான் இந்தப் பதவியை ஏற்று இரண்டு வருடங்கள் ஆகின்றன.
இதுவரை காலமும் உங்கள் ஏக்கங்களை சரியாக தீர்த்து வைக்க முடியவில்லை. 
 
காலமும் அதற்கு இடம்கொடுக்கவில்லை. ஆனால், இப்போது காலம் கனிந்திருக்கிறது. தை பிறந்தால் வழிபிறக்கும் என்பார்கள். அந்த வழி நிச்சயம் உங்களுக்குப் பிறக்கும். 
 
புதிய மாற்றத்துக்காக அனைவரும் ஒத்துழைத்திருக்கிறார்கள். குறிப்பாக ஜனாதிபதியின் வெற்றியில் தமிழ் மக்களின் பங்கு அதிகமாகவிருக்கிறது. இதன்மூலம் அவர்கள் நல்லதொரு செய்தியையும் ஜனாதிபதிக்கு கூறியிருக்கிறார்கள். 
 
எமது உறவுகளை எங்களுடன் வாழ வழிசெய்யுங்கள் என்பதே அந்த செய்தி. ஜனாதிபதி மைத்திரிபால சிறிசேனவும் இவர்களின் ஆசையினை தீர்ப்பதற்கு கடமைப்பட்டிருக்கிறார். 
 
ஆகையினால், எதிர்காலத்தில் நிச்சயமாக நல்லது நடக்கும் என நம்புகிறேன். சந்தேகத்தின் பேரில் கைது செய்யப்பட்ட அரசியல் கைதிகள் நீண்டகாலமாக இங்கிருக்கிறீர்கள். இவர்களின் நிலை தொடர்பில் ஜனாதிபதி செயலாளர் மற்றும் உயரதிகாரிகளின் கவனத்துக்கு எடுத்துச் செல்வேன். 
 
அவர்களின் ஆலோசனைக்கமைய, உங்களின் விடுதலை துரிதப்படுத்தப்படும் என்ற உறுதியை இன்றைய தைத்திருநாள் பரிசாக உங்களுக்கு நான் வழங்குகிறேன் என அவர் குறிப்பிட்டுள்ளார்.

Tamils protest against water contamination by Chunnakam power station
Photographs Uthayan
-
17 January 2015
Tamils in Chunnakam protested on Saturday against contamination of the local environment by the Chunnakam Power Station, demanding justice for the effects of the spread of crude oil into water supplies.

Placard reads: 'Let our future generation live'


The crude oil waste from the power station has contaminated wells and drinking water in local areas including Udumalai and Tellipalai, reports the Uthayan. It continues to spread into other regions of the Jaffna peninsula.

"Water poison is another way to kill people?" read placards carried by protesters.





Calling on the those responsible to take action to control the situation and vacate the area, local residents began protesting outside the power station at 9am local time along side environmental activists and local Tamil politicians.



Health department officials warned consuming the contaminated water may result in serious illnesses such as cancer, infertility, and birth defects.

Residents have filed a joint case at Mallakam Justice Court. An investigation is reportedly underway. 


New civilian Governor for North a ‘progressive step’ - TNA

New civilian Governor for North a ‘progressive step’ - TNA
January 17, 2015
logoMembers of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) have commended the new government’s decision to remove Maj. Gen. (Retd) G.A. Chandrasiri from the post of Northern Province Governor, and his replacement by a civilian, H.M.G.S. Palihakkara, terming it as a “progressive step”.
“On the one hand we are happy that one of our key demands, that the Governor should be a civilian and not one with a military background, has been met. But on the other, we are not very optimistic that the change will be for the better. We hope Palihakkara will cooperate with us,” said C.V.K. Sivagnanam, Chairman of the Northern Provincial Council (NPC).
However, Sivagnanam conceded that the Sirisena government has taken “some positive first steps” such as the appointment of a civilian Governor; declaration of an intent to form a committee to release private Tamil lands from the grip of the army; and ordering the release of Tamil detainees against whom no cases have been filed for long.  
Suresh Premachandran, spokesman of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), described the replacement as a “progressive step” but he recalled that Palihakkara, as the Sri Lankan Permanent Representative at the UN, had denied that the Lankan government was violating human rights.
“However, if he supports power sharing and devolution, we will be happy,” Premachandran said leaving the door open for a reassessment.
“If he shows goodwill, we will reciprocate. But we will have to wait and see if he will bow to pressure from Sinhala extremists in the Sirisena government like the Jathika Hela Urumaya,”  commented M.K. Sivajilingam, member of the NPC.
TNA MP, M.A. Sumanthiran felt that there could be a working relationship between the elected NPC and the Government as “Palihakkara is a very fair minded man”.
In Colombo, political commentator Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka said that Palihakkara is an “excellent choice” because he has the necessary “diplomatic skills” to function in an emerging environment which may see significant changes in Centre-Periphery relations, following the drastic pruning of the powers of the Executive Presidency, the New Indian Express reported.

An end to culture of retaliation: Transitional justice in Sri Lanka

Photo via Asia News



Groundviews“In the absence of justice, what is sovereignty but organized robbery?”—St. Augustine
“When will our conscience grow so tender that we will act to prevent human misery rather than avenge it?”—Eleanor Roosevelt
An End to Culture of Retaliation Transitional Justice in Sri Lanka by Thavam Ratna

Immediate Action By President To Reconcile The Alienated     

Colombo Telegraph
By S. Sivathasan -January 17, 2015
S. Sivathasan
S. Sivathasan
Both content and speed of action taken are heartening to the Tamil psyche. The news item of 15 January, given below connotes much.
Land to legitimate Owners
“President Maithripala Sirisena has advised armed forces chiefs to act fast to release private lands that have no security concerns in the Northern and Eastern Provinces. Secretary Defence, B.M.U.D. Basnayake disclosed this yesterday.
Basnayake informed that the tri-forces Commanders had already appointed a committee in that regard and work was underway to ascertain the legitimate owners of lands in those areas.
He further said, President Sirisena had advised him and the three Commanders that apart from sensitive and vulnerable areas and lands that had a direct relevance to the three forces, remaining plots should be returned to the rightful owners.”
Maithripala 1President’s Directive
“Release private lands that have no security concerns”, is the advice. What time horizon is encompassed? Is it July 1977 to present day in 2015? Quite correctly is it said that the devil is in the details. Definition and elaboration will be helpful to those affected to set their bearings right. If the widest coverage is envisaged by the government or expected by the people, de-freezing of High Security Zones is a part. Consultation with the two Provincial Councils will clarify issues. The citizens will deem transparency a right. Let the Forces Chiefs present, a fresh citizen-friendly image as a harbinger of the healing process, in both approach and action.
What the Decision Conveys
The President inducted for long in politics at local and national levels, understands well what deprivation of land means to owners. The sense of hurt becomes all too grievous when a particular community is singled out for harsh treatment. Yet more when it follows war defeat and the land is used for military occupation. Action delayed or denied would be a travesty of justice. President has cut the Gordian Knot and got away from many an entanglement.Read More

Government of good governance appoints National Executive Council which decides future course of the country


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News- 16.Jan.2015, 11.55PM) We are pleased to announce to the people of the country that the first government in Sri Lanka ‘s history that is treasuring and cherishing the value of good governance laid the foundation stone yesterday (15) to appoint an important historic Institution with a view to achieving this goal .
The important historic Institution under the name of’ ‘national executive council’ which will be facilitating directly and indirectly the ‘good governance’ of the government is comprised of representatives of all its constituent parties , political groups and civil organizations .
The primary objective of this council is to function as a united national decisive force towards achieving good governance in the interest of people’s welfare under the government’s 100 days program ,which unity cannot be brought about as a government .
The four aims and objectives of this national executive council which is devoid of race , religion , caste ,creed or factions are as follows:
1.Reforms to revive and restore the supremacy of the law
2.Reforms via the Institution to establish good governance.
3.A methodology aimed at providing relief to the nation.
4.A mechanism to stamp out corruption
The national executive council which is launched to achieve the above objectives is comprised of the following representatives :
1.Most Ven. Maduluwawe Sobitha Thera
2.The incumbent President Maithripala Sirisena
3.Ranil Wickremesinghe who is elected the Prime Minister for the third time.
4.Former President Chandrika Kumaranatunge who was President for 12 years.
5.Anura Dissanayake , the present leader of the JVP , a leftist party for 50 long years.
6.R.Sampanthan the senior leader of the TNA ,the main united party of the Tamils, or its youthful leader Sumenthiran
7.Rauff Hakeem , leader of the SLMC (Sri Lanka Muslim Congress)
8. Rishad Bathiudeen , leader of Samastha Lanka Muslim Congress
9.General Sarath Fonseka , former army commander and leader of Democratic party
10.Champika Ranawake , leader of the JHU , or Ven . Athureliya Ratahne Thera , President of Pivithuru Hetath
11.Mano Ganeshan , leader of Western province Democratic party .
When the maiden meeting of the council was held yesterday it was decided these representatives meet once a week, and a secretariat shall be commenced for the council.
This council was scheduled to be launched two days earlier under the 100 days program of the new government ,but because, until the parliament meets on the 19 th there were no other agendas , there arose no hindrances to the 100 days program.
After the conclusion of the maiden meeting of the national executive council , leader of the JVP Anura Dissanayake made a statement – video footage of it is herein 

Mahinda, Maithri, and the politics of marginalisation

Fragments.Friday, January 17, 2015

Uditha DevapriyaUditha Devapriya
S. W. R. D. Bandaranaike knew politics well enough to pick on-the-moment fads and turn them into ideology. He has been criticised and praised for all the wrong reasons. He has been called a chauvinist, as erroneous as the the "opportunist" and "demagogue" tags that have been pasted on him by his critics.

There are also those who admire and censure him for different reasons. Having an axe to grind with what he stood for, they consider him a cunning politician, one who tricked his supporters into making him popular. As crass a generalisation as this is, it’s an observation that has gained currency among the self-styled intelligentsia, mainly but not only hailing from Colombo (the “Colomboans”).
S. W. R. D. was a politician. He knew words. Rhetoric. He felt the on-the-moment need and transformed it into want. He rode on a populist platform and ended up in 1956. To say that he did all that with words alone isn’t true. To say that he was the shrewd, Machiavellian politician-statesman purely by this isn’t true. Both are claims. Unsubstantiated and crass. This isn’t to say that he was a lily-white angel, but this doesn’t make him a deceitful politician either.
I have often wondered whether these claims have anything to do with post-independence politics. After all, as Kumari Jayawardena has so brilliantly observed in Nobodies to Somebodies, it was a ruling dynasty that got to dominate our political landscape. For some, Anglicised and deeply Westernised, the sight of one of these somebodies turning into a “nobody” and trying to learn the ways of his own country would have been unbearable.
That is why they resent Bandaranaike. Why they imagine him as a vulgar nationalist and a demagogue. Why they relish it whenever and wherever they stoke their hatred by marginalising his contribution to our country. The truth is that those who belong to that elite and privileged class resent him for having unshackled himself of their class interests and detoured.
This isn’t all, of course. The Colomboans (or, as Malinda Seneviratne calls them, the “Kolombians”) have always believed that it was a particular class who were destined to rule the country, wherever and whatever the context. Bandaranaike was an unforgivable rebel, never to be tolerated again.
When Maithripala Sirisena won this year, everyone cheered. Change was needed. The Colomboans, long resentful of his predecessor’s regime, shouted. Some of them shouted because of regime-change, others because Mahinda Rajapaksa lost. Whatever the reason, however, they raised a cheer. All of them. Accordingly therefore, in an attempt to belittle everything that man did or at least tried to do, they began to marginalise.
The abuse began on social media. It began right after the election results began to get ethnicised by those who couldn’t bear Rajapaksa’s defeat: right after claims that the former president had all but the North and East began gaining (undue) currency. There were statuses and comments which began poking fun at those who had voted for him, particularly from the South. I can’t pick out one status to speak for them all, but looking through it all, it’s easy to understand just how insular, how bigoted, some of them are.

Things move fast on social media. Hashtags and labels gain currency pretty quickly and move all over. It didn’t take long for these insular statements to gain popularity. Most if not all of them called Southerners and in particular those who voted for Mahinda a bunch of uneducated barbarians. At a time when we were condemning those who were trying to script ethnicity into the election, these commentators were raising up bigotry of a different form.

Almost subconsciously, these commentators began associating “villager” with “barbarianism”, claiming that the reason they voted for Mahinda was their lack of education and “refinement” (whatever that meant). They didn’t (and couldn’t) identify the simple fact that even in certain Southern electorates, Mahinda won only by a margin: a dramatic volte-face from the last election.

Accordingly, in an attempt to “make use” of the former president’s victory to spurt out their prejudices, the Colomboans alleged that the Southerner voted for Mahinda owing to how easy he was to fool. Indeed, if we were to go by this logic, those who vote for the TNA and the SLMC would have blindly followed those parties for that same reason - a statement no-one with any sense of decency would make.

There was vilification that day. We saw Tamils being branded as Tigers. We saw needless divisions between voters being made. Some cheered, others sobered. Those who had thought Mahinda invincible were shattered. That’s natural. When you’ve cheered the same guy over and over again, you tend to assume he won’t lose. This is what happened. To go beyond this and claim that one section (or subsection thereof) of this country are uneducated barbarians is as bigoted as it’s going to get.

It was Malinda Seneviratne who correctly observed that vilifying an entire collective was indicative of hypocrisy, whether in social media or elsewhere. More often than not, the “trend” was to criticise one form of “blanket vilification” while absolving another. That’s what surfaced (slightly, I should say) when those who condemned the Northern and Eastern voters were rightly thrashed while those who rubbished Southerners did so with impunity. As a part-Southerner myself, I found the latter’s statements offensive and downright insulting. But those who condemned them were in the few. Sadly.

The reason has more to do with self-inflated notions of “education” and “refinement” than with actual bigotry. It’s significant that those who ridiculed Southerners hailed from Colombo or at least from neighbouring suburbs. It’s also significant that their puffed up notions of education came from privileged backgrounds rather than from any real sense of what that term really meant. Most of them came from that English-speaking and self-styled “intelligent” crowd who couldn’t probably identify Kandy or Galle on a map and would probably be comfortable with the British ruling us, thinking that West is best and those who can’t speak in English or afford fine dining can’t think and are brainless.

There were claims made that day. Counterclaims too. Those who condemned one form of racism were in the many. It’s sad to think that even some of those who condemned it got themselves involved with bigotry of another sort: not fueled by racism, but by the need to emphasise that imaginary line between them and those they deem to be brainless village idiots.

The postscript belongs to a friend of mine who, by way of explanation, had this to say: "The elite castes always considered Southerners (as) lower beings."

So it’s not racism. Not even bigotry. It’s class consciousness. The same kind of consciousness that continues to vilify Bandaranaike and ridicule him as a Westernised elitist who took everyone, Sinhala Buddhists et al, by their (imaginary) horns and fooled them into electing him. That’s politics. The politics of marginalisation.

Uditha Devapriya is a freelance writer who can be reached at udakdev1@gmail.com.

2000 Soldiers Were Moved to Colombo for Coup, Says Former Sri Lankan Army Chief

2000 Soldiers Were Moved to Colombo for Coup, Says Former Sri Lankan Army ChiefFormer Sri Lankan Preisdent Mahinda Rajapaksa during has final rally ahead of the elections in which he was voted out. (Reuters)

 by Sreenivasan Jain (With inputs from Manas Roshan) | Updated: January 17, 2015 10:48 
ISTCOLOMBO:  Mahinda Rajapaksa's defeat in the Presidential elections was followed by the news that he had attempted a coup as the results poured in, predicting his defeat.

Now, even more explosive revelations have emerged about the attempted coup. In an exclusive interview to NDTV , former army chief General Sarath Fonseka , tipped to be the new Defence Minister, said that Rajapaksa had moved 2000 troops into Colombo three days before the results in an attempt to stage a coup. Rajapaksa has denied the charges.

According to Fonseka, troops brought in from the Northern Command were deployed in and around Colombo in two circles - one in the metropolitan area around Temple Trees, Rajapaksa's official residence; and an outer circle that covered the Election Commission office.

"If any security is needed the Inspector General of Police has to be informed by Election Commissioner," said Fonseka. But no rules were followed in this case, he said.

Fonseka, who was arrested by Rajapaksa for sedition in 2010, says the new government has proof of this and that they ordered the troops back into their garrisons after the results came out. 

Mangala Samaraweera, the Foreign Minister and a close aide to the new President told NDTV that Rajapaksa held a meeting at Temple Trees in the late hours of January 9, as votes were being counted, attended by his brother Gotabhaya, the Foreign Minister and the Chief Justice among others. 

"At around 4 am, the Attorney General was summoned along with the army chief and IG of Police," said Samaraweera.

But, the Attorney General refused, stating that this amounted to treason. The security chiefs were also reluctant to go ahead with the plan.

"It was because of their courage, that Sri Lanka's democracy survived," said Samaraveera.

The governement has ordered the CID to conduct an inquiry into the incident. But many have been suspicious of its intentions after President Sirisena took over leadership of the SLFP, Rajapakse's party, this morning, effectively making it an SLFP-led government.

Both Fonseka and Samaraweera have maintained that the inquiry will be fair and action taken.

"If there is sufficient evidence, then the law will take its course," said Samaraweera at his office in the Ministry.

As the parties wrangle over control of the island state, it is clear that Rajapakse is very much still in the picture.