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 26, 2015

China’s Clickbait Nationalism

Sensational headlines, misleading translations -- it’s how Chinese state media keeps its citizens angry at Japan.
 China’s Clickbait Nationalism
BY YIFU DONG-JULY 25, 2015
On July 16, the lower house of the Japanese Parliament passed a set of new security legislation that would grant Japan limited power to engage in foreign conflicts for the first time since its defeat in World War II. Despite domestic public opposition and doubts from Japanese legal scholars as to whether the legislation is in line with article 9 of Japan’s constitution, in which the country “forever renounce[s] war as a sovereign right,” Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe was able to get enough votes.
In China, Japan’s huge neighbor and regional competitor, the new legislation met with a wave of alarm. The memories of Japanese cruelty during World War II still hover over China’s collective consciousness, made fresher by constantly replenished propaganda both in schools and in Chinese media. Highly publicized quarrels with Japan over wartime atrocities, as well as contemporary territorial disputes in the East China Sea, have only added to Chinese distrust and even hatred of Japan. And Chinese state-run online media outlets — especially the fervently nationalist Global Times, which produces much of the virulent content circulated elsewhere online under separate cover — have seemed eager to fan the anti-Japanese flames. While the nationalist drumbeat in Chinese state media is nothing new, what is novel is the use of modern Internet media tactics that slice, dice, and repackage stories in the name of national pride, not to mention page views. At each step in this process, the truth recedes further from view.
One popular approach, recognizable to anyone who’s ever bemoaned the ubiquity of so-called click-bait, is the practice of juicing a headline. One particularly egregious instance involved a June 27 article in U.S. outletNational Interest, called “3 Ways China and Japan Could Go to War.” That article was unlikely to leave anyone feeling better about Sino-Japanese relations, but at least it ended with a paragraph that asserted the exercise in imagination allows analysts to “look at where vital interests intersect and work to avoid them.” That paragraph went missing in a Chinese languagetranslation appearing shortly thereafter on Global Times, which used a new, zestier headline, which read in part: “China and Japan Might Be Forced Into War.” Many other outlets, including major news portal Sohu, reposted the article.
If the article’s Chinese incarnation was intended to rile up the ranks, it seems to have succeeded. Of more than 2,200 comments to the article on Sohu, the most popular evinced eagerness for real action: “A war of words with the Japanese devils will never help reclaim the Diaoyu Islands.” (China and Japan have fiercely contested control of the Diaoyu, which Japan calls the Senkaku, a group of small islands in the East China Sea.) Another popularcomment read, “The battlefield should not be limited to the Diaoyu Islands. We should attack the Japanese homeland at the same time.” Only a few commenters seemed reluctant to take the article at face value. One user wrote that “whenever the economy has an unoptimistic accident” — a likely reference to the recent stock market crash in China — “I can always see news of the imminent war between China and Japan on the media.”
Another popular approach is showcasing Chinese weaponry in a way that implicitly or explicitly links it to Japan. Accuracy is not a threshold requirement. On July 4, Sohu’s military page featured an article with the title, “China Coast Guard’s Wenzhou Station Home to Ten Thousand Ton ‘Monster;’ Japan Shocked.” (It was first published June 15 on the Global Times.) That headline, too, is click-bait; the actual article notes that the ten-thousand-ton “monster,” which has yet to be deployed from a coast guard base in the coastal city of Wenzhou, is nothing more than a patrol ship. Another example: On July 15, portal Netease published an article with the headline, “Expert: Japanese F-15 Pilots Scared of China’s Su-27, Get Nervous as Soon as They Sight a Su-27.” The genesis of the headline is a comment that a Japanese commander allegedly made to a Chinese military expert, saying that whenever a Su-27 fighter jet takes off, “Japanese Air Self-Defense Force pilots are highly concentrated and vigilant at all times.” That, of course, is not the same as quaking in one’s boots. One reader commented on the article, “Only after reading this did I realize the magic of Chinese culture. Through distorting the words of others, we’ve vanquished the enemy.”
A more sophisticated strategy takes advantage of the readers’ source amnesia. On June 29, an article under the headline “Abe admits to war planning: Japan’s new security law targets South China Sea” appeared across the Chinese Internet, having again originated with the Global Times. The piece cites Japanese reports that during a meeting with representatives from domestic media, Abe “produced one shocking remark after another after finishing his share of red wine.” Among these remarks, the piece said, was an admission that with the help of U.S. forces, Japan “intends to beat China in the South China Sea.” The article included a selection of similarly sensational quotes of Abe disparaging South Korea, not to mention U.S. President Obama. Among the more than 9,700 comments on a version syndicated on Sohu, this one garnered 14,000 likes: “War between China and Japan is unavoidable. Are we ready?” Leading TV channels then picked the story up, including China Central Television, the country’s major state-run broadcaster.
Yet no major Japanese press seems to have covered the story. The occasion on which Abe has allegedly made the remarks was supposed to be what the Japanese call an informal “off-the-record gathering” between the prime minister and representatives of the reporters club of the Japanese cabinet. The first Global Times article identifies the sources as Shukan Gendai, which translates as “Modern Weekly”) magazine and a website called LITERA. The Modern Weekly is a well-known gossip magazine in Japan, while LITERA is a rather obscure website with a gossipy spin.
These articles are not isolated exceptions. News of imminent war, or something that sounds like it, is a constant drumbeat on Chinese media. Many major news portals have a subsection devoted entirely to military affairs; on Sohu’s, a sampling of titles from the week of July 21 includes: “Japan Acts Abnormally and Intends to Return to the Battlefield,” “Japan Spends Lavishly on War Machines,” “Abe Has Devised Multiple Preparations for China-Japan Conflict,” and “It’s Easier Now than During World War II to Suffocate Japan.”
Of course, not everyone in China believes what they read about Japan, or takes what they read to represent the sum totality of China’s relationship with Japan. And not all Japan-related state media coverage is negative. On July 9, Sohu ran a story about Chinese and Japanese youth engaging in “friendly hugs” in Tokyo. Chinese students studying in Japan had organizedthe early July cross-border hug-in, first by state mouthpiece People’s Dailyon July 6. But the Chinese Internet being what it is, the article  still drew mostly negative comments from Sohu readers. One wrote, “The longer we are friendly with Japan, the closer we are to being traitors.”

India's reforms target labour anarchy, but too late for some

A view of the complex that houses the office and a garment factory of Orient Craft Ltd., is pictured at Gurgaon on the outskirts of New Delhi, India, July 3, 2015. Picture taken July 3, 2015.
Akshay Kumar Pal (C), a 42-year-old worker from Uttar Pradesh state, walks through a street in the Kapashera village, a slum on the Delhi-Gurgaon border, India, July 9, 2015. Picture taken July 9, 2015
NEW DELHI  Sun Jul 26, 2015
Last month, hundreds of workers went on the rampage at a factory belonging to garment exporter Orient Craft, torching vehicles and smashing windows in the gritty industrial fringes of Gurgaon, a Delhi satellite city.
Increasingly common in Indian workplaces, these violent outbursts could become a thing of the past under a bold round of labour reforms planned by Prime Minister Narendra Modi.
Many businesses cheer the plans, which they say will help make India a manufacturing hub. Taiwan's Foxconn, the world's largest contract electronics manufacturer (2317.TW), plans to set up 12 new factories in India and employ one million workers.
Yet Orient Craft, which has suffered three riots in three years, fears the changes will create as many problems as they solve by making the cottonwear it exports to global brands such as GAP (GPS.N) and Marks & Spencer (MKS.L) less competitive.
Like many other low-margin businesses in India, garment makers will gain from increased flexibility to hire, and fire, seasonal labour - reforms demanded by industry since India began to shift away from socialism in 1991.
But to make this more palatable for unions, Modi wants to also extend the social security net. The government expects that will reduce labour volatility, but it will also raise costs for companies like Orient Craft whose chairman Sudhir Dhingra fears losing clients to lower-cost rivals in Bangladesh.
Dhingra said the new flexibility will enable him to hire workers according to his business requirements, but only if Indian garments remain in demand. If they are priced out of business, the net benefit evaporates, he said. "Buyers are already moving to cheaper locations," said Virender Uppal, the head of India's Apparel Export Promotion Council. "If labour costs go up further, it's going to affect business."
Modi plans to take the amendments to parliament later this year.

THE ROOTS OF A RIOT
The June 20 riot at the Orient Craft factory was sparked by an unfounded rumour that a worker had died from an electric shock. A similar rumour in February led to strife at another nearby apparel exporter, Richa Global.
Nobody was seriously hurt in these outbursts - unlike the 2012 riot at a Maruti Suzuki (MRTI.NS) plant that left one executive dead and many injured.
Workers, labour officials and managers say the cost of living, low wages and conditions in slums where migrant workers stay keep Gurgaon's labourers on edge. They can easily turn on their bosses - even at firms like Orient Craft, known for its worker care.
"When your life is so stressed, any trivial reason is capable of turning you violent," said Akshay Kumar Pal, a 42-year-old worker from Uttar Pradesh state.
Pal has lived for a decade in a cramped, dirt-floored room with a leaky roof in Gurgaon. In his block, 80 people live up to six per room, sharing three toilets and a single water tap. Rents rise every year. Pal said he was a tailor at Richa Global until April when he was sacked, accused of involvement in the February riot. He says he was not there.
    At Richa, Pal earned about $200 a month after 2-3 hours overtime every day. Half of his pay went on rent and food, leaving little for his wife and two daughters back home. "There is a big mismatch between our wages and the cost of living," he said. "You cannot survive without overtime."

TOO LITTLE, TOO LATE
Orient Craft's bright, ventilated factories are recognised as offering better conditions than most. It's known for taking good care of its 32,000 employees. But even Dhingra recognises that the system is not working.
"We know the wages paid to workers are not good enough to secure them a decent and dignified living," he said. "But we cannot afford to pay more, else we will lose all our business."
The failure by successive governments to overhaul one of the world's most rigid labour markets has squeezed firms like Dhingra's between low-cost producers like Bangladesh and skilled and fast-moving innovators like China.
Modi's reforms aim to help companies go up the value chain, creating jobs for the 200 million Indians who will reach working age over the next two decades, and reducing labour volatility.
Shankar Aggarwal, the top bureaucrat at the labour ministry, said laws had not adapted to the dynamics of mobile labour forces and industry demands. The changes under discussion will improve productivity as well as industrial relations, he said.
Instead of saddling companies with additional costs, Dhingra wants the government to set up hostels for workers in industrial towns to reduce tension in the workforce.
He also wants India to sign free trade agreements with the European Union and the United States to offset the cost advantage exporters from Bangladesh enjoy.
    "After starting so late, changes in laws alone will not be enough," he said.

(Editing by Douglas Busvine and Ian Geoghegan)

Barack Obama in Kenya: 'no excuse' for treating women as second-class citizens

  • ‘Just because something is part of your past doesn’t make it right’, Obama says
  • Rousing address in Nairobi also offers insight into his African heritage
  • Obama’s half-sister Auma introduces him at the Moi international sports centre in Nairobi. Photograph: Carl de Souza/AFP/Getty Images
  • Barack Obama speaks to a large crowd at a Nairobi sports centre in Guardian video.
  •  in Nairobi-Sunday 26 July 2015
  • Barack Obama wrapped up his visit to Kenya on Sunday with a strong condemnation of female genital mutilation and other “bad traditions” that treat women as second-class citizens, in a speech that also a offered a poignant glimpse into his African heritage.

Four-limbed, long-fingered snake hints at a creepy crawly evolutionary journey

The four-legged snake Tetrapodophis amplectus subdues a gondwanatherian mammal. The scene is set in an Early Cretaceous forest in Gondwana. (Julius T. Cstonyi)
By Rachel Feltman-July 24
A newly discovered fossil may represent the first four-limbed ancient snake ever found -- a slithering constrictor that could use its long fingers to pull you into a fatal embrace. And if the 113-million-year-old fossil really is a snake, it could help settle a debate on where the reptiles -- one of the most recognizable groups on the planet -- really came from.
The creepy new snake ancestor -- called Tetrapodophis amplectus -- is described in a paper published Thursday in Science.

Tetrapodophis amplectus whole skeleton. ( Dave Martill, University of Portsmouth)
"Snakes, they occupy a unique spot in the human imagination," study authorNicholas Longrich of the University of Bath, in Britain, said. "They come up as villains everywhere, from Harry Potter to the Bible. We dislike them so much because they're such great predators -- they ate a lot of our ancestors."
But how they came to be so fierce is a matter of some debate: Some paleontologists think that snakes evolved from marine creatures, but it is quite accepted now that snakes evolved from lizards, losing their limbs along the way. Scientists point to very primitive snake fossils that didn't live in the sea, indicating that the first snakes evolved from land lizards before some descendants chose to go for a swim.
This newly described species has a long, snake-like body and a flexible spine that hints at serious constriction capabilities. According to Longrich and his colleagues, it looks like an animal that might have burrowed under the ground, suggesting that it evolved from subterranean lizards that spent all their time beneath the Earth.
And unlike previously discovered ancient snakes, which had two limbs at most, this one seems to have retained all four. That's surprising, because many paleontologists have theorized that the lengthening of the body made limbs -- now useless -- disappear.

Tetrapodophis amplectus hands. (Dave Martill, University of Portsmouth)
But Tetrapodophis amplectus may have used its limbs even as its body stretched out -- just not for walking.
"They would have moved in a serpentine fashion, like snakes today," Longrich said, "But the limbs aren’t just a scaled down, reduced, nonfunctional lizard limb, like you find in many ancient snakes. They’re very highly specialized."
"They could have used these limbs like grappling hooks to grab onto their prey," he said.
Tetrapodophis amplectus catching Olindalacerta. (James Brown, University of Portsmouth)Tetrapodophis amplectus catching Olindalacerta. (James Brown, University of Portsmouth)
Indeed, the animal was preying on something not long before it died. Its stomach contains another vertebrate.
University of Florida's Martin Cohn, who wasn't involved in the study,told Nature Magazine that the combination of a complete set of limbs and a long, snake-like body could make the specimen "one of the most important fossils ever found."
But some paleontologists aren't sure that the fossil is a snake at all. Michael Caldwell of the University of Alberta told National Geographic's Ed Yong that he'd have to see the specimen in person to be convinced. “I think the specimen is important, but I do not know what it is,” Caldwell told Yong. Because the skull of the snake isn't very well preserved, many of the "snake-like" characteristics that Longrich and his colleagues have spotted may be subject to debate.
If it is indeed an early snake, the fossil could solve one more mystery as well: The geographical origin of serpents.
"You see a handful of very old, primative snakes in North America, and many more in South America and Africa," Longrich explained. He believes this new, unprecedentedly primitive snake came from South America (though this is also up for debate, since the fossil came from a private collection). In that case, he argues, the first snakes and their ancestors surely came fromGondwana -- the ancient super-continent that broke apart to form South America and Africa some 180 million years ago.
"Gondwana is really weird, everything there was very different," Longrich said. "Most of the things that originated there didn't make it, evolutionarily. But it looks like snakes might be the one big holdover from this weird ancient landmass."
Which Human Blood Type is Most Superior
Posted on Jun 23 2015 - 2:25am by admin@healthtipsportal.com
According to the research blood type has deep association with your health. There is another sizzling nutritional plan in which it is suggested that eating behaviors are based on blood type. It also suggests that your performance, diseases, emotions and even the whole life is connected with your blood type. Now the emerging research says that your diet might not be linked with your blood type but your health is necessarily linked with your blood type. The most emerging blood type according to the experts is blood type O.
Which Human Blood Type is Most Superior
According to researchers people with blood type O are assumed to be at lower risk of cardiovascular health problems like stroke or heart attack. Moreover there is less likelihood of such people to die of malaria. People with AB blood type are at higher risk of memory issues as compared to the people with blood type O. O blood people are also said to be more safe from certain kinds of cancer like gastric cancers and pancreatic cancers.
All the above debate depicts that type O blood is rather protective. To understand this thing the other blood groups are to be discussed. There are 4 types A, B, AB and O (or ABO). Your blood type is determined by the absence or the presence of antigens on red blood cells and it trigger an immune response in the body.

Blood types and health:

We each have different variety of antigens that enables the immune system decides about a substance either it is foreign or not. Each blood group has its own antigen but type O has no antigens.
Type O people are known as universal donor. It means they can donate blood to any person without knowing his or her blood group. But against it they can receive blood of the same blood type means type O.

Weaknesses and strengths of Type O:

Such people have higher tendency of stomach acids but are considered good at digesting fats and protein. The digestive factors greatly improve the ability to metabolize cholesterol in animal products very efficiently. In O type people the simple carbohydrates like form grain etc. are easily converted into triglycerides and fats.

Managing O type stress:

There is observed excessive anger, hyperactivity, temper tantrums or even chemical imbalance that can lead to manic episode. Caffeine is especially harmful for such people.

Saturday, July 25, 2015

TNA reiterates self determination, North-East re-merger

Tamil National Alliance leader R. Sampanthan. File photo

R. Sampanthan, TNA leader, who released the coalition's manifesto for the next month's Parliamentary elections, asserted that "there is no way out."

Return to frontpageThe Tamil National Alliance (TNA), a coalition of four parties in Sri Lanka, on Saturday reiterated its adherence to the right to self determination for Tamils and the re-merger of the Northern and Eastern Provinces under federal structure.
While pointing out that Tamil-speaking Muslims would be entitled to be beneficiaries of "all power-sharing arrangements in the North-East," the Alliance, in its manifesto released on Saturday, said "this will no way inflict any disability on any people." 
R. Sampanthan, TNA leader, who released the coalition's manifesto for the next month's Parliamentary elections near a Anjaneyar temple in Maruthanamadam near here, asserted that “there is no way out.”
He made this observation, while replying to a query on the principal political formations of Sri Lanka accepting the TNA’s demands on the right to self determination and federalism. “I am hopeful that they will realise that majoritarianism is not a solution to the country’s national problem.” he said, adding that the formations would accept the Alliance’s position reflected through the manifesto.
Asked whether the TNA would make the acceptance of its demands as a pre-condition to getting its support in the post-election scenario, Mr Sampanthan replied in the negative and said the Alliance would engage itself with everyone. Its approach would be “positive and constructive.”
The TNA, which comprises of the Ilankai Tamil Arasu Katchi (ITAK), Tamil Eelam Liberation Organisation  (TELO), Eelam People's Revolutionary Liberation Front (EPRLF) and the People’s Liberation Organisation of Tamil Eelam (PLOTE),  is contesting in the electoral districts of Jaffna, Vanni, Batticaloa, Digamadulla (also known as Ampara) and Trincomalee of the Northern and Eastern Provinces.
The Alliance, while seeking fulfillment of resolutions adopted at the United Nations Human Rights Council from 2012 to 2014 and recommendations of report to be released in September this year,  called for “meaningful demilitarization” resulting in the return to the pre-war situation as existed in 1983, speedy resettlement of displaced Tamils in the North and the East.  The involvement of the international community in the Tamil question was “inevitable to achieve permanent peace through genuine reconciliation,” enabling all people living in the country to live as equal citizens.
TNA manifesto calls for constitutional change that accepts Tamil right to self-determination

25 July 2015
The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) election manifesto, has called for constitutional changes that accepts the Tamil people's entitlement to their right to self-determination under the United Nations International Covenants on Civil political rights and Economic, Social and Cultural Rights (ICCPR).


Noting that any political solution should accept the Tamil people’s right to self-determination and that Sri Lanka had ratified the international treaty, the TNA election manifesto, released on Saturday, said,

“The Tamil People are entitled to the right to self-determination in keeping with the United Nations International Covenants on Civil and Political Rights and Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, both of which Sri Lanka has accepted and acceded to.”

On accountability and reconciliation, the manifesto added that “truth, justice and reparation and the guarantee of non-recurrence are fundamental to the national question being comprehensively addressed so as to ensure permanent and genuine reconciliation.” 
The manifesto added calls for a political solution merged the North and Eastern that devolved powers of land, law and order, socio-economic development, cultural affairs and domestic and foreign fiscal powers and direct foreign investment in the North-East under a federal structure.

Outlining immediate matters of concern for the Tamil people, the manifesto called for “meaningful de-militarisation” and “removal of armed forces, military apparatuses and High Security/ Restricted Zones from the Northern and Eastern provinces.”

The manifesto further called for “comprehensive development programme” of the North and East through support from the Sri Lankan state, the Tamil Diaspora and the International Community, “including upgrading Palali airport as an international airport.”

Highlighting the unresolved cases of disappearances of Tamils in Sri Lanka, the manifesto highlighted the need to ascertain the truth of the fate of thousands of disappeared, whilst calling for the release of all political prisoners and abrogation of the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA).

The manifesto added that “international auspices is inevitable to achieve permanent peace through reconciliation.”

UNF leadership rules out self government for Tamils in Sri Lanka

BY ATHULA VITHANAGE-24 JULY 2015
The right to autonomy will not be granted in Sri Lanka under a future United National Front (UNF) government, a senior government minister said. Speaking in Sinhala, cabinet spokesman Rajitha Senaratne told journalists in Colombo on Thursday (23) that the country will remain a 'unitary state'.
Earlier in the weekend, leader of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) said that Tamils will achieve the right to self rule under a new government 'whose leaders we are working with'. Addressing supporters attending an election rally in the eastern town of Sampoor, the TNA leader Rajavarodhayam Sampanthan said, "we will have devolution of power by 2016, with autonomy for Tamil regions".
Election 'promises'
"We do not approve of it," said Dr. Senaratne rubbishing the TNA leader's claim brought to his attention by journalists during the weekly cabinet news briefing. "They say these things during elections. Any power sharing will be within a unitary state," he emphasised.
Tamils voted overwhelmingly for Maithripala Sirisena in January to end ten years of rule by Mahinda Rajapaksa who crushed the Tamil  resistance in a bloody war. The campaign in north backing president Sirisena was driven by TNA which joined Sinhala majority political alliance led by the United National Party (UNP).

Unfettered Tamil Vote & Formidable UNF Government In August


Colombo TelegraphBy S. Sivathasan –July 25, 2015
S. Sivathasan
S. Sivathasan
Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s lament is that the Tamil voter voted him out and dislodged his regime. Not wrong the nation affirms. With fetters in full and yet in part, this voter has helped seat and unseat governments. When bound hand and foot and delivered at the disposal of M.R. in 2005, victory was his. The slim 180,000 majority then, bespoke his lack of lustre in the Sinhala eye, though the Tamil vote was shut out.
Ranil Ravi MaithriThe Tamil vote in January though partially unbound and yet not fully free, made for a 444,000 majority and spelt him disaster. It changed the ruling hand in January 2015. The Tamil vote together with the Muslim one cooked his goose is his contention. How to undo it may be his obsession. But can he? No it appears. Why?
Benefits from January
In January, the body blow to the incumbent President came from the nation’s polity. In the August encounter, the majority ethnic segment itself is poised to deliver a mortal blow. When all ethnicities act in tandem, the minority vote will become less important for victory, but of utmost significance for a two-thirds. Such a resounding victory is crucial for an unswerving effort at reform. The nation is yet waiting for the 19th Amendment in its pristine form after repealing the current one. The 20th too is similarly awaited. The voters’ resolve is for stable governance, not for seven months but for decades and more.
The diligent have seen people’s gains in the last seven months. A fresh air of liberty now pervades the country. With an independent judiciary, tyrannical enforcement of tyrannical laws is consigned to the past. Separation of powers a bedrock of democracy had all but disappeared. The educated classes fought hard to get it back, not to loose with a few words from a UPFA pulpit. Recourse to justice not available earlier is now accessed and cherished. Freedom of thought, expression and assembly lost for long are regained. The media that fought bravely will continue to be in the forefront of the struggle. The white van spectre, arbitrary arrest, death at the rulers’ wish and disappearance at will are among the inglorious past. These features becoming permanent in the Rajapakse era stand demolished. Can anybody cite even three reasons for the previous order coming back?
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Peace and Reconciliation: A Way Forward

Presented by Dr. Devanesan Nesiah, to the Association for Social Development at the OPA, 25 July 2015
I have enjoyed and appreciated the documents you have sent me and am happy to speak to you on Peace and Reconciliation – Way Forward. Up till the time of Independence in February 1984 our country was widely regarded, with much justification, as a model colony, eminently equipped to be a peaceful, democratic, stable, socially cohesive and economically upward mobile nation-state. There was much promise of our land and our people living up to the legend of the Isle of Serendipity.

Tamil people and all citizens of Sri Lanka need to consolidate the recent progressive changes in SL

gtf-1
Saturday, 25 July 2015
Global Tamil Forum (GTF) strongly urges the Tamil people and all citizens of Sri Lanka to do their historic duty at the upcoming Parliamentary elections by carefully voting for the parties and candidates with the main objective of consolidating the progressive changes and gains made during the recent past.
The presidential election of the 8th January 2015 was a turning point in the recent political history of Sri Lanka where the voters overwhelmingly rejected the undemocratic, corrupt, intolerant and violent political culture practiced at that time. Undoubtedly that election outcome brought welcome changes that included the adoption of the progressive 19th amendment to the constitution, the expansion of the democratic space available for freedom of expression and rule of law, and the reduced fear for the minority communities from ethno-religious extremism. These changes were recognised and welcomed across the major capitals of the world, and it is the duty of all responsible Sri Lankan citizens to ensure that these tenuous beginnings are consolidated without giving any chance for their reversal.
For the Tamil people, though their day-to-day existential problems, human rights issues including the fate of the disappeared and their legitimate aspirations for political power sharing are yet to be addressed in a meaningful way, there were early signs of goodwill as reflected in actions such as - the appointment of civilian governors for the Northern and Eastern Provinces, the release of small parcels of lands to the rightful owners and the release of some prisoners detained under the Prevention of Terrorism Act. It is our belief that these positive developments, together with the new found political optimism and will, could be further strengthened after the August election, fortifying the hands of those who want to resolve the long standing Tamil national problem for the benefit of the entire country.
The resolution of the Tamil problem invariably will involve meaningful negotiations between the Government of Sri Lanka, the elected representatives of the Tamil people and other relevant stakeholders, and it is the expectation of the GTF that the International Community too will play a constructive role in this process. In this context, the Parliamentarians elected by the Tamil people will have multiple roles to play, and these include addressing their constituents’ concerns at the electorate level and articulating and negotiating on behalf of the Tamil community as a whole – be it at the Sri Lankan Parliament, with various international governments or non-governmental organisations.

The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) has earned the recognition and respect of the Tamils, the representatives of other communities in Sri Lanka and the key international players including India, by carefully and consistently articulating the concerns, grievances and aspirations of the Tamil people and through their several, overwhelming election victories in the recent past. GTF works closely with TNA as the elected representatives of our people, and our partnership has been crucial in some of the diplomatic initiatives and achievements made in our adopted countries as well as at international institutions such as the UNHRC.
It is our collective view that a strong and tested representation of Tamil interests spanning across the entire Northern and Eastern provinces, together with victory for the progressive forces in the South that advocate democracy and good governance, will greatly enhance the chances of achieving a negotiated political resolution, accountability, justice and sustainable reconciliation in Sri Lanka.