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

Saturday, July 11, 2015

Jaffna sees sharp fall in number of voters

Image result for Jaffna North provinces
The Jaffna electoral district in the Northern Province has witnessed a sharp drop of over 25 per cent in the number of voters.
Return to frontpageAccording to the 2010 data, this electoral district, covering Killinochchi, too, had about 7.21 lakh voters, which fell to 5.29 lakh in 2014.
The steep decline arouses curiosity as the Eelam War IV was over in May 2009, over a year before the release of the 2010 data.
Explaining the difference, M. M. Mohamed, Additional Commissioner of Elections (Legal and Investigation), told The Hindu on Friday evening that the house-to-house enumeration of electors did not take place properly there till 2010 due a variety of factors. It was only since 2011 a proper enumeration has been carried out annually.
Exclusion of voters

Asked about the chance of eligible young voters being left out, S.K. Sitrampalam, Professor Emeritus of the University of Jaffna, said that as field level officials were doing their job in an exhaustive manner, the chances for omission were “very, very less.”
Manjula Gajanayake, Coordinator of the Centre for Monitoring Election Violence said the entire issue called for a closer study and the organisation would consider taking up such an exercise after the poll authorities released the 2015 data by October.
Apart from Jaffna, the Vanni electoral district, comprising Mannar, Vavuniya and Mullativu, has seen a marginal decline. At present, the number of voters stands at 2.53 lakhs, down from 2.67 lakhs five years ago.
All other 20 electoral districts, including three in the Eastern Province where Tamils and Muslims constitute a majority, have seen varying levels of rise in the population of electors.

Why This Appetite For 225 Plus?


By S. Sivathasan –July 10, 2015 
S. Sivathasan
S. Sivathasan
Colombo Telegraph
A state and a government of worth, place little value on the size of its legislature or the magnitude of its cabinet. The quality of governance and the health of the economy are determined by criteria other than these two. Judged by any standard, no country has ever shown a relationship between representational strength and political stability, economic growth or social peace. Why is Sri Lanka hankering after an increase to 235 or 237 or 255? Is it that a few more heads will make a difference to the wisdom deficit of 225? Why this insatiable appetite for more and more and yet more from independence to now?
Some of the countries which have caught people’s attention may be examined to see whether those societies put their legislatures in perpetual expansion mode to arrive at their current position.
ParlimentUSA – The most powerful democracy in the world, having several firsts to her credit governed in1815 with 183 Representatives. In 1913 there were 435 members. In 2015 governance is with 435 members in the House of Representatives. There are 100 Senators besides. The two Houses exercise checks and balances. Presidential system one would say. But so was Sri Lanka from 1978 to January 2015. The latter had none of these oversights or restraints. In U S there has been no change in the size of her legislature for the last 102 years. The genius of the people made the difference. Ethnic diversity made the country strong.
Sri Lanka purchased a US dollar at Rs.5 in 1975. Today she buys at 27 times the price. This speaks for the weakness of the currency, a good index of the health of the economy. The collective wisdom of 225 legislators brought this about. Now they seek more of the same to redress the deficiency.Read More

You can’t make Lanka’s omelette 

without first breaking SLFP egg

The Sunday Times Sri LankaSunday, July 12, 2015
‘You cannot make an omelette without breaking an egg’ would have been the adage staring in the face of Maithripala Sirisena when he rose at the New Town Hall meeting last November 21st to announce his intention to contest the presidential election and vowed to the nation that he would usher in a new maithri era and root out all the junk in the Rajapaksa trunk in order to do so.

Brutus, Marc Antony, And Maithri

Maithripala Sirisena, Ranil Wickremesinghe and Champika Ranawaka
By Upul Kumarapperuma-Saturday, July 11, 2015
The Roman Empire was plagued by coups, conspiracies and wars nevertheless it was the most formidable Empire in Europe.
Julius Caesar became one of the most decorated war heroes after defeating the slave leader Spartacus and his slave army that had caused much humiliation to the Roman Empire, and was later on crowned as the Empire of Rome.
Caesar formed a political alliance with Crassus and Pompey which dominated Roman politics for several years. However, there was opposition to their political alliance by the conservative ruling class within the Roman Senate. During this period the Roman Empire was extended up to the English Channel and the lands beyond the river Rhine, which caused Caesar to gain enormous military might.
The Roman Senate was perturbed by the political authority acquired by Caesar, which authority was capable enough to veto the Senate.

On The Road To Retrogression


By Rajan Hoole –July 11, 2015
Dr. Rajan Hoole
Dr. Rajan Hoole
Colombo Telegraph
The foregoing contributed significantly to the change of public mood in the South. On 11th January 1996 President Chandrika Kumaratunga addressed a letter to the Army Commander G.H. de Silva with an attached schedule of names of army personnel identified by commissions of inquiry as being responsible for disappearances of persons. These personnel, she said, should be sent on compulsory leave and disciplinary action initiated. She wanted him to report the action taken within a month. This was about the last occasion on which President Kumaratunga took her election pledge on human rights seriously.
When the editor Rohana Kumara was murdered in September 1999, eleven of this country’s leading editors in a statement pointed to the State as the culprit, and the ridiculously ineffective police investigation did nothing to contradict them. But then most of these editors directly or indirectly supported UNP’s Ranil Wickremesinghe for president at the election held shortly afterwards, and some of them had worked openly to subvert any punitive action against security personnel implicated in grave violations, including arbitrary reprisal killings. Are they not rather late in condemning something that they had licensed several years ago? How consistent are they even today?
When the editor Rohana Kumara was murdered in September 1999, eleven of this country’s leading editors in a statement pointed to the State as the culprit, and the ridiculously ineffective police investigation did nothing to contradict them. But then most of these editors directly or indirectly supported UNP’s Ranil Wickremesinghe for president at the election held shortly afterwards, and some of them had worked openly to subvert any punitive action against security personnel implicated in grave violations, including arbitrary reprisal killings. Are they not rather late in condemning something that they had licensed several years ago? How consistent are they even today?
That there was such a letter was first reported in the Island on 28 Feb.96. Among the 200 personnel to be sent on compulsory leave were 4 brigadiers, including Janaka Perera and P.A. Karunatilleke. On 11 Mar.96 Shamindra Ferdinando writing in the Island as part of the campaign against the move said that it will not go ahead. An unnamed army officer was quoted saying, “Who wants to join the army when one is punished for destroying the enemy?” Here was the Press trying to bury mass murder, even the murder of women and children (68 children in the Sathurukondan massacre), under the general nomenclature of ‘enemy’.
That the move had indeed been undermined was confirmed when on 15th April 1996, Janaka Perera and Karunatilleke were promoted to the rank of major general. It was in the divisions of these two generals that disappearances commenced in Jaffna less than 3 months later, after a woman suicide bomber killed Brigadier Hamangoda. The total disappeared ran into several hundreds. The Army was once more beyond the law.Read More


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by Rajan Philips-

Most political societies, to generalize Marx’s writing in 19th century France, are accustomed to circumstances that enable "grotesque mediocrity to play a hero’s part". But over the last two weeks Sri Lankan politics witnessed the spectacle of grotesque mediocrity playing out grotesquely mediocre roles in brokering and nominating candidates for the parliamentary election. There was no heroism, not even hero acting. Manifest blackguards thumped at every scintilla of political decency. The sheer weight and the subversive inertia of the political system has been snuffing out every bit of life from the offspring of hope for good governance that an inspired and a heroic electorate had brought forth on January 8, pushing aside every official obstacle that stood in its way. With due apologies to principled purists for mentioning Marx and Nanayakkara in the same paragraph, I am constrained to re-quote, from last week, Vasudeva Nanayakkara’s intuitive assessment of one of the most heinous betrayals in Sri Lankan politics that was played out over the last fortnight: "The President has given up the January 8 mandate, and has joined us."

If, as Marx also wrote, world-historic facts and personages have a tendency to appear twice, first as tragedy and later as farce, in Sri Lanka historic facts and personages have shown a tendency to repeat themselves multiple times, tragically as well as farcically. And within these cycles, the same individuals are heroic at one moment and mediocre at another. Maithripala Sirisena acted heroically in November last when he broke loose from the Rajapaksa regime to challenge and eventually defeat the incumbent president against all odds. For six months, he conducted himself with dignity and seeming sincerity. But then in the last two weeks he unravelled inexplicably and has become a lame duck waiting for direction from a new Prime Minister after the August election. In January, he achieved something extraordinary in not only defeating Mahinda Rajapaksa, but also securing a victory for the project of good governance. Now he has performed something extraordinarily mediocre. The Maithri-Mahinda moment is, rather was, a moment of grotesque mediocrity.

Maithripala Sirisena was not elected by 6.2 million people to draft the UPFA nomination list, or to resurrect Mahinda Rajapaksa from presidential defeat to a parliamentary victory. He was technically elected on a mandate but most people voted for him mostly because they were fed up with the corruption of the Rajapaksa regime and the swaggering, in-your-face, abuse of power by the Rajapaksa family. Sirisena was elected as President on the promise that the new government(s) under him would investigate and hold to account the perpetrators of corruption under the old regime. How could he expect a UPFA government with Mahinda Rajapaksa, or any one of his cronies, as Prime Minister to continue the investigations against its own members? Imagine the fate that awaits police officers and government officials and lawyers now handling the investigations, in the event of a UPFA/Rajapaksa victory. Imagine, as well, the confusion and vendetta that will spread throughout the government machinery.

Having given away nomination blank cheques to the UPFA bullies, Mr. Sirisena is relying on karma to punish the corrupt and the abusive. Addressing a gathering of Archeologists, the President reminded everyone of the warning in a rock inscription attributed to the reign of King Nissanka Malla: "Those who steal state assets will be reborn as dogs and crows". Now he plans to place this warning on every government desk – starting from his own, to remind politicians and officials their rebirth destiny if they were to steal government money. In other words, it is alright to let every scoundrel run on a UPFA ticket and leave it karma to deal with them if they steal from state coffers. Equally, there will be no need for investigations of corruption because those who are corrupt in government are doomed to be reborn as dogs and crows anyway. Someone might make that argument in the Supreme Court as an argument against double jeopardy.

Double-mediocrity

More to the point, there is double-mediocrity, as well as double-jeopardy of a different kind, in the much celebrated Mahinda-Maithri unity. The smarter option for both men would have been to stay clear of each other, politically speaking, after the presidential election. No one asked Mahinda Rajapaksa to hand over the SLFP leadership to Maithripala Sirisena, but he did so voluntarily. The suggestion that this was done on the advice of Basil Rajapaksa to set a future political trap for Sirisena is rather farfetched to fathom. But the pro-Mahinda (Dinesh-Vasu-Wimal) troika, none of whom is a member of the SLFP, made the SLFP leadership transfer a broader political issue by ill-advisedly and illogically interpreting it as a betrayal of the 5.8 millions who voted for Mahinda Rajapaksa. They formulated the ‘bring Mahinda back’ campaign as a fight to win UPFA/SLFP nomination for Mahinda Rajapaksa and his supporters, and invariably put Rajapaksa and Sirisena on a collision course. In hindsight, a head-on collision would have been politically better for both men than the contrived unity that was forged between them over the last two weeks. A collision would have shown off the two to be at least less grotesque even if not more principled. The forged unity has made them not only look grotesquely mediocre, but also politically vulnerable.

If principled politics, and not the craving for power and perks and positions among the beneficiaries of the old Rajapaksa regime, was the driving motive behind the ‘bring Mahinda back’ campaign, it would have charted a third way independent of the UNP and the Maithri-SLFP. But there is nothing political about the Rajapaksa beneficiaries except their self-interest, and they cannot be in politics without the UPFA apparatus of their benefactor. So they bullied Sirisena to forge the Mahinda-Maithri unity. Now it has backfired on them, because the coalition of forces that was ranged against Mahinda Rajapaksa juggernaut, in January, is now reunited for the August parliamentary election. The August parliamentary election will be a re-staging of the January presidential election, but without Maithripala Sirisena likely playing any role - either as the heroic common opposition candidate or the wounded mediocre president.

Without the Mahinda-Maithri unity, the common opposition parties that supported Maithripala Sirisena in January would have been competing against one another in August election. They were already divided in government thanks to mediocre leadership and self-serving political agendas. There is nothing heroic about their new unity, but they will be seen as much less grotesque and mediocre than the Mahinda-Maithri axis. That axis itself may not last another week, let alone the full campaign. President Sirisena has lost all his allies who supported him in January, and even though he has little credibility left to lose, he is unlikely to campaign for the UPFA candidates that will include Mahinda Rajapaksa. Sirisena has brought political isolation upon himself, but that may be a blessing in disguise inasmuch as he could stay neutral in the campaign. His capacity for silence that deafened the country over the last two weeks may be his greatest asset until August 17.

Polls Chief Gets Tough, Wants Assets Declarations Along With Nominations

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Sri Lanka Brief11/07/2015
Elections Commissioner (EC) Mahinda Deshapriya has requested prospective candidates of the forthcoming Parliamentary polls to hand in their assets declaration forms along with their nominations.An Elections Dept official said that assets declaration could be handed over within three months, but the EC has requested that presenting them along with their nominations would set a good precedence.
Meanwhile, the EC has issued a tough new circular to all heads of State institutions to ensure there is no abuse of State resources by any of the candidates at the forthcoming elections, and warned them against participating in political activities.
He said that, as the Dept had received numerous complaints during past elections that State-owned vehicles, as well as aircraft had been illegally used for election work, those in charge of these vehicles must maintain a strict inventory to ensure these resources are not abused.
The EC also said that, while Ministers, State and Deputy Ministers are allowed to retain their vehicles in their official capacity during the interim period between the dissolution and holding of the election, these vehicles should not be used for election related activity and not display photos or the candidate’s number.
He has also warned against the use of garage numbers on vehicles belonging to State institutions. The EC said no State-owned buildings including schools, holiday bungalows or offices should be used to hold election meetings or house elections offices.
The EC has asked officials not to issue invitations or letters announcing the granting of land deeds, houses, gifts and others things under the guise of conducting State functions, that could be used to induce voters.
Public servants are strictly warned against participation in any political activity during their office hours or during holidays.
All recruitments, transfers and promotions within the government sector too have been prohibited till after the conclusion of the elections
By Chandani Kirinde
ST

Sri Lankan politics-Rajapaksa redux

A general election is called and an ex-president plots his comeback

Jul 11th 2015
GIVE credit to Mahinda Rajapaksa, a former president of Sri Lanka (pictured), for his fighting spirit. In early January voters unexpectedly and narrowly denied him a third successive term in office. An opposition alliance of Tamil, Muslim and disaffected Sinhalese had tired of his authoritarian rule and the presence of several of his brothers in government. Despite steady economic growth, voters disliked inflation, rising debt and blatant corruption. His overly powerful presidency also appeared to threaten democracy.
Rather than accept the end of his political career, however, Mr Rajapaksa has since been plotting his return. After his defeat he gave up both the presidency and his leadership of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), the dominant party of the ruling coalition. His successor in both posts was Maithripala Sirisena, a former colleague. Luckily for Mr Rajapaksa, the new president has shown little authority or resolve.
Mr Sirisena has been slow at delivering on promises made during the presidential election, a problem shared by his ally, Ranil Wickremesinghe, who became prime minister of a minority government. They have faced strong opposition from Mr Rajapaksa, whose loyalists launched no-confidence motions and prevented parliament from agreeing even to routine financial measures, such as a proposal in April to extend government borrowing.
Thus cornered, the new government has achieved little. It did push through a constitutional amendment reintroducing a two-term limit for the presidency, which Mr Rajapaksa had scrapped in 2010. It also removed some of the president’s powers. But it failed to move ahead on promises to overhaul the voting system, shrink government or deliver a right-to-information bill. Worryingly, on July 2nd Mr Sirisena re-established a press council that can wield wide-ranging and punitive powers against journalists, a move that editors condemned as threatening.
In the meantime, Mr Rajapaksa has been rallying supporters, especially in the south of the country. He remains popular among the majority Sinhala Buddhists, notably for his record in leading a victory over Tamil Tiger rebels in 2009, putting an end to civil war. Fans have crowded to his home every day since he left office. He has toured temples, offering flowers to deities and delivering speeches to cheering crowds. In effect he has been campaigning ever since his defeat.
The fact that Mr Rajapaksa’s political fortunes have brightened, however, hardly explains a baffling decision announced on July 3rd by the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA), now headed by his successor and rival, Mr Sirisena. The president had earlier dissolved parliament and called parliamentary elections for August 17th. The UPFA, of which the SLFP is part, said it would field none other than Mr Rajapaksa as its prime ministerial candidate. And, through gritted teeth presumably, Mr Sirisena said he would offer “blessings and advice” to Mr Rajapaksa in the election.
All this smacks of betrayal to those who united behind Mr Sirisena precisely in order to keep Mr Rajapaksa as far as possible from government. The decision came after weeks of negotiations between the two men in which Mr Sirisena evidently lost out. Critics accused him of political skulduggery and claimed that, despite his protestations of being “apolitical”, he cares mostly about the interests of his party, the SLFP. It is likely to do fairly well in elections with Mr Rajapaksa at the front, who is expected to whip up a sense of nationalistic triumph over his war record.
Voters will get their say. To keep Mr Rajapaksa at arm’s length they could instead back the interim prime minister, Mr Wickremesinghe, and his United National Party. However, he has difficulties of his own, notably questions over the behaviour of a friend, the central bank governor, who faces allegations of impropriety in office. It is unlikely that Mr Rajapaksa will be swept aside in the forthcoming polls. A fragmented result, with nobody getting a comfortable majority, is quite possible. If so, much would rest on politicians’ skills at horse-trading and building coalitions of small parties. It is worth remembering that Mr Rajapaksa, with his fighting spirit, has a record of being especially good at that.

First The Party, Then The Country

By Ruvan Weerasinghe –July 11, 2015
Dr. Ruvan Weerasinghe
Dr. Ruvan Weerasinghe
Colombo Telegraph
First a card carrying member of the SLFP, then a Sri Lankan – that’s what President Maithripala Sirisena proved to be in the end. That can also be so for many politicians in the UNP, JVP, JHU or any of the plethora of parties and alliances contesting elections in Sri Lanka. We need to advocate voting for principles over parties in the forthcoming elections.
When President Maithripala Sirisena agreed to give nominations to the very person he took a courageous stand to oppose in the interest of the people of Sri Lanka, he didn’t just let them down. He dealt yet another blow to the Sri Lankan identity.
Sri Lanka has had more than its fair share of thought leaders who espoused diverse forms of identity as valid, or even more potent, than our common Sri Lankan identity. Ranging from the old caste system that still has its proponents even among some educated individuals, to the ‘brown sahib’ that gave us respectability (and jobs) among our colonial masters, we have dabbled in other forms, especially our ethnicity (as espoused by the LTTE and to some extent the JHU) and our religion (by the likes of the more extreme elements of the SLMC and the BBS).
MaithriPresident Maithripala Sirisena, has added yet another identity as a reasonable and valid one to replace our Sri Lankanness. While his unexpected and fearless act of defecting from a party he was so much a part of gave us hope of a statesman emerging in Sri Lanka, his capitulation to be more worried about being accused of splitting the party than letting down the people who voted for him, would probably class him with all politicians before him – not acting truly in the interest of being Sri Lankan first, and card-carrying members of a political party second (or indeed at least third, behind our philosophical worldview). So, he has unintentionally forwarded party as a more important identity for us than our nationality.
The UPFA manifesto
Can there be one? To say that a coherent manifesto is impossible for the UPFA, would be an understatement. When the President of the party still speaks of furthering the steps taken towards good governance (a word that brings distaste to the mouth, Yahapalanaya), and the majority of its top leadership scoffs at it, or more accurately hopes to put do away with it (by possibly stoning the law enforcement agencies of the state), there could be no coherent manifesto for the UPFA – nor even the SLFP.

Presidential election victors regroup for parliamentary polls


* UNP Convention endorses formation of United National Front for Good Governance
* Comprises section of SLFP, JHU, SLMC, left parties, civil society and clergy
* Gas price reduced, relief for three-wheeler drivers, FCIU to be strengthened


by Zacki Jabbar-

A majority of the parties and organizations that propelled Maithripala Sirisena to the Presidency, have regrouped under a common banner to contest the August 17 general election.

 Maithripala and Mahinda| File photoThe formation of an alliance named United National Front for Good Governance(UNFGG), which  comprises a section of the SLFP, the JHU, SLMC, some Tamil and left parties, civil society organizations and leading members of the clergy was approved by a special convention of the UNP held at Campbell Park, Borella yesterday.

Leader of the UNP and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe addressing  the convention said that the UNFGG would contest under the Elephant symbol.

Formation of the UNFGG, he noted, would thwart attempts by corrupt and criminal elements who were rejected by the people on January 8 trying to reverse the path of good governance and rule of law which had been re-established by the current National Government.

Pledging to develop the country, eliminate corruption and provide more relief to the people once a UNFGG government was installed in power on August 17, which Wickremesinghe said was a foregone conclusion, he announced that the Financial Crimes Investigation Unit(FCIU) would be made law so that the ongoing investigations into the massive pilferage of state funds under the Rajapaksa regime could continue unhindered. 

"Our peoples program would include the creation of one million jobs, 48 economic zones and development of the health and education sectors. The University Grants Commission would be abolished and a University Development Board established. We will also provide one million rupees plus Rs.25,000 for funeral expenses to immediate family members  in case of the death of a  three wheel taxi driver, " the Prime Minister said.

Finance Minister Ravi Karunanyake revealed that the price of 12.5 kilogram domestic LP gas would be reduced by Rs 100 with effect from July 15.

From Wednesday Lak Sathosa outlets would also sell a kilogram of rice (white Nadu) at Rs.60 and Ponni Samba at Rs.69, he added.

The Finance Minister predicted that the UNFGG would not only win the Kurunegala District which former President Mahinda Rajapaksa  was supposed to contest, but also secure two thirds of the seat in the next Parliament.

Vice President of the SLFP and Health Minister Rajitha Senaratne who was a confidante of President Srisena said that he along with many SLFPers who were disappointed by a UPFA announcement that Mahinda Rajapaksa who had been accused of corruption being granted nomination, had decided to contest the general election under the UNFGG banner.

Among the  former Ministers, MP’s and Provincial Councilors who would be joining him, Senaratne noted, were M.K.D.S. Gunawardana, Arjuna Ranatunga, Hirunika Premachandra and Sarath Amunugama, in addition to the JHU’s Champika Ranawaka and Ven. Athuraliye Rathana.

Other SLFP’ers who were likely to team up with the UNFGG were Neomal Perera, Hemal Gunasekera, Duminda Dissanayake, Sudarshani Fernandopulle, Wijaya Dahanayake and Earl Gunasekara.

Leader of the SLMC and Urban Development Minister Rauff Hakeem said on Friday said that  his party backed by an Eastern Province based organization campaigning for good governance had entered into an MoU with the UNP to contest the General Election.