Peace for the World

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

Sunday, July 12, 2015

Fear of opening economic borders: Countries to lose instead of gain 

Ken Schoolland addressing the Bastiat Society
logoMonday, 13 July 2015
Untitled-1Fear of opening economic borders
Untitled-2“Don’t harbour fears about opening economic borders. You are to gain rather than losing when economic borders are open.” This was the piece of advice which Ken Schoolland, Associate Professor of Economics and Political Science at the Hawaii Pacific University, left with his audience when he delivered the keynote address at a recent event organised by the Bastiat Society of Sri Lanka in Colombo.
The event marked the publication of selected texts on liberty and economics of Frederic Bastiat, the 19th Century French economist, philosopher and legislator, in Sinhala by the Bastiat Society of Sri Lanka.

Economic recovery: Fact or mirage?

Global capitalism still wobbling seven years after recession began

article_imageby Kumar David- 

The IMF hedged its bets but concluded cautiously on an optimistic note in its 27 April World Economic Outlook document and press briefing. Jan Hatzius, Chief economist at Global Investment Research at Goldman Sachs, says "There is more light than shadow, but it’s a relatively finely balanced picture". The Economist in its June 13-19 issue on whether there is a US and global recovery comes down gingerly on the positive side. They highlight different spanners in the works; the IMF the hangover of debt ("legacy problems"), Hatzius that when the Fed raises interest rates, possibly in September, it will have disruptive global effects, and the Economist that central banks and policy makers have depleted their arsenal of recession fighting tools and will be empty handed if recession returns. I will summarise this variegated picture without reference to last weeks 61.3% vote in Greece against austerity and neoliberal economics, an expression of confidence in Tsipraz-Syriza and shockwaves for Euro, European finance capital and possible Grexit. These topics deserve full length treatment on their own.

Mexican drug lord Joaquin 'El Chapo' Guzman escapes


CNNBy Ed Payne and Don Melvin, CNN-Sun July 12, 2015

(CNN)Mexican authorities have launched a manhunt to find drug kingpin Joaquin Guzman, who has broken out of prison again, the country's National Security Commission said Sunday.
Guards at the Altiplano Federal Prison discovered during a routine check on Saturday that Guzman, known as "El Chapo," was missing, a statement from the commission said.
Guzman escaped through a hole in his cell that led to a lighted and ventilated tunnel nearly a mile long, Mexico National Security spokesman Monte Alejandro Rubido García confirmed Sunday morning at a news conference in Mexico City.
Guzman is the storied boss of one of the world's most powerful and deadly drug trafficking operations.
He escaped in 2001 from a high-security prison in a laundry cart and was not apprehended again until 2014, when he was arrested at a Mexican beach resort.
Speaking to reporters Sunday from France, where he is traveling on a state visit, Mexican President Enrique Peña Nieto avoided mentioning Guzman by name, but said he was closely following news of the escape of a man who has been among the most wanted criminals in Mexico and around the world.
    Peña Nieto said he was "deeply troubled" by "a very unfortunate event that has outraged Mexican society." He vowed that his government would recapture Guzman, step up prison security and investigate whether any prison workers helped the notorious Sinaloa cartel chief break out.
    "This represents, without a doubt, an affront to the Mexican state, but also I am confident that the institutions of the Mexican state, particularly those in charge of public safety, are at the level, with the strength and determination, to recapture this criminal," Peña Nieto said.

    'The world's most powerful drug lord'

    Guzman heads the Sinaloa Cartel, which the U.S. Justice Department describes as "one of the world's most prolific, violent and powerful drug cartels." It says Guzman was "considered the world's most powerful drug lord until his arrest in Mexico in February 2014."
    "The Sinaloa Cartel moves drugs by land, air, and sea, including cargo aircraft, private aircraft, submarines and other submersible and semi-submersible vessels, container ships, supply vessels, go-fast boats, fishing vessels, buses, rail cars, tractor trailers, trucks, automobiles, and private and commercial interstate and foreign carriers," the Justice Department said earlier this year.
    The trafficking network keeps U.S. drug agents busy. In January, the Justice Department unsealed indictments naming 60 members of the cartel, including Guzman's son, Ivan Archivaldo Guzman-Salazar, aka "El Chapito."
    The main indictment said the cartel imported cocaine, methamphetamine, marijuana, other drugs and the chemicals necessary to process methamphetamine into Mexico from various countries, the U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of California said in a news release.
    The drugs were then smuggled into San Diego for distribution throughout the United States, the statement said, adding that money was then laundered through a variety of means.
    In just one phase of the investigation, which the Justice Department said spanned eight countries and a dozen U.S. states, authorities seized more than 1,400 pounds of methamphetamine, almost 3,000 pounds of cocaine, 12.2 tons of marijuana and 5,500 oxycodone pills, along with $14.1 million.
    Also this year, federal authorities announced: Thirty-one people were charged in February withconspiring to launder $100 million for the Sinaloa Cartel in a cash-for-gold scheme; Jose Rodrigo Arechiga-Gamboa, an alleged Sinaloa kingpin who goes by "Chino Antrax," pleaded guilty in federal court in May to helping coordinate the shipment of tons of marijuana and cocaine into the U.S.; and last month, U.S. officials announced indictments against a Baton Rouge, Louisiana-based trafficking network with ties to Sinaloa.

    Toluca International Airport closed

    In Mexico, the diminutive Guzman became a larger-than-life figure as he eluded authorities while expanding a drug empire that spanned the world. His life story became the topic of best-selling books and the subject of adoring songs known as narcocorridos.
    In the United States, he is wanted on multiple federal drug trafficking and organized crime charges.
    His nickname, which means "Shorty," matches his 5-foot-6-inch frame.
    The statement from the National Security Commission said that, at 8:52 p.m. Saturday, surveillance cameras at the Altiplano federal prison saw Guzman approaching a shower area in which prisoners also wash their belongings.
    When Guzman was not seen again for some time, officials checked his cell, found it empty, and issued an alert.
    Altiplano is a maximum security prison in south central Mexico.
    Officials not only launched a manhunt, they also closed Toluca International Airport, a 45-minute drive away.

    Ukraine government in armed standoff with nationalist militia

    Government forces barricade bases of Right Sector, which has helped it battle pro-Russian forces, after gunfight reportedly killed two people
     Ukrainian servicemen guard entrance to the western city of Mukacheve, after fighting between police and Right Sector fighters took place on Saturday. Photograph: Janos Nemes/EPA
     in Moscow-Sunday 12 July 2015
    Soldiers and police have been locked in a standoff with a nationalist militia in western Ukraine after a gun and grenade battle that left at least two dead.
    Tensions have been rising between the government and the Right Sector militia that has helped it fight pro-Russian separatists in the east of the country.
    A Right Sector spokesman, Taras Kuzyak, told Ukrainian media on Sunday that seven infantry fighting vehicles had blocked the entrance to Right Sector’s base near the town of Skole in Lviv region, adding that law enforcement was similarly cutting off access to other Right Sector bases in western Ukraine.
    The move came after a gunfight broke out on Saturday, when about 20 Right Sector gunmen arrived at a sports complex controlled by MP Mikhail Lano. They had been trying to stop the traffic of cigarettes and other contraband, a spokesman for the group said.
    Near the city of Mukacheve, the site of a fierce gun battle involving Right Sector fighters, private security guards and police on Saturday, Right Sector members were camped in the forest and did not plan to put down their weapons, spokesman Artem Skoropadsky said. It was previously reported that police had surrounded some gunmen in a wooded area and were attempting to negotiate their surrender.
    Lano said a Right Sector commander had met him to ask his help in arranging sanatorium stays for men who had fought in eastern Ukraine, during which time an unknown man was shot outside. According to local medical staff, nine people were wounded, including three passersby, in addition to the fatalities.
    A video published by journalist-turned-MP Mustafa Nayyem on Sunday shows Right Sector fighters firing Kalashnikov rifles and a heavy machine gun mounted on a pickup truck, apparently in the direction of police who had arrived on the scene. Another piece of footage shows a police car burning.
    About 200 people rallied in support of Right Sector outside the presidential administration in Kiev, many of them in military uniforms.
    Kiev has allowed nationalist groups including Right Sector to operate despiteallegations by groups such as Amnesty International that Right Sector has tortured civilian prisoners.
    Despite an official ceasefire that started in February, the conflict in eastern Ukraine continues to simmer. Two Ukrainian soldiers were killed and five wounded in the past 24 hours, a spokesman for Kiev’s “anti-terrorist operation” said on Sunday.

    The Anna Reese cop-kill: Impunity of elites reigns over justice in Thailand

    View image on TwitterAnna Reese speaks to police after last month's fatal accident. Image via Bangkok Post.
    Anna Reese speaks to police after last month’s fatal accident. Image via Bangkok Post.

    By Alexandra Demetrianova-By  Jul 10, 2015
    It wasn’t an extraordinary story to begin with. A deadly car crash in a country where 26, 000 people die on the roads every year, it comes as no surprise that yet another person died due to speeding and road racing. Also in the context of Thailand, there hadn’t been a major celebrity involved. Anna Reese, the Thai-English actress who rammed her speeding Mercedes into a parked car, where a policeman was resting, is a “B-list” celebrity in Thailand’s show business and celebrity culture. Not even a police officer killed in an accident or assault is an unusual news in Thailand. What really made the headlines was what came after, which doesn’t come a surprise in Thailand. On the contrary, it underlines the inequality and special treatment some get in the Kingdom, and how money and power decide justice.

    China and Russia Lay Foundation for Massive Economic Cooperation

     China and Russia Lay Foundation for Massive Economic Cooperation
    BY REID STANDISH-JULY 10, 2015
    In he past decade, Beijing and Moscow have been more competitors than partners. But that relationship may now be changing as Russian and Chinese leaders are considering combining their two countries’ regional economic projects — the Eurasian Economic Union and the Silk Road Economic Belt, respectively.
    While meeting at a two-day summit of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization in Ufa, Russia, Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping are reportedly discussing a framework that would merge China’s multi-billion dollar network of roads, railways, and pipelines through Central Asia with the Eurasian Union, the post-Soviet economic bloc that includes Armenia, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, and Russia. The two projects would be combined under the auspices of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, and if the proposal is completed, it would make the opaque organization the preeminent economic body from Shanghai to St. Petersburg.
    “For the first time there is a working group on this topic and at the moment the merger of the two projects seems feasible,” Alexander Gabuev, senior associate and the chair of the Russia in the Asia-Pacific program at the Carnegie Moscow Center, told Foreign Policy. The proposal would combine the regulation of the Moscow-led bloc with the deep pockets of China, which has already invested more than $50 billion in Central Asia. Piggybacking on the Eurasian Union’s joint customs space could drastically reduce costs for shipping products from China to Europe, with goods only having to cross one unified tariff zone before entering the European Union.
    “There is a strong commercial logic for this plan, it’s not just about geopolitics,” said Gabuev.
    Formed in 2001 by China, Russia, and four Central Asian countries, the SCO was originally created to settle border disputes between members. Successful in its original task, the bloc has taken many forms in the following years, from development to counterterrorism, but has struggled to play a defining role on any one issue.
    Leaders at Ufa approved applications by India and Pakistan to join as full members of the SCO on Friday, and Russia hopes Iran will join after United Nations sanctions on Tehran are lifted. “A reinvigorated SCO fueled by a China-Russia partnership could suddenly make the organization very relevant,” said Luca Anceschi, a Central Asia expert at the University of Glasgow.
    State media in both countries are already trumpeting the cooperation proposal and the SCO, with the Chinese state news agency Xinhua calling it a blueprint for “cooperation and prosperity of the whole Eurasian continent.” That marks quite a departure from Moscow and Beijing’s previous tug of war over influence in Central Asia.
    As Putin has found himself isolated from the West and his economy weakened by sanctions and falling oil prices, the Kremlin has aimed to bolster its relationship with Beijing. Russia’s pivot east has come mostly in the form of energy deals, exemplified by a gas deal last year worth more than $400 billion. Moscow also joined the Beijing-led Asian Infrastructure Investment Bank this year, and is in talks at the Ufa summit to start a new development bank under the SCO, a proposition that Moscow had previously nixed for fear of giving China too much power in its sphere of influence.
    But under these new circumstances, Russia is recalibrating its position in Central Asia and other parts of the former Soviet Union. “The Eurasian Union has not been the success Moscow hoped it would be,” said Anceschi. Since coming into effect in January, the bloc has been marred by trade disputes between Belarus, Kazakhstan, and Russia and has not delivered the economic stimulus promised to its members. “The Kremlin knows that they won’t be able to compete with Chinese investment,” said Anceschi. “Russia simply can’t catch up.”
    Russia is instead aiming to retain its influence as the security guarantor in the region, keeping its sway in the region through military bases in Central Asia, arms deals, and the Collective Security Treaty Organization, a security bloc of former Soviet countries. This formula satisfies both China, which is wary of deploying troops beyond its borders, and Central Asian countries used to a Russian military presence. “Under this arrangement, China would be the bank and Russia would be the big gun,” said Gabuev.
    Despite the roadmap being drawn in Ufa, the agreement still faces major obstacles before coming into effect. According to experts, the Russian leadership is divided on anchoring itself so firmly to China. On one side, pragmatic technocrats within the Russian government view cooperation with China as an economic necessity given Moscow’s falling out with the West, its inability to match Beijing’s deep pockets, and the fact that Russia needs Chinese investment. But the Russian security organs remain wary of how an unimpeded China could erode Russian influence. At least for the moment, the pragmatic camp seems to winning the argument.
    Host photo agency / RIA Novosti via Getty Images

    European talks over Greece resume, but compromise remains elusive

    The Greek Parliament backed down in its confrontation with the country’s creditors.
     
    ATHENS — Bitterly divided European officials were trying to salvage hopes Sunday of averting an imminent financial collapse in Greece, squaring off in a fresh round of talks over how or whether to give this Mediterranean nation its third bailout in five years. 
    The meeting set up a day that could rapidly define the future of the world’s most ambitious currency union, the euro. Meeting in Brussels, finance ministers from the 19 nations of the euro zone were unable to come together during a marathon round of talks that broke off in the early morning, exposing the deep fault lines that have developed in recent days over rescuing Greece and the price other nations must pay to allow it to stay in the euro.
    Greeks overwhelmingly voted against a strict bailout package proposed by the E.U. Here is how that affects Greece and the United States. (The Washington Post)

    European finance ministers temper optimism over the possibility of a Greece bailout deal. (Reuters)

    Nobel winner Malala opens school for Syrian refugees

    Nobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai participates in the Oslo Summit on Education for Development at Oslo Plaza, Norway July, 7, 2015. REUTERS/Vegard Wivestad Grott/NTB ScanpixNobel Peace Prize winner Malala Yousafzai participates in the Oslo Summit on Education for Development at Oslo Plaza, Norway July, 7, 2015.REUTERS/VEGARD WIVESTAD GROTT/NTB SCANPIX
    ReutersBEKAA VALLEY, LEBANON Sun Jul 12, 2015
    Malala Yousafzai, the youngest winner of the Nobel Peace Prize, celebrated her 18th birthday in Lebanon on Sunday by opening a school for Syrian refugee girls and called on world leaders to invest in "books not bullets".
    Malala became a symbol of defiance after she was shot on a school bus in Pakistan 2012 by the Taliban for advocating girls' rights to education. She continued campaigning and won the Nobel in 2014.
    "I decided to be in Lebanon because I believe that the voices of the Syrian refugees need to be heard and they have been ignored for so long," Malala told Reuters in a schoolroom decorated with drawings of butterflies.
    The Malala Fund, a non-profit organisation that supports local education projects, paid for the school in the Bekaa Valley, close to the Syrian border. It can welcome up to 200 girls aged 14 to 18.
    "Today on my first day as an adult, on behalf of the world's children, I demand of leaders we must invest in books instead of bullets," Malala said in a speech.
    Lebanon is home to 1.2 million of the 4 million refugees that have fled Syria's war to neighbouring countries. There are about 500,000 Syrian school-age children in Lebanon, but only a fifth are in formal education.
    Lebanon, which allows informal settlements on land rented by refugees, says it can no longer cope with the influx from Syria's four-year conflict. One in four living in Lebanon is a refugee.
    The U.N. says the number of Syrian refugees in neighbouring countries is expected to reach 4.27 million by the end of the year.
    "In Lebanon as well as in Jordan, an increasing number of refugees are being turned back at the border," Malala said. "This is inhuman and this is shameful."
    Her father Ziauddin said he was proud she was carrying on her activism into adulthood.
    "This is the mission we have taken for the last 8-9 years. A small moment for the education of girls in Swat Valley: it is spreading now all over the world," he said.
    Malala was feted with songs and a birthday cake. Moved to tears by the girls, she was modest when asked for advice.
    "They are amazing, I don't think they need any message, I don't think they need any other advice because they know that education is very important for them."

    (Editing by Digby Lidstone)

    7 Healthy Reasons to Eat Flaxseeds Every Day

    7 Healthy Reasons to Eat Flaxseeds Every Day
    Healthy and Natural WorldJuly 9, 2015
    Humans have been using flaxseed for 30,000 years and it still offers some amazing health benefits today. Flaxseeds are one of the best sources of lignans which are the compounds responsible for many of the health benefits associated with adding flaxseeds to your daily diet.

    Lignans are unique fiber type compounds that offer antioxidant benefits, provide vital fiber for the diet, and mimic natural estrogen within the body. Flaxseeds contain an abundance of omega 3 fatty acids, they are also high in vitamin B1, selenium, and they are an excellent source of copper.[1]
    Flaxseed is also one of the superfoods mentioned in my e-book about superfoods which is part of the Natural Health Revolution Program. This program will help you to achieve your health, nutrition and weight loss goals.
    Some of the health benefits associated with adding flaxseeds to your daily diet include:

    Flaxseeds for Heart Health

    Cholesterol has become a vital indicator of overall cardiovascular and heart health. Managing your cholesterol levels is vital for ensuring a healthy heart. A clinical trial published in the Journal of Nutrition[2] showed that individuals who consumed 30 g of milled flaxseeds as part of their diet had lower LDL cholesterol levels than those who consumed cholesterol lowering medication on its own.
    The cholesterol lowering effects of flaxseeds may be attributed to the increased fiber in flaxseeds and to the fact that flaxseeds are high in healthy omega 3 fatty acids in the form of alpha-linoleic acid.

    Flaxseeds for Metabolic Syndrome

    Metabolic syndrome has been identified as one of the underlying causes of the development of cardiovascular disease and type II diabetes. Characterized by high blood pressure, high blood sugar, and an excess of body fat around the waist, metabolic syndrome poses a threat to your overall health.[3]
    Metabolic syndrome can rob you of energy, leave you feeling fatigued, and can threaten your health in the long term.
    The Journal of Nutrition published a trial showing that lifestyle counseling and the addition of flaxseeds to your daily diet can help you to manage and reduce the symptoms of metabolic syndrome by reducing central obesity.[4]

    Flaxseeds Help to Reduce Inflammation

    Inflammation is becoming a huge problem for health. The inflammatory process is a natural part of the healing process, but diet, toxins, and free radicals result in too much inflammation in the body. Inflammation can damage the body, the arteries, the joints, and the tissues if you don’t regulate the process efficiently. It is therefore becoming vital to learn to control inflammation and to include nutrients in your diet that can help to reduce inflammation in your body.
    Flaxseeds are not only high in lignans, but are also an excellent source of omega 3 fatty acids. PloS ONE reports a study that shows that the addition of dietary flaxseed to the daily dietary intake of individuals suffering from hypothalamic inflammation, helped to reduce the inflammation and fat deposits in those individuals.[5] You can also consume these foods that reduce inflammation.

    Flaxseeds Increase your Antioxidant Protection

    The need to protect yourself from the damage caused by oxidation and free radicals is becoming more and more important as researchers identify inflammation and free radical damage as the underlying causes of diseases like ovarian cancer, cardiovascular disease, and arthritis.
    Oxidants and free radicals damage your body, cause premature aging, increase the inflammation in your body, and may play a role in the development of various forms of cancer. With the added toxins in our diets and environment, ensuring your diet is high in natural antioxidants has become a vital part of supporting overall health (read more about antioxidants in my article about 9 amazing antioxidants for great health).
    The Journal of Gynecologic Oncology published a study indicating that a flaxseed enriched diet decreased the incidence of ovarian cancer in poultry hens by reducing the production of prostaglandins.[6]

    Flaxseeds Improve Digestive Health

    Digestion is often the first key to supporting optimal health. The food you eat and the supplements you take all begin in the digestive tract and it is only through efficient digestion that your body can absorb these nutrients.
    Flaxseeds are high in healthy fiber which ensures that the nutrients you eat remain in the GI system long enough to ensure the healthy absorption of nutrients. Fiber also supports bowel health and plays an important role in reducing or relievingconstipation. You can also try these 8 natural methods to treat digestive problems, or these 10 herbal teas to improve digestionor this delicious digestive detox smoothie.

    Flaxseeds Help Reduce Menopausal Symptoms

    The active ingredients in flaxseeds are classified as phytoestrogens. Phytoestrogens are plant based compounds that mimic the functions of estrogen in the body. Flaxseeds can therefore be helpful for allowing you to supplement your natural levels of estrogen in the body.
    In a study on the efficacy of flaxseeds for reducing menopausal symptoms, researchers found that the consumption of flaxseeds helped to reduce menopausal symptoms when compared with a placebo.[7] You can also read about these 10 herbs and nutritional supplements for menopause.

    Flaxseeds and Insulin Resistance

    Insulin resistance is one of the major factors in metabolic syndrome and arteriosclerosis and it is the main underlying cause of diabetes. Insulin resistance occurs when cells no longer accept insulin and glucose. This means your cells cannot produce the energy you need to be healthy.
    In another trial on flaxseeds, the Journal of Nutrition found that the consumption of flaxseeds decreased insulin resistance in obese glucose intolerant individuals.[8]

    How to consume Flaxseeds

    Flaxseeds come in two varieties, golden or brown. Both types offer similar health benefits, but it is important to realize that flaxseeds need to be ground in order to take full advantage of all they have to offer, as when eaten whole they are more likely to pass through the intestinal tract undigested. You can grind the flaxseeds using a coffee or spice grinder.
    The recommended daily intake is 3 tablespoons of ground flaxseed. To take advantage of the benefits of ground flaxseeds, add them to yogurt, smoothie, salad, sandwich and baked goods to increase your daily intake of these healthy seeds. Baking flaxseeds in your bread or muffin does not change the health benefits offered by these tiny seeds.
    Read my other related articles:
    Sources:
    [1] http://www.whfoods.com/genpage.php?tname=foodspice&dbid=81
    [2] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25694068
    [3] http://www.mayoclinic.org/diseases-conditions/metabolic-syndrome/basics/definition/con-20027243
    [4] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20826632
    [5] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22279596
    [6] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23707669
    [7] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22925074
    [8] http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/21554710

    Saturday, July 11, 2015

    Provincial Journalist Receives Death Threats

    DSCN3936-300x116
    Sri Lanka Brief11/07/2015
    Provincial journalist Augustine Fernando has received death threats for exposing the activities of some individuals illegally charging parking fees on Weavers Road in Chilaw.
    Both police and UC authorities claim they are ignoirant of anyone charging parking fees for vehicles parked down Weavers Road
    Residents living down Weavers Road in Chilaw complain that certain persons are using the road as an illicit parking lot for visitors to the District General Hospital. They added that they are unable to take action against those parking their vehicles along the road as unknown individuals are charging parking fees from vehicle owners. Vehicle owners claim a man stationed at the ‘parking lot’ charges a parking fee of between Rs. 20 to 50 per vehicle. Residents however say they are greatly inconvenienced by the haphazard manner in which these vehicles are parked.
    The individual collecting parking fees claimed that his employer had won a tender for this purpose. He added they also had the approval of the Chairman of the Urban Council (UC) as well as the Chilaw Police.
    Residents said they did not blame vehicle owners as they pay a parking fee, however they pointed out that parking fees could be charged if a proper parking area was available. Besides residents, shop-owners on Weavers Road too complained that the parking of vehicles hindered their business.
    Residents’ added that complaints to both the police and the UC had proved to be futile. The UC Chairman when contacted insisted no individual had been given permission to park vehicle down Weavers Road or to charge parking fees. He added he would not hesitate to take action against any individual who engaged in such illegal activities.
    Assistant Superintendent of Police Chilaw Mr. S.S. Wickramasuriya, said police would not permit such illegal activities to continue and would be taking action in this regard. However while no action has been taken regarding the ongoing illegal parking lot, senior journalist Augustine Fernando who exposed the illegal activity has received death threats via three members of the local underworld.
    According to the complaint lodged by Mr. Fernando at the Chilaw police station, the person collecting parking fees at Weavers Road had informed him they were operating with the approval of the Chilaw police and Chairman of the Urban Council.
    He had also requested the journalist not to report the problem but suggested they meet subsequently to ‘discuss’ the problem. He had also suggested a payment of a substantial sum could be arranged in order that the matter not be highlighted.
    Mr. Fernando rebuked the man for attempting to bribe him. He also demanded the man call a halt to the illegal activities which were causing endless trouble to residents and shop-owners alike. He then left.
    On June 26, Mr. Fernando visited the area with the intention of taking photos re the collection of parking fees for vehicles.
    On June 30 the man collecting parking fees from the illegal parking lot, accompanied by two men called at Mr. Fernando’s house and informed him they had the approval of the police and the Chairman of the urban council to charge fees for parking vehicles at Weavers Road. They also threatened Mr. Fernando with death if he continued to report on the issue and warned him they would lodge a complaint with the police claiming he was making false charges against them as they refused to pay him the Rs. 50,000 he had demanded.
    Senior Superintendent of Police Chilaw, Palitha R. Siriwardena is inquiring into the complaint.
    S


    LogoSri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe today promised power devolution to the island's provinces as part of the reconciliation process with the minority Tamils ahead of the August 17 parliamentary election. 

    His government would look to devolve power in an undivided island, Wickremesinghe said. 

    The Tamil minority has been urging for power to the north and east provinces since the LTTE's military campaign ended in 2009. 

    The said the private lands acquired for military purposes in the former conflict zones will be returned to their owners after the election. 

    Wickremesinghe made the remarks - being seen as his first policy statement for the polls - while addressing his United National Party (UNP) special convention which adopted a resolution to work as a broader political front to pursue good governance and democracy. 

    The convention of the UNP, that was President Maithripala Sirisena's main backer in the January presidential election, came after his decision this week to allow former President Mahinda Rajapaksa to run for the August 17 from his party. 

    Sirisena, who branded Rajapaksa as a corrupt leader and resisted calls to allow him back, has also agreed to give party tickets for all Rajapaksa loyalists who face corruption charges. 

    The decision shocked the UNP and Sirisena's civil society allies, who blamed Sirisena for betraying the cause for good governance. 

    Angered by his decision to bring back Rajapaksa, a Sirisena loyalist Rajitha Senaratne said a group of them were leaving him and would align with the UNP to contest the election. 

    "We can't get on the same platform with corrupt and murderous elements. So we have decided to join UNP's front for good governance," Senaratne said. 

    Arjuna Ranatunga, the former world cup winning cricket captain and a key Sirisena ally in the January election, is also said to be contemplating a move to leave Sirisena and join the UNP front.