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

Thursday, June 4, 2015

Phoenix mosque protest exposes America's disintegrating society 


As America continues its journey to becoming a militarised third world nation, rightwing militias and extremist groups will continue to expand 
CJ Werleman's pictureCJ Werleman-Tuesday 2 June 2015
On Friday, 250 mostly armed “protestors against Islam” encircled a mosque in Phoenix, Arizona. Jon Ritzheimer, the organiser and avowed atheist, called the event a “patriotic sign of resistance” against what he deemed the tyranny of Islam in America.
Home“My aim is to expose the true colours of Islam,” Ritzheimer told CNN’s Anderson Cooper.

Fifa scandal: England 'is ready' to host 2022 World Cup

Culture Secretary John Whittingdale says England is ready to host the 2022 World Cup if it is stripped from Qatar in the wake of allegations of corruption and bribery in Fifa.
Channel 4 News
THURSDAY 04 JUNE 2015
John Whittingdale said the case for re-running the 2022 bidding process is "very strong" if investigations show the original process was corrupt.
FBI and Swiss authorities are investigating bribery and corruption at Fifa, including scrutiny of how football's governing body awarded the two tournaments to Russia and Qatar.
Speaking in the Commons Mr Whittingdale said "if Fifa came forward and asked us to consider hosting it, we have the facilities in this country and of course we did mount a very impressive, if unsuccessful bid to host the 2018 World Cup." He said: "If there is evidence the bid process was corrupt then I think the case for re-running it is very strong."
However the culture secretary backed FA chairman Greg Dyke's observation that since the 2018 World Cup is being hosted by Russia, it may be unlikely that another European nation would be granted the 2022 edition.

Chuck Blazer
Chuck Blazer (Credit: Reuters)

Not going quietly

The culture secretary spoke as the scandal engulfing Fifa continued to unfold.
Overnight it was revealed that former top Fifa executive Chuck Blazer admitted bribes were paid to senior officials to vote for the 2010 and 1998 World Cups.
Plea bargain details published by the US Department of Justice revealed that Blazer admitted taking bribes totalling $10m for South Africa to host the 2010 World Cup and an undisclosed sum for Morocco's unsuccessful bid to host the 1998 tournament.
Hours later former Fifa vice president Jack Warner, who is wanted by US authorities, claimed he would reveal the "secrets" about the scandal and had documents linking Blatter and other officials to the 2010 election in Trinidad and Tobago.
This morning South African officials have announced their own investigation into the alleged bribes.
News

'Stinking sink of corruption'

Mr Warner is one of 14 senior football officials and businessmen arrested last week, which has exploded into a scandal that led to Tuesday's resignation of newly re-elected Fifa president Sepp Blatter. It is unclear what exactly caused Mr Blatter to throw in the towel but there are reports that he has also been placed under investigation.
Shadow culture secretary Chris Bryant said: "With the news from Chuck Glazer and Jack Warner, isn't it increasingly evident that Fifa is a stinking sink of corruption and it has polluted everything it touched?
"Would it now not be wholly inappropriate for any money to pass from UK broadcasters in respect of 2018 or 2022 unless and until Blatter has actually left - rather than just declared he is leaving - Fifa is reformed and the 2018 and 2022 bids are rerun?"
Mr Whittingdale replied: "I share your astonishment that even today the new claims being made by Jack Warner, this whole saga becomes more murky and distasteful by the day." He added, "however, if the World Cup goes ahead then I think it would be unfair to tell English fans, and indeed fans of the other home nations if their sides qualify, that they would not be able to watch their sides compete in the World Cup because the broadcasters were not going to purchase the sports rights to cover it... The important thing is we get this cleared up long before we actually get to the World Cup in 2018."

Physicist Stephen Hawking says he would consider assisted suicide

June 4 
 Renowned physicist Stephen Hawking would consider assisted suicide if he felt he had become a burden to those around him or if he had nothing more to contribute to science, he has said in an interview.
Hawking, who suffers from motor neurone disease and has used a wheelchair since the 1960s, also said he sometimes gets “very lonely” because people can be afraid to talk to him, or can’t listen to him answer.
Hawking’s illness, which is also known as Lou Gehrig’s disease, has slowly paralyzed him over the decades. He now communicates using a single cheek muscle through a speech synthesizer.
Hawking, 73, made his comments in an interview for a new program for the British Broadcasting Corp., the London Times newspaper reported Thursday.
“To keep someone alive against their wishes is the ultimate indignity,” Hawking said in the interview. The physicist, whose bestselling book “A Brief History of Time” spent 237 weeks on the British Sunday Times bestseller list, used to oppose assisted suicide, but he said he has changed his mind.
“I would consider assisted suicide only if I were in great pain or felt I had nothing more to contribute but was just a burden to those around me,” he said in the interview. He added, however, that at the moment, he still had scientific contributions to make. “I am damned if I’m going to die before I have unraveled more of the universe,” he said.
One of Hawking’s best known scientific theories is the notion that black holes emit radiation, which has become known as Hawking radiation. He has been the recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom, America’s most prestigious civilian award.
The scientist, who has traveled widely, has been married twice and has three children. His early life — he was told at the age of 21 while studying at Oxford University that he had only two years to live — was depicted in the 2014 autobiographical film, “The Theory of Everything.” Despite his disabilities, and his difficult communication style, Hawking is known as a man with a serious sense of humor.
He told the BBC that he was not in pain but suffers from discomfort because he cannot adjust his own position in his wheelchair. The interviewer, Dara O Briain, who has a degree in theoretical physics, praised Hawking for his “impressively honest answers, even to the most direct questions.”
Asked by O Briain if he ever gets lonely, Hawking answered: “At times I get very lonely because people are afraid to talk to me or don’t wait for me to write a response. I’m shy and tired at times. I find it difficult to talk to people I don’t know.” The scientist is currently testing a more sophisticated communication method.
It is illegal in Britain to help people end their lives. Britons who wish to do so often travel to the Dignitas clinic in Zurich. So far, however, no one has been prosecuted for helping someone end his or her life there.
A new bill in Britain’s House of Lords has been presented to change the law to allow doctors to prescribe lethal doses of medication for terminally ill patents who have six months or less to live.

Posted in Healthy BodyHealthy Living by  on 21 May 2014 
Instant Healthy LivingAbout 9% of women suffer from iron deficiency, according to the latest research, but strangely, the figure is even higher in physically active women, experts say. Find out what can cause iron deficiency and be aware of the following 10 warning signs.

Fatigue

The body uses iron to make hemoglobin – the substance in the red blood cells that take oxygen. When your body don’t have sufficient healthy blood cells, you start to feel weak and too tired.
fatigue

Inability to focus

The synthesis of neurotransmitters may be modified in people with iron deficiency, leading to less functionality than usual.

Apathy

Another consequence which occurs as a result of the change in the synthesis of neurotransmitters? Apathy towards everything and here is included – friends, family, work, and even the last episode of your favorite series.

You remain without breath

This can happen whether you’re in the gym or simply walking to your car, but why? Without enough iron in the blood, the body becomes hungry for oxygen.

Unusually pale skin

pale woman
You look like you have come out of Twilight? It’s not exactly a good sign. Pale appearance may be a consequence of decreased blood flow and decreased number of red blood cells.

Problems in carrying out your normal daily training

You struggle to make at least the minimum exercise of your usual schedule, even thinking to quit exercising forever? Low iron levels may be the reason for your suffering endurance.

A terrible muscle pain

pain
Even if you manage to go to the gym when you don’t feel like doing exercises, you probably feel exhausted much earlier than usual. Iron deficiency deprives the ability of the muscles to heal properly, leading to severe pain.

Brittle nails

Even the sweetest manicure and pedicure can not hide the thin, brittle nails. Another sign that could indicate a possible lack of iron in the blood is spoon shaped nails.

Frequent infections

If you frequently get sick – especially if you ever suffer from respiratory diseases, iron deficiency could be the culprit for that.

Pink or red urine

red urine
I saved the strangest for last. Beeturia is what happens when you eat red beets and your urine gets red. Although this is the case in 10-14 percent of the healthy people, this figure is much higher in people with iron deficiency, and is caused by increased absorption of certain pigments.

Wednesday, June 3, 2015

‘‘There is a window of opportunity’’





2015-06-03
The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) parliamentarian and well-known Constitutional lawyer M. A. Sumanthiran says that his party emerged to voice the grievances of the people of the North and East but was ready to expand its activities to other parts of the country and would be involved in national politics. Mr. Sumanthiran who is based in Colombo and plays a vital role in the TNA as a bridge between the North and the South says though there are certain obstacles there is a window of opportunity for true reconciliation and long lasting peace.  Following are the views he shared with the Dailymirror:

Beyond accountability: the struggle for co-existence in Sri Lanka

The promised report of a UN investigation into war crimes in Sri Lanka will achieve little unless accompanied by real introspection by both Tamil and Sinhala communities.

by Ahilan Kadirgamar and Mahendran Thiruvarangan
Courtesy: Open Democracy
( June 3, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Sri Lanka’s civil war ended in May 2009. For years, the lack of accountability for the grave human rights abuses committed during the last phase of the war has seemed for many actors to be the sole issue of concern. Powerful states, international human rights organizations, vocal sections of the Tamil diaspora, alongside some NGOs and courageous activists in the country, brought increasing international pressure to bear on the authoritarian Rajapaksa regime. This culminated in March 2014 when the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) established an investigation into the violations during the war.
The UN report is likely to be released in September. In January 2015, a wide spectrum of Sri Lankan society democratically overthrew the Rajapaksa regime, electing a new government under President Maithripala Sirisena. It is uncertain how it will respond to the UN report and whether it will pursue accountability. What is certain is that the international effort for accountability and the national debate about it have both been deeply politicized. The UN report itself may do little to promote the introspection by both Tamil and Sinhala communities that is so urgently needed to achieve genuine reconciliation.
Geopolitical reasons, particularly the proximity of the Rajapaksa regime to China, led the United States to sponsor the UNHRC resolution against Sri Lanka. The report it called for was to have been published in March 2015. But when President Sirisena was elected, interventions by powerful western states and India led the UN to delay publication, giving the new government a chance to pursue its own investigations. However, Tamil nationalist sections both in Sri Lanka and in the diaspora vehemently protested even this modest delay.
For the survivors, accounting for the war affected, for the dead and the disappeared, is necessary. But their calls for truth and for engagement with the UN investigation are mediated by nationalist politics and by the interests and agendas of the international human rights community. Such politicisation and internationalization of the lives of the survivors disregards their socio-economic suffering that continues after the war; or it attempts to equate this suffering solely to attacks by the state.
Indeed, accountability is linked to memory, to the past and also to the future. It requires collective introspection on the part of communities. It is precisely such introspection that is lacking in Lankan society, particularly among the nationalists in the Sinhala Buddhist and Tamil communities. Their nationalist propaganda, alongside western portrayals of Sri Lanka as a place only of ethnic conflict, and where only war crimes and accountability appear to matter, debilitates processes of truth-seeking and polarises communities.
An earlier report by a panel mandated by the UN Secretary-General in March 2011 alleged that in the last months of the war the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) held thousands of Tamil civilians as hostages, forcibly recruited youth and children, and killed many who attempted to escape. Public reflection by Tamils on these LTTE atrocities is necessary to chart an alternative political path for the future; and to change the Sinhala community’s views on the genuine grievances of minorities as distinct from the LTTE’s politics. The LTTE’s brutal attacks against Sinhalese and Muslims during the civil war need to be acknowledged by the Tamil community, no less than the Sinhala community needs to recognise the brutality of the state which led to the alienation felt by many Tamils. Unfortunately, Tamil nationalists avoid such reflection, and attack or attempt to isolate Tamils critical of the LTTE; this further stifles critical thinking.
In southern Sri Lanka, Sinhala-Buddhist nationalists use anti-imperialism as a convenient cover to avoid examining the abuses of the State; including the many massacres, indiscriminate attacks on civilians, and the torturing and disappearing of thousands, which are etched in the minds and bodies of the Tamil survivors of the war. While it is true that the interests of powerful western states and other emerging powerful states shape the agendas of supranational organizations like the United Nations, political engagement in Sri Lanka cannot be in opposition to imperialism alone. The struggle is at many levels including vigilance against imperialism, challenging the majoritarian national security state and so-called “liberation movements,” all of which undermine the rights and aspirations of the people.
Local understandings of human rights and accountability are shaped by the discourse on these issues by both the state and nationalist forces at home, and powerful actors including NGOs abroad. For instance, when the LTTE took advantage of the Norwegian-mediated ceasefire and peace process in the 2000s, and persecuted Tamil dissenters and recruited children, the failure of local and international human rights organizations to initially register their protest gave human rights a bad name. Similarly, today, these organizations remain silent on the polarizing discourses propagated by Tamil nationalist actors in the name of accountability, including when they brand Tamils who seek to engage the state and the Sinhala community as traitors.
A local human rights group, the University Teachers for Human Rights (Jaffna) consistently throughout the war recorded the abuses by all actors, the Sri Lankan state, the LTTE and the other armed groups. While it exposed some of the worst human rights abuses, UTHR(J) also saw its role as opening the space for dissent and introspection among Tamils. Similarly, future human rights initiatives, whether they are local or international, should recognize that it is only when communities mutually engage through self-criticism that processes of accountability can lead to their co-existence.
In Sri Lanka, addressing the historic grievances of minorities and the legacy of the long civil war and its aftermath are mammoth tasks. The oppression of women, the social exclusion of oppressed castes, the exploitation of the rural and urban under-classes – all must be addressed. All citizens of Sri Lanka, not just those in the north and east who survived the war, will benefit from the reform of a militarised and centralised state, the democratisation of an authoritarian political culture and an end to the dispossession of marginalised peoples. Discussions on the political future of Sri Lanka, which often reduce the national question to a Sinhala-Tamil ethnic conflict, should recognize the history of exploitation faced by the up-country Tamils (who came as colonial indentured labor from India). It should address too the mass violence that the Sri Lankan Muslim community suffered at the hands of both Sinhala-Buddhist and Tamil nationalist forces.
The UN investigation and report can polarize as much as reconcile. It is the work of progressive local actors willing to take a resolute stand including by challenging the state, chauvinistic forces within their own communities and powerful international interests, which will ultimately determine the UN report’s lasting impact.

‘What is represented and what is made invisible’: Women and Transitional Justice Processes in Sri Lanka

During a recent conversation about campaigns to eliminate violence against women, and the participation and role of women working at the community level in these campaigns, particularly their ability to influence and shape the form and manner of these initiatives, a friend, who for many years has worked on issues of violence and justice, mentioned she was concerned about ‘what is represented and what is made invisible’ in the narratives about these campaigns. Her question, which pushes us to probe whether initiatives to eradicate violence against women are inclusive, participatory and responsive, can be extended to ascertain the nature of broader transitional justice processes as well.

SL Navy deploys Sinhala extremist BBS to keep Tamils away from Champoor

Image result for SL Navy

TamilNet[TamilNet, Tuesday, 02 June 2015, 22:39 GMT]
On the invitation by the occupying Sri Lanka Navy in Trincomalee, Sinhala Buddhist extremist monks belonging to Bodu Bala Sena (Buddhist Power Force) have been exerting pressure on the Sri Lankan Police in Moothoor to keep the uprooted Tamils away from their lands in Champoor, informed sources in Trincomalee said. The BBS has also been exerting pressure on the Sri Lankan Gateway Industries (SLGI) to file complaints with the SL Police to maintain the status quo of occupation until the final verdict is issued on the on-going court case. 

The BBS monks visiting Champoor have taken photographs of Tamil landowners cleaning their lands and handed over these to the SLGI as documentary evidence to be submitted to the courts stating to argue that the SL police has failed to ‘protect’ the property of SLGI before a final verdict is issued by the court. 

The SL police have earlier informed the courts that the people have been only accessing their lands during the daytime. 

The uprooted people are now being instructed by the SL police not to access their lands till the court case is over. 

In the meantime, Tamil National Alliance (TNA) parliamentarians R. Sampanthan, M.A. Sumanthiran and Suresh Premachandran, are under criticism for compelling the protesting people to abandon their protest. 

The TNA parliamentarians have given false assurances to the people that they could go back to their lands, the uprooted people complain.

Developments in South and Central Asia

Remarks

Richard E. Hoagland
Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary, Bureau of South and Central Asian Affairs
U.S. Department of State - Great SealWashington International Business Council
Washington, DC
June 2, 2015
When I look at the map of South and Central Asia in my office, I see a region that is truly at the world’s crossroads – spanning vital sea lanes to the south and burgeoning trade routes and energy flows to the north. So this is a region not just at a geographic crossroads, but also at the crossroads of global economic and strategic trends. In the year since Assistant Secretary Biswal spoke to you, we have seen some important developments throughout the region, which I’d like to briefly review before we jump into discussion.

SL govt. & GTF to meet in London tomorrow night!

gtf 1 Wednesday, 03 June 2015
The Sri Lankan government and the Global Tamil Forum will have a meeting tomorrow night in London, according to reports reaching Lanka News Web through a reliable source.
The Sri Lankan government will be represented by foreign affairs minister Mangala Samaraweera, while the TNA MP, advocate S. Sumanthiran and GTF spokesman Suren Surandiran will also take part. In addition, a representative of the South African government too, will be present, says the source.
Coordinator of the meeting on behalf of the Norwegian government is Erik Solheim.
This meeting will elaborate on the human rights report on Sri Lanka to be released at the UNHRC session in Geneva in September and the action needed to be taken. This will be the first in a series of meetings arranged in this regard, said the source.

EU puts a spoke in GoSL’s wheel


Judicial executions

Image result for executions

By Shamindra Ferdinando-

The European Union opposes Sri Lanka resuming judicial executions under any circumstances.

Well informed sources said that the EU had strongly advised successive governments against resumption of judicial executions and there was no change in that stance. Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government, too, was also told to continue with moratorium on capital punishment, though the public pushed his government on the issue.

President Maithripala Sirisena on Monday said that those who had been found guilty of drug trafficking in the country should be given capital punishment. Addressing a gathering at the BMICH to mark international no-tobacco day, President Maithripala Sirisena said that he would seek public opinion before taking a decision.

Soon after the new administration took office in January, Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe declared in Kandy that the new government wouldn’t hesitate to re-implement the death penalty to fight what he called a crime wave.

The declaration was made soon after he paid courtesy calls on Mahanayakes of Asgiriya and Malwatte chapters. However, there hadn’t been any further statements by government politicians until President Maithripala Sirisena proposed the death penalty for a specific offense.

The northern public as well as many others called for resumption of judicial executions in the wake of recent rape and murder of a Jaffna schoolgirl. Deputy Minister of Higher Education and Research Dr. Sudarshini Fernandopulle admitted that she wasn’t aware of an understanding between Sri Lanka and the EU as regards suspension of death penalty. The Island sought her comments in the wake she calling for death penalty for those responsible for the Jaffna schoolgirl’s killing. The deputy minister promised to raise the issue with relevant authorities.

Sri Lanka suspended judicial executions many years ago in accordance with an understanding with the EU.

Well informed sources told The Island that the then head of the European Union delegation in Colombo Bernard Savage in early November 2012 reiterated to the then Justice Minister Rauff Hakeem, the EU’s strong opposition to resumption of judicial executions.

The meeting took place in the wake of persistent calls for the resumption of judicial executions.

Sources said that SLMC leader Hakeem had assured Ambassador Savage that a committee headed by a retired High Court judge would be appointed to pave the way for death sentences to be commuted to prison terms.

Ambassador Savage, who had been also the top EU representative for the Maldives, pointedly told Minister Hakeem that Sri Lanka and the Maldives hadn’t carried out judicial executions since 1976 and 1953, respectively. Ambassador Savage had said that the EU expected the moratorium on the death penalty in Sri Lanka to remain.

Minister Hakeem said that Tissa Karaliyadda, Minister of Child Development and Women’s Affairs had urged the Justice Ministry to look in to the possibility of imposing capital punishment on those found guilty of child abuse.

Pakistan lifted moratorium on death penalty in the wake of a terrorist suicide attack on a school recently in spite of strong objections from the EU. Pakistan ignored EU’s demand to halt judicial executions. Pakistan suspended judicial executions in 2008.

During Chandrika Kumaratunga’s tenure as the president, she declared on Nov 20, 2004 that capital punishment would be implemented with immediate effect for rape, murder and narcotics-related cases. This followed a Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) call to implement the death penalty following the assassination of Colombo High Court Judge Sarath Ambepitiya. This was the BASL’s immediate response to Ambepitiya’s killing.

Kumaratunga on three separate occasions before the last Parliamentary Elections in April 2004 announced that she would resume judicial executions though her promise was never kept.

The Delegation for Relations with South Asia and SAARC of the European Parliament led by Gerard Collins, at the end of their six-day visit in March 2001 declared, "We urged President Kumaratunga to abandon the decision to resume judicial executions. We totally reject judicial killings.


The pledge to implement the death penalty in the aftermath of Ambepitiya’s assassination was the fourth instance since Parliament, in1995, adopted a private member’s motion by the then PA MP Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra calling for the immediate implementation of capital punishment. A few days later, the then Justice and Constitutional Affairs Minister G.L. Peiris declared that there had been no firm decision on it.

Rape: A Human Issue


Colombo Telegraph
By Rashantha N. de Alwis-Seneviratne –June 3, 2015
Rashantha N. de Alwis-Seneviratne
Rashantha N. de Alwis-Seneviratne
A young girl, in the morning of her life, was brutally raped and killed in Jaffna. The cruelty and sadism of this particular incident impacted on the entire country and not just on the northern community. Rape, on its own, is a cruel act and not unknown in Sri Lanka but the heinous nature of what took place and that the perpetrators were young boys – not hard-nosed criminals or inebriated men, made the entire nation gasp in disbelief. Why and why the viciousness of the attack and of all places in Jaffna, miles away from the wicked, bustling city of Colombo, were questions from the mouths of many.
Yet, rape is commonplace and endemic in some societies. Since the Stone Age, women have been viewed as possessions of first, their fathers and then of their husbands. Rape of women or youths was common in Greek mythology. Roman Law was more progressive in that it did recognize rape as a crime if it were committed against a citizen but not of a slave. Attitudes changed with the Christianization of the Roman Empire: The first Christian emperor Constantine, redefined rape as a public offence rather than as a private wrong, which made the victim an accomplice and was disinherited, irrespective of the wishes of her family. Rape laws in the modern day attract strict penalties but whether they adequately punish the offender and can ever be a sufficient deterrent, are moot points.
Rape mapWhile Lesotho leads the World, Sweden has the highest incidence of rape in Europe, alongside of the US, New Zealand and Colombia in South America. Egypt has the lowest rate of rape.
One commonly believed myth is that rape is primarily a sexual act. Persons with this belief often place the victim on trial. Her motives, her dress and her actions become suspect not only to law enforcement officials but also to her family and friends. The woman’s credibility may be questioned and her sexual activity and private life may be made public. Often, the media highlights the incident rather than the crime itself and the grossly anti-social behaviour of the rapist. In the recent horrendous rape and subsequent death of a medical student in New Delhi, where she was gang raped by four people in a bus, the lawyers for the rapists were of the unbelievable view that ‘she asked for it by going in the bus at that time in the night’- the time in question being 9 p.m. In their opinion, prevention or avoidance of rape was the responsibility of the victim.

Rape and Murder of Vithiya

Two grey areas that need to be cleared

by Gunadasa Amarasekera
( June 3, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) It is rather unfortunate that our politicians or political analysts have so far not attempted to make an in-depth analysis of this dastardly crime which has incited such violent reaction, almost a revolt against the State. What must be inhibiting them may be the possible charge of arousing racial hatred that would be leveled against them especially at a time when we are all out to go ahead with reconciliation. But if reconciliation is to be based on truth, fear of such baseless charges should not deter us from unravelling the truth.