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

Monday, May 4, 2015

Probe launched into sale of liquor at Army Resort

Probe launched into sale of liquor at Army Resort
logoMay 4, 2015
Sri Lanka’s Military Police, acting on the directions of the Army Commander, has commence investigations regarding the alleged sale of liquor at the Wadduwa Army Holiday Resort.
The Wadduwa Army Holiday Resort, meant to further promote welfare of both officers and other ranks while paying more dividends to them, was established in 1991 and was recently re-branded as the ‘Laya Beach’.
Concerned over some media reports on the alleged sale of liquor at the establishment, the Commander of the Army Lieutenant General Crishanthe De Silva, has instructed the Military Police to immediately initiate investigations into the matter forthwith.
Accordingly, the Military Police have already begun investigations, Sri Lanka Army (SLA) said in a statement.
“Likewise, the Commander of the Army, having underlined that maximum punishment should be meted out to anyone who was found involved while on service in any such unlawful act following Military Police findings, has further instructed relevant authorities to deal with the culprits severely in accordance with military law, irrespective of ranks or status,” it said.

Who is behind influence against Lalith’s arrest?

Lalith Weeratunga 2
04 May 2015
Former chairman of the Telecommunications Regulatory Commission and former secretary to the president Lalith Weeratunga, director general of the TRC Anusha Pelpita and former presidential advisor Watinapaha Somananda Thera are to be arrested within days in connection with the spending of Rs. 620 million of TRC money on a project to distribute Sil clothing among voters on Duruthu full moon poya day, four days before the presidential election.
Their arrests were to be made about a week ago, but an invisible hand had exerted pressure on the president and the prime minister and prevented their arrests, reports say.
Information is coming to light that this pressure was exerted through Weeratunga’s wife Indrani Sugathadasa, who is the incumbent head of the Insurance Board. Several top officials in the state administration service have requested that the law be enforced without arresting Weeratunga since that would be a bad precedence as he is the topmost official in the state service. In the future, state officials would be reluctant to implement orders by politicians, which would lead to a breakdown of the entire state mechanism, they have pointed out to the president 

Texas attack: Phoenix home raided after shooting at Muhammad cartoon event

Texas scene
An FBI crime scene investigator documents the area around two deceased gunmen and their vehicle outside the Curtis Culwell Center in Garland, Texas. Photograph: Brandon Wade/AP
 and  in New York,  in Garland, Texas, and in London-Monday 4 May 2015

Police in Garland refuse to confirm identity of gunmen, who were killed by a Texas traffic officer near an event hosted by an anti-Islam group
Police raided an apartment in Phoenix on Monday after two unnamed gunmen were killed by a Texas traffic officer when they tried to get into a contest calling for cartoon depictions of the prophet Muhammad hosted by an anti-Islam group in a Dallas suburb.

In Yemen, Trying to Save People Without Selling Out

Yemenis desperately need hundreds of millions of dollars in humanitarian aid being offered by Saudi Arabia. But relief workers are wary of taking the money while Saudi airstrikes continue.
In Yemen, Trying to Save People Without Selling Out

Foreign PolicyBY LARA JAKES-MAY 4, 2015
Humanitarian aid groups that have been a lifeline to millions of desperate people in Yemen are considering rejecting a $274 million donation from Saudi Arabia as long as Riyadh continues bombing Houthi rebels in the Mideast’s newest war.
The conflict — which is widely seen as a proxy war between Saudi Arabia and Iran — presents an ethical dilemma for aid workers who need the funds to help hungry, sick, and homeless civilians in Yemen but are wary of appearing complicit in the devastating air campaign that is believed to have killed more than 1,000 people.
The Saudi Arabian donation may be unprecedented in its scope: It is believed the first time in recent memory that a single nation has paid 100 percent of a  so-called “flash appeal” emergency fund that is managed by the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Flash appeals are usually funded by multiple donors.
One Western aid worker, who was recently evacuated from Sanaa and spoke to Foreign Policy on condition of not being identified, called the Saudi donation “guilt money” for moving ahead with its bombing campaign instead of aggressively pushing for a cease-fire. Another aid worker from a different organization urged colleagues to “avoid [having] the KSA fund the humanitarian response in Yemen,” according to e-mails obtained by FP that were sent to at least eight relief agencies, including the International Federation of the Red Cross and Red Crescent, CARE International, Oxfam, and Save The Children.
KSA stands for the kingdom of Saudi Arabia. Its embassy in Washington declined comment for this story.
The dilemma is nearing a decision point: Aid groups will have to decide in the next few weeks whether to accept the Saudi donation, which was given to the United Nations humanitarian affairs office to be parceled out to relief organizations. Top officials with U.N. and Red Cross humanitarian aid missions will meet May 13 with international relief groups to discuss the Yemen funding appeal.
At least one major aid organization — which declined to be identified until a decision is reached — is leaning against taking the money, and others are wrestling with whether they should also reject it, according to emails and interviews with a half-dozen humanitarian workers and advocacy missions. Nearly all spoke to FP on condition of anonymity as their organizations consider whether a perceived stigma of allying with Riyadh outweighs the urgent need of ministering to the war’s civilian victims.
“It is an uncomfortable situation,” said Joel R. Charny, vice president for humanitarian policy at InterAction, a Washington-based alliance for aid and advocacy organizations worldwide. “Of course it raises questions as to whether this is a way [for Riyadh] to wash [its] hands or distract attention from the humanitarian impact of the war to date. There’s bound to be a little bit of discomfort, I think, given the fact the entire pool of money is coming from a single donor that’s a belligerent.”
The U.N. will keep the money available for other aid organizations that will try to distribute it in Yemen.
InterAction represents about 10 aid groups that have been working in Yemen, including Oxfam and International Medical Corps, which suffered employee injuries or damage to warehouses storing medicine, food and other relief supplies in mid-April airstrikes they believe were ordered by Riyadh. Charny said most, if not all, aid groups have pulled their international staff from Yemen, leaving the daunting mission to local workers.
Yemen is one of the poorest countries in the world, and one of every five of its people is undernourished, according to the U.N. Humanitarian aid missions in Yemen for years have been severely underfunded, and had by late March collected only 8 percent of an emergency fund appeal by the time Saudi airstrikes began, according to the U.N.
As many as 16 million Yemenis were reliant on international aid before the war began, and up to 12 million are in immediate danger of going hungry, according to a senior Western aid worker who recently left Yemen. And if fuel cannot be shipped into the country within two weeks, he said, it’s likely that many relief efforts will shut down.
The U.N. has demanded a cease-fire in Yemen, and the U.S. has called for apolitical solution to the unrest, although Washington supports a Saudi-led coalition of Arab states determined to shut down the Shiite Houthi rebels. Riyadh shows little sign of stopping: Human Rights Watch on Sundayreported evidence of banned cluster munitions being used in airstrikes along the Saudi border in mid-April.
Cluster munitions are banned by the U.N. and 91 countries — but not the U.S., Saudi Arabia, or most of the Mideast — because they are imprecise weapons that leave unexploded but still operational bombs in conflict areas that can be picked up or otherwise detonated by civilians. The Human Rights Watch findings put new pressure on the U.N. and the International Committee of the Red Cross, which generally accept donor funds from belligerent nations so long as efforts are made to protect civilians and make sure they are not confused with combatants.
On April 17 — a week before Riyadh pledged to wind down its bombing campaign but continued to attack — Saudi King Salman donated the full amount of a new, three month $274 million U.N. appeal for a Yemen-focused program that aid groups had helped design. It followed more than $850 million Riyadh has given to refugee, emergency health, and other humanitarian crises in the Mideast and West Africa since last July.
“The significance of this money cannot be underplayed,” said Kieran Dwyer, spokesman for the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. He called the situation in Yemen “desperate and getting worse.”
“All humanitarian organizations are committed to delivering life saving aid, but to do this they need resources,” Dwyer said. “And resources for Yemen at this scale are very, very difficult to get from alternative sources.”
Dwyer also said the Saudi government has put no conditions on how the funds are spent or who they will go to help. Charny called that “very rare in this day and age of emergencies” and said that should ease the aid groups’ concerns they are talking sides, in the war, which would cast doubt on their neutrality.
The U.N. and world powers like the U.S. have long pressured nations in the Mideast to take the lead in helping victims of war in their own region, often to little or no effect. “So you can look at this and say, ‘Wait a second, from a Saudi perspective, they’re stepping up; they’re doing exactly what we’re asking them to do,’” Charny said.
But aid groups that have been working in Yemen say there’s little point in accepting the funding if it cannot get to the people who need it most.
A Saudi airstrike last week hit an airport runway in Sanaa, blocking aid planes from landing. Riyadh said it was trying to stop an Iranian plane suspected of carrying assistance to Houthi rebels. Most of Yemen’s main seaports also have been shut down, either by the Houthi-controlled government in Sanaa or in what Charny called a Saudi blockade to further cut off the Shiite rebels from Tehran’s assistance. Saudi officials, meanwhile,say it’s the continued attacks by Houthis that are preventing aid from reaching civilians in Yemen.
One senior Western aid worker who was forced to flee Sanaa for safety said Yemen depends on 350,000 tons of food each month and 144,000 barrels of oil daily to keep its people fed and hospitals, transportation, and other vital infrastructure up and running. That aid is “stuck outside Yemen at the moment,” he said.
And the few local relief workers who are still in the country find it increasingly dangerous to distribute what aid is available due to the ongoing violence.
Airstrikes last month that hit relief agencies’ warehouses has further spooked aid workers who fear they will become the war’s next victims. Those airstrikes were widely believed to be ordered by the Saudi government.
The State Department is working with Saudi officials to “ensure safe conduct of humanitarian operations” in Yemen, said spokesman Daniel Langenkamp, and a USAID adviser is in Riyadh to help guide coordination with aid agencies in battle zones to avoid similar strikes going forward.
On Friday, White House counterterror czar Lisa Monaco met with new U.N. Special Envoy to Yemen Ismail Ould Cheikh Ahmed to discuss how to speed access and delivery of “badly needed food, medicine, and other supplies to the people of Yemen who are suffering.”
But that is of little assurance, and no comfort, to the relief organizations.
“With all the bombing going on, how will we be able to spend that money if you can’t actually get access?” said the senior Western aid worker, who remains in the Mideast and refused to be identified, in part for fear of the safety of his local staff still in Yemen.
His organization is leaning against accepting the Saudi donation, especially as the bombing campaign continues.
“It’s guilt money,” the worker said, and “it doesn’t seem like they’re feeling all that guilty.”
MOHAMMED HUWAIS/AFP/Getty Images

Israeli veterans say permissive rules of engagement fueled Gaza carnage

In this July 29, 2014 photo, smoke and fire from an Israeli strike rise over Gaza City. (Hatem Moussa/AP)
A Palestinian girl walks past a house that witnesses said was destroyed by Israeli shelling during a 50-day war last summer, in the east of Gaza City April 27, 2015. (Mohammed Salem/Reuters)

By William Booth-May 4
TEL AVIV — The war last summer between Israel and Hamas in the Gaza Strip left more than 2,100 Palestinians dead and vast areas reduced to rubble. On Monday a group of Israeli veterans released sobering testimony from fellow soldiers that suggests permissive rules of engagement coupled with indiscriminate artillery fire contributed to the mass destruction andhigh numbers of civilian casualties in the coastal enclave.
The organization of active and reserve duty soldiers, called Breaking the Silence, gathered testimonies from more than 60 enlisted men and officers who served in Gaza during Operation Protective Edge.

Israel's Ethiopian Jews clash with police at race rally

Dozens injured during anti-racism rally in Tel Aviv sparked by brutality against a black soldier.

 
04 May 2015
Israeli riot police have fired stun grenades and water cannon on thousands of ethnic Ethiopian Jewish citizens in an attempt to clear one of the most violent protests in memory in the heart of Tel Aviv.
The protesters, Israeli Jews of Ethiopian origin, were demonstrating on Sunday against what they said was police racism and brutality after a video clip emerged last week showing policemen shoving and punching a black soldier.
Demonstrators overturned a police car and threw bottles and stones at officers in riot gear at Rabin Square in the heart of Israel's commercial capital.
Israel's Channel 2 television said tear gas was also used, something the police declined to confirm.
"I've had enough of this behaviour by the police, I just don't trust them any more ... when I see the police I spit on the ground," one female demonstrator who was not identified told Channel 2 before police on horseback had charged.
Al Jazeera's Mike Hanna, who attended the protest, said the Israeli Red Cross earlier in the evening said at least 40 people, including 23 police officers, were injured.
"All suffered light injuries to the head and upper body," Hanna said.
Hanna said that it was notable that the injuries weren't more serious, when Israeli police clashes with Palestinian protesters often ended with far more severe injuries or deaths.
"Very clearly, the Israeli police are capable of riot control that does not involve the loss of human life or severe injury."
Israeli police later in the evening said at least 46 officers had been injured.
Hanna said the protest began peacefully when demonstrators brought evening rush hour traffic to a standstill for more than an hour by blocking one of the city's main highways.
There was no immediate sign of demonstrators dispersing and some protest organisers told Israeli media that sections of the crowd had been incited to violence.
The protest turned violent when it later moved to Rabin Square, where Israeli riot police and special forces fired stun grenades and water cannon into the crowds.
Tensions rose after an incident a week ago in a Tel Aviv suburb where a closed circuit video camera captured a scuffle between a policeman and a uniformed soldier of Ethiopian descent, Damas Pakada.
Two policemen have since been suspended on suspicion of using excessive force.
Israeli politicians, stung by community leaders' comparison of the incident to police violence against blacks in the United States, scrambled to defuse tensions.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, taking time out from the final days of negotiations with political parties on forming a coalition government, said he would meet Ethiopian community leaders and the soldier on Monday.
Al Jazeera's Hanna said the meeting signalled the sensitivity of the Israeli government to claims of racism within Israeli society.
"These claims are made often and they have reached a peak in recent days," Hanna said.
"The Ethiopians have long argued that they have been marginalised and discriminated against because of the colour of their skin."
At an earlier protest by Ethiopian Jews on Thursday in Jerusalem, police used water cannon to keep angry crowds away from Netanyahu's residence, and at least 13 people were injured.
Discrimination, racism and poverty

Tens of thousands of Ethiopian Jews affected by famine were airlifted to Israel in the 1980s and 1990s after a rabbinical ruling that they were direct descendants of the biblical Jewish Dan tribe.
The community, which now numbers around 135,500 of Israel's population of more than 8 million and includes many born in Israel, has long complained of discrimination, racism and poverty. More than half of the Ethiopians in Israel live in poverty and only half graduate from high school.
The Israeli government is also frequently accused of racism for deporting African migrants. In 2013,
Israel also admitted to forcibly administering birth control injections to Ethiopian Jewish women without their consent or knowledge.
Ben Hartman of the Jerusalem Post, who also witnessed the protest, told Al Jazeera it was a symptom of a wider problem in Israel.
"It's a whole range of social issues and a wider failure to integrate the Ethiopian community since the '80s," Hartman said.
"Because they're quite a small percentage of the population, they don't have a lot of political power. They don't have a lot of structures or support that a lot of other people do."

Nepal asks foreign nations to end search, rescue operations

India's National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) personnel and Nepal army soldiers carry a body after being recovered from a collapsed house, after the Saturday's earthquake, in Kathmandu, Nepal April 29, 2015.India's National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) personnel and Nepal army soldiers carry a body after being recovered from a collapsed house, after the Saturday's earthquake, in Kathmandu, Nepal April 29, 2015. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
ReutersMon May 4, 2015
(Reuters) - Nepal has asked foreign countries to wrap up search and rescue operations nine days after a devastating earthquake killed more than 7,200 people, now there is no hope of finding people alive in the rubble.
Dozens of countries sent teams to look for survivors after the Himalayan nation was hit by a 7.8-magnitude quake on April 25, its worst since 1934, but the Nepal government now believes the search and rescue work has been nearly completed.
"They can leave. If they are also specialists in clearing the rubble, they can stay," Rameshwor Dangal, an official at Nepal's home ministry, told Reuters on Monday.
The quake killed 7,276 people and wounded over 14,300. Nepalese Prime Minister Sushil Koirala earlier estimated the death toll could reach 10,000.
On Monday, police and local volunteers found the bodies of about 100 trekkers and villagers buried in an avalanche set off by the earthquake in a remote district and were digging through snow and ice for scores more missing.
Many countries have pledged money that will be necessary to rebuild homes, hospitals and historic buildings. Others such as neighbouring India have sent trucks to deliver aid and deployed helicopters to rescue thousands of people from remote towns and villages.
The chief of India's National Disaster Response Force (NDRF), which was among the first foreign organisations to arrive after the quake, said it had been asked by the Nepalese government to conclude its search and rescue operation.
"All the search and rescue teams, not the relief (teams) ... have been asked to return," NDRF Director General O.P. Singh told Indian television. "We will see how best it can be done."
The United Nations has said 8 million of Nepal's 28 million people were affected by the quake, with at least 2 million needing tents, water, food and medicines over the next three months.
(Reporting by Gopal Sharma in KATHMANDU, Writing by Aditya Kalra; Editing by Will Waterman)

Burma: Ethnic rebel groups discuss nationwide ceasefire as hostilities continue

Burmese soldiers carrying launchers walk on a road as they patrol in Kokang, northeastern Shan State. Pic: AP.Burmese soldiers carrying launchers walk on a road as they patrol in Kokang, northeastern Shan State. Pic: AP.
By  May 04, 2015
Burma’s Nationwide Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) may not proceed beyond the draft stage because some of the ethnic armed organisations (EAOs) involved in the latest rounds of fighting are being excluded from the agreement.
A summit between the leaders of 12 EAOs is being held in Panghsang at the headquarters of the United Wa State Army (UWSA), ending on May 6.
Three of the EAOs attending the summit are not recognised by the government. These are: The Arakan Army (AA), the Myanmar Nationalities Democratic Alliance Army or Kogang Group (MNDAA), and the Ta’ang National Liberation Army (TNLA). The Burma Army also expressed its displeasure that these groups were invited to the summit. It even threatened to arrest their leaders under paragraph 17/1 of the Association with Illegal Organizations Act as they traveled through military-controlled areas to the summit.
Unfortunately for the government and Burma Army the recent fighting in Kokang, Northern Shan State that broke out in February has involved these three groups. If they were to be excluded from a peace agreement there would be little reduction in levels of fighting.
The AA was formed in 2010, but until recently was only active in Kachin State and northern Shan State. They have an agreement with the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) who have trained their troops. Of the 23 military cadets who were killed at a KIA base near Laiza by Burma Army artillery on November 19, eight of those who died were AA cadets.
After fighting in Kokang members of the AA returned to Arakan State and on March 29started fighting the Burma Army in Kyauktaw Township in Northern Arakan State near the border with Chin State. This is the first time there has been fighting in Arakan State for decades.
Since then there has been sporadic fighting in Kyauktaw Township and Paletwa in Chin State. This has caused civilians to flee their homes and take shelter in Sapar Seik Village. There have also been reports that the Burma Army is arresting people because they suspect them of being AA members or assisting the AA. There were even reports of them arresting and torturing 70 villagers.
On April 27 the US embassy issued a statement saying that the US was concerned by the fighting in Arakan State. It said: “We urge all parties to cease hostilities, and ensure the protection of civilians and timely delivery of all necessary humanitarian assistance to the affected population in accordance with international standards.”
It is clear that if the government refuses to deal with the MNDAA, TNLA and AA fighting will continue and as Bao Youxiang, the UWSA commander, said: “It [the NCA] would just be words on paper if there are still uncertainties and the conflict cannot be stopped.”
The ethnic summit in Panghsang includes senior representatives of the following ethnic armed groups: the UWSA, the MNDAA, the TNLA, the AA, the Restoration Council of Shan State/Shan State Army (RCSS/SSA), the Kachin Independence Organisation (KIO/KIA), the Karen National Union (KNU), the Shan State Progressive Party (SSPP/SSA), the National Democratic Alliance Army (NDAA- Mong La), the New Mon State Party (NMSP), the Pa-O National Liberation Organisation (PNLO) and the Karenni National Progressive Party (KNPP).

10 Nutrition Packed Health Snacks For Weight Loss

credit: thinkstock.comcredit: thinkstock.com
credit: thinkstock.comCashews new

By  in Food
A healthy midday snack will combat any unplanned unhealthy snacks. You’ll feel full and those bad temptations will be ignored. Keep your metabolism going and increase the calories you burn with some snack boosters!
If you are looking to prevent large meal sizes at dinnertime, then avoid long periods of time between eating, plan your meals with the nutrients and healthy fats you need, and avoid those addictive snacks that are high in sodium, sugar and bad fats.
10 Nutrition Packed Health Snacks For Weight Loss.odt by Thavam Ratna

No association found between MMR vaccine and autism, even among children at higher risk

A baby undergoing vaccination. A large study examined the measles-mumps-rubella vaccination and found no link to autism.
Credit: © JenkoAtaman / Fotolia
ScienceDailyApril 21, 2015
In a study that included approximately 95,000 children with older siblings, receipt of the measles-mumps-rubella (MMR) vaccine was not associated with an increased risk of autism spectrum disorders (ASD), regardless of whether older siblings had ASD, findings that indicate no harmful association between receipt of MMR vaccine and ASD even among children already at higher risk for ASD, according to a study in the April 21 issue of JAMA, a theme issue on child health.
Although a substantial body of research over the last 15 years has found no link between the MMR vaccine and ASD, parents and others continue to associate the vaccine with ASD. Surveys of parents who have children with ASD suggest that many believe the MMR vaccine was a contributing cause. This belief, combined with knowing that younger siblings of children with ASD are already at higher genetic risk for ASD compared with the general population, might prompt these parents to avoid vaccinating their younger children, according to background information in the article.
Anjali Jain, M.D., of the Lewin Group, Falls Church, Va., and colleagues examined ASD occurrence by MMR vaccine status in a large sample of U.S. children who have older siblings with and without ASD. The researchers used an administrative claims database associated with a large commercial health plan. Participants included children continuously enrolled in the health plan from birth to at least 5 years of age during 2001-2012 who also had an older sibling continuously enrolled for at least 6 months between 1997 and 2012.
Of the 95,727 children included in the study, 1,929 (2.01 percent) had an older sibling with ASD. Overall, 994 (1.04 percent) children in the cohort had ASD diagnosed during follow-up. Among those who had an older sibling with ASD, 134 (6.9 percent) were diagnosed with ASD, compared with 860 (0.9 percent) diagnosed with ASD among those with siblings without ASD. The MMR vaccination rate (l dose or more) for the children with unaffected siblings (siblings without ASD) was 84 percent (n = 78,564) at 2 years and 92 percent (n = 86,063) at age 5 years. In contrast, the MMR vaccination rates for children with older siblings with ASD were lower (73 percent at age 2 years and 86 percent at age 5 years). Analysis of the data indicated that MMR vaccine receipt was not associated with an increased risk of ASD at any age.
"Consistent with studies in other populations, we observed no association between MMR vaccination and increased ASD risk among privately insured children. We also found no evidence that receipt of either 1 or 2 doses of MMR vaccination was associated with an increased risk of ASD among children who had older siblings with ASD. As the prevalence of diagnosed ASD increases, so does the number of children who have siblings diagnosed with ASD, a group of children who are particularly important as they were undervaccinated in our observations as well as in previous reports," the authors write.
Editorial: Promising Forecast for Autism Spectrum Disorders
In an accompanying editorial, Bryan H. King, M.D., M.B.A., of the University of Washington and Seattle Children's Hospital, Seattle, comments on the findings of this study.
"Some parents of children with ASD may have chosen to delay immunization in subsequent children until they were certain any risk had passed. Such behavior, which arguably could enrich the immunization rate in the nonautism subgroup relative to the group that may have been showing early atypical development, might create the impression that MMR vaccine is actually reducing risk for ASD. Indeed, Jain et al report relative risks of less than 1.0. Even so, short of arguing that MMR vaccine actually reduces the risk of ASD in those who were immunized by age 2 years, the only conclusion that can be drawn from the study is that there is no signal to suggest a relationship between MMR and the development of autism in children with or without a sibling who has autism."
"Taken together, some dozen studies have now shown that the age of onset of ASD does not differ between vaccinated and unvaccinated children, the severity or course of ASD does not differ between vaccinated and unvaccinated children, and now the risk of ASD recurrence in families does not differ between vaccinated and unvaccinated children."

Sunday, May 3, 2015

6 years after war, Tamil families want to know where their loved ones are
Still missing in Sri LankaSri Lankan ethnic Tamil women hold portraits of their missing relatives during a protest in Colombo in April 2015. (Eranga Jayawardena / Associated Press)
May .03 .2015,
Khendran Manoranjithamalar and her husband trudged into the army checkpoint on the last day of the Sri Lankan civil war, clutching their three children and some jewelry. They had lost everything else.
Then, as they sought refuge in government territory, they lost each other.
Soldiers detained her husband, Balasingham, a sometime driver for the defeated Tamil Tiger rebels. He has not been heard from since that warm evening in May 2009, joining thousands of ethnic Tamils who disappeared into Sri Lankan military custody in one of the largest roundups of wartime prisoners in recent memory.

Kerry backs justice for Sri Lanka's war-hit Tamils

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By AFP-3 May 2015
US Secretary of State John Kerry ended a visit to Sri Lanka Sunday after pledging support for minority Tamils following decades of ethnic war, a local Tamil politician said.
Kerry met heads of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), the main political party from the ethnic minority, a day after holding talks with Sri Lanka's new President Maithripala Sirisena.
"He (Kerry) said he will do his best to support us to resolve outstanding issues," TNA lawmaker Suresh Premachandran told AFP after their 30-minute meeting at Kerry's hotel in the capital Colombo.
US Secretary of State John Kerry (L) speaks with Sri Lankan Tamil National Alliance (TNA) party leader Rajavarothiam Sampanthan (2nd L) in Colombo on May 3, ...
US Secretary of State John Kerry (L) speaks with Sri Lankan Tamil National Alliance (TNA) party leader Rajavarothiam Sampanthan (2nd L) in Colombo on May 3, 2015 ©Andrew Harnik (POOL/AFP)
"They (US) will also keep pushing for reconciliation, justice and accountability," he added, referring to alleged war crimes committed by government forces in the final stages of the conflict that ended in May 2009.
On Saturday Kerry, whose presence in Colombo marked the island's return to the diplomatic fold, heaped praise on the new administration of Sirisena, who toppled strongman Mahinda Rajapakse at January elections.
The diplomat pledged support to ensure "true reconciliation" in Sri Lanka six years after the end of its 37-year Tamil separatist war which claimed at least 100,000 lives.
He echoed a longstanding Tamil demand to investigate the cases of thousands who went missing towards the end of the conflict.
"Try to find wherever the truth may lead. No matter how painful that truth is," Kerry said. "It's the right and the humane thing to do -– and it is, believe it or not, an essential part of the healing process."
Sirisena's administration has promised to investigate allegations that up to 40,000 Tamil civilians were killed by troops under Rajapakse's command.
Kerry has promised technical assistance for any probe and also urged Sirisena to free hundreds of Tamils who are still being held without any charges against them.
During Rajapakse's decade-long rule, Washington was close to imposing sanctions on Colombo for refusing to allow investigations into claims of mass killings and rights abuses at the end of the war with the separatist Tamil Tiger guerrillas.
As Sri Lanka's relations with the West and regional powerhouse India soured, Rajapakse turned increasingly to Beijing, with Chinese-funded investments projects springing up across the island.
Since coming to power Sirisena has tried to reset the diplomatic balance, choosing India for his first foreign visit and offering the hand of friendship to other key players who fell out with his predecessor.
Kerry flew to Nairobi Sunday after meeting US embassy staff in Colombo.
US Secretary of  State John Kerry (L) greets Kollupitiye Mahinda Sangharakkhita mahathera at the Kelaniya Rajamaha temple during a visit to Kelaniya on May 2...
US Secretary of State John Kerry (L) greets Kollupitiye Mahinda Sangharakkhita mahathera at the Kelaniya Rajamaha temple during a visit to Kelaniya on May 2, 2015 ©Ishara S. Kodikara (AFP)

Still Searching For Answers

By Waruni Karunarathne- Sunday, May 03, 2015
Andhoni Ravidha and Mrs. J. Najendran














Even after many years of search, families of those who are missing, especially during the last phase of the war, have not given up their search in hope to find their kith and kin. Most of them carry evidence of as to how their family members went missing and as to who abducted them or arrested them. There are also women who have proof to say some of those reported missing are still alive and are detained either in prisons or camps which they are eager to find out. Several women from North and East with clear evidence of those who are disappeared met the Presidential Commission to investigate into cases of missing persons to present their cases last Thursday.
Among them there was Andhoni Ravidha from Batticaloa who alleged that her husband was kidnapped by the Special Task Force (STF) on the 02.12.2008. “My husband’s name is Kandaya Andhoni and he was a fisherman. His age is now 46. On the day of the incident, he left home to go for fishing. There were four others who used to work with him. That day evening, those four people came rushing to my house to inform that my husband was arrested by the STF and those people were in uniform,” she alleged. She added that she has four children – two sons of age 20 and 18 and two daughters of age 25 and 23. “The eldest boy is now working as a carpenter and the youngest boy has left school without completing his education as we have financial difficulties. My elder daughter is a teacher and the other one does not have a job. I am maintaining a small grocery shop to meet the family needs,” she explained her difficulties.
She is also in possession of solid evidence to say that her husband is still alive as on 26th September 2011, Veerakesari newspaper carried a news item with a photo of several people who had been released from a prison and her husband was among them. Showing the photo she obtained from the newspaper, Ravidha added that even though there is a photo evidence of him being released he has not made his way home. She questioned as to what actually happened to him.
Mrs. J. Najendran, a mother of a son who was disappeared alleged that her son was abducted on 27.05.2008 by someone attached to the Navy Intelligence. She is from the Trincomalee district and her son’s name is Najendran Pradeeban. “Now he should be 30 years old. After finishing his A/L in Anuradhapura, he wanted to go overseas for a job. I paid an agent Rs. 100,000/- but the agent deceived us. My son was sent to various countries and was shifted from place to place for about 2 years but without a job – so I thought it was best for him to come back home. My son arrived in Sri Lanka on 02.01.2008. After he got back, he wanted to pick up his hobby of playing Cricket and he went to the Play ground Ahambram in Trincomalee. At that point, he was questioned by a person called Robert attached to the Navy Intelligence. He had shown my son his ID,” she added.
According to her, Robert from the Navy Intelligence had questioned her son as to why he had not been to the playground before and as to where he was during the last couple of years. “After this incident, my son refused to go to play with the others. However, my son had a friend called Rama Krishnan Jayadeepan and Robert from the Navy Intelligence unit had asked him to bring my son to play Cricket with them and Jayadeepan convinced my son to accompany him. But later that day Jayadeepan came back to my house and claimed that my son was kidnapped by Robert in a white van as they went to meet him. According to Jayadeepan, my son was hand cuffed from behind and was blindfolded. Jayadeepan insisted me not to call the police or talk to anybody about the incident as Robert had threatened to kill him and my family, if I do so. Before I could do anything I received a call from a person called Siripala asking me to come to 59th mile post at Kandalai with Rs. 150,000/- and he would release my son. I knew it was Robert. But i did as I was told without questioning in fear of my son’s life. I went there and handed over the money but he did not send my son home, ” she said.
She added that afterwards she filed a case in the Trincomalee court regarding this matter on 20.05.2008. According to Mrs. Nagendran, later, the court had issued an order to arrest Jayadeepan and Robert but they were released one year after saying that there were no valid evidence against them. She also suspected that Jayadeepan was also involved in the abduction.
Daniel Valanteena, another woman from Vavuniya claimed that she handed over her mother, Daniel Victoria Rani to the military on the 17. 05.2009 as her mother sustained a minor injury in her stomach due to a shell attack during the last phase of the war. “We were coming from Mullaithivu to Vavuniya and my mother was injured in Mullivaika – so I handed her over to the military for treatment. Last time I saw her she was taken away in a tractor. I wanted to go along with her but I was taken to the Chettikulam camp. At that point my mother was 66 years old but she was healthy. I was in the Zone 4 Chettikulam IDP camp till September 2010. Once I was out of the camp, I started looking for her. I wrote to the former President, the military, ICRC and various other place in search of her. I received a response letter from the Presidential Secretariat dated 06.01.2011 saying that my letter was forwarded to the Secretary, Ministry of Defence and Urban Development and they would take the necessary actions – but I did not receive any other response from them to date. ICRC also responded with a letter dated 19.01.2010 saying that due to restricted access to certain places including hospitals, they could not curry out the search. However, I am still searching with the hope to find her somewhere alive,” Valanteen added with perseverance.
Meantime, Chairman of the Presidential Commission appointed to investigate into cases of missing persons Maxwell Paranagama admitted that some people who presented their cases to the commission on last Thursday had first hand information in their possession. According to him, the Commission had invited these civil society members and families of the missing persons for a discussion as those groups had been protesting during some of the public hearings that the commission conducted. “These groups have been protesting out side holding various placards asking for an international inquiry during some of our public sittings and we invited them for a discussion to Colombo to sort out this problem. The group of Civil Society members presented certain shortcomings of the commission based on their view. They handed over to us a document in writing with all their concerns and shortcomings insisting on as to how we can address those,” he added.
According to him, some families of the missing persons produced some documents including photos as evidence saying that those people who are reported missing are still in certain prisons and various other places. “They gave us first hand information. We will take measures to check in prisons and various other places by next week as to whether they are still in those places,” he added. According to Mr. Paranagama, the commission had met the Secretary to the Ministry of Justice recently and requested a list of persons who are in prisons all over the island – in order to cross check with that list as to whether these people who are reported to be missing are in prisons.