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

Friday, January 30, 2015

Sri Lanka's Tamil party rejects domestic probe into war allegations

Shanghai Daily,上海日报Jan 29,2015
COLOMBO, Jan. 29 (Xinhua) -- Sri Lanka's main Tamil party on Thursday said it would oppose any domestic inquiry into the alleged human rights violations during the final stages of the country's civil war and reiterated its call for an international probe.
Tamil National Alliance (TNA) spokesperson Suresh Premachandran told reporters that the Tamil minorities in the island nation had no faith or trust in a domestic inquiry, noting that numerous domestic commissions had been futile in the past.
"We categorically oppose any domestic inquiry. Tamil have no faith or trust in a domestic investigation and we reiterate our call for a UN backed international probe," Premachandran said.
He also urged the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights to table a report on Sri Lanka as scheduled at the UN Human Rights Council Session in March.
The report on Sri Lanka will be presented to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva by UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Prince Zeid Ra'ad Zeid Al-Hussein with a comprehensive investigation on Sri Lanka's civil war.
Sri Lanka's senior advisor on foreign affairs Jayantha Dhanapala was in Geneva to discuss the UN Human Rights Council's investigation into alleged violations of human rights by both parties in Sri Lanka with the High Commissioner.
He is also expected to brief the High Commissioner of the government's efforts to conduct its own inquiry into the war allegations.
Sri Lanka's newly elected government led by Maithripala Sirisena said earlier this month that it will conduct its own probe and appoint a domestic independent commission, consisting of professionals, to investigate the final stages of the war against Tamil Tiger rebels which ended in 2009.
Sri Lanka has been under continuous pressure from the UN and human rights watchdogs to have an international probe but the request had been turned down by former President Mahinda Rajapakse 's government.

Sri Lanka's new government plans fresh war crimes probe

Sri Lankan Tamils hold pictures of family members who disappeared during the war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) at a protest in Jaffna, about 400 km (250 miles) north of Colombo November 15, 2013.REUTERS/Stringer/FilesSri Lankan Tamils hold pictures of family members who disappeared during the war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) at a protest in Jaffna, about 400 km (250 miles) north of Colombo November 15, 2013.
ReutersThu Jan 29, 2015
(Reuters) - Sri Lanka is planning an investigation into accusations of human rights abuses in the final stages of a 26-year civil war amid international frustration at the failure to look into numerous civilian deaths, a government spokesman said late on Wednesday.
Former president Mahinda Rajapaksa, who was ousted in a surprise election defeat this month, had refused to cooperate with any U.N. investigation into claims the army committed atrocities in the war that ended in 2009.Without some accountability for civilian deaths, the United Nations argues there will be no lasting reconciliation to allow Sri Lanka to move on from the war that dragged on for decades as ethnic Tamil rebels battled for autonomy in the island's north and east.
"We are thinking of having our own inquiry acceptable to them to the international standards," Rajitha Senaratne, a government spokesman, told a forum of foreign correspondents in Colombo, referring to the United Nations.
"It will be a new local inquiry. If we need, we will bring some foreign experts."
The U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights in November accused Rajapaksa's government of trying to "sabotage" its own investigation and creating a "wall of fear" to prevent witnesses from giving evidence to its inquiry set up in March.About 40,000 Tamil civilians were killed in the final weeks of the war, most of them by the Sri Lankan army, the United Nations estimated in a 2011 report. Sri Lanka has rejected the accusations and has been conducting its own investigation.Newly elected President Maithripala Sirisena in the run up to the vote promised a new investigation under an independent judiciary, but rejected demands for an international inquiry.
This week, he sent his senior adviser on foreign relations to meet U.N. officials to discuss the investigation, government sources said.
Senaratne also said the government was looking at releasing political prisoners, mainly suspected members of the defeated Tamil Tiger rebel group.
(Editing by Andrew MacAskill, Malini Menon, Robert Birsel)

A New Approach To Eradicate Poverty In Sri Lanka

Colombo TelegraphBy Vasantha Raja -January 30, 2015
Vasantha Raja
Vasantha Raja
Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake’s mini-budget (29th) – with substantial offers to ordinary people – will be most welcome by many. Clearly, the minister must have taken the oncoming parliamentary election into account in designing the budget. However, occasional salary increases and random price-reduction of essential items are neither durable nor eliminate endemic poverty.
The new government’s 100-day program, in contrast, clearly has the potential to make a worthy contribution to Sri Lanka’s unfolding democratic revolution. But, remember, the existing constitution is a hotchpotch of uncoordinated patchwork; therefore, ad hoc changes will not be sufficient to do a solid job. Only a specially designed Constituent Assembly comprising experts and delegates from different communities, in my view, can fix the problem in the future.
Whatever the limitations facing the new administration, one must accept the fact that defeating Rajapaksas’ Mafia-regime electorally is a positive start.
The people of Sri Lanka seem to be already feeling jubilant and free, above all, fearless. This shows that the 8th of January marks something more than a ‘regime-change’; above all, an apparent ‘leap’ in mass consciousness. In other words, Rajapaksas’ ruthless regime seems to have unwittingly triggered a social backlash that has become irreversible. Perhaps, that’s the most important accomplishment.
Ravi Karu
*Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake’s mini-budget – with substantial offers to ordinary people – will be most welcome by many. Clearly, the minister must have taken the oncoming parliamentary election into account in designing the budget.Read More

K. Sripavan sworn in as Chief Justice

K. Sripavan sworn in as Chief JusticeJustice K. Sripavan today took oaths as the 44th Chief Justice of Sri Lanka before President Maithripala Sirisena.
logoJanuary 30, 2015
Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake yesterday retired from service,after the resumption of office the previous day as the Chief Justice. Dr. Bandaranaike (57) was appointed to the Supreme Court in 1996. She was purportedly impeached by Parliament in 2013. 
Yesterday, she publicly announced her retirement at a ceremonial sitting of the Supreme Court.
While addressing the Ceremonial Sitting at the Hulftsdorp Court complex, Bandaranaike said that she greets Justice Kanagasabapathy J. Sripavan, the senior-most Judge of the Supreme Court. 
President Maithripala Sirisena chose to take his oath of office before Justice Sripavan, on 9 January.
Sripavan was a former Deputy Solicitor General and judge of the Court of Appeal. He has also served as acting Chief Justice.
Sripavan is the second Tamil to be Chief Justice of the Sri Lankan Supreme Court. The first Tamil to hold the highest judicial post in Sri Lanka was Suppiah Sharvananda, who served between 1984 and 1988. 
Born in 1952, Sripavan was educated at the Jaffna Hindu College and the Law College in Colombo. After a short stint at the private bar in the late 1970s, he joined the Attorney General’s Office as a government counsel. He rose to be Deputy Solicitor General before he was appointed a judge in the Court of Appeal.  He was party to many landmark judgments when he was raised to the Supreme Court.

Sri Lanka: de-facto CJ Mohan Peiris faces serious legal charges

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Sri Lanka Guardian( January 30, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Former Chief Justice Mohan Peiris is facing a serious charge of misconduct on his part which was committed by him yesterday.
It happened when Shirani Bandaranayake was reinstated as Chief Justice yesterday at the court complex at Aluthkade in Colombo.
Peiris had ordered the release of the suspects who were arrested in connection with the attack on film artistes in Kurunegala during the run-up to the January 8 Presidential election.
This was revealed by magistrate Chamara Wickremanayake in public.
Peiris had told Wickremasinghe to release the suspects in the same way that he (Peiris) got Nishantha Muthuhettigama released on bail.
Mutthuhettigama was released by Magistrate Chandima Edirimanne.
Magistrate Wickremanayake confessed he released the suspects against his conscience and being a junior he feared for his position.


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By Saman Indrajith-

Mohan Peiris courted favour from President Maithripala Sirisena, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and former President Chandrika Kumaratunga in a bid to retain his position as the Chief Justice after the new government came to power, Parliament was told yesterday.

 Those included unscheduled visit by Peiris accompanied by his wife to President Sirisena on the night of January 21 only to be turned away, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said, making a special statement in response to a query raised by Leader of the Opposition Nimal Siripala de Silva and MEP Leader Dinesh Gunawardena the previous day.

 The Prime Minister in a lengthy statement to the House explaining the circumstances that had led to the removal of Peiris and reinstatement of Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake as the Chief Justice said that Peiris had offered to give any judgment in favour of the new government if he was retained as Chief Justice till April this year.

 "Then I told him that the Bar Association of Sri Lanka was demanding his removal from the office of Chief Justice. Thereafter, Peiris said that he was ready to step down from the post of Chief Justice if he received a diplomatic posting in a country such as Switzerland. I told him that I first had to consult Foreign Affairs Minister Mangala Samaraweera to check whether any such vacancy was available in the Foreign Service. Then Peiris said that he would step down once he was informed of the details of the diplomatic posting. When I contacted Foreign Minister Samaraweera in this regard, I was told that there were two vacancies for diplomatic postings in Vietnam and Brazil and position of Lankan Ambassador to Italy would fall vacant soon. I coveyed this to Peiris and suggested that he would take the position of Sri Lankan Ambassador to Brazil. He was not satisfied with that offer. Later, I instructed Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe to inform Peiris that Ambassador post in Rome would be vacant in few weeks’ time. Minister Rajapakshe told me that he had conveyed the message to Peiris and he was waiting for Peiris’ response."

 Prime Minister Wickremesinghe said that BASL seniors had pointed out to him that appointing Peiris to the office of the Chief Justice was not legal and he should leave the office forthwith. "They pointed out to me that removal of Shirani Bandaranayake from her office was bad in law and therefore she was still the Chief Justice of the country. The proper method of removing a judge had not been followed when she was removed from office. Since Bandaranayake had not been removed from office following the proper method, the appointment granted to Peiris was null and void."

Wickremesnghe said that the BASL had been concerned about the presence of Peiris at Temple Trees during the wee hours of January 9, 2015.  "Senior lawyers and the BASl told me that presence of chief justice at the house of a presidential candidate while votes were being counted was unbecoming. The CID is currently carrying out an investigation following a complaint lodged by Minister Samaraweera in this regard. The name of Mohan Peiris is associated with several companies. He not only served as a director at Rakna Lanka Private Company, Lanka Logistics Company but also still a major shareholder."

The Premier said that Peiris holding the office of Chief Justice had paved way for a conflict between lawyers and courts. "His conduct plunged the country’s judicial system into a crisis. His unconstitutional appointment and conduct have ruined the good name of the office of Chief Justice. After consulting the Solicitor General, the National Executive Council decided that correct action to be taken was by informing Peiris that his appointment was null and void. The President accepted that decision and conveyed that message to Peiris and informed Bandaranayke to resume duties at the office of Chief Justice as she was still the legally appointed Chief Justice of the country. I would like to remind that the BASL had been fighting against the removal of Bandaranayake from her office and did not accept Peiris as the Chief Justice for the past two years."

To be or not to be (the Chief Justice)!

 January 31, 2015
‘A Daniel come to judgment! Yea! A Daniel! O wise young judge, how I do honour thee!” – Merchant of Venice-Shakespeare
Some years back I was a member of the official bar in the famed south sea islands of Fiji. This was when that beautiful country of roughly 18,000 square km was, despite simmering tensions between the indigenous Fijians and the immigrant Indians, a sturdy democracy, with an excellent legal system and a judiciary of high repute.
If my memory serves me well, I believe the population of the entire group of islands then was about four to five hundred thousand, more or less. The judicial structure was three tiered, with the Magistrates Courts possessed of both criminal and civil jurisdiction as the base, the High Courts hearing bigger matters as well as holding appellate jurisdiction, and at the apex the Supreme Court.
To Be or Not to Be (the Chief Justice)! by Thavam Ratna

Towards an Independence Day for National Unity and Reconciliation

Sri Lanka Guardianflags_SL











by Laksiri Fernando

( January 30, 2015, Sydney, Sri Lanka Guardian) It is only four days to go for the Independence Day celebrations. It appears that the positive input from the Minister of Foreign Affairs has come to make the celebrations more meaningful. Earlier indication was to have the day on the theme of ‘wholesome motherland, dignified tomorrow’ (piripun maubimak, abiman heta dinak).

Ranil Says De Facto CJ Pieris Was Ready To Send Rajapaksa Regime Members To Jail


January 30, 2015
Colombo TelegraphPrime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe had said during his special statement to the parliament today that de facto Chief Justice Mohan Peris had said he was ready to imprison all members of the Rajapaksa regime.
Ranil Wickramasinghe 1 - colombo telegraphThe PM had stated that reinstating the 43rd Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake was carried out in accordance of proper proceedings and had added that when the de-facto CJ was requested to resign from his position respectfully, he had in return expressed his readiness to deliver judgments in favour of the government.
“Therefore, it the government retained Mohan Pieris, he could have sent all of the former government members to jail,” he said when a huge uproar was made by the Opposition during his statement.
However, the uproar escalated when several Opposition MPs including Nimal Siripala de Silva, Wimal Weerawansa and Dinesh Gunwardena repeatedly requested for time for a debate on the legality of reinstating the 43rd CJ, which was in turn refused when the PM informed the parliament that an opportunity for a debate on the topic can only be given after February 5, when the independence day celebrations are concluded.


Rajpal Still Editor Of Daily News, Still Getting Paid By The Taxpayers

Colombo Telegraph
January 30, 2015 
One of the ugliest facets of the Rajapaksa regime was its conduct in the state media. Even by State media standards no others surpassed the absolute low levels that were reached by the Editor of the Daily News,Rajpal Abeynayake. From foreign leaders, ambassadors, public servants to opposition politicians have all been victims of this vitriolic individual claiming to be a journalist. even die hard supporters of the Rajapaksa regime such as Dayan Jayatilleka have been called donkey by in the Daily News editorial.
Rajpal
Rajpal
Even more preposterous is the retention of Rajpal Abeynayake as the editor of the Daily News. It is reliably learnt from sources within the Lake House that Abeynayake continues to function as the Editor of the paper and is now writing its editorials. Not known for any principles, integrity or values, Abeynayake has no qualms about pandering to his new masters as long has he is paid and his privileges continued. In 180 degree turn from his unquestionable defence of the Rajapaksa regime, including the anti-Muslim massacre in Aluthgama, Abeynayake has now taken to topics such as ethnic harmony, reconciliation, good governance and demilitarization.
In the later part of the election cycle he called Muslim MP’s who supported candidate Sirisena Pigs and then went on to apologize to Pigs. He has called President Sirisena a traitor, an Eelamist, a crook and a coweredamong many other names.
Abeynayake has been involved in numerous scandals during the Rajapaksa regime. Famously he got mugged at a brothel in Geneva during an all expenses paid trip to cover the Human Rights Council sessions in 2012. He and Bandula Jayasekera, another Rajapaksa mouth piece had visited the establishment again with tax payer money when they faced the misfortune.

Shock and Joy in Sri Lanka

Sri Lankan Tamils hold pictures of family members who disappeared during the war against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) at a protest in Jaffna, about 400 km (250 miles) north of Colombo November 15, 2013.REUTERS/Stringer/Files

Erik Solheim Headshot

The Huffington Post -01/29/2015
The election shock on Sri Lanka has been called a model for how reformist elites and a fed up people can get rid of increasingly authoritarian leaders. To become a true role model, the reincarnated Sri Lankan democracy must in the next years deliver political reform, inclusive development and devolved power to minorities.
There were few people outside of this beautiful island who thought the unknown Maithripala Sirisena could beat the increasingly authoritarian president Mahinda Rajapaksa. Rajapaksa put the entire state apparatus behind his election campaign. Thousands of busses were redirected to transport people to his election rallies. Fake pamphlets called on the Tamils to boycott the election. The media was broadcasting propaganda and outright lies. Imagine the CNN on the eve of the upcoming US elections reporting that Bill Clinton has joined the Republican Party.
The new president Sirisena led one of the broadest coalitions in electoral history. Free market supporters and communists stood shoulder to shoulder. Tamils, Muslims and ultra-nationalistic Sinhalese Buddhists rallied behind a common candidate to get rid of Rajapaksa. Massive support from the minorities was a key to the coalition's success. A solid 80 percent support from minority Tamils and Muslims combined with 45 percent of the majority Singhalese Buddhist vote secured victory.
The new Sri Lanka is facing great challenges. The democracy must be secured and strengthened. Economic growth and development must be more inclusive and benefit all ethnic groups. The question of the role of the Tamils on Sri Lanka, the source of a conflict that has lasted for half a century, must be resolved. Sri Lanka proved that democracy could get rid of the authoritarian leader. The big challenge will be to prove that the new democracy can deliver democratic reforms, inclusive development and satisfy the Tamils and other minorities. The new government has done a lot right so far. But the international community must support in any way it can.
Many democratic reforms are being put in place to make the courts, central bank and military independent from politics. Media censorship is lifted to ensure a free press. Activists will no longer be picked up by the "white van's" and never seen again. Rajapaksa was never invited to Europe or the US and made Sri Lanka increasingly isolated. But Sirisena will go to India for his first state visit and it should not be long before we see the President in the White House and European capitals.
Sri Lanka is doing well on poverty reduction and the economy is growing fast. But improvements have not been equally shared. Many are still poor in the rural Deep South and among Muslims and Tamils. Sri Lanka needs more and better aid, investments and domestic taxes to develop faster and fairer. More development aid should target the remaining pockets of poverty. The West should rapidly match the useful Chinese investments in promising industries like fisheries, energy, textiles and IT. The most important source of development finance is always domestic resources. But Sri Lanka only generates 12 percent of national income in taxes, much lower than the developing country average of 20 percent. OECD Tax for Development programs which have assisted other countries in raising millions dollars could be implemented in Sri Lanka. The large and successful Tamil diaspora can also be a source of investments and expertise and the new government has signaled a strong will to engage with them.
Sri Lanka also has a huge potential for tourism with beautiful beaches, magnificent cultural sites and elephant reserves -- all within few hours' drive from the capital Colombo.
The biggest challenge will be reconciliation with the minorities and resolving the Tamil national issue. The new government has signaled a willingness to reach out. They will investigate human rights abuses during the final stages of the civil war. The international community will continue to call for war criminals and human rights abusers to be held accountable. This is good, but the international community must give the government enough time and space. To bring this to a close, the Sinhala majority must also be brought on board and understand what Sri Lanka looks like from a Tamil perspective. Accountability unfortunately takes time as we saw in Chile and Serbia. But at the end it will come. Talks between government and the main Tamil party TNA are urgent.
The new ''Sri Lanka model'' could make many dictators lose their sleep. If the new democracy is able to deliver results; democratic reforms, inclusive development and Tamil and Muslim rights, it will become a true role model. We should all do what we can to support the new government and the people of Sri Lanka.
Erik Solheim, former Sri Lanka peace envoy.


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By Izeth Hussain- 

We are presently witnessing the maturing of Sri Lankan democracy, specifically in the form of a transition from conquest democracy to consensual democracy. About a quarter of a century ago, perhaps it was in 1990 or 1991, I wrote an article in the Lanka Guardian under the heading ‘Conquest Democracy’. The title showed that I was clearly being derisive and my intent was satirical, aimed at poking fun at the stupid and brutal antics of the Jay Gang of JRJ and subsequently of the Prey Gang of Premadasa. But at the same time I was pointing to something that had gone terribly wrong with our democracy. The article was just a page long, but it made a much wider impact than I had anticipated. How wide was shown when some months ago Dr. Dayan Jayatilleke denied using the phrase that the political ‘mainstream is a sewer’ and attributed it correctly to me as its only true begetter.

The idea of conquest democracy seems to be worth expounding seriously. Its latest practitioners, the Rajpak Gang, have been booted out but it can recur. I began my earlier article by pointing out that the practice of democracy cannot be identical in all countries because it can be expected to acquire a local coloration from the culture that is specific to each country. To illustrate my point I chose a hilarious example, culled from somewhere in the voluminous writings of Bertrand Russell. An East European Government in the inter-War years decided to practice democracy and accordingly held free and fair elections. It lost and its Parliamentary majority was reduced to a minority, but it was not prepared to relinquish office. It, therefore, proceeded to assassinate the requisite number of Opposition members to make the Opposition majority into a minority. That was unique in the annals of democracy. We, too, I pointed out, have been unique in the practice of democracy. After elections the new government becomes the conqueror of both the Opposition and the people of Sri Lanka.

What else could the propensity to celebratory post-election violence signify? After elections the defeated politicians and their supporters are whacked, sometimes killed, and their properties torched. I recall that during my boyhood days and youth there used to be pre-election but never post-election violence. The British, being the conquerors, wouldn’t have allowed the natives to behave like conquerors. Post-election violence gradually took root after 1948 and reached its apogee in 1977 when JRJ gave leave to the police so that celebratory murder and mayhem could go unchecked. Since then some unique refinements, unparalleled elsewhere in the world, have been introduced, such as females being forced to parade naked – a fate recently promised to CBK. After the recent elections the violence appears to have been significantly less than customary, but we must note that the new President declared that had he lost he would have been tortured and his family would have suffered ill consequences.

The analogies between military conquest and the Sri Lankan version of democracy have been very striking. The post-election violence corresponds to the licence traditionally allowed by conquerors to their soldiers to kill and loot in the immediate aftermath of conquests. Since conquests were for the most part motivated by the drive for loot, the conqueror and his top buddies proceeded quickly to grab the land of the conquered. It is not accidental that after 2009 our Tamils and Muslims have been complaining that their lands were being grabbed under the aegis of the State. The traditional land-grabbing by conquerors finds its analogy in the quick grabbing of the resources of the State by newly-appointed Sri Lankan Governments. There is no let or hindrance to the plum posts in the huge State sector being given to the kith and kin and the political supporters of the conquering power elite. Conquerors don’t usually brook opposition; so media freedom and the independence of the judiciary are curtailed or destroyed. I must point out that it has been a peculiarity of the Sri Lankan conquerors not just to destroy the independence of the judiciary but to humiliate the judges.

The mentality of the conqueror can be clearly seen in the maltreatment of the minorities. When the 1977 government took office there was a widespread and confident expectation that the promised All Party Conference would soon be held, after which there would be a definitive solution of the Tamil ethnic problem at long last. Instead JRJ unleashed his State terrorist program from 1977 to 1983, showing very clearly that his priority was to conquer the Tamil people, which apparently was his way of solving the ethnic problem. Again in 2009 there was a widespread and confident expectation that the Tamil ethnic problem would soon find a definitive solution. Instead the Tamils in the North were treated as a people who should never lose sight of the fact that they were under the heels of the Sinhalese conqueror. In addition MR gave blatant though undeclared support for the racist extremists who saw in the abjectly submissive Muslim minority an existential threat to the Sinhalese – in other words, a people who had to be conquered.

While our politicians have been attracted by conquest democracy, our people have acquiesced in it because they have conceived of democracy as a form of non-violent civil war. Every Sinhalese village, across the length and breadth of Sri Lanka, has been divided between supporters of the UNP and of the SLFP, and their relations have usually been antagonistic. A foreign scholar – if I remember rightly it was Jonathan Spencer – wrote of a village that had been celebrating a Festival in common down the millennia, but had taken to celebrating it on separate days because the supporters of the two parties could not come together for a common celebration. The divisiveness and the antagonism are easily understandable in terms of a paradigm of conquest democracy. Politics became essentially a matter of getting at the spoils – "spoils" being shorthand for "the spoils of war".

I am told, however, that the most successful of the villagers have been the ones who knew how to play both sides, by cultivating relations with the influential and powerful of both parties. That fact pointed to the possibility of a convergence of our two major parties. I argued in my last article that the convergence has been taking place, and therefore our politics could become less conflictual and more consensual than in the past. It is arguable, on the other hand, that Maithripala Sirisena won because of the minority vote, which spells a sharpening of the ethnic polarization and therefore our politics will become even more conflictual than in the past. I don’t know, but I suppose it depends mostly on what we think and do to shape the future. I like to recall that someone – was it Keynes or Tawney or someone else? – wrote that what we do today is shaped by what the philosophers thought yesterday.

Sri Lanka Navy To Probe Former President’s Son’s Appointment To Navy

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Sri Lanka Brief29/01/2015 
The Sri Lanka Navy is to commence a probe in to the appointment of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s second son, Navy Lieutenant Yoshitha Rajapaksa.
The Defense Ministry has sent a letter to the Navy Commander asking the navy to probe how Yoshitha entered the Sri Lanka Navy and his conduct.
Navy Spokesperson Commander Kosala Warnakulasuriya has said that the Navy Commander has received a letter from the Defense Secretary to probe the former First Son.
The Spokesperson has also said that the resignation letter presented by Yoshitha Rajapaksa has not been accepted by the Navy Commander and that the lieutenant is currently assigned to the Sri Lanka Navy headquarters.
The Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna on Monday (26) handed a complaint to the Defense Secretary seeking a probe on Yoshitha Rajapaksa on how he joined the Navy, how he was granted overseas scholarships and his active involvement in politics and other activities while serving as a naval office

Presidential Secretariat Expenses Had Reached An All-Time High In 2014!

Colombo Telegraph
January 30, 2015 
Figures revealed regarding the annual expenses of the Presidential Secretariat during the Rajapaksa regime reveals that it had reached an all-time high last year.
Mahinda RMFinance Minister Ravi Karunanayake during the 2015 interim budget reading last afternoon revealed that the annual expenses of the Presidential Secretariat which was at Rs. 6,340 million in 2009 had been escalated to an all-time high of Rs. 104,970 million in 2014.
According to the figures released by Minister Karunanayake, the expenses are as follows:
2009 – Rs.     6,340 million
2010 – Rs.     7,650 million
2011 – Rs.   50,630 million
2012 – Rs.   59,360 million
2013 – Rs.   82,440 million
2014 – Rs. 104,970 million
He also said the estimated cost for the Presidential Secretariat had been calculated to be Rs. 95,930 million but added it has been cut down to Rs. 2560 million under the instructions of President Sirisena.
It is no surprise that the expenses would rise to such exorbitant amounts, as it has been revealed that the fleet of vehicles owned by the Secretariat had been 749. About 80 of them have been discovered by the Police in several locations and investigations have commenced into 65 of them.

Ethnic nationalism versus Civic nationalism

logoprez pm in arliBy  Mass L. Usuf

When the Parliament met for the first time on 20 January 2015 after the Presidential elections the Prime Minister Mr. Ranil Wickremasinghe said, inter alia, “Irrespective of being Sinhala, Tamil or Muslim, we must try to find a solution as Sri Lankans”.   His sagely admonition came in the form of these words, “We should abhor racism.” Nationalism is an ideological concept through which a national identity is created to its citizens and a sense of belonging to one’s nation.

Serbian Army Chief Accused Over Kosovo Killings

Army general Ljubisa Dikovic with Minister of Defence Bratislav Gasic. Photo by BETA

29 Jan 15
The Belgrade-based Humanitarian Law Centre accused the current head of the Serbian Army of commanding troops who attacked four Kosovo villages in 1999, when at least 69 civilians were killed.
The Humanitarian Law Centre alleged in a new report on Thursday that current Serbian Army chief Ljubisa Dikovic was the commander of the 37th Brigade of the Yugoslav Army responsible for the attacks on the four villages in the Drenica area between April 5 and May 27, 1999, when at least 69 Kosovo Albanians died.
The rights group’s report also claimed that the 37th Brigade was responsible for the subsequent removal of the bodies from the villages of Rezala, Staro Cikitovo, Donji Zabelj and Gladno Selo in an attempted cover-up.
The Serbian defence ministry has strongly denied the allegations.
But Sandra Orlovic, director of the Humanitarian Law Centre, said that convincing evidence had been assembled that showed that the 37th Brigade was involved.
“Our evidence which is based on documents from the Hague Tribunal and witness testimonies which without doubt show that his unit was present in the villages when the attack took place, and was later in charge of the removal of the bodies,” said Orlovic.
“In the village of Rezala, the bodies were covered with dirt, and then a few days afterwards the bodies were put in to trucks and taken away,” she said.
She added that the Humanitarian Law Centre also had information that “the military wanted to hang over the bodies to the civil authorities, but their request was denied”.
Forty-seven of the victims’ bodies were found 15 years later in a mass grave at the Rudnica quarry, near the town of Raska in southern Serbia. Ten people are still listed as missing.
“The location of the mass grave is just near the border with Kosovo, and near the military barracks of the 37th Brigade. The mass grave was in a completely public space, just near the land which was owned by the Yugoslav Army,” Orlovic said.
She said that all the evidence about the alleged involvement of Dikovic in the wartime crimes in the Kosovo villages and the removal of the bodies was available to the Serbian authorities even before his appointment as the army’s chief of staff in 2011.
But the Serbian defence ministry told BIRN that the Humanitarian Law Centre report was false.
“Public statements from Humanitarian Law Centre are intended to directly diminish the reputation of Serbia and its army,” the ministry said.
The crimes committed by the 37th Brigade were partly dealt with during the trial of former Serbian President Milan Milutinovic and other senior officials at the Hague Tribunal, but its commander was never prosecuted.
The Humanitarian Law Centre’s new report is the first to claim proof of the involvement of the army in the removal of the bodies.
So far, only Vlastimir Djordjevic, a former Serbian interior ministry assistant, has been convicted of transporting the bodies to Serbia. He was sentenced to 18 years in prison by the Hague Tribunal.
No one has been prosecuted in Serbia itself for removing the bodies.