Peace for the World

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

Tuesday, May 26, 2015

Unacceptable presence of war criminal soldiers in North-East - CV Wigneswaran

25 May 2015
The chief minister of the Northern Province, C V Wigneswaran has criticised the continued militarisation of the North-East by forces that he describes as “threatening” and perpetrators of war crimes.

“In order for normality to return to our daily lives, the military must withdraw from our lands,” the chief minister said, speaking at the 150 year anniversary of Inuvil Hindu College.

“Saying we are all brothers and sisters and getting on stage and calling for goodwill and amiable relations between us while continuing to stations soldiers that committed war crimes to occupy our lands is not acceptable in any way,” he said.

Further remarking on militarisation, Mr Wigneswaran said:

“Saying they are protecting the country’s borders, while occupying our land and resources even six years after the end of the war, the army and the navy are a state force that has been forcibly placed among us. The government declares that the military has been placed here for our safety.”

“But none among us are known to have asked the military to please stay here and protect us.”

“The brutal crimes that have taken place here in recent times were unheard of to the people here prior to 2009.”

Mr Wigneswaran said that the environment created by militarisation impacted negatively on students and young people, preventing them from “developing the thirst for freedom, or excelling in knowledge or pursuing ambitious career paths.”

The chief minister also said that trusting in the generosity of politicians, whether Sirisena, Ranil or Chandrika was folly and that Tamil leaders should be open and clear in their demands, pointing out that “fearing that Sinhalese voters will not tick their box in elections if they showed any goodwill towards Tamils, all Sinhalese political leaders only offer us covert promises.”

Speaking on the future of the North-East, Mr Wigneswaran said “our resources have been damaged in various ways. Some resources are being ransacked and are being smuggled to other provinces” and called on both local citizens and the Tamil diaspora to take up their duty of building up the Tamil homeland.

One killed, four injured in two separate shootings

One killed, four injured in two separate shootings
logoMay 26, 2015 
One man was killed and four were injured in two separate shootings that occurred in Peradeniya and Batticaloa on Tuesday (26) morning, police said.
In one incident, four persons sustained injuries at a jewelry shop in Gelioya, Peradeniya when an individual open fired on them.
Police Spokesperson ASP Ruwan Gunasekara says that four individuals had arrived at the scene wearing full-face helmets. They have fled the area soon after the crime, he added. 
In another incident, a 44-year old person, who was a resident of Velavali area in Batticaloa, was killed by an unidentified gunman, at around 11 am. The post-mortem of the deceased will be conducted at the Batticaloa Teaching hospital today.
[ செவ்வாய்க்கிழமை, 26 மே 2015, 12:35.26 PM GMT ]
நீண்ட காலத்துக்கு பின்னர் இன்று காலை மட்டக்களப்பு மண்டூர் பகுதியில் சமூகசேவை உத்தியோகத்தர் ஒருவர் சுட்டுக்கொல்லப்பட்ட சம்பவமானது பொதுமக்கள் மத்தியில் அச்சத்தினை ஏற்படுத்தியுள்ளது.
 
 
மட்டக்களப்பு மண்டூர் பிரதேசத்தில் இன்று காலை இடம்பெற்ற துப்பாக்கிச் சூட்டுச் சம்பவத்தில் நாவிதன்வெளி பிரதேச செயலகத்தில் பணிபுரியும் சமூகசேவை உத்தியோகத்தர் மதிதயான் சுட்டுக்கொல்லப்பட்ட சம்பவமானது பொதுமக்கள் மத்தியில் மீண்டுமொரு அச்ச உணர்வை ஏற்படுத்தியுள்ளது.
நாட்டில் நல்லாட்சி ஏற்பட்டுள்ளதாக கூறப்படும் இக் காலகட்டத்தில் நடைபெற்றுள்ள இச் சூட்டுச் சம்பவமானது தமிழ் மக்கள் மத்தியில் பல சந்தேகங்களை தோற்றுவித்துள்ளது.
உண்மையில் சம்பவத்தின் சூத்திரதாரிகள் குறித்தும், சம்பவம் இடம்பெற்றதற்கான காரணங்கள் குறித்தும் உடனடியாக பொதுமக்களுக்கு தெளிவுபடுத்தி மக்கள் மத்தியில் ஏற்பட்டுள்ள அச்ச உணர்வை போக்க வேண்டியது பாதுகாப்பு தரப்பினரின் பொறுப்பாகும்.
குறித்த சம்பவத்தின் சூத்திரதாரிகளை கைது செய்ய தவறும் பட்சத்தில் கிழக்கு மாகாண மக்கள் மீண்டும் ஒரு துப்பாக்கி கலாசாரத்திற்குள் தள்ளப்படுவதுடன் கிழக்கு மாகாணத்தின் கருத்துச் சுதந்திரம் உள்ளிட்ட ஜனநாயக வழியிலான அனைத்து செயற்பாடுகளும் அச்சம் காரணமாக முடங்கிவிடும் என்பதே யதார்த்தம்.
எனவே உண்மைகளை விரைவாக பாதுகாப்பு தரப்பினர் தெளிவுபடுத்த வேண்டும் என்பதே அனைவரது எதிர்பார்ப்பாகவுள்ளது.

Yahapālanaya For The People Of Tumpane?


Colombo Telegraph
By Emil van der Poorten –May 26, 2015
Emil van der Poorten
Emil van der Poorten
Your Ref RDD/KG/E/4/Gen
Registered Post
The Hon. Lakshman Kiriella
Minister of Plantation Industries
55/75 Vauxhall Lane
Colombo 2
Dear sir:
Payment of subsidy to rubber producers in the Galagedera area on May 16th, 2015
Subsequent to receipt of the invitation, signed by Mr. R. K. Saman Anura of the Rubber Development Department, District Secretariat, Kegalle to attend a meeting at the Galagedera District Secretariat, I arrived there, as requested, before 10 a.m. today, carrying the invitation as proof of the fact that I was entitled to be there and to receive a cheque in settlement of the subsidy for which rubber producers of the area qualified. In case there is any doubt about the bona fides of this claim, I am attaching a photocopy of that invitation.
The tone for the day’s proceedings appeared to be set by your arrival two hours late, after 12 noon.
After your arrival, those who controlled the microphone indulged in endless speeches in support of the United National Party and yourself, at least one of which informed those present that you had turned down the Foreign Affairs portfolio because of your devotion to rubber growers of our district!
The very lukewarm responses to the speeches should have provided you with an appropriate indication of the attendees’ enthusiasm for the tone and content of the proceedings.
After your address to the faithful, received with pretty thin applause as you might recall, you made your exit together with the rest of your entourage, inclusive of video cameramen. The reason for the timing of this event was soon apparent: there were dozens of rubber producers with letters of invitation to an event at which they were to be presented cheques in payment of a grant for which they had qualified, but no cheques for them!

A Choice between Stability and Virtue?

Photo by EPA/M.A.PUSHPA KUMARA, via Sky News
GroundviewsI start with a quote from Shang Yang (390-338 BC), an insightful statesman in the Chinese state of Qin: “A country where the virtuous govern the wicked will suffer from disorder, so that it will be dismembered; but a country where the wicked govern the virtuous will be orderly, so that it will become strong.”
Although this quote on governance is over 2300 years old, the issues are still relevant. The January Presidential election was fought as one between stability and good governance. Such alternatives (i.e. order vs. virtue) are echoed in the above quote too. After Maithripala Sirisena won the election, the Rajapaksa camp warned that it may lead to separatist elements gaining an upper hand (cf. “dismemberment”); instead of the country becoming ‘strong’ through a long term Presidency. And at the end of the 100 day Sirisena regime, doubts were expressed whether it was either orderly or strong.
The quote of course is not a scientific law. At best, it encapsulates a socialtrend; and Karl Popper has clearly enunciated the difference between the two. A trend has very limited predictive power compared to a law. And it is almost impossible to posit ‘natural laws’ in the social sciences, which are also notoriously ‘fuzzy’ in nature, lacking the relative crispness of the pure sciences. Thus, there will be no unanimity as to whether the Sirisena regime is ‘virtuous’ – especially if account is taken of some (though not all) members of his cabinet. And while there are many in the country who will label the Rajapaksa regime as ‘wicked’ (with justifiable cause too), it may be difficult to ‘demonize’ it unanimously.
It is paradoxical however that while most of us would value virtue over wickedness (the process), we also tend to value stability over disorder (theoutcome) – and therein lies the rub. Because Shang’s quote suggests that stability may be achievable only through wicked rulers, whereas virtuous ones may lead to a measure of disorder.
Is disorder then such a bad thing? I want to make three arguments for choosing instability and disorder over stability and order. The first argument stems from the Shang quote itself. Although it is not easy to arrive at causes by studying effects (a form of reasoning called abduction and used by diagnosticians), it may very well be that a stable society arises because of wicked rulers whereas instability could be a sign that rulers are virtuous.
My second argument stems from the notion of democracy, to which lip service is paid the world over, even by regimes bordering on totalitarianism. The association of democracy with disorder goes back to Athens, supposedly the birthplace of democracy. Plato, quoting Socrates calls it “a charming form of government, full of variety and disorder, and dispensing a sort of equality to equals and unequals alike”. Of course there is a strong notion that democracy delivers justice too, which is probably why it is paid so much lip service. The American theologian Reinhold Niebuhr said “Man’s capacity for justice makes democracy possible, but man’s inclination to injustice makes democracy necessary.” Anyone who values democracy (and the justice it delivers) therefore should be prepared for a degree of instability.
My final argument is that instability is associated with positive change. Many people feel that the scientific revolution in Europe arose in a climate of social instability, arising from the authority of the established church being challenged, primarily by those within the church itself. And the industrial revolution in England took place in a climate of political flux, when the power of the King was being replaced by that of the Parliament. So lack of stability and order can give rise to positive changes, especially when the previous state of equilibrium has been unjust and unfair.
A final comment – Shang Yang’s quote was made at a time when Chinese states were at war with each other. So it may even be argued that to forget virtue a little during times of war is acceptable for the sake of order (I would not advocate it however, because the inexorable ‘cosmic’ laws of justice will come back to haunt us). But we have finished our war – it is 6 years since we did. This is a time to espouse the process of being virtuous (whatever theoutcome will be) rather than insisting on stability at any cost, because we may have to allow, participate in or commit great wickedness in order to achieve it.
Speaking for myself, and many people in this country I think, President Maithripala Sirisena’s great appeal stems from the fact that he is not in control of everything. It suggests that he is more democratic and virtuous. President Mahinda Rajapakse on the other hand tried to make sure that he had everything under his control – deeply disturbing at best. And even where potential “dismemberment” is concerned, in my opinion, President Sirisena’s conciliatory gestures to northern citizens, and the TNA’s rapport with him, makes separatism much less likely now than under the Rajapakse iron fist.
Government has failed, charges JVP’s Lalkantha


BUP_DFT_DFT-15_02-5
















logo
Wednesday, 27 May 2015
dffhIn order to resolve the Wilpattu deforestation matter, the first priority should be to find a proper and suitable area to resettle the people, says JVP Politburo member K.D. Lalkantha, noting that this is a sensitive matter concerning people who have lost everything.

lf-harrow2
logoMay 25, 2015
The Sri Lankan Muslim community based in UK, at an event held at the Sri Lankan Muslim Cultural Centre (SLMCC) in the London Borough  of Harrow honoured veteran Sri Lanka journalist Latheef Farook  for his services in highlighting burning Muslim issues in the island and creating awareness both within the community and the country as a whole.
Latheef Farook is now on a three week long lecture tour to brief the Muslims of the current political situation in the country especially the changes taking place since the 8 January 2015 presidential election which brought Mr Maithripala Sirisena to power defeating former President Mahinda Rajapaksa.He was invited by Harrow based SLMCC, which is considered a centre point for SL Muslims in UK.
The plaque and the certificate of appreciation were handed over to LatheefFarook at this special function by SLMCC  Chair Mr Mubarak Junaideen.
Addressing the gathering during the function the coordinator of LatheefFarook’s visit Mr Lukman Harees who is also a social activist and a writer had this to state;
Latheef Farook is on a visit to UK  to raise awareness regarding the plight of Muslims in Sri Lankans well as the lessons to be learnt from Sri Lanka experience in promoting peaceful coexistence among different communities, and the need for the Sri Lankan Diaspora in UK to support the process of national reconciliation in Sri Lanka
lf-harrow4We , the Sri Lankan Muslim Community in UK wish to place on record our Deep Gratitude and sincere appreciation to Brother Farook for the selfless, courageous and forthright role he has been playing, as a senior journalist, authhor and social activitist, particularly in they filed of media, writing and journalism, in highlighting defending and standing up for the interests and rights of Musims, to live as equal, dignified citizens and their proud heritage and history in Sri Lanka,
Brother Farook, with sheer determination, boundless energy and enthusiasm, in many occasions in the past played a pivotal role at much personal sacrifice of time, energy and financial resources, whenever the interests of the community were compromised by vested interests and when certain extremist elements engaged in a concerted and continuous hate campaign against Islam and Muslims. He continues to play the role with increasing vigour.
He has also used his mighty pen to highlight Muslim issues on the global scene as well, Besides, the books he has authored on these areas of concern, will be valuable resources to thegenerations to come  to understand the immense challenges which Muslims faced with fortitutde,particularlyt in the recent past, both in Sri Lanka and worldwide,in the correct perspective.
Brother Farook is indeed a remarkable and sincere activist who strives in the greater interests of his own community in Sri Lanka in particular and humanity in gerenal.May Allah SWT reward him long life, good health and peace of mind to continue his indefatigable services to promote national reconciliation in Sri Lanka and to humanity.
Meanwhile Brother Farook also spoke to the audience explaining the prevailing politicalsituation in Sri Lanka in its true perspective followed by a lively question and answer session
Ends

Are Women To Be Blamed For Rape?


Colombo Telegraph
By Muhammed Fazl –May 26, 2015
Muhammed Fazl
Muhammed Fazl
And among His signs is this that He has created for you mates from among yourselves, that you may dwell in tranquility with them; and He has put love and mercy between you…” – [Quran – 30:21]
Committed in the name of love of women, out of hatred or as a punishment, incidents of rape are definitely on the rise. While the act of rape needs to be considered as a violation of a woman’s (in most cases) right to her body and honor, and not just as a forced sexual act, it is important to address this burning issue taking into consideration all related matters and in a comprehensive manner, including highlighting the importance of preventive measures.
Vidya Sivayoganathan, a beautiful flower, breathed her last few days back after enduring untold brutalities in a supposedly civilized world. Having attended a candle-lit vigil at Colombo’s Independence Square yesterday in memory of the victim, I believe the need to address and contain this inhumane criminal trend should figure among the top priorities of any government in power.
While seeking home-grown solutions, one must have an open mind and it should be tailor-made to suit our country and society. Civil societies and feminist movements may want the death penalty imposed and or bail denied for suspects, but I am of the view that a holistic approach is needed, hence the need to begin examining,
  • The root causes of rape with emphasis and studies on the mentality of the average local male and of each and every known perpetrator.
  • Exiting laws and traditional preventive measures.
  • Existing and possible psychological counselling facilities for victims.
  • Possible enactments of guidelines/laws for public and private behavior of both sexes.
  • Possible regular media campaigns in protecting the rights and honor of the weaker sex.
  • The possibility of enacting laws against immodesty in dress codes when in public and the possible implementation of laws against nudity and objectification of women for commercial gain on all formats of the media.
  • Suitable methods of punishments and as a deterrent.
Vidya SivayoganathanWhile studies have revealed that male rapists in general don’t suffer from any particular medical conditions that could relate to their violent behavior, I believe contributory factors include sexual deprivation, obsessive behavior, broken families, lack of education, poverty, infidelity in relationships (on the part of their women), jealousy, and hardcore pornography among others. Being introverts in nature and more often than not, identifying or profiling rapists before the crime is committed is in no way an easy task either.Read More

Special court to try those involved in schoolgirl killing

President makes lightning visit to Jaffna



article_image
 
 President Maithripala Sirisena during a sudden visit to Jaffna yesterday assured that a special court would be established to hear the abduction, rape and killing of Sivaloganathan Vithiya, a student at Pungudutivu Maha Vidyalayam on May 13.

 The victim’s body was found close to an abandoned house the following day.

 President Sirisena pledged that maximum possible punishment would be provided to those involved in the gruesome deed. The assurance was given to a group of students during a hastily arranged visit to Jaffna where the police remained on alert to thwart possible fresh wave of protests demanding death penalty for the suspects.

 On his arrival in Jaffna, President Maithripala Sirisena was welcomed by Northern Province Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran.



 The president met students at the Vembadi Girls’ school. President’s Office said that President Maithripala had also expressed regret and offered condolences to the parents of the victim. (SF)

Film on slain Lankan TV journalist banned


UDHAV NAIG-CHENNAI, May 26, 2015

Return to frontpageThe Central Board of Film Certification (CBFC) has refused to certify ‘Porkalathil Oru Poo,’ a film based on real life story of television journalist, Isaipriya, who was allegedly killed in captivity by the Sri Lankan armed forces in the final stages of the civil war in 2009, on the grounds that the film could strain “friendly relations with foreign States.”

 The film director, K. Ganeshan, who is yet to get a formal letter of rejection from the CBFC, protested the decision. “What if Sri Lanka is a friendly State? Are we not allowed to criticise even when its armed forces have committed blatant human rights abuses? Even the Tamil Nadu government has passed a unanimous resolution in the Assembly not to consider Sri Lanka as a friendly nation,” he said.

This narrative around the Sri Lankan civil war has been hotly contested, resulting in a number of films being banned by government and others facing protests from various Tamil groups and parties in the State.
 While the critically acclaimed documentary ‘No Fire Zone’, made by Channel 4, was banned by the Sri Lankan government, Tamil student groups and parties called for a boycott of Santhosh Sivan’s ‘Inam’ and Hindi film, ‘Madras Café, on the pretext that they misrepresented the Sri Lankan conflict and tilted the narrative in favour of the Sri Lankan government.

 Actor S. Ve. Shekar, the Regional Chairman of CBFC, defended the decision saying that the board merely followed the Cinematograph Act.

“Basically, the act is very clear: certification of a movie cannot be given if it could strain friendly relations with a neighbouring country. We have only followed the rule book. We cannot give a certification based on our whims and fancies,” he says. 

“We can argue about what happened during the civil war, but that doesn’t mean that we have to allow a film to be screened. Brutal murders happen in society, but does that mean we can make a film out of it? The director is free to screen the movie outside the country without any cuts,” says Mr. Shekar.

CBFC says “it could strain friendly relations with foreign States”

The Necessity Of Increasing Women’s Political Representation In Sri Lanka

Colombo Telegraph
By Mira Philips –May 26, 2015 
Mira Philips
Mira Philips
In a few short weeks, President Maithripala Sirisena will attempt to pass the20th Amendment to the Constitution, which proposes a number of electoral reforms. There has been much discussion in the media about the impacts of the reforms on political parties, such as introducing a hybrid system ofProportional Representation and First-Past-the-Post, abolishing preferential voting, and adding 30 additional seats to Parliament. However, it is disconcerting to observe that Sri Lankan media and political leaders are indifferent to the amendment’s conspicuous disregard for improving women’s political representation.
Chulani Kodikara (2011) describes the experience of women in Sri Lanka as a “paradox of strong development indicators and weak political representation.” While literacy rates and educational attainment amongst women are high, their representation in the various levels of government is dismally low, especially in comparison to other South Asian countries such as India and Pakistan (Wickramasinghe & Kodikara 2012). Women represent 52% of Sri Lanka’s population, and yet, they account for less than6.5% of parliamentary seats, 6% of seats in provincial councils, and 2% of seats in local government (Ariyaratne 2015). Under-representation globally can be attributed to a number of factors, but the gendered nature of politics and entrenched stereotypes that privilege men as leaders and women as caregivers, have had a sustained impact on women’s exclusion (Wickramasinghe & Kodikara 2012; Krook & Norris 2014).
Sri Lanka is doing fantastically well if it is looking to contest for the title of “Top Country for Excluding Women from Politics.” If this is not the case, then the 20th Amendment presents an opportunity to kick-start a process to improve Sri Lanka’s standing when it comes to women’s political representation and good governance. So, will political leaders seize this moment? Or will they continue down a road that sees half the population on the fringes of the political sphere?                                          Read More    

The rape and murder of Vidya: Do women really matter in Sri Lanka?

Image from Icarus Wept

Sri Lanka president visits Jaffna over gang-rape anger

MailOnline - news, sport, celebrity, science and health stories
By AFP-26 May 2015
Sri Lanka's President Maithripala Sirisena flew to the island's former warzone of Jaffna on Tuesday to defuse rising tensions over the gang rape and murder of a teenager, a spokesman said.
Sirisena met relatives of the 17-year-old school girl killed in the minority Tamil stronghold in the island's north two weeks ago, an incident that sparked clashes between residents and police, who were accused of failing to act swiftly.
"The president invited the mother and brother of the victim to lunch with him and promised speedy legal action against the perpetrators," Sirisena's spokesman Dharmasri Bandara told AFP.

Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena (L) gesturing ahead of a meeting in Jaffna with S. Saraswathi (R) the mother of a 17-year-old school girl who had b...
Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena (L) gesturing ahead of a meeting in Jaffna with S. Saraswathi (R) the mother of a 17-year-old school girl who had been gang raped and murdered some two weeks earlier ©- (Presidential Office/AFP)
The unannounced visit to Jaffna, 400 kilometres (250 miles) north of Colombo, came as police obtained a new court order banning protests for two more weeks fearing further mob violence, after obtaining a similar ruling last week.
However, in the capital Colombo, hundreds of activists staged a peaceful demonstration at a busy intersection to condemn the rape and killing and demanded tough action against those responsible.
"Justice delayed is justice denied, expedite judgments in all rape cases," said a placard carried by two activists.
Sri Lankan courts are notoriously slow and some rape cases are dragged out for 10 years.
Enraged local residents pelted stones at police and a local court house in the Jaffna peninsula last week after the girl's bruised body was found near her home on May 14, one day after she went missing.
Police responded by firing tear gas at the protesters and arresting 130 people who took part, a move that residents said only fuelled anger.
Police said they have since taken nine men into custody but tensions remain high.
The girl's hands and feet were bound and local media have said she was suffocated, although an autopsy report has not been released.
The protests were a rare public outburst of anger in Jaffna since the end of the decades-long separatist war in 2009 between Tamil rebels and the military that left at least 100,000 people dead.
Dharmasri said the president also met with about 200 girls from 17 schools in the Jaffna district to address any safety concerns.
"The president took questions from them and also promised better infrastructure for schools in the area," Dharmasri said.
Police have said the main suspect in the murder is a Swiss national of Sri Lankan origin. The Swiss embassy has said, however, he was a Sri Lankan with a residence permit for Switzerland.
The government has said three senior officers have been transferred from their stations in Jaffna, pending an internal investigation into police handling of the crime.
Sirisena, who came to power in January, has promised to reform the criminal justice system and ensure swift punishment for offenders.
Official figures show about 2,200 cases of rape and other forms of serious violence against women and children are reported annually.
Sri Lankan activists hold placards as they protest in Colombo on May 26, 2015, following the gang rape and murder of a teenage girl in Jaffna
Sri Lankan activists hold placards as they protest in Colombo on May 26, 2015, following the gang rape and murder of a teenage girl in Jaffna ©Lakruwan Wanniarachchi (AFP)
Sri Lankan activists hold candles during a vigil in Colombo on May 24, 2015 following the gang rape and murder of a teenage girl in the district of Jaffna
Sri Lankan activists hold candles during a vigil in Colombo on May 24, 2015 following the gang rape and murder of a teenage girl in the district of Jaffna ©Lakruwan Wanniarachchi (AFP)
Shiranthi to appear before FCID

2015-05-27
Former first lady Shiranthi Rajapaksa has been asked to appear before the police Financial Crimes Investigation Division (FCID) on June 1, over alleged corruption in connection with a bank account of the ‘Siriliya Saviya’ Foundation,MP Namal Rajapaksa told Daily Mirror. An investigation was underway into the bank account of the ‘Siriliya Saviya’, whose patron is the former First Lady.