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 25, 2015

When War and Weather Conspire

In an increasingly vicious cycle, conflict pushes people from their homes — then floods or landslides force them out of the U.N. tents where they took shelter.
When War and Weather Conspire
BY LAUREN WOLFE-JULY 24, 2015
Asawamp is a bad place to live in tents. Mud turns to rivulets or dirty streams when rains come, breeding mosquitoes and the diseases they carry. Thin mattresses soak through, leaving people to sleep in water teeming with waste.
For as many as 70,000 people in Bentiu, in South Sudan’s northern Unity State, this has become the norm. Since 2013, the country’s protracted civil war has forced residents to flee their homes as armed groups attack townswith extreme brutality. But without an entrenched, well-planned emergency infrastructure that can handle the displaced, internal refugees have been forced to head to the nearest United Nations camps. These sites have sprung up in some inhospitable places in a makeshift effort to give some protectionto an increasingly vulnerable population. In Bentiu’s case, a camp was built under emergency conditions in a wetland. And when the rains come, life in the swamp becomes exactly what you might imagine: miserable.
In midsummer of last year — the height of the rainy season in South Sudan — things got so bad for the displaced in Bentiu, “people were living knee-deep in floodwater contaminated with raw sewage,” Doctors Without Bordersreported. “Many slept standing up, their children in their arms.” Some simply had to flee. Again. The number of people infected with malaria rose, and 175 latrines collapsed, increasing the threat of a cholera outbreak.
The refugees in Bentiu weren’t alone. By mid-August, the U.N. Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs estimated that about 70 percent of the 1.3 million people displaced by war in South Sudan were living in flood-prone sites.
What the Bentiu camp faced is being called a “toxic cocktail” by the authors of a new report on displacement due to natural disasters, published by the Geneva-based Internal Displacement Monitoring Center on Monday. That label refers to what happens when people displaced by war end up being struck again, this time by Mother Nature. “It’s rare in sub-Saharan Africa that someone is displaced only once,” says Alexandra Bilak, the head of policy and research at the center and one of the authors of the report.
Populations struck by both war and weather are hardly confined to Africa, however. More than 70 percent of areas affected by severe flooding in Bosnia in 2014 had been laid with landmines during the war in the early 1990s, and 700 homes belonging to refugees were destroyed, the government’s Deputy Security Minister Mladen Cavar told Deutsche Welle. And in Afghanistan’s Helmand and Herat provinces, a third of displacements in 2014 were due to the combination of ongoing conflict and drought or other natural disasters.
The effects of repeated displacement are devastating on both personal and community levels, Bilak says. They also pose major challenges in terms of figuring out how to provide help: “The needs of these people — where do you start?”
The problem is only growing.
The number of people displaced by disasters has risen by 60 percent in the last four decades, IDMC has found. (In the last seven years, the group estimates, one person was displaced every second.) Worldwide, 38 million people were internally displaced because of conflict as of the end of 2014, and 19.3 million were uprooted by natural disasters. Perhaps most alarming, however, is that 13 of the 33 countries labeled “fragile” and “conflict-affected” by the World Bank — including Afghanistan, Somalia, and Sudan — suffered “significant new displacement” because of both natural hazards and conflict in 2014. (To answer the obvious question, it does seem that climate change is playing into this situation and will continue to make it worse: According to a 2014 report from the Brookings Institution, in the not-distant future, climate change will “result in large-scale movements of people,” for which “developing states will bear the greatest costs.”)
The instability caused by one crisis makes the impact of another worse, creating a vicious loop that seems difficult to break. “It’s not Mother Nature to blame,” says Alfredo Zamudio, director of the IDMC. “If it was a peaceful situation with good governance, laws that could have reduced people’s vulnerability [in a natural disaster] would have given [them] access to safe areas.”
The fragility of a state affects its response; a vacuum often exists in which there is no ready response system with evacuation plans, habitable areas for temporary resettlement, and channels of aid. The “frequent, toxic mix” of both conflict and natural hazards “complicates the quickly changing, insecure, and highly politicized nature of the problem,” says Zamudio. “People in a complex setting navigate through an archipelago of conflicts and disasters. Displaced people seek shelter from one place to the next, and humanitarian actors have often a complicated task to gain access, identify, and then reach people in greatest need of assistance.”
Perversely, for those who have already been displaced by war, natural catastrophes can sometimes trap them in a disaster zone, making them hard to reach. People without documentation papers, which includes many refugees, cannot move safely when a new crisis hits, says Aurélie Ponthieu, a humanitarian advisor on displacement for Doctors Without Borders. When floods hit Thailand at the end of 2011, for instance, the affected area was in chaos and difficult to physically navigate. Hundreds of Burmese asylum seekers were too afraid to flee, lest they be arrested or extorted because of their lack of documents. “The main challenge was actually finding them,” says Ponthieu.
The combination of conflict and natural disaster often exposes the most vulnerable people in a population to new nightmares. For example, when floods struck rural areas around the city of Pasto, Colombia, four years ago, it was at a time when armed groups were still recruiting children as soldiers, according to UNICEF. During the flooding, schools were hurriedly turned into shelters, leaving kids without a daily, supervised routine, and therefore more vulnerable to recruitment, Zamudio explains. Flooding can also wipe out people’s land and thus livelihood, leaving a gap for armed drug traffickers to move in and either steal land or recruit people to their ranks. As previously secure areas succumb to new pressures, “whoever is there will use the displaced people as a laboratory of influence,” Zamudio says.
It’s critical to disrupt this laboratory, or stop it from existing in the first place, in order to protect the already marginalized: ethnic minorities, children, and women, for instance, who are disproportionately affected by poor response mechanisms and political manipulations in both war and other disasters. Evidence shows that pre-existing inequality can mean these populations bear the brunt of a state’s weak capacity or willingness to provide assistance; they often lack access, for example, to things like well-built shelters or temporary housing. (Developed countries are not immune to this problem, at least on the natural disaster side of the equation. Research shows that Hurricane Sandy hit New Jersey’s Latino and African-American populationsparticularly hard in 2012; thousands of families are still displaced because of difficulties getting loans and other assistance. Meanwhile, in Canada, First Nation communities are still living in hotels after 2011 floods in Manitoba, according to the IDMC.)
But the solutions are not solely material. Indeed, internal displacement won’t just go away because emergency humanitarian aid is thrown at it, Zamudio points out: “The answer is not technical — food and water.” Rather, there needs to be sustainable solutions to bringing people home, no matter the reasons they are displaced, and to preventing others from being forced from their homes in the future. An emphasis needs to be placed on development, the IDMC argues: better governance, transparency, investments in livelihoods, and stronger infrastructure. And while the main responsibility for all this lies with national governments, the international community “needs to keep governments responsible for displacement situations,” Zamudio says, through diplomacy and dialogue about legal protection frameworks for the displaced.
He adds that the world has a duty to help people who’ve been hit with misery not just once, but two, three, or even more times because of war followed by earthquakes, landslides, drought, and other catastrophes. “It’s one of the strongest moral responsibilities the world can have,” Zamudio says. Left on their own, the most vulnerable have no means of permanent rescue: “If we are ever going to be able to say to ourselves, ‘We have done our best,’ we should never leave those people behind.”
Photo credit: Ivan Lieman/AFP/Getty Images

Crime and Punishment of China’s Rights Lawyers


Lawyers detained on July 10. Photo: http://www.hrichina.org/chs/reng-ran-shi-zong-huo-ju-liu-de-wei-quan-lu-shi-he-huo-yue-ren-shi
By Mo Zhixu, published: July 23, 2015
This commentary was written and published in March 2014 in connection with the Jiansanjiang incident (建三江事件) in which four rights lawyers went to Heilongjiang province to free Falun Gong practitioners from a black jail. The lawyers were tortured and temporarily detained. Dissident intellectual Mo Zhixu’s observations about the political climate in China (paragraph 3 onward) stand out even more today in light of the recent large scale arrests of rights lawyers.   – The Editors

Azerbaijan puts imprisoned journalist Khadija Ismayilova on trial

Human rights groups say charges against investigative reporter are politically motivated after series of stories about president’s financial dealings
Khadija Ismayilova, a reporter for Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, inAzerbaijan. Photograph: Aziz Karimov/AP
Charles Recknagel for RFE/RL, part of the New East network
Friday 24 July 2015
After almost eight months behind bars, the trial of Azerbaijani investigative journalist Khadija Ismayilova on charges of libel, tax evasion, illegal business activity and abuse of power has begun in a Baku court.
Ismailova’s trial started today in the Azerbaijani capital’s Sabayil district court of grave crimes, the semi-official APA news agency reports. The presiding judge rejected two motions brought by Ismailova’s defence attorney, one to dismiss the criminal case and another to provide for audio and video recordings of the proceedings.
International human rights organisations, Ismayilova, and her supporters say the charges against her are politically motivated and are a form of retribution for her extensive reporting on the financial dealings of the president, Ilham Aliyev, and his family.
There have been widespread calls for the release of Ismayilova, a contributor to Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty. The Pen American Center in May awarded her its Barbara Goldsmith Freedom To Write Award, given annually to “an imprisoned writer persecuted for exercising her right to free expression”.
Ismayilova said in a letter from prison published in the New York Times that Azerbaijan is in the “midst of a human rights crisis”. She urged the international community to press Aliyev to release all political prisoners in the country.
The editor of RFE/RL,Nenad Pejic, said Ismayilova’s imprisonment “has nothing to do with any wrongdoing or law, it is about silencing Khadija and RFE/RL, by any means necessary, period.”
Ismayilova was taken into custody in December. Originally she was accused of trying to persuade another journalist to take their own life. Eventually, prosecutors charged her with libel, tax evasion, illegal business activity, and abuse of power. Her arrest followed a series of investigative reports that proved deeply embarrassing to the Aliyev administration.
Ismayilova’s investigations focused on apparent nepotism within the highest levels of Azerbaijan’s ruling establishment. In August 2010, for example, she wrote that the privatisation of many state airline services, including a bank, had completely bypassed procedures to ensure transparency. 
Citing official documents, she and co-reporter Ulviyye Asadzade claimed that the bank’s new owners included relatives of highly placed officials; oneArzu Aliyeva, a daughter of President Aliyev; the other Zarifa Hamzayeva, wife of the airline’s head.
In another high-profile investigation, Ismayilova suggested that the first family was personally profiting from the construction of a new $134m concert venue, the Crystal Hall, which was being prepared to host that year’s Eurovision Song Contest.
Ismayilova’s investigative reporting played a role in an Azerbaijani government crackdown on RFE/RL. Authorities raided the Baku bureau in December without explanation and sealed it shut. They confiscated company documents and equipment, detained bureau staff without legal representation, and later expelled the bureau’s legal counsel from court proceedings.
RFE/RL closed the bureau in May, but continues to broadcast to Azerbaijan from its headquarters in Prague.

Verizon wireline workers authorize strike amid contract negotiations

Verizon workers take part in a rally as they negotiate a union contract in New York July 25, 2015. REUTERS/Eduardo MunozVerizon workers take part in a rally as they negotiate a union contract in New York July 25, 2015.-REUTERS/EDUARDO MUNOZ
ReutersBY MALATHI NAYAK-Sat Jul 25, 2015
Verizon Communication Inc's (VZ.N) wireline unit workers on the U.S. East Coast have voted to go on strike, if needed, amid contract negotiations, the unions representing them said on Saturday.
At a rally in New York, the unions announced that 86 percent of Verizon's 39,000 wireline employees have voted to authorize a strike. This comes a week before their current contracts expire on Aug. 1.
The vote to strike does not mean work in the wireline business, which includes FiOS Internet, telephone and TV services, will come to a halt as the board of the unions Communications Workers of America (CWA) and International Brotherhood of Electrical Workers that represent the employees have yet to approve it.
“Our members are clear and they are determined – they reject management’s harsh concessionary demands, including the elimination of job security, sharp increases in workers' health care costs, and slashing retirement security," Vice President for CWA District One Dennis Trainor said in a statement.
The company's union-represented employees in the East work under 27 collective bargaining agreements in nine eastern states in the United States and Washington D.C. Verizon's plans to cut costs by controlling healthcare and pension-related benefits over a three-year period are at the center of union negotiations.
"Union rallies and strike authorization votes are useless distractions that achieve nothing," Verizon spokesman Rich Young said. "We believe their time would be far more beneficial focusing on the important contractual issues that need to be resolved."
Verizon said in late June it offered salary hikes to 39,000 employees in its East wireline business after its first negotiating session with representatives of the two unions.
The wage increases were subject to an agreement between the company and the unions. In 2011, the last round of talks had ended in a strike.

(Reporting by Malathi Nayak)

How security experts protect themselves online

A man types on a computer keyboard in Warsaw in this Feb. 28, 2013 illustration file picture. (Kacper Pempel/Files)
By Andrea Peterson-July 24
With news of a big hack almost every week, the Internet can be a scary place. So how's an Internet user supposed to stay safe?
One strategy is to mimic how security experts watch out for themselves. And luckily, a new paper from researchers at Google outlines some of the steps they take to keep their systems safe.
The paper outlines two surveys — one with nearly 300 non-expert Web users, and another with about 230 security experts -- asking them how they stay safe online.
Here are a few of the top safety practices the experts used:
1. Install software updates quickly. When someone discovers a problem in software and discloses them to the developer, they push out patches that fix them. Those fixes block up digital holes that can give hackers backdoors into your system -- and often, these can be set up automatically.
The experts reported installing software updates much quicker than the non-experts, and said it was an important part of staying safe. Some 35 percent of the experts said installing them was one of their top three security practices -- but just 2 percent of non-experts said the same thing, according to the paper.
Some non-expert Web users told the survey that they were worried that automatic updates could be abused to install things like malware.
2. Use unique passwords. With a password manager. It's no secret that passwords are a pain in the neck. And with the rolling tide of breaches, reusing a password could leave other parts of your online identity at risk if one service is breached. That's probably one of the reasons that 25 percent of experts in the survey cited using unique passwords as part of their top three online safety practices, vs. 15 percent of non-experts.
And experts were much more likely than non-experts to usepassword managers to help keep those unique passwords in line -- with 73 percent of experts using them for at least some of their online accounts vs. 24 percent of the non-experts. Password managers are tools that store encrypted versions of your passwords, making it easier to keep track of the dozens of robust, unique passwords that are needed to keep a modern digital life up and running.
But non-expert users seem wary of them, according to the paper, voicing concerns that the password managers themselves might be hacked -- which isn't without precedent. “I try to remember my passwords because no one can hack my mind,” one survey respondent said.
3. Go beyond a password with two-factor authentication.No matter how you store passwords, though, experts were more likely to want an added layer of protection: Two-factor authentication. It works by using a second step, often a code that's texted to your mobile device, that users then use to verify their logins. Most of the big online services offer it -- here's a handy Web site that keeps track of your different two-factor options.
Nearly 90 percent of the experts used two-factor on at least one of their accounts, compared with 62 percent of the non-experts according to the paper.
 
Andrea Peterson covers technology policy for The Washington Post, with an emphasis on cybersecurity, consumer privacy, transparency, surveillance and open government.

Are China’s anti-pollution policies already bearing fruit?

Pollution in Beijing, pic: Michael Henley (Flickr CC)
Miners shovel coal at a mine in China's Hebei province. Pic: AP.Pollution in Beijing, pic: Michael Henley (Flickr CC)
By  Jul 24, 2015
Graham LandI’ve written plenty — especially in recent weeks — on China’s air pollution problem and efforts to improve air quality in the country’s choked provinces and megacities. Just checkherehere and here.

6 URINE COLORS THAT TELLS YOU HOW YOUR BODY WORKS !
6 URINE COLORS THAT tells you how your Body Works.
Usually the extent of our knowledge about urine coloring is, the lighter the color, the more hydrated you are and the darker it is the more dehydrated you are… but there is so much more, read and find out.
6 urine colors that indicate your health
1. Dark Yellow /Amber
This color is not bad is fine, however like we mentioned above, you may want to increase your daily intake of water! When your body is releasing water-like urine, it means that it can afford to lose some water from your body.
2. Murky Urine
When your urine appears milky or murky, you may have a urinary tract infection of kidney stones.
This one is hard to identify so if you suspect your urine is abnormal, we suggest popping over to see your doctor.
3. Pink / Red Tint
If you didn’t have beets, blueberries or rhubarb for lunch or dinner last night, then this color urine could reveal that there is blood present in your urine.
This could mean nothing, however it could also be an early symptom of kidney disease, a urinary tract infection or tumors.
4. Syrup Colored or Brown
This color of your urine could indicate that you’re suffering from some type of liver disease.
If this is the regular color of your urine, we highly recommend you visit a Doctor.
5. Orange
This orange is a bright orange that can sometimes be caused by dehydration, but it differs from a dark yellow because it also indicates that you could have a liver or bile duct infection.
6. Normal Urine
There is a large range of colors due to the fact that everybody is different!
Everyone’s body digests food differently and everyone has a different diet to begin with! You should generally have yellow pee, anywhere ranging from a dehydrated amber, to completely clear with a slight yellow tinge.

Friday, July 24, 2015

British Tamils commemorate Black July pogrom
23 July 2015
 
(Photos: Tamil Guardian)
The massacre of thousands of Tamils at the hand of Sinhala mobs, known as Black July, was marked on its 32nd anniversary with a vigil outside Downing Street in London.
British Tamils gathered outside the prime minister's residence and lit candles in remembrance of those who died in 1983.
The crowd was addressed by Mr P Sathiyaseelan, a long-standing activist and friend of many of those who lost their lives, including political detainees Kuddimani and Thangathurai, who were murdered in Welikada prison by Sinhala prisoners, during the violence which engulfed large parts of the south of the island.
Recounting his experiences during the time of the riots, Mr Sathiyaseelan stressed the need for accountability for all crimes that occurred in the long-running conflict, including those of Black July, which saw government officials colluding with the mobs to hunt down Tamils in Colombo and other areas.

"Only an international tribunal can bring justice for the genocidal crimes that were committed, not only by the Rajapaksa-regime, but also by previous regimes," Mr Sathiyaseelan said.

JVP: A Collective Conscience & An Accord


Colombo Telegraph
By Sarath De Alwis –July 24, 2015
Sarath De Alwis
Sarath De Alwis
The working class did not rise like the sun at an appointed time. It was present at its own making” – E.P. Thompson
The third force has ended the age of complacency that has lasted for 67 post independence years. In the process, the JVP has promised the country something that we never realized as missing. The party that chose to abdicate armed rebellion in carefully crafted eloquence has now conceptualized what has been absent in the politics of patronage practiced since independence – a liberated citizenry.
JvpThe front cover depicts a wooden ladle of rice on a background of a pleasing shade of red. The red is soothingly subdued and holds out the promise of a new dawn. The title reads ‘ An accord of Conscience’ – the national programme ‘. A legend below explains that the conscience is that of the ‘Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna’ implying that their ‘conscience’ and that of our land is more or less the same. This writer is inclined to agree.
The political document unveiled by the JVP is a spirited attempt to infuse a moral and intellectual urgency for the dismantling of ‘politics as usual’ and ‘patronage politics’ practiced for the past 67 years. The Sinhala prose is precise and piercing.
“The present structure and substance of governance under the two party system is geared to serve a society driven by excessive consumerism and a relentless pursuit of profit. It calls for change in the structure and system of governance.
The immediate task is to install a foundational government that will restructure the state and build an enlightened society that holds out the twin promises of economic resilience and social justice.
The document has five principal components viz. A people centric government, Human resource excellence, building a modern industrialized land, an equitable society and a liberated citizenry.

Riots helped to define Canada's Tamil community

Thirty-two years ago on Friday, anti-Tamil riots burned a hole into the South Asian island nation of Sri Lanka that it still struggles to close. For many of us in the Canadian Tamil diaspora, it is an emotional reminder of not only what we had lost in Sri Lanka but also what we have gained in Canada in return.
In 1983, the seaside capital city of Colombo and neighbouring towns were engulfed in flames as a gruesome pogrom was unleashed on ethnic minority Tamils. Carried out by organized mobs, almost exclusively made up of ethnic majority Sinhalese who were aided and abetted by senior government officials, the riots lasted from July 24 to July 30, 1983.
When the fires had burned out and the blood cleaned off the streets, thousands of Tamils had died, tens of thousands were injured, and tens of millions of dollars’ worth of mostly Tamil-owned homes and businesses were left in ruins. More than a few escaped death thanks to quick-thinking Sinhalese and Muslim neighbours who sheltered them.
It was not the first anti-Tamil riots to rock Sri Lanka. But the 1983 race riots, or Black July as it is now commemorated, became one of Sri Lanka’s most defining historical moments. It sparked the prolonged civil war for a separate Tamil state, which claimed nearly 100,000 lives and displaced hundreds of thousands more, before coming to a violent end in May 2009.
Black July also drove thousands of Sri Lankan Tamils to seek refuge in other countries. They arrived at the borders of India, Australia, United States, the United Kingdom and beyond, their pockets weighed down by hurt and humiliation, Almost 2,000 of them made their way to Canada thanks to a Special Measures program approved by the federal government.
In his soon-to-be-published landmark study of the Canadian Tamil diaspora, Pain, Pride, and Politics: Social Movement Activism and the Sri Lankan Tamil Diaspora in Canada, author Amarnath Amarasingam explains that Sri Lankan Tamil migrants benefitted from large-scale changes to Canada’s immigration policy in the 1960s and 1970s, early Tamil organizational lobbying in Canada, and the “turbulence that marked Canadian immigration and refugee determination in the 1980s.” Regardless of how they came to settle in Canada, the Sri Lankan Tamil migrants who arrived after Black July turned adversity into opportunity and laid the foundations of the present Canadian Tamil diaspora.
Since the mid-1980s, the Canadian Tamil community has grown to nearly 250,000, although official 2006 census data cuts that number in half. It boasts more than a dozen English- and Tamil-language newspapers, radio and television stations. The Tamil business directory runs over a thousand pages, and just this month two incubators were launched aimed at fostering even more Tamil entrepreneurship.
Two major Tamil Studies conferences are also regularly held in Canada, attracting scholars from around the world. Major suburbs in Ontario and Quebec house Hindu temples and churches owned and patronized by Canadian Tamils. Canadian Tamils also continue to be effective in political mobilization, and there are Canadian Tamil legislators in municipal and federal government with representation expected to increase across all orders of government.
Black July, therefore, was an enormously important turning point in Sri Lanka, but also marked, in a very real way, the birth of a successful and influential diaspora. The story of Canadian Tamils, which seemed nearly lost forever in the ashes and broken glass of a very different place in a different time, has survived. In the same 32 years, that story has also managed to weave itself, firmly albeit not always conveniently, into the larger narrative that we Canadians tell ourselves and the world.
It is a story worth re-telling this year, and many years hence.
Kumaran Nadesan left Sri Lanka in 1987 and came to Canada a decade later. He is an Ontario public servant and volunteers as an advisor-at-large to Sri Lankans Without Borders.
Sri Lanka: Tamil Tiger Women- Through 

Selected Writings by Them: 


Home
By Prof. Charles Sarvan:-Dated 23-July- 2015
The web-site tamiltigerwomen.com contains material, both poems and prose-sketches, selected and translated from the original Tamil into English by Dr N. Malathy: my thanks to her for sending me a copy.
The documents are rare in that they are the writings of women (many were teenagers or in their early 20s) who were Tiger combatants. Presumably most, if not all, are now dead, killed in action. I may be mistaken but think their names as given are nom du guerre. Much of the material they left behind was destroyed by the government. Dr. Malathy is owed a debt of gratitude for collecting, translating and making available for posterity these intensely personal perspectives. It is, one hopes, an on-going project to which others will contribute. Eventually, a data or document bank can be established from which those interested can draw.
at http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=nSSv9Kk3tkI

Muslim Hating Ven. Gnanasara Thero


By Hilmy Ahamed –July 24, 2015
Hilmy Ahamed
Hilmy Ahamed
Colombo Telegraph
The death of a Sri Lankan in Syria, fighting with the IS (Islamic State or Caliphate) also known as ISIS has opened up a new front for extremist elements to target the Muslim community as terrorists or sympathizers of terrorism. Islam forbids taking of innocent lives, and the violence perpetrated by terrorists in the name of Islam is neither Islamic nor humane. Thus the irresponsible action of an individual should not be a reflection of a whole community, as Muslims have been a peaceful and patriotic community in Sri Lanka during their 1200-year history in the country.
courtesy Foreign Correspondents' Association of Sri Lanka Facebook pageVen. Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara Thero, the General Secretary of the Bodu Bala Sena, the Bodu Janatha Peramuna (BJP) and candidate for the Kalutara District, has launched his political campaign by once again attacking and branding every Muslim as a terrorist. His clarion call for the Sinhalese to “wake up”, his ominous augury “Abasaranai” to the Muslims in Aluthgama and the hate speech on 15th of June 2014 that led to the riots against the Aluthgama Muslims destroyed the peace that existed between the two communities. Now, his verbal diatribe and racism meant to help him to step in to Parliament, seem to get more vicious and venomous as the symbol for his new party, the cobra. He has now condemned every Muslim Civil, Religious and Political organisation as sponsors of terrorism in Sri Lanka. The media reports of the death of a Sri Lankan following a twisted ideology while fighting with IS (ISIS) has given him the ammunition to call every Muslim a terrorist or sponsor of terrorism. Little does he realize that he is the one who has been unleashing terror against the Muslims and other minorities in Sri Lanka, making him a terrorist as per the definition provided in Wikipedia –Terrorism is commonly defined as violent acts (or the threat of violent acts) intended to create fear (terror), perpetrated for an economic,religious, political, or ideological goal, and which deliberately target or disregard the safety of non-combatants (e.g., neutral military personnel or civilians).
His attempts to lay blame on IS or other Muslim extremist groups for the Aluthgama riots clearly exposes his complicity in the Aluthgama violence on June 15th 2014. His detestable oration was a provocative speech full of racist venom in which he asserted that the Police and military were Sinhala and that no Muslim or Tamil or anyone else could harm a Sinhalese and get away with it. “This country still has a Sinhalese Police, this country still has a Sinhalese Army. It will be the end of all if someone at least lays a finger on a Sinhalese”. And now he claims that extremist terrorists from abroad, including IS were behind the destruction of lives and livelihood in Aluthgama and Beruwela.Read More