Peace for the World

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

Sunday, October 11, 2015

Enforcing a global climate deal: speak loudly, carry no stick

Cracked earth marks a dried-up area near a wind turbine used to generate electricity at a wind farm in Guazhou, 950km (590 miles) northwest of Lanzhou, Gansu Province September 15, 2013. REUTERS/Carlos Barria/FilesCracked earth marks a dried-up area near a wind turbine used to generate electricity at a wind farm in Guazhou, 950km (590 miles) northwest of Lanzhou, Gansu Province September 15, 2013.
Negotiators have several terms for the way they plan to enforce any deal reached at global climate talks in Paris this December. "Peer pressure" and "cooperation" are a couple. "Race to the top" is the American buzzword.
    What you won’t hear mentioned is the word "sanctions". Or "punishment".
    For all their efforts to get 200 governments to commit to the toughest possible cuts in greenhouse gas emissions, climate negotiators have all but given up on creating a way to penalise those who fall short.
The overwhelming view of member states, says Christiana Figueres, head of the U.N. Climate Change Secretariat, is that any agreement "has to be much more collaborative than punitive", if it is to happen at all.
    "Even if you do have a punitive system, that doesn't guarantee that it is going to be imposed or would lead to any better action," Figueres said.
    To critics, the absence of a legal stick to enforce compliance is a deep - if not fatal - flaw in the Paris process, especially after all countries agreed in 2011 that an agreement would have some form of "legal force".
    They warn that a deal already built upon sometimes vague promises from member states could end up as a toothless addition to the stack of more than 500 global and regional environmental treaties, while the rise in global temperatures mounts inexorably past a U.N. ceiling of 2 degrees Celsius (3.6 Fahrenheit), with the prospect of ever more floods, droughts and heatwaves.   
INTERNATIONAL CLIMATE COURT?
That fear finds its sharpest expression in a proposal from Bolivia’s socialist government for an International Climate Justice Tribunal with powers to penalise countries that break commitments.
    Diego Pacheco, Bolivia’s chief negotiator, said anything less would be "dangerous to Mother Earth".
But the idea is a non-starter with almost every other country going to the Paris talks, from Nov. 30-Dec. 11.
    Even the European Union, which has long argued for a strong, legally binding deal, is increasingly talking about a “pledge and review” system under which national commitments would be re-assessed every five years against a goal of halving world emissions by 2050.
Elina Bardram, head of the European Commission delegation, insisted that strong compliance mechanisms were vital. "Weak rules would undermine the whole structure," she said.
    However, many developing nations oppose reviews of their goals, wanting oversight to be limited to the rich.
Nick Mabey, chief executive of the E3G think-tank in London, says a Paris deal is likely to be more like international agreements limiting nuclear weapons than accords under the World Trade Organization, which can impose sanctions.
    A watchword of nuclear non-proliferation - "trust but verify" - could be the basis, he said.
Yvo de Boer, the United Nations' former top climate official, said he remembers the moment when he realised that the principle of sanctioning countries for non-compliance was dead.
    In 2001, as a senior member of the Dutch delegation, de Boer attended a closed-door meeting of environment ministers in Bonn, Germany, that was designing rules to enforce the U.N.'s 1997 Kyoto Protocol, which obliged about 40 rich nations to cut greenhouse gas emissions.

EMPTY ACT
    He recalled being struck by the strength of objections, even from once-supportive countries such as Australia and Japan, to any attempt to punish those who fell short of emissions commitments.
"The agreement was to be legally binding, but it became very clear that a lot of countries didn't want sanctions," he said.
Despite the opposition, a sanctions regime was agreed later in 2001. It required any developed country that missed its greenhouse gas targets between 2008 and 2012 to make even deeper cuts in the future.
    But even those sanctions were an empty act of bravado by rich nations angered by U.S. President George W. Bush's decision in March 2001 to stay out of Kyoto, said Jan Pronk, a former Dutch environment minister who chaired the Bonn meeting.
    "There was a political feeling that the United States cannot just kill something that is so important internationally," Pronk recalled. But now that even the flawed Kyoto agreement had expired, he added, "sanctions don't mean anything any more".
    He noted that Japan, Russia and Canada - which was set to break its pledge - have simply abandoned Kyoto in recent years, without suffering sanctions.
    "Kyoto was the high-water mark for the idea of sanctions in climate agreements," said Alex Hanafi of the U.S. Environmental Defense Fund.

"RACE TO THE TOP"?
    Both China and the United States, the two top carbon emitters crucial to any effective agreement, made clear from the start of the current negotiations they would not agree to any form of international oversight. The U.S. position instead speaks of a collective "race to the top", in which countries push each other to see who can be the greenest.
    Nor do the loose commitments being made by countries lend themselves to easy enforcement. Russia's pledge, for example, says only that limiting emissions to somewhere between 70 and 75 percent of 1990 levels by 2030 "might be a long-term indicator".
All countries agree that that the emissions curbs pledged so far are too small to get the world on track to limit warming to 2 degrees Celsius.
That means a strong mechanism will be needed for ratcheting up pledges after Paris.
Critics say that simply shaming outliers will not ensure compliance and that, unless there are costs for non-compliance, any country can share in the global benefits of reduced temperature rises while leaving the hard work of emissions cuts to others.
    But Figueres, the U.N. climate chief, believes that cuts in greenhouse gases can serve countries' economic self-interests. China, for instance, can improve the health of millions by shifting from coal-fired power plants that cause air pollution.
    And sharp falls in the costs of solar and wind power also mean that greener technologies can help, rather than hinder, economic growth, benefits that were not so evident under Kyoto, she said.
The Paris accord also holds out carrots for participation by developing nations, including a new mechanism to fund loss and damage from hurricanes, droughts or rising sea levels.
    De Boer, who now works for the Global Green Growth Institute in South Korea, said that ditching sanctions was, ultimately, part of the price of getting a broad, global agreement.
"The sting has been taken out of the process ... That means the chances of a deal are much better."

(Reporting By Alister Doyle, editing by Bruce Wallace and Kevin Liffey)

It Looks Like a Pimple on His Back. But What They Pulled Out, got Bigger and Bigger (VIDEO)

Health Tips Portal by admin@healthtipsportal.com-Oct 3 2015

Botfly is an insect which lays its eggs underneath the skin of animals such as horses so when the larvae are out of the egg, it can grow and feed on the host. You will see a video of a botfly which has laid the eggs inside a human. The person said he felt dizzy and nauseous; however this video is not for the ones with a weak heart.
It Looks Like a Pimple on His Back. But What They Pulled Out, got Bigger and Bigger
At first it looks like a pimple and everyone thought he was stung by a fly. When they looked closer, they have realized that they had to use tweezers.
Even though you may think that this can happen somewhere in exotic countries, you are kidding. This happened in the US and it means that it is not too far away from us. Fortunately it was gotten out before it infected the man’s blood. Send this video to your friends so they will be aware of what can happen!

Saturday, October 10, 2015

Udalagama, Paranagama Presidential Commission Reports to be Tabled on October 20 – PM

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Sri Lanka Brief10/10/2015
(Trincomalee 5 students case too was investigated by the Udalagama Commission)
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday informed Parliament that the Udalagama and Paranagama Presidential Commission Reports would be tabled on October 20. He said the government would facilitate the promised debate on the UNHRC resolution after tabling the two commission reports.
The Prime Minister noted a two day debate would be facilitated on the subject on Thursday and Friday of the next Parliament sittings week (October 22 and 23). He said the government would move an adjournment motion regarding the subject to facilitate the debate.
“The Opposition is requesting to fix a date for the debate soon. The party leaders told me that they prefer to take up the debate during the next Parliament sitting week. The Presidential Secretariat has sent us the Udalagama and Poragamagama Commission reports but at the moment only the English copy of there reports are available,” he said.
“The Sinhala and Tamil translations will require more time. However if we are taking up the debate, I will formally release the English copies of these reports before the House on Tuesday of the next Parliament sittings week. I have instructed to keep enough copies of these reports ready by that time,” the Prime Minister said.
Sandasen Marasinghe, Irangika Range and Disna Mudalige
CDN

Sri Lanka: talking about a resolution

Hugo Swire-7th October 2015 London, UK

Minister of State at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office
For those of you who don’t know Sri Lanka, it’s a beautiful country – with world-class national parks, world heritage sites and pristine tropical beaches. But it is also haunted by a traumatic past, a devastating twenty-six year civil war between the Tamil Tigers and the government that ended in 2009.
Some of the stories from this war – many documented in painstaking detail by the media – are horrifying: rape, disappearances, torture, executions. To be clear, there were atrocities on both sides. And they cast a long shadow in communities right across Sri Lanka today.
Until very recently, Sri Lanka has been unwilling to address the legacy of this war. We know from our own experience that opening up old wounds can be painful; but experience also shows that allowing them to fester is even worse. And it is my firm belief – from the many discussions I’ve had with Sri Lankans since becoming a Minister in 2012 – that for the country to fulfil its enormous potential, it needs the catharsis that can only come from a proper process of accountability and reconciliation.
That is why, back in 2013, our Prime Minister was so determined that the United Nations should take action to kick-start this work, when it was clear that the Sri Lankan government of the day was unwilling to do so. I remember travelling to Geneva to lobby for the resolution at the Human Rights Council: it was hard work, with a good degree of opposition from countries close to President Rajapaksa and his administration. But we got there in the end. This mandated the UN to produce a report on the conflict, which they have now done. It makes for sobering reading.
Happily, a new government in Colombo has now taken an altogether more constructive approach to this process. When I went back to Geneva last month, to start to put together a new resolution setting out what should now happen to address the crimes laid out in the report, I was working with the Sri Lankan Foreign Minister, rather than against him. Sri Lanka ended up co-sponsoring the resolution, and firmly committed to implementing its recommendations. This is good for those who seek truth and justice, good for the rule of law, and good for the future of the people of Sri Lanka.
There will of course be those on the extremes of both sides who will be concerned either that this is not enough, or that it goes too far. It is only right that they are able to express their opinions and it is important that the government listens to all points of view as part of the wider consultations to which it has agreed. But now, as the country is beginning to take brave and important steps forward, it is above all vital that progress is not derailed.
I’m hopeful that the next stage of this process will be accompanied by further progress on some of the other commitments President Sirisena has made – from demilitarisation, to anti-corruption work, to the release of political prisoners, to reducing tensions between communities and disengaging the military from commercial activities. There is much to be done, and we in the UK are keen to offer support wherever we can. We’ll be discussing this with the Sri Lankan government in the coming weeks.
I remember one particular moment from my first trip to Sri Lanka, back in 2013. I met a number of families who had not seen relatives, in some cases, for years, and who had no idea whether they were dead or alive. The impact on their lives was of course tremendous. In some cases they wanted justice, but above all they wanted answers.
A two thousand word document negotiated five thousand miles away in Geneva can seem a long way from people’s lives on the ground. But every practical step the Sri Lankan government takes to implement the recommendations in this document will help to answer questions that have been left unanswered for too long.

Tamil expatriates want Sri Lanka, TNA to talk



Business Standard
October 10, 2015
Tamil expatriates here have urged the Sri Lankan government and the country's main Tamil party to discuss ways of bringing about constitutional reforms without resorting to secret deals.

"It was the overwhelming understanding that there is a need to urge both the government and the TNA to open their doors for engagement without relying on secret deals," said a statement issued by the expatriates.

The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) is the largest Tamil party in the newly elected 225-member Sri Lankan parliament.

Participants at the meeting here also urged the Sri Lankan government and the TNA to reach out to the wider expatriate Tamil community.

The appeal to Colombo and the TNA followed a meeting facilitated by the Non Resident Tamils of (NRTSL) to discuss the intended constitutional reforms.

It was held at the Barnhill Community Centre in Hayes in Middlesex on October 9 and attended by a cross section of Tamil opinion makers in Britain.

London is home to tens of thousands of Tamils of Sri Lankan origin. Most expatriates who met have traditionally kept their distance from the Tamil Tigers, who were vanquished by the Sri Lankan military in 2009.

The expatriates acknowledged the conducive political climate now in Sri Lanka to bring about the much needed broader devolution of powers and good governance practices in the island nation.

"There was consensus on the role played by the TNA to forge a friendly relationship with the government that is not so far burdened by the acrimonious hate campaigns by the extremist fringe," the statement said.

The session discussed possible methodologies to adopt a new constitution and issues of political will to bring about constitutional changes.

Most participants agreed that one of the many proposals that have gone through wider consultation process in Sri Lanka in the past should be implemented without going through unpleasant and prolonged debates.

"Fears were expressed that there will be always a danger of extremists from both sides attempting to thwart the passage of such broader reform," the statement said.

Sri Lanka's long-drawn Tamil separatist campaign was one of the bloodiest and left tens of thousands dead since 1983. The victims were primarily Tamils but also included large numbers of Muslims and Sinhalese.

Moderate Tamils seek greater political powers and constitutional rights within a united Sri Lanka.

Clarifications on Geneva 2015


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By Izeth Hussain-

It seems to me that there are certain essentials on which we should focus in the aftermath of the recent UNHRC Resolution at Geneva. One, as I argued in my last article, is an incontrovertible fact about which there should be no argument at all: every civilized society has sanctions against crime, and in so far as we fail to apply them we have to be regarded as to that extent a quasi savage society. That fact is not altered one jot by the fact that there may be a hundred and one infirmities in the UNHRC Report and the Resolution that followed from it. The other essential arises from the fact that what is at issue are crimes allegedly committed against an ethnic minority, namely the Tamils. Our refusal to hold credible investigations on the alleged crimes and take appropriate action over them would mean that the Tamils are regarded as a lesser breed who are not entitled as a matter of course to the protection of the law. The case for Eelam would be strengthened to the extent that the culture of impunity applies to the Tamils.

Those two essentials fully justify our Government’s co-sponsorship of the Resolution. There is an additional compelling reason for supporting the Resolution, which is that in the alternative crippling sanctions would almost certainly have been imposed by the Western powers and their associates, crippling because of our dependence on Western markets. That is contested by the Sri Lankan Opposition but the two essentials I have mentioned above should be regarded as beyond contestation. I will expand on them slightly. A society is a whole, not just a collection of autonomous fragments, and that means that what affects the part can come to affect the whole as well. Under the last Government a culture of impunity applied to the Tamils because that Government refused to hold credible investigations into alleged crimes against the Tamils. A coarsening of the moral sensibility, a partial atrophy of the moral faculty, a lapse into a condition of quasi savagery, ensued from that refusal. It is not surprising therefore that under that same Government the culture of impunity came to prevail against the Sinhalese and the Muslims as well.

As for strengthening the case for Eelam, we must first of all take into account the unalterable facts of power. The Sri Lankan state emerged victorious after the 26-year civil war. It has been clearly demonstrated that the ethnic minorities are at the mercy of the Sinhalese majority. But the Sinhalese cannot treat the Tamils like dirt – for instance by refusing to hold credible investigations into alleged war crimes – and hope to get away with it with total impunity. The reason of course is the Tamil Nadu factor: what happens to the Tamils here could conceivably cause a fall-out in Tamil Nadu of so serious an order that Indian intervention could ensue, even possibly to the imposition of a Cyprus-style solution. That is only a worst-case hypothesis, a possibility of a very remote order, but it should not be discounted because the unalterable facts of power are there: the Sinhalese are dominant over the Tamils in a national context, but the Tamils could become dominant over the Sinhalese in a regional context. Those unalterable facts of power dictate that we support a Resolution that is meant to ensure that the Tamils are not treated as a lesser breed that is not entitled to the full protection of the law.

It seems to me essential that the Opposition in particular do some rethinking about our propensity to think of Resolutions on human rights as anti-Sri Lankan. A Resolution on human rights is critical of the Government, not of the people, for violating the rights of the people. It is absurd therefore to think of a Resolution that is critical of the Government over human rights as anti-Sri Lankan. It should appropriately be regarded as pro-Sri Lankan. The confusion has arisen because of simplistic notions about sovereignty. The modern state system has its origin in the Treaty of Westphalia of 1648, according to which every state is sovereign and it is in that respect the equal of every other state. The golden principle theoretically guiding international relations was that there should not be any interference in the internal affairs of states. But the notion of sovereignty underwent a sea-change in the course of the centuries, and there has been a steady erosion of state sovereignty in recent decades.

At the time of the Treaty of Westphalia a traditional political order prevailed in the West and in the rest of the world. It consisted essentially of the King and nobles, the clergy, and the commons. It was the result of a process of organic growth over centuries, and it was regarded as immutable because it was part of the natural order of things or God-given. All that began to change in the second half of the eighteenth century with the American and French Revolutions, as a consequence of which the people, not the wielders of power, became sovereign. Consequently when we complain that a UNHRC Resolution infringes Sri Lankan sovereignty, we are forgetting that it is supportive of the rights of the people of Sri Lanka who are sovereign under the Constitution. Such Resolutions should be regarded as pro- not anti- Sri Lanka.

It seems essential also that we should get our perspectives clear about the Western powers. Simplistic notions of pro-Western and anti-western have to be jettisoned because they don’t fit the complex realities that we have to confront in international relations. It is true that the US and other Western powers have been interfering, bullying, aggressive towards weaker powers. At the UNHRC they have been notorious for double standards and for giving priority to political interests over human rights. But – and this is the point of crucial importance – they have been in earnest, or at least partly in earnest, about the promotion of human rights, and that is something of real benefit to the oppressed of the earth. We must see the promotion of human rights as part of a revolutionary transformation of the world, and the West is at the forefront of that transformation.

The negative and positive aspects of Western relations with the rest of the world should, I think, be seen in terms of a schizophrenic divide at the heart of Western civilisation. The prevailing political ideology of the West is liberal democracy, an ideology which is favored by the majority of people in the contemporary world. Liberal democracy really consists of two distinct components, liberalism and democracy, which can be seen in the ideological writings that preceded the American and French Revolutions. Liberalism stands for rationality, secularism, individualism and capitalism, while democracy stands for liberty, equality, and fraternity. The schizophrenic divide can be seen clearly in the two contrasting figures of Voltaire and Rousseau. It is the Western liberal drive to transform the world that has earned the West the detestation of the peoples of many third world countries. As for the democratic drive, shown for instance in the promotion of human rights, alas it has too often been misunderstood, particularly in countries dominated by rogues, thugs, and fools.

izethhussain@gmail.com

THE GENEVA RESOLUTION AND POLITICS: A NOTE OF CAUTION

The recent Human Rights Council resolution on Sri Lanka is a remarkable document. Crafted in the immediate aftermath of the devastating OISL Report on Sri Lanka whose central recommendation was that a ‘special hybrid court’ be established in Sri Lanka, and despite some hiccups during negotiations, a resolution eventually acceptable to a wide range of parties found uncontested passage through the Council. The government’s eventual co-sponsorship of the resolution signaled their full acceptance of its language. In exchange for its support, the Sri Lankan government was rewarded with text that congratulated it, and approvingly recognized many of its voluntary commitments. Moreover, the resolution offered the government the interpretive space to claim to its domestic audience that it had overcome a challenging trial in Geneva. On the Tamil side of the equation, the moderates of the Tamil National Alliance who roundly defeated their extremist opponents in recent elections also welcomed the resolution on account of the strength of its content.

Gota’s Inadvertent Admission of Complicity in the ‘White Flag Massacre’

One difference is that in this case the matter is not about ‘attacking’ as Romer said, but alleged killing or massacre. More pertinently, what should have applied in this case is the principle C, the protection of ‘anyone who clearly expresses an intention to surrender.’

by Laksiri Fernando
( October 10, 2015, Sydney, Sri Lanka Guardian) When asked “Do you really believe the proposed judicial mechanism can help address accountability issues?” former Defence Secretary, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa (GR), has started talking about “one of the major accusations directed against the army” – the “execution of surrendering LTTE cadres during the last phase of the offensive on the Vanni east front.”
I am quoting his own words published by Shamindra Ferdinando in ‘The Island’ (7 October 2015). The interview is titled ‘War crimes probe Gotabhaya speaks out.’ As a teacher, I am well aware that there are people who fail to answer questions directly and sometimes we call them ‘rigmaroles’ or malle polls. However, there are other psychological reasons why people become obsessed with something, even when something else is asked. The possible reasons can be ‘guilt’ or ‘over enthusiasm.’
However, it should be admired that GR has been straight forward and bold in giving this interview particularly at this juncture. As the interviewer has stated “the former Defence Secretary now faces the prospect of a no holds barred judicial investigation never held in this part of the world.” He may also be believing that he has done ‘nothing wrong’ according to his ‘limited knowledge and beliefs.’
It is interesting note that he has not disputed the validity of the now proposed ‘judicial mechanism’ whereas he has been apparently opposing purely an ‘international investigation’ before. Even he has suggested that the “The proposed court [could] call the then Norwegian Ambassador in Colombo Tore Hattrem (present State Secretary at the Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs) to verify accusations.” The interviewer however has noted, that in the past, “The Gajaba Regiment veteran strongly opposed an external investigation into Sri Lanka’s war which he quite rightly believed was an internal matter.”
GR has admitted that the “Widely dubbed the white flags killings, the allegation brought the Sri Lankan Army to disrepute.” However, according to him, the army hasn’t done anything wrong because “There had never been an agreement or an understanding between the government and the LTTE for the latter’s surrender though various interested parties alleged execution of surrendering persons.”
But for surrender, there is no need for an agreement or understanding between two parties and in this case ‘between the government and the LTTE.’ Of course the Ceasefire Agreement (CFA) was now defunct and abrogated. According to Jan Romer (Killing in a Grey Area between Humanitarian Law and Human Rights) the customary international humanitarian law (IHL) pertaining to non-international armed conflicts rules the following.
“Attacking persons who are recognized a horse de combat is prohibited. A person horse de combat is:
  • Anyone who is in the power of an adverse party;
  • Anyone who is defenceless because of unconsciousness, ship wreck, wounded or sick; or
  • Anyone who clearly expresses an intention to surrender; provided he or she abstains from any hostile act and does not attempt to escape.” (p.74).
One difference is that in this case the matter is not about ‘attacking’ as Romer said, but alleged killing or massacre. More pertinently, what should have applied in this case is the principle C, the protection of ‘anyone who clearly expresses an intention to surrender.’ Romer further says,
Surrender requires that attacked person to discontinue his/her participation in hostilities, in particular, by resisting or defending him or herself. Surrender is not bound by strict formalities. In general, a soldier surrenders by laying down his or her weapons, raising his/her hands, or waving a white flag.” (p. 77, with my emphasis).
The surrender does not require strict formalities. Does not require an agreement between the two parties to the conflict or war. And in this case, did not require the dictates or ruling from GR who was in Colombo (I may add in an air conditioned room!). It was a simple procedure, of course with caution, which should have been followed by the commanders or whoever in charge on the ground.
The following is the narration that GR has given about his part on the saga which might not be the full story.
“On the night of May 16th, 2009, Hattrem visited me at my official residence, Baudhaloka Mawatha, where he claimed that LTTEer Pulithevan had offered to surrender along with some other cadres and their families as all senior leaders were dead by then. Hattrem had been in touch with Pulithevan over the phone. However, arrangements couldn’t be made for the surrender as Hattrem failed to get in touch with Pulithevan to know the identities of those willing to surrender. Primary objective of an investigative judicial mechanism is to verify accusations made by various parties.”
Note that ‘all senior leaders were dead by then.’ It is commendable that GR has accepted the objective of ‘investigative judicial mechanism to verify accusations made by various parties.’ There is no question that there can be some questions that Hattrem has to answer as well.
However, there cannot be any dispute that GR was placing unnecessary preconditions or one might say obstacles from Colombo for the purported surrender. Of course there can be some reasons why he was doing that, and he has explained some of the matters in his interview. However, those are not necessary under the international humanitarian law and what were at stake in this instance were lives, not only one or two but of several.
We at least know or have credible evidence that at least the lives of Pulidevan and Nadesen (and their families) were involved. For some people, those lives might not be worth, but those are not the premises of the international humanitarian law or our civilized human conscience. Killing of those who surrender is barbaric. What we have lost is also valuable information to know the ‘truth’ from the LTTE side.
This is not the first time that such things have happened in Sri Lanka. We know that a similar fate happened to Rohana Wijeweera (the JVP leader), who was under state custody, whatever the crimes he himself had committed. The impunity has continued. That is another reason why these incidents should be investigated and investigated thoroughly.
GR has said, ‘for the failure of the surrender arrangements,’ passing the buck to Hattrem, “However, arrangements couldn’t be made for the surrender as Hattrem failed to get in touch with Pulithevan to know the identities of those willing to surrender.”
It is a strange order to rule that ‘the identities of those willing to surrender’ should be known or revealed before the acceptance of surrender. This was 16th of May 2009 evening, two days before the body of the LTTE leader Prabhakaran was found. This was a period of extreme uncertainties. However, the demise of the LTTE was exceedingly clear. It is not revealed in what form the identities of those who wanted to surrender was required. The decisions were taken in Colombo. Verifications were obviously problematic and communications were exceedingly difficult with those who wanted to surrender. GR was asking for the impossible.
The interviewer has very clearly asked, “Q: Who wanted to establish the identities of those wanting to surrender?”
The answer given is also very clear, “A: That decision was mine.”
It is apparent that the decision was given over and above the international humanitarian law and in violation of international humanitarian concerns. The alleged ‘massacre’ was the result, extent of which has to be determined.

Sirisena Now Wants Annual Allocation Upped By Rs 380 M


Colombo TelegraphOctober 10, 2015
Through seven supplementary estimates in May and June, President Maithripala Sirisena’s office has sought Rs.380 million as expenditure for several projects. This is in addition to the annual allocation of monies for spending of the President.
MaitreThese supplementary estimates were sought for the below mentioned projects.
An allocation of 10.1 million rupees to complete renovations of the senior minister’s office. Rs.70.6 million to buy a BMW motor car and 12 BMW R1200 motor cycles for the Presidential Security Division.
In addition, to rehabilitate and improve the residence of the President by joining two old houses in Colombo an expenditure of Rs.180 million was sought, through 02 supplementary estimates.
Also, Rs.2.7 million has been allocated to pay salaries of workers involved in the coordination and supervision of a science project and Rs.20.7 million for the setting up of a bureau to propagate national unity.
Another Rs.96 million supplementary estimate was submitted for two BMW motor vehicles, two vehicles for transporting President’s security vehicles and to cover additional expenses of President’s overseas visits.
Recently responding to media reports the Presidential Secretariat only clarified the expenditures sought to renovate the President’s residence (RS.180 million) and to buy BMW motor vehicles (Rs.70 million). The Secretariat failed to mention other expenses sought which have been mentioned above.
Responding to media reports regarding a government request for an allocation of Rs. 180 million to renovate and refurbish the official residence of the President Maithripala Sirisena, Presidential secretariat recently clarified that the supplementary estimate includes expenditure for several projects.
Issuing a communiqué Secretary to the President P.B. Abeykoon clarified that the supplementary estimate presented to the Parliament by the Minister of Mass Media and Parliamentary Affairs, included the expenditure of several ministries and institutions, including the Prime Minister’s Office, Ministries of Foreign Affairs and Plantation Industries, Home Affairs & Fisheries, Highways and Investment Promotion as well as the expenditure of the Presidential Secretariat.
The Secretary to the President pointed out that the Government had to rehabilitate and improve the residence of the President by joining two old houses to bring it to a proper condition which is suitable for the use of the President.
In addition to that the Government had to provide security to the official residence of the President and to provide accommodation facilities for the security personnel of the President and also steps were taken to renovate garages at the premises. The Secretary to the President further stated that all the renovation works were completed by the Central Engineering Consultancy Bureau.Read More

A Story of Fierce Courage From Vishvamadhu – Kishali Pinto Jayawardena

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Sri Lanka Brief
11/10/2015
In a ‘letter to the editor’ of a Sri Lankan national newspaper recently, someone pointed to the need for a fearlessA story of fierce courage from Vishvamadhu to emerge from post-war Sri Lanka.

”In our legal history, extraordinary cases of this nature have had little impacton the general structure of law enforcement and the military. Instead theyremain confined to the law in theory, most often than not reversed on appeal.”

Conflicted by race
This was a nostalgic beckoning of Pulitzer prize-winning author Harper Lee’s iconic portrayal of a small-town white lawyer in ‘To Kill a Mockingbird’ who defended a wrongly accused black man in the American Deep South of the Thirties.

The optimist who made that appeal would probably have been unaware of this July’s release of ‘Go Set A Watchman,’ based on the original manuscript of Harper Lee’s ‘Mockingbird.’ Provoking distraught fans, this portrays Atticus Finch not as a legendary civil rights hero but as a man deeply conflicted by race, even as he appeared for the ‘black man.’

As we are now told, the transformation of the manuscript to its monumental best-seller status thirty five years ago came through the deft pen of Harper’s editor. Probably however the original version, though annoying the idealists, would have been nearer to the reality of fallible humankind.

The politicization of justice
Regardless, Sri Lanka’s tragedy is that it has had very few Atticus Finches, morally flawed or otherwise. In fact, its problematic Republican Constitutions in 1972 and 1978 were fashioned by very clever men, distinguished by their ability to take a simple principle safeguarding liberties and twist it into a singularly unrecognizable creature that serves the interests of the State.

This is why we never had the right to life even though the Indian citizenry was afforded that constitutional protection at the turn of independence. Motivated by a fierce desire to bring their people out of the dark ages, activists used this to breathe life into the very legal system itself. Even with modern-day tangles in ensuring justice to teeming millions, Indian jurisprudence would have been much the poorer if this spirited struggle had not ensued.

Yet in Sri Lanka, men of adroit minds not only drew up subverted Constitutions but sat on the Benches of our courts, straining every sinew not to dispense justice but to politicize it. They were only matched by the hordes of unprincipled lawyers who marched through the courtrooms, blind to the very idea of justice. Only few exceptions prevailed. Ordinary men and women wilted before such a cruel onslaught, preferring silence to protest, even when suffering the greatest loss.

Casual exercise of power
So when the system occasionally surprises the cynic with extraordinary stories of courage, we should sit up and take note. This week, the Jaffna High Court characterized as ‘unbearable and unforgivable,’ the rape of two internally displaced women in Vishvamadhu in 2010 even as it sentenced four soldiers to twenty five years rigorous imprisonment.

In many respects, the Vishvamadhu incident typified the breakdown of the Rule of Law in post-war Sri Lanka. Well over a year after active fighting ended in the Wanni war theatre, this was a casual exercise of power by military personnel over what they perceived to be vulnerable victims, condemned twice over by their gender as well as by their ethnicity.

Several aspects of the case symbolize the pressure points in our justice system. The forensic evidence, the evidence of lay witnesses and identification of the perpetrators were key positive factors in securing what is (relatively), a surprisingly speedy outcome in the High Court.

Sheer courage of the victims
Yet the victims were constantly intimidated by the perpetrators who were released on bail even after they were positively identified. This is why victims generally do not persist with rape complaints. One accused who was out on bail absconded thereafter, resulting in the sentence reportedly being passed in absentia.

But the sheer courage of the women transformed their story into a different rendering of the hopelessness which normally prevails. The intimidation resorted to was basic and crude. It followed a familiar pattern seen in “Southern torture cases.’ First the victim is persuaded with offers of money to drop the case. Thereafter, false cases are lodged, most often on accusations of allegedly selling illicit liquor.

These are all factors that speak to the overriding importance of having an effective witness protection programme with the Protection Division being separate from the Department of the Police. Unfortunately this appears not to be the case with the recently enacted Witness Protection law.

State patterns of impunity must change

Generally however, police intimidation action is compounded by outright denial by the Government. In the Vishvamadhu case, the intimidation was explained to have had no connection to the complaint of rape (see the government response to two United Nations Special Rapporteurs on Torture and Violence against Women, dated 7 July, 2014). Even earlier, the case is referenced by the shameful notation in a United Nations report that ‘the victim gave her testimony reportedly in the presence of more than 100 military men inside the court’ (A/HRC/20/30, 15 June 2012),

In that same United Nations report, the 2011 extra-judicial killing of Nuwarapakshage Madushanka (allegedly) by law enforcement officials is noted. Madushanka’s mother had been informed by the Koswatte Police Station that he had committed suicide inside the police cell. However the post mortem results pointed to a different result. Other cases mentioned include Asaka Botheju whose body was found in the Kelani River after his arrest that same year. The imaginative explanation given by the police was that he had jumped into the Kelani River. These are explanations that are extremely hard to swallow.

Through a combination of fortuitous circumstances, the Vishvamadhu case pulled itself out of that dark abyss to deliver some sort of justice to the victims. However, this must not remain as an isolated case which does not have deterrent impact on abusive soldiers. In our legal history, extraordinary cases of this nature have had little impact on the general structure of law enforcement and the military. Instead they remain confined to the law in theory, most often than not reversed on appeal.

There must be a complete reversal of old patterns of impunity. And State will to ensure this must surely be evidenced at least now
– Courtesy of the Sunday Times

ppeal court turns against CID that took action against army officers in Prageeth’s murder: Cases can be rigged say brokers


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News- 10.Oct.2015, 11.45PM) In the brutal cold blooded murder of journalist Prageeth Ekneliyagoda following his  abduction, the wives of the four suspects (army officers including two lieutenants now  in custody), filed a habeas corpus writ application in the appeal court requesting court to issue an order to produce the suspects in court .
When the appeal court heard the petition for the second day, since  the Director CID , and the respondents in this appeal  did not appear in court yesterday (09), notices were issued on them  again  , to explain in court on the 16 th why they were not present.
This writ application was taken for trial before appeal court president justice Vijitha Malalgoda.
It is significant to note that , the habeas corpus writ petition similary filed by wife of Prageeth (abducted and murdered), no court took this measure to issue notice on the police  any day  during the last five years .
In this writ application filed by T . Sudharshani ,  P. Nadheeka , P. Niyomi and M. Kumararatne  , the wives of the suspects, Director CID Sugath Nagahamulla, OIC of mass robbery division J.V. Niroshan  Silva , ASP Sherni Abeysekera , the defense secretary , the IGP and the attorney general have been cited as respondents.  
The petitioners have averred in the petition that their husbands staff sergeant  , R.M. Priyantha Kumara, Corporal Anura Jayalath, and lieutenant colonels T.T.D. Pramodh Siriwardena  and S.A. Kumararatne of the SrI Lanka army, were taken into custody on the 24 th by the CID , and based on a court order they were  detained from 27 th August until 10 th September under the prevention of Terrorism  Act (PTA).They have alleged that such detention is illegal since they cannot be detained for more than 24 hours . The petitioners therefore requested the appeal court to issue an order that the fundamental rights of the suspects (their husbands) have been violated.
 Terrorizing civilians in order to win the goals of those terrorizing is what is called terrorism. Whether that is resorted to  by the Guerilla groups , the members of the forces in uniform , or by an army group in official uniforms that caused the abduction and murder of unarmed journalist Prageeth Ekneliyagoda , it is terrorism doubtless.

It is worthy of note , this group that committed the brutal and ruthless crimes pertaining to Ekneliyagoda were held in detention under the PTA, only after immense and intense pressure were mounted by the people. Detentions under that Act are not illegal ,and those in custody have to be produced before the magistrate every month.
The more grave the case , simply more payment is all what is required to rig the case in the appeal court, brokers involved in the deals say.


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by     (2015-10-10 21:10:04)

Inter Parliamentary Union Wants Sri Lanka to Answer on MPs Killed

MKs
Sri Lanka Brief10/10/2015
The Inter Parliamentary Union (IPU) asked Sri Lanka to provide details on the assassination of four former Sri Lankan MPs, Deputy Speaker Thilanga Sumathipala said on Friday (09).
Addressing a press briefing Sumathipala further said that the IPU asked to provide details on the assassination of Former MPs D.M Dassanayake, Joseph Pararajasinghan, N.Raviraj and T. Maheshwaran.
Moreover, the IPU also told the government to inform the progress made in the investigations, Sumathipala added.
The IPU informed that the information should be provided during its 133rd session, which is scheduled to be held from October 16 to 21. The Sri Lankan delegation will include Deputy Minister Anoma Gamage, MPs Ranjith Aluvihara, Nimal Ratnayake, Shanthi Sri Skandarajah and M. A. Sumanthiran.
( Original Caption: IPU Informs To Provide Details On Assassination Of Four Ex-MPs) AM