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

Thursday, August 27, 2015

There’s Something Rotten in Lebanon

And it’s not just the fetid mountains of trash in the streets.
There’s Something Rotten in Lebanon
BY DAVID KENNER-AUGUST 25, 2015
BeIRUT — By any standard, the Lebanese government is worth protesting against.
Its leaders regularly subvert democracy: Parliament has unconstitutionallyextended its term twice, even as parliamentarians benefit from a generous array of perks they voted for themselves. The country has been without a president for 15 months, as parliament has failed to elect a new one, and it has not passed an official budget since 2005. Basic services are crumbling: The country suffers from hours of power cuts each day, and there is anincreasingly severe water shortage.
Roughly 1.5 million Syrian refugees are in the country, with many living indeplorable conditions, and the government’s only response has been to stop the U.N. registration of new refugees and to try to block Syrians’ entry into the country. Oh, and let’s not forget the persistent clashes between Hezbollah and the Islamic State, as well as other assorted Sunni jihadi groups, along the border with Syria — an existential crisis on Lebanon’s doorstep that the state is powerless to affect.
But it took a crisis over garbage to focus public anger in Lebanon. After the closure of a major landfill in July*, tens of thousands of tons of trash piled upin the streets of Beirut. As the garbage piles grew, municipalities increasingly turned to illegal dumping and burning trash to alleviate the problem. In the neighborhood of Hamra, the trash piles got so large at one point that they partially blocked a major intersection; sanitation workers covered the trash in a thin white dust meant to repel insects, but which did little to mask the smell in the summer heat.
“The government is hurting everyone who is living in Lebanon,” said Assaad Thebian, a spokesman for a protest group calling itself “You Stink,” which has organized regular demonstrations against the situation. “People are smelling the trash. The trash is blocking the highways and the roads. It shows the government’s lack of ability to create proper solutions for public crises.”
On Sunday, Aug. 23, You Stink organized a demonstration in downtown Beirut in which thousands of people took to the streets to protest the situation. Many demonstrators appropriated chants from the 2011 Arab Spring protests, calling for revolution. The event, however, ended in chaos: Some demonstrators clashed with the security forces, while others hurled Molotov cocktails; the police responded with water cannons and rubber bullets in street fights that left more than 400 people injured.
The struggles of this nascent protest movement highlight the central paradox of politics here. Lebanon has one of the weakest governments in the entire Middle East, yet it has managed to subvert popular demands for reform more effectively than virtually all of the surrounding Arab states. As countries like Egypt, Syria, and Libya — states with functional institutions and feared security forces — have all been profoundly changed by protests and war over the past four years, Beirut has somehow remained immune from popular unrest.
It’s not as if the Lebanese government is ruthlessly efficient at defending the status quo. Its response to the protest movement has been typically floundering. On Monday, authorities built a wall to protect the Grand Serail, where the prime minister’s office is housed — only to tear it down on Tuesday after protesters decorated it with art lampooning the government. On Monday, Environment Minister Mohammed Machnouk declared a “happy ending” to the crisis, while announcing the names of the companies that had won new waste-management contracts; the government canceledthe winning bids on Tuesday.
The real challenge to the protest movement comes not from the government, but in organizing a common front that stretches across Lebanon’s religious and class divides. It’s already a struggle: Organizers blamed the clashes on “infiltrators” intent on disrupting the peaceful nature of the demonstration. You Stink’s Facebook page posted a video of hundreds of young men entering the protest en masse and referred to them as “hooligans” who purposefully incited violence against the security forces.
“They really wanted to damage the demonstration,” Thebian said of the protesters who clashed with police. “They want to move the demonstration into a sectarian conflict, which we totally refuse.”
Thebian’s comment echoes fears that some demonstrators hope to use the protests as leverage in the country’s traditional political game, rather than to build a truly secular movement. Some activists and political parties have seized on the fact that the “infiltrators” who clashed with the police appearedto be Shiite — noting their religious tattoos and necklaces — as proof that they were sent by the Amal Movement, a party allied with Hezbollah, to hijack the protest. Amal has denied any involvement in the clashes. The Lebanese Forces, a Christian party, published a post on its website highlighting Shiite chants at the protest and accusing the youth of sectarian motives.
The controversy provides a case study in how Lebanon’s political system short-circuits reform efforts. The country’s state institutions may not command much respect, but its diverse political parties are legitimate in the eyes of their supporters and are ruthlessly efficient at playing on their members’ fears.
Lebanon’s politicians are not above sending angry youth to undermine a peaceful protest — most of them survived the country’s brutal civil war and have doggedly resisted threats to their power for the quarter-century since. At the same time, the fact that a protester had a tattoo with a specifically Shiite message doesn’t mean that the protesters were directed by Shiite politicians, any more than the demonstrators wearing cross necklaces were under orders by Christian political leaders. A previous demonstration on Saturday also descended into violence without any accusations that “infiltrators” had instigated the clashes.
But regardless of the political leaders’ machinations, the far more potent force is Lebanese citizens’ own fear of losing ground in the sectarian battles. The You Stink movement published a frustrated-sounding Facebook post on Tuesday detailing how it had been accused of serving as a pawn for everyone from the predominantly Sunni Future Movement, to Hezbollah, to foreign powers. The accusations highlight the fact that politics in Beirut is seen as a zero-sum game: If parties belonging to one sect are gaining, the others must be losing.
You Stink is hoping to avoid such sectarian logic. It called off a scheduled demonstration on Monday to regroup, and it announced that the protests would resume on Aug. 29. With several days to prepare, organizers believe they can keep the protests peaceful and on message.
“We’re going to have better organization; we’re going to have better communication and very clear demands, so we protect ourselves,” promised Thebian.
It’s not going to be an easy task. The garbage has been piling up in the streets of Beirut for a few months, but the rotten rules of Lebanon’s political game have been in place for decades.
Correction: This article originally mistakenly said that Lebanon’s main landfill was closed in June. It was actually closed in July.
STR/AFP/Getty Images
UAE paid ransom to Yemeni tribesmen to free British hostage 

The UAE was not engaged in any military operation to free British hostage in Yemen, Aden-based source tells Middle East Eye 
Al-Qaeda militants posing in the Yemeni city of Seiyun in Hadramawt province on 21 May 2014 (AFP) 

HomeRori Donaghy-Thursday 27 August 2015
The United Arab Emirates paid a ransom to Yemeni tribesmen to free a British held hostage, according to a source close to exiled president Abd Rabbuh Mansour Hadi.
The UAE said that on 23 August they launched a military operation to rescue 64-year-old oil worker Douglas Semple from the grips of al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP).
Semple was kidnapped at gunpoint in Yemen's eastern province of Hadramawt in February 2014 and was held captive until his return to the UK this week.
An Aden-based source told Middle East Eye on condition of anonymity that AQAP was not holding Semple hostage and that it was local tribesmen who were detaining the Briton.
The source said that the UAE did not rescue Semple through a military operation but had in fact paid a ransom to the tribesmen for his release.
The source did not reveal the amount paid by the UAE in ransom, however, a prominent Gulf commentator has on Twitter claimed that it was $25mn.
Reports that paid $25 million ransom to 2 secure release of British hostage @BBCWorld @Reuters @cnnbrk @CENTCOM @CNNSitRoom
AQAP on Wednesday released a statement claiming that they had not been holding Semple hostage and accused the UAE of lying in their tale of having rescued the Briton from their clutches in Hadramawt.
Abu Dhabi has not commented on the AQAP claim, or reports that it paid a ransom for Semple's release, and on Thursday their embassy in London did not return calls for a statement. 
The UAE has sought to keep its ground troops' participation in the Saudi-led military operation in Yemen low key, as the move appears to be unpopular in the Gulf state, especially following the death of a number of Emirati soldiers.
The UAE's participation in the Saudi-led offensive also appears to be in contrast to the Emirates' cosy ties until recently to Yemen's former president, Ali Abdullah Saleh, who is currently the chief ally of the Houthi militiamen.

India deploys army to stop caste-related violence in Gujarat

Army soldiers patrol after clashes between police and protesters in Ahmedabad, India, August 26, 2015.
Commuters move past damaged passenger buses which were burnt in the clashes between the police and protesters in Ahmedabad, India, August 26, 2015
Reuters
 Thu Aug 27, 2015
The army patrolled riot-hit areas of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's home state of Gujarat on Thursday after the death toll rose to seven in two days of caste-related violence.
Clashes spread after police arrested a young leader of the influential Patel clan who led a huge rally on Tuesday to demand more government jobs and college places for members of his community.
The breakdown of law and order revived memories of serious rioting in 2002 in which more than 1,000 people, most of them Muslims, died. Modi, chief minister of Gujarat at the time, has faced criticism for doing too little to halt the bloodshed.
"Six protesters and a police officer have lost their lives and 18 people are critically injured," said Keshav Shah, a senior police officer in the state capital Gandhinagar.
"Schools, business and private offices will not open today. The mood is tense and no one should venture out," he said, adding that a curfew would remain in force.
Modi has called for calm in the state that he ran for more than a decade before leading his nationalist Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to victory in last year's general election.
The Patels, or Patidar community, make up 14 percent of the population in Gujarat. A relatively affluent group of land- and business-owners, they had been a bulwark of support for Modi.
Members of the Patel community said they will continue to demand changes to policies that, they argue, unfairly favour groups at the lower end of India's social order.
"We will not let the government suppress our demands. They can kill as many Patels as they want," said 21-year-old activist Hardik Patel.
The young leader drew a crowd of half a million to a rally on Tuesday in the city of Ahmedabad. His detention there led to clashes between police and protesters across the state, forcing authorities to release him.

(Writing by Rupam Jain Nair; Editing by Douglas Busvine, Robert Birsel)

The unfortunate case of Malaysia’s prime minister


Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak. Pic: AP.
Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Razak. Pic: AP.

By  Aug 27, 2015
Greg LopezThe feeling that Malaysia is now in an abyss is real. Malaysians fear terrible things are happening to them and their country because of poor leadership. The man who – rightly or wrongly – will be blamed for all of Malaysia’s woes will unfortunately be the current prime minister.

In June this year, the minister responsible for transforming the Malaysian economy – Idris Jala – in an open letter to Bloomberg , complained that he hardly recognised the country that Bloomberg columnist William Pesek was writing about. In the open letter, Idris Jala provided a robust rebuttal to Pesek’s derisive commentary on Malaysia.

Last week, Prime Minister Najib Razak was compelled to assert that Malaysia is not a failed state as public outrage reached a crescendo. Some even suggested that Malaysia is heading towards both a dictatorship and a  failed state. Najib Razak countered with statistics and examples.

Both the prime minister and his minister for economic transformation are correct that – on balance – the available analyses suggests that the Malaysian economy is healthy and the prime minister is not yet a dictator. Yet, both men also know that despite evidence to support their arguments; and after spending hundreds of millions of ringgit to prosecute their case, and also improve the prime minister’s image, the majority of Malaysians still think little of him, his administration and the country’s performance. After the fatal mistake where he admitted that he “accepted” $700 million from a foreign donor (after first denying it) for the ruling party’s political activities (a story that is still unfolding), a significant portion of his own supporters (from the United Malays National Organisation/UMNO) have also lost faith in him. This is most unfortunate for Najib Razak, but also his cabinet and the Barisan Nasional.
Former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad. Pic: AP.
Former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad. Pic: AP.

During the East Asian Financial Crisis of 1997/98, then Malaysian Prime Minister Dr Mahathir Mohamad (Tun Mahathir) managed to successfully pin the blame for Malaysia’s economic woes on the Jews. Najib Razak is attempting to do the same, but does not have the required conditions that favoured Tun Mahathir. There is no crisis that he can appeal too. There is/are no external force/s that he can pin the blame on. He is being attacked by people from within his own party for what they perceive as unforgivable mistakes that are weakening the Barisan Nasional and UMNO further; and that these mistakes are of his own making. The majority of Malaysians have long registered their preference for another coalition and leader.

The leadership of Barisan Nasional and the present cabinet strongly backs Najib Razak. Beyond that small but powerful circle, support is thin. He is now being made the scapegoatfor the Barisan Nasional’s, the UMNO’s and the country’s poor performance. All calamities befalling Malaysia and Malaysians are now being placed at his feet.

Despite being a prized product of the UMNO and Barisan Nasional system, Najib Razak is now a curse to many within the system that produced him.  The son of the architect of  theNew Economic Policy and an UMNO thoroughbred, Najib Razak once glorified, is nowhounded by the very people who made him the king of the hill. He has become a plague. It is no longer 1MDB but the prime minister that is the symbol of everything that is wrong with Malaysia.

On August 29-30, 2015, rallies have been organised not only in Malaysia, but all over the world by Malaysians calling for Najib Razak’s resignation.

Will Najib Razak survive the weekend?

Stay tuned.
Note: (1) I am holding off my article on the intra- and inter-institutional fights for awhile as I await new information. (2) Videos of grassroot UMNO leaders openly (and sometimes rudely) calling for his resignation are available on the internet. Here is a selection: [Video 1;Video 2Video 3]. While other videos [Video 4] have exhorted the importance to attend the rally to demand change [Video 5].

This article was originally published on Forbes. It was republished with the author’s permission.

Working longer hours increases stroke risk, major study finds

Danger highlighted by research suggesting those working a 55-hour week face 33% increased risk of stroke than those working a 35- to 40-hour week
 Workaholics may question whether spending so much time in the office is really worth it: those working 55 or more hours a week are 33% more likely to suffer a stroke, research suggests. Photograph: Alamy

 Health editor-Thursday 20 August 2015
The likely toll of long working hours is revealed in a major new study which shows that employees still at their desks into the evening run an increased risk of stroke – and the longer the hours they put in, the higher the risk.
The largest study conducted on the issue, carried out in three continents and led by scientists at University College London, found that those who work more than 55 hours a week have a 33% increased risk of stroke compared with those who work a 35- to 40-hour week. They also have a 13% increased risk of coronary heart disease.
The findings will confirm the assumptions of many that a long-hours culture, in which people work from early in the morning until well into the evening, with work also intruding into weekends, is potentially harmful to health.
The researchers, publishing their findings in the Lancet medical journal, say they cannot state categorically that long hours cause people to have strokes – but their study shows that there is a link, and it gets stronger as thehours people put in get longer.
“Sudden death from overwork is often caused by stroke and is believed to result from a repetitive triggering of the stress response,” they write. “Behavioural mechanisms, such as physical inactivity, might also link long working hours and stroke; a hypothesis supported by evidence of an increased risk of incident stroke in individuals who sit for long periods at work.
“Physical inactivity can increase the risk of stroke through various biological mechanisms and heavy alcohol consumption – a risk factor for all types of stroke – might be a contributing factor because employees working long hours seem to be slightly more prone to risky drinking than are those who work standard hours.”
People who work long hours are also more likely to ignore the warning signs, they say – leading to delays in getting treatment.
Mika Kivimäki, professor of epidemiology at UCL, and colleagues looked separately at heart disease and at stroke. For coronary heart disease, they pulled together 25 studies involving more than 600,000 men and women from Europe, the USA and Australia who were followed for an average of 8.5 years.
They then pooled and analysed the data that had been collected. This produced the finding of a 13% increase in the chances of a new diagnosis of heart disease or hospitalisation or death.
For stroke, they analysed data from 17 studies involving nearly 530,000 men and women who were followed up for an average of 7.2 years. They found a 1.3 times higher risk of stroke in individuals working 55 hours or more, compared with those working a standard 35- to 40-hour week.
This association remained even after taking into account health behaviours such as smoking, alcohol consumption and physical activity as well as standard cardiovascular risk factors including high blood pressure and high cholesterol.
The longer the working week, the higher was the risk of stroke. Those working between 41 and 48 hours had a 10% higher risk of stroke and those working 49 to 54 hours had a 27% increased risk.
Kivimäki said the scale of the study allowed the team to be more precise about the health toll of long hours than ever before. He suggested that doctors should take note of the possible risks to their hard-working patients. “Health professionals should be aware that working long hours is associated with a significantly increased risk of stroke, and perhaps also coronary heart disease,” he said.
In a commentary in the journal, Dr Urban Janlert from Umeå University in Sweden writes that the European Working Time Directive, meant to limit the week to 48 hours, is not in effect in all countries. “Long working hours are not a negligible occurrence. Among member countries of the OECD, Turkey has the highest proportion of individuals working more than 50 hours per week (43%) and the Netherlands the lowest (less than 1%).
“Although some countries have legislation for working hours ... it is not always implemented. Therefore, that the length of a working day is an important determinant mainly for strokes, but perhaps also for coronary heart disease, is an important finding.”
Dr Tim Chico, reader in cardiovascular medicine at the University of Sheffield, said the study did not prove long working hours could cause stroke or heart disease. “It is almost certainly impossible to prove whether there is a direct link as this would require thousands of people to be randomly allocated to work more or less hours and followed up for years to see if this changes the risk of stroke, while keeping all other behaviours the same between groups,” he said.
For many people, cutting down on working hours would be difficult or impossible, he said. “Most of us could reduce the amount of time we spend sitting down, increase our physical activity and improve our diet while working and this might be more important the more time we spend at work. We should all consider how the working environment could be altered to promote healthy behaviour that will reduce strokes, irrespective of how long we work.”
 This article was amended on 24 August 2015 because the European Working Time Directive is meant to limit the week to 48 hours, not the day to 48 hours as an earlier version said.

Wednesday, August 26, 2015

Tamils only 10% of agricultural research appointments in North
 26 August 2015
Tamil farmers and agricultural workers from Kilinochchi and Mullaitivu protested on Monday that over 90% of newly appointed agricultural research assistants to the North are Sinhalese.

Of 365 appointments made by Sri Lanka’s Department Agrarian Development for the position, only 26 are Tamil, while the remaining 336 are Sinhalese from the South.

The protesters called for local jobs for local people, particularly local youth, and pointed out the unsuitability of employing non-Tamil speakers for a role that would primarily entail providing advice to Tamil-speaking farmers in the North.
Tamils in the North-East repeatedly express their grievances over unemployment, especially among youth, with graduates from Jaffna and Batticaloa protesting against the issue in recent months.
Biswal calls on President, PM

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Wednesday, 26 August 2015
  • Mangala briefs US delegation on domestic accountability mechanism
  • US proud of Sri Lanka’s commitment to democracy: Biswal
  • Commends ‘tremendous progress’ towards good governance and reconciliation
  • US diplomat for democracy and human rights says Lankans voted for change, twice this year
  • Sri Lanka voted against impunity, against politics of division: Malinowski

By Dharisha Bastians
A top US diplomat hailed Sri Lanka’s “tremendous progress” towards good governance, reconciliation and democracy during a two-day visit to Colombo, weeks ahead of the release of a UN report on allegations of war crimes committed during the final stages of the war.
US Assistant Secretary of State for Central and South Asian Affairs, Nisha Biswal, told reporters, at the conclusion of discussions with Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera at his ministry yesterday, that her delegation was in Sri Lanka to reaffirm her Government’s strong support for the Sri Lankan people for their commitment towards the institutions of good governance, peace and prosperity.
“We are incredibly proud of the journey that is being undertaken here. The story that is unfolding in this great country is one that stands as a testament to the rest of the world,” Biswal emphasised during her remarks to the media at the Foreign Ministry.  
Samaraweera told reporters that he had briefed the US delegation on measures taken to address concerns about alleged human rights violations, including independent domestic mechanisms to probe allegations about the final stage of the war. 
The US has led moves at the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva to push Sri Lanka to probe allegations of extrajudicial killings and civilian casualties during the final battle against the LTTE and reconciliation, including a political solution to the ethnic question.
Biswal said that since her last visit to Colombo in May with US Secretary of State John Kerry, the US Government had seen not only commitment towards democracy but also “just a tremendous momentum of progress towards institutions of good governance, combating corruption and promoting reconciliation.”
The US Assistant Secretary of State also said they had informed President Maithripala Sirisena about US plans to support resettlement and education in Sampur, with a commitment of $ 1 million in resources. “We look forward to working with President Sirisena, the Prime Minister and with the new Government to ensure that the country is able to realise its enormous potential,” she said.
Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor, Tom Malinowski, who is also part of Assistant Secretary Biswal’s delegation, hailed Sri Lankan voters in all parts of the country for voting for change twice this year.
“What was most important to us was the message that the people of Sri Lanka have sent, twice now this year. The people in the north, south, east and west have told us they support change. Twice now they have voted north south east and west, for the rule of law, against impunity, for reconciliation, for building this country, development of this country and against the politics of ethnic and religious division, against extremism on both sides,” Malinowski said in his remarks to the media following discussions with Minister Samaraweera.
Malinowski said the US recognised that some of the decisions the Government would have to make to fulfill its promises would be difficult ones. “We know that this process is going to be slow and difficult. Nobody expects miracles,” the US diplomat said.
“But the US will stand by its side, so long as the Government of Sri Lanka continues to make courageous decisions,” he added.
The new US Ambassador to Sri Lanka and the Maldives, Atul Keshap, was also present during the discussions with Minister Samaraweera yesterday.

BUP_DFT_DFT-1-884 BUP_DFT_DFT-1-885

Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Nisha Biswal, accompanied by the Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labor Tom Malinowski met with President Maithripala Sirisena at the Presidential Secretariat on Tuesday.
Earlier in the day the two high ranking US officials met with Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and Foreign Affairs Minister Mangala Samaraweera to discuss issues relating to the national reconciliation, combating corruption and good governance.
During her meeting with the President, Biswal appreciated his initiatives towards democracy, peace and reconciliation in Sri Lanka.
 “The Government’s initiatives towards democracy, peace and reconciliation are highly satisfactory to the international community,” she said. President Sirisena has stated to the Assistant Secretary that his Government desired to maintain a cordial and fruitful relationship with the US, while strengthening the longstanding friendship between the two countries. Biswal extended best wishes on behalf of the US Government and the Secretary of State, John Kerry, to President Sirisena for conducting the recently concluded Parliamentary Elections in a free and fair manner.

Subordinate officers ready to reveal conspiracies against former intelligence chief

Subordinate officers ready to reveal conspiracies against former intelligence chief
Lankanewsweb.net- Aug 26, 2015
Subordinate officers are ready to reveal the conspiracies against the former army intelligence chief responsible for political murders.
Hundreds of allegations are continuously leveled against a former army intelligence chief and an army intelligence unit operated under for many extra judicial murders committed during the Rajapaksa regime for personal benefits and gains. Meantime further allegations are charged against many senior officers in the army during the time.
High officials of the SL army are said to be involved in the disappearance of Prageeth Ekneligoda, the murder of Lasantha Wicramathunga, abducting of students for extortions and the murder of MP Raviraj. All investigations are coming to an end and for all the incidents the final command is revealed to have been given by an army intelligence chief.
Meantime it is being revealed that many high officials in the army intelligence are said to be involved in these crimes. However army reports reaching us confirms they started to act following a political command they got and they are ready to reveal everything if there
would be an inquiry against them during a court case.
However there is an agitation within the army following this inquiries and a generalization campaign has been started against the war crimes leveled against Sri Lanka during the UNHRC in the coming September.

Gota & Fonseka to be questioned regarding Eknaligoda disappearance

WEDNESDAY, 26 AUGUST 2015
Former Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa and former Army chief Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka are be questioned regarding the disappearance of cartoonist Prageeth Eknaligoda say reports.  The questioning is based on information given by an arrested ex-LTTE spy Suresh Kumar alias Thavendran say police sources.
Thavendran, who had an operative under LTTE intelligence leader Kapil Amman, has exposed several secret missions by the Army intelligence.
The CID also has found out during its investigations that Sri Lanka Army’s intelligence unit had maintained a shadow LTTE group, which had had links with Prageeth Ekneligoda.
Members of this shadow group, run with the instructions of the defense ministry, were LTTE spies who had surrendered to the Army and intelligence personnel proficient in the Tamil language.
Statements  also are to be recorded from former Army commander Jagath Jayasuriya and several Army intelligence personnel, including Maj. Gen. Kapila Hendavitarana, Maj. Gen. Amal Karunasekara, Maj. Gen. Janmika Liyanage and Brig. Wanniarachchi, the sources say.
Army intelligence unit’s Lt. Col. Kumara Ratnayake, Lt. Col. Siriwardena, Staff Sergeant Rajapakse, Corporal Jayalath, a Sergeant Major and another Tamil man have been arrested in connection with Ekneligoda’s disappearance.

Torture chamber and murder chamber at Giritale army camp: A Captain reveals to the courts: Ekneliyagoda murder investigation uncovers.!


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News- 26.Aug.2015, 10.00AM) A torture chamber and a murder chamber had been in operation at the Giritale security camp under the direct administration of  Gotabaya Rajapakse, the  ex defense secretary of the former lawless Mahinda Rajapakse reign, the CID has uncovered among loads of vital information , according to reports.
These most conroversial inhuman tortures  and murders committed during the former Rajapakse regime had sent a wave of rude shock among the people .The CID  had been able to unearth all this information during the investigation into the abduction and brutal killing of journalist Prageeth Ekneliyagoda .The latter had been most ruthlessly killed after inflicting torture while he was detained at the Girithale camp. 
Four front line  army security officers , namely Lieutenant Colonel Shammi Kumararatne, Lieutenant Colonel Siriwardena , staff sergeant Rajapakse and Corporal Jayalath have already been taken into custody by the CID and are being interrogated after obtaining court detention orders on them.

In addition to these four army officers , retired army sergeant major Ranbanda and two officers of the Tamil national army intelligence division were earlier taken into custody. They too are being quizzed following detention orders taken on them from court.
Meanwhile the revelations made pertaining to the Giritale army camp by Captain Wickremesinghe the accused in a case No. 50/10 filed in the Kandy high court by the Attorney general, are also being investigated by the CID, it is learnt . Captain Wickremesinghe is by profession a graduate teacher . During the years 2008-2009 while he was a teacher in a school he had been  serving as a voluntary officer of the forces.
At that time a Tamil firend of the captain was taken into police custody. Thereafter the captain too was arrested. Captain Wickremesinghe the accused in case No. 50/10 making a special statement to the court in this case revealed how he was taken to the basement of the Giritale camp where the torture chamber was , and tortured. He also told court he was blindfolded and detained.
Subsequently on a frame up a case was filed against him by the AG in the Kandy high court. Duirng the proceedings Captain Wickremesinghe revealed all the lurid details of the most inhuman and degrading treatment he was subjected to at the camp.
Wickremesinghe also stated those who were victims of the white Van abductions were tortured and mercilessly killed after detaining them in the Giritale camp. It was only he who escaped death after being taken to the camp ,and came out alive from the camp , he further noted.
Based on his shocking revelations , according to reports there must be thousands of skeletons of humans in the precincts of the Giritale army camp ,who fell victims to these tortures and brutal murders during the Rajapakse regime .
By - T. Jeyakumar
Translated By Jeff
Biswal meets with wife of missing Sri Lankan cartoonist

Photograph US embassy
 26 August 2015
The US assistant secretary of state for South and Central Asia, Nisha Biswal, who is currently visiting Sri Lanka, met with the wife of the missing political cartoonist, Prageeth Eknaligoda on Wednesday. 

Earlier this week, the Sri Lankan Criminal Investigation Department has questioned four army officers over the disappearance of cartoonist, who his wife says disappeared after he had uncovered evidence of the Sri Lankan army’s use of chemical weapons against the Tamil people. 

“In 2008, Prageeth wrote and informed the diplomats about the Sri Lankan government’s usage of chemical weapons against the people in the north," Mrs Eknaligoda told the BBCin 2010. 

“I think he was abducted by people who did not like the truth.” 

The new US ambassador to Sri Lanka, Atul Keshap and the US assistant secretary of state for democracy, human rights and labor, Tom Malinowski were also present at the meeting.
The fallen king?

Untitled-3
Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa
Untitled-4After a double whammy of electoral defeats this year, will spoiler-in-chief be the only role left for Mahinda Rajapaksa to play on the political stage?
logoThursday, 27 August 2015
The small village of Medamulana, nestled deep inside the Hambantota District, is a place of tranquility and scenic beauty. Tiny lakes glisten in the bright sunshine, studded with bright pink lotuses in full bloom. Endlessly green paddy fields extend as far as the eye can see, coconut trees dance and rustle in the wind. It is as idyllic as rural Sri Lanka gets.

US–SL talks : Govt. reaffirms commitment to domestic war crimes investigation


Biswal announces USD 1 mn in assistance for resettlement, education

 




















By Zacki Jabbar-August 25, 2015, 9:30 pm
The government, while reiterating its commitment to probing alleged war crimes in Sri Lanka through an independent domestic mechanism, said yesterday that it had agreed to prioritise closer economic cooperation with the US.

article_imageThe announcement was made by Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera to the media at the Foreign Ministry in Colombo, after he and Justice Minister Wijyayadasa Rajapakshe had held talks with a visiting US state delegation led by Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs, Nisha Biswal and Assistant Secretary of State for Democracy, Human Rights and Labour, Tom Malinowski.

"In keeping with the specific pledge in President Maithripala Sirisena’s manifesto and with political stability being achieved through one of the most free and fair elections held in this country, I outlined measures being taken to address concerns regarding alleged human rights violations through independent domestic mechanisms" Samaraweera said.

He revealed that the Srisena–Wickremesinghe government wanted to enhance trade and business relations and encourage more US investors to take advantage of the economic opportunities in Sri Lanka. "The US is Sri Lanka’s biggest export market with 23 percent of our exports entering that country."

Biswal, said that the US would provide USD 1 mn in assistance for education and resettlement in Sampur.