Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Fulfill justice for the prisoners who were killed in Welikada – Go Rights organization 

weli 1
Tuesday, 17 February 2015There was a protest staged on the 17th condemning the murders committed at the Welikada prison inmates during the last regime. People’s collective against Welikada prison massacre and the Go Right organization jointly convened this protest opposite the Welikada prison.
The protestors stressed that why the laws are still not enforced for the people who are accused.
Rev. Fr. Sathyawel said the murders were committed in order to destroy the evidences of the corruption and abuses of the former regime strongmen’s. Rev Sathyawel questioned who had the legitimate reason to kill the witnesses and said the former President, Defense Secretary and senior DIG Anura Senanayake has to directly bear the responsibility for these killings. Rev. Sathyawel further stressed that the current government should fulfill justice for those inmates who were killed.
Wicramabahu Karunarathna, Human Rights activists and the families of those inmates who were killed participated for this protest.
Fulfill justice for the prisoners who were killed in Welikada – Go Rights organizationFulfill justice for the prisoners who were killed in Welikada – Go Rights organization
Fulfill justice for the prisoners who were killed in Welikada – Go Rights organizationFulfill justice for the prisoners who were killed in Welikada – Go Rights organization
Fulfill justice for the prisoners who were killed in Welikada – Go Rights organizationFulfill justice for the prisoners who were killed in Welikada – Go Rights organization
Fulfill justice for the prisoners who were killed in Welikada – Go Rights organizationFulfill justice for the prisoners who were killed in Welikada – Go Rights organization
Fulfill justice for the prisoners who were killed in Welikada – Go Rights organizationFulfill justice for the prisoners who were killed in Welikada – Go Rights organization

Sri Lanka’s Right To Information Bill Requires Further Improvement: Article19

Colombo Telegraph
February 17, 2015 |
Sri Lanka’s Right to Information Bill requires further improvement says the Article19, London based international organization for global campaign for free expression.
Article 19's Executive Director Thomas Hughes
Article 19’s Executive Director Thomas Hughes
Issuing a statement today the Article 19 said; “The draft Bill is a good start on achieving the fundamental right of information in Sri Lanka. However, the Bill needs to be further improved and clarified preferably before it is put before Parliament, or at least by Parliamentarians themselves.”
We publish below the statement in full;
Article 19 welcomes the new government’s commitment to creating a long awaited right to information law. However the draft requires some improvement and clarification before it is adopted.
A draft Right to Information Bill was shared by the new Sri Lankan Government with stakeholders last week and is due to be presented before Parliament on 20 February. The Government has stated its intention for Parliament to adopt the law within three weeks.
The new Government’s commitment to instilling a new culture of openness and transparency is commendable. Sri Lanka has been discussing legislating to protect the right to information for many years and came close to adopting a law in 2002.
However, while the draft Bill contains many positive attributes, such as the 10-year rule on providing secret information and the overriding of existing secrecy legislation, it has a number of flaws and is not completely in line with contemporary international standards. The Bill should be improved and clarified in the following ways:
WEAK PROVISIONS OPEN TO ABUSE
The Bill should recognise that any person regardless of citizenship status has the right to information. The limitation may result in officials preventing marginalised people – such as those living in extreme poverty – from making requests by imposing burdensome requests for identity and proof of citizenship.
The Bill should explicitly state that people do not have to justify or explain the reason for their request. Without such explicit provisions, some officials may try to require applicants to declare their intentions and refuse to accept them, which creates a chilling effect.
The appointments for the Information Commission should be clarified to that only candidates recommended by the Constitutional Council are appointed, rather than by the media minister; the Secretary of the Media Minister should not be a member; the commission should choose its own president.
The timescale of responding and providing information should be shortened. 28 working days (nearly 6 weeks) is far too long for persons to receive information.
The provisions on republication of information that is released (a31) should be deleted and replaced with a provision stating that all information released is freely re-publishable and reusable.
SCOPE IN SOME DEFINITIONS IS TOO NARROW
The term “official information” should be replaced with “information” to prevent officials determining that information that it holds is not “official” and the related definition broadened and defined as “any information in any form held by a public authority”.
The definition of “public authorities” should be broadened to ensure that all public and private bodies that are conducting public business are covered.
The definition of “public interest” should be clarified to ensure that the bills goals of promoting accountability, ensuring public participation, proper spending and other public interests are considered.
The provisions for “affirmative publication” of information relating to reports and projects should be expanded. The Bill should provide for “regular publication” and include information on contracts, budgets, spending and so forth. The information should be released in open data format when applicable.
CLARIFICATION NEEDED
The decisions of the Information Commission should be made clearly binding under 14(c) and should be clarified to provide for an authority to order its release.
The provisions on fees should be clarified – currently there seems to be a presumption that requests are made with fees under 25(1).
The exemptions require some clarification. Provision (e) is unnecessary as medical records are covered under (a), and provisions (g) and (i) are too broad. Provision (j) does not make sense, as people should be allowed to see their exam results in order to prevent fraud and improper grading.
The bill should state that the provisions go into effect within a specific time frame (1-2 years) after its signing.
A whole separate law on protecting whistleblowers should be adopted to ensure adequate protections.
The draft Bill is a good start on achieving the fundamental right of information in Sri Lanka. However, the Bill needs to be further improved and clarified preferably before it is put before Parliament, or at least by Parliamentarians themselves.
Wigneswaran calls for further devolved power to address issues in Northern Province

16 February 2015
Noting that the elected leaders of the Northern Province had no control over their own offices, the Chief Minister of the Northern Provincial Council  CV Wigneswaran called on the government to hand over authority and power to the provincial administration during a Provincial Council meeting on Monday.

Over 100,000 war widows remain in the North-East of Sri Lanka said Mr Wigneswaran addressing a meeting of the Special Coordinating Committee for the Northern Province, in Jaffna.

The meeting was chaired by the Central Public Administration and Good Governance Minister Karu Jayasuriya, reports the New Indian Express.

100,000 War Widows in Lanka’s Northern Province, Says Wigneswaran

The New Indian Express
By P.K.Balachandran-Wednesday, February 18, 2015
COLOMBO: The Chief Minister of Sri Lanka’s Northern Province, C.V.Wigneswaran, said in Jaffna on Monday, that there are “almost a lakh war widows” in his province.
He was addressing a meeting of the Special Coordinating Committee for the Northern Province, which was presided over the Central Public Administration and Good Governance Minister, Karu Jayasuriya.
Delineating the problems confronting his  war-devastated province, Wigneswaran said that there are 20,000 “immobile patients” whose vertebral columns were injured during the war. Besides that, the Northern Province has a number of children orphaned during the war. Many are suffering from psychosomatic disorders. These need to be given psychiatric help, the Chief Minister said.
He charged that during the regime of President Mahinda Rajapaksa, there was “ bad governance, closed administration and corruption at all levels,” in the Northern Province.
The then military Governor (Maj.Gen.G.A.Chandrasiri), was running his own administration. Some ministers of the Ventral government were also running parallel administrations.  The elected peoples’ representatives of the province had no control over their own officers. Lack of supervision by the peoples’ representatives resulted in corruption going unchecked. With so many competing power centers in operation, officers of the provincial administration were in a quandary because they had often to choose between “the devil and deep sea”.   
Given this background, Wigneswaran appealed to Jayasuriya to hand over power and authority to the provincial administration as per the 13 th.Amendment of the constitution. He also stressed the need to fill vacant posts in the various administrative cadres so that the provincial administration will have the necessary trained manpower to implement its plans. The provincial council has to make several statutes, but it does not have trained officers to draft the statutes, he pointed out.
Kudos for New Governor
However, Wigneswaran thanked President Maithripala Sirisena for appointing a civilian to the post of Governor and praised the present Governor, HMGS Palihakkara, for changing the nature of the post.
Wigneswaran described Palihakkara as a “shepherd protecting his sheep, allowing that extra leverage to be free to run about and eat what they prefer, though not to bite on any forbidden fruit.”
*****
See related articles: 

NPC passes resolution asking UN to investigate genocide of Tamils by Sri Lanka state
 (10 Feb 2014)

Where are our loved ones who have been abducted, arrested and disappeared?


Image courtesy Today
To
His Excellency Maithripala Sirisena
President of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka
Respected President,
In the journey towards good governance where are our loved ones who have been abducted, arrested, and disappeared?
The 3 decades of war in our country affected all communities, irrespective of ethnicity and religion and left them with unforgettably painful experiences.
We are the relatives of those who have been abducted, arrested, and disappeared by agents of the state or different armed groups. With our lives and emotions, in different ways, we have been searching for our loved ones who have not returned home, and who we believe are being held in illegal and secret ways.
In your 100 days programme of good governance why is there no space for us, and to date, no information about our loved ones who were abducted, arrested, and disappeared?
We too are part of the people who have an unshakable hope in your efforts to build good governance, that we too will be freed from suffering.
We have been searching for our loved ones for many years in the hope that they will come back to us. We are holding this fast to bring to you our demands to include the search for our loved ones in your agenda of good governance.
These are our demands to achieve freedom for our loved ones and freedom for our lives, which we place yet again on your agenda for good governance:
  • Take immediate action in the cases of our loved ones who have been abducted, arrested and disappeared and rescue them from whatever circumstances they are currently in so they can come back to us as soon as possible.
  • Respect our strong belief that our loved ones who have been abducted and disappeared are still alive:
    • Why does the state call those of us whose husbands have been disappeared as widows?
    • Why are the names and details of our missing loved ones erased from the electoral lists by the state?
    • When we wish to get a passport for our child why do they ask for a death certificate of our husbands?
In these situations we, including you, are being asked to ‘put to death’ our loved ones who have been abducted, arrested and disappeared.
Until they come home, the structures of government should practice alternative ways that are respectful of our faith that our loved ones are alive.
  • Cancel the issuing of death certificates. We do not want the death certificate based on the assumption that the people who have been abducted, arrested and disappeared are not alive. The conditionality that compensation will only be given if we register them as dead should be stopped.
  • Expedited investigations should be conducted to find those who have been abducted, arrested and disappeared.
  • Speed up the process of the established commissions to find out the truth about those who were abducted, arrested and disappeared, we ask that investigations into those who were responsible and those who we alleged as being involved, should be conducted in front of us.
  • Release without any conditions those who are being held in Illegal and secret detention centers.
  • Stop immediately the threats, the harassment, the fear, even the fear of being disappeared ourselves, that we have faced as women, mothers, and individuals, in our journey of searching for our loved ones all these years.
The actions we undertake with the objective of finding solutions to alleviate the painful experiences and effects of the war are for all ethnic groups and should not be used for any politically motivated objectives.
Until we get an immediate response to all our demands, in your 100 day work plan, we will continue the journey for searching for our loves ones in different ways.
We strongly hope that your actions will legitimize the trust we placed in you through our vote for a real change.
Sincerely,
Family members of those who have been abducted, arrested and disappeared
February 16, 2015
Presented at the one-day fast in front of Gandhi Square, Batticaloa on 16thFebruary 2015 by the family members of those who have been abducted, arrested and disappeared.
Sent to:
  • His Excellency Maithripala Sirisena, President of the Democratic socialist Republic of Sri Lanka
  • Hon. Ranil Wickremesinghe, Prime Minister Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka
  • Hon. Vijayakala Maheshwaran
  • Deputy Minister Women’s Affairs
  • Hon. Austin Fernando
  • Hon. Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe
  • Hon. Judge, District Court,Batticaloa
  • Hon. Judge, Magistrate’s Court, Batticaloa
  • Hon. Judge, High Court, Batticaloa
  • Ms. P.S. M. Charles, The District Secretary

Some Comments On The Constitutional Draft


Colombo Telegraph
By Sumanasiri Liyanage -February 17, 2015 
Sumanasiri Liyanage
Sumanasiri Liyanage
I assume that the discussion paper that was published in the Colombo Telegraph is authentic.
Ranil MaithriVaclav Havel once wrote that “if the world
today is not to become hopelessly enmeshed in ever more terrifying conflicts, it has only one possibility: it must deliberately breathe the spirit of multicultural co-existence into the civilization that envelopes it.” The basis of this sprit, according to him, is “for different peoples, religions, and cultures” to learn to “respect each other” and to “respect and honor each other’s’ differences”. If we look at from the prism of this grand objective Maithripala Sirisena government’s constitutional proposals can be portrayed as the weakest and most regressive document in the constitutional discourse in Sri Lanka in the last three decades or so. It is regressive when it is compared with the 2000 constitutional draft and the majority position of the all-party conference. No use of comparing it with some of the writings of the civil society activists. Apologists may argue that the drafters of this documents worked within the parameters given to them by the political leaders of the government and approved by the electorate on January 8. Constitution engineering should not be concerned only on the immediate present but on the recent past. Moreover, such exercise has to be futuristic.
In a diverse country in which one of the brutal wars in recent time had been waged, it is imperative to take the underlying causes of the war as well as steps to be taken for reconciliation into account in constitutional engineering. The peoples in the Northern and Eastern Provinces voted overwhelmingly for the President Sirisena expecting not just a change but changes for their lives and conditions; not to taste the bitter side of political power exercised and executed by an alien power in and from Colombo, but to participate in decision-making that directly affect their lives. Hence state restructuring making that expectation and democratic right workable is a responsibility of the government and the constitution drafters. Making excuses that it is not in the 100 day program and we have not made promises to that effect is not only funny but tantamount to a complete exclusion of people in the governing. As I have argued in all my writings, what Tamils, Muslims and Kandyan Tamils meant by democracy and good governance are somewhat different from what is meant by southerners with regard to those terms. Democracy for them is an inalienable right for identity and security. Good governance is an inclusive governance. The following sentence is the only one that is included in order to address this specific burning issue, adding more powers to the President. “In addition to the powers and duties presently exercised under Article 33, the President shall promote national reconciliation and integration, ensure and facilitate the preservation of religious and ethnic harmony and ensure and facilitate the proper functioning of the Constitutional Council and the independent Commissions.”Read More
TNA accuses government of reneging on promises regarding demilitarisation



17 February 2015
The Tamil National Alliance has demanded the return of Tamil land in the North-East, occupied by the military in so-called High Security Zones, by the start of the UN Human Rights Council session in March, as promised by the new government ahead of the presidential elections.

“Before the election the new government pledged it will release land occupied by the military and the people will be resettled [in those land],” MP MA Sumanthiran said, according to the Uthayan.

“However not an inch of land has been released, in Sampur, Keppapilavu, Mullikkulam, Paravippanjaan and Vali North, land which the government promised will be returned,” the MP charged.

Mr Sumanthiran rejected the recent announcement of the release of 1,000 acres of land in Vali North and the building of a model village, implying the move was made to show progress ahead of Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera’s meeting with US Secretary of State John Kerry.

“The government announced that it will release 1000 acres of land in Vali North, in advance of the foreign minister’s visit to the US, where he met John Kerry. 

We know what that announcement was for,
“They said, [we will build a] model village for Vali North, but we refused that completely. All this is happening whilst there are cases [related to land grabs] still pending in the court,

“We gave the government the map of Vali North and the details of the families [from there], there are no reasons for a delay. The people’s lands should be released before the March UNHRC session begins and resettlement should happen. Otherwise, we will complain to the international community that the government made false promises to win the election,” Mr Sumanthiran said.

Hugo Swire responds to Sri Lanka report update

placeholder



17 February 2015
Hugo Swire urged all sides to continue to work together to ensure that the OHCHR’s report on Sri Lanka, now due in September, is thorough and consistent.Speaking the day after the UN Human Rights Council agreed to defer publication of the report from March to September 2015, Mr Swire welcomed the opportunity for contribution from the Sri Lankan government and restated the UK’s commitment to seeing this report published.
Mr Swire said:
The UK wants to see reconciliation in Sri Lanka. That’s why we argued last year for a UN investigation into alleged war crimes and it is why we supported the deferral of this report for six months.
We believe that the extra time will create an opportunity for the new Sri Lankan government to deliver on its commitment to engage with the UN investigation, potentially generating additional material to inform the High Commissioner’s report. And it will allow the Sri Lankan government to establish their own credible accountability processes.
The UN investigation is a vital part of the process of addressing the grievances of those affected by the conflict and of achieving lasting peace in Sri Lanka. And we recognise how important this report is for many communities in Sri Lanka and around the world who are looking for answers. That’s why we, and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, have made clear that the report must be published and discussed by September 2015 and we will stick to that.
In the meantime, the new Government of Sri Lanka must use this time to work with the High Commissioner and his Office, and to engage with the broadest possible spectrum of civil society groups within Sri Lanka in order to make progress on reconciliation, accountability and human rights. They have a real opportunity to build a successful, inclusive and prosperous future for their country. But achieving that potential is all about reconciliation. It’s about bringing justice and closure and healing to Sri Lanka and we encourage the Sri Lankan government to take this path to a brighter future.

Further information

Follow Foreign Office Minister Hugo Swire on twitter @HugoSwire
Follow the Foreign Office on twitter @foreignoffice
Follow the Foreign Office on facebook and Google+

Media enquiries

Who Manages Risks, Controls & Compliance In Governance?


Colombo Telegraph
By Chandra Jayaratne -February 17, 2015
Chandra Jayaratne
Chandra Jayaratne
Governance, Risk and Compliance (GRC) function is a key focus of the Board, CEO and the Top Team of any global multi-national operation.
“The business environment over the past few years has experienced an unprecedented series of issues, surprises, and negative events that have increased the focus on the adequacy of organizations’ governance, risk, and control activities. To address strategic issues, some organizations have developed initiatives referred to as GRC, which look across their risk and control functions holistically and seek to enhance their efficiency and effectiveness. [1] A Strategic Framework for Governance, Risk, and Compliance by By Mark L. Frigo and Richard J. Anderson
The Governance Framework Post 9th January 2015?
Maithri Ranil Chandrika
With the big change in the governance commitments post 9th January 2015, especially during the 100 day programme and in the years follow, if the change momentum is to take effective root and grow in to a strong tree, a benchmark governance culture must be fostered supported by all critical stakeholders engaged in change management and in embedding such a culture.
Who Leads GRC in the Sirisena Administration?
Is there any one, a few persons or a group, whether formally appointed or even informally assigned, taking accountability to alert and guide the new administration, in regard to Governance, Risk, Controls and Compliance issues, that emerge, or are likely to crystallize in the future?
Have the President, the Prime Minister, the former President Madame Kumaratunga, the National Executive Committee, Advisors of the President/PM, Key Ministry Secretaries, been assigned this task?; or has anyone voluntarily undertaken this critical responsibility?; or could it be that in the celebratory mood, raised egos and the corruptive power of new found power, the need for such an activated function has not even been considered essential?Read More

Sri Lanka: Delay of key UN human rights report must not herald further impunity


16 February 2015
The decision by the UN Human Rights Council to delay, until September, the release of a key report into widespread human rights violations during the conflict in Sri Lanka must not allow the perpetrators of horrific crimes during the country’s armed conflict to escape punishment, said Amnesty International. 
“Sri Lankan victims of human rights violations deserve truth and justice. Survivors of torture, including sexual abuse, people whose family members were killed or forcibly disappeared have waited a long time for this report,” said Richard Bennett, Amnesty International's Asia-Pacific Director. 
“A delay is only justifiable if more time will lead to a stronger document and to a concrete commitment by the new Sri Lankan authorities to actively pursue accountability. This includes by co-operating with the UN to investigate conflict-era abuses and bring perpetrators to justice.” 
The Human Rights Council must also be vigilant and ensure that all those coming forward to give testimony are protected from any potential threats from those who do not want justice to prevail. 
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, said today “I give my personal, absolute and unshakeable commitment that the report will be published by September” and that he had received a clear commitment from the new Sri Lankan authorities to cooperate on various issues related to the UN investigation.   
For more information: 
Sri Lanka: Promises of a new beginning - international cooperation is essential to ensure justice, accountability and an end to impunity, 16 February 2015. 
Awaiting Justice



Editorial Tamil Guardian 17 February 2015
The UN Human Rights Council’s decision to give the new government 6 months to cooperate with the OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka (OISL), in view of gathering more information, and defer the publishing of the UN inquiry into mass atrocities till September, has been met with mixed reactions. Whilst Colombo celebrates what it sees as a diplomatic coup, human rights groups have cautiously welcomed the prospect that more evidence can be found. However, Tamil victims, witnesses and campaigners for justice have expressed deep disappointment that justice, denied to them for so long, is delayed once again.

Describing it as a “difficult decision”, the High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein’s acknowledged the inevitable disappointment of witnesses, but said the decision was based on the promise of “broad cooperation” by the new government and the prospect of “a stronger and more comprehensive report”. Mr Zeid’s unequivocal statement that the deferment was “for one time only” and his personal commitment to ensure its release at the Council’s 30th session is welcome. However, despite the new government’s very basic promises (outlined in the foreign minister’s letter to Mr Zeid), the Tamil people’s deep scepticism that it will deliver on them remains palpable - nowhere more so than in the North-East.

Beyond the calls from the Tamil Civil Society Forum and the Jaffna University Teachers Association for the UN inquiry report to be released to schedule, recent weeks have seen a wave of protests across the Tamil homeland by mothers, wives and loved ones of those killed or missing, demanding an international inquiry. Moreover, the Tamil people’s unflinching demand for justice through an international mechanism, which is too often sidelined as the demand of only the diaspora, was encapsulated last week in the resolution passed by the Northern Provincial Council (NPC) last week.

The resolution, emphatically endorsed by voices in the East, both Tamil political parties in the North-East and Tamil diaspora organisations worldwide, called for the OISL to investigate the genocide of Tamils by successive Sri Lankan governments, and for the UN Security Council to refer Sri Lanka to the International Criminal Court as the only means of ensuring justice. 
Pointing to "Sri Lanka's instituitionalised impunity" over Tamil crimes, the resolution, tabled by the widely respected former Supreme Court judge and chief minister of the Northern Province, C V Wigneswaran, firmly rejected any notion of a domestic commission. “Tamils have no hope for justice in any domestic Sri Lankan mechanism, whether conducted by the Rajapaksa regime, Sirisena regime, or its successor" the NPC said, urging any investigative process "to be driven and carried out by the international community".

As the High Commissioner himself stated in his letter to the Council, Sri Lanka has a long history of failed and obstructed domestic commissions - described by Amnesty International as ‘Twenty Years of Make Believe’. The next six months must not be allowed to pave the way for more of the same. The Sri Lankan government must allow a robust in-country evidence collection process, ensuring OISL investigators, UN working groups and Special Rapporteurs free and unfettered access to the Tamil areas and former conflict zones. Moreover, it is self-evident that for witnesses and victims to safely come forward, without fear of repercussions, and for investigators to have unhindered access to mass grave sites and the killing fields across the North-East, the Sri Lankan military - who stand principally accused of perpetrating the crimes in question - must be removed from the Tamil areas. The detention of Tamil political activists and campaigners, most notably, the prominent disappearances campaigner, Balendran Jeyakumary, who remain key sources of evidence must end. The proscription of Tamil diaspora groups, who were instrumental in calling for justice and using their well-established network of contacts to ensure witnesses are contacted, must be revoked.

As the UN’s internal review panel on its conduct in relation to Sri Lanka concluded in 2012, the body failed to “adequately respond” to the clear evidence of mass atrocities being committed against the Tamil people during the end of the armed conflict in 2009. The time for the body to put right its failures and see justice is served is long overdue.
The victims, who came forward to give their testimonies at grave risk to themselves and are now being asked to wait six more months, cannot have waited in vain. It beholds the international community to ensure the delay, built on the pledges of Sri Lanka’s new government to cooperate with the OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka (OISL), fulfills its promise of delivering a stronger and more comprehensive report. 

RTI Draft Act – 2015: Concerns & Issues That Need To Be Addressed

Colombo Telegraph
By Kusal Perera -February 17, 2015
Kusal Perara
Kusal Perara
The draft copy of the Right to Information (RTI) Act – 2015 in English language (supposed to be ready in Sinhala and Tamil by 20 Feb) made rounds in private circles over a week ago. These comments and observations are made on that English draft and need serious attention from public interest groups and other concerned citizens, to achieve the objectives of a good RTI Act. Expecting positive response from such concerned citizens and groups and also expecting engagement from responsible policy making authorities too, let’s start from a very common conceptual flaw the draft is saddled with.
Most State and professional entities often fail to accept this country has a three tiered governing system since adopting the 13 Amendment in late 1987. That all, beginning with the President through PM, cabinet of ministers and parliament as the first tier in governance, Provincial Governors, Chief Ministers, provincial ministers and Provincial Councillors as the second tier down to the last Pradeshiya Sabha in the third tier are equally responsible to the citizens. They should be held accountable in all what they do in offices they hold, along with all officers working with and under them.

New Government’s Newest Milestone

Colombo Telegraph
By Maneshka Borham -February 17, 2015
Maneshka Borham
Maneshka Borham
On 20 February the set task for the government according to its 100 Day program will be introducing to parliament the much awaited and fought forRight to Information (RTI) Bill. While previous attempts were made by a handful of Sri Lankan politicians to engage the parliament in introducing such a bill, it failed in two instances making Sri Lanka, along with Afghanistan the only two SAARC countries not to enact legislation giving its citizens the right to request information pertaining to actions of the government.
If therefore it is in fact for good governance that the new regime is gunning for, it is vital that it understands that freedom of information is a key component of transparent and accountable government.
In a post conflict society, establishing transparency in the public sector is a daunting, if not an overwhelming task. Therefore RTI laws can play a major role in achieving this target while ensuring good governance in a society.
Accusations have been many regarding governmental bodies being rife with corruption, nepotism and dominated by political control, while their policy making processes are often shrouded in secrecy, all of which can ideally be rectified by the introduction of RTI laws.Read More