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 15, 2015

கூட்டமைப்பின் வெற்றிச் செய்திக்காக காத்திருக்கின்றது சர்வதேச சமூகம்: மாவை 

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logonbanner-115 ஆகஸ்ட்டு 2015, சனி
 "வடக்கு, கிழக்கில் தமிழர்களின் ஏகப் பிரதிநிதிகள் தமிழ்த் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பினர் என்பதை கடந்த தேர்தல்களில் எமது மக்கள் இலங்கை அரசுக்கு மட்டுமல்ல, சர்வதேச சமூகத்திற்கும் நிரூபித்துக்காட்டினர்
. இம்முறையும் அதனை எமது மக்கள் நிரூபித்துக் காட்டுவார்கள். எனினும், தீர்வை நாம் விரைவில் பெற மாபெரும் வெற்றி இம்முறை எமக்குத் தேவைப்படுகின்றது. இந்த வெற்றிச் செய்திக்காக சர்வதேச சமூகம் காத்திருக்கின்றது. எனவே, 17ஆம் திகதி காலையிலேயே தமிழ் மக்கள் அனைவரும் ஓரணியில் திரண்டு தமிழ்த் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பின் வீட்டுச் சின்னத்திற்கு வாக்களியுங்கள்.''இவ்வாறு இலங்கைத் தமிழரசுக் கட்சியின் தலைவரும் தமிழ்த் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பின் யாழ். மாவட்ட முதன்மை வேட்பாளருமான மாவை சேனாதிராஜா தெரிவித்தார்.

"தமிழ்த் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பைத் தடைசெய்யவேண்டும் என்று தெற்கில் பொதுபலசேனா கட்சியினரும், அதே கூட்டமைப்பைத் தோற்கடிக்கவேண்டும் என்று வடக்கு, கிழக்கில் கஜேந்திரகுமார் பொன்னம்பலமும் வலிந்து கட்டிக்கொண்டிருக்கிறார்கள். அவர்களின் நோக்கத்தை இனங்கண்டு மக்கள்தான் அவர்களைத் தோற்கடிக்கவேண்டும். அதற்கு அனைவரும் தவறாது வீட்டுச் சின்னத்துக்கே வாக்களிக்கவேண்டும்" என்றும் அவர் கோரிக்கை விடுத்தார்.
 
யாழ்ப்பாணத்தில் நேற்று நடைபெற்ற பரப்புரைக் கூட்டத்தில் உரையாற்றும்போதே அவர் மேற்கண்டவாறு கூறினார்.
 
அவர் தனது உரையில் மேலும் தெரிவிக்கையில்,
 
"நாம் மாவீரர்கள் பிறந்த மண்ணில் வாழ்பவர்கள். எமக்குத் தன்மானம் உள்ளது. எமது மாவீரர்களின் தியாகங்கள் வீண்போகக்கூடாது.
முள்ளிவாய்க்காலில் எமது ஆயுதப்போராட்டம் மெளனிக்கப்பட்ட பின்னர் தமிழர் தாயகத்தை இராணுவத்தை வைத்து சிங்களமயமாக்க முயன்ற மஹிந்த ராஜபக்­ஷவை எமது வாக்குரிமை என்ற ஆயுதத்தால் கடந்த ஜனவரி மாதம் 8ஆம் திகதி நடைபெற்ற ஜனாதிபதித் தேர்தலில் தோல்வியடையச் செய்தோம்.
 
அதேபோன்று எதிர்வரும் 17ஆம் திகதி திங்கட்கிழமை நடைபெறவுள்ள நாடாளுமன்றத் தேர்தலிலும் எமது வாக்குரிமையை சரியான முறையில் பயன்படுத்தி தமிழ்த் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பின் அமோக வெற்றியை சர்வதேச சமூகத்திற்கு வெளிப்படுத்தவேண்டும். அத்துடன், எமது பேரம்பேசும் சக்தியையும் உணர்த்தவேண்டும்.
 
கடந்த ஜனாதிபதித் தேர்தலில் வாக்களிக்கவேண்டாம் என்று கூறிய கஜேந்திரகுமார் பொன்னம்பலம் தலைமையிலான கட்சியினர், தற்போது அதற்கு அர்த்தம் கற்பித்துக்கொண்டு திரிகிறார்கள். எனவே, வடக்கு, கிழக்கிலுள்ள அனைத்துத் தமிழ் மக்களும் தமிழ்த் தேசியக் கூட்டமைப்பின் வீட்டுச் சின்னத்துக்கு வாக்களியுங்கள்! வெற்றியை உறுதிப்படுத்துங்கள் என்றார்.
- See more at: http://onlineuthayan.com/News_More.php?id=627684197216157795#sthash.WsCoA9E9.dpuf

Thajudeen – Not The First & Not The Last


By V.Kanthaiya –August 15, 2015
Colombo Telegraph“He chained my handcuffs to a chair so I couldn’t move. Tried to remove my shalwar, I kept shouting and crying, but he was stronger than me. When he finished he went outside. A second official came to the room. He raped me too. Second official smoked cigarettes and then with that burned my breasts, my inner thighs and legs. Both men beat me. They bit my breast and my thighs. It was still dark when I was brought back to the police station the next day. The official who raped me first warned me not to tell anybody about this. They told me they would kill my husband. I started bleeding very heavily. I think I was pregnant prior to the rape and miscarried. “ – An account by a victim of sexual violence and torture by Sri Lanka Security Forces, We Will Teach You a Lesson, Sexual violence against Tamils by Sri Lankan Security Forces, Human Rights Watch, February 2013.[i]
Wasim Thajudeen
They even cite the undisclosed sources to graphically illustrate the final moments of the ruggerite.
The Sri Lankan media is so much obsessed with unravelling details of the former ruggeriteWasim Thajudeen’s murder. They even cite the undisclosed sources to graphically illustrate the final moments of the ruggerite. As per the Sri Lankan popular English and Sinhala language based media, Thajudeen had been abducted by a vehicle belonged to Red Cross, but used by “Siriliya Saviya” a NGO run by Former first lady Ms.Shiranthi Rajapaksa. It is reported that his teeth and pelvic bones had been broken, his ribs had been fractured, his neck had been pierced with a sharp instrument and the muscles in his legs had been cut with a piece of broken glass. His body showed that he had been assaulted by blunt instrument.
Why the police department didn’t disclose this in 2012? Why didn’t it take legal action based on these findings? And now why they shamelessly tell us that there was a cover up? And why they have not taken any action against the officers who covered this up? Is this the only criminal case which had been “covered up” or any more cases meted out the same fate? If so, how many cases the department has re-opened for investigation? How long will it take to arrest the perpetrators? How long will it take those alleged perpetrators to get the bail? And will our legal system deliver the verdict with in our lifetime? And finally, will the perpetrators be punished or would be released citing lack of evidence? And once they are released, will they say the entire legal action is an international conspiracy and eat kiribath or they will simply have a “bottle party” to celebrate their “Nidaahasa”? And to whom should I ask this question? To the IGP? Defence Secretary? Prime Minister? Or the President of Yahapalanaya? Well! I have some more questions to ask and I feel it is better to ask them at the end of this article.
Suppose Wasim Thajudeen had been subjected to brutal torture at the hands of his assailants; my dear fellow Sri Lankans, he was not the first one and definitely not the last one to meet this agony.Read More

Wife of slain ex-policeman of Tamil Eelam denounces slow resolution of case

TamilNet[TamilNet, Saturday, 15 August 2015, 14:56 GMT]
Kavitha, the wife of assassinated Tamil social activist Nakuleswaran Krishnasamy in Ve’l’laangku’lam, Mannaar, this week cried out her frustration over the slow progress of the investigation surrounding the Nov 12, 2014 assassination of her husband. She alleges that the Sri Lankan Police and powerful politicians have been deliberately slowing the investigation process and expressed her fears that both are working together in bailing out the suspects involved in the slaying of her husband. 

Krishnasamy Nakuleswaran
Krishnasamy Nakuleswaran (12 May 1974 – 12 November 2014)
Seven suspects, including the village officer (GS) of Ve'l'laangku'lam, were taken under the custody of the Sri Lankan Police. Included in the suspects is an alcoholic who is deemed physically incapable of executing the crime.

The case is filed at the Magistrate Court, however, the case should be heard at the High Court for it to prosper. The family is waiting for the issuance of written instruction from the Attorney General for the case transfer. To date, no letter has been issued.

Kavitha deplores the delay saying this is due to political influence that may eventually cause the escape of the real killers. Even the politicians who promised assistance during the funeral failed in their promise to extend so, she said.

Kavitha lamented highly over the latent cover-up as the family is still grieving the loss of the father of two kids. She bemoans the trauma suffered by their kids who, at nights, run to the spot where their father was gunned down and cry. 

Desperate for justice and needing to appease the grief of their family, she says, she just takes her kids to the temple and prays. With no hope in the immediate future and for fear that the real killers are still on the loose, she says she can only seek solace in the temple.

Nakuleswaran served earlier as a policeman in the Tamil Eelam police and after the war, he was actively involved in the protection of Tamil lands against illegal seizure. 

Nakuleswaran's wife, a teacher, and their children photographed by visiting Tamil activists
Kavitha, a teacher, and her two children [File photo from November 2014]

Foreign Minister Samarweera inviting British war criminal Tony Blair on a family holiday!

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Ignorance of international affairs or indifference towards Island’s Muslims sentiments?
logoBy Latheef Farook--August 15
A Daily Mirror report on 12 August 2015 stated that former British Prime Minister Tony Blair and his family arrived in Sri Lanka previous day on a two week holiday on an invitation by Foreign Minister Mangala Samarwaeera.

Plot to incite racial violence as soon as Maithri –Ranil government is installed – National Intelligence report


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News- 15.Aug.2015, 4.00PM) With Medamulana barbaric brutes and their slavish rogues becoming increasingly aware day by day that defeat is writ large on the wall at the upcoming elections , it is learnt, following their defeat they are planning to incite post election  racial and religious violence while also going on a rampage of looting and plundering of main  vital commercial enterprises  and  business establishments , based on reports reaching Lanka e news inside information division.
 Wimal Weerawansa , Udaya Gammanpila, Dinesh Gunawardena , Vasudeva Nanayakkara , Dallas Alahaperuma and  Manusha Nanayakkara the discarded dejected accomplices of Alibaba ( chieftain of the crooks) who have no place in the sun unless they cling on to the cursed moth eaten shawl of Mahinda Rajapakse , and surviving on the discarded crumbs falling off the sumptuous dining table of Rajapakses are currently  in a deep predicament.
 
After president Maithripala taking a stern stance and stating  in no uncertain terms via a written letter to Mahinda himself that latter will not be granted the prime minister post , this disgruntled and discarded lot had become jittery and panicky. Hence having realized they are headed for inevitable doom and gloom are most craftily planning and plotting to create racial tension and riots , based on national  security  intelligence division reports .
It is learnt that the aim of this conspiracy  is to create bitter resentment and hatred among the Tamil and Muslim minority communities against the newly formed government (which they know is sure going to be a reality) of Maithripala Sirisena and Ranil Wickremesinghe by arousing racial animosities and violence Islandwide . At the same time it is planned to start a series of white Van abductions and murders as was carried out during the Rajapakse era while blaming them on the new government.
With a view to bringing back deposed Mahinda Rajapakse to power by foul or fair means, these most violent vicious activities against the citizens  are to be engaged in enlisting the members of the provincial councils and local bodies . A series of secretive and treacherous discussions had been held already towards creating the unlawful environment that will enable them to implement their  most diabolic, unconscionable and bloody anti -national plans, according to sources close to Gammanpila and Wimal Weerawansa  
Their motive is to build  brutal and murderous sentiments among the majority Buddhists resulting in  hatred and bitterness against the Tamils and Sinhalese as fast as possible . By  painting a false picture that because the UNP has captured power within parliament , the Tamils and Muslims are taking decisions on the fate and destiny of the Majority Buddhists , and by pointing out this situation cannot be allowed to continue, these desperadoes and politically discarded scoundrels are to fan and inflame racial violence . They are to provoke the Buddhists by falsely  claiming this disastrous situation must be averted , and the Buddhists should not  stand idle and watch it deteriorate further.

This despicable disgraceful task of stoking tension and violence using the Buddhists has been undertaken by Dinesh Gunawardena , Wimal Weerawansa and Udaya Gammanpila , and already this is under way at village level .This traitorous group is  hell bent on bringing back Mahinda the devil incarnate without whom , they know fully well they  will have no chance of survival when all the most heinous and ruthless crimes committed against the nation  get exposed eventually.
Measures  have been taken to gather data and information including addresses of Tamils and Muslims at village level using the so called NFF media spokesman Muzammil who has extended  this chain of operation already.

It is because president Maithripala has been informed of these diabolic and anti national devastating plans of these scoundrels who fatten on even death and national despair that he had in the conclusive stages of his  letter to Mahinda Rajapakse , he warned him to halt his  racial hatred and holocausts he is likely to unleash, and to act intelligently with restraint and  farsightedness.
It is the consensus among all , even if nitwits and nincompoops, morons and minions,  crooked and the corrupt who are a plenty in Mahinda’s den mislead and  misguide him to devastate the country, he despite his own weaknesses should not dance to their tunes or become a ventriloquist dummy in their hands , for he cannot forget that he was the  president of the country himself ( even though he ruined the country and routed its economy) at one time  and held the highest position in the hierarchy  until only some months ago.  
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by     (2015-08-15 10:58:55)

Sri Lanka: Ensure Safe, Secure, Free Polls

All Parties Should Keep Violence, Intimidation Out of Elections
Human Rights WatchAUGUST 14, 2015
(Bangkok) – Authorities in Sri Lanka should ensure that voters have safe and secure access to the polls to vote in parliamentary elections on August 17, 2015, Human Rights Watch said today. Local monitoring groups have reported numerous incidents of election-related violence and campaigning irregularities in the month leading up to the nationwide polls.
Polling officers carrying ballot boxes walk with a police officer as they prepare to go to their polling centers ahead of presidential election in Colombo on January 7, 2015.
Polling officers carrying ballot boxes walk with a police officer as they prepare to go to their polling centers ahead of presidential election in Colombo on January 7, 2015.
 © 2015 Reuters

The Centre for Monitoring Election Violence (CMEV), a longstanding independent monitoring organization, documented 135 major incidents, 10 involving the use of firearms, and 624 minor incidents between July 13 and August 13. The major violations occurred primarily in Jaffna, Colombo, Batticaloa, and Gampaha districts. Three people have been reported killed and several injured.
“With evidence already of violence in the run-up to these elections, Sri Lankan authorities should take all necessary steps to protect voters and party supporters from attacks, threats, and intimidation,” said Brad Adams, Asia director. “The authorities should also ensure that voters can travel safely and securely to the polling booths and back.”
Over the past month there have been several assaults during campaign-related activities. Some attacks have led to death or grievous injury. On July 31, a shooting at a United National Party (UNP) event led to the death of Ms. S. Maheema, a UNP supporter. No one has been arrested in the shooting. Local police confirmed that on August 5, a supporter of the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA), Mohamed Adhiyas, was attacked with a sharp object, allegedly by a member of the rival UNP. Adhiyas was pronounced dead on arrival at the hospital. On August 5, supporters of a United National Front (UNF) candidate were attacked by supporters of the UPFA, leading to several injuries. Also on August 5, supporters of the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress allegedly threw stones at UNF supporters, causing injuries requiring hospitalization.       
In addition, CMEV has documented other campaign violations such as finding forged ballot papers, arson attacks, and acts of vandalism and intimidation. In some cases, the police were able to identify and arrest the perpetrators.
“Sri Lanka has a long history of attackers getting away with election-related violence. A few arrests, while a positive step, do not address these longstanding concerns,” Adams said. “State authorities need to pursue each attack vigorously to send an unequivocal message that there will be no obstacles to fair and free elections.”
CMEV also reported misuse of state resources and other violations of campaign rules by the various political parties, including the use of government employees for election campaigning. CMEV also expressed concern about allegations that some local election monitors were not remaining neutral and were acting on behalf of certain political parties.
The Sri Lankan Election Commission and the state security forces had played a constructive and neutral role during the January 8 presidential elections. Those authorities should ensure that police and other security forces act in an impartial manner throughout the electoral process and respect the human rights of all voters.
“The role played by the security forces during and after election day will send an important message about the future of human rights in Sri Lanka,” Adams said. “Meeting the basic requirements of a free and fair election is an important step toward addressing the country’s persistent rights problems.”

Ugly Muslim Politics


Colombo Telegraph
By MYM Siddeek –August 15, 2015
Dr. MYM Siddeek
Dr. MYM Siddeek
I am one of the keen observers of the Muslim politics from the time the Muslims felt sidelined and realised the need for a separate Muslim political party to raise their concerns in the parliament since mid-1980s. I am also closely listening and watching the election campaigns by the Muslim political parties’ candidates since the nominations were called for the 2015 general election. In the campaign meetings I hear the pathetic stories of the Muslim candidates who contest in various political parties – Muslim parties and major national parties. These Muslim candidates are mainly trying to attract sympathy votes by stereotyping their personal grievances and using other tactics such as creating regional and communal feelings, character assassinations of opponents and promising national list MPs. I can give a few examples to demonstrate how ugly the Muslim politics is. One of the Muslim candidates is repeating in almost all the meetings why he left one Muslim party and joined the other. He was also telling the audience, as the major component of his speech, how he was ill-treated by the party he had just left. Another leader of a Muslim political party who was overwhelmingly received by the people of the village and so excited by the reception suddenly declared and promised a national list MP to the candidate who organised the meeting. I am sure this candidate will cross over to another party if the leader does not deliver the promise. This party leader was also promising to the audience that he would obtain the so-called Kalmunai costal district if his party secured two seats from Digamadulla district and asking the voters to vote for his party. To give such a false promise, he may be certain that his party will not secure two seats from the district and therefore, he will not need to demand for a costal district from the government after the election. It also implies that the services he is going to provide to the people of this region depends on the number of seats his party secures in the election. Isn’t he going to demand for the Kalmunai costal district if his party does not secure two seats in Digamadulla district? The leader of this very small regional party has made the similar promises in many other districts wherever his party contests!.
HakeemIn-fighting within each political party is also getting worse day by day. A meeting of a Muslim political party was abruptly interrupted because one of the participants criticised the party leader for not nominating the former MP of his electorate in the national list ! Further, the candidates of the same party are critical of each other in the contest of getting the highest votes in each district they contest. In another meeting, one of the Muslim candidates was making a thunderous speech to get a local council for the village he was born as the main task if he was elected as an MP and asking the audience to vote for him. He was also blaming another party leader for his inability to get it done in the past. But he failed to explain how it would solve the burning issues facing the people of the area. He was also pleading the audience to caste one vote for the main candidate in the district list and another vote for him. In most of the election campaign meetings, I could also hear their calculations of securing two or three seats in parliament in respect of each district they contested. In every meeting there were character assassinations of the opposite party candidates. Further, regionalism plays a major role in attracting the local voters. The campaigns target even chasing the Muslim politicians/leaders out of the region/district who come from other regions/districts and campaigning for their candidates. The Muslims are now divided very much by their party affiliations, regional biases and on personal grounds. Offensive, filthy and vulgar languages are limitless in these election campaign meetings. The ugly inter-party and intra party rivalry among the Muslim candidates is becoming worse day by day since the poll date is nearing closer.Read More


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by Izeth Hussain-

I am no psephologist with specialist skills in the analysis of elections but I have found that commonsense can serve well in the prediction of electoral outcomes. On commonsensical grounds I expect the UNP to win by a comfortable margin. Perhaps the most important reason is a sense of fatigue with SLFP-led Governments since 1994, except for a brief UNP inter-regnum. There is a deep human impulse that seeks renewal by turning to the new. Another important factor is that the minorities’ vote that proved so decisive at the Presidential elections is sure to remain with the UNP. On the economy the voters could hope to see an end to gigantic idiocies such as Mattala Airport and Hambantota Port. On democracy, and all the issues of good governance, the UNP would obviously have the edge.

If it is true that there is a deep human impulse to seek renewal by turning to the new, the UPFA campaign can be seen to be deeply flawed. There has been a monomaniacal focusing on one point, the other points not being really important. It is that Sri Lanka is again in danger both internally and externally and the Nation therefore requires a Saviour, the same Saviour who saved us in 2009, the true-blue Ruhunaputra, the descendent of the culture hero of the Sinhalese people, Dutugemunu. That idea did not have all that much traction among the Sinhala Buddhist masses at the Presidential elections. 45% of them voted against Rajapakse, and the percentage could have been significantly higher if not for the command of the huge resources of the state by the Rajapakse campaigners.

The assertion of Sinhala Buddhist supremacy by the State could be losing its attraction among the masses. That is suggested by the failure of the state-backed anti-Muslim campaign of the BBS. Impressive mass demonstrations were held but after the tumult and the shouting died down the usual relations of amity and co-operation between the Sinhalese and the Muslims continued. There would have been an increase in anti-Muslim sentiment but there was no ignition of an anti-Muslim conflagration. What happened at Aluthgama/Beruwela was an organized affair, not a mass conflagration. The underlying reason why the assertion of Sinhala Buddhist and Sinhalese supremacy might be losing its attraction could be this: they asserted their supremacy with total success as far back as 1971 by the outrageously discriminatory University admission standardization scheme. Since then it has been shown that there isn’t a dam thing the minorities can do to challenge that supremacy. 44 years later it must seem to many sane and wholesome Sinhalese that there is no point in going on yelling and howling and screeching about a non-existent threat to the very existence of the Sinhalese. The time has come to really try to establish some degree of ethnic harmony and some degree of unity in this so-called nation. The mass appeal of racist neo-Fascism will continue. But the mass appeal of the assertion of Sinhala supremacy could diminish. It should be possible to contain racist neo-Fascism within a well-entrenched democracy as in India – as I argued in the first part of this article.

I would attach much importance to a linguistic change that has taken place over the last three years or so. Linguistic changes in the form of neologisms, words falling into desuetude, old words suddenly coming into vogue, words changing their meaning or acquiring new nuances, indicate changes taking place in a society. They signify new ways of conceptualizing the world and evaluating it. I have in mind the fact that the word "communalism", once ubiquitous in Sri Lankan usage has now fallen into desuetude and is used only infrequently. It has been replaced by "racism" which we used to think of as something that applied to what the whites did to the coloured, not what the coloured do to the coloured. I believe that the reason why "racism" has come into vogue is that it has much stronger negative connotations than "communalism". We had 100,000 deaths as a consequence of communalism. The strongly denunciatory "racism" is more apposite in that context. I take this linguistic change as signifying that Rajapakse’s racist neo-Fascism is not the wave of the future.

A noteworthy feature of the present pre-election scene in Sri Lanka is that there is not much popular enthusiasm about it, which is in striking contrast to a well-established norm. The explanation for this could be that we are moving from a conflictual to a consensual model of politics. On the first of the three great problems facing us, that of the economy, there is consensus about the basics among the two major parties. On the problem of democracy there is an apparent polarization, but it is not in the form of a stark dichotomy between democracy and dictatorship as in the Arab world and elsewhere. There is no doubt that Rajapakse is ideologically committed to racist neo-Fascism but in practice he is committed to working within a democratic framework. Otherwise he would not have held democratic elections. On the ethnic problem, the moderates are clearly in the ascendant in the GTF and the TNA, and on the Sinhalese side both major parties remain committed to a political solution within the framework of 13A. It is not surprising that in this situation our politicians are commuting from one Party to another without any sense of strain, so much so that we find it difficult to remember to which Party this or that politician belongs at the moment.

There are also factors of a socio-economic structural order behind the move to consensual politics. I have explored that in an earlier article and I am not going to repeat my argument here. Instead I will quote a poem of Hilaire Belloc, one of the great political poems of the last century, which expresses the underlying reality of democratic politics with beautiful lucidity:

The accursed reign of Privilege,

Which goes with women and champagne and bridge,

Broke – and Democracy resumed its reign,

Which goes with women and bridge and champagne.

There is a school of thought according to which we are moving towards a three-Party system with the JVP as the third Party, comparable to Britain’s Conservative, Labour, and Liberal Parties. In that case the following nursery rhyme, also a great political poem in my view, will be entirely apposite:

Hey rub-a-dub dub,

Three men in a tub,

The butcher, the baker, the candle-stick maker –

Turn ‘em out! Rogues all three!

It is masterly, the way the rhythm moves towards that thundering emphasis on Rogues – so apposite to Sri Lankan politics. I recommend that both poems be inscribed in our new Constitution.

izethhussain@gmail.com

Battle lines drawn in Hambantota


logoSaturday, 15 August 2015
Untitled-5With Rajapaksa shining less brightly in the family’s home base, Sajith Premadasa making inroads for the UNP in the district and Sirisena loyalist Mahinda Amaraweera emerging as the UPFA strongman in the area, the Hambantota race will be an interesting one to watch

Reflections on the 'Sihala Urumaya' that was

Fragments-Posted by 

On October 10, 2000, there was a Parliamentary Election. Two days later, a newly formed party split over its National List seat. The Central Committee had selected one person for that seat. This person had later resigned over the split, a problem given that he was the party's president. Worse still, the split had been a tug-of-war between him and a younger rebel, who was apparently hellbent on forcing everyone into selecting him.
In the end, that rebel got what he wanted. He got the seat.
S. L. Gunasekera, the president, had commented on him and his faction: "A set of intolerant Talibans."

A New Growth Paradigm ?


By Ranil Senanayake –August 15, 2015
Ranil Senanayake
Ranil Senanayake
Colombo Telegraph
Any discussion on ‘ Economic Development’ as a national goal, must demonstrate a perspective strongly rooted in modern science. It must take into consideration the reality of the current global crises. It must also understand the history of the crises. In doing so, we might find a way out of the current impasse between economic growth and planetary stability
Life on Earth learnt how to maintain gas and material flows, optimum for the evolution and sustainability of biodiversity. Carbon Dioxide, although essential to the process of life, was often introduced into the atmosphere by volcanic processes at disruptive levels, throughout geologic history. But the gas has not concentrated in the atmosphere, because it was sequestered by living things and put away out of circulation from the biosphere of living carbon, so that the environment was stable for life. This store of carbon was fossilized and has been slowly accumulating over the last few hundred million years and has acted as the storage of excess carbon.
In our rush to create the new petroleum and coal driven economy, this very simple and fundamental fact has been ignored. Carbon that cycles through living systems represents a fixed proportion of the planetary carbon, one part solid, like the carbohydrates in trees and one part gas, as in atmospheric Carbon Dioxide gas. If excess Carbon Dioxide enters the atmosphere through tectonic processes such as volcanism, photosynthetic activity removes this excess carbon dioxide from the biosphere and that excess is deposited as fossils to enter the lithosphere (rocks), never to interact with the biosphere again. This deposition is translated into vast quantities of fossilized carbon that has been removed from the biotic/atmospheric cycles. Unlike the biotic cycles of Carbon that stay deposited for tens of thousands of years. The fossil pools have deposition lifetimes of tens or hundreds of millions of years.
There have been fluctuations of Carbon Dioxide in the atmosphere in the past but equilibrium was gained and balance was restored. All this was long before humans.
The first human driven change that affected the local and regional climates was the massive loss of the global forest stock with the advent of colonization. This loss represents a debt to every nation that lost its forests as well as a debt to planetary atmospheric equilibrium. This debt can be settled by re-establishing the sequestered stocks of carbon that were lost by reforestation. But once this debt is settled there will be no more room on this planet to plant more trees to sequester the fossil carbon that is currently being released so irresponsibly.
                                        Read More

What future after the General Election?

by Victor Cherubim
( August 15, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Sri Lanka’s Parliamentary General Election on 17 August 2015 as many observers predict will be a defining moment perhaps, a game changer, for two main reasons.
A Tame Affair
After the “yahapalana” the so called 100 days government, of President Sirisena, a rainbow coalition of parties ushered in a measure of “good governance,” it was quite
natural to expect a cloudburst of verbal thunder, sporadic lightning and torrential downpours literally so to speak, during the run up to the election. But it was a tame affair. Fair enough, even the former President Mahinda Rajapaksa was restrained under provocation. The Elections Commissioner was able to moderate the usual fanfare, “cut-outs,” tamasha’s etc, and the Election so called “democracy in action” was kept to a comparable low key. The Army was in barracks, unable to take any sides, the Police had never witnessed such an unforeseen mild event, that the general public were said to be somewhat bored. Even Gotha decided to go abroad. This was unexpected, unusual in many respects to Sri Lanka, where past elections were considered somewhat notorious but colourful. Small wonder the Commonwealth contingent of “observers” hardly had much to do, to search or ransack malpractices.
An expectation of a New Stability and Security
After nearly thirty years of war, the people of Sri Lanka are looking forward to a time of peace and quiet. They want a new approach, an innovation in thinking. A new stability and security is a great source of warmth and pleasure. This election happens to be the first major impact on public life, six years since the war. It can have many different impacts on a society that it is impossible to generalise. At the same time throughout history the world over, elections held years after a prolonged war have had major implication and effect on societies.
One of the stark effects of a clean up after excesses of wars and peace is reconstruction and rehabilitation. Reconstruction after a war by its very nature is often done in haste. It encourages and breeds corruption and poor governance. Rehabilitation on the other hand, depends very much on what the society was before the war, what the war was about and many other variables.
General elections are corrective mechanisms where the public have their say. It is at this time that the public makes judgment. Most often the judgment is on improvement of the economy. Improvement cannot take place without good governance.
The result    
Whatever the result one thing is certain after the election, Old ways of doing things will naturally have to change to meet the wall of expectation of the masses. The coming together of various parties to change Sri Lanka for the better has brought with it high expectation. Great expectations require great leadership and even the old will bend with the new to survive.

Elephant alone forming government is foregone conclusion ! All election forecasts confirm


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News - 15.Aug.2015, 8.00PM) Following the conclusion of all election campaigns midnight yesterday (14), , based  on information provided today  by all intelligence officers across the Island , the State intelligence division has submitted an election forecast to president Maithripala. Similarly the secretarial offices havae also forwarded election forecasts to president.
Based on those reports the forecasts in a nutshell are as follows :
UNP will secure 116 seats
UPFA – number of seats  77
TNA – number of seats 18
JVP – number of seats – 12
Muslim Congress that is contesting separately – 2 seats
Fonseka’s party – number of seats – none 
When Lanka e new inquired from a high rung officer of the  elections commission in this regard  , he said the elections department does not usually do an official voter survey to decide on an election forecast . However according to the reports received on the election forecasts of officers , their evaluation is there cannot be much difference to the forecasts mentioned above.
The high rung elections department officers said , the JVP and TNA would together get 30 seats .Among the remaining seats , the UPFA at its best can get a maximum number of 80 seats. The Muslim party contesting separately will secure two seats , while the remaining 113 seats will be won by the UNP , he added.
Hence it is his opinion that the UNP will without any difficulty secure a clear majority, in his final analysis.
Meanwhile based on the independent survey conducted by a team of Dons  of Kelaniya University social science faculty including  senior lecturer Ven.  Legumdeniye Piyaratne Thera ,  the UNP will secure 115 seats while the UPFA will get 74 seats . In their analysis report they had however omitted the two Muslim parties that are contesting separately .
In all the reports aforementioned , as at  day of conclusion of election campaign , there was a common indication ( the final day of campaign)- this time more interest  is being shown towards  exercise of franchise.
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by     (2015-08-15 14:30:06)
Maithri strikes again!

logoSaturday, 15 August 2015
  • UPFA plunges deeper into crisis  
  • SLFP Chairman sacks party general secretaries and appoints loyalists
  • Colombo District Court reinforces party chairman’s appointments until next hearing
  • Susil, Anura Yapa have party membership suspended
  • Sirisena accuses sacked office bearers of conspiring against the SLFP
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FLASHBACK: President, UPFA and SLFP Leader Maithripala Sirisena receives the copy of the party manifesto from UPFA General Secretary Susil Premajayantha and SLFP General Secretary Anura Priyadarshana Yapa soon after its release last month File photo
By Dharisha Bastians
President Maithripala Sirisena moved hard and fast yesterday to wrest control of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) and the United Peoples’ Freedom Party Alliance (UPFA) that he leads, 48 hours ahead of crucial elections, by unceremoniously sacking both party secretaries and appointing his loyalists to the posts.
Both SLFP General Secretary Anura Priyadarshana Yapa and UPFA General Secretary Susil Premajayantha had their membership in the SLFP suspended with immediate effect, with President Sirisena informing the Elections Commissioner in writing that the two men no longer acted legitimately for the two parties.
Duminda Dissanayake was appointed SLFP General Secretary while Wishwa Warnapala was appointed acting UPFA General Secretary, President Sirisena informed the Commissioner of Elections Mahinda Deshapriya, the parties concerned and his party’s administration in writing yesterday.
The calculated move was reinforced by a court order issued by Colombo District Judge Harsha Sethunga who banned the ousted General Secretaries from interfering with the duties of the new appointees and fixed the case for 28 August, more than 10 days after the parliamentary election. Dissanayake and Warnapala went to court to seek the injunction.
In his letters to Yapa and Premajayantha, President Sirisena accused them of conspiring against the party and acting against the party leader and party policies and used powers vested in him as SLFP Chairman to suspend their party membership and remove them from all currently held posts.
President Sirisena told Yapa and Premajayantha to expect letters detailing disciplinary action that is to be initiated against them in due course.
Both sacked office-bearers were seen as being instrumental to ensuring former President Rajapaksa was given nominations to contest on the UPFA ticket, against President Sirisena’s wishes. The pair would be equally powerful in naming the UPFA’s final nominees for the national list, where former President Rajapaksa is eager to ensure his loyalists make the cut.
Both Premajayantha and Yapa were at Rajapaksa’s final election rally in Kurunegala last night, but both men remained mum on the sacking.
Wimal Weerawansa, a staunch Rajapaksa supporter, told massive crowds at the rally that former Chief Justice Sarath N. Silva, who was also on stage, had advised that the Elections Commissioner could only recognise the two general secretaries who signed nomination papers during the current election cycle.
However, analysts said Sirisena had played a masterstroke by obtaining a court order to reinforce his decision, which could force the Elections Commissioner to accept the new status quo.  
President Sirisena has been widely criticised for failing to remove the two officials who were suspected as being Rajapaksa loyalists, as soon as he took over the party chairmanship in January.
Exercising his authority as Chairman of the SLFP for the first time in seven months, President Sirisena also threw the UPFA elections operations room out of the SLFP’s Darley Road headquarters last night.
The move follows a press conference organised by the UPFA at the headquarters yesterday morning, at which the party attempted to showcase the seven SLFP seniors President Sirisena had named in his fiery letter to Mahinda Rajapaksa as the party’s potential prime ministerial nominees.
The seven, of which only three showed up at the press briefing, were to tell the media that all of them were rejecting the President’s offer. UPFA candidate and former Minister John Seneviratne claimed that all seven seniors named would reject the President’s offer and insisted Rajapaksa should be appointed prime minister if the UPFA won the election on Monday.
The eleventh hour moves sent shockwaves across the island, where political parties are wrapping up their campaigns with final rallies that must end by midnight.