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, March 29, 2015

The State Is Spying On You Right Now. Where’s The Outrage?

Guest Column by Judge Andrew Napolitano-March 27, 2015

Here is a short pop quiz: When Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu addressed Congress earlier this month about the parameters of the secret negotiations between the United States and Iran over nuclear weapons and economic sanctions, how did he know what the negotiators were considering? Israel is not a party to those negotiations, yet the prime minister presented them in detail.
When Hillary Clinton learned that a committee of the U.S. House of Representatives had subpoenaed her emails as secretary of state and she promptly destroyed half of them—about 33,000—how did she know she could get away with it? Destruction of evidence, particularly government records, constitutes the crime of obstruction of justice.
When Gen. Michael Hayden, the director of both the CIA and the NSA in the George W. Bush administration and the architect of the government’s massive suspicionless spying program, was recently publicly challenged to deny that the feds have the ability to turn on your computer, cellphone, or mobile device in your home and elsewhere, and use your own devices to spy on you, why did he remain silent? The audience at the venue where he was challenged rationally concluded that his silence was his consent.
And when two judges were recently confronted with transcripts of conversations between known drug dealers—transcripts obtained without search warrants—and they asked the police who obtained them to explain their sources, how is it that the cops could refuse to answer? The government has the same obligation to tell the truth in a courtroom as any litigant, and in a criminal case, the government must establish that its acquisition of all of its evidence was lawful.
The common themes here are government spying and lawlessness. We now know that the Israelis spied on Secretary of State John Kerry, and so Netanyahu knew of what he spoke. We know that the Clintons believe there is a set of laws for them and another for the rest of us, and so Mrs. Clinton could credibly believe that her deception and destruction would go unpunished.
We know that the NSA can listen to all we say if we are near enough to a device it can turn on. (Quick: How close are you as you read this to an electronic device that the NSA can access and use as a listening device?) And we also know that the feds gave secret roadside listening devices to about 50 local police departments, which acquired them generally without the public consent of elected officials in return for oaths not to reveal the source of the hardware. It came from the secret budget of the CIA, which is prohibited by law from spying in the U.S.
What’s going on here?
What’s going on here is government’s fixation on spying and lying. Think about it: The Israeli Mossad was spying on Kerry while the CIA was spying on the Mossad. Hillary Clinton thought she could destroy her emails just because she is Hillary Clinton, yet she forgot that the administration of which she was an integral part dispatched the NSA to spy on everyone, including her. And though it might not voluntarily release the emails she thought she destroyed, the NSA surely has them. The police have no hesitation about engaging in the same warrantless surveillance as the feds. And when Hayden revealed a cat-like smile on his face when challenged about the feds in our bedrooms, and the 10,000 folks in the audience did not reveal outrage, you know that government spying is so endemic today that it is almost the new normal.
Yet government spying is not normal to the Constitution. Its essence—government fishing nets, the indiscriminate deployment of government resources to see what they can bring in, government interference with personal privacy without suspicion or probable cause—was rejected by the Framers and remains expressly rejected by the Fourth Amendment today.
For our liberty to survive in this fearful post-9/11 world, the government’s lawless behavior must be rejected not just by the words of dead people, but by the deeds of we the living. When the president violates the Constitution and the Congress and courts do nothing to stop him, we have effectively amended the Constitution with a wink and a nod—by consent, if you will. Its guarantees of liberty are only guarantees if the people in whose hands we repose it for safekeeping honor them as guarantees and believe and behave as such because the Constitution means what it says.
Where is the outrage? If you knew the feds were virtually present in your bedroom or your automobile, and your representatives in Congress did nothing about it, would you buy the nonsense that you should have nothing to hide? Would you send those weaklings back to Congress? Or would you say to a lawless government, as the Founders did to the British, “Thou shalt not enter here”? Does the Constitution mean what it says in bad times as well as in good times?
These are not academic questions. They address the most important issue of our day. For nothing will destroy our personal liberties more effectively than the government refusing to honor them and Americans sheepishly accepting that. And without freedom, what are we?
Andrew P. Napolitano, a former judge of the Superior Court of New Jersey.

Conference discusses present and future direction of Burma’s ethnic media

Burma media lawsPeople read weekly journals to buy at a roadside shop in Yangon, Burma. Pic: AP. 
By  Mar 28, 2015 
Ethnic media organisations, journalists and donors made the long journey to the remote Chin State capital Hakha, for the BNI (Burma News international) ethnic media conference from 18-20th March.
The conference was held to discuss the present state and future direction of ethnic media in Burma. It was also an opportunity for representatives of media organisations from all the ethnic areas of Burma to meet up and exchange ideas.
The sense of camaraderie at the event was enhanced because of the remoteness of the location. Hakaha, deep in the mountains of Chin State is the most remote state capital in Burma, the closest airport at Kale is an eight hour drive away on rough roads and many of the participants had taken a bumpy, dusty 32 hour bus ride from Yangon to reach the conference. For many it was their first trip to Chin State.
The conference was held in Carsson Hall, a large airy hall built by Baptist missionaries at the turn of the century on one of the few areas of flat land in Hakha.
It was organised by BNI, an umbrella group for 13 ethnic media news organisations that runs training for ethnic media groups and publishes their articles on its website in Burmese and English.
Representatives and journalists from ethnic media groups, representatives from donor groups, representatives from state media groups Myanmar Radio and Television (MRTV) and National Races Channel (NRC), writers, poets and photographers attended the event.
This was BNI’s third annual ethnic media conference. Amongst the panels held over the three days there were panels on media law, the role of community radio and television, ethnic media development and marketing and sustaining ethnic media. There were also workshops that discussed, amongst other things: networking, using ethnic languages and business models for ethnic media.
One of the recurring themes of the conference was whether ethnic media, which at present is supported by donor funding, could ever become self-sustaining.
Any form of government support was emphatically rejected as he participants thought it would come with too many conditions attached.
Ideas for funding included syndicating ethnic stories to mainstream media and advertising. It was suggested that ethnic media organisations could band together and offer advertising across all their titles.
Daw Nan Paw Gyi, a BNI board member and the editor of Karen News explained how in the future ethnic media could make more money by syndicating stories to mainstream media.
She said: “Mainstream media understand ethnic media is important for the country, but some mainstream media use our news stories without permission and without credit and we are not happy with it. Before they pay they should request and compromise with us to use the stories.”
It was also suggested that BNI could publish a nationally distributed newspaper that would include stories from all the different ethnic media agencies.
There was also optimism about producing and distributing online content in the future, but due to the present poor internet penetration in Burma it would be a while before online content would be available to a majority of people in ethnic areas.
This was neatly demonstrated by the almost non-existent availability of any internet connection in Hakha.
It was agreed that for the time being published newspapers were still the best way to reach the majority of the population in ethnic areas.
According to representatives the biggest obstacle to printed newspapers was the lack of printing presses in remote areas. This means that ethnic newspapers can only be printed in large towns, which leads to delayed distribution and logistical problems.
Nyo Min, the BNI assistant manager, said: “We need to set up printing houses for each state in order to compete with mainstream media.”
The most popular alternative to print media for the delegates was community FM radio.
Kyle James, a consultant who trains groups in how to set up local radio stations, spoke on the panel entitled ‘The Role of Community Media Including Radio and TV’: “Radio is an easy medium to access, for instance in areas with poor roads and where it is hard to deliver newspapers. People do not have to be able to read and radio is inexpensive.”
Unfortunately radio is not a viable option at present as government permission is needed to run radio stations and the government is not granting permission.
Delegates agreed that pressure should be put on the government to grant ethnic media licenses to run community radio stations, but that until such licenses were granted it would be impossible to implement any plans for community FM radio.
Nyo Min still thought community FM radio was a viable option.
After the conference he said: “Our first priority is community radio. We are not sure about licensing, but we believe the ministry of information will approve them [licences] because they are under pressure.”
At the end of the conference a vote was taken on where he 2016 ethnic media conference should be held and the winner was Mrauk U in Rakhine State.
The conference finished off with a meal accompanied by Chin wine that ensured all the delegates ended up dancing to the Chin band that was playing.

Insight - Modi's popularity in rural India punctured by discontent, suicides


Prime Minister Narendra Modi speaks during an energy summit in New Delhi March 27, 2015.

Reuters Sun Mar 29, 2015
(Reuters) - Over a dozen debt-laden farmers have committed suicide in recent weeks in India, and discontent in many rural areas against government policies is turning into anger against Prime Minister Narendra Modi less than a year after he swept into office.


Curejoy Expert James Dudley Explains:
AyurvedaOne of the most important activities that keeps us healthy throughout our lives is sleeping. Needless to say that sleeping is as important as eating and when one gets deprived of it, it can cause fatal health issues.

There are certain guidelines for sleeping and it is a universal truth that anything done less or above the level of moderation can be of risk or can cause lethal side effects. It is considered to sleep at least 6 to 8 hours at night depending on the physical attributes of the person. Anyhow, today, let’s see why sleeping naked is beneficial to us.

What Are The Benefits Of Sleeping Naked?

Conformability

If you are not a naked sleeper, the idea of laying naked in the bed may sound not too comforting but when you actually get used to it, it is. Moreover, it is not just about comfort in the bed but also because you will have to wash less clothes and you might as well save some bucks on pajamas as well. Moreover, it also frees you from tight underwear and bra as well, which obviously makes you morerelaxed and happier.

Better Sleep

Most of the people who wear clothes and sleep must have faced a situation in the bed when their clothes get stuck with something, or their t-shirts gets twisted and presses the belly so hard and you wake up with a bad dream. Thus, when you are sleeping naked, you are free from such small distractions and can result in deeper and better sleep.

Improves Skin Quality

If you sleep naked, at least once in a day, for the better, your body will get to breathe fresh air. More importantly, your private parts will also get aired and obviously, that is a great thing. Your private parts,armpits, and feet are generally restricted all day and are often covered by multiple layers, even in the summer time. Give those parts a chance to air out and breathe. This can lower the risk of skin diseases, like athlete’s foot, that result from wet, restricted skin.

Helps Regulate Cortisol

When you sleep naked, it helps keep your body temperature at the optimal ranges so your body can better create cortisol. Therefore, if you sleep overheated, your cortisol levels tend to stay high even after you wake up. This can lead to increasedanxiety, cravings for bad food, weight gain, and more terrible things. Thus, sleeping naked can properly produce and regulate cortisol.

Balances Melatonin and Growth Hormone

Sleeping naked can keep your sleeping environment below 70 degrees (F) every night and help your body regulate its melatonin and growth hormone levels. These chemicals help prevent aging and are essential to good health.

Saturday, March 28, 2015

பொறுமையாக இருங்கள் : அமைப்புக்களை நிர்வகித்து மக்கள் பிரச்சினைகளுக்கு தீர்வைப் பெற்றுத் தருவோம்: ரணில் உறுதி 
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logonbanner-127 மார்ச் 2015, வெள்ளி 8:10 பி.ப
புதிய அரசை நியமிக்க மக்களுக்கு சந்தர்ப்பத்தை வழங்கி குறிப்பாக தமிழ் ,முஸ்லிம் மக்கள் தமது வாக்குரிமையை அளித்து புதிய அரசை ஏற்படுத்த சுமூகமாக செயற்பட உதவிய அனைவருக்கும் ஆயர்  நன்றி தெரிவித்தார்.



 
இன்று மாலை 6 மணியளவில் நடைபெற்ற யாழ்.ஆயர் ,பிரதமர் ரணில் ஆகியோருக்கிடையிலான சந்திப்பின் போதே அவர் இதனைத் தெரிவித்தார்.
 
புதிய அரசு மக்களுக்கு நல்ல சேவையை செய்யும் என நாங்கள் எதிர்பார்ப்பதாகவும் இதனூடாக  முக்கியமான சில கோரிக்கைகளை பிரதமரிடம் ஆயர் முன்வைத்தார்.
 
முதலில் இடம்பெயர்ந்த மக்கள் குடியிருப்புக்களை இழந்து நடுவீதியில் நிற்கிறார்கள் அவர்களுக்கு வீடுகளை நிர்மாணித்து கொடுப்பது ,வாழ்வாதாரங்களை செய்து கொடுப்பது  என்ற திட்டங்களை தாமதிக்காமல் உடனே செய்து தரவேண்டும்.
 
இரண்டாவதாக வளலாய் கத்தோலிக்க மக்கள் இடம்பெயர்ந்ததால் தேவாலயங்கள் ஒன்றும்.இல்லை.எனவே அவர்கள் வழபாடுகளை மேற்கொள்வதற்கு ஆலயங்களை அமைத்து தருமாறும் அதற்கான இடங்களை பெற்றுத் தருமாறும் கேட்டுக் கொண்டோம். சில தேவாலயங்கள் இடிந்து போய் உள்ளன.அதனையும் மீளபுனரமைத்துத் தரவேண்டும்.
 
மூன்றாவதாக மீனவர்கள் மிகவும் துன்பப்படுகிறார்கள்.நீண்டகாலமாக அவர்கள் பிரச்சினைகளால் சிக்கித் தவிக்கிறார்கள் அவர்களது பிரச்சினையை தீர்க்க நடவடிக்கை எடுக்க வேண்டும் .
 
 
இதேவேளை மக்களின் முக்கியமான பிரச்சினை அதாவது  காணாமற்போனவர்கள் எங்கு போனாலும் கண்ணீருடன் இருக்கிறார்கள்.அவர்களது பிரச்சினைக்கு உடனடியாக தீர்வு பெற்றுக் கொடுத்து அவர்களுக்குரிய சுய உரிமையை பெற்றுக் கொடுக்க வேண்டும் என்றும் ஆயர் முக்கிய 4 அம்சக் கோரிக்கைகளை முன்வைத்தார்.
 
 அதற்கு  பிரதமர் ரணில் பதிலளிக்கும் போது,
 
ஆழ்கடல் றோலர் மீன்பிடியை மீனவர்கள் நிறுத்தினால் மீனவர் பிரச்சினைகளை எளிதாக தீர்க்க உதவ முடியும். 
 
அத்துடன் யாழ்ப்பாணத்தில் இளைஞர் அமைப்பினை ஏற்படுத்தி அவர்களுடன் உறவை வலுப்படுத்தி அவர்களுக்கான வேலைவாய்ப்புக்களையும் வழங்கவுள்ளதாக அவர் தெரிவித்தார்.
 
 
மேலும் பிரதமர் ரணில் மக்களின் அனைத்து பிரச்சினைகளுக்கும் தீர்வாக புதிய அமைப்புக்களை நிர்வகித்து அதனூடாக தீர்வை பெற்றுத்தர முனைப்பு காட்டுவோம்.
 
 
எனவே அனைவரும் பொறுமையாக இருங்கள் இதற்கான தீர்வை உடனே பெற்றுத் தரமுடியாது. கால அவகாசம் தாருங்கள் மக்களது பிரச்சனைகளை தீர்ப்போம் என்றும் பிரதமர் ரணில் யாழ்.ஆயரிடம் உறுதியாகத் தெரிவித்தார்.
தார்.
 
 

A “Troika” Without Credibility & A Merry-go-round For People

Colombo Telegraph
By Kusal Perera -March 28, 2015
Kusal Perara
Kusal Perara
The whole country doesn’t want (an international inquiry) because it is the feeling that it is insulting to the government that we cannot carry out our own investigation in a transparent manner” Chandrika B. Kumaratunga quoted by UK IBTimes as reported in DailyFT of 17 March, 2015.
“UN can give its probe. We’ll engage the UN on these issues. That’s the difference. We’re going to engage the UN Human Rights Council on these issues. All we’re saying is any criminal jurisdiction must be exercised in Sri Lanka. Any civil jurisdiction has to be exercised in Sri Lanka. Only the Sri Lankan courts can determine this issue.” PM Ranil Wickramesinghe with NDTV in Colombo on 19 January, 2015
On 12 March, 2015 Al Jazeera reported, Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena plans to set up a domestic inquiry into alleged crimes committed during the country’s civil war.“….but outside investigators would not be necessary” Sirisena told Al Jazeera
In his (PM Wickremesinghe’s) first formal interaction with the media on 26 March, PM “referred to the setting up of an Office for National Unity headed by former President Chandrika Kumaratunga as well as retention of four international experts who were originally appointed to advice the Maxwell Paranagama-led Commission of Inquiry.” (DailyFT – 27 March)
Maithri-Ranil-ChandrikaWhat’s important in all these quotes are their inherent contradictions, ambiguity and deceptions in saying what should be told to the people, not being told straight and direct. PM Wickremesinghe tells NDTV’s Srinivasan Jain, the difference between Rajapaksa and his government is that, his government would engage the UN Human Rights Council. President Sirisena is quoted by Al Jazeera as saying there will not be any outside investigators. Does he then mean, not even UNHRC engagement as it would mean an insult to his government as explained by former president Kumaratunga? She has told a UK based media, the whole country is against any international inquiry into war related crimes. When she says “whole country”, she perhaps discounts the North that is openly agitating against any domestic investigation.Read More

Sri Lankan tea plantation workers oppose Glenugie estate witch-hunt

Deeside workers discussing SEP program during February strike










By M. Devarajah
28 March 2015
Glenugie tea estate Deeside division workers at Maskeliya in Sri Lanka’s central plantation district have spoken out against the police and company management frame-up of eight fellow workers. The Deeside workers were responding to a Socialist Equality Party (SEP) statement distributed last Sunday calling for unified action to defeat the witch-hunt.
On March 11, police arrested eight workers on fabricated charges that they physically attacked an estate supervisor and stoned wasp nests to disrupt work at the tea estate. The victimised workers, including an SEP supporter, G. Wilfred, were bailed-out on personal guarantees the following day. The case against them will be heard on June 24.
The management made similar bogus accusations against the eight employees and announced an internal inquiry. If the charges are “proven,” the workers could be sacked.
There are indications that Ceylon Workers Congress (CWC) trade union leaders and management prompted the supervisor to make a complaint to the police. This repressive response is a crude attempt to intimidate the workforce, following a three-day strike against increased work quotas.
The bogus nature of the allegations was demonstrated when the name of T. Jayaram, one of the workers arrested, was removed from the list of those charged. In his place, the management added another employee, S. Janaratnamm, to the list.
Deeside workers discussing SEP program during February strike
Jayaram told the WSWS: “Management removed my name from the list because I was far away from where the incidents are supposed to have happened. Having my name on the list could easily expose the fabricated story and so they removed it. Management created this false story, with the support of the unions, in revenge against workers who launched a strike against the increased workload.”
A retired estate worker said he fully supported the SEP campaign to defend the victimised workers. All workers at Deeside and other plantations should be mobilised, he said.
“I have my own experience,” he explained. “Ten years ago, during a wage struggle nine workers from the estate, including me, were arrested. I was then CWC branch president. CWC leader Arumugam Thondaman refused to mobilise any other workers to defend us. I took up the initiative to mobilise other workers in defiance of the CWC leadership, and we were released.”
Estate employees said they would oppose all attempts to victimise the eight workers, insisting that the management witch-hunt was an attempt to frighten the workforce and drive up productivity.
Several months ago, the estate management raised the tea-leaf pluckers’ daily workload by 2 kilograms, from 16 to 18 kilos. The company was forced to reverse its dictat after workers went on strike, independently of the estate unions, but is still attempting to increase workloads.
A Deeside worker explained: “After the strike, the Glenugie estate management, with the support of the CWC branch leadership, began imposing more burdens on workers to take revenge.”
A female worker said: “One manager came to the field and said that if we cooperated and worked according to the 18-kilo target, he would make some concession. We refused to do this because our three-day strike won our demand for 16 kilos and so we can’t go back.
“Every day since the strike, the management has imposed many burdens on us, such as increasing working times and ending short-leave facilities, which we had before the strike. Today a field officer declared that we had to be back at work at 2 p.m. sharp after lunch and that if we were a few minutes late we’d have to work until 5.30 p.m. Normally our work ends at 4.30 p.m.”
Another worker condemned the living conditions on the estate: “More than 60 workers have no houses in our estate. Some live in temporary huts, others live with parents, with two or three families congregated in one house. More than 50 percent of workers have no toilet facilities. If a worker wants to build a new toilet he has to get loans from other means. Even then, management does not want to allocate land for that. There are no proper water facilities in the estate.
“More than 30 retired people are working to earn additional income but their pay is tied to the work quota. Management always thinks only in terms of increasing company profits.”
The CWC, the National Union of Workers (NUW) and other estate unions are collaborating with management to drive up workloads. NUW area leader G. Naguleswaran supported the management’s verbal agreement to maintain the 16-kilo quota but told workers they would have to go to a labour tribunal to secure payment for the several months they worked under the 18-kilo quota. The unions have done nothing since then to obtain the money owed to the workers.
The NUW and other plantation unions, including the Up-country People’s Front (UPF), the Democratic Workers Congress and the Lanka Jathika Estate Workers Union (LJEWU), are backing the recently installed government of President Maithripala Sirisena. In fact, NUW, UPF and LJEWU leaders are among Sirisena’s ministers. In line with his government’s big-business policies, they fully back the plantation companies’ demands.
As well as the Maskeliya estates, all 22 plantation companies want to drastically ramp up work quotas, slash production costs and drive up profits.
Plantation Employers Federation chairman Rosan Rajadurai told theVirakesari newspaper on March 24 that the tea and rubber industries “face severe losses in the world market” due to falling prices and “productivity must be increased.”
Rajadurai declared: “The average quota of plucking tea leaves is 18 kilos but without increasing it by 2 or 3 kilos, the industry cannot go forward. We are demanding 23 kilos per day and we will make this demand in discussions for next collective agreement.”
As these comments make clear, the struggle to defend the victimised Deeside workers is inseparable from the fight against the attacks being prepared by the plantation companies, backed by Sirsena’s government.
The SEP urges all class conscious workers and youth to come forward to defeat the Deeside frame-up as part of a unified struggle for better working conditions, a decent monthly wage system and the defence of the democratic rights of the working class. This fight requires taking up the SEP’s socialist and internationalist program.

A Government Committed To Comedy?

Colombo Telegraph
By Emil van der Poorten –March 28, 2015
Emil van der Poorten
Emil van der Poorten
As someone who was simply disgusted by the consistent performances of the likes of Dilan Perera over the years, the new spate of Cabinet appointments left me, if you would forgive the use of that expression, bewildered.
Here was a man who started his headline-grabbing by making a great deal of noise when Mahinda Rajapaksa appointed one of the earlier UNP “crossers’-over” to Cabinet while that man still had a capital charge hanging over his head in the death of an SLFP stalwart of the Sabaragamuwa province. Dilan Perera made a great show (for the media at least) of refusing to sit near his new colleague on the government benches. Mind you, his gallery-fetching ended with his moving to a seat farther away from the new member of Cabinet but god forbid that he should even threaten as much as a temporary show of principle by taking a hike across the great divide to the opposition benches! That would be a performance beyond the call of all that is holy in the church of self-seeking opportunism!
dilan pereraBad enough in the matter of hypocritical gallery-fetching? The man’s next act intended to stay in the public eye and curry even more favour with Mahinda Rajapaksa was his abusive and boorish behavior towards the 43rd Chief Justice of Sri Lanka at the time his boss was in the process of railroading her out of the position in which she had not provided adequate proof of fealty to the man who believed that he was Lord and Master of all he surveyed. Her simple suggestion that an absolutely unconscionable piece of legislation, the simple legality of which was in question, should be put through something resembling “due process” was met with a Presidential hissy-fit of Rajapaksa proportions. And who, pray, led the parade of abusive sycophants playing uneducated and vile court jesters in this pantomime? Dilan Perera, no less, front, centre and on television screens in virtually every home in Sri Lanka.Read More

Mahinda trying to go to Geneva in order to complain the increasing crime rate

MR Saturday, 28 March 2015 
The former President alleges that the crime rate has been increased in the current good governance in Sri Lanka. The former president made this comment when he attended the funeral of the Rathgama Pradeshiya Sabah chairman Manoj Mendis.
There are reports that Mahinda is planning to go Geneva in order to explain the international community about the current crimes in Sri Lanka.
The latter 25 years back during the 1987- 1989 period visited Geneva and complained to the several Human Rights organizations about the killings in Sri Lanka.  During that period Mahinda as a parliament Minister stood against the killings of young people and briefed the international community. Although people can remember that, Mahinda forgot the incident for the last several years or pretended to act forgotten. If he has not forgotten he would have gone to Geneva and complained when Lasantha Wicramathunga got killed or when Lalith and Kugan got disappeared in Jaffna. He should brief the international community about the white van abduction, when there was interference to the judiciary and during the removal of the Chief Justice during his era. If Mahinda had gone to the Human Rights Council for the previous crimes now he has to go to the Human Rights Council at least two or three times a day.
He made complaints to the Human Rights Council during that time anticipating that he doesn’t know there is a Geneva or without knowing that nobody complained during the 87-89 era. Now following his defeat in last January he once again has remembered about Geneva.
Following this fake attempt Mahinda is trying to gain his lost popularity and become a Human Rights activist hero. Since the people of Sri Lanka well know about the attitude of this old vampire it would be difficult to deceive them this time.

The Bond Issue Goes To Supreme Court – Full Text Of The Petition

Colombo Telegraph
March 28, 2015
A team of professional and experienced bankers and treasury managers and Good Governance activists DrG. Usvatte-Aratchi, Dr. A.C. Visvalingam and Chandra Jayaratne yesterday have submitted a petition to the Supreme Court (SC FR 107/15) re the controversial Treasury Bond issue.
The Central Bank Governor - Arjuna Mahendran
The Central Bank Governor – Arjuna Mahendran
The petitioners request;
(a) The Monetary Board to carry out an independent inquiry by a competent panel of professionals well versed in the rules, systems, procedures and processes applicable to the public debt management under the supervision of Court and to report thereon ; and
(b) Direct the Monetary Board and other associated Respondents, in consultation with stakeholders, to formulate new systems, processes, rules and regulatory frameworks which assure transparency and best good governance practices are in place in respect of future public debt issuance
This public interest petition has been filed through, Attorney at Law Ms. Lilanthi De Silva and has been settled and will be supported by Attorney at Law, Mr. Saliya Peiris and Attorney at Law, Mr. Pulasthi Hewamanne.
To read the petition click here