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, April 19, 2015

Will Solve Fishermen Issue: Lankan PM Ranil Wickremesinghe


Sri Lankan PM Ranil Wickremesinghe accompanied by his wife Maitree Wickremesinghe at Guruvayur temple on Saturday

Sri Lankan PM Ranil Wickremesinghe accompanied by his wife Maitree Wickremesinghe at Guruvayur temple on Saturday | Express

The New Indian Express19th April 2015
THRISSUR: Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, on the sidelines of his visit to Guruvayur temple here on Saturday, said that measures would be taken to solve the issues plaguing the fishermen community in India.
“There are no classifications like Indian fishermen, Sri Lankan fishermen or Tamil fishermen. All of them are treated alike,” he said. The Lankan PM had earlier made a controversial statement justifying shooting of Indian fishermen if they intruded into Lankan waters.
In response to mediapersons question about the country’s foreign policy, he said that Sri Lanka has always maintained an equidistant policy between India and China. “We are neither pro India nor pro China. We are committed to uphold Sri Lanka’s interests,” he said. “With ongoing bilateral talks between India and Sri Lanka, we hope to develop a closer cooperation and working relationship between the two nations.” His last visit to offer prayers had been on December before he was elected as the Prime Minister in January. “This is a sort of thanksgiving visit for me,” he said.  He also said that he was looking forward to working towards a greater cultural exchange between the two countries and said that an expert team from Sri Lanka would be visiting the elephant sanctuary in Punnathurkotta, the Guruvayur Devaswom elephant sanctuary as part of the initiative.
He was accompanied by his wife Maitree Wickremesinghe and Sri Lankan Minister for Resettlement, Reconstruction and Hindu religious affairs D M Swaminathan.  

Italian PM calls for emergency summit as up to 700 migrants drown

Matteo Renzi says EU action must be a priority as death toll of drownings this year now stands at 1,500 – 50 times more than at same point in 2014

An infra-red screengrab provided by the Italian coastguard during the operation to rescue the migrants An infra-red screengrab provided by the Italian coastguard during the operation to rescue the migrants. Photograph: Guardia di Finanza/EPA

 in Tripoli, in Rome and Alessandra Bonomolo in Catania-Sunday 19 April 2015

Italy’s prime minister called for an emergency European summit this week to deal with the deepening migrant crisis off its southern coast after as many as 700 men, women and children were feared to have drowned in a Mediterranean shipwreck.
Matteo Renzi said that concerted European Union action had to be a priority after the latest tragedy 60 miles north of Libya in which a prodigiously overladen vessel capsized late on Saturday, leaving hundreds in the water.
UN and coastguard officials said that survivors spoke of as many as 700 people being in the boat. The number could not be confirmed but a dozen rescue boats continued to comb the waters, looking for survivors. 
Italian officials said that a Bangladeshi survivor flown to Sicily for treatment told them 950 people were aboard, including hundreds who had been locked in the hold by smugglers.

Save the children calls for better search-and-rescue systems. Link to video
If the toll is confirmed, it would be the deadliest yet of a succession of tragedies involving desperate migrants, unscrupulous traffickers, inadequate fishing smacks and an even more inadequate EU response. Another 400 people drowned in the same waters last week. In the worst incident before Sunday, an estimated 500 people drowned off the coast of Malta last autumn.
“How can it be that we daily are witnessing a tragedy?” Renzi asked. 
The drama unfolded in the watery darkness of a Mediterranean night. Coastguard officials said the vessel probably overturned when the migrants caught sight of a Portuguese ship and all moved to the same side of their boat. Only 28 people were rescued, along with 24 bodies. 
General Antonino Iraso, of the Italian border police, said those small numbers make more sense if hundreds of people were locked in the hold, because with so much weight down below, the boat would “surely” have sunk.
“They wanted to be rescued,” said Barbara Molinario, a spokeswoman for UNHCR in Rome. “They saw another ship. They were trying to make themselves known to it.”
The toll, if confirmed, would bring the number of Mediterranean drownings this year to more than 1,500 – more than 50 times greater than at the same point in 2014, which was itself a record year.
The sudden surge in deaths has increased pressure on European powers to come up with a proper joined-up strategy to deal with the burgeoning crisis. Last autumn, Mare Nostrum, an Italian search-and-rescue mission that saved more than 100,000 people at sea in 12 months was discontinued following a row over funding and Italian exasperation that it was shouldering the burden of responsibility alone.
It was replaced with a slimmer EU force with a weaker mandate, amid suspicions that some European leaders did not want to fund an operation that might encourage greater numbers of unwanted migrants to risk the deadly crossing. Migrant smugglers have told the Guardian that the presence or absence of rescue forces in the Mediterranean makes no difference to people so desperate to flee that they would rather chance their luck on the ocean than return home.
The stricken vessel sent out a distress signal at around midnight on Saturday. Italian naval and coastguard ships and Maltese vessels were on the scene by the morning. But it was too late.
“They are literally trying to find people alive among the dead floating in the water,” said Joseph Muscat, the prime minister of Malta.
The survivors are still aboard an Italian rescue ship but are expected to be brought to Sicily on Monday. Weather conditions are fair and the water not too cold, meaning that more survivors could yet be found.
Two distinct messages emerged from European states. 
Southern powers including Italy and Spain reiterated their demand that Europetake control to avoid more deaths. Donald Tusk, the EU president, indicated that an emergency political summit could be on the cards after he spoke to EU leaders about “how to alleviate [the] situation”. Federica Mogherini, the Italian EU foreign policy chief, said: “We have said too many times ‘never again’.”
But others, while expressing the same regret and outrage, put the accent on targeting the traffickers who make handsome profits from moving people north. Germany’s interior minister, Thomas de Maizière, said: “We cannot and we will not tolerate these criminals sacrificing human lives on a large scale out of sheer greed.”
The British foreign secretary, Philip Hammond, added: “We must target the traffickers who are responsible for so many people dying at sea and prevent their innocent victims from being tricked or forced into making these perilous journeys.”
The European commission issued a statement that acknowledged the need for immediate actions to prevent further loss of life but also tellingly pointed out that “as countries of origin and transit do not take action to prevent these desperate trips, people will continue to put their lives at risk”.
“That is why a large part of the approach we are working on is going to be about working with third countries,” it said, adding that a joint meeting of the foreign and interior ministers would address this. Various radical plans for tackling the crisis have been floated, including putting the onus on north African countries to patrol the seas and process migrants in their own transit camps.
Tusk indicated that a summit could be on the cards after he spoke to EU leaders about how to alleviate the situation.
Tens of thousands of migrants and refugees have been moving north and west in recent years, driven to desperation by war, persecution and economic stagnation in countries as diverse as Syria and Senegal, Eritrea and Egypt, Afghanistan and Iraq.
Huge numbers have funnelled through Libya, where the state has all but collapsed and people traffickers operate with relative impunity. In Misrata, a major Libyan port, coastguards said that the smuggling trips would continue to rise because Libyan officials were woefully under-resourced.
In all of western Libya, the area where the people smugglers operate, coastguards have just three operational boats. Another is broken and four more are in Italy for repairs. Libyans say they have been told they will not be returned until after the conclusion of peace talks between the country’s two rival governments.
“There is a substantial increase this year,” said Captain Tawfik al-Skail, the deputy head of the Misrata coastguard. “And come summer, with the better weather, if there isn’t immediate assistance and help from the EU, then there will be an overwhelming increase.”

Pope Francis calls for decisive action from political leaders. Link to video
Pope Francis, an outspoken advocate for greater European-wide participation in rescue efforts, reiterated his call for action during mass on Sunday after learning of the latest disaster.
“They are men and women like us – our brothers seeking a better life, starving, persecuted, wounded, exploited, victims of war,” he said from St Peter’s Square.

Iraqis unearth mass graves in city where Islamic State ruled



 April 18 2014.
 Saddam Hussein’s former palace complex here is seemingly idyllic, its gardens lined with lush palm trees and bursts of bougainvillea. But at the heart of the verdant compound, diggers are turning over the earth in search of evidence from what could be one of Iraq’s worst atrocities in more than a decade.
‘They Were Just Struggling to Breathe’

An eyewitness to a chemical attack tells FP that Assad’s forces are dropping barrel bombs containing chlorine gas on hospitals and civilian centers.

‘They Were Just Struggling to Breathe’

Foreign PolicyBY DAVID KENNER-APRIL 17, 2015
IRUT — Dr. Mohammed Tennari first saw the six members of the Talib family when they were carried into his cramped field hospital in northern Syria on the night of March 16. They had been taking refuge in the basement of their home in the town of Sarmin when a barrel bomb filled with chemical gases struck their house. The gas, being heavier than air, quickly filtered down into the basement, poisoning the family.

Islamic State shoots and beheads 30 Ethiopian Christians in Libya - video


ReutersBY SYLVIA WESTALL-Sun Apr 19, 2015

(Reuters) - A video purportedly made by Islamic State and posted on social media sites on Sunday appeared to show militants shooting and beheading about 30 Ethiopian Christians in Libya.

Reuters was not able to verify the authenticity of the video but the killings resemble past violence carried out by Islamic State, an ultra-hardline group which has expanded its reach from strongholds in Iraq and Syria to conflict-ridden Libya.

The video, in which militants call Christians “crusaders” who are out to kill Muslims, showed about 15 men being beheaded on a beach and another group of the same size, in an area of shrubland, being shot in the head.

Both groups of men are referred to in a subtitle as “worshippers of the cross belonging to the hostile Ethiopian church”.

Libyan officials were not immediately available for comment.

Ethiopia said it had not been able to verify whether the people shown in the video were its citizens.
“Nonetheless, the Ethiopian government condemns the atrocious act,” government spokesman Redwan Hussein said.

He said Ethiopia, which does not have an embassy in Libya, would help repatriate Ethiopians if they wanted to leave Libya.

Militants professing loyalty to Islamic State have claimed several high-profile attacks on foreigners in Libya this year, including an assault on the Corinthia Hotel in Tripoli and the beheading of 21 Egyptian Christians in February.

The killing of the Egyptians prompted Egyptian President Abdel Fattah al-Sisi to order air strikes on Islamic State targets in Libya.

In the latest video, a man dressed in black clutching a pistol stood behind some of the victims.
“Muslim blood shed under the hands of your religions is not cheap,” he says, looking at the camera. “To the nation of the cross: We are now back again.”

The video concludes with a warning that Christians will not be safe unless they embrace Islam or pay protection money.

Islamic State controls large parts of Iraq and Syria and wants to redraw the map of the Middle East. It is not clear how many fighters it has in Libya, an oil-producing nation.

Egyptian security officials estimate that thousands of militants who share Islamic State’s ideology moved from the Sinai Peninsula to Libya after the army toppled President Mohamed Mursi of the Muslim Brotherhood in 2013.

(Additional reporting by Ahmed Tolba in Cairo and Aaron Maasho in Addis Ababa; Writing by Michael Georgy; Editing by Gareth Jones)

Russia's Putin says ready to work with United States: TV

CNBCSaturday, 18 Apr 2015 | 8:06 AM ET
Russia has key interests in common with the United States and needs to work with it on a common agenda, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Saturday in a television interview.

In his comments to the state-run Rossiya channel, Putin appeared to soften his anti-American rhetoric after being highly critical. Relations between Moscow and Washington and other Western powers have soured over the conflict in Russia’s neighbour Ukraine, sinking to an all-time low.
Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin on March 5. 2015.Sasha Mordovets | Getty Images-Russian President Vladimir Putin at the Kremlin on March 5. 2015.
“We have disagreements on several issues on the international agenda. But at the same time there is something that unites us, that forces us to work together,” Putin said.

“I mean general efforts directed at making the world economy more democratic, measured and balanced, so that the world order is more democratic. We have a common agenda.”

Putin has in the past fiercely attacked the United States and the West in general, blaming them for the Ukraine crisis, which Russia says was the result of a Western-backed “coup” against Ukraine’s former leader Viktor Yanukovich.

Russia has repeatedly denied accusations from Kiev and the West that it is supporting pro-Russian rebels with troops and weapons in eastern Ukraine, where more than 6,000 people have been killed since last April.

His latest remark comes two days after an annual TV phone-in show in which Putin accused the United States of trying to dominate world affairs, saying it wanted “not allies, but vassals”. However, his criticisms of the West were more moderate than in some previous appearances.

However, both Russia and the West say they back a peace deal agreed in Minsk in February, as a result of which a ceasefire in the Donbass region is largely holding.

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Putin warns Israel: Don't send deadly weapons to Ukraine

Russian president's warning comes week after he lifted ban on delivery of S-300 missile defense systems to Iran.

Russian President Vladimir Putin, pictured on Wednesday March 11, 2015.Russian President Vladimir Putin, pictured on Wednesday March 11, 2015. Photo by AP

Apr. 18, 2015 
Russian President Vladimir Putin warned Israel on Saturday not to supply weapons to the Ukrainian government,saying that the move would be counterproductive to efforts to reach peace in east Ukraine.

“It’s the Israeli leadership’s choice. It’s their right to do what they think is appropriate. If this is lethal weapon, I think it will be counterproductive. It will only lead to another round of conflicts, to a rise in the number of victims, and the outcome will be the same,” Putin told the state-run Rossiya channel.

Some 300 U.S. soldiers are now in Ukraine to train local troops, the government in Kiev confirmed Friday.The Russian Foreign Ministry late Friday warned that the planned training was a “first step” to possible delivery of weapons.

Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov criticized the operation, saying that the presence of American soldiers was not helpful. “This is likely to destabilize the situation,” Peskov was quoted as saying by Russian news agencies.

Last week, Putin signed a decree lifting a ban on the delivery of S-300 missile defense systems to Iran. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said that in light of the progress in the nuclear talks between Iran and world powers, there was no longer a need for the embargo. “

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu spoke on the phone with Putin for nearly an hour on Tuesday, andexpressed Israel’s disappointment with the latter’s decision to rescind the ban on selling S-300 missile air defense systems to Iran.

"Regarding our [weapons] shipments to Iran, these are defensive weapons, that will in no way harm Israel’s defensive capabilities.”

Putin on Thursday defended his decision to resurrect a deal to sell missiles to Iran during his annual television call-in show, saying it increases security in light of the conflict in Yemen.

“Under the present conditions in the region, especially regarding events in Yemen, such arms supplies are a deterrent.”

The head of the Iranian security council, Ali Shamkhani, on Tuesday said that Iran expects Russia to deliver the air defense systems by the end of the year. His Russian counterpart, Nikolai Patrushev, said delivery would take time. “It will depend on our manufacturers,” he told the Interfax news agency. “I believe they will need at least six months to complete this work.”

Rape in Thailand: Stop blaming the victims

Pic: AP.This banner appeared on the Thai Ministry of Culture website in 2010.
By James Austin-By  Apr 17, 2015
The Thai New Year Festival has come to an end, the streets are eerily quiet, and online news media is mopping up the aftermath of the festival’s more negative impact on society. This year, arguably, was a stand-out out year for official extremism concerning safety initiatives, with Thai people being exposed to a very long list of crackdowns relating to: water-squirting weapons, alcohol consumption, dangerous driving, and “improper dances or performances that do not reflect Thai culture”.
Rape in Thailand Stop Blaming the Victims by Thavam Ratna

green-juice
Diet of LifeYou won’t look “baggy” any more after drinking this juice. Take my word for it!
You are probably out of your mind when you can’t fit into your favorite clothes. I perfectly understand that because it happens to everyone once in a while.
 
What can you do to get rid of extra pounds?
Well, let me see: You can do sports, you can visit a beauty salon, you can cut down on your meals… or you can find a healthy way to lose weight extremely fast. 
The healthiest way to shed extra pounds and stop worrying about your looks is this one:
FIND THE PERFECT JUICE FOR YOU!
Why juice is great for people who cannot follow complicated diets?
Recently, the National Cancer Institute began a campaign to get people to do one simple thing – EAT MORE FRUITS AND VEGETABLES. Specifically, the recommendation was to eat five servings of fruit and three servings of vegetables a day, and their reasoning was simple:
A diet high in fruits and vegetables will prevent or cure a wide range of ailments! 
Here are several tips that will quickly persuade you to go “juice-addicted”:
1. It’s an easy way to get more fruits and veggies into your diet, especially if you are not big into fruits and vegetables. A diet rich in organic and raw foods will bring the best health benefits for you!
2. Fresh juices are a tremendous source of enzymes. In fact, the “freshness” of juice is one of their key features. If the food is cooked at temperatures above 114 degrees, the enzymes have been destroyed by the heat. Since produce is juiced raw, the enzymes are still viable when you drink the juice. 
 
3. When you go to bed and fall asleep, the metabolism slows down. That is the reason why I suggest drinking juice in the evening: it will boost your metabolism while you are sleeping and help you burn calories.
Juiced fruits and vegies increase your metabolism real fast, so you won’t even notice how you lose unnecessary fat.
Now, are you ready to give juicing a whirl?
Juice recipe:
Ingredients:
  • 2 glasses of water
  • 1 lemon (squeezed)
  • 1 tsp. ginger (grated)
  • 2 tbsp. parsley (chopped)
  • a handful of spinach
Directions:
Put the ingredients in a juicer and let it do the work. Once your juice is ready, it’s best to drink it the same day you make it, for food safety. Yet, don’t drink immediately the whole amount, but consume it in a period of 2 hours.
Drinking this juice every evening will help you get rid of the unwanted toxins in your body, will prevent water retention, will control food cravings of all kinds, will suppress appetite and will keep you safe from constipation which is one of the main reasons for gaining extra weight.
Instead of falling into the trap of disappointment, i.e. thinking that you can never be attractive again, you can simply juice your dinner or supper!

Saturday, April 18, 2015

Electoral Reforms: Minor Parties to Put Forward Common Stand

Mano_Ganesan_at_Bring_Them_Home_event
[Mano Ganeshan: taking the lead to protest minority party rights]
Sri Lanka Brief18/04/2015 
Minor and minority parties are meeting in the evening today to formulate a common stand on the proposed electoral reforms and put forward their own recommendations.
The parties including the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC), People’s Liberation Front (JVP), Democratic People’s Front (DPF) and Eelam Peoples Democratic Party (EPDP) are among the minor parties invited for the meeting due to take place at a hotel in Bambalapitiya. DPF leader Mano Ganesan told the Sunday Times that his party will come up with recommendations and its own proposals on the proposed electoral system. They will be sent to the President and Prime Minister for consideration.
“If the authorities fail to look into our concerns, we will seek legal intervention to stop any unilateral action,” he said.
A statement issued by the organisers of the meeting said:
“The majority parties and forces fail to understand the sentiments of the minority parties. The current Proportional Representation (PR) electoral system is the best system that has paved the way not only for minority parties but also for the minor parties. We agree there are shortcomings in the current system. They have to be rectified. But such rectification should not lead to big blunders made in haste,” a statement from the organisers said.
“We call upon all those who campaign for electoral reforms to let the next elections to be held under the current system. Any new system needs to address our fears,” the statement said. “We need further discussions. Besides the voters need to be given reasonable time to understand the new system. We cannot agree to the private agendas of certain big parties which want reform to suit their own ends,” the statement added.

Rationale for 13A minus plus


article_image
By Izeth Hussain- 

In my article The Solution to the Ethnic Problem in The Island of April 11, I argued that the implementation of 13A minus land and police powers together with a fully functioning democracy would lead to a solution of the ethnic problem. I expressed a conviction about that outcome, which could seem to be foolhardiness on my part. The article was also reproduced in the Colombo Telegraph, where up to now it has provoked 169 responses, which is a very exceptionally high number. That seems to attest to a very widespread interest and concern over the question of a solution to the ethnic problem. Some of the responses, particularly from Tamil readers, indicate that my article can be seriously misunderstood. I am, therefore, setting out here a brief rationale for 13A minus plus, brief because I am focusing only on what seem to me to be the essentials.

Electoral Reforms: some critical reflections

Professor Jayadeva Uyangoda-

Monday, April 6, 2015

Daily News Online : Sri Lanka's National NewsSri Lanka’s current debate on electoral reforms seems to be heading towards a politically inspired deadlock. Some powerful sections of the SLFP seems to be using the idea of electoral reforms either as a bargaining tool for some short-term political gains, or to checkmate the constitutional reform initiative aimed at changing the executive presidential system.

Flawed 19A Allows ‘Rajapaksa Judges’ To Continue


By Nagananda Kodituwakku -April 18, 2015
Nagananda Kodituwakku
Nagananda Kodituwakku
Colombo Telegraph
19A: Section 54 is flawed and violates the sovereignty in the people
Transitional Provision (Section 54) in the proposed 19th Amendmentprovides that every person holding office on the day preceding the date on which it becomes law, as the Chairman or a member of the (a) Parliamentary Council (b) Public Services Commission (c) National Police Commission (d) Human Rights Commission (e) Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption; or (f) Finance Commission, shall cease to hold such office with effect from the date on which the 19th amendment becomes law. Apparently this move has been adopted by the Sirisena Administration for a reason, that the persons holding such offices referred to above indeed is a hindrance to installing of the Rule of Law and Good Governance.
However, the said Transitional provision provides that every person holding office as (a) the Chief Justice (b) Judges of the Supreme Court (c) the President of the Court of Appeal (d) Judges of the Court of Appealshall continue to hold such offices and shall, continue to exercise, perform and discharge the powers, duties and functions of that office, under the same terms and conditions.
In the light of certain glaring flawed decision makings by the Supreme Court in the recent past under the de facto Chief Justice, Mohan Pieris, causing tremendous damage to the trust and confidence placed in the Judiciary by the people, any concerned citizen may ask whether the Judges holding the office in the Supreme Court should be allowed continue to hold office or whether all the judges too shall ceased to hold office, may be with an option to reappoint honorable judges.
Just before the Presidential election, people of Sri Lanka witnessed as to how submissively the Judges in the Supreme Court, responded to the two questions referred to the Supreme Court by the former PresidentMahinda Rajapaksa who sought the Court’s opinion to contest for a third term. The Supreme Court, de factoChief Justice, Mr Mohan Peiris P.C., with all other Justices agreeing, expressed it’s opinion in very subservient tone and the Court declared that the President Rajapaksa should seek election for re-election for a further term. It is important to note that the said opinion was declared on a private matter only affecting the President Rajapaksa, having denied the citizens any opportunity to express their views on the matter referred to the Court by the President. The concluding paragraph of the said opinion was recorded in the following words.

Chronicle of a death online

Speaking Up: “Sharmila continues to be in partial hiding, fearful of her child’s safety, but still bold and confident.”Return to frontpage

First exiled from her country, Sri Lankan writer Sharmila Seyyid, has now been ‘raped’ and ‘killed’ online.

KANNAN SUNDARAM- April 17, 2015
Fundamentalism knows no boundaries. In India, it was Perumal Murugan who announced the death of the writer in him. In Sri Lanka, writer Sharmila Seyyid was ‘raped’ and ‘murdered’ online on March 28, marking a new low in the history of intolerance. If casteist and Hindutva forces drove the writer in Mr. Murugan to death, it was fundamentalist Muslim groups who ‘killed’ Ms. Seyyid online. A seemingly real news report of the event, accompanied by a gory photoshopped picture of Ms. Seyyid’s body, went viral. Its impact was so real that her family and friends rushed to her home in shock and sorrow.
Her father Seyyid Ahmed wrote in his complaint in Eravur police station in Batticaloa in eastern Sri Lanka that there has been a concerted effort to incite hatred in the Muslim community against his daughter. Threats of kidnapping were also sent to Ms. Seyyid’s younger sister. It has become hard for the family to live in the community amidst all the rumours and suspicion, Mr. Ahmed said. He greatly fears for the lives of his daughters and their children.
The controversy

Ms. Seyyid, a single mother, journalist, activist and writer, was barely 30 when she was in the eye of the controversy that forced her into self-exile from eastern Sri Lanka. She has a graduate degree in journalism, and is the founder-president of the Organisation for Social Development, established in 2009, a community-based organisation in Eravur. On November 18, 2012, she was interviewed on BBC TamilOsai after her first collection of poems Siragu Mulaitha Penn (The women who grew wings) was released in Sri Lanka. Justice Minister Rauff Hakeem, speaking at the event, highlighted a few of her poems, one of which one was about sex workers.
In response to a question from the BBC reporter, Ms. Seyyid said that legalising sex work would help protect sex workers. This was interpreted as endorsing prostitution, considered haram in Islam. The threatening calls began soon after. By the next morning, Ms. Seyyid had received hundreds of missed calls on her mobile phone. There were news reports that condemned her for supporting sex work and the social media joined in.
Ms. Seyyid issued a clarification explaining that she was only highlighting a social reality and did not intend to defy Islamic tenets. She expressed regret for unwittingly hurting people’s sentiments. But when clergy compelled her to retract the statement, she refused. An English academy she ran along with her sister was damaged in an attack and an attempt was made to burn it down. She fled Sri Lanka soon after, but the online world continued to watch her every move and hound her. She has been warned repeatedly for posting photographs on Facebook of herself without a purdah. When she posted a photo album of selfies with her son, she was warned for posing playfully like a ‘mendicant in penance’.
Ms. Seyyid has published two poetry collections so far. Her novel Ummath not only exposes the injustices meted out by Tamil nationalists to Tamil-speaking Muslims in Sri Lanka, but also critiques the Talibanisation of the Muslim community in eastern Sri Lanka. Both her poetry collections and her novel have received awards from the Tamil Nadu Progressive Writers and Artists Association.
Some sections from her novel that question the practice of purdah have been widely circulated online. Ms. Seyyid writes, “Questions about covering a woman’s face... are crying out for clarity and resolution. It is not just a question of covering a woman’s face, (but) her whole body and the clothes and accessories that embellish it are shrouded over by force. Islamic society continues to not only force its womenfolk to stay in an environment that makes no concession to contemporary realities and the liberalising trends of the times but is in fact regressing into increasing rigidity. The stand taken by Islamic fundamentalists on issues such as women’s rights is often most condemnable and quite contrary to common sense and reason. The fundamentalists, appropriating for themselves the role of guardians of the society, have set up their own illegal panchayats, making it impossible to give reality to the dignity and the rights of women that the holy book, the Koran, has taught us.... The practice of wearing a head-dress and facial veil is an Arab custom and was brought to other countries as part of commercial ventures. Our dominating men have been successful in convincing women that these commercial products are a part of Islamic culture and tradition. Islamic women have, therefore, started wearing them as symbols of their identity and also because they fear that refusing to do so would stigmatise them as unchaste, anti-Islamic and even brand them as prostitutes!”
Threats and warnings

In mid-March, an audio recording made news and was widely shared and heard online. It was of a high-ranking Tamil Nadu police officer in a lustful telephonic conversation with a woman subordinate. But the photograph that accompanied it in online reports was Ms. Seyyid’s. It is not clear if this was deliberate or merely an act of negligence. Shocked, but never one to take anything lying down, she condemned it on Facebook and, with several friends, strongly protested against the websites and social media pages that published her photograph. She succeeded in temporarily taking it off the web.
It was at this point that some Muslim fundamentalist groups from Tamil Nadu, Sri Lanka and West Asia began an organised attack on Ms. Seyyid. Her photograph is now being deliberately circulated along with the audio recording; and her name defamatorily linked with the scandal. But before this the groups sent her a warning: she was to remove all of her photographs without purdah from Facebook within 24 hours. The attacks began when the warning went unheeded and ended with her ‘rape’ and ‘killing’.
Liberal Muslims are protesting loudly online. Women writers and liberal Muslim writers joined to organise a protest meeting. Under the umbrella ‘Pen Veli’, a discussion forum was launched in Chennai on March 5, to protest the continuing attacks on women by Islamic fundamentalists. The speakers categorically condemned the attempts to defame women and Islam by fundamentalist groups. The acts of such groups were condemned as anti-Islam.
Ms. Seyyid continues to be in partial hiding, fearful of her child’s safety but still bold and confident. Sri Lanka’s Criminal Investigation Department has now registered charges of cyber crime against unknown persons. Of course, the culpable persons are not confined to Sri Lanka but are spread out across India and West Asia.
In Kerala, fundamentalists of all kinds joined hands to protest the ‘Kiss of Love’ movement. In the global Tamil sphere, they appear to be acting in concert to threaten the free expression of writers and artists.
There is no clash of fundamentalists in India, but a symphony that is now reaching a crescendo, against freedom of expression and existence, which is reaching across borders.
(Kannan Sundaram is editor of Kalachuvadu, a Tamil monthly, and is the publisher of Perumal Murugan’s Mathorubhagan. E-mail: kannan31@gmail.com)