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

Friday, November 6, 2015

Battle of Stalingrad, the turning point of the 

Second World War 


Ravi-P
 Thursday, 5 November 2015
Untitled-1
Untitled-2logoBetween August of 1942 and January of 1943 an epic battle was waged in the Soviet city of Stalingrad , which in the opinion of many commentators determined the course of the Second World War and thereby the path of history. Had the Germans taken the city early, many things now we take for granted may have evolved very differently. 

In this ‘Information Age’, a journalist is killed every week 


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The Pakistan media mark international day to end impunity for crimes against journalists (file photo)

November 4, 2015, 8:38 pm
Indeed, the impunity with which journalists are killed or made to ‘disappear’ must be brought to an end. It is up to states to ensure that this ‘culture of impunity’ is ended. Governments claiming to be democratic are specially obliged to take this task upon themselves.

Making a statement on the occasion of the ‘International Day to End Impunity for Crimes Against Journalists’, which fell on November 2, UNESCO pointed out that over the past decade 700 journalists have been killed the world over while carrying out their professional duties. Accordingly, on the average, a journalist is killed somewhere in the world every week while discharging his professional responsibilities.

Even as this is being written, a radio journalist is reported to have been brutally murdered in the Philippines, which is described by the international media as ‘a country known for dozens of unsolved killings of journalists.’ Apparently, since 1992, 77 journalists and two media support workers have been killed in the Philippines ‘for their work’. But to balance the picture, the Lankan state too has a lot of explaining to do with regard to some journalists who have been killed or caused to ‘disappear’ over the decades. Well, to be fair, an accusing finger cannot be pointed at the state in connection with all these incidents of the past, but a duty is cast on the state to ascertain as to what happened to these journalists and to bring to justice those responsible for the relevant misdeeds. It is in this sense that the state has a lot of explaining to do.

Such ‘bleeding statistics’ ought to shock the world, but is there any indication that this is the case? Do states and publics anywhere figure out as to what these figures on the killing of journalists translate into?

The answer to these posers is an obvious ‘No’ because there is hardly any evidence that the killing of journalists and media workers means anything much to anyone, including those sections which are said to espouse the cause of the media. What, for example, are journalists’ organizations and linked groups in Sri Lanka doing about their country’s ‘disappeared’ journalists? The responsibility of the journalist, essentially, is to keep the public and other relevant sections informed about what is happening around them, but it is insufficiently realized that such information is as important as the food a human eats and the air he breathes.

It is the journalist who helps in the empowerment of people and communities by keeping them ‘abreast of the news’ daily. If people are to act in their legitimate interests they need to be constantly informed and it is the journalist who helps them in this vital task. Whether it be food prices and its availability, government policy, Cabinet changes, bank interest rates, share prices, medical facilities, pensions and international political developments, to take just a few examples, it is the journalist and the media who bring such information to the notice of the people and it ought to be plain to see that without such knowledge life would be impossible. So, information is as important to a human as food and water.

How could any sensible person or section, therefore, be complacent and unmoved about the killing of journalists? This is the ‘overwhelming question’ which governments and civil societies need to urgently answer.

Could it be that journalists are ‘taken for granted’ by all and sundry? If so, this is a disconcerting trend which must be arrested without delay. It needs to be underscored that journalists are as vital to social well being as other important professionals and journalists’ organizations need to tirelessly work towards the greater professional acceptance of the ‘Fourth Estate’ and other sections of the media. Besides, journalists should acquire a greater awareness of their true worth as a category of professionals who are vital for the smooth functioning of society. They need to formulate codes of conduct for themselves, keeping these requirements in mind. Once done, journalists need to stick strictly to them. Under no circumstances should they be seen as ‘buyable’ by governments and other quarters.

But the taking of lives, whether those of journalists or of others, by criminal elements and other sections who act in contravention of the law, constitute extreme acts which need to be quelled and in no way condoned. It is up to the state and civil society to do this through a realization that their crucial interests are seriously compromised when Knowledge Workers, such as journalists, are killed or harmed. Let it be remembered that the silencing of journalists is integral to the ‘dismantling of democracy’ and the steady erosion of the rights of all.

Indeed, the impunity with which journalists are killed or made to ‘disappear’ must be brought to an end. It is up to states to ensure that this ‘culture of impunity’ is ended. Governments claiming to be democratic are specially obliged to take this task upon themselves.

It ought to strike the socially-conscious as highly ironic that journalists are tended to be killed with impunity in these times which are seen as an ‘Information Age’. There is an ‘Information Explosion’, enveloping the world and the journalist is instrumental in enabling the public to access this wealth of knowledge but he is seen as disposable by those who see themselves as threatened by the disclosures of the press. Sri Lanka is no stranger to these realities. The ‘White Van’ terror of yesteryear, for instance, bespoke the vulnerability experienced by sections of the then power elite in the face of journalistic disclosures.

Today, it is the services sector which is tending to be predominant in Southern economies and it is the knowledge of markets, delivered by Knowledge Workers, such as Journalists, which is proving pivotal in the sustenance of the services sector. Needless to say, knowledge is also vital in the growth of Research and Development activities the world over. Besides, new knowledge is proving crucial in value-addition processes in the manufacturing sector. Thus, is the ‘Information society’ brought into being.

But the journalist and media worker are seen as disposable by sections of the powerful in this ‘Information Age’ and civil society is tending to look the other way when the worst, thus, befalls the media. For reasons outlined in the preceding paragraphs, society and the state need to see that their vital interests are hit very severely when the journalist is harmed.

It should be clear that the state and society need to stir themselves into creating a world which is safe for the journalist. Time is not on their side.

Are Thai banks ripping off consumers?

A Thai woman walks in front of an advertisement poster of Krungsri Ayudhya Bank in Bangkok , Thailand. Pic: AP.

A Thai woman walks in front of an advertisement poster of Krungsri Ayudhya Bank in Bangkok , Thailand. Pic: AP.

Thailand’s excise exemption on new cars but thousands of new vehicles on the road, but many can’t afford them. Pic: AP.

by 5th November 2015
WHEN one wanders around Thailand today, so many people can be seen struggling with their loan and credit card repayments to banks. There are always complaints by expats of unreasonable bank charges on the pages of bulletin boards, whereas on travel pages there are warnings about poor Thai bank foreign exchange rates at airports.

Obama rejects Keystone XL pipeline in victory for environmental activists

Obama turns down controversial proposal to build 1,700-mile pipeline through six states, saying ‘it does not serve the national interests’ of the US
 Barack Obama announces his rejection of the Keystone XL pipeline, flanked by secretary of state John Kerry, and vice-president Joe Biden. Photograph: Mandel Ngan/AFP/Getty Images

 andFriday 6 November 2015

Barack Obama has rejected a proposal from TransCanada to build the Keystone XL pipeline through the American heartland, the Guardian has learned, ending years of uncertainty about the project.

The US president made the announcement from the White House flanked by both secretary of state John Kerry and vice-president Joe Biden, declaring that Keystone “would not serve the national interests of the United States”.
Keystone XL was designed to pump crude from the Alberta tar sands for 1,700 miles and across six states to refineries on the Gulf coast. Over the years, the project has become a symbol of the greater political struggle surrounding Obama’s efforts to move away from fossil fuels and fight climate change.
But Obama said the project was neither “a silver bullet for the economy” nor “an express lane to climate disaster”. It would not meaningfully boost jobs or cut gas prices for US motorists, he said. And in a sweeping statement which became a global call to arms ahead of the UN climate talks starting in Paris later this month, he said it was time to stop using the argument over Keystone as a political cudgel.
The proposed route for the Keystone XL pipeline. Photograph: The Guardian
Keystone XL map
Highlighting US progress in moving away from reliance on fossil fuels, he promised US global leadership in pursuit of an ambitious framework “to protect the one planet we have got while we still can”.
Earlier this week, TransCanada asked the State Department to put its US permit application on hold, which marked a shift for a firm that had spent seven years relentlessly pushing for approval of the project.
Prospects for Keystone XL have been receding over the last year because of low oil prices, which made the project uneconomical, and amid political shifts in the US and Canada.
Jane Fleming Kleeb, founder of the Bold Nebraska coalition of citizens, farmers and ranchers opposed to the pipeline, told the Guardian: “It’s a long time coming. I feel like, honestly, the boots have beaten the big oil suits for the first time in the country’s history on a big major infrastructure project.
“I’m just proud, I can’t even believe it’s finally happening. The difference this time around was that farmers and ranchers were unified and stood up against the project – that made a huge difference. Something which would normally be decided in the halls of Congress was actually influenced by farmers and ranchers this time around.”

Air pollution chokes New Delhi
ReutersThursday, November 05, 2015

Seasonal changes and an increase in the number of diesel vehicles are causing air pollution levels in New Delhi to soar. Diane Hodges reports.
In India's capital, New Delhi, air pollution levels are soaring. Since November began, experts say the amount of particulate matter in the air has been up to ten times higher than normal. This Delhi woman says its hard to breathe. (SOUNDBITE) (English) NEW DELHI RESIDENT, ANKITA BANSAL, SAYING: 
"It's worsening. I mean we feel breathlessness towards the end of the day." Those with respiratory problems are in worse shape. Dr. Vivek Nangia says his caseload has risen about 30-percent during the past week. (SOUNDBITE) (English) DIRECTOR PULMONOLOGY, FORTIS HOSPITAL, VIVEK NANGIA, SAYING: "And I would attribute it to pollution levels only, because till about a week or ten days back, this number was not so high." Smog levels are always high in Delhi during November and December, because of falling temperatures and the seasonal burning of paddy fields. But officials say emissions from the increasing number of diesel vehicles in the city are making this year even worse. Experts say about a third of the pollution comes from the 52,000 vehicles that enter the land-locked city each day. As the temperatures continue to fall, they warn that the pollution could get even worse.                                                                                     Video:

Thursday, November 5, 2015

All Cases in Chavakachcheri Court to be Conducted in Tamil From January 2016

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Sri Lanka BriefA district court in Jaffna has announced that from January 2016 all cases will be conducted in Tamil.
District judge Srinthi Nanthasekaran told visiting Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe that despire the apparent recruitment of 600 Tamil police officers, police in the North did not conduct any cases in Tamil.
Testimonies were not recorded in Tamil, she said.
Mrs Nanthasekaran announced that all cases coming to the Chavakachcheri court from the start of 2016 must be filed in Tamil or would fail to be processed. She had already issued instructions to the police, she said
TG

Milk for ‘Wholesome’ Empowerment: Life after War

UNDP Milk for ‘Wholesome’ Empowerment: Life after War October 19 2015

At 25 years she is the General Manager of the Poonakary Livestock Breeders’ Cooperative Society (PLIBCO) in Killinochchi, Sri Lanka. She has the overall responsibility for managing both the revenue and cost elements of 10 Milk Collection Centers of the Cooperative. She not only oversees the Cooperative's marketing and sales functions but also the day-to-day operations.

Smart, skillful, determined and passionate – Meet Thevaseelan Keetha.

Newly married Keetha is the second eldest in a family of four girls. Growing up in the Northern Province of Sri Lanka, she and her family were forced into displacement due to the near-thirty year civil war in 2009; a war which claimed the life of her older sister. “My family and I had to spend a year at the camps where there were thousands of displaced people with us. I was determined however not to let this derail my education and so I spent that one year studying in the camps. Fortunately for me there were many teachers in the camp, so we were able to continue our education there.”

Having completed her primary and secondary education, albeit under trying circumstances, Keetha was employed at an international non-governmental organization for six months and thereafter was recruited to the PLIBCO after a competitive selection process. Although she was determined and passionate about her new job, she admits she knew nothing about being a General Manager. “Everything I do now, I taught myself on-the-go. Through programmes conducted by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) and the International Organization for Migration (IOM) I was able to receive basic management training which helped a great deal but other elements of my job I learnt on my own because I really wanted to excel at what I do.”

The economy of Killinochchi and other neighbouring areas in the Northern Provinces bore the brunt of the war, stifling growth and expansion. Following the end of the war, most of the local industries were found to be lagging far behind in terms of infrastructure, technology, skills, access to credit and market shares that are required for growth. Particularly in the Poonakary Divisional Secretariat Division, majority of the families undertake dairy farming as their source of income but due to challenges of low productivity, these dairy families continue to live below the poverty line.

PLIBCO is one of 15 Producer Organizations selected by UNDP through the Northern Livelihood Development Project (NLDP) funded by the Government of Norway to assist them in uplifting their production. This has in turn increased the livelihoods of the 720 dairy families who are members of this Organisation.

Through this Project, a milk collection network centered around three of the ten milk collection centers, was established and linked with Nestle Lanka Pvt Ltd, a private sector company. The Project also introduced methods to improve milk production and begin value-addition processes. Learning visits and in-house trainings were conducted, where dairy producers learned how to enhance production and make value added-products such as curd, yoghurt, milk toffee and ‘lolly juice’. They also learnt how to improve hygiene and extend the shelf life of the products.  A much needed cold storage unit was set up at the Mulankavil Collection center which has enabled farmers to store excess milk in a hygienic manner and therefore reduce post-harvest losses.  Today, these 10 Centers receive a total of over 1300 litres of milk daily and have experienced an almost 277% increase in their monthly income since UNDP intervention.
***

As a result of years of war and displacement, women in the North were faced with a number of new challenges that hampered their capacity to recover. While a large number of women were forced to become the sole breadwinners of their families despite having no prior experience, skills or training, others remained sidelined in communities. To enhance women’s livelihoods and social wellbeing it is imperative to include them in local decision making processes, a practice challenged by social and cultural inhibitions widely prevalent in the region, which is why UNDP is focused on bringing women to the forefront in decision making positions. As such, Keetha is our role model. 25 year old young Keetha is more than competent to carry out her duties and report to male dominant Board of Directors at the Cooperative.   She is passionate about making it to the top and hopes that someday she can use the ‘wholesome’ experience she has gained to help her husband expand his private business. “My husband is very supportive of what I do and someday I hope to use my experience to help him run a successful business”
Australian High Commissioner speaks on the continuing importance ofInternational Humanitarian Law
Australian High Commissioner speaks on the continuing importance ofInternational Humanitarian Law Australian High Commissioner, HE Robyn Mudie spoke about the continuing importance of International Humanitarian Law, also known as the law of war or the law of armed conflict. As High Commissioner Mudie said, International Humanitarian Law remains as relevant as ever despite the changing nature of warfare. “These changes pose challenges… and highlight the…
Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace and JusticeNov 5, 2015
Last month, Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena announced that his government is planning to contribute more troops to United Nations peacekeeping missions. While more contributions to UN peacekeeping are desperately needed, the Sri Lankan offer should be treated with caution given its military’s human rights record – both domestically and abroad.

Causes for concern

Recently, the UN’s investigation into human rights abuses in Sri Lanka (“OISL) provided further confirmation that the Sri Lankan military likely committed gross violations of international human rights law, serious violations of international humanitarian law, and international crimes in the context of the Sri Lanka’s bloody civil war. Perpetrators of such violations have enjoyed near total impunity over many decades, as the Sri Lankan judicial system has failed to hold them accountable.
There is evidence that this climate of impunity has affected the actions of Sri Lankan soldiers deployed abroad.  In 2007, for example, the UN Office of Internal Oversight Services (OIOS) investigated serious allegations of sexual exploitation and abuse of children committed by Sri Lankan peacekeepers within the United Nations Stabilization Mission in Haiti (MINUSTAH). The investigation concluded that ‘acts of sexual exploitation and abuse were frequent, occurred usually at night, and at virtually every location where the contingent personnel were deployed. In exchange for sex, the children received small amounts of money, food and sometimes mobile phones’. Indeed, Haitian lawyers accused Sri Lankan peacekeepers of ‘systematically raping Haitian women and girls, some as young as 7 years old’.
By way of response, 111 soldiers, one Lt. Colonel and two Majors were repatriated back to Sri Lanka on disciplinary grounds. This expulsion from Haiti constituted the single largest troop repatriation in UN peacekeeping history.
The Sri Lankan government claims that 23 soldiers were subsequently convicted of sexual exploitation and abuse and subsequently ‘discharged, demoted, formally reprimanded or otherwise punished’. However, these are merely disciplinarary sanctions, whereas the severity of the allegations clearly suggested a need for criminal investigations and prosecutions. There is no evidence suggesting that any of the Sri Lankan soldiers were ever prosecuted.

Recent UN Recommendations and Reform Proposals

In response to recent further scandals, UN officials do acknowledge that the organization has failed to adequately address sexual violence committed on UN peacekeeping missions. In the so called “HIPPO” report to the UN General Assembly earlier this year, Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon set out comprehensive measures for strengthening protection from sexual exploitation and abuse. These include:
  • Various measures aimed at strengthening accountability (The report emphasizes that ‘Member states must do their part to pursue cases of sexual exploitation and abuse to the full extent of the applicable legal framework’. Accountability measures must ‘cover command and individual responsibility, as well financial accountability where this is appropriate’.)
  • Stronger vetting mechanisms. (Military contingents, for example, should not only be vetted for prior criminal offences and violations of human rights or humanitarian law, but also for prior misconduct while in the service of the organization).
These proposals must be read alongside the recommendations of the recently published “OISL” report on Sri Lanka. Thatreport calls upon the international community to ‘ensure that no member of the Sri Lankan security forces is sent on a UN peacekeeping without vetting to establish that the individual, including commanders, have not in any way been involved in human rights violations or criminal acts.  Any allegations of abuses by Sri Lankan peacekeepers while on peacekeeping duties must be fully investigated by the authorities.’

Impunity without borders

The example of Haiti clearly illustrates that a domestic culture of impunity and the failure of the Sri Lankan government to hold its military accountable for systematic abuses has far reaching consequences for the conduct of Sri Lankan soldiers.
If Sri Lankan troops are able to act with de facto impunity at home, it is not difficult to understand why these same troops would consider that their actions abroad are likely to be dealt with in a similar manner. In the circumstances, theInternational  Truth and Justice Project’s call to suspend the involvement of Sri Lankan police and military personnel in UN peacekeeping missions ‘pending and independent international inquiry into allegations of current, systematic and widespread sexual abuse by the security forces in Sri Lanka’ would seem reasonable.
At the very least, effective vetting and accountability strategies must be in place before Sri Lanka’s offer to increase its contribution to UN peacekeeping is seriously considered. Furthermore, for a new Sri Lankan Government in search of credibility and legitimacy within the international community, disclosing the whereabouts and actions of units during the Sri Lankan civil war prior to them being sent on UN deployment would be a powerful shift towards a more transparent and effective approach to avoiding further abuses.

Enforced Disappearances: UN Experts on Official Visit to Sri Lanka

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Sri Lanka Brief05/11/2015
( Colombo July 2015: A mother carrying her disappeared sons photo in a protest ©s.deshapriya)
 GENEVA (5 November 2015) – The United Nations Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances* will undertake an official visit to Sri Lanka from 9 to 18 November 2015, at the invitation of the Government.
During the mission, the UN experts will study the measures adopted by the State to prevent and eradicate enforced disappearances, including issues related to truth, justice and reparation for the victims of enforced disappearances. They will also gather information on cases of enforced disappearances, including those pending before the Working Group.
The Working Group will start and end the visit in Colombo and will travel to Jaffna, Kilinochchi, Mannar, Mullaitivu, Batticaloa, Matale, Trincomalee, Ampara and Galle. The expert body will meet with State officials, both at the central and provincial levels, as well as with relatives of disappeared people, representatives of civil society organizations and of relevant UN agencies.
 The Chair-Rapporteur is Ms. Houria Es-Slami
The Chair-Rapporteur is Ms. Houria Es-Slami
The Working Group will be represented by Vice-Chair Bernard Duhaime, Tae-Ung Baik and Ariel Dulitzky. The independent
experts will be accompanied by staff of the Secretariat of the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights.
The Working Group will hold a press conference at the end of the visit, on 18 November 2015 at 15h00, at the UN Conference Room, UN Compound, 202-204, Bauddhaloka Mawatha, Colombo 7.
A final report on the visit will be presented to the UN Human Rights Council in September 2016.
ENDS
(*) The Working Group is comprised of five independent experts from all regions of the world. The Chair-Rapporteur is Ms. Houria Es-Slami (Morocco) and the Vice-Chair is Mr. Bernard Duhaime (Canada); other members are Mr. Tae-Ung Baik (Republic of Korea), Mr. Ariel Dulitzky (Argentina) and Mr. Henrikas Mickevicius (Lithuania).
 Vice-Chair is Mr. Bernard Duhaime
Vice-Chair is Mr. Bernard Duhaime
The Working Group was established by the UN Commission on Human Rights in 1980 to assist families in determining the fate and whereabouts of disappeared relatives. It endeavours to establish a channel of communication between the families and the Governments concerned, to ensure that individual cases are investigated, with the objective of clarifying the whereabouts of persons who, having disappeared, are placed outside the protection of the law. In view of the Working Group’s humanitarian mandate, clarification occurs when the fate or whereabouts of the disappeared person are clearly established. The Working Group continues to address cases of disappearances until they are resolved. It also provides assistance in the implementation by States of the United Nations Declaration on the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance. Learn more, log on to:http://www.ohchr.org/EN/Issues/Disappearances/Pages/DisappearancesIndex.aspx

The Other Side Of Ethnic Cleansing


By Veluppillai Thangavelu –November 5, 2015
Veluppillai Thangavelu
Veluppillai Thangavelu
Colombo Telegraph
The Colombo Telegraph published a statement issued by the National Peace Council titled “Deal with the Muslim Expulsion also through Geneva process” and the comments that followed.
Amarasiri in his comment rightly claims that “Ethnic Cleansing is a WAR CRIME. Period. Refer to war Crimes.”
The expulsion of Muslims from the North was ethnic cleansing even if that was retaliation for violence against Thamils in the east by Muslim Home Guards aided and abetted by the armed forces. Thamils living along Muslim border villages were forcibly driven away and their homes and paddy fields appropriated by marauding Muslim goons.
Twelve years after the summary expulsion of the Muslims from the Northern Province, the LTTE held a meeting at Kilinochchi on April 13, 2002 presided by Prabhakaran. The meeting was meant to mend fences between the two communities and was attended by SLMC leader Rauff Hakeem, Athaullah, Uthumalebbe. Mohideen Abdul Cader, Basheer Segu Dawood, Masoor Noordeen and Masoor Moulana. Also present were Anton Balasingham, Political Advisor, S.P.Thamilchelvan, Head of Political Department and District Commanders of the LTTE.
Following the talks between the two sides, Anton Balasingham on behalf of the LTTE expressed profound regret and also apologised to the Muslims. “I made an apology to the Muslim people that what has happened in the past has to be forgotten, that we are willing to talk to them and resolve their problems,” Mr Balasingham said, assuring Muslims that they could return to their homes in the North. He stressed that the Tamil homeland and the Tamil territory in the North-East “belonged to the Muslim people also.”
Mr Hakeem said that they are willing to forgive the LTTE. “We have told them unequivocally that we are prepared to forgive and not forget (the past)… We have bitter memories of the past. But it is time we contended with the ground realities. That would mean that the LTTE also has to look at Muslims and their separate political identity as something that has become quite pronounced over a period of time,” he said in an interview.
At a function held last week to mark the 25th  anniversary of the expulsion of  Muslims from the North, Sumanthiran, TNA MP told Express “Just as  the NPC  passed a resolution condemning the genocide conducted against the Thamils, the NPC should pass a resolution condemning the en masse expulsion of Muslims by the LTTE which amounts to ethnic cleansing. If the NPC does not do it, the world will not take the Thamils’ contention that they had been subjected to genocide, seriously.” “The Thamils cannot condemn the misdeeds of the Sinhalese majority while ignoring the misdeeds of the Tamil majority,” the Jaffna district MP further said.
Chapter Eleven - Conclusions and Recommendations | THE CITIZENS' COMMISSION


The Commission on the Expulsion of Muslims from the Northern Province has come to the following conclusions regarding the expulsion, the displacement and return:

Renowned Scholar Professor. S. Mahalingam passes away

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(November 5, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) A well-known Engineer and an Emeritus Professor of Mechanical Engineering at the University of Peradeniya, Professor. Selvadurei Mahalingam passed away, early hours of Tuesday ( November 3, 2015) at a hospital in Jaffna.
Professor S. Mahalingam received his doctorate (DSc) in Science from the University of London. He joined The University of University of Peradeniya as a lecturer in 1970s. The first ever honors of that kind in Engineering.   Prior to joining the University of Peradeniya, Professor Mahalingam taught at the Engineering Faculty based in Colombo at the inception in July 1950.
He is well known for his work on Vibration of branched systems—A displacement excitation approach’. This publication was widely cited and refereed by leading scholars in the field
He was always known for his simplicity, integrity and humbleness among people
His funeral was taken place yesterday, Wednesday  at Alaveddy, Jaffna.
JetEngine
A Jet Engine, which had been brought down from London to University of Peradeniya by Professor. S. Mahalingam
Prof.-S-Mahalingam-1Prof.-S-Mahalingam-3