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 20, 2015

Syria’s Speed Freaks, Jihad Junkies, and Captagon Cartels

Syria’s Speed Freaks, Jihad Junkies, and Captagon Cartels
BY CHAVALA MADLENARADWAN MORTADA-NOVEMBER 19, 2015
BEIRUT — In a dank garage in a poor neighborhood in south Beirut, young men are hard at work. Industrial equipment hums in the background as they put on their surgical masks and form assembly lines, unpacking boxes of caffeine and quinine, in powder and liquid form. They have turned the garage into a makeshift illegal drug factory, where they produce the Middle East’s most popular illicit drug: an amphetamine called Captagon.
For at least a decade, the multimillion-dollar Captagon trade has been a fixture of the Middle East’s black markets. It involves everyone fromBulgarian and Syrian gangs, to Hezbollah, to members of the Saudi royal family. On Oct. 26, Lebanese police arrested Saudi prince Abdel Mohsen Bin Walid Bin Abdulaziz at Beirut’s Rafik Hariri International Airport for allegedly trying to smuggle 40 suitcases full of Captagon (along with some cocaine) to Riyadh aboard a private jet.
The past several years have seen the global trade in illegal Captagon skyrocket, as authorities across the region have observed a major spike in police seizures of the drug. Local law enforcement, Interpol, and the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) all agree on the catalyst: the conflict in Syria. Captagon now links addicts in the Gulf to Syrian drug lords and to brigades fighting Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, who are funded by the profits, and, after years of fighting, are now hooked on the product.
Captagon began as a pharmaceutical-grade amphetamine calledFenethylline. Patented by German pharmaceutical giant Degussa AG in the 1960s, doctors used it to treat a range of disorders, from narcolepsy to depression. But the drug fell out of favor in the 1970s, when the U.S. Food and Drug Administration deemed it too addictive to justify its use, with the World Health Organization following suit and recommending a worldwide ban in 1980s.
This is where the free market history of Captagon ends and the hazier black market story — one told by drug lords, smugglers, and law enforcement — begins. What’s clear is that the counterfeit Captagon trade has flourished across the region over the past three years. A 2014 UNODC report noted that 56 percent of all amphetamine seizures in the world occurred in the Middle East; many of the seizures were of Captagon. In a single raid last year, police in Dubai seized 17 million tablets. At $10 a pill — a rough estimate, but one that is widely cited by law enforcement officials and drug treatment specialists alike — this amounts to a total street value trade of around $170 million.
While the Gulf’s appetite for the pill is driving demand, much of the Captagon that finds its way there gets its start in Syria. Since1999, the UNODC’s annual reports have cited Syria as a production and transit point for drugs from Europe, Turkey, and Lebanon.
Last spring, Gen. Ghassan Chamseddine, head of Lebanon’s Internal Security Forces’ anti-drug unit, led one of the biggest drug busts in the history of Lebanon: 15 million Captagon tablets. Chamseddine’s unit traced the pills back to a family of Syrians who were trying to smuggle them from Beirut to Dubai in a shipment of corn. “During the interrogation we discovered that they had been smuggling Captagon to the Gulf for years…even before the unrest in Syria,” he told Foreign Policy from his office in Beirut, four floors above an evidence room stuffed full of confiscated sacks of Captagon. “From our experience, we are sure the main production of Captagon comes from Syria,” he added.
Louai Hussein, a former Syrian Border Guard, was stationed on the southern border with Jordan, near Daraa, until shortly before the Syrian conflict began. “A lot of stuff came through us, strange stuff — Captagon, hash, and other drugs,” he said. “The smugglers cross the Syrian border to the Jordanian border, and from the Jordanian border to other borders to deliver these pills and hash to Saudi Arabia.”
As for why Syria became a hub for manufacturing Captagon in the first place, it may have to do with the fact that, before the war, Syria had a vast pharmaceutical industry. With dozens of factories, Syria was the second-largest supplier of pharmaceuticals in the region. It’s not hard to imagine enterprising criminal gangs finding a way to divert some of the country’s supplies of drug precursor chemicals and pill pressing equipment.
Syrian government officials refuse to comment on the thriving Captagon market. But Chamseddine, who confers regularly with various Syrian law and border enforcement agencies, says that, in the years before the war, they told him they were aware that Captagon production occurred around Homs. Lebanese security forces’ interrogations of a Syrian smuggling ring busted in 2013 also revealed a supply chain that stretched back to factories around Homs and near the Syrian city of Yabroud.
Syria’s war has had a profound effect on its Captagon industry. In part, the war’s chaos has allowed drug producers to operate more freely. In a BBC Arabic documentary aired earlier this year, a Syrian opposition figure, businessman, and Captagon producer known as ‘Abu Sous’ said the manager of his underground factory near Homs saw the war as an opportunity to increase production. “I told him no problem, bring all of these things,” Abu Sous said. “And he did and our production increased. The truth is that we sold a lot.”
The ongoing war has also changed his motivations for his involvement in the Captagon trade. Vehemently opposed to both the Assad regime and the jihadi groups controlling parts of Syria, he now describes his Captagon operation as a charitable endeavor. He said that he has channeled money from his earnings to provide funding for weapons, equipment, and supplies to three secular brigades operating around Homs. “Almost, last year, our profit passed $6 million, or more. We put even more than this amount into keeping our secular groups standing on their feet.”
Meanwhile, the war seems to have increased demand for the drug within Syria itself — especially among those on the battlefield. “The brigade leader came and told us this pill gives you energy. Try it,” said a former Free Syrian Army member, speaking from his new home just outside Saadnayel in Lebanon’s Bekaa Valley. “So we took it the first time, [and] we felt physically fit, and felt like if there were ten people in front of you, you could catch them and kill them.”
The former fighter now lives in a makeshift tent made of plastic sheeting. He says he witnessed widespread dependence among his fellow fighters. “They are addicted, they would stop providing food for their children so they [could] buy Captagon.”
Various reports have alleged that Islamist fighters in Syria, including from both the Islamic State and al-Nusra Front, are also using Captagon. These allegations are based largely on analyses of these fighters’ speech patterns in propaganda videos and anecdotal reports of “crazed” fighters. Hard evidence corroborating jihadi involvement in the Captagon trade, however, has yet to emerge.
Nadya Mikdashi, a Lebanese addiction specialist who runs Skoun, Lebanon’s only outpatient treatment center, was not surprised to hear that soldiers on all sides of Syria’s conflict have turned to amphetamines. “Historically, fighters always used drugs,” she says. “Since the beginning of availability of synthetic drugs as well, you know, this has been going on.” Only a few patients in her facility have come in contact with Captagon, but Mikdashi is worried by the recent reports of shipments from Syria being intercepted by authorities from Dubai to the West Bank. “Where are these drugs going? To the Gulf, to Sudan, to different places.…A lot of people in the region are using amphetamines.”
Back in the illegal Captagon factory in Beirut, two men sat at a table patiently unpicking packages of tissues, placing bags of Captagon into them, and carefully gluing the packages shut again. They say Captagon production in Lebanon is now booming as well — small, mobile factories have begun to pop up around the country to feed the unceasing demand. “We do half a million to a million per week or per month; it depends on the orders,” said one of the young men, wearing a tight t-shirt and a baseball cap.
For now, Captagon seems primed to continue booming: The illicit factories seem intent on hiring. “If you like you can leave your journalism career and come and work with us,” one worker said, “then you’ll know why we do this.”
Photo Credit: Mohammed Huwais/AFP

America's poorest white town: abandoned by coal, swallowed by drugs

In the first of a series of dispatches from the US’s poorest communities, we visit Beattyville, Kentucky, blighted by a lack of jobs and addiction to painkillers
 
One of the abandoned houses along Crystal Creek, Beattyville. Photograph: David Coyle for the Guardian
1- Alex Dezanett lives in a tent pitched in a horse trailer in Beattyville. Photograph: Sean Smith for the Guardian
 2-Trailers in Beattyville. Photograph: Sean Smith for the Guardian
Deputy Sheriff David Stamper
3-Deputy Sheriff David Stamper on patrol in Beattyville. Photograph: Sean Smith for the Guardian
4-An abandoned railroad coal-loading station, Beattyville. Photograph: David Coyle/Team Coyle for the Guardian
 in Beattyville, Kentucky-Thursday 12 November 2015
Karen Jennings patted her heavily made up face, put on a sardonic smile and said she thought she looked good after all she’d been through.
“I was an alcoholic first. I got drunk and fell in the creek and broke my back. Then I got hooked on the painkillers,” the 59-year-old grandmother said.
Over the years, Jennings’ back healed but her addiction to powerful opioids remained. After the prescriptions dried up, she was drawn to the underground drug trade that defines eastern Kentucky today as coal, oil and timber once did.
Jennings spoke with startling frankness about her part in a plague gripping the isolated, fading towns dotting this part of Appalachia. Frontier communities steeped in the myth of self-reliance are now blighted by addiction to opioids – “hillbilly heroin” to those who use them. It’s a dependency bound up with economic despair and financed in part by the same welfare system that is staving off economic collapse across much of eastern Kentucky. It’s a crisis that crosses generations.                     Full Story>>>

Before You Order Chinese Food, You Might Want See This


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Everyone loves going to the Chinese restaurant right? For relatively low cost you get a good amount of tasty food.
But as the saying goes, you get what you pay for. If you want to have the curtain pulled and take a look at the actual conditions of where this restaurants Chinese food gets prepped, cooked, prepared and served, then here is a revealing view which will have you wondering how clean your favorite Chinese restaurant is.
Here is an absolutely shocking expose on a Chinese restaurant and the horribly filthy conditions in the kitchen. This guy walks around with a video camera and documents all the filth while adding commentary, which actually would be humorous if the conditions were not so horrid to look at.
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Asian Garden in Littleton, New Hampshire is the restaurant which this guy documents. He’s part of a cleaning crew that had come in there three months prior and he is now shocked to see how it clearly hasn’t been cleaned since and the buildup of muck is overwhelming to view. Everything is left open, meats are mixed with veggies, a build up of mildew and grease abound everywhere, strange black particles in the food, and dead bugs stuck in the sauces.
After watching this, I would ask for a kitchen tour before eating in any restaurant next time I dine. Shocking!

Fake pesticides endanger crops and human health in India

A farmer sprays a mixture of fertilizer and pesticide onto his wheat crop on the outskirts of Ahmedabad February 18, 2015.-REUTERS/AMIT DAVE/FILES
ReutersFri Nov 20, 2015
A farmer sprays a mixture of fertilizer and pesticide onto his wheat crop on the outskirts of Ahmedabad February 18, 2015. REUTERS/Amit Dave/FilesMillions of unsuspecting Indian farmers are spraying fake pesticides onto their fields, contaminating soil, cutting crop yields and putting both food security and human health at risk in the country of 1.25 billion people.
The use of spurious pesticides has exacerbated losses in the genetically modified (GM) cotton crop in northern India after an attack by whitefly, a pest, say officials. If unchecked, some of India's roughly $26 billion in annual farm exports could be hit.
Made secretly and given names that sometimes resemble the original, counterfeits account for up to 30 percent of the $4 billion pesticide market, according to a government-endorsed study.
And they are gaining market share in what is the world's No.4 pesticide maker and sixth biggest exporter.
Influential dealers in small towns peddle high-margin fake products to gullible farmers, in turn hurting established firms like Syngenta, Bayer CropScience, DuPont, BASF, PI Industries, Rallis India and Excel Crop Care.
"We are illiterate farmers; we seek advice from the vendor and just spray on the crop," said Harbans Singh, a farmer in Punjab's Bathinda region, whose three-acre (1.2-hectare) GM cotton crop was damaged by whitefly this year.
"It's a double loss when you see the crop wilting away and your money is spent on pesticides that don't work."
But S.N. Sushil, who heads India's top pesticide testing laboratory in Faridabad, near Delhi, said farmers panic at the first sight of a pest attack.
As a result, they overuse chemicals, reducing their effectiveness and raising costs.
Sushil's team worked overtime after Punjab sent nearly 1,000 samples of suspect pesticides following the whitefly outbreak, finding some to be falsely labelled.
Indian officials tested nearly 50,000 pesticide samples last fiscal year, finding around 3 percent of them "misbranded", Sushil said.
He added the government was increasing inspections and looking to increase penalties, including jail terms of up to 10 years.

TOXIC RACKET
Lax laws, which punish by revoking licences or imposing short jail terms for offenders, and staffing shortages compromise efforts to track and seize substandard products.
Toxic pesticides that are banned abroad continue, meanwhile, to be sold freely in India.
India still permits the use of monocrotophos, a pesticide blamed for the death of 23 children in Bihar in 2013 after they ate contaminated free school lunches. That tragedy prompted the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) of the United Nations to advise developing countries to phase out such chemicals.
"Use of excessive pesticides has been a cause for concern for quite some time," said Shyam Khadka, FAO's India representative. "Now if they turn out to be spurious it's a cause for even greater worry."
Chronic exposure to pesticides can lead to depression, a factor in suicides, he said. Pesticides can also cause cancer.
In recent years the European Union and Saudi Arabia temporarily stopped buying some vegetables from India after finding pesticide residues in produce. Indian officials say such cases result from the overuse of chemicals.

RAPID GROWTH IN FAKES
India's fake pesticide industry is expanding at 20 percent per year while the overall market is growing at 12 percent.
"We know that a racket is going on," said P.K. Chakrabarty, an assistant director general of Indian Council of Agricultural Research. "But it is only when suspicion arises that people go to inspect."
He also said illegal chemicals are imported "under the garb of good material", and that there was a "definite risk" of some fake pesticides being exported from India, although there was no evidence yet.
"Theoretically it becomes a risk, but practically there are checks and balances," said Gantakolla Srivastava, CEO of CropLife India, an association of the top pesticide companies operating in the country.

KNOCK OFFS
Karnataka state authorities this month seized large stocks of "Korajen", an illegal copy of DuPont's Coragen used to kill rice pests. Police are investigating similar cases elsewhere, DuPont said.
Punjab has also filed police cases against fake pesticide makers and arrested a senior official at its agriculture university for allowing the sale of counterfeits.
Apart from counterfeiting, India is also grappling with rising cases of unmonitored chemicals passed off as herbal pesticides, said Srivastava.
India loses about 4 percent, or over 10 million tonnes, of food output a year due to fake pesticides, said the government-backed study.
"There has been a trend of increasing consumption of (fake)products as against the regular ones," said Manish Panchal of Tata Strategic Management Group that conducted the study.
"All stakeholders should be worried ... it's going to hit food security."
Last year spurious fungicides cut apple production in Jammu & Kashmir state, while farming lobbyists have linked recent farmer suicides in Odisha to fake pesticides.
Some producers say they have been wrongly targeted by government laboratories. Coromandel Agrico, for example, was accused of selling falsely labelled products.
Tests that found it selling pesticides in incorrect dosages were inaccurate, said Vipin Bisht, the company's regulatory affairs officer.
"We will not take the risk of selling sub-standard products," Bisht said. "The problem is at the dealer/distributor level. Similar sounding products are made, mixed, sold."
(Additional reporting by Rupam Jain Nair in BHATINDA, Jatindra Dash in BHUBANESWAR and Mayank Bhardwaj in NEW DELHI; Editing by Douglas Busvine and Mike Collett-White)

Thursday, November 19, 2015

Vavuniya school remembers massacred students



19 November 2015
The Thandikulam Agriculture Farm School in Vavuniya held a ceremony to mark the 9th anniversary since the massacre of 5 students by Sri Lankan security forces.

On the 11th of November 2006 Sri Lankan troops raided the school and lined up the students, before executing them.

School principal Kumuthiny Chandrakanthan lit a memorial flame, with other school officials, students and relatives of those killed present at the ceremony. A blood donation event was also held in memory of those killed.

“These soldiers fired indiscriminately at a group of students who had thrown themselves on the ground seeking safety after an LTTE (Tamil Tiger) claymore mine blast nearby,"said Helen Olafsdottir, spokeswoman for the Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission to Reuters at the time.

"Witnesses say that soldiers jumped over the fence, into the agricultural school premises, and opened fire," she added. "They shot from close range, five of the students were killed and at least 10 others were injured."

Condemning the crime, the Tamil National Alliance said at the time:
“This is yet another crime in a very long list of such crimes that have deliberately and systematically targeted innocent Tamil civilians. These are War Crimes of the most serious nature.”
“The TNA wishes to point out that the GOSL Armed Forces are over 99% Sinhalese, and are openly hostile to the Tamil people. The Tamil people look upon the GOSL armed forced as an Army of Occupation and have every reason to fear that the massacre of Tamil civilians will continue for as long as the GOSL Armed Forces continue to occupy the areas of historical habitation of the Tamil speaking people.”

The relatives of the disappeared still intimidated

The relatives of the disappeared still intimidated

Lankanewsweb.netNov 19, 2015
The United Nations Organization asserts that still there are intimidations imposed against the relatives of the people disappeared.

The organization said that they received credible information’s when they met the relatives of the people disappeared during their tour of Sri Lanka.

A specialist team consisted with Bernard Duhaime, Tae-Ung Baik and Ariel Dulitzky told this during a media communiqué held in Colombo following their ten day tour. The UN team said that this cannot be accepted in a democratic society. The delegation said that they met 200 relatives of the people disappeared.

When the BBC inquired this from the foreign minister Mangala Samaraweera about the latter said the UN delegation disclosed this allegation when they met him.

The minister said although it is not the policy of the current government he said he knows there are malicious elements still exist in the security forces who follow the previous regime.

The delegation said that they saw three detention camps during their visit and there were 12 rooms within those camps. The members of the delegation said that they are unaware about when those camps were used at first and until when it was used.

The delegation affirmed that they found credible evidence that there was torture inflicted in the underground of the navy camp in Trincomalee. They said from the scribble written on its wall there were people secretly detained until 2010.

However the UN delegation said that those camps were not used until recently.

The UN committee recommends Sri Lanka to conduct a comprehensive investigation over the enforced disappearance caused by the Sri Lankan authority and the LTTE.

The UN delegation said that they are not satisfied with the insufficient inquiries and slow progress of those investigations.

The UN delegation said that it cannot generalize enforced disappearance caused by war, terrorism or by any means. 

The United Nations emphasized that Sri Lanka has got a good opportunity to establish justice for the thousands of people disappeared during the last many decades and the necessity to punish the perpetrators who caused enforced disappearance.

The delegation would render its assistance to establish a hybrid courts recommended by the Geneva Human Rights Commission stated that the proposed special office established to search the disappeared would be able to investigate all disappearances happened during the past.

The UN delegation which accepted that the enforced disappearance which was caused during the final phase of the war has significantly reduced now said that there were no such complaints received for the past two years.

Cultural Invasion – In The Wake Of The Abaya


By Mass L. Usuf –November 19, 2015
Mass L. Usuf
Mass L. Usuf
Colombo Telegraph
Man in Buddhism is analysed into five aggregates or existences known aspañcupadānakkhandhā. One of which is the aggregate of perception (saññā). Perception arises from form (rūpa). The path leading to the cessation of wrong perception is the noble eightfold path i.e., right view, right resolve, right speech, right action, right livelihood, right effort, right mindfulness, right concentration.
In several fora on multi-culturalism and co-existence even recently, I have noticed people curious about the prevalence of the black abaya clad women in our streets. Applying the buddhistic principle of perception (saññā) and form (rūpa), I was imagining what the perception would be if the ‘abaya’ is worn in yellow or orange colour.
As a youngster, in the 1960s, I cannot recollect an instance of seeing a Muslim woman wearing the black Abaya or the Niqab in Sri Lanka. The words Abaya and Niqab are Arabic words. Abaya means, a cloak or a loose over garment covering the body except the face, wrists and feet. Niqab means, a veil. A piece of cloth that covers the full face or the face except the two eyes.
The attire of the Muslim woman of the yesteryears was generally, the Shalwar Kameez. A predominantly South Asian dress with pantaloons or long trousers and a shirt. This comes with an accessory, the dupatta, a multi purpose long shawl. The Kameez would extend beyond the elbows almost reaching the wrists. And the trouser worn loose and baggy would conceal the shape of the woman wearing it. The hair on the head would be covered by wearing the shawl over the head and the cloth flowing over the bosom. Or, one who wears the saree, would extend a portion of the saree to cover the head.
Petrodollar
During the early 1970s, the world witnessed a phenomenon of oil exports by Saudi Arabia, Iran and other middle east countries. The era of petrodollar had dawned. Ibrahim Oweiss a Professor of Economics at Georgetown University in Washington first coined the word, “petrodollar” in order to cater to the new phenomenon of excess dollar movement not forming part of the money supply of the exporting countries.
With the advent of petrodollars industrialization and luxury lifestyle dominated the socio-economic landscape of these countries. The Arab who once took pride over his ship of the desert abandoned it for motorised vehicles. Folks who used to preserve meat using bee’s honey opted to use the refrigerator. The economic transformation through massive industrialization ran parallel to the metamorphosing of the bedouin existence into a modern lifestyle. Of course, many countries of the world benefited by this change. Employment opportunities were in abundance be it for professionals, skilled, semi-skilled, unskilled and also for housemaids. At any given time citizens of more than 50 to 75 countries were benefitting from this black gold revenues. Sri Lanka was no exception.                                                           Read More 

Tamil organisations outline confidence building measures to gain trust of victim communities in Sri Lanka


18 November 2015
Tamil organisations from the North-East, India and across the world have outlined a series of steps that the Sri Lankan government can take in order to gain the Tamil community's trust "in any accountability, reconciliation or constitution building process,"  following a meeting in South Africa earlier this month.

Noting that "the government's actions thus far, under past and present regimes provide little reason for Tamils in the North-East and the Diaspora to believe that the government genuinely has the political will to deliver on accountability and lasting peace through a political solution," the organisations called on Sri Lanka's government to take meaningful "confidence building measures" that created a future "environment in which justice and sustainable peace can be achieved."

The list of recommendations laid out by the Tamil organisations include public acknowledgement of the systemic nature of the crimes committed with impunity against Tamils, removal of troops from the North-East and demilitarization of the area, the de-proscribing of all diaspora groups and individuals, open and unimpeded access for international NGOs and human rights organisations to the North-East, the release of all political prisoners, closure of secret camps and space for Tamils in the North-East to remember their war-dead without interference, intimidation or reprisals from the state.

The steps were listed as “preliminary recommendations to assist the international community, including the South African government, in their engagement with the Sri Lankan government”.

The document was formulated as an outcome of a conference hosted by South Africa's Solidarity Group for Peace and Justice in Sri Lanka (SGPJ), which was attended by Tamil politicians, members of Tamil civil society, members of Tamil diaspora organisations across the world, and South African foreign office officials.

The conference was convened by the SGPJ in response to suggestions by Sri Lankan official statements that South Africa's assistance would be sought in a reconciliation process led by the new Sri Lanka government.

See the full document and signatories here.

Forming parties for race and religion is a hindrance to reconciliation

Forming parties for race and religion is a hindrance to reconciliationImages (1) 10155485_670672322968125_9139898150065310922_n

Lankanewsweb.netNov 19, 2015
The Supreme Court has decided to consider a petition filed which urged to impose an injunction order to register political parties based on race and religion.

President Counsel Lawyer Prashantha Lal Alvis has presented a petition seeking an order from the Supreme Court.

21 political parties and the election commissioner have been cited in the petition as respondents. The petitioner emphasize that forming political parties based on race and religion is an impediment to national reconciliation between ethnicities.

When the case was called today the 19th the Attorney General protested against the petition and said the petition should be rejected before an inquiry.

Lawyer Sumanthiran who represented the Tamil National Alliance disclosed his impediment as one of the respondents.

The Supreme Court decided to call the case on March 15th 2016.

“It isn’t impossible to free Sri Lanka of corruption” 



Friday, 20 November 2015
logoSri Lanka can be a country free of bribery and corruption, vouched Director General of the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption Dilrukshi Dias Wickremesinghe.

Disappearances of Journalists in Sri Lanka: Lessons Learned – Sunanda Deshapriya

Untitled
Sri Lanka Brief19/11/2015

( Struggle against disappearances  need to stop abduction: in 2006 FMM led swift action saved the life of journalist  Nadaraja Guruparan)

Sri Lanka has seen decades of abductions and disappearances by state security agencies. Campaigning against such repressive acts too has become part of our political culture.

A study on Skype Chat as a tool for Public Discourse

Picture courtesy androidcentral
Recently, Skype launched its new public group chat tool, which allowed even those who weren’t registered Skype users to chat with others, and for free. Around the same time, a protest held by Higher National Diploma students for accountancy was violently disrupted by police (read In the Name of Assaulted HND Students by Kusal Perera), with the latter using tear gas and batons to subdue students.

Dual Citizenship At A Price!


By Bandula Kothalawala –November 19, 2015
Dr. Bandula Kothalawala
Dr. Bandula Kothalawala
Colombo Telegraph
According to a news item in today’s papers, some 2,000 Sri Lankan expatriates were “awarded” certificates of dual citizenship at a ceremony held at Temple Trees on 17 November 2015 by HE Maitripala Sirisena, President of Sri Lanka. One is struck by the solemnity and grandeur of the occasion, apparently, graced by a constellation of local dignitaries including the Prime Minister. Nevertheless, there seems to be something odd about this particular spectacle.
In the first place, Sri Lankans who became citizens of another country should not have been stripped of their nationality. They should have been allowed to retain their nationality. In fact, Sri Lanka is one of the very few countries in the world, the citizens of which automatically lose the right to the nationality of their own country when they become citizens of another country. It is the prerogative of each and every nation to define the rules governing the retention and/or the acquisition of nationality. However, the state should exercise that right with fairness. It is hard to understand why a Sri Lankan citizen should automatically lose his/her nationality just because s/he becomes a citizen of another country. Many of us have obtained foreign nationality for a variety of reasons including hassle free travel. I have been working in the International Department of the Trades Union Congress (TUC) in London for over 26 years now. It would have been impossible for me to do my job as an international policy officer, as it involves frequent travel to various parts of the world. A Sri Lankan passport holder has to secure an entry visa for all but a few countries in the world. Very often, s/he has to apply for a visa, at least, three or four weeks in advance, depending on the destination and often cough up a tidy sum, in addition to filling in numerous forms accompanied with voluminous supporting documentation.
It is hard to understand why the acquisition of foreign nationality by a Sri Lankan is considered an offence punishable by withdrawal of his/her nationality. In the recent past, the media have reported on a spate of financial and other scandals involving people of all walks of life including prominent politicians of all hues. The lurid details published in the media would certainly make many a politician in the so-called banana republics blush. Curiously, those allegedly involved in the unsavoury deals are all deemed fit and proper persons to continue to be Sri Lankans unlike the expatriates who have chosen foreign citizenship for whatever reason. I hasten to add that I am not suggesting for a second that they be deprived of their nationality. I am only pointing to the fact that there seems to be limitless tolerance for one category of citizens and zero tolerance for others. If the acquisition of foreign nationality is so serious an offence, one wonders why it has been made possible to recover it, albeit at a price! According to the criteria for dual nationality published by the Department of Immigration and Emigration only those who have considerable financial resources at their disposal are eligible to apply for it. http://www.immigration.gov.lk. The fee per applicant is LKR 250,000, with some reductions for spouse and children.                                                                Read More
Govt. justifies political appointments in SL missions 


2015-11-19 20
Though the new government recalled all politically appointed heads and senior officials of Sri Lankan missions overseas back to the country, the government had not said it would not make political appointments in the future, the Foreign Ministry said today. 

Responding to a question that eight out of the new 13 Sri Lankan heads of missions appointed by the Ministry were political appointments, Ministry Spokesperson Mahishini Colonne said the government had never said that no further political appointments would be made.   

    “We have to resort to suitable and senior officials who didn’t belong to the Foreign Service to serve in Sri Lankan missions overseas as the Ministry doesn’t have a sufficient number of senior officials to both serve in the ministry and embassies at a given time. Therefore, we have to balance that void. Appointing officials out of the Foreign Service is not something new and practice only in Sri Lanka. Even the US does that,” she told a news conference. 

The Ministry today announced the names of 13 heads of missions appointed to Sri Lankan embassies and high commissions overseas.  Accordingly, new ambassadors were appointed to Austria, China, Indonesia, Italy, Jordan, Myanmar, Palestine, Saudi Arabia, Singapore, South Africa, Turkey and United Arab Emirates. Mr. Wadiwel Krishnamurthi was appointed as the Deputy High Commissioner to Shanghai. 

Former Minister Dr. Karunasena Kodithuwakku was appointed ambassador to China, Darshana Perera to Indonesia and Priyani Wijesekara to Austria.   D.S.L. Pelpola was appointed as the Ambassador to Italy, A.L.M. Lafeer to Jordan, K.W.M.D. Karunaratne to Myanmar, A.M. Thaseem to Saudi Arabia, Sunil De Silva to South Africa, S.J. Mohideen to UAE, M.S. Anwar to Palestine, Nimal Weeraratna to Singapore and C.M. Anzar to Turkey. (Lahiru Pothmulla)