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

Monday, August 24, 2015

India says rich world has responsibility to curb climate change

Smoke rises from a chimney of a garbage processing plant on the outskirts of Chandigarh December 3, 2011. REUTERS/Ajay Verma/FilesSmoke rises from a chimney of a garbage processing plant on the outskirts of Chandigarh December 3, 2011.-REUTERS/AJAY VERMA/FILES
ReutersNEW DELHI Mon Aug 24, 2015 
The environment minister said on Monday that the rich world could not wish away its responsibility for man-made global warming, as he urged developed nations to do more to help his country deal with the impact of climate change.
India is one of the last major economies still to submit its plans to tackle global warming ahead of a United Nations summit in December where more than 190 countries will seek a deal to halt a damaging rise in temperatures.
Despite its low per-capita emissions, India is already the world's third-largest carbon emitter. Its huge population of 1.2 billion, a fast-growing economy and rising use of coal make its role crucial if the U.N. summit is to succeed.
Prakash Javadekar said India was in the final stages of preparing its submissions to the U.N., and that he was confident a global deal could be reached at the summit in Paris.
But, he added, the rich world had so far failed to make sufficient money and cutting-edge technology available to help poorer countries that were not to blame for global warming.
"Historical responsibility is a fact. It cannot be wished away. We are just 2.4 percent of the world's historical emissions," he told reporters in New Delhi.
Unlike other large emitters like the United States and China, India has said it will not commit to a "peak year" for its own emissions, arguing that doing so would hamper its drive to beat poverty through economic growth.

(Reporting by Tommy Wilkes; Editing by Douglas Busvine)

The heroin epidemic’s toll: One county, 70 minutes, eight overdoses

 The first call came at 7:33 p.m. last Sunday: Two people had overdosed on heroin in a home just a few hundred yards from the station where firefighters were awaiting their nightly round of drug emergencies.

Universal flu vaccine a step closer as cientists create experimental jabs

Annual vaccinations could be a thing of the past as scientists have successfully tested vaccines on animals infected with different strains of influenza
 3D model of virus particles. Conventional flu vaccines target the “head” of a molecule called haemagglutinin (HA) that sits on the surface of flu viruses. Photograph: Bernhard Classen/Alamy
, science editor-Monday 24 August 2015 
A universal flu vaccine that protects against multiple strains of the virus is a step closer after scientists created experimental jabs that work in animals.
The vaccines prevented deaths or reduced symptoms in mice, ferrets and monkeys infected with different types of flu, raising hopes for a reliable alternative to the seasonal vaccine.
Doctors hope that a universal flu vaccine would do away with the need for people at risk to have flu jabs every year, and even protect the public from dangerous, potentially pandemic, strains that jump from birds or pigs into humans.
Conventional flu vaccines target the “head” of a molecule called haemagglutinin (HA) that sits on the surface of flu viruses. But because the head of the HA mutates so rapidly, seasonal flu vaccines must be continually re-formulated to ensure they are effective.
During the last flu season, mutations in the HA molecule on one of the most common circulating strains, H3N2, meant that the seasonal flu vaccine offered little protection. Public Health England said in February that the less effective vaccine was likely to have been behind a steep rise in flu deaths.
In two studies reported on Monday, separate research teams describe how they created novel flu vaccines that target the “stem” of the HA molecule instead of the head. The stem of the HA molecule is similar across different flu strains and mutates far less often.
One of the teams, led by Barney Graham at the National Institutes of Health in Maryland, created their vaccine by attaching part of a flu virus’s HA stem to tiny balls of protein. These protein nanoparticles kept the stem intact and made it easy for the immune system to spot once it was injected.
In lab tests, one version of the vaccine completely protected mice and partially protected ferrets from injections of H5N1 bird flu virus, which was fatal in unvaccinated animals. The H5N1 flu strain has killed more than 400 people since 2003, most of whom caught the virus from infected poultry.
“This is very much a test of concept,” Graham told the Guardian. The team, whose study appears in the journal Nature Medicine, now hopes to develop another vaccine that protects against a different group of flu viruses. The first human trials are at least three years away, Graham added.
A second team, led by Antonietta Impagliazzo at the Crucell Vaccine Institute in Leiden, created their own experimental flu vaccine by removing the head of the HA molecule, and tweaking the stem to make it bind to antibodies more effectively.
Writing in the journal Science, the team describes how injections of one formulation of the vaccine protected mice from H5N1 bird flu and the H1N1 swine flu that emerged in 2009. The vaccine was less effective in macaques, but the animals had less severe flu symptoms after receiving the jabs.
“Influenza remains one of the most serious public health challenges, and new therapeutic and preventative solutions are needed,” said Hanneke Schuitemaker, head of viral vaccines discovery at Janssen Infectious Diseases and Vaccines, a company that worked on the vaccine.
“The results highlighted today shows there is potential in the development of a single universal vaccine to protect against all seasonal and pandemic influenza strains,” she added.
Sarah Gilbert, professor of vaccinology at Oxford University, said: “This is an exciting development, but the new vaccines now need to be tested in clinical trials to see how well they work in humans. This will be the next stage of research, which will take several years. So we are still some way from having better flu vaccines for humans.”

Sunday, August 23, 2015

UN Pushes ‘Long Term Peace’ Under New Sri Lanka Government

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(Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe leaves after his swearing-in ceremony in Colombo, on August 21, 2015 (AFP Photo/Ishara S. Kodikara))
Sri Lanka Brief23/08/2015
UN chief Ban Ki-moon has urged Sri Lanka’s new government to ensure “long term peace” as Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe was set to form a coalition committed to ethnic reconciliation.
“The secretary-general encouraged the prime minister and the national unity government to seize this opportunity to advance long-term peace for all Sri Lankans,” the UN said in a statement.
It added Ban had a telephone conversation with Wickremesinghe after he was sworn in at a ceremony in Colombo on Friday.
The UN statement received Saturday said Ban congratulated Wickremesinghe and commended his message of “good governance and national unity”.
“He (Ban) noted that the peaceful nature of the polls as well as high voter turn-out were in part a reflection of this message,” the UN said.
The UN welcome came as France said Sri Lanka’s election was “one more step forward towards strengthening democracy”.
“We hope it will also help continue the action taken since the election of President Maithripala Sirisena (in January) in support of human rights and inter-community reconciliation,” the French foreign ministry said.
The opposition Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) of former president Mahinda Rajapakse agreed Friday to a broad-based coalition government with Wickremesinghe’s United National Party (UNP).
The UNP, which more than doubled its seats in Monday’s parliamentary election, is due to form a new cabinet early next week that will include SLFP members too after securing a coalition agreement.
The deal is a remarkable turnaround for a country that appeared firmly in Rajapakse’s grip until his surprise defeat in January’s presidential polls.
The former strongman, who oversaw the crushing of a long-running Tamil separatist insurgency, will sit on the opposition benches along with a dissident group of loyalists.
But the SLFP, which had opposed any concessions to the Tamils, now says it will back constitutional reforms aimed at addressing minority rights and ensuring reconciliation.
In a memorandum of understanding, the two parties pledged to ensure “ethnic and religious reconciliation” in a country that still bears the scars of a separatist war that killed at least 100,000 people between 1972 and 2009.
The agreement pledges constitutional reforms to ensure ethnic unity and uphold the rights of minorities.
But it does not go into specifics and it remains unclear how the two parties will reconcile past differences, with the UNP favouring extensive devolution of power to the Tamils.
The SLFP also opposes investigations into war crimes said to have been committed by troops under Rajapakse’s command, while the UNP wants a fresh inquiry.
The minority Tamil National Alliance (TNA), which took 16 seats and emerged as the third largest party in a hung parliament, will not join the coalition but has promised the new government “issue-based” support.
AFP
President urget to seek second term to fulfill people’s expectations 

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President Maithripala Sirisena with people and greeted by TNA leader R. Sampanthan during his visit to the north which was preceded by a tour to the east as well.                                
logo Monday, 24 August 2015
Trincomalee: Sri Lanka’s President Maithripala Sirisena has been asked to seek a second term to fulfill the expectations of the people.
The people of Kinniya made this request when President Sirisena visited the Eastern Province town and met with the local population on Saturday, the President’s Media Division said.
Informing the President that the development expected by them had not yet been received to their areas, the people apprised the President of the problems faced by them. These included the issues on agriculture, lands, health and education.
President Sirisena engaged in a tour to Kinniya and Sampur on 22 August in order to provide land deeds to those in the Eastern Province. He was warmly welcomed by the Sinhala, Tamil and Muslim people of the area when he arrived in Kinniya.
The President presented the land deeds to 234 displaced families in the Sampur area to resettle them in their original places. Earlier this year the President revoked an agreement under which 818 acres of land was taken by the previous Government after the war and released the land to resettle the displaced persons.

The Chief Minister of the Eastern Province Nazeer Ahamad made a special request from the President to develop the agriculture in Kinniya in the same way the agricultural sector in Polonnaruwa was developed.
The people, drawing the President’s attention to the issue of unemployment faced by the youth in the area, requested him to create jobs for them by establishing new factories.
President Sirisena promised to take action in this regard through public representatives during his next visit to Kinniya. He told them he visited Kinniya today without any invitation as he wanted to look into the welfare of the people whom he considered his brothers and sisters.
The President stated that he would implement a new program to develop the agricultural sector. He expressed his confidence about the transformation which will take place in the country through the local food production program. 
“Every crop which can be grown in this country will be cultivated within the country under this program,” he said.
He also promised that the fishing industry would be boosted through new technology and plans, creating more employment opportunities in order to increase the income in the area. The President said his ambition was to take the country forward according to a new plan, as a new Government.
He said he would give the opportunity to people in the country by enabling public representatives of the area to carry out development work. “It will be done by devolving power to provincial development committees,” he said.
Eastern Province Governor Austin Fernando, Chief Minister of the Eastern Province Nazeer Ahamad, MPs-elect Rauf Hakeem, Lakshman Kiriella, M.K.D.S. Gunawardena, Daya Gamage, M.S. Nawfik and former Chief Minister Nageed Abdul were present at the occasion.

Another Jumbo Cabinet with National Govt.

Mahinda Rajapaksa, now MP for Kurunegala and President Maithripala Sirisena greet each other after Ranil Wickremesinghe was sworn in as Prime Minister. On extreme right is Prime Minister Wickremesinghe
By Our Political Editor-Sunday, August 23, 2015

The Sunday Times Sri LankaSirisena continues tough stand; six new loyalists get National List seats, GL left out despite plea
War of words between President and Rajapaksa over cause of UPFA defeat; CBK wants Tamils also included in National Govt.
A nation watched Friday as the victor and the vanquished at Monday’s parliamentary elections pledged to form a National Government just after a historic ceremony, televised live, where Ranil Wickremesinghe took his oaths as the 21st Prime Minister of Sri Lanka.

Cautious engagement not euphoria the safe bet

Extend positive but critical support to the RW-MS Administration


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In the name of God Go and be Gone!

by Kumar David-

Mahinda Rajapaksa (MR), his posse of crooks and gangsters and the cohorts of racist rabble rousers incited by Wimal, Gammanpila, Dinesh and heaven knows why Vasu, have been seen off.. MR energised the UPFA campaign but his presence steeled an opposition that ensured its downfall. Every Muslim in Lanka voted him down; the Negombo, Colombo North and West and Nuwara Eliya results illustrate total consolidation of anti-MR sentiment in the Catholic and Tamil communities; the liberal middle classes vomited en mass. A nightmare has been averted but the next step in Lanka’s voyage has not begun. The way ahead is daunting and dimly lit but it would be wrong to greet the new government with cynicism. We must step forth in a positive frame of mind but at the same time not be naïve or have illusions about obstacles on the way.

The Pitfalls & Challenges Waiting For Maithri & Ranil


By Saliya Pieris –August 23, 2015
Saliya Pieris
Saliya Pieris
Colombo Telegraph
As Maithripala Sirisena and Ranil Wickremesinghe begin a new term of cohabitation they need to lesrn lessons from the past and take into account the new balance of power brought about by the 19th amendment and the results of the Parliamentary elections.
The reality is that the new regime has two power centres. The President continues to wield executive power and remains at the helm of government, although no longer constitutionally entitled to hold cabinet portfolios, except for Defence, Mahaweli and the Environment. The Prime Minister effectively controls Parliament and will actually run the administration.
Ranil MaithriAlthough President Sirisena may be bound by the advice of the Prime Minister in making ministerial appointments there is no doubt that the new Cabinet will be a product of consensus and compromise between the President and Prime Minister. As in other periods of cohabitation between the President and Prime Minister such as in 1994, 2001-2004, the President and the Prime Minister will have to effectively share power in the next few years.
While there has been talk on further constitutional change and the total abolition of the executive presidency, any further move to dilute the Presidency is unlikely to be welcomed by the President’s camp. The reality is that the UNP will have to learn to work with the President within the present framework. Any attempt to reduce the President’s powers any further will not be conducive to the rapport which should exist between the President and the Prime Minister.Read More

From Real Election to Realpolitik

Photograph courtesy Wall Street Journal


Groundviews
“His (Mahinda Rajapaksa’s) chief interest will be to strike a deal on the corruption investigations against himself and his family.”
Manik de Silva (CNN – 19.8.2015)
The UPFA fought two consecutive elections in an imaginary country and lost them both. In that imaginary country the minority vote was of less value and weight; and the absolute majority of Sinhala-Buddhists yearned to live under the patriotic-yoke of the Rajapaksas.

Finally loosening the grip of the ‘Satakaya’?

Maithri RanilLEAD

The Sunday Times Sri LankaSunday, August 23, 2015

As the intense heat of electioneering gradually subsides, sober relief intermixed with reasonable wariness is reflected in the public mood this week.

Uniting a quarrelsome opposition
Monday’s tensely played out general elections echoes this curious combination of emotions in no uncertain terms. A deeply divisive ‘Satakaya-factor’ (a word play on the maroon shawl habitually worn by former President Mahinda Rajapaksa) worked its anticipated black magic as it united perpetually questioning ‘floating voters’ in opposition, albeit less jubilantly than in January 2015.

Eight months of uncertain governance punctuated by an unseemly financial scandal to boot under the alternative United National Party (UNP) proved to be very much the lesser evil as against the threat of the ‘Satakaya’. The fundamental objective was clear. Prevent the former President and his abominable band of Merry Men being catapulted into power at all costs. This aim appears to have been realized at least for now, even though many dissolute characters will sit in the chambers of Parliament, no doubt equally intent as they were previously to filibuster progressive legislation.

But what proved pivotal was President Maithripala Sirisena’s deft balancing on a political tightrope between opposition forces which brought him to power and members of his own party determined to stare him down. The President asked for an affirmation of his January 2015 mandate, to which request the people responded, albeit tentatively and cautiously.

The rejection of racism
That said, certain definitive trends were apparent. Rajapaksa supporters had often derisively mocked that the January Presidential elections came about only because of minority votes in the North and East. The August general election result conclusively puts that despicable canard to rest as majority Sinhalese polling divisions clearly turned against racism and communalism.

Indeed, the Rajapaksa factor did not prove to be overwhelmingly decisive even in the North-Western Province which the former President had decided to contest from as a calculated move based on the human contribution made from that Province to the war effort. While expectedly large preferences came into his vote bank, this was by no means a comprehensive routing of the UNP as predicted. In fact, the Rajapaksa presence in Kurunegala only made people nervous; one rural estate proprietor complained in pithy Sinhalese to me a week before the elections’ I am not sure why he had to move from the South and come here with all communalistic talk. He should have just stayed in the South. Now his minions may start sending letters to us, grabbing all our lands.’
This perception – and indeed – the raw reality of unbridled power which the Rajapaksa Presidency demonstrated at the height of its rule proved to be its undoing among Sinhala voters. This is a good lesson for cynics who dismissed the January Presidential result as a political fluke brought about by a one-off combination of factors. For those of us struggling for years to mend gaping tears in Sri Lanka’s democratic fabric, this is certainly heartening. So too is the electoral rejection of racist political forces from the South to the North, particularly the deservedly stinging slap across the face delivered to the Bodu Bala Sena. That said, the election of major crooks on the UPFA ticket including overt racists being returned from the Western Province demonstrates a continuing tenacious Rajapaksa hold on a significant urban voter base. This is not something to be complacent about.

The nature of the beast
Certainly the gravity of the democratic reform process which lies ahead should not be underestimated in the face of such formidable challenges. Even as the sight of former President Rajapaksa complete with immaculate satakaya gracing the swearing in of the new Prime Minister at the Presidential Secretariat sent uneasy shivers down the spines of some, skeptics cannot be blamed for eying askance the commitment of the new coalition government to actually implement the law against gross corruptors of the previous regime. The UNP itself is not free from blame. Its own failings in interim government were largely why it was not afforded a totally enthusiastic peoples’ mandate to govern. Recent mistakes should not be repeated if this fragile balance of power is to prevail.

And President Sirisena’s opting to use the UPFA National List slots for defeated candidates supporting him within the party is not an example to be emulated. The unseemly controversies dogging the UPFA and the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) National List nominees show us the true nature of the political beast. In the final result, it is the thirst for a coveted parliamentary seat which pushes fancy rhetoric of democratic rights aside.
This mechanism of the National List is itself an aberration in any event. For this election, the Lists of both major parties were stuffed either with incompetents or by aged loyalists. Few were included on merit. This device of a National List remains one of the many democratically subversive features of the current Constitution. Serious thought should be given if it should be continued.

Priorities for reform
In the final result, Sri Lankans and grizzled veterans of the Department of Elections headed by Mahinda Deshapriya may be deservedly proud of themselves for two peaceful and disciplined national elections held within an unprecedentedly short period. So much so that foreign election observers issued an injunction which may have seemed odd at any other time; namely that strict election laws unduly restricted candidates.

As a new Parliament sits within coming weeks, the enactment of a National Audit Act and the Right to Information Act need to be prioritized. With a looming September report of the United Nations Human Rights Council on war time accountability, systematic dismantling of long standing structures enabling state impunity must be addressed. Mock truth and reconciliation commissions or show trials will not suffice. But the fear is that we may end up with much the same as before, with one major party ruling in coalition together with a portion of the other major party while the remainder of that party sits chaotically also in the opposition.

Despite sunny talk of a National Government to address national issues, this is by no means a happy prognosis for Sri Lanka.
Poll monitors regret defeated candidates entering parliament 

2015-08-23
A leading election monitoring group today expressed its regret and disappointment over the nomination of defeated candidates to parliament through the national list and called for a new criterion for this purpose. 

Eight defeated candidates have been nominated to parliament through the United People's Freedom Alliance (UPFA) national list, one each through the national lists of the United National Party (UNP), the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and the Tamil National Alliance (TNA). 

People's Action for Free and Fair Elections (PAFFREL) Executive Director Rohana Hettiarachchi said guidelines were necessary to prevent those not eligible from entering Parliament. 

He said some of the defeated candidates nominated to parliament through the national list there were several who were not eligible for such nomination. 

Mr. Hettiarachchi admitted to the fact that there were some who where worthy of being nominated to parliament. 

Meanwhile, Campaign for Free and Fair Election (CaFFE), another leading election monitoring group, also criticized the appointment of defeated candidates though the national list. 

CaFFE Executive Director Keerthi Tennekoon said it a defeated candidate who was appointed through the national list was responsible for the post-election violence in Katankudi. 

He said it was disappointing to see such defeated candidates being appointed through the national list. “Such of these appointments are blow to the efforts made by President Maithripala Sirisena to change the political culture of this country,” Mr. Hettiarachchi added. (YP) 

Polls Are (Not Always) For Dogs!


By Emil van der Poorten –August 23, 2015 
Emil van der Poorten
Emil van der Poorten
Colombo Telegraph
I arrived in Canada sometime after John George Diefenbaker had been reduced to a raucous front-bench opposition (Conservative party) voice after his famous and totally unexpected ascendance as Prime Minister (PM) to majority government followed by a bout of back-stabbing by the Tories that would have put the Rome of the Caesars to shame.
However, “Dief the Chief,” continued to earn the grudging respect of many Canadians despite his curmudgeonly conduct and his ultimate passing was mourned by even those who believed him to be the most paranoid PM that Canada had ever had and that was in a country that had in that same pantheon a very long-serving P. M. in the person of MacKenzie King who was claimed to be able to communicate with his deceased mother through a medium!
When the polling prior to Dief’s unexpected victory showed him trailing the Liberals, he made the comment that I’ve paraphrased as the title of this piece, the original reading, a most dismissive, “Polls are for dogs,” alluding to the propensity of the male of the canine species to raise its leg when passing any stationery object, punning on the words “polls” and “poles.”
Recent experience in the democratic world, particularly in Great Britain in the matter of the Scottish Referendum and in their most recent general election, proved polls to be anything but infallible, bringing back, to my memory at least, the grizzled veteran of Canadian politics in the nineteen-fifties, who, incidentally, visited post-independence Sri Lanka (“Ceylon” as it was then) and was most disturbed by its anti-imperialist politics and its lack of affection for the King (or Queen) of the Commonwealth that had only recently emerged out of the dismembered Empire!
MahindaAll of the preceding seeks to preface the recent polling in Sri Lanka which took place in a climate of fear and lack of trust in any nosy “stranger” seeking access to one’s political leanings. That (very justified) fear, something all-pervading since Mahinda Rajapaksa imposed himself on a nation only too ready to accept a xenophobic culture bordering on, if not entering, the “master race” ideology of that Teutonic demagogue earlier in the 20th century.

Parliamentary Polls 2015: What does it mean to us?

It is time for those who celebrate killing as the victory to understand the real causes behind the symptoms.

Maithri_Sambandan
A ceremony was held under the patronage of President Maithripala Sirisena to hand over the land deeds to 234 war displaced families in Sampur, yesterday (22).
by Nilantha Ilangamuwa
( August 23, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) An argumentative, free thinking and free speaking political culture, buried for decades is once again sprouting with good hopes and dreams in Sri Lanka. Such trends will construct space for healthy social discourse which can, hopefully, re-engineer the nation.
Seize the opportunity is the matter of common sense for the public and those who are privileged, as it was prescribed by Thomas Pain in his account centuries ago. This is what meant to us after two elections conducted this year in Sri Lanka. Despair replaced with hope, nightmares with dreams.
Years of conflicts and annihilation of the intelligentsia from the social system patched the way to grim and despicable repression. One of hardest questions we are facing now is how to diagnose the situation in order to understand the real problem when everything was distorted by political vulgarism and the crooked culture of opportunists.
This visible and painful challenge is now making its way out. It is up to the public who’s yet to understand the power of the powerless as it was examined and explained in his sage thoughts by Vaclav Havel in his context decades ago.
Of course this is all thanks to the former President Mahinda Rajapaksa for taking greedy, niggardly and highly irascible decisions when he had absolute power to control the Island nation till 2017. Hopefully his political career is on the down turn but sadly, as a Member of the Parliament he still persists. He is now on the edge in which he has to decide either side, scheming for grabbing the power or being confessional on his woebegone history before the true friends in the party.
However the result clearly indicates that the can of worms which was operated by Rajapaksa is still active. It has power and the “wisdom” to grab the larger number of votes within the Sinhalese community. It can be used for viciousness such as fuelling racial elements or reducing the dream of good governance based on conventionalism.
What would be the outcome when the common person has the liberty to think and cast their votes in a free and fair election? That is the most important question compel before us. Why did the majority of the voters in a particular electoral district think that the best man to govern them over the next five years is a man who is in remand for murder? What is the tendency behind electing a person who is doing everything, but nothing to do with politics? This anthropological scenario can’t be an accident but a deep rooted nightmare in the culture. It should be a major concern in a public discourse.
However, the memorandum of understanding signed between the United National Front and the Sri Lanka Freedom Party to form a national government is indeed a wise political idea to move forward and prevent political chaos. This is a historical political cohabitation which will benefit the country if it addresses the core issues behind the failure of this nation.
It is time for those who did an ‘exceptional’ job in the cause of getting rid of an internal civil war, to think and learn how to live in peace. It is time for those who celebrate killing as the victory to understand the real causes behind the symptoms.
It is only then that our long term dream of conventional politics will be achieved.

Post-election colours, prospects and casualties


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by Rajan Philips-August 22, 2015

Sri Lanka’s electoral map the morning after its 16th general election was a fascinating picture of political colours. The middle of the island was all (UNP) green, spreading from west to east and covering the hill country and most of the country’s wet zone. The southern base and much of the dry zone was shot in (SLFP) blue. The north stood out in (TNA) yellow. This broad brush display of colours obviously concealed the many local variations of political loyalties and conflicts. At the all island aggregate level, the regional variations in electoral support translated into 5 million votes and 106 seats for the UNP-led alliance (UNFGG), 4.7 million votes and 95 seats for the UPFA, and just over half a million votes and 16 seats for the TNA. The only missing colour and the surprising result came at the expense of the JVP which polled 543,944 votes and obtained six seats, much lower than many observers were expecting. Otherwise, the results were as expected. The UNP alliance has won a substantial victory and the UPFA’s hijacking mission to ‘bring back Mahinda’ has suffered a serious defeat. In the north, the Tamil voters have mightily (65% to 75% voter support in every riding) endorsed the TNA’s pragmatism and swept aside the messianic idiocy of a maverick Chief Minister and the provocative agency of third generation Tamil Congress.