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, August 1, 2015

Sri Lanka justice: Callum Macrae on the leaked UN document

Published on Jul 29, 2015
Callum Macrae, director of No Fire Zone, on the leaked UN document that suggests UN officials have been working "behind the scenes" on a plan for a purely domestic inquiry into allegations of war crimes at the end of Sri Lanka's civil war.

The UN says it "supports accountability mechanisms that meet international standards".

UN Yet to Decide on Domestic or International Accountability Process For Sri Lanka Says Sec-Gen’s Office

S
 01/08/2015
Sri Lanka BriefThe UN is yet to decide whether there will be a domestic or international accountability mechanism to deal with the findings of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) investigation into Sri Lanka’s atrocities, said a representative of the office of the Spokesperson for the Secretary General. Responding to a question on the nature of the accountability mechanism that the UN support in Sri Lanka, the spokesperson, said,
“I think, you know, whether it’s domestic or international, that will need to be determined.  We are obviously awaiting the High Commissioner’s report and recommendations to make that decision.”
Answering questions on if the UN Peacebuilding Fund was considering funding a national accountability mechanism in Sri Lanka as suggested by recently leaked documents, the Un Secretary General representative said,
“I think what I can tell you is that the UN supports the Government and the people of Sri Lanka and their efforts to advance reconciliation and accountability as evidenced by commitments made by the Secretary General and during the Under-Secretary-General’s recent visit — Feltman’s recent visit to Sri Lanka.  In this regard, we’re exploring provision of a broad package of technical and financial assistance at the request of the Chief Minister, also including the support of the Northern Province to bolster citizen confidence in the peace process.  What is currently under discussion for support by the Peacebuilding Fund are initiatives to advance the process of reconciliation in Sri Lanka by resettlement of internally displaced persons, national reconciliation, strengthening human rights mechanism, and ending impunity.  The UN support is always based on the basis of inclusive and participatory consultations with all key stakeholders.”
Tamil Guardian 01 August 2015

UN awaits report on Sri Lanka to decide on international probe

UN awaits report on Sri Lanka to decide on international probeAugust 1, 2015
logoThe United Nations says that it’s exploring provision of a broad package of technical and financial assistance to Sri Lanka’s Northern Province, at the request of Chief Minister C.V Wigneswaran.
Stéphane Dujarric, Spokesman for the UN Secretary-General, made these comments in response to a question regarding reports of the UN Peacebuilding Fund considering funding a purely national accountability mechanism in Sri Lanka.
The UN supports the Government and the people of Sri Lanka and their efforts to advance reconciliation and accountability as evidenced by commitments made by the UN Secretary General and during the Under-Secretary-General’s recent visit to Sri Lanka, he said. 
“In this regard, we’re exploring provision of a broad package of technical and financial assistance at the request of the Chief Minister, also including the support of the Northern Province to bolster citizen confidence in the peace process,” Mr Dujarric told a press briefing on Friday.  
He stated that what is currently under discussion for support by the Peacebuilding Fund are initiatives to advance the process of reconciliation in Sri Lanka by resettlement of internally displaced persons, national reconciliation, strengthening human rights mechanism, and ending impunity.  
“The UN support is always based on the basis of inclusive and participatory consultations with all key stakeholders,” he said.  
The Spokesman said that already $1 million have been dispersed to support resettlement and integration initiatives for the remaining internally displaced people in the north and east on land that have been returned by the Government.  
“For the rest, we continue to consult with the Government of Sri Lanka and the Northern Provincial Council and all key stakeholders to finalize the UN support,” Mr Dujarric said.
He emphasized that the UN is looking at implementing projects both with the support of the Government and the Northern Provincial Council.  
When asked about an international mechanism, he said that: “whether it’s domestic or international, that will need to be determined.  We are obviously awaiting the High Commissioner’s report and recommendations to make that decision.”
Pakistan’s mango diplomacy and Lanka’s ‘insect fear’ 

2015-07-30 23
Did it deter the ‘king of fruit’ being a sweet diplomatic mediator? 


It was somewhere in early July  1977, during a crucial election campaign that Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike received a crate of juicy Pakistani mangoes from General Zia Ul Haq who toppled Zulfikar Ali Bhutto and assigned himself the position of President and Chief Martial Law Administrator of Pakistan.  

The mangoes were delivered to Rosemead Place from Islamabad via the Pakistan High Commission in Colombo. Then Ambassador Khalid Khaishgi who had received them through diplomatic courier had assigned his second secretary  Rehmat Ullah Khan to ensure that the premier received the mangoes-a gesture of good will from his new boss. He also attached a letter from Zia    Ul Haq to the crate of mangoes that came from the trees of the central Pakistani city of Multan in Punjab Province. A response from Mrs Bandaranaike was never expected. The next day however, the ambassador was stunned to receive the same crate of mangoes with a curt written message from Mrs. Bandaranaike:   “Your Excellency, Mr Ambassador, Pakistani mangoes are well known for their taste and fragrance. Thank you for sending me this crate of mangoes on behalf of President General Zia Ul Haq. However, I cannot accept a gift from a person whose hands have the blood of Pakistan’s elected Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto on them. He was not just the leader of Pakistan but a great spokesman for the Third World. Please return this gift to the sender.” By then General Zia had sent Bhutto on trial on charges that drew the death penalty.  

Nevertheless the mangoes were never sent back to Islamabad but consumed by the staff of the Pakistan High Commission. However, Mrs Bandaranaike’s message was sent to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Islamabad for onward delivery to the President’s House in Rawalpindi. This was, besides being an unusual diplomatic response, a stinging rebuke to a military dictator who had turned down the three written appeals by Mrs. Bandaranaike to Zia Ul Haq to spare the life of Bhutto and  send him into exile. She had even offered to host Bhutto in exile in Colombo. 

 The same summer Zia Ul Haq had sent mangoes to his counterparts in India, Bangladesh and Nepal. But, it is not known if those leaders responded in a manner to the fearless, principled gesture of Mrs. Bandaranaike.  

 For decades, Pakistani leaders have been using the country’s declared ‘king of fruits’ – the mango – as a tool of diplomacy to sweeten relations and tape over any wrinkles in bilateral ties with its regional neighbours, especially SAARC states, said political analysts Adnan Rehmat in Islamabad. This practice  conducted on behalf of Pakistani presidents and prime ministers by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs – has been documented since the mid-1970s.  Pakistan’s first elected Prime Minister Zulfikar Ali Bhutto was the first to use the practice after being elected to office in 1972. The first crate of mangoes he sent was to Indian Prime Minister Indira Gandhi. This was barely a year after Pakistan broke into two with East Pakistan becoming an independent Bangladesh in 1971. Islamabad has always maintained that India played an active role in stoking independent sentiments in the politically volatile east wing of Pakistan, which ended  after a bloody war between India and Pakistan in 1971. The war ended with over 93,000 Pakistani soldiers becoming prisoners of war (POWs) of India and Ali Bhutto used mangoes to start a post-war dialogue with Indira Gandhi to secure the release of all the POWs as well as to get back a few border towns captured by India. 

Bhutto was hanged by Zia in 1979 after a a kangaroo trial. Zia was reputed to hate every Bhutto practice and did not follow the civilian leader’s diplomatic practices, except one. This was sending mangoes to his counterparts in other countries, said Rehmat.  

 History continued to repeat itself when another Pakistani military dictator, General Pervez Musharraf, toppled another elected prime minister, Nawaz Sharif, in 1999. Musharraf, who also appointed himself president like Zia, is also on record that he sent crates of mangoes to his Lankan counterpart Mahinda Rajapaksa. Sources in the  Ministry of Foreign Affairs in Islamabad confirmed that Rajapaksa loved the Multan mangoes and never returned any mangoes Musharraf sent him. [But the Colombo foreign office denied this claim and stated that no mangoes had been accepted from any country for many years].
 A friendly neighbour with strong diplomatic relations since 1948 who helped Sri Lanka during a ruthless war does not need mangoes to send ambassadorial messages.  

But the story was different when Nawaz Sharif sent a fresh crate of Pakistani mangoes to President Maithri a couple of weeks ago. According to last week’s Sunday Times, the Presidential Secretariat had refused to accept them after customs and quarantine clearance. But the President’s Office said that the decision to return the mangoes was taken by the Foreign Ministry and that it had nothing to do with them. The Foreign Ministry said that the decision was purely based on ‘technical reasons’. The Pakistan High Commission in Colombo said that they too had no role in this episode as the mangoes reached the President’s Office direct from Islamabad.


 What are the technical reasons that the Foreign Ministry  referred to? It was purely on agricultural grounds and had nothing to do with politics, said one senior official at the foreign office. “It is something beyond quarantine. We do not have systems like Singapore to counter insects that could come along with such fruits,,” said agriculture officials. “Thus, the only solution was to return them”. But were they really returned to Islamabad? According to a media report the mangoes were consumed by Customs officials. Then what about the insects the authorities were worried about? And how come President Rajapaksa enjoyed Pakistani mangoes despite the insect fiasco? 

 According to Foreign Ministry sources, the decision [to send mangoes] was not confined to Pakistan. Even India sent such a mango ‘gift’ recently and the ministry had to apply the same policy. “We were convinced that both countries understood our position”, a ministry official said. “All these gifts never reached their point of origin but were consumed here”, declared Customs. 

 “Although Sri Lanka continues not to accept, they continue to send mangoes and we continue to enjoy them once rejected by the recipient”, said a Customs official.    Mangoes have been integral to the way Pakistan conducted diplomacy with India, according to some recent media reports. On many occasions, Sharif’s predecessors too, have let the ‘king of fruits’ do the talking. Mango diplomacy came in handy the second time when, last year, the fruit relished equally on both sides of the border were seen as a peace offering.
  
As far as we are aware, Sharif’s mangoes were delivered to Prime Minister Modi, Sonia Gandhi and President Mukherjee.  ‘Insect attacks’ were not featured. 

The Choice Is Between Moving Towards Democratisation Or Falling Back Into Abyss Of Narrow Nationalism: Friday Forum

Colombo Telegraph
August 1, 2015 
The Friday Forum has today called upon all political parties to declare their stance on at least the ‘National reconciliation and integration’, ‘Economic crisis and development’ and ‘Foreign policy’.
“We are once again being called to make crucial decisions between moving towards substantial democratisation or falling back into the abyss of narrow nationalism and authoritarianism, this time through the establishment of a new Government.” the Friday Forum said in a statement.
We publish below the statement in full;
Parliamentary Election—Challenging Divisive Politics with an Alternative People’s Narrative
Bishop Duleep de Chickera
Bishop Duleep de Chickera
The country is about to face another decisive Parliamentary election shaping our political future. The Friday Forum wishes to place some crucial concerns before the voters.
There is much confusion among the public about what is at stake with the Parliamentary election. Is it the danger of a return of terror and war, or is it the return of attacks on democracy, deterioration of the rule of law, authoritarianism and governance that is not accountable to the people? Indeed, the election campaigns have already begun with accusations and counter accusations. The polarising rhetoric in recent weeks is worrying, as it points to the possibility of an election campaign with incitement once again of racial and religious hatred and violence. The damage done during such virulent election campaigns may trouble the country for years, as we all know from our tragic political history.
Despite the end of a brutal armed conflict over six years ago, it was only with the recent Presidential election that serious attempts were made to restore democratic institutions and values leading to a democratic ethos. We are once again being called to make crucial decisions between moving towards substantial democratisation or falling back into the abyss of narrow nationalism and authoritarianism, this time through the establishment of a new Government. The controversies and bargaining that took place recently over necessary amendments to the Constitution demonstrate once again that many politicians are motivated by self-interest rather than the public interest. Therefore, it is when voters are informed, vigilant and far thinking that a people stand the best chance of electing a government most inclined to uphold the sovereignty of the people and serve them through justice, equal rights, freedom and integration.
The Parliamentary election campaigns are already centring on personalities and comparisons in performance, and drowning the real social, economic and political challenges that face us as a people. We call upon all political parties to declare their stance on at least the following crises that have remained unaddressed for decades.
National reconciliation and integration                      Read More

Sri Lanka: Back to the Future?

Sri Lanka's authoritarian former president is on the brink of a political resurgence. His electoral success would put a halt to the country's already troubled political reform process.
Sri Lanka: Back to the Future?
BY TAYLOR DIBBERT-JULY 31, 2015
After months of intense speculation, it has become official: Sri Lanka’s recently ousted president, Mahinda Rajapaksa, will contest in the country’s parliamentary elections which will be held on August 17. He will be contesting from Kurunegala district as a part of the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA), and the possibility of him becoming prime minister is not out of the question. The former president’s return to power would complicate further efforts at democratic reform within the war-torn country.
Like current President Maithripala Sirisena, Rajapaksa is a longtime member of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP). But since Sirisena heads that party as well as the UPFA (the broader political alliance which is led by the SLFP), many had expected that Rajapaksa, if he did actually contest, would have needed to do so on an alternative political platform. After all, Sirisena is the one who came out of nowhere to defeat Rajapaksa when he ran for an unprecedented third term in January’s presidential contest.
Indeed, the fact that Rajapaksa has been granted a nomination under the UPFA umbrella is what some observers find so troubling. Sirisena promised to break with his predecessor’s corrupt and authoritarian past, but Rajapaksa’s return under the alliance he used to lead renews his political relevance and underscores how difficult it could be to implement further democratic reforms. For Sirisena, party politics and SLFP unity became increasingly important once he assumed the presidency. Yet even after doling out numerous cabinet portfolios to SLFP members—a clear transactional gesture to garner additional support—he was still unable to gain control of his own political party and the broader UPFA coalition. Sirisena’s political weakness has undermined his ability to implement many of his desired reforms, including electoral reforms, a Right to Information act, and the abolition of the executive presidency.
Shortly after Rajapaksa called a presidential election last November, Sirisena emerged as the presidential candidate for a broad coalition of political parties, including the United National Party (UNP), one of the country’s two major Sinhala-Buddhist parties and the rival of the SLFP. Sirisena is a longtime member of the SLFP, and his challenge to Rajapaksa came as a tremendous surprise, although most members of the SLFP (and of the broader alliance, the UPFA) did not support his candidacy.
The UNP-led administration which Sirisena formed immediately after being elected to the presidency will be remembered as an unusual, uncomfortable alliance, and the majority of the reforms set out in Sirisena’s 100-day reform program did not come to fruition.
Furthermore, the corruption investigations from Rajapaksa’s tenure (over matters including Chinese-backed infrastructure projects, bribery, and the mismanagement of state-run enterprises) have not yet resulted in indictments. Besides, the UNP is now dealing with corruption allegations of its own making. However, an important distinction from previous elections is that the UPFA will not be able to brazenly abuse state resources during the electoral campaign (as it had done during past contests when Rajapaksa was in power).
The late-June dissolution of parliament came several months later than expected. Sirisena seemed to believe that, as time went by, he would eventually be able to garner control over the SLFP and marginalize Rajapaksa. However, the fact that Sirisena delayed dissolving parliament seems to have had the opposite effect. A thoughtful piece has recently illustrated that, in spite of numerous exhortations to the contrary, Sirisena had far less power to prevent Rajapaksa from running on the UPFA’s platform than is commonly believed.
Ostensibly, Rajapaksa’s return under the prevailing circumstances is good news for the SLFP-led coalition, since a deeply divided SLFP would provide the rival UNP with a significant advantage in the upcoming vote. Similar to the recent presidential election, the UNP is set to lead a broad allianceagainst the UPFA.
However, on July 14, Sirisena delivered an important speech, clearly stating that he is against Rajapaksa’s nomination and that he would not appoint Rajapaksa as prime minister if the UPFA were to win a majority in the forthcoming election. Sirisena’s speech has allowed to him to regain credibility in the eyes of voters and others who had accused him of betraying the mandate on which he was elected. It also underscores the fact that divisions within the SLFP remain, something which should help the UNP-led coalition on August 17. Nevertheless, Rajapaksa’s resurgence through the alliance he led for nearly a decade emphasizes that the former president looks far from finished.
Sirisena’s electoral victory has resulted in some positive changes, although transformational improvements remain unlikely to occur under his watch. He lacks the charisma found in many visionary leaders, and given the composition of the recently dissolved parliament, his ability to enact comprehensive reforms swiftly was always somewhat limited. Even though Sirisena was elected to the presidency on a wave of UNP support, the UPFA still had a majority in parliament, complicating efforts at reform—not least because constitutional amendments require a two-thirds majority in parliament.
Sri Lanka’s next steps towards improved governance and deeper democratic gains, if that happens at all, will almost certainly come through modest reforms. And, unfortunately, difficult (though vital) issues such as reconciliation, devolution, and accountability for wartime abuses don’t look like they will be dealt with adequately in the near future.
However, it is important to keep in mind that, had Rajapaksa been elected to a third term as president, he probably would have consolidated his nepotistic, authoritarian brand of governance, likely thwarting even modest democratic gains for a number of years. The passage of the 19th amendment to the constitution reintroduced presidential term limits and curtailed the sweeping powers of the executive presidency. This is a positive step, but well short of the initial vision of abolishing the executive presidency altogether and returning the country to a parliamentary democracy.
The majority of Sri Lankans rejected rampant corruption, nepotism, and unbridled authoritarianism during the January 2015 election. It remains to be seen whether the forthcoming general election will generate the same amount of excitement, but—about half a year later—voters are faced with a similar choice.
Rajapaksa’s record as the man who ended the country’s civil war and his concomitant Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism remain potent political weapons—ones he will be able to use during the campaign, especially since a controversial report focused on abuses that occurred during the end of country’s civil war is expected to be delivered to the Sri Lankan government in late August or early September. This timeline gives Colombo time to prepare a response prior to the report’s official release during the 30thsession of the U.N. Human Rights Council, which starts on September 14.
The next few months still have enormous ramifications for the island’s domestic politics and Colombo’s ties with the international community. Sirisena has indicated that he will remain neutral during the election campaign and it is difficult to predict what will happen over the next few months. The forthcoming election could be a closely fought contest. Furthermore, recent developments have shown that formidable obstacles to deeper reforms and longstanding war-related issues will remain prominent for the foreseeable future.
China’s continuing woes in Sri Lanka

Home
By Col. R. Hariharan-1-Aug-2015
Even in the midst of all political gerrymandering going on in Sri Lanka as election fever is heating up, China must be one country praying (but do Communist nations pray?) for former president Mahinda Rajapaksa’s successful return as prime minister after the country elects a new parliament on August 17, 2015.

Sri Lanka: Muslim Racism – Izeth Hussain


A protest by Muslims in Sri Lanka 
A protest by Muslims in Sri LankaSri Lanka Brief


01/08/2015 
I have been frequently berated for writing about Sinhalese and Tamil racism but never about Muslim racism. This charge has been made not only by Tamil lunatic fringe anti-Muslim racists, whose ranting and ravings need not be taken too seriously, but also by Sinhalese who seem to be genuinely perplexed by that omission. They refer frequently to the horrors perpetrated by the IS. Actually I have covered the subject of Islamism, political Islam, Islamic fundamentalism, of which the IS is the most horrible example so far, in the series of articles that I wrote some time ago on the Sri Lankan Muslims. There I made absolutely clear my utter abhorrence of all the forms of Islamic fundamentalism spawned by the original monstrosity of Wahabism. But readers have forgotten all that and berate me over my alleged disingenuousness and hypocrisy over Muslim racism.

There is more than one reason why I haven’t written on the problem of Muslim racism in Sri Lanka. There is no such problem – that’s my first reason. Certainly there will be racist attitudes among some Muslims but their racism does not constitute a national problem meriting articles by me and others. Am I to write an article on The Non-problem of Muslim Racism? It is widely recognized that there is the problem of Sinhalese racism towards the Tamils. It is also widely recognized – particularly after the antics of the BBS – that there is the problem of Sinhalese racism towards the Muslims. You can therefore expect articles on those subjects but not on the non-problem of Muslim racism. It is therefore absurd to charge me with disingenuousness and hypocrisy because in writing an article about Sinhalese or Tamil racism I haven’t included in it my views on Muslim racism. The reader must bear in mind another fact also. Bishop Butler observed in the eighteenth century that “Everything is what it is and not something else”. I observe today “Every article is about something and not about something else”. That’s another reason why I shouldn’t be expected to cover Muslim racism when I write on Sinhalese racism or Tamil racism.

However there has been alleged Muslim racist violence against Tamils in the Eastern Province in the past. That alleged racist violence has not continued into the present and therefore does not constitute an urgent national problem today. But of course what happened in the past can impact on the present and influence the future. It is therefore something that should be examined by the political analyst, not something that should be left only to the historians. My problem in writing about it has been that I have not been able to get detailed, accurate, and complete information about what really happened. I have only very recently been provided with information that is detailed and looks accurate, but it is not complete according to the person who provided it. However that does not matter because the information certainly suffices for an article on alleged Muslim racist violence against the Tamils in the EP.

But the information is incomplete, very seriously incomplete, in another sense. It is one-sided. We know that the Muslim violence in the EP led to the eviction of 80,000 Muslims from the North. But what were the antecedents of that Muslim violence? Did it just happen like a thunderclap out of the blue? This is what Rajan Hoole writes in his recently published book Palmyra Fallen. “In the East, though tensions between Tamils and Muslims have a longer history, the situation at present is largely the result of the great harm inflicted upon Tamils by a nationalism that under the LTTE behaved like its savage Sinhalese counterpart. Tamils readily remember the massacres of Tamils by Muslim home guards and thugs in the early 1990s, but few remember that these were reprisals for senseless LTTE massacres of Muslims. Moreover, rather than the work of Muslim leaders, these were instigated or supported by the Armed Forces – unlike massacres by putative sole leaders of the Tamils. It is mainly the Tamils who are holding back on dialogue”.

I request the reader to scrutinize that quotation scrupulously. He must bear in mind that Rajan Hoole is an eminent Tamil and is also a prominent member of the University Teachers for Human Rights (Jaffna), an institution which at great risk to life and limb has produced material of great value on the ethnic problem. We can therefore presume that behind that quotation there are standards of the highest integrity. One point to note is that massacres of Tamils by Muslim home guards were reprisals for senseless LTTE massacres of Muslims. Therefore the notion is wrong that the Muslims brought it – the eviction from the north – on themselves. The responsibility for that horror is unequivocally on the Tamil side.

The other and more important point to note is that the massacres of Tamils by Muslim home guards were instigated or supported by the Armed Forces, not by Muslim leaders. I believe that it would be very plausible to say on commonsensical grounds that action by the Muslim home guards had at the very least the implicit blessings of the Armed Forces. I find it impossible to believe that the Armed Forces, the instrument of the supreme Sinhalese State, would have been content to play the role of neutral observers while the Muslim home guards went on the rampage. It becomes plausible to argue that the massacres of Tamils in the EP were the expression of State racism in which the Muslim home guards were the instruments of the State. Anyway it is questionable that those massacres were the unequivocal expression of Muslim racism. I must add that according to Hoole the massacres by the Tamils had the backing of the putative sole leaders of the Tamils, meaning the LTTE.

Under these circumstances I have decided against writing an article on alleged Muslim racism in the EP on the basis of the material I have been given. That information, though supplied with the best of intentions, is one-sided. No information is available on what was done by the LTTE to provoke those reprisals. An article with the present state of knowledge would be grossly unfair to the Muslims. There is also another reason behind my decision. In the West any manifestation of racism is brought out into the open and examined, after which corrective action is taken if it seems necessary. That is the result of Hitler’s Holocaust against the Jews which alerted Westerners to the terrifying destructive potential in racism. In Sri Lanka the consensus is very different: such problems should be played down or ignored altogether, and after some time they will go away. It is a mistaken belief, as the facts about the Muslim ethnic problem show very clearly, and I therefore favour the Western strategy. But I cannot ignore certain facts. The situation in the EP has much incendiary potential in it, but as far as I can make out the Tamils and the Muslims there are handling their problems pragmatically and in an accommodative spirit. Should outsiders do anything that might aggravate their problems? Surely not. It is therefore up to them to decide whether or not some things that happened in the past should be examined at the present stage.

izethhussain@gmail.com

Mahinda seeks respectable exit

mahinda rajapaksha wave Saturday, 01 August 2015
Former President and UPFA candidate of the Kurunegala District - Mahinda Rajapaksa has sought a chance from President Maithripala Sirisena to make a respectable exit from politics following the upcoming General election, sources from the Rajapaksa family say.
The request has been made by Mr. Mahinda's brother - former Defence Secretary - Gotabaya Rajapaksa, the 'Sath Handa' reports.
He has requested to provide the Prime ministerial position for Mahinda Rajapaksa on a short term basis should the UPFA win with a majority of at least one seat.
He has also urged to allow Mahinda Rajapaksa to respectfully resign from that post some months later.
Mr. Gotabaya has further assured that his brother will bid adieu to politics soon afterwards and that the President's politics would not face any harm or hindrance during this time.
Senior State Leader
As the President has refused to comply, another proposal has been made.
The second proposal has suggested to name Mahinda Rajapaksa as a 'Senior State Leader'.
A senior state leader is entitled to Preliminary Protection and powers enjoyed by a cabinet minister and has a similar acceptance to that of the State Leader during diplomatic affairs, reports say.
Only two global leaders have ever been acknowledged as Senior State leaders. One, is Malaysia's former leader Mahathir Mohamad while the other is Singapore's Lee Kuan Yew.
According to sources, the suggestion to name Mr. Rajapaksa as Senior State Leader was made after the President recently stated that the former will never be appointed as the country's Premier.
In this backdrop, Mr. Rajapaksa would be compelled to function as a backbencher in Parliament as it is unlikely that he will be made a minister.
As this would have a negative impact on his image and personality, and as reports predict a negative impact on the island after the UNHRC report is released in September, the above suggestion has been made with the hope that Mahinda Rajapaksa holding the Premiership would be able to minimise the possibility of war crimes being levelled at him.
However, sources close to the President say that Mr. Sirisena is swaying between his earlier public statement and the two new proposals he is now faced with.
The President, who had earlier prepared to address the public during this weekend, has postponed it due to this issue, reports say.
- SLM -


article_imageJuly 31, 2015,
"Hypocrisy can afford to be magnificent in its promises, for never intending to go beyond promise, it costs nothing. – Edmund Burke

Politics has reached new heights in its traditional path of seeking the votes of the people.

It is the Path of the Promise. It takes my mind back to "Broken Promise" – first Sinhala film screened, for the politics of promises have always been that of broken promises.

The manifestos of the two main contenders for a majority of seats in Parliament are more full of promises, than of promise.

It is not surprising that senior politician DEW Gunasekera has challenged both the caretaker government of the UNP, and its polls rival the SLFP-led UPFA, to reveal how they were planning to increase State revenue needed to implement the promises made by them in this run up to the polls.

It’s quite a good question to ask, but Mr. Gunasekere with all his years in politics must surely know that it is not the stuff of electoral politics to give such details to the people when seeking their votes. What is worse is to know whether he was consulted, or whether he contributed, to drawing up the UPFA manifesto, which has certainly reached the record for the most number huge and costly promises made to the people in any election since this country gained universal franchise in 1931.

The UNP heading the Caretaker Government certainly has many explanations to make about its huge promises. Their absence from power for nearly two decades is no excuse for what seems the lack of stuff in many of its promises.

But the bigger responsibility is certainly with the SLFP-led UPFA that has been in power until January 8 this year, for nearly a decade under its current Campaign Organizer, former President Mahinda Rajapaksa. What is evident from all the big amounts promised for everything from pre-school education to Mahapola Scholarships, agriculture and industry, special payments for marriages and loans for the special needs of women, is the lack of thinking or Chinthanaya in these huge promises of largesse, offering pie in the sky for those who are pleased with rice and curry on the ground.

Politicians are not unknown to build castles in the air, offering pipe dreams full of wishful thinking in their search for votes. The need for such chicanery is very big for the UPFA this time round, as they seek to change the mood of the people from what they had on January 8, which saw the defeat of Mahinda Rajapaksa, and by association, all who were aligned to him in Parliament. The sheer size of promises thrown out in the UPFA manifesto show the battle they are up against.

Our people were given the original "Mahinda Chinthana" (Thinking of Mahinda) as the manifesto in his first run for the Executive Presidency in 2005. After the defeat of the LTTE and his second run for the same office in 2010 there was the "Mahinda Chinthana – Forward Vision" given to the people. These were two documents that sought to analyse political needs at the time and make proposals on political programmes and development strategies, with little said on the costs involved. They may not have been the best solutions, but there was political thinking involved. But what is offered in this election as the "Guarantee for the Future" has nothing of political thinking or strategy. Instead, it is a whole layout of costly promises, with no evidence of any serious thinking. All it offers are the golden dreams of politicians who need guarantees for their own future and no guarantees for the people.

While Mahinda Rajapaksa leads this campaign of costly promises, this very costly "Guarantee for the Future", has to be accepted as the rejection of Mahinda Chinthana, by him, his political party and the people whose votes he seeks, in his attempt at political resurrection, as the reborn father of the SLFP.

This is the Chinthana of massive bribery at the polls-promise level. It belies any suggestion that this manifesto has been thought out to address the needs of the people today. It does little or nothing to further the cause of democracy, which need not be as costly as the many real and virtual giveaways promised.

The green shirt supporters at the elephant camp should also take note of the consequences to the people and country of this contest of promises. They should also pay more attention to the substance of and reality of public needs, and not try to be champions in this promise laden campaign for the control of Parliament.

As the campaign for the August 17 poll continues, we are sure to see more of such promises of the unreal kind come before the people. It is best to be aware that the bigger the promise, the lesser the chances of it ever being implemented, and hopefully not ever implemented.

It is best to remember "Broken Promise" as the first Sinhala film screened in his country. It certainly did not offer a strategy for politics in the country.

A Group Of Professionals With ‘Restricted Ability’ To Contest August Elections


By Ajith C. S. Perera –August 1, 2015 
Colombo TelegraphFor the first time in history, a group of professionals and intellectuals “With Restricted Ability” will contest the upcoming Parliamentary elections 2015. They will contest as independent candidates for the Colombo and Gampaha Districts.
An estimated 20% of our Population with **Limitations in their Ability** form the Country’s Biggest Minority. BUT, the political parties find NO ONE from this 4 Million People – that includes academically & professionally qualified intellectuals with honesty, and experience as disability activists – to fill even the 29th place in their national lists.
What made we professionals contest as an independent group?
Dr. Ajith C. S. Perera
Dr. Ajith C. S. Perera
We want to use this Election to draw optimum attention to the plight of our ever growing Biggest Minority in the country – People who have Deficiency in Ability”
We had high hopes that the elected politicians from several parties, with whom we have worked closely, would make decisions on several key issues that concerns our quality of life .
But this has not happened even after 20 years.
In fact, due to ageing, numerous debilitating illnesses (such as arthritis, joint problems, diabetes, vertigo), accidents, convalescing after surgery and the ended 30 years of conflict, very many people find their mobility, sight, hearing or brain functioning restricted.
These 4 Million people with **Limitations in Ability** form the country’s biggest minority!
Yet, inept attitudes and inaction have denied us our rights to live as equal citizens with dignity and deprived us of the equal opportunities that come through social integration in respect of employment, education, recreation, travel and health.
Five factors that triggered our entry to contest                                   Read More  

Excise seize illicit fags worth over Rs.60mn in Mattakkuliya

custom 01 Saturday, 01 August 2015
A large stock of foreign made illicit cigarettes worth over Rs.96 million was seized by Excise Headquarters Special Crime Unit from a warehouse in Mattakkuliya yesterday amidst unconfirmed reports of a container illicit cigarettes discreetly being released through the Customs recently.

The detection was carried out following an arrest of a trader in Wattala yesterday morning along with a stock of illicit cigarettes, Excise sources said.
The Excise sleuths, who had been investigating reports that had reached them of a large stock of illicit cigarettes being circulated around Colombo City, had arrested the trader who was transporting 250 cartons of contraband in his van at the time.
On being questioned about the source of this illicit stock of fags, the trader had led the authorities to his warehouse situated on Ferguson Road in Mattakkuliya where they discovered more than 16, 000 cartons of cigarettes.Each carton contained 200 sticks of cigarettes of the foreign brands like Top Mountain and Gold Leaf brand sold in Dubai which the sale in Sri Lanka is entirely prohibited.
The cartons were found neatly packed inside large flat screen televisions, used refrigerators and metal boxes which were suspected to have come from Dubai.
The Daily Mirror learns that the seized contraband was suspected to have arrived in the country in a 20-foot-container which was alleged to have been released from the Colombo Harbour under the influence of top Customs officials.
When contacted, Customs Spokesman Director Leslie Gamini said that there had been no such slip ups according to his knowledge but assured that he would not hesitate to take immediate measures to conduct a probe if concrete evidence of misconduct reached him.
However a separate investigation was being conducted by the Ceylon Tobacco Company regarding the container load of illicit cigarettes that would have entered the local market with the government incurring a massive loss of tax revenue as a result.
The estimated loss of revenue to government through taxes from the illicit products had been calculated at Rs.50 million.
Excise Inspector A R Lambert and Guard Lokupitiya (685) were conducting investigations on the instructions of Excise Commissioner General L K G Gunawardena, and Deputy Excise Commissioner Crimes, Pushpakumara Silva