Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Saturday, September 5, 2015

National List? What List?

The 8th parliament has been convened after a roller-coaster election. The indelible ink still stains my little finger, but my optimism about the national list wore off some time ago.
The results were a mixed bag; Sri Lanka sent home some notorious politicians, but it also returned a remarkable number (one in particular, straight from remand prison). While the United National Front (UNF) and Ilankai Thamil Arasu Katchi (ITAK) gained the ground that the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) lost, the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) under-performed; their showing seemed not to correspond to their public appeal prior to the election. On both sides, there are young, new faces entering parliament, but the hope this inspired has been marred by the events surrounding the National List candidates appointed by parties.
What is the National List for?
In our electoral system, the National List MPs comprise 29 members who will enter parliament without having to contest elections. The list was introduced primarily to bring in experts and professionals from various fields, whose knowledge and skills would be useful in parliament – the underlying assumption being that such individuals would not have the time, political know-how, or the requisite popular appeal to successfully contest and win an election. In the same vein, it could also help improve the gender balance of parliament. Women candidates still have had limited electoral success in Sri Lanka; the list ought to help increase female representation in parliament. It was not meant to be a back door through which unpopular – or insecure – politicians might enter parliament without having to contest elections, nor was it meant to be a safety net for defeated politicians to enter the legislature.
The logic behind a national list is sound, although the mechanisms to protect its spirit are not (Section 99A as introduced by the14th amendment effectively allows parties to ignore the lists they have declared and to nominate anyone else, subject to the normal limitations). In Sri Lanka, politicians are generally not seen as being well educated, and so it makes perfect sense to ensure that at least little over 10% of the parliament’s composition is protected by the national list for educated professionals and upstanding members of the public. The aim is that these MPs will make significant contributions to debate in parliament, and according to research done by Manthri.lk, opposition national list MPs in particular seem to have lived up to expectations. Such individuals would probably not take the trouble to fund and run their own campaigns, especially because their chances at election would be slim. Thus – a national list.

Who was on the National Lists, and who ultimately got in?
Of all the political parties at this election, it was the JVP that seemed to approach the National List in the true spirit for which it was intended. Their list comprised a former Auditor General, lawyers, a number of university professors, writers, cartoonists and so on – a mixed bag of professionals who would each bring some unique experience to the country’s primary deliberative body. However, having secured two bonus seats, the party decided to nominate defeated Matara district candidate and former MP Sunil Handunetti through the national list, along with former Auditor General Sarathchandra Mayadunne. The latter has since made his first and last speech in parliament, and has resigned. He has been replaced by yet another defeated candidate.
In stark contrast to the JVP, the UPFA had very few non-politicians on their list to begin with, but they made things worse by nominating seven defeated candidates in their final list.
The ITAK also nominated defeated candidates for both its seats, with the only saving grace being that one is a woman.
The United National Front had a mix of politicians and non-politicians, but did the honourable thing by sticking to its list (for the most part – one defeated candidate from the ACMC made the list). This was in spite of mounting pressure to nominate former MP Rosy Senanayake who was unable to secure a seat from the Colombo District. Anoma Gamage – a woman nominee – will sit in parliament through the UNP, as will Dr. Jayampathy Wickramaratne, a constitutional lawyer.
The National List as a safety net – why is it wrong?
I strongly believe that appointing defeated candidates through the national list undermines the voter’s franchise. The voter does two things with her vote – she casts a preference for a particular candidate (or candidates), but she also casts that vote against all others. The latter was abundantly clear in the presidential election in January, but it also holds true at general elections. Whether voters do it consciously or not, when they mark a preference, they are making a decision to pick one candidate over the other – those of us who voted in Colombo are painfully aware of how tough this decision can be.
Let us then examine how this plays out with a national list. I vote for party A because I like candidate X, who is contesting the election, and Y, who is on party A’s national list. When voting for candidate X, I am also hoping that another candidate (Z) who is contesting from the same party will not get elected. Thus, I cast my vote in the hope that it will directly get candidate X in and keep candidate Z out, and that it will indirectly get Y in through the national list.
Post-election, candidate X wins his seat, candidate Z loses, and party A secures a national list seat – so far I am happy on all counts. However, the party then decides to nominate defeated candidate Z through the national list. Now, I am doubly wronged, because the candidate I did not want (Z – who was fairly defeated at the polls) gets in, and at the expense of the national list member I did want.
I may not have changed my vote even if I knew party A would behave this way, and certainly, Sri Lankan voters know not to have any expectations of political parties; nevertheless, this amounts to nothing more than a deception of the voter. I have been tricked, and my franchise undermined.
Some may argue that parties ought to have the discretion to appoint candidates who may have just had a bad campaign; that failure to garner enough votes is not proof that a politician is unworthy of a seat in parliament. I would respond that in a democracy, victory at an election is the least flawed and most objective measure of the ‘worthiness’ of a politician. Above all, a system by which parties have such discretion in appointments seems to do the voter greater injustice than one in which national lists are closed, to the detriment of a few deserving politicians who may come up short at the polls.
Through this all, the biggest disappointment has been the JVP, whose campaign declared themselves the conscience of the people. They presented the ideal national list to the people, but have since turned their backs on it completely. As a result, they have lost their moral high ground, and cannot express the people’s frustration at the way other defeated candidates (and less ‘worthy’ ones, certainly) have been included by the UPFA.
I am told I am too young to be cynical, but events like these certainly push the public in that direction. The new government has talked of a new constitution, and if such a process does materialize, protecting the spirit of the national list should be high on our priorities.

National Government & New Political Culture: Two Steps Forward, One Step Back?


By Jude Fernando –September 5, 2015
Jude Fernando
Jude Fernando
Colombo Telegraph
The oppressed are allowed once every few years to decide which particular representatives of the oppressing class are to represent and repress them in parliament.” –V.I. Lenin
“The oppressed, having internalized the image of the oppressor and adopted his guidelines, are fearful of freedom. Freedom would require them to reject this image and replace it with autonomy and responsibility.” –Paulo Freire
Forming a national government as the bedrock of a just political culture is a welcome move indeed. While I appreciate the current government’s many efforts toward good governance, I also see that some of those efforts have compromised President Sirisena’s desire to “formulate and implement rational, evidence-based national policies to address this country’s critical issues.” The way the so-called national government is evolving is sowing the seeds of its own demise and paving the way to re-establishing the same political culture it seeks to transform.
The current national government is in fact a coalition and in many ways resembles the previous one. Labeling the coalition a national government suggests that the administration is committed to justice and fairness. This is somewhat disingenuous. The United National Party (UNP) had no intention to form a government prior to the election. The concept of a national government did not emerge from any shared agreement regarding its meaning, nor is it grounded in consensus in terms of the reforms and road map needed to achieve its goals (i.e., a just and fair political culture).

New parliament clears ‘party leader’ misconception: Racists Wimal, Gammanpila, Dinesh, Vasu left high and dry !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -05.Sep.2015, 4.40PM) ‘Who are party leaders ? Will the 100 days interim govt. distortion be continued with the new parliament ?’ Lanka e news questioned in its report on 31 st August under this caption . The present parliament has finally converted this issue into a non -issue  by clearing the doubts once and for all. 
Until the advent of the 100 days interim government , only party leaders proper  who contested parliamentary  elections were considered as ‘party leaders’ and not those who signed agreements forming alliances outside the parliament.Accordingly , only the party , in the name of UPFA that contested elections as a single party , and only its representative can be  recognised as a party leader , and not those leaders of parties who signed pacts with the UPFA .This misleading precedent and cardboard ‘party leaders’ were created during the 100 days interim government by none other than  speaker Chamal Rajapakse and the pro Rajapakse regime government.
However in the best interests of the country and parliamentary traditions , this misleading precedent was eliminated by a decision taken during the party leaders meeting chaired by speaker Karu Jayasuriya , whereby the cardboard party leader masqueraders cannot now any longer wear that mask and dupe the parliament or people.
Accordingly , the present parliament reckons as party leaders only the  leaders elected at  the last general elections as parliamentary members of the following recognised parties:
UNP United National Party
UPFA United people’s Freedom Alliance
TNA Tamil National Alliance
JVP Jathika Vimukthi Peramuna
SLMC Sri Lanka Muslim Congress
EPDP  organization
Wimal of the National Freedom Front, Gammanpila of the Pivithuru Hela Urumaya , Dinesh of the Mahajana Eksath Peramuna , Gajadeera of the communist party , and Vasudeva who contested under the betel symbol of the UPFA , in the circumstances will not be entitled to sit in the front row , as they are not any longer ‘party leaders’ proper.They  are also divested of the parliamentary privileges attaching to them as party leaders.
According to parliament standing order 23 , a party leader has a parliamentary privilege to make a special  announcement pertaining to a subject concerning  a matter of national importance. Now, that privilege no longer applies to Wimal , Vasu, Gammanpila, Dinesh and others of that pseudo party leaders’ group. Even the time allocation for their speeches must be obtained from the UPFA  leader ,if not , from the opposition leader Sampanthan or from the chief opposition whip Anura Kumara Dissanayake out of the opposition time allocation, after discussing with them.
In addition when discussions are held pertaining to decisions among party leaders on parliamentary affairs , the leaders of the aforementioned masquerading group cannot participate.
One M.P speaking to Lanka e news inquired from us whether this was  divine retribution that is visited  on these evil thinking ‘manimals’ and inhuman  racists , Wimal , Gammanpila and  Dinesh who do not treat humans as humans simply  because they belong to a race different from theirs. 
Wimal and his clan hitherto who ‘congregated’ (formed groups)  in the office of the leader of the house and  government party organzation office   for their selfish self propulsion , do not now have the opportunity  to  ‘congregate’ in the  opposition leader’s office, the opposition chief whip’s office or anywhere in parliament , perhaps will have to congregate now at  Abhayarama , the M.P. pointed out to Lanka e news.


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by     (2015-09-05 11:33:22)

Retired Maj. Gen. lied to save Gota

SATURDAY, 05 SEPTEMBER 2015
The retired Maj. Gen. Gamini Jayasundara who gave false evidence to Presidential Commission of Inquiry probing into serious frauds to save former Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa in connection with irregularities connection in Rakna Lanka Security Service was asked by the Commission yesterday (4th) to show cause for not taking legal action against him.
Maj. Gen. Gamini Jayasundara who was a manager of a section of Rakna Lanka Security Service had stated he gave false evidence under oath to save former Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa.
The panel of Judges said giving false evidence under oath by a retired major general was a serious crime and Maj. Gen. Gamini Jayasundara was asked to present to Court on the 17 if there is any reason why he should not be punished for contempt of Court.
The Judges of the Commission are Judge of the High Court Preethi Padman Surasena (Chairman), and D.A. Mendis Seneviratne, High court Judge Gihan Kulatunga, Retired Additional Solicitor General Aiyathurai Gnanathasan and retired Auditor General P.A. Pematilaka while Mr. Lasil de Silva acts as the Secretary.

I gave false evidence to save Gota – Retired General Jayasundara asserts 

Lankanewsweb.netSep 05, 2015
I gave false evidence to save Gota – Retired General Jayasundara asserts
Presidential commission for the investigation of grievous crimes today the 4th told the Manager of Rakna Security Lanka Limited which was established with the assistance of the ministry of Defense, retired major General Gamini Jayasundara, to give an explanation if there is a reason to generalize his false evidence he gave disrespecting the Presidential commission for the investigation of grievous crimes.

During the cross examination of the government lawyers, Gamini Jayasundara accepted that he gave false evidence during the court case which held today in the BMICH premises.
He said due to the unlimited respect and love he had for the former defense secretary and in order to save him he gave false evidence.
The presidential commission was established to investigate grievous crimes have five members.
High Courts judges Preethi Padman Surasena (Chairman) Vikum Kaluarachchi, Amendra Senevirathna, Gihan Kulathunga and the retired auditor general P.A. Padmathilake.

With only $150,000 in savings, Nigeria’s leader may be the least corrupt in Africa

Nigerian President Muhammadu Buhari salutes his supporters during his inauguration in Abuja, Nigeria, on May 29. An official in Nigeria says the new president's wealth declaration shows that he has been living "an austere and Spartan lifestyle" compared to his predecessors and other senior government officials, with $150,000 in his personal account. (Sunday Alamba/AP)
By Sudarsan Raghavan-September 5
By the standards of sub-Saharan African leaders, Nigeria's President Muhammadu Buhari is dirt-poor.
According to a statement released by his government, he has $150,000 in his savings account. He owns five homes and two mud houses, an orchard and ranch with 270 head of cattle, 25 sheep, five horses and a variety of birds. He has bought two cars from his savings
"President Buhari had no foreign account, no factory and no enterprises. He also had no registered company and no oil wells," reads the statement released by the spokesman, Garba Shehu, describing the president's assets as "Spartan."
Everyone in Abuja is just talking about how their vice-president is richer than President Buhari after wealth declaration!

The question on many minds is this: Is Buhari, Nigeria's former military ruler and ex-head of the oil ministry, telling the truth?
Corruption, after all, is a major problem in Africa's largest economy. Buhari himself has publicly said that more than $150 billion is missing from the government's coffers. Still, the public declaration appears to be an attempt to show some much-needed transparency. Buhari was elected in March largely by promising that he wouldn't tolerate corruption.
What's clear is that Buhari has done what his predecessors — and most other African leaders — have never done.
Nigeria's last 3 presidents: Umaru Yar'Adua worth $5m (£3.5m), Goodluck Jonathan didn't want to say how much, and General Buhari $150,000.

Consider these five other African leaders. They have been labeled by Forbes Magazine as the  "five worst leaders in Africa."
1.  Teodoro Obiang Nguema Mbasogo, president of Equatorial Guinea
He's Africa's longest-serving ruler, an autocrat who leads the tiny, oil-rich West African nation of Equatorial Guinea. Despite its vast natural wealth, the majority of its people live in deep poverty with no access to clean drinking water, proper educational or health facilities. One fifth of children die before age 5. The money has gone into the pockets of Mbasogo and his family. They own luxury properties in the United States and other countries, a private jet and a fleet of luxury cars.
2. José Eduardo dos Santos, president of Angola
He's Africa's second-longest-serving leader. Angola is the continent's second-largest oil producer, and one of the biggest suppliers of oil to the United States. It also has massive diamond deposits. Dos Santos's relatives hold key positions in his government and control a huge share of Angola's economy, amid widespread allegations of corruption. Nearly 70 percent  of the population lives in dire poverty, and a third of the nation's children are malnourished.
3. Robert Mugabe, president of Zimbabwe
He has ruled the southern African nation for a quarter-century. He was the architect of controversial policies, most notably the seizure of white-owned commercial farms. Though the country in recent years has seen an economic rebound, Mugabe remains one of the continent's most autocratic rulers. He wields nearly total control of government institutions, and his loyalists have used violence to retain control. Human rights abuses are rife, while unemployment remains among the highest in sub-Saharan Africa.
4. Omar Al-Bashir, president of Sudan
Bashir seized power in a bloodless military coup in 1989 and has since disbanded political parties, the nation's parliament and many privately-owned media outlets. Under his rule, civil war erupted, in which more than 1 million people were killed. Bashir is wanted by the International Criminal Court at the Hague on charges of war crimes and crimes against humanity for his role in the killing and rape of civilians in Sudan's Darfur region. A U.S. diplomatic cable, leaked by Wikileaks, unveiled that Bashir may have stolen as much as $9 billion from state coffers and deposited it into his private bank accounts in Great Britain.
5.  King Mswati III, king of Swaziland
He is the continent's last reigning monarch, presiding over a nation with one of the world's highest HIV rates, where average life expectancy — 33 years — is among the lowest in the world. Despite his people's suffering, the king leadsa lavish life with a taste for luxury cars, first-class travel and expensive parties, even as the nation's economy is in dire straits.
 
Sudarsan Raghavan has been The Post's Kabul bureau chief since 2014. He was previously based in Nairobi and Baghdad for the Post.

Why is China Bankrolling Venezuela?

Why is China Bankrolling Venezuela?
BY JOSÉ R. CÁRDENAS-SEPTEMBER 4, 2015
When Chinese leader Xi Jinping meets with President Barack Obama in Washington later this month, there will be no shortage of items of the highest strategic order to discuss. Still, President Obama ought to carve out a few moments to discuss Chinese activity in our own neighborhood. Specifically, he should raise the issue of why China is continuing to loan billions of dollars to Venezuela, whose problematic government is in a political and economic tailspin of its own making and has now begun to lash out at its neighbors.
This week, beleaguered Venezuelan president Nicolas Maduro was in Beijing rattling the tin cup, securing another $5 billion loan from his hosts — a deal in which, as The Economist described, as it is “hard to see any economic advantage to China.”
Certainly, Chinese commercial engagement in Latin America is nothing new. Over the past decade or so — when times were good — China moved to lock in long-term access to energy and raw materials through an aggressive trade and investment push, including free-flowing loans with little fiscal oversight.
But now the economic worm has turned: Chinese growth is slowing and commodity and oil prices are sinking, blurring the lines now between what may have passed as straight apolitical commercial deals with activity that is now carrying more ominous strategic undertones.
Consider the fact that, according to Evan Ellis of the U.S. Army War College, “Of the more than $100 billion that [Chinese] banks have loaned to the region since 2005, more than three quarters has gone to the nations of ALBA and Argentina.” (ALBA, or Bolivarian Alliance for the Peoples of Our America, is an anti-American construct of the late Hugo Chávez and deadbeat Argentina has long been excluded from international capital markets.)
In particular, Venezuela, despite its terrible credit risk, has benefited from Chinese largesse to the tune of some $56.3 billion in loans since 2007.
Whatever Beijing’s motivations, the practical effect of said loans, according to Ellis, has “enabled countries such as Venezuela to continue as de facto sanctuaries for criminal and insurgent groups, and also, as points of entry into the region for Russia, Iran and other actors with potentially hostile intentions toward the United States.”
As is evident from today’s headlines, the situation is getting worse. With the highest inflation rate in the world, plunging foreign earnings from collapsed oil prices, widespread food and medicine shortages, and soaring crime, the hapless Maduro government is doing what all good authoritarians do when faced with intractable domestic problems: it’s picking fights with its neighbors.
When Maduro is not trying to bully small Guyana over a major oil find in territory Venezuela claims as its own, he’s provoking a humanitarian crisis with Colombia, closing a key border crossing and expelling upwards of 1,000 Colombians living on the Venezuelan side of the border, causing another 9,000 to flee homeless and without property. (For good measure, he also accused Colombia of plotting his assassination for the umpteenth time.)
It is not as if President Obama has to pound the table with his Chinese counterpart. If the Chinese want to engage in risky economic behavior abroad, that’s their business. But when their economic engagement in our neighborhood enables bad behavior that threatens regional stability, then that is our business. The president simply needs to impart that his administration is watching with growing concern the direction of events in Venezuela and distinguish between what we consider helpful efforts to achieve a peaceful resolution there or those that we do not. For good measure, he could add that, given the changing international environment, it is increasingly difficult to see an economic rationale behind lending more money to a country near to our shores and bent on such a destructive agenda.
After all, it is not going to be China or Brazil or anyone else for that matter, that will be called upon to help the Venezuelan people rebuild their country after the collapse of chavismo or else deal with the regional repercussions of that collapse. It will be the United States. It appears, then, we ought to have some say on the matter.
Parker Song-Pool/Getty Images