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, August 16, 2015

Prageeth probe: Police under no pressure to conceal infor 


2015-08-16
Police Headquarters said today that some of the details of the investigation into the disappearance of Prageeth Eknaligoda had been released to the public but the rest could not be revealed because the investigations were continuing.

 It denied that Police Chief N.K. Illangakoon was holding back some of the information under pressure from some individuals.

 Prageeth's wife Sandaya Eknaligoda had at a news conference claimed that information regarding the disappearance of her husband had not been released to the public. 

Police Spokesman Ruwan Gunasekara said the police had handed over all the files connected to the disappearance to the CID under instructions from the police chief to carry out the investigations without fear or favour. 

"There has been no intimidation at all," he said. The CID was continuing the investigation successfully, he added. 

“We can’t reveal all the information we have. We have already arrested two individuals and we will provide more information as and when necessary. We will update the media and the family when we have made further progress while making sure that the information would not hamper further investigations,” ASP Gunasekara said. (Darshana Sanjeewa) 

Luxury Sri Lanka resort can't hide country's divisions

The swimming pool at the Thalsevana resort in Sri LankaJulius Selvamalar

BBC
14 August 2015
Sri Lanka has everything a holidaymaker could want: a wonderful climate, friendly people, delicious food and beautiful beaches. But some of its resorts hide dark secrets.

President Sirisena Has Acted Proactively


Colombo TelegraphBy Hema Senanayake –August 16, 2015
Hema Senanayake
Hema SenanayaAugust 16, 2015
President Mithripala Sirisena has begun to act proactively. This is something I was expecting. But I was expecting him to act decisively immediately after the conclusion of the general election. Instead, President Sirisena has begun to act proactively and decisively on the eve of the election in order to ensure the political stability of the country for the next five years after the general election. I being an economic analyst have been keen about the political stability of the country. No economic development agenda is possible without peace and political stability. In this particular moment of history I knew that political stability should arise from the Central Committee of SLFP. There cannot be any stability if the general secretaries of SLFP & UPFA and present members of respective Central Committees do not understand the vision and wishes of the President Sirisena.
The President sacked both Anura Priyadarashana Yapa and Susil Premajayanth from the positions they held in SLFP and UPFA. Anura Priyadarshana Yapa and Susil Premajayantha had now been prevented from functioning as the General Secretary of SLFP and Secretary of UPFA respectively. Instead of them President has appointed Duminda Dissanayake as the secretary to SLFP and Dr. Wiswa Warnapala as the secretary to UPFA.
MaithripalaI have been expecting this to happen for a while. Yet, I expect it to happen immediately after the conclusion of the general election. I have documented it by writing an article titled “Thinking of a president” to Colombo Telegraph on July 15th. Let me quote it. It may be a little bit long quote. But it says what has to be said. I wrote as follows:

A Victory for ‘Democratic Revolution’

The President would be undoubtedly taking firm security measures to thwart any efforts at communal violence aftermath of the elections whoever wins. It is to preserve the good name of the SLFP and the UPFA, under such circumstances, that the President has taken over the control of those political organizations. After all he is the leader of the SLFP and the UPFA, however they have been hijacked by the unscrupulous ‘gangs and groups.’
by Laksiri Fernando
( August 16, 2015, Sydney, Sri Lanka Guardian) Both President Sirisena and Prime Minister Wickremasinghe have called the ongoing change a ‘revolution’ whatever the attendant infirmities or exaggerations. It is through the same democratic processes that those weaknesses could be rectified. The participation of the people and the civil society is of paramount importance. If January 8th was the first stage of that revolution, today, the August 17th undoubtedly is going to be the second stage.

If MR’s defeat is certain, why not vote JVP!


article_imageAugust 15, 2015, 6:53 pm
Be patient Comrade; two stages can’t merge into one!

An uneasy relationship; but it has to be managed.

by Kumar David

If it is certain that Mahinda Rajapaksa (MR) will not be the next Prime Minister, it makes sense to use ones vote to craft a meaningful opposition instead of increasing the Ranil Wickremesinghe (RW) UNF-GG parliamentary majority. A strong JVP serves two objectives: (a) an opposition that can keep the next government on a tight leash (the debauched UPFA opposition can serve no such purpose); (b) test out a dish that may mature into an alternative government one day. Yes, I can hear voices in protest: "Kumar, you are crazy, you are playing with fire! How can one be sure till the votes are counted that the UPFA has been defeated? How can we take a chance? We must pool every vote to defeat MR; we can think of the JVP afterwards, that is after the immediate peril has receded".

A Plea To Enlighten The Ruthlessly Abused People

Colombo TelegraphBy Nagananda Kodituwakku –August 16, 2015
Nagananda Kodituwakku
Nagananda Kodituwakku
ByThe reply sent by Mahinda Rajapaksa to Party Leader, President Maithipala Sirisena’s letter shows nothing more than the immaturity of the electorate and dire need to educate the people of Sri Lanka who hold the all inalienable sovereign powers of governance under the Constitution, which is being ruthlessly abused by the politico cheats belongs to both the ruling party and the opposition.
Naturally it is disheartening to observe that those who are well acquainted with the fundamentals of the constitutional law have preferred to remain silent, refraining from educating the people of this country whose sovereign rights (Legislative, Executive and Judicial power) have ruthlessly been abused by the two main political parties since independence.
Both two established political parties in Sri Lanka have shown that they have no genuine interest whatsoever to establish true democracy in this country that would respect the inalienable democratic rights of the people as enshrined in the supreme law of the land, the Constitution.
Rajapaksa: a cheat with credibility lost altogether
Mahinda Rajapaksa, in his re-election bid to the Office vouched in the 2010 Manifesto ‘The Executive Presidency will be converted into a Trusteeship which honours the mandate given to Parliament by being accountable to parliament, establishes equality before the law, is accountable to the judiciary and enacts laws that are accountable to the judiciary, and is not in conflict with the judiciary’ (page 56)
JVPBut what Rajapaksa did after his re-election to the office was absolutely the opposite. He encouraged the absolute lawlessness and was determined to have a firm grip on the justice system that could hinder all forms of abuses condoned by him.Read More

Outcome of tomorrow’s poll crucial for Lanka

A worker at the Department of Elections busy moving ballot boxes to be transported to polling booths for tomorrow’s polls. Pic by Indika Handuwela
View(s): 8303

    The Sunday Times Sri Lanka
  • Both major alliances confident, but dramatic internal battle rages within UPFA
  • Sirisena’s suspension of two party secretaries apparently linked to dispute over National List nominees
  • International Crisis Group says resolution of ethnic issue depends on what happens at elections
When a messenger from the Presidential Secretariat arrived at former President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s temporary residence in Mirihana on Thursday morning, he was away. So the messenger left a letter he brought with a staffer at Rajapaksa’s residence.
Rajapaksa was in Kurunegala, from which district he is contesting for tomorrow’s parliamentary elections. When he learnt that a letter from President Maithripala Sirisena had come, he asked that it be opened and faxed to Basil Rajkapaksa. He was expected to read the contents and brief the former President on the telephone.

As Sri Lanka goes to polls, calls grow for war crimes trial over Tamil Tigers assault

Sri Lanka votes on Monday in parliamentary elections that could see Mahinda Rajapaksa return to politics - just as the UN prepares to release a report into human rights abuses under his rule


Mahinda Rajapaska

Telegraph.co.ukPhilip SherwellBy Jaffna-16 Aug 2015
In the peaceful confines of a church compound in the northern tip of Sri Lanka, its thick walls offering a cool respite from the cloying tropical humidity outside, the diminutive middle-aged woman quietly related the horrors that tore apart her family.

The Thunderbolt before Election

Is Sri Lanka going to continue her forward journey towards greater democracy (albeit with warts)? Or will she retrograde, into the Rajapaksa era of familial rule and dynastic succession?

by Tisaranee Gunasekara
“Time will say nothing but I told you so,
Time only knows the price we have to pay…”
Auden (But I Can’t)
( August 16, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Last week Candidate Mahinda Rajapaksa was interviewed on Derana. At one point the interviewer asks what guarantee he has he will be offered the premiership by President Sirisena. Mr. Rajapaksa gives a dismissive half-smile and replies, ‘I know Maithri.’

Another Place & A Small Part Of Another Experience

Colombo TelegraphBy Emil van der Poorten –August 16, 2015 
Emil van der Poorten
Emil van der Poorten

The prohibition on the publication of material that might relate to the General Election due to be held on the day after the Sunday newspapers hit the stands this week, has offered me the opportunity of taking a journey down memory lane to a small piece of my existence more than 30 years ago.
There are going to be many diversions in this story and for them I’ll make no apology because I think they are relevant to that narrative.
It was 1981 and I was about to take my second trip back home to Sri Lanka when I was asked to present myself for an interview in Slave Lake, in the northern half of Canada’s western province of Alberta, colloquially known in Canada as “the land of the blue-eyed sheikhs,” thanks to it producing huge quantities of oil and natural gas which had the province’s coffers overflowing with petrodollars, leading, on one occasion to the government of the day, faced with a huge budget surplus, giving every man, woman and child a cheque for $1000. This had some unexpected political embarrassment attached to it when it was discovered that some older folk who were born in the province but had moved away in their infancy, qualified for and received this payment! This proved to be the one time that my family were direct beneficiaries of the fossil-fuel-generated wealth of the province!
Since my arrival in the southern part of the province, I’d worked in the livestock feed industry, first as a commodity buyer, buying feed grains for what was then Canada’s biggest (cattle) feedlot with a capacity for 50,000 head, despite the fact that I’d proclaimed to those who interviewed me for the position, that the only cereal grain I was familiar with was rice and that the job I held since my arrival in Canada in 1973 – as an accounts clerk at British Petroleum – in no way qualified me for the position. For whatever reason, they hired me and I started working in Alberta in December of 1975, having driven across the part of Canada that separated Toronto from Alberta in early winter, with a young Sri Lankan for company, leaving my wife and two children in Canada’s largest city to join me later in December.
One of the commonest (polite!) questions asked of people of colour in Canada then was, “What was the extent of your culture shock when you moved from a very different warm, southern Asian country to what is a predominantly ‘white’ Canada?” My stock (and honest) answer to that question after I took up my new position in Slave Lake in northern Alberta, used to be, that moving from Sri Lanka, (essentially as political refugees long before the term came into common use!) did not jar us in a cultural sense, given the fact that we belonged to a class that was raised with ‘western’ norms and values. However, moving in December 1981, from Claresholm in Southern Alberta, from a countryside dominated by white ranchers, producing more than 60% of Canada’s beef and where the “conservatism” practiced was more akin to fundamentalist, right-wing Christianity of the most reactionary kind – to the land of the Cree and the muskeg – was a cultural shock!
Alberta (the south of it, anyway) was predominantly “cow country,” and was often referred to as “the Texas of Canada, except that, in Alberta, the b.s. is on the outside of the (cowboy) boots!”

Virtuous vote today!

logoMonday, 17 August 2015
  • More than 15 million registered to cast their ballot to elect new government
  • Polls observers hail peaceful election; expect tight race
  • “Go out and vote for country, nation and your future”: Mahinda
  • ​Ranil upbeat, says people for good governance, transparency, economic progress
  • JVP expected to do well in today’s poll
  • Polls Chief expects first result to be out after midnight 
Untitled-2Untitled-1
A Police officer with a person carrying a ballot box in Colombo yesterday for 
distribution to a voting centre – Pic by Upul Abayasekara
By Dharisha Bastians
Sri Lankans will vote to elect legislators to sit in the country’s 15th Parliament today, in a poll that has become a rematch between former President Mahinda Rajapaksa and the coalition that defeated him in the January presidential contest.
Over 15 million voters are registered to vote at 12,314 polling stations around the island in today’s Parliamentary election to choose the new 225-member Legislature.
The Elections Department began the distribution of ballot boxes to polling stations islandwide at 7 a.m. yesterday, and the task was completed by mid-afternoon, election officials said.
The department will deploy 125,000 officials for election duty today, with 70,000 officials ear-marked for vote-counting once polling concludes this evening.
Polls Chief Mahinda Deshapriya said he expects the first results of the 2015 Parliamentary election to be released by midnight tomorrow. The results release is not likely to extend till 19 August, he said.
Officials and analysts expect today’s voter turnout to be lower than in January’s presidential poll, since the two major national elections have happened only months apart, a trend observed in previous elections. 
A drop in turnout is most likely to adversely impact the UPFA led by Rajapaksa, analysts say, with the party’s internal crisis reaching crescendo two days ahead of election day likely to discourage its base supporters and activists.
Political parties are urging people to go out and vote.
“Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa urges all registered voters to think about the country, the nation and the future and cast their ballots in tomorrow’s election,” Rajapaksa spokesman Rohan Welivita said in a press release issued yesterday. Welivita said the former President also appealed to all Sri Lankans to remain peaceful on election day and in the post election period.

Polls observers hailed today’s Parliamentary election as largely peaceful, despite four fatalities being recorded during the campaign.
The Campaign for Free and Fair Elections (CaFFE) said it had received 1,802 complaints during the pre-election but the bulk of them were minor complaints. The polls monitor also hailed the considerable decreased in the abuse of State property, that it said had been inherent to Sri Lankan elections. 
“In the last elections during the Government of Mahinda Rajapaksa such abuses were widespread often with the blessings of the most senior politicians. However during this election Sirisena and Wickremesinghe have not misused public property and have led the fight against the misuse of public property,” the monitors said.
The observers said the election was likely to be the tightest race since the parliamentary polls in 2001. The Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna led by Anura Kumara Dissanayake is projected to perform well in today’s election, potentially obtaining between 10-15 seats.
The defining highlight of the 17 August polls campaign has been the re-entry of President Rajapaksa who is hoping to make a political comeback as prime minister if his party secures the most seats in the House.
Rajapaksa has pushed back hard against the coalition Government of Prime Minister Wickremesinghe and President Maithripala Sirisena, claiming they had been soft on terror threats and stalled the country’s major development drive initiated during his presidential tenure.
However Rajapaksa’s re-entry galvanised opposition forces that had mobilised against his rule in January, pushing a fragmented coalition back together to contest the Parliamentary poll under a single banner. The UNFGG has campaigned on a good governance platform, urging voters to prevent Rajapaksa from rolling-back the 8 January victory for democracy, freedom and the rule of law.
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe who is facing off against Rajapaksa as his de facto prime ministerial rival for the first time in a decade, told The Hindu newspaper yesterday that today’s election was crucial, like the 1977 poll.
“There is a definite trend against former President Mahinda Rajapaksa and the type of autocratic government they had. People are for open, good governance, transparency. They also like to see rapid economic progress,” Wickremesinghe said.
Analysts are predicting that no party will win an outright majority in the election, but most forecasts expect the UNFGG to secure between 95-105 seats, making the coalition the single largest party in Parliament.

MR violating election laws?

MR violating election laws?

Lankanewsweb.net- Aug 16, 2015
A complaint was lodged against UPFA Kurunegala District candidate and former president, Mahinda Rajapaksa, on Saturday (16), with the Commissioner of Elections, for alleged violation of election laws by distributing white cloth at various temples and promoting his preference number at religious ceremonies.
 Executive Director of Campaign for Free and Fair Elections (CaFFE), Keerthi Tennakoon, head of the election monitoring body that lodged the complaint, told the Sunday Observer, the former president and the main campaigner for the UPFA had purportedly distribute white cloth (sil redi) among devotees at several Buddhist temples in Krunegala on Saturday morning.
The deadline for all election propaganda was Friday midnight (15). According to CaFFE, the distribution of white cloth Saturday morning amounted to violation of election laws.
The complaint made to the Election Commissioner stated that Rajapaksa has commenced distributing white cloth among Buddhist devotees Saturday morning, with the first such meeting taking place at the Bauddaloka Privena at 9.30 a.m.
 Tennakoon told the Sunday Observer that according to information received, the former president had arrived in a fleet of over 10 vehicles, displaying his photograph and the preference number.
The former Head of State has visited temples in Wariyapola, Demataluwa, Dikwehera, Wedanda, Colombagama and Randeniya areas in the Kurunegala District. At certain places, the Special Task Force (STF) personnel on pre-election duty had stopped him and cautioned against the violation of election laws, CaFFE further said.
Human Rights lawyer and anti-corruption campaigner, J. C. Weliamuna, commenting on the purported election law violation told the Sunday Observer such acts amounted to ‘election bribery.’
“This has happened despite the Election Commissioner’s strict instructions to avoid violations of the law,” Weliamuna said.
The Election Commissioner was not available for comment but a top election official told the Sunday Observer that appropriate action will be taken based on the complaint and images received.
“It is an apparent violation,” the official said. Police Media Spokesman, ASP Ruwan Gunasekera said he was unable to comment on the matter as no complaints had been lodged either with the Kurunegala or Kuliyapitiya police stations.
Government Spokesman Dr. Rajitha Senaratne told the Sunday Observer the Commissioner of election, who has the powers to act, should do so.
“The Commissioner has taken steps against minor violations committed by the government candidates and it would be appropriate if he were to extend the arm of the law to the former president as well,” he said.

On the eve: The President closes all avenues for MR’s return what will the voters say?


article_image
by Rajan Philips-

Maithripala Sirisena brought life to a lifeless campaign on its last official day. After putting it in writing that he will not appoint Mahinda Rajapaksa even if the UPFA manages to win more than half the number of seats in tomorrow’s election, Sirisena went further and fired the twin-secretaries of the SLFP-UPFA alliance so that they are not around to play monkey tricks after the election and in the selection of national list MPs for the UPFA. After berating Rajapaksa for letting the UPFA tails wag the SLFP dog, Sirisena is determined to cut off the nefarious small-party tails to restore his old grand Party. Mr. Sirisena is proving himself to be more ruthless as the Chairman of his Party than he has been as the President of his country. Political parties in times past have been shaken by splits, crossovers and defections, but there have never been such dramatic expulsions in any political party similar to what we saw on Friday, and that too two days before a parliamentary election. And unlike others the President is not expelling by elimination but by due process and litigation. As the entire political class of the country is divided on the question of the return of Mahinda Rajapaksa – one is either for it, or against it, so too will the pundits be divided - either for or against President Sirisena’s actions last week.

But the important question is how will the voters respond to it tomorrow? To ask another way, is President Sirisena, intentionally or otherwise, inviting the voters to support him in cleaning up the SLFP as part of his January 8 mandate. The battle for the SLFP, pitting the MR and non-MR factions, was expected to roll out immediately after the January presidential election. Instead, the battle is unfolding quite unexpectedly in the midst of a parliamentary election seven months later. The odds seem firmly stacked against Mahinda Rajapaksa, and to be in favour of Maithripala Sirisena. MR and the UPFA need to win 113 or more seats in the new parliament to make any credible claim to form the next government and to have Mahinda Rajapaksa appointed as Prime Minister. President Sirisena would welcome a UPFA government, but he has made it clear that he will not appoint Mahinda Rajapaksa as the new Prime Minister under any circumstances.

As I alluded to last week, and as others have argued, the President is on arguably strong legal and constitutional grounds, and unequivocally on strong moral grounds in insisting that he will not appoint MR as PM. But the President’s hand will be infinitely strengthened if the voters were to deny Rajapaksa and the UPFA a majority of the seats in tomorrow’s election. The President seems confident that the electoral wind is behind him and a majority of surveys and predictions seem to support his confidence. The seat predictions (including the National List appointees), based on opinion surveys, range from 100-110 for the UNF, 85-95 for UPFA, and about 15 each for the TNA and the JVP. Even in favourable scenarios for the UPFA, it is not being seen as getting the largest number of seats.

Anticipating such an outcome, the President has started clearing the decks even before the election. After firing the two spineless Rajapaksa loyalists, he has appointed his supporter from Anuradhapura, Duminda Dissanayake, as the new SLFP Secretary, and academic and Bandaranaike favourite Wiswa Warnapala as the UPFA Secretary. They will now determine who will fill the UPFA’s national list slots. Whatever opinion one might have on the propriety, or impropriety, of the President’s actions, few will question the good riddance of bad national-list rubbish that has burdened the parliament for 21 years.

Will the President’s actions have any direct effect on tomorrow’s vote? It is unlikely to cause major changes among voters who have already made up their minds. But it will create opposing effects on the main supporters of the UNF and UPFA alliances. The UNF and non-Rajapaksa forces are obviously elated by the President’s lightning strikes and will work with much enthusiasm in ‘getting out the vote’ tomorrow. The UPFA and the Rajapaksa loyalists, on the other hand, are thoroughly demoralized by the President’s double blows in three days, and are more likely to be deflated and sulking rather than mobilizing voters.

The secret of the Rajapaksa power base has always been in two parts – the people’s support being one part, albeit the minor part, and the use of the state muscle being the bigger part. Mahinda Rajapaksa has never won power from the ranks of the opposition. In 2005, he succeeded Chandrika Kumaratunga in government, even though he made it out to be that he was coming from the opposition. Ten years later, even the muscle of state power was not enough to sustain the January presidential campaign over the fatigue that had clearly set in within the regime as well as in the country in relation to the regime. The current campaign to bring back Mahinda just for the sake of bringing him back has not been enough to overcome that fatigue and the lack of state power has not helped the cause either.

Historical Perspective

To step back from the kerfuffle inside the SLFP-UPFA, and to look at tomorrow’s election in its historical perspective, the people will be heading to vote in a second national election in a span of seven months. It will also be the 16th parliamentary election in 68 years. The island polity elected its first parliament in a month long (August 23 – September 20) election in 1947, five months before the country became independent from British colonial rule. Although the two elections this year are totally different – the presidential election in January and parliamentary election in August, the same voters who voted in January will be voting again tomorrow – perhaps in fewer numbers. On the other hand, while the first election in 1947 and the election tomorrow are nominally the same parliamentary elections, the two are totally different in terms of every empirical category that one can think of. They are not just two different elections, but they represent two different countries 68 years apart. And the 14 elections in between are milestones along the long road of changes between then and now. No two elections have been the same. The election tomorrow is unique in many respects. The President has it made it even more unique.

Every election has had its questions and answers. Quite a few questions have continued unanswered from the time of independence to where we are today. Some of the old questions have been aggravated along the way by wrongheaded answers that were attempted more for reasons of expediency than for genuine resolutions. Several new questions have arisen in recent years, corresponding to wholesale changes in the country’s internal affairs and external relationships. When people cast their votes tomorrow, they will be voting on lists of candidates in different districts, but they will not be carrying for guidance lists of political questions that concern academics and commentators. Even those who are familiar with and are exercised over the ‘grand questions’ of economy, national security/sovereignty, the unitary/federalist dichotomy, war crimes and UNHRC reports, and the relative importance of Sri Lanka’s relationships with India, China and the West – will not have much of an answer to any or all of these questions when they cast their votes simply for a party and to indicate their preferences among the candidates in a district.

It will be up to the new parliament that the people will elect tomorrow to deal with those questions and find answers. To ask a question about ‘questions’, will the new parliament deal with them in a ‘transformatively’ different way, or will it be bogged down by the shenanigans of the old parliament that was dissolved in July. From that standpoint, the President’s actions over the last few days can be seen as a challenge across the political spectrum, to every political party, to get rid of the corrupt deadwood and bring in new blood into the country’s political veins. The UNP, more than others, now seemingly smug in anticipation of a favourable outcome tomorrow, must not try to avoid or delay dealing with that challenge inside its own organization, just as President Sirisena is provoking it within the SLFP. The moral premises of that challenge must spill over into the organization of cabinet government in the new parliament. The people deserve that the new government should be qualitatively different from not only the rots of the Rajapaksa regime, but also from the disappointments of the yahapalanya government. And it would be up to the President to show that he could be just as assertive in ensuring good governance as he is being assertive in cleaning up the SLFP.