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, October 3, 2015

USTPAC joins ‘continuous and unequivocal calls for a strong international role’ in Sri Lanka


03 October 2015
The United States Tamil Political Action Council (USTPAC) said it “joins in victims’ continuous and unequivocal calls for a strong international role in all transitional justice mechanisms” in Sri Lanka, in a statement released on Friday.

Stating that the UN Human Rights Council resolution on Sri Lanka and the OISL report provides “a way forward,” the organisation said “immediate confidence-building measures are also necessary”. 

“These include repeal of the odious Prevention of Terrorism Act, a review and strengthening of the Witness and Victim Protection Act and the urgent demilitarization of the North and East,” said Dr Karunyan Arulanantham, president of USTPAC. “Sri Lanka should also seize this opportunity to work towards a political solution that guarantees non-recurrence, with the help of the United States and India,” he added.

Dr Arulanantham continued to say the “immediate establishment of an in-country OHCHR office, as recommended by the High Commissioner, would significantly allay victims’ doubts of fair process and fears of reprisals while providing the government practical expertise.”
See the full statement here.

President berates SL embassy officials for misleading him and invites genuine ‘Swan’ supporters to meet in NY


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -02.Oct.2015, 11.55PM) President Maithripala Sirisena who read the Lanka e news report of 27 th September titled ’ Those for good governance who helped ‘Swan’ win ignored ; sex shop owners held high –New York Sri Lankan group disillusioned’ while on his tour of New York , has immediately and positively responded .
The President had stated , he does not know, Sanath Vitharne the sex shop owner mentioned in the news report , and that he was sent to the airport VIP lounge to welcome him  by the Sri Lanka Embassy officials in New York. The president has blamed the officials for that action with all the fury he could unleash.
When the officials had tried to counter by saying that this sex shop owner had arrived at the VIP lounge on his own , the president in a fit of rage had told the embassy officials, a stray  individual of his own accord  cannot come to the airport to welcome a president , and warned them not to tell lies , and in future not to allow such scoundrels and rascals even to come before him.
The president had even gone beyond , and inquired who are those ’Swan’ supporters  that helped him, mentioned in the news report , and he has himself then extended invitations to them. Accordingly , on 30th, that group had arrived and met with the president at the hotel Hyatt at 42 nd street  , New York where the president was staying. It is significant to note this hotel chosen by president Maithripala is very much less expensive than the luxurious hotel Restoria ,ex president Mahinda Rajapakse chooses when he goes to New York.
The president had invited those who supported him during the last presidential elections,  whomever the president could contact . The invitees met with the president 30th evening . Justice minister Wijedasa Rajapakse too was present on the occasion. They had long cordial discussions , when the president has  cleared the misunderstandings . 
During the discussions , one group has raised the issue affecting all Sri Lankans living in America. That is , the attention of the president was drawn to the inability of green card holders in America  to obtain loans in local rupees in Sri Lanka (SL) .  The group had pointed out this attitude  of SL banks is even in contravention of the international agreements signed by SL pertaining to those employed in foreign countries , and rights of their families.
The president told them , no sooner he returns to SL than he would take action to resolve this issue.
Meanwhile, the president visited the Buddhist Vihara in New York . Sadly , the SL embassy had not duly made arrangements in regard to the president’s visit to the Temple.
The true unfortunate position is , a majority of  representatives at the SL embassy in New York , and those in the  office of the UN permanent representative are pro Rajapakse corrupt stooges.
Need we recall , when Shavendra Silva was there , he had as many as five body guards, and gobbled up public funds. If we may mention , even after  Maithripala Sirisena became president on 8 th January , during the period of his 100 days interim  government , it was the photograph of Mahinda Rajapakse that continued to hang in SL ‘s embassy in New York. The staff was so indifferent that they did not take the trouble to replace that photograph with that of new President Maithripala . Still no suitable officials who understand the vision and mission of the government of good governance had been appointed to replace these low bred corrupt stooges. Regrettably  , it is the policies of the president himself that are militating against these measures being taken.
Maithripala Sirisena who said at the last presidential elections , after he becomes the president he  will be neutral sans party affiliations, took over the leadership of the SLFP in site of it. Consequently , he is unable to get rid of the  SLFP stooges of Rajapakse .On top of that he had appointed most shameless lickspittles and bootlickers like Daya Ratnayake and Jagath Jaysuriya of Rajapakse as foreign diplomats. The evil fallout of these actions is ,  discarded sex shop owners getting an opportunity  to welcome the president at the airport  , and the whole world being made to  laugh at this.
Apparently , the president has not learnt a lesson even after an individual some time ago came  close him armed with a pistol, for the president had still not  sacked the security chief owing to whose laxity such a dangerous incident took place. It is of paramount importance  that the president realizes , as in  the Institutions within  the country , so in the SL embassies abroad there are conspirators and saboteurs who are sabotaging the government of good governance.
No matter what , the media and the people of SL must be happy that , at least , there is a president now in the country who responds promptly to take remedial and corrective  measures following criticisms leveled against him by the media .SL  is lucky that even at this belated stage , it has been able to get  a president who puts up with criticism instead of stifling it  via white Van abductions and murders ; banning media Institutions ;or  committing arson on media Institutions .Hence , it is important that we on our part should  not hesitate to protect him from falling into pitfalls or becoming  prey to conspiracies and  falsehoods . 
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by     (2015-10-03 01:36:15)

The Unique Difference In Economic Governance: President Got It!


By Hema Senanayake –October 3, 2015
Hema Senanayake
Hema Senanayake
Colombo Telegraph
All good hopes will be dashed if the good-governance government failed in economic governance. Establishing democracy is good but it is not everything; people hope for better economic governance too. In New York, I just got two minutes to explain this to President Maithripala Sirisena in a formal event when he was in New York in order to attend the United Nation’s General Assembly. He was so attentive and quite a few times nodded in assenting during my speech. Hence, for the readers benefit I submit below the near exact translation of my statement. It is as follows:
“… Your Excellency President, Honorable Ministers, Ambassador, distinguished guests and friends.
The Sri Lankan community in New York is keenly interested in the governance of Sri Lanka. As far as we know there are two segments in governance. The work or duties in the first segment can be done through the frame work of democratic process. The work which falls into the second segment cannot be executed only through the democratic process; and this is the segment of economic governance. This is an important segment – And what is applicable here is the theoretical and technical expertise of the officials –elected or appointed- who execute the macroeconomic policies.
For an example, the rupee is depreciating now. The value of one U.S. dollar has now exceeded Rs.140. There is no democratic procedure to bring it to a reasonable value. This can only be done by officials who have high economic expertise.
Who is the official who has high level economic expertise? I might be able to give you a clue on this question. As at now the largest economies have become the most indebted economies in the world. For an example the public debt in Japan is 230% of GDP. In the USA this ratio exceeds 100%. Europe is no different except a few countries.
Therefore, the person who can accurately explain as to why the largest economies in the world have at the same time be regarded as the countries with highest public debt, is a person who has the best macroeconomic technical expertise.
Dear Mr. President unfortunately, the true excellence for macroeconomic know-how is not pursued within the formal economic establishments including International Monetary Fund. This is happening outside the establishments. The real challenge is to bring this know-how into the segment of economic governance. In this regard, the secretariat you proposed to coordinate with intellectuals – expatriate or local- will be very useful for the country. Thank you all” (Statement Ends)                  Read More

An armed struggle needs arms

By Udeni Saman Kumara-2015-10-04

Interrogation of Rohana Wijeweera by Sunanda Deshapriya continued.....
Sunanda Deshapriya: I will make a proposal to you. According to the facts of history, my statement will clarify the instances when you have lied.
Rohana Wijeweera: I too am of the opinion that history will explain everything.
Sunanda Deshapriya: Do you remember the first day I met you?
Rohana Wijeweera: I do not remember the first day but I believe it was in late 1968 or the beginning of 1969 at your house.
Sunanda Deshapriya: At that point did you know that I was already exposed to the JVP teachings by Sanath?
Rohana Wijeweera: Yes. I got to know you through Sanath
Sunanda Deshapriya: Do you remember meeting me in Akmeemana in a political workshop which was held in 1969?
Rohana Wijeweera: Yes, I think so. I did a class in Akmeemana
Sunanda Deshapriya: Do you remember? It was held for five days.

Rohana Wijeweera: Yes. That was the general procedure.
Sunanda Deshapriya: Apart from physical exercises, do you remember doing other training programmes?
Rohana Wijeweera: No.
Sunanda Deshapriya: Do you remember teaching us to climb trees and move by hanging on ropes?
Rohana Wijeweera: No. Those activities were not done in Akmeemana.
Sunanda Deshapriya: Was there anybody in Akmeemana who came from the Navy?
Rohana Wijeweera: Comrade Thilakarathne attended the first camp but he did not attend the second.
Sunanda Deshapriya: So, according to you, a military training was not given at the camp?
Rohana Wijeweera: No. We did not give such a training.
Sunnanda Deshapriya: In the final lesson you gave, the class number 5 addressed the path and direction of the revolution in Sri Lanka.

Rohana Wijeweera: That lesson was given at all camps we organized; therefore we must have had it in Akmeemana as well.
Sunnanda Deshapriya: There, did you talk about a subtopic called, the geographical position of Sri Lanka?
Rohana Wijeweera: No. I don't remember. I remember one called the unique conditions of Sri Lanka.
Sunanda Deshapriya: Did you talk about the geographical position of Sri Lanka under the title "Unique Conditions"?
Rohana Wijeweera: No. Primarily we talked about social issues.

Sunanda Deshapriya: So according to that explanation, 'unique conditions of Sri Lanka' does not include geographical position?
Rohana Wijeweera: It does, but to a certain extent according to the subject matter.
Sunanda Deshapriya: Did you talk about the history of Sri Lanka's freedom struggles and the lesson we can learn from them?
Rohana Wijeweera: Not in the way you describe but we talked about 1818 and 1848 rebellions.
Judge Wimalarathne: Sunanda we have already heard about them.
Sunanda Deshapriya: Your Honour, I have only a few questions left.
Sunanda Deshapriya: Did you talk about lessons that should be learned by those struggles?
Rohana Wijeweera: Yes. We wanted to discuss those lessons.

Sunanda Deshapriya: Did you mention that these rebellions did not succeed because they were spread out and instant?
Rohana Wijeweera: "Instant" is not a correct way to explain it. But I have said that the rebellions were spread out and the tactics of the rebels were wrong.
Sunanda Deshapriya: Let me put it this way, lacking an instant, collective response?
Rohana Wijeweera: Yes. I might have said it.
Sunanda Deshapriya: Do you say that the long descriptions that you have given to the CID which included details about an armed struggle, is true?
Rohana Wijeweera: As far as I remember, I have said the truth.

Sunanda Deshapriya: Does it include information about an attack?
Rohana Wijeweera: As far as I know, it was not about an attack. It included a detailed description about the lessons which were given in the class number five.
Sunanda Deshapriya: Does it mean you have given information about an armed struggle or how to launch an armed struggle?
Rohana Wijeweera: It means, if the revolution in Sri Lanka drives in a violent route, a common opinion can be there about the ways in which force can be used.
Presiding Judge: You have said, in class number five you taught about the lessons that can be learned by the 1818 and 1848 rebellions.
Rohana Wijeweera: Yes.

Presiding Judge: Learning about unsuccessful revolutions can be used to examine how to do a successful one.
Rohana Wijeweera: Yes. If there is a need for another revolution!
Presiding Judge: Did you also talk about how to do a successful revolution in Sri Lanka at the camp?
Rohana Wijeweera: We addressed that issue as well as other issues which were relevant and the common steps we can take.
Judge Alles: For a revolution to become successful it should occur throughout the country.
Rohana Wijeweera: According to the condition of the country, if the revolution were supposed to be an armed struggle, then yes it should occur throughout the country.
Judge Alles: You would need arms for that.
Rohana Wijeweera: In order to conduct an armed struggle one needs to be armed.
Judge Alles: So, class number five in the workshop must have discussed about the issue.
(To be continued)

Disruptions to Raviraj, Lasantha, Ekneligoda probes!

Disruptions to Raviraj, Lasantha, Ekneligoda probes!The CID is reportedly facing continuous disruptions in its investigations into the killings of MP Nadaraja Raviraj and senior journalist Lasantha Wickramatunga and the forced disappearance of journalist Prageeth Ekneligoda.
02 October 2015
A top official of the CID explained this to a head of the prime minister’s office when inquired about the progress of the investigations.
Military chiefs were trying to cover up information with regard to military personnel implicated in these crimes and are not giving the support required in the investigations, the CID officer has said.
Some officials of the attorney general’s department too, are not extending their support, while certain judges are acting in a biased manner citing their safety, he has also said.
However, the president and the prime minister have said they fully supported these investigations.

Jiffy Corporation which destruct the Deduru Oya threaten the environmentalists

Jiffy Corporation which destruct the Deduru Oya threaten the environmentalists


Lankanewsweb.netOct 03, 2015
Jiffy Corporation owners, has imposed death threats to a group of environmentalists who has gone on a research trip to learn the environment effect of the Deduru Oya and its suburb. The environmentalist has come back following the visit along Deduru Oya.

Environment and Nature Education Center coordinating environmentalist Ravindra Kariyawasam and his group whom protested against the continuous environment destruction caused by the Jiffy Factory and multinational companies today 3rd had gone on a monitoring visit around Deduru Oya. A group which has come claiming to be the authorities of the Jiffy has caused hindrance to the
environmentalists. Ven. Wekandawala Rahula himi, photographer Duminda Alahakoon and a group of environmentalists has jointed this monitoring mission.
25 people claiming to be the workers of the Jiffy has come to the place and intimidated the group of environmentalist to show the pictures and the videos taken.
Following the incident the Kobeigane police have visited the scene and the police has taken the environmentalist Ravindra Kariyawasam, Ven Wekandawala Rahula Himi and Duminda Alahakoon into custody and taken them to the Kobeigane Police Station. The three people taken into custody is reported to be questioned by the police.
Meantime the Jiffy factory authorities are reported to be inside and surrounding outside the police station.

Sri Lanka’s Domestic Probe & India, the US and China



Not Only One! There Are Two Children At Kotadeniyawa: An Open Letter To The PM

Colombo TelegraphBy Liyanage Amarakeerthi –October 3, 2015
Dr. Liyanage Amarakeerthi
Dr. Liyanage Amarakeerthi

Dear Mr. Prime Minister,
I hope you are rather settled in your prime ministerial seat now, and your president and Foreign Minister have handled the Geneva quite well, it seems. So, now you have some respite to read this letter. I have chosen to send this letter this way because I am sure, like all politicians, you have appointed a bunch of supporting staff to make sure that only the letters by powerful lobbies get delivered to your desk and priority lists. I have also chosen write this letter to you because I know that our president is busy introducing his son to some powerful men and women in the world.
Let me cut to the chase. Speaking of ‘chase’, you must have heard that Sri Lankan police stationed at Kotadeniyawa chased down the murderer of Seya Sandamini – that child of five – three years younger than my own daughter. I will refrain from further sensationalizing that murder story. Sinhala press – including the papers belong to your own family – interestingly enough there are only a few papers that are not somehow connected with your family – has sensationalized the story so much that people’s anger at that murder is far greater than their understanding of social conditions that create such tragedies. That anger was primarily directed at the suspects. Media reporting, ideally, should lead to understanding not to anger. As a son of a journalist you know that already. Anger is understandable; but it needs to be followed by the calming effects of an understanding. That understanding must not of a religious kind that teaches us the nature of life or karma but rather it needs to be of a social kind that teaches us of the nature of our society which is primarily under your prime ministerial care.
Seya Sandamini’s death is sad, wrong, tragic and it must not have happened. For that death, however, the entire socio-cultural situation is responsible. That includes even our thoughts and customs of bringing up children. Our thoughts of parenting need to be rethought. Mr. PM, perhaps you know already that Lanka is not very child friendly. Our country is ‘politician friendly.’ It is as simple as that. Your responsibility is to make that country safe again for people, especially children. You must have heard of some rating systems where some cities, townships, neighborhoods are rated as “most child-friendly” and so on. I myself have raised a son in a city that was named several times as “the most child-friendly city” of that country. If you are interested I can tell you more on that.

Of what worth is the khaki uniform of IGP who cannot take action against his khaki clad sadistic criminals ?


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News - 03.Oct.2015, 9.05PM) Folowing the rape and murder of a 4 ½ years old girl at Kotadeniyawa ,  a student attending school and a father of a child were arrrested by Kotadeniyawa polce unlawfully .Thereafter the CID took into custody the true culprit who made a confession. The DNA of his and that of  murdered child were similar. Subsequently the father of a child who was wrongfully arrested and asaulted brutally by the police  for four full days , and the student  whose photograph was taken keeping him in naked state and assaulted were released . It is to be noted  even yesterday(02) , both these innocent victims are receiving medical treatment at the Gampaha hospital because of the bruthless assault launched on them by the lawless police.
These victims after  their release told the media that they were treated by the police as though they were terrorists. Lanka e news that champions the cause of the oppressed and the victims of injustice , from the very outset  highlighted that the arrest of the student by the police without evidence was wrongful , yet the IGP (Impotent General of police ) of SL paid no heed .
What the student revealed to the media after his release ….
''On the 16 th (September) morning  at about 10.00 my mother woke me up and told that the police have arrived. When I came out the police took my laptop , some other things , and along with a shool friend of mine took us in a three wheeler saying , after recording a statement we will be released immediately.There were four officers  in colored attire.
They took me to  a rear room of the Kotadeniya police leaving my friend at another place.After taking me into the room they made me kneel down , and assaulted. They continued to attack me saying  ‘you did it.’ They asaulted me with the fist , feet and an S Lon pipe.They did not allow my mother too to see me. The OIC came to the venue , and told the assailants to kill me, while alleging that it should be me who had done that.
The police held me in custody for four days , 16,17 ,18 and 19 and continued to assault me  every now and then.The police officers stripped me nude , and started looking at me and laughing when I was in the naked state.They also took photographs when I was naked.An ASP too came and looked at me in my nude state , and scolded me in absolute filth.
Throughout the period I was in custody they assaulted me.My mother was not allowed to see me for three days.They threatened to kill us.Some who claimed they are from the CID  too came and assaulted me. On the 19 th I was produced in court. ''
Kelum the father of a child the other victim  who was released ……
''In the early hours of the morning of 16 th September , the police  OIC arrived , took me into the police vehicle and blindfolded me.They removed the blindfold after taking me to a house in a jungle at Wedibehethwatte area.
It is the OIC who then instructed to remove the blindfold. Thereafter I was assaulted  while saying ‘it is you who did this.’I was hung , and assaulted. When I was being hung I felt something happened to my spine.I was assaulted with the fists , feet and S Lon pipe.. After keeping me for a day and assaulting me, I was brought  to the police. I was produced in court only on the 19 th.''
Seemingly there is no one to agitate to arrest those who brutally and mercilessly assaulted two innocents , a school going student and a father . Neither is any attempt being made to arrest those police officers guilty of exteme brutality and sadistic propensities.

The good governance rulers and promoters who went with all the fanfare abroad to speak about and for human rights have also returned carrying ‘cutouts’ for display .Media however reports  that on the instructions of the IGP an investigation has begun.
Meanwhile,  the entire population of this country is intently watching and  earnestly waiting until the president who is in charge of the security of the people gives unwavering orders to arrest the police OIC , the ASP and other outrageously  law breaking officers who were responsible for the wrongful arrest of two law abiding innocent citizens- a  student and a father of one child . 
Even when the media  were publishing reports on this incident of intense gravity , and about this innocent child which are   full of portents  affecting  the security of the entire nation , and is not  something which concerns  just a student and a father alone,the police top brass ignored it . Hence  from the IGP to the SSP of Negombo police must be held answerable  for remaining blind and deaf to all the exposures for so long.  
This police brutality and neglect of duty cannot be taken lightly for this lawless conduct of the police taking  two law abdiding citizens of the country into custody at their will and pleasure is not a matter that concerns only those two innocent victims , but all law abiding citizens of the country . If the police act this illegally and with impunity , are the law abiding cirtizens to take the law into their hands , the only option they have in such circumstances of police criminalities and brutalities with impunity  ? Are these culprits not being  taken into custody because they are police officers ?
The IGP the head of the police enforcment must give an answer not only via  word but by deed by taking stern and deterrent action against these subordinates under him . Let us remind him lest he has forgotten he is the Inspector General of police , and not Impotent General of police. Though the abbreviation IGP is the same for both , he cannot be both when performing his duties and responsibilities  for which he is paid a salary out of public funds.
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by     (2015-10-03 15:40:04)

Chamal becomes a state witness against Mahinda

Chamal becomes a state witness against MahindaLankanewsweb.netOct 03, 2015
According to the reports reaching us from the Financial Crime Investigating Department Mahinda Rajapaksa’s elder brother Chamal Rajapaksa would appear as a state witness against the frauds committed by Mahinda and his sons exercised during the previous regime.

Meantime alias “Baggage Boy” of Mahinda Rajapaksa and the former parliament MP Sajin Vaas Gunawardana and the former chairman of the Ports Authority Bandu Priyath Wicrama too would be turned as state witnesses against Mahinda Rajapaksa.
When the Financial Crime Investigation Bureau questioned the former speaker Chamal Rajapaksa regarding how the CSN network can be located in a land given to the Rajapaksa Foundation? The latter said he is unaware about all these and all these things are done by the Rajapaksa
and his sons.
A 29 perches of land which belonged to the Urban Development Authority was given to the D.A. Rajapaksa foundation in 2003 under a 30 year lease for an annual rent of Rs. 163,125.
When Mahinda Rajapaksa was serving as the opposition leader in 2003 the latter has requested this land to the D.A. Rajapaksa Foundation from then western province development minister M.H. Mohamed. Later the land was transferred following an approval of a cabinet paper. When transferring the land there was a condition imposed stating that this land should be used only for D.A. Rajapaksa Foundation affairs.
However later there was no activities related to D.A. Rajapaksa foundation were carried out but the CSN network building was constructed and business established which was completely illegal.

When the FCID inquired about this from the chairman of the D.A.Rajapaksa Foundation the latter said he doesn’t know anything about this affair but all these irregularities were done by Mahinda Rajapaksa and his sons. When the FCID inquired from the treasurer of this institute Lalith Chandradasa the brother in law of Mahinda Rajapaksa the latter too has said he doesn’t know anything about this. The FCID came to know that he does not possess any accounts information regarding the Foundation.
In order to incorporate the Rajapaksa Memorial Foundation all financial accounts of the foundation should be annually audited in terms of the acts passed in the parliament, but unfortunately there is no indication regarding those so far.
However as soon there was a regime change last January 8th there was a sudden lease agreement signed between the CSN network and the Rajapaksa Foundation on the 14th of January.

Restoring Sustainability To Sri Lankan Agriculture


By Ranil Senanayake –October 3, 2015
Ranil Senanayake
Ranil Senanayake
Colombo Telegraph
Sri Lanka maintained a massive highland soil ecosystem that was untouched until the advent of the colonial experience. The rice farming soils as well as the agroecosystem was a co-evolved system that maintained its production potential for literally thousands of years. History demonstrates that the great soil capital of this nation was lost with the advent of colonial plantation agriculture and the advent of ‘modern agriculture’ destroyed the remaining productive potential of our farming soils.
To appreciate this loss and the consequent dependency on chemicals to farm, the action of the soil ecosystem should be appreciated. Farming and forest soils are very energetic ecosystems. It has been estimated that a gram of good farmyard soils can contain about 1 billion individual bacteria, over 100 million individual actinomyctes and over 1 kilometer of fungal hyphae, notwithstanding plants like algae and animals like collembolids, nematodes or worms. In total these microorganisms add up to about 7-11 tons of living matter per hectare in the top 15 cm of soil. It is this living matter providing about 6-10 horsepower of free energy per day that maintained the fertility of our traditional agriculture. These soils did not require anything more than small additions of organic matter to maintain its productivity and the farmer was able to provide that through traditional practices without external inputs.
Paddy RiceDuring the early part of the 1960’s when there was a great emphasis on developing our agriculture, it was noticed that the yields were lower than our neighboring countries. The reasons were, poor seed and heavy weed infestations. The School-weeding program instituted in the late 60’s was recorded by National Geographic to increase yield by 200 % by simply weeding the fields at the right time by hand. With the advent of the ‘Green Revolution’ that promoted chemical and high-energy input farming systems, our farmers lost their ability to independently manage their farms and over the years and generations, lost their indigenous farming knowledge and practices.  Read More

Video: Gota’s ‘floating market’ gone to flies!


SATURDAY, 03 OCTOBER 2015
The floating market trade complex constructed with the mediation of former Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa has become a place shunned by people.

The shops at Bastian Mawatha in Pettah were destructed amidst strong opposition of the traders who were doing business there and were forced to do business in the floating market. However, most of the shops have been closed down due to people avoiding to shop there.

Trades say people shun the complex due to the stink that exists in Beira Lake and also due to uncleanliness of the area. The site being constructed far away from where people congregate is also a reason for the absence of shoppers point out traders.

Traders in the floating market say they are unable to meet their ends meet and moreover the area is used for nefarious activities at night they complain.

The floating market constructed spending a colossal sum of money and opened with pomp and ceremony is another unsuccessful project of Rajapaksa regime.

Camera in ladies toilet at ‘Mawbima’!

Camera in ladies toilet at ‘Mawbima’!

Lankanewsweb.netOct 03, 2015
The Lanka News Web has received reports about yet another despicable incident at ‘Mawbima’ newspaper which is leading gutter journalism in Sri Lanka.

Someone had fixed a camera in the ladies toilet that is being used by female journalists attached to ‘Mawbima’ and ‘Ceylon Today’ newspapers and had had been watching them for some time. A few days ago, one female journalist spotted the camera and immediately complainted to the management. Straight away, ‘Mawbima’ managing editor Thushara Gunaratne had gone there and took the camera and its recorder into his custody.
Later, Thushara informed ‘Mawbima’ owner Tiran Alles, who is presently in England, about the incident. Tiran has told him to keep the camera and the recorder with him safely until he returns. He is due back at this weekend.
Tiran had also instructed Thushara to place the entire blame on the worker who cleans the toilet. Immediately, Thushara sacked him. He told all staff that the cleaner was responsible for the camera in the toilet.
When two employees of the graphic division questioned him as to why he was keeping the camera and the recorder with him, an angry Thushara sacked the two of them too.
Thushara has displayed his meanness by threatening female journalists of ‘Mawbima’ that he would post the content of the camera on facebook. Through his colleague Banda and his girlfriend Aruni, Thushara has told the female journalists that the nudity of female journalists who leave ‘Mawbima’ and provide information to websites would be posted on facebook. Angered by that, the female journalists had retorted that if he did so, they would post on facebook all the mean acts he had committed.
From England, Tiran has told Thushara and Banda that ‘Mawbima’ would have to be closed if its income from advertisements is not improved within the next few months. A possessed Banda came to work yesterday morning and sent the staff to agencies to obtain advertisements. Later, he and Thushara went to ‘The Fat Crab’ for lunch, where while having a beer, the duo had watched the content in the camera and the recorder, say the sources which gave us details of the incident.

The Imperfect Trial of Congo’s ‘Terminator’

As Bosco Ntaganda faces charges of war crimes at the Hague, those watching from Congo debate what comes next for their country.
The Imperfect Trial of Congo’s ‘Terminator’
BY HOLLY DRANGINISFIDEL BAFILEMBA-OCTOBER 2, 2015
WASHINGTON and GOMA, Congo — When Congolese rebel leader Bosco Ntaganda’s war crimes trial opened in The Hague last month, most of his victims were nearly 4,000 miles away in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo. Unable to watch the proceedings in person, some of them tuned in from a gas station in the provincial capital of Goma.
Nicknamed “the Terminator” for his alleged brutality, Ntaganda faces 18 counts of war crimes and crimes against humanity, including murder, sexual enslavement, and destruction of enemy property. He is thought to have been involved in multiple rebel movements in Rwanda and Congo going back as far as 1990, when he was still a teenager. More than 5 million people have died in eastern Congo since 1996, when a Rwandan invasion sparked a regional conflagration that eventually drew in nine countries and dozens of rebel groups. It has been described as “Africa’s World War.”
One of the most brutal of these rebel groups was the M23. In 2012, Ntaganda helped the M23 as it seized control of Goma, only to become embroiled in a leadership dispute that would eventually split the movement in two. The Terminator’s rein of terror came to an end in 2013, when he abruptly turned himself in to the U.S. Embassy in Kigali, Rwanda, apparently fearing for his life. On Sept. 15, the first witness took the stand to testify against him at the International Criminal Court (ICC).
Unsurprisingly, the proceedings have attracted considerable attention in Congo. During the trial’s early days, people in the country’s east huddled around TVs and radios, glued to the opening statements. In Goma, every local radio station broadcast the first two days of the trial live. A major regional cell-phone provider, Tigo, enabled streaming through its free Facebook app so that people could watch on their devices, at home, in shops, and in public gathering places.
At the OKIS gas station in Goma, employees set up a large TV and screened the trial for anyone who wanted to watch. More than 200 people streamed in, some arriving three to a motorbike, others on foot and dragging toddlers by the hand. The station’s proprietor had a personal stake in the proceedings: He is related to an army colonel who was killed in 2012, the proprietor says, because the colonel refused to join Ntaganda’s mutiny.
It’s hard to say what has drawn Congolese to the trial in such numbers. Some were eager to hear how foreign lawyers would describe the chain of command that oversaw crimes in their communities. Others simply came to see Ntaganda in the dock, his military uniform swapped for a tailored suit. Many wanted to know what he would say when he faced his accusers. Shielding their eyes from the sun’s glare to make out the black-robed figures on the screen, they were participating in a milestone for international justice, just by showing up.
But so far Ntaganda’s trial has been far from perfect — speedy or accessible — especially from the perspective of the victims. Despite a recommendation, penned by judges in one of the ICC’s trial chambers, that the trial be held in Congo’s Ituri region, where the alleged crimes took place, the ICC president decided to keep it in The Hague. Legitimate security concerns factored into the decision, but it nonetheless erected massive physical as well as language barriers between the victims and the trial. Some screenings organized by advocacy groups and ICC field teams in Congo offered translations, but in informal settings like the gas station, viewers had to decipher the proceedings — conducted in a combination of English, French, and Kinyarwanda — on their own.
The charges against Ntaganda are also fairly narrow. Although he is thought to be responsible for war crimes spanning almost a decade, the trial will be limited to crimes committed in 2002 and 2003. “The ICC has decided to wipe the slate clean with Ntaganda’s crimes in the Kivus,” one viewer at the gas station was overheard complaining.
“Still,” the viewer added, “I thank God that he’s at least being held accountable for his crimes in Ituri.”
Another major shortcoming of the case against Ntaganda is the absence of any talk of minerals or other natural resource riches. According to a 2014 briefing on the case by Human Rights Watch, the former rebel leader is believed to have amassed a considerable fortune over the years, “notably through seizing control of fertile land and cattle, and looting and trafficking minerals.” The court has accepted Ntaganda’s claim of indigence and has provided for his defense.
Evidence of pillaged minerals could surface in witness testimony in the coming months of the trial. But theft of Congo’s natural resources deserves more than just a passing mention. While the court can penalize convicts with imprisonment, it can also seize assets in cases where convicts got rich by committing atrocities.
Ignoring the opportunity to retrieve ill-gotten gains was a devastating loss for victims of violence in Sierra Leone in the case of Charles Taylor, the former Liberian president who was sentenced to 50 years in prison for war crimes in 2012. Taylor, who like Ntaganda claimed indigence during his trial at the ICC, was never prosecuted for spearheading the plunder of so-called “blood diamonds” in neighboring Sierra Leone. As a result, the millions — perhapsbillions — of dollars in profits he may have hidden away were never sought, seized, or returned.
Human rights groups and U.N. panels have documented extensive exploitation of minerals by armed groups connected to Ntaganda. That theft is often connected to brutal violence. “There is a formula the armed groups use for gaining mineral wealth,” the archbishop of Bukavu, François-Xavier Rusengo, who has witnessed violence in connection with mining in his native South Kivu, eastern Congo, for the past two decades, told us when we visited his cathedral in eastern Congo last month. “That is to attack civilians. When a mother is attacked, the children can’t survive. When a woman is raped, the man is forced to flee. The village is abandoned, and the area is free for minerals exploitation.”
In cases where the accused amassed wealth by committing atrocities, prosecution alone is inadequate. When their profits are not traced and seized, war criminals and their families continue to benefit from ill-gotten gains. Others still at large will never feel financial pressure to stop committing atrocities.
Prosecuting war crimes requires tremendous bandwidth from investigators, prosecutors, defense attorneys, and witness units who handle testimony and outreach, and the ICC is already overextended. But financial investigations are an important part of the court’s mandate. Congolese victims of war have never seen a viable reparations program. The assets are out there, and communities that have suffered deserve repayment. The ICC can and should establish a financial crimes unit to trace assets in all cases and return them to victims in the form of reparations. Ntaganda’s case offers a good opportunity to start.
MICHAEL KOOREN/AFP/Getty Images