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, November 1, 2015

Putin and Politics Are Behind Obama’s Decision to Send Troops to Syria

When military moves seem too small to make a difference, there's usually another reason for them.
Putin and Politics Are Behind Obama’s Decision to Send Troops to Syria
BY DAVID ROTHKOPF-OCTOBER 30, 2015
Vladimir Putin ordered U.S. troops into combat in Syria on Friday. That’s not what White House Press Secretary Josh Earnest said when explaining the decision to send as many as 50 special operations forces into a training, assistance, and advisory role in that country, but that’s the reality. If the Russian president hadn’t made his move into Syria, the United States would not have felt compelled to finally, belatedly, shore up support for anti-Islamic State and anti-Assad allies in that embattled, long-suffering country.
How do we know that? The past three years are how we know that. Those years have been a period during which the president’s own top national security advisors were unable to get him to take more decisive action to stop the decay in Syria — which gave way to the upheaval that now fuels not only the rise of the world’s most dangerous extremists but also the overflow of refugees into Europe and neighboring countries in the Middle East. But Putin, apparently, has more sway in the Oval Office than Hillary Clinton, Bob Gates, Leon Panetta, David Petraeus, and a host of others whose counsel went unheeded ever did.
Putin’s decisiveness in engaging in Syria has shifted the balance of power in that country. It has not only unquestionably shored up President Bashar al-Assad’s regime, but it has also sent a message that opponents of Assad (including some ostensible U.S. allies among the rebel fighters in Syria) were going to be the targets of the fiercest military attacks rather than the Islamic State extremists the United States and its allies were seemingly seeking to defeat. The Russians talked up their opposition to the Islamic State, but the pattern of their initial strikes indicated that the primary goal was protecting their man in Damascus. (Putin’s long-term motives in Syria remain misunderstood by many in Washington. They do not seem to understand that he does not seek to transform the country or do any of the things that would make Russia’s involvement a dangerous quagmire for him. He simply seeks to ensure that the regime in Syria’s capital is acceptable to him. That means keeping Assad in place or being involved enough to have a clear say in choosing his successor. That is all. If the rest of the country roils and sends refugees into Europe, shoring up nationalists and weakening support for the EU, all the better for Putin. In fact, it would be a win-win for the Russian Tarzan.)
Whatever stated anti-Islamic State purpose there may be for the U.S. forces involvement in Syria, it also — and perhaps even primarily — has a political purpose. (As a general rule, if a military action seems to be too small to advance a military objective then it probably is being done for political reasons.) Domestically, the move to send U.S. Special Forces into Syria helps the president address the perception of American inaction that was seen to have contributed to the Russian intervention while also helping to address concerns that the administration’s efforts to train the Syrian opposition have been a failure to date. As far as geopolitics is concerned, it lends credibility to America’s desired role in advancing the multiparty talks about Syria’s future taking place in Vienna this week. It says the United States is involved and also suggests to the Russians that the conflict in Syria may grow more complex for them (as we work toward not always overlapping goals) so it provides a little pressure on that front as well.
In fact, what it also ends up meaning is that for the foreseeable future in Syria there’s going to be a whole lot of “de-conflicting” going on. The United States and its allies, the Russians, the Iranians, and the Syrians will have to work to ensure that in the confused fog of the Syrian war — on which some battle zones contain scores of factions — the collateral damage does not include destabilizing otherwise stable relationships between major powers. A subsequent consequence that seems inevitable anyway, given the complexity of the Syrian conflict, is that the Russians or Iranians will be found increasingly attacking and killing fighters who are direct proxies of the Saudis, Qataris, and others. And when that happens, we will suddenly see the greatest geopolitical clusterfuck of the current era get even clusterfuckier.
I understand the White House’s decision clearly. It makes some political sense. It may help nudge political discussions regarding Syria’s future forward. Secretary of State John Kerry is pushing hard on this front, but at the moment there are too many moving parts to make real progress. And, as is the case in other conflicts, like that of Israel and Palestine, while the end deal is clear, getting politicians to admit that is going to be tough. (And the reality of that end deal looks like this: Assad stays for transition, leaves with immunity, is replaced by Assad-lite alternative acceptable to Moscow and Tehran, and the United States gets a fig leaf of promise of a more inclusive Syrian government — one that is soon forgotten because everyone values stability above niceties like democracy or respect for human rights — while much of the country will remain in turmoil because Damascus doesn’t, and may never again, control it.)
I also understand the decision to send in troops because of my extensive training in the field that is really the birthplace of geopolitics, which is to say “show business.” (My first half-dozen or so years after college were spent directing and writing for theater and television.) In show business, one of the most often quoted maxims is “acting is reacting.” It means that good actors listen to the other actors they are working with and respond to what they are given rather than anticipating their business or emotions simply because they are called for in the script.
In foreign policy, sometimes smart reacting is called for. As with theater, a performance is best when it comes naturally, quickly, and doesn’t seem forced or unduly delayed. But on the world stage, reaction is, of course, not enough. Leaders must lead. They must be willing to take the first step sometimes, show initiative, set the rules, and take risks. That is why canned (and let’s face it, tiresome and unconvincing) dismissals of Putin from U.S. officials and sympathetic commentators in the media aside, the Russian president has in Syria — as he did in Ukraine — really reset the terms of a situation in which his side had been losing ground. And he benefited because he did more than simply react. (Arguments that Putin has not benefited in Ukraine are unconvincing. He has Crimea. He has much greater influence in eastern Ukraine. Sanctions have hurt economically but not politically — his approval rating post-Ukraine and now Syria is near 90 percent. Or as Donald Trump would say enviously — “huge.”)
Will Putin’s gambit in Syria work exactly as he hopes? Maybe not. (Though I bet, as in Ukraine, he gets much of what he wants, even if not all of it and even if the cost is higher than anticipated.) But he is one of a breed of leaders who are looking at the last months of the Obama administration and seeing American passivity as an invitation for opportunism.
Iran is seizing the initiative as much as Russia is — beginning with but not limited to the collaboration of the two sides in Syria and Iraq. Iran sees America’s swoon and the not entirely unrelated struggles in the region’s Sunni pillar states — Egypt and Saudi Arabia — as an opportunity to gain influence. And in this sense Iran is also doing exactly what Russia has done: gaining control where it can, putting pressure where it can, and extending its sphere of influence. In this case, it must be said that America’s lack of leadership is compounded by the absence of a positive “moderate” Sunni agenda in the region. Like the GOP candidates for president, Egyptian, Saudi and many other Sunni moderate leaders may know what they are against but not what they are for. The result is that anyone with a clear agenda in the Middle East — whether a pragmatic one like the Iranians or a positively demonic one like that of the Islamic State — makes headway in the intellectual, policy, and action vacuum they have created.
And it’s not just a behavioral pattern being played out in the Middle East, China has done likewise in the South China Sea. In each of these instances, calculating international actors have seen America’s inertness, made an educated guess as to where the real red line that would trigger significant U.S. reaction might be, and then taken an initiative that has gone as far as, but not past, the red line. And these actors are making big gains wherever they see zones of U.S. indifference around the world.
And the U.S. pattern of reaction is the same over and over. It’s only after these opportunistic actors seize the day that we are roused into action. The kind of action that might make us look engaged but that does not change the situation very much — a destroyer sails around some artificial islands, a few troops and Humvees are deployed in Poland, some special operations forces are deployed in Syria. It is the equivalent of squeaking “Oh yeah?” to a bully who has come up to you on the beach, kicked sand in your face, and walked away with your picnic basket. It’s the Obama special, the illusion of action.
Acting may be reacting on the stage, but it’s not enough in foreign policy and not enough for leadership. Sometimes, you have to know what you want and be willing to have enough guts and courage in your convictions to make the first move.
Photo illustration by FP

The US and China are Playing with Matches

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by Eric S. Margolis
( November 1, 2015, New York City, Sri Lanka Guardian) Russia and US warplanes are flying way too close to one another over Syria and may soon, in Iraq. Drones are all over the place. An accident is inevitable. Civilian airliners are increasingly at risk over the Mideast. US ground troops may enter Syria.
This week the missile destroyer, USS Lassen, openly challenged the maritime exclusion zone drawn by China around its latest militarized atoll, Subi reef, in the South China Sea – a sort of poor man’s aircraft carrier that hugely annoys Washington and its Asian allies.
China is building other man-made islands by dredging submerged atolls. Japan and China are at dagger’s drawn over the disputed Senkaku (Daiyou in Chinese) Islands. The Philippines, Vietnam, Brunei, Malaysia, South Korea, and Taiwan all have overlapping claims in the region. China rejects all other nation’s claims.
Beijing says the new atolls are only for civilian use, but no one believes this. The raised reefs are a key part of China’s claim to 80% of the South China Sea, a key conduit for its trade, oil imports, and rich fishery zones. Suddenly, previously unknown bits of rock like the Paracels, the Spratley’s, Scarborough Reef, Fiery Cross, Senkakus and Subi reef have become key bits of geography. Tensions are particularly high between China, Vietnam and Japan.
America’s Asian allies are too scared of China to do much about China’s muscular takeover of the South China Sea – which Beijing calls “the 9 dash zone.” So the Asians are all hiding behind America’s apron, hoping Uncle Sam will face down China.
Who is right in this dispute? As a former student of international law in Geneva, here’s my view: Washington is on the right side of international law.
China is wrong to lay exclusive claims to the atolls and China Sea. Its claims are based on flimsy historic documents and the suspicious finding of religious relics, a dubious method long used by Israel to justify its land seizures. In fact, China is doing just what Israel has done in the West Bank, using salami tactics and seizure of high ground to back claims by creating facts.
Beijing is mulling declaring an air defense identification zone over the entire South China Sea, though it lacks ground or air-based radars to see what’s going on over the vast maritime area. Such “ADIZ” zones would sharply raise tensions with the US, South Korea and Japan. When China asserted an ADIZ over the East China Sea in 2013, the US Air Force flew two B-52 bombers right through the Chinese ADIZ.
The US is right that China’s aggressive intrusions into the seas around it are unacceptable and a major threat to freedom of the seas. Beijing is very sensitive to freedom of navigation in its region and potential threats posed to its essential imports of oil and raw materials. This is a vital Chinese national interest.
Fair enough. But the US has egregiously violated international law by invading Iraq, a major crime, and trying to overthrow Syria’s legitimate government. Two wrongs don’t make a right.
As in Syria, aircraft from all sides are flying dangerously close, warships are playing chicken, and threats are growing hotter. The China Seas are hardly worth risking war when diplomacy holds the answers. Besides, China would be unwise to go to war against the US 7th Fleet backed by Japan.
If war did erupt, might China’s new ally Russia get involved on Beijing’s side? Might India, newly a maritime power, decide to go after rival China’s Mideast oil lifeline? Would Vietnam and China fight, as they did in 1979? Would an angry China finally invade Taiwan? Lots of dangers.
A good way to calm things down is for the US to stop buzzing China’s coasts and provoking North Korea. Imagine if Chinese warships appeared off my hometown, New York City?
The US must learn to lower its profile in Asian waters and China must do deep breathing and use Confucian wisdom.
copyright Eric S. Margolis 2015

Cameron: Britain shares Russia's pain over air crash

Channel 4 NewsSUNDAY 01 NOVEMBER 2015
The Prime Minister tells Vladimir Putin that Britain "shares the pain and grief" of the Russian people after a passenger plane crashed in Egypt, killing more than 220 people.
Downing Street said Mr Cameron called the Russian president on Sunday morning, a day after the plane went down in a desert region of the Sinai peninsula while flying from the Red Sea resort of Sharm el-Sheikh to St Petersburg.
A spokesman said: "The Prime Minister said how sorry he was about this terrible tragedy and that Britain shared the pain and grief of the Russian people," the spokesman said.
"The Prime Minister added that Britain stood ready to help if there was anything we could do to establish the reasons behind the crash."
All 224 people on board the Kogalymavia Airbus A321 died. Experts have recovered the plane's black box recorders but Egypt's president Abdel Fattah al-Sisi said an investigation into the causes of the crash could take months.
Wreckage of plane at Sinai crash site (Reuters)
Russia's Emergency Ministry says satellite shots showed the debris of the plane on the are of 16 square kilometers.
At least 163 of the bodies have already been recovered from the wreckage and moved to hospitals and morgues in the Egyptian capital Cairo.
About 100 Russian investigators have joined the search for remaining bodies and evidence at the crash site.

IS claims

A local Islamist militant group affiliated to the Islamic State (IS) group said in a statement it had brought down the plane "in response to Russian airstrikes that killed hundreds of Muslims on Syrian land".
A video posted on a website linked to the group purported to show the airliner blowing up in mid-air, but the footage could not be independently verified.
Russian and Egyptian officials have rejected claims of terrorist involvement.
Wreckage of plane at Sinai crash site (Reuters)

Plane 'broke up in air'

On Sunday afternoon a Russian aviation official told reporters the plane "broke up in the air" - but said it was too early to draw conclusions.
Russia's transport regulator has issued Kogalymavia with an inspection order to check all its Airbus A321 planes.
The airline - which also trades under the name Metrojet - said on Sunday that all of its planes were serviced in a timely manner and tested before takeoff, and that it had no reason to doubt the professionalism of the pilot or crew of the crashed jet.

Turkey set to return to single-party rule in boost for Erdogan


ReutersBY ERCAN GURSES AND ORHAN COSKUN-Sun Nov 1, 2015
Supporters of the ruling AK Party wave national and party flags during an election rally in Ankara, Turkey, October 31, 2015.  REUTERS/Umit Bektas
Turkey looked set to return to single-party rule after the Islamist-rooted AK Party swept to victory in a general election on Sunday, a major boost for embattled President Tayyip Erdogan but an outcome likely to sharpen deep social divisions.

Republicans ‘don’t have a vision,’ Ryan says in first interviews as speaker

Speaker Paul D. Ryan, left, and predecessor John A. Boehner share the stage after Ryan’s election on Thursday. (Jahi Chikwendiu/The Washington Post)



By Mike DeBonis-November 1 at 10:16 
Paul D. Ryan, in his first series of interviews since his election on Thursday as House speaker, blamed a policy vacuum for causing months of Republican infighting on Capitol Hill.
“We fight over tactics because we don’t have a vision,” Ryan (R-Wis.) said on “Fox News Sunday” in the first five interviews to be broadcast on morning news programs. “We’ve been too timid on policy; we’ve been too timid on vision — we have none.”
Ryan told Fox and other networks that he would put forth a more robust GOP agenda that would serve as a blueprint for Republican candidates going into the 2016 presidential and congressional elections.
“We have to have a vision and offer an alternative to this country so that they can see that if we get the chance to lead, if we get the presidency and if we keep Congress, this is what it will look like, this is how we’ll fix the problems working families are facing,” Ryan said on Fox.
In another interview, on CBS’s “Face the Nation,” Ryan said, “We’ve taken plenty of tactical risks here in Congress. I believe it’s time to take some policy risks.”
Ryan’s election ended a month-long scramble to identify a successor to John A. Boehner (R-Ohio), who left Congress last week after nearly five years as speaker. Ryan, thanks to his chairmanship of two key House committees and his 2012 nomination for vice president, was seen as uniquely positioned to unite a House Republican conference badly divided over how to oppose President Obama on issues as diverse as fiscal policy, regulation and immigration. 
On CBS, Ryan called the turmoil of the past month “growing pains” and said he was confident that he could maintain support from the hard-line conservatives who worked to force Boehner from office. “I am a movement conservative, and people know that,” he said.
Ryan made public Sunday at least one commitment he had made in private settings in recent weeks: not to take up an immigration-reform package while Obama is president.
“Specifically on this issue, you cannot trust this president,” Ryan said on CNN, making reference to Obama’s executive orders last year granting some illegal immigrants a path to legal status: “This president tried to write the law himself. . . . Presidents don’t write laws; Congress writes laws.”
In the past, Ryan has supported comprehensive immigration-reform legislation that would include a path to legal status for illegal immigrants, andBoehner had hoped to take up such a bill as recently as last year. But a conservative backlash, seen in the surprise ouster of then-Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-Va.) in a primary election last year, arrested that momentum.
In addressing the immigration issue in recent private meetings, Ryan pledged to obey the “Hastert rule,” bringing to the floor only those bills supported by a majority of Republicans. But Ryan on Sunday opened the door to breaching the rule on other matters.
“There are always exceptions to the rules, and when circumstances dictate, we have to look at all options available. But I believe it’s important going forward that we operate on a consensus basis,” he said on Fox.
Ryan also declined to commit to another crucial issue to many conservatives: a push to defund Planned Parenthood in spending legislation that must be passed by early December. Although he said the group “shouldn’t get a red cent from the taxpayer,” he would not commit to including defunding language that would spark a showdown with Obama and congressional Democrats.
“Being an effective opposition party means being honest with people up front about what it is you can and cannot achieve,” Ryan said to CNN’s Dana Bash. “We have a president that isn’t willing to listen, that isn’t going to sign lots of our bills into law. We have a Senate that has a very difficult process when it comes to actually getting bills voted on. And, so knowing that we have those constraints, we have to operate within those constraints.”
Ryan, 45, who has three young children, was also pressed on his request to maintain his weekend time with his family as a prerequisite for agreeing to serve as speaker. That demand touched off a wide conversation about how American workers are able to balance their personal lives with their professional lives — and it has led to calls for legislation guaranteeing paid family leave.
Ryan — who taped the Sunday shows Friday — dismissed those suggestions: “I don’t think people asked me to be speaker so I can take more money from hardworking taxpayers to create some new federal entitlement,” he said on Fox. “I’m going to keep living in Janesville, Wisconsin. Yes, Sundays are going to be family days, and Saturdays are family and constituent days. That is what most people want in their life — is a balance.”
During the week, Ryan told CNN, he will continue to sleep on a cot in his Capitol Hill office — as he has done since arriving in Washington in 1999. “I’m just a normal guy,” he told Bash, explaining the decision.
“Yeah, but normal guys don’t sleep in their office,” Bash replied.
Said Ryan, “I just work here. I don’t live here. . . . I can actually get more work done by sleeping on a cot in my office.”
In Sunday’s interviews, Ryan was respectful of his predecessor but made clear that he intended to make significant changes to the management of the House.
“This job can’t be done like it was done,” he said on ABC’s “This Week.” “If I pick up where John Boehner left off, then I think we won’t be successful. That’s not a discredit to John Boehner, that’s just a discredit to the way the job has been done.”
Boehner, in an interview with Bash that aired Sunday, called Ryan “the right guy at the right time” and described how he managed to help persuade the reluctant Ryan to serve as speaker: “I laid every ounce of Catholic guilt I could on him. . . . ‘You have no choice. This isn’t about what you want to do. It’s about what God wants you to do. And God has told me, he wants you to do this.’ ”
Ryan described a gradual process of being convinced to serve by Boehner and other colleagues. A fitness enthusiast, he did offer one direct criticism of Boehner: the cigarette-smoke-infused offices he left behind.
“I’m going to have to work on the carpeting in here,” he told NBC’s Chuck Todd. “You know, if you ever go to like a hotel room or get a rental car that’s been smoked in? That’s what this smells like.”
Mike DeBonis covers Congress and national politics for The Washington Post. He previously covered D.C. politics and government from 2007 to 2015.

Burma’s ethnic areas all but peaceful despite recent ceasefire

Julian AssangeIndia Fuel Prices


In this file photo, a young female recruit of the Kachin Independence Army, one of the country's largest armed ethnic groups, participates in battle drills at a training camp near Laiza in Myanmar. Pic: AP.


by 1st November 2015
TWO weeks after a National Ceasefire Agreement (NCA) was signed between Burma’s central authorities and a number of ethnic armed groups, the country’s ethnic areas remain all but peaceful.
According to a dispatch by UNHCR, the United Nations’ commission for refugees, sporadic clashes between the Kachin Independence Army (KIA) and Burmese armed forces continue in Kachin State, the country’s northernmost province, forcing civilians to hide in forests.
Burma’s Ethnic Areas All but Peaceful Despite Recent Ceasefire by Thavam Ratna

Madagascar: the country that's poor but not poor enough for aid

With no terrorism or geo-strategic importance, the island nation slips off lists of global causes despite widespread hunger and harsh impact of climate change
Pictures of emaciated Vorito, Lovasoa, Fanampesoa and Rasoa published on Facebook earlier this year. Photograph: John Strauss Kotovaorivelo
 Castor Oil Plant, Seed Heads & Leaves
Lahie and Njomasy, with the children - Vorito, Lovasoa, Fanampesoa and Rasoa – who gained notoriety on Facebook because of photos of their malnourished bodies. Photograph: Shiraaz Mohamed
 in Ambovombe-Sunday 1 November 2015

She had never heard of Facebook, so when shocking photos of her emaciated children and grandchildren were posted there, Njomasy could little guess the ripples of anger they would send all the way to the president. The family’s plight brought rare public attention to the “silent killer” of child malnutrition.

What Happens When A Fly Lands On Your Food?


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Have you ever wondered what a fly is doing when it lands on your food? Laci did some research to figure out just what happens.
Womans Vibe
1st November 2015
[Warning: You probably shouldn’t watch this video while eating.]
A recent survey asked participants: “if you were at a restaurant, which critter would make you drop your fork: Rodents, cockroaches, flies, ants, or snakes?” 61% chose cockroaches. But scientists warn that flies are actually two-times more likely to spread germs – specifically those ubiquitous, hard-to-swat houseflies.
So what’s the science behind this? Well, flies eat some of the grossest things imaginable: Poop, garbage, rotting animal carcasses. Another fact about flies is that they can’t chew, so in order to eat, they spit-up enzymes onto their food, which dissolves it and lets them slurp it up.
Even though it’s probably the grossest thing imaginable, it’s actually the bacteria and viruses that get stuck to their body that spreads disease and makes people sick, not their enzymatic spit-up. They only need to touch your food for a second for their legs or the tiny hairs all over their bodies to transfer germs from all those nasty things they eat onto what you’re eating. And since flies can transfer serious, contagious diseases like cholera, dysentery, and typhoid, it’s probably best if you avoiding eating things that a fly lands on.
Are you the type of person who throws out your food if a fly lands on it? Have you become one after watching this video? Let us know in the comments section below because we’d love to hear from you.
BREVARD, Fla. — Answer this question while you are not eating: Which of the following would make you stop chowing down if you spied them while you were in a restaurant?
• Rodent
• Cockroach
• Flies
• Ants
• Snake or gecko


While 61 percent of 300 people asked by pest-control company Orkin would drop their forks at the sight of a cockroach, it’s the lowly fly that presents more of a health hazard.
Yet only 3 percent said the presence of a fly would make them stop eating.
“Many restaurant patrons may not be aware that houseflies are twice as filthy as cockroaches,” Orkin entomologist and Technical Services Director Ron Harrison, Ph.D., said in an e-mail statement announcing the results of the survey. “It’s important that everyone understands the magnitude of the health threats flies pose so that they can help prevent the transmission of dangerous diseases and bacteria.”
According to Orkin, flies easily carry communicable diseases. They collect pathogens on their legs and mouths when females lay eggs on decomposing organic matter, such as feces, garbage and animal carcasses.
Flies carry these diseases on their legs and the small hairs that cover their bodies. It takes only a matter of seconds for them to transfer these pathogens to food or touched surfaces.
According to the Mayo Clinic, diseases carried by flies are typhoid, cholera and dysentery. Symptoms of these conditions can include diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, fever, headaches and lethargy.
Antibiotics are the standard treatment.

Saturday, October 31, 2015

Meeriyabedda: One year on


    Groundviews
On October 29, 2014, at 7:30 am, a landslide hit Meeriyabedda, Haldummulla in the Badulla district.
The landslide was one of the worst natural disasters recorded in recent times. Although 12 bodies were recovered, nearly 37 were reported missing, buried under the avalanche of mud. At least 192 people were reported missing.
Our sister publication Maatram visited the site of the disaster, one year on, and took a series of immersive photos.
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The photos show the difference just one year has made; the landscape now seems eerily calm where the earlier photos taken show crumbled buildings and people combing through the mud.
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Some areas still bear scars from that fateful day, one year ago.
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At the time, the Disaster Management Centre in Badulla said they hadwarned villagers on Tuesday night, but they had not had time to evacuate. Meanwhile an official at the National Building Research Organisation said that its bulletin, which the disaster centre was supposed to disseminate, had not reached the villagers.
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You can view the set in its entirety on Flickr. 

Sri Lanka: A Ray of Hope for those Looking for War Missing

Thavarasa Utharai son Jadusan, 14 years, holds a picture of his missing father and mother. He last saw his father in March 2009. Credit: Amantha Perera/IPS
Thavarasa Utharai son Jadusan, 14 years, holds a picture of his missing father and mother. He last saw his father in March 2009. Credit: Amantha Perera/IPS
By Amantha Perera-Saturday, October 31, 2015
PAVAKODICHENNAI, Sri Lanka, Oct 29 2015 (IPS) - Thavarasa Utharai’s most treasured belongings are stuck inside several plastic bags and tucked within old traveling bags.
Inside, wrapped in more plastic sheets, are old fading photographs, scrap books, legal documents and even some old bills. These are the only processions the 36 year old mother of two has to show of her husband. He went missing on March 20, 2009 while returning home after tending to his cattle. No one really knows what happened to him.
“They took him, I know they did, I know the person who did it also,” Utharai says of suspected abductors who she says were linked to government military. The abduction took place as a three decade old bloody civil conflict was drawing to an end and government forces were poised to achieve a decisive military victory over the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The separatist LTTE had fought successive Sri Lankan governments to achieve a separate state for the country’s minority Tamils like Utharai.
Utharai hails from the remote village of Pavakodichennai, in the eastern Batticaloa District about 350 km from the capital Colombo. But distance and lack of public utilities like transport and a functioning public service have not prevented her from seeking justice. She has sought the intervention of police, a Presidential Commission and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) to gain any morsel of information on her husband. So far she has hit a blank wall, except when an officer with Criminal Investigation Department suggested that if she register her husband as deceased her family would be eligible for Rs 100,000 (700 dollars) in compensation.
“Why should I? I will seek the truth, I owe it to him,” the slightly built woman says with a feisty tone.
Her circumstances however are not rare in the former conflict-zone. Tens of thousands are still looking for their missing loved ones six years after the guns fell silent. The number of the missing has remained contentious since the war ended. A Presidential Commission on Missing Persons that has been conducting interviews since 2013 has so far received over 20,000 complaints, including over 5,000 of missing members of government forces. The ICRC, which has been registering missing persons since 1990, has recorded 16,064 cases. An Advisory Panel to the UN Secretary General put the death toll during the final phase of the war at 40,000. Research by the advocacy group University Teachers for Human Rights from northern Jaffna increased that figure to 90,000.
“It really does not matter how high or how low these figures are, for each family it is vital that they get to know what happened to their loved ones,” Vallipuram Amalanayagni said. She has been searching for her husband since he went missing in February 2009. He went missing while at his paddy field.
Amalanayagni also acts as a community leader for families of the missing. She says the last six years have been some of the hardest in her life. “We were hounded like criminals because we looked for our family members.”
As the then Mahinda Rajapaksa government fought off wave after wave of international scrutiny on the conduct of the final phase of the war, it did not encourage any action that could fuel international pressure – looking for the missing or tabulating them was one of them. During the last months of his administration, Rajapaksa loosened the grip a bit but not by a lot.
All that changed in January this year, when a new president, Maithripala Sirisena, took office. The new government has renewed engagement with the UN and has pledged to strengthen efforts to trace the missing and provide compensation.
It will set up a missing persons office and also issue Certificates of Absence. Last week it also released a report by a Presidential Commission looking into allegations of abductions and disappearances. The commission has acknowledged that disappearances did take place while persons were in military custody and that military linked groups were involved in abductions.
“This is not a political gimmick, we are serious about what we have set out to do,” Minister Rajitha Senarathana, the cabinet spokesperson told IPS.
The minister said that investigating the thousands of missing cases was a pledge that President Sirisena, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremasinghe and their loyalists made while they campaigned to oust the Rajapaksa administration
“For a nation to heal we must know the truth, however difficult and uncomfortable it may be,” Senarathana said.
Given the media hype, expectations have also risen that there could be fast tracked action. But Sri Lanka watchers caution not to raise hopes too high and to give the current government enough time to feel politically secure.
“It would be slow progress, the government has shown its inclination that it wants to act on these, it has international support right now, but it would need time to convince everyone,” Jehan Perera, Executive Director National Peace Council, a national advocacy body.
Diplomatic sources in Colombo also say that the Sirisena government is still wary of the Rajapaksa factor and the former president’s core support base of ultra-nationalists from the Sinhala majority.
For the families of the missing, there is at least a new ray of hope. “Some of us have been looking for loved ones for decades, imagine living without any kind of knowledge of your husband for over a decade, that is a terrible tragedy, at least now there should be closure,” Amalanayagni said.
(End)