Peace for the World

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

Saturday, November 28, 2015

Did a PM’s friend collect U$D 496,000 saying it is for the Prime Minister? 

Did a PM’s friend collect U$D 496,000 saying it is for the Prime Minister?

Lankanewsweb.netNov 27, 2015
These days according to UNP sources two people by the name of Kishan and Rifky are running round the city selling the Prime Minister’s name.

They say they can call the Prime Minister and discuss any project. They have developed a model where they take advance money from the client even before they talk.
Two foreign business people nearly got caught to their claims. Fortunately an honest official saved them. Our investigations revel that they work through a lady and a gent in the PMs office.
If they don't watch out we will expose who these people in the PMs office are?
According to energy sector sources we understand a friend of the Prime Minister of yesteryear who is not involved in the present set up is running round the city selling his connection to the PM.
We understand he had collected around 65 Million Rupees saying it is for the PM after an energy deal he did, went through.
More details of this energy deal will be exposed soon.
For Good Governance

90-Member Cabinet Cannot Eradicate Corruption: Sampanthan

Colombo TelegraphNovember 29, 2015
The government should take effective steps to avoid waste and extravagance and also to eradicate corruption, says the Leader of the Opposition R. Sampanthan.
Leader of the Opposition R. Sampanthan
Leader of the Opposition R. Sampanthan
“I do not think that it is within the power of your 90-member Cabinet to achieve this. I think, a few persons of the highest integrity, with specialized knowledge and experience should be specially empowered to examine and analyze in detail all aspects of Government expenditure and come up with plans and proposals to reduce and remove waste and extravagance. Their recommendations should be implemented. It appears to me that whatever arrangements you have now are inadequate.” Sampanthan said yesterday.
The Leader of the Opposition R. Sampanthan participating in the budget debate said; “Corruption needs to be eliminated with a firm hand. Given the fact that corruption is deeply entrenched in governance in this country, we perhaps need special laws to deal with this menace – special offences even beyond what is now available, new provisions of law relating to detection, investigation, trial and sentence pertaining to corruption which will convey the message to the whole country that the Government will not tolerate corruption in any form, and that those who are corrupt will be very sternly dealt with. There is, in my view, a need for a new initiative and a new message from the Government. I ask you in the name of the people of this country, can you permit what happened at SriLankan Airlines to be repeated?”
Read the full speech here

                                    Read More

Editorial: Are we being diluted by President Sirisena?

Maithripala Sirisena Beats Opposition To Become Sri Lanka's New President
Corrupted men and women contribute nothing towards in good governance but only dilute the leadership. Once the leader himself is diluted, he will take decisions out of the dilution. Decisions made out of dilution will not address the issues ordinary citizens craving for. It will only benefit those who in his immediate circle.

EDITORIAL  -
( November 27, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) An unfortunate curve in the political arena of good governance is emerging. This is evidenced by the recent press conferences held by the president in which only favoured “journalists” were permitted to ask questions. And, it was very obvious that they had been told what questions to ask, and more importantly, what questions not to ask. Indeed, it looks as if history is repeating itself, first as a tragedy then as a farce, so we’d get ready for it. However, we appreciate, those who have, quite courageously, openly questioned the president in the talk shows.
It is time to review the President’s foremost promise of abolishing the executive power of the President.
The majority of people in this country voted in the new government because they no longer wanted to be victims of the polluted political system. They wanted and expected a better future. The people were thirsty for justice and freedom where they could secure their civil liberty. They wanted the respect and dignity of every Sri Lankan to be restored.
President Maithripala Sirisena promised to abolish the excessive powers granted by the executive presidency in 1978. His promise was subsequently approved by the Cabinet and many media outlets started beating their drums and dancing around the subject.
However, the political superstar who is extremely shrewd in planning, Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera, did not hesitate to step forward and disclose the true timeframe of the abolishing of the Executive Power of the President.
He announced that President Sirisena will abolish executive power the very moment before his first term of the office is concluded. That moment is five years away.
We have heard similar promises from the last two presidents. The same crafty words of “abolishing the executive power and making the President accountable and transparent”, were spoken by each of them. But none of them was sincere to their people as the only thing they attempted to abolish was civil liberty. It was former President Chandrika Bandaranaike who expressed her guilt in failing to dismantle the political beast created in early 1978. President Sirisena himself is a result of her failure to halt the political decay in the country.
The new government is the result of a non-violent democratic revolt by the people, in general, which was geared up by former President Chandrika Bandaranaike, along with true activist such as late Rev. Maduluwawe Sobitha Thero. It was indeed interesting to read what her private secretary disclosed to the media recently, on how he struggled to find President Sirisena, then a Cabinet Minister, to have his consent to run the for Presidency.
The more things change the more they remain the same. Those who actively worked for social change are gradually being sidelined. Those who were encouraged former President Rajapaksa in his wrongdoings are as disgusting as Sirisena’s buddies. This is indeed an indication of future threats of the leadership and the country in general.
Corrupted men and women contribute nothing towards in good governance but only dilute the leadership. Once the leader himself is diluted, he will take decisions out of the dilution. Decisions made out of dilution will not address the issues ordinary citizens craving for. It will only benefit those who in his immediate circle.
Let’s discuss just two examples out of the dozens that have occurred within the walls of the Presidential office.
First, there is the well-known exposure of the behaviour of the President’s younger brother, Mr Kumarasinghe Sirisena, who was appointed as the head of Sri Lanka Telecom. It is not just blatant nepotism but also a deliberate action of ignoring the commitments of those who elected the President. By and large, this can be compared to how the former President Mahinda Rajapaksa granted immunity to his younger brother Gotabaya Rajapaksa. Whether appreciated or reviled, Gotabaya Rajapaksa had the professional experience to hold the office as the defence secretary, but in the case of President Sirisena’s brother, the president is well aware of the truth.
Second, the little known, but slowly coming to light, the modus operandi of Former Commander of Navy, Admiral (Retired) Jayantha Perera, who was appointed as the President’s adviser on Maritime Affairs.
We have reliably learnt, that Admiral Perera was under the payroll of the Avant Garde Maritime Service Ltd., just after he retired as the Navy Commander. In the same time, he was appointed as the President’s advisor on Maritime Affairs. The President was taking steps to appoint him as an ambassador. But, it was learnt, that there were few concerned officials who prevented the move. However, the “silent coup” continues.
Is President losing his sense of good governance or he is deliberately diluting the people?
Good Governance will be turned into farce sooner if the president has no mechanism to remove the cunning culture in the bureaucracy and the putrid tradition in politics while destroying the dreams of countrymen.
Not only will good governance be impossible but also abolishing the executive power of the President will also just be a smokescreen.
Mr President, please don’t pull this nation from Kablen Lipata (from the frying pan into the fire)! We still have trust and believe that you are not diluting the public to conceal schemes but that you will be a man of accountability and transparency. Just, a matter of five years!

Mystery out as to how Ranil lost presidency in 2005!

Mystery out as to how Ranil lost presidency in 2005!

Lankanewsweb.netNov 28, 2015
Finance minister Ravi Karunanayake and a group of UNP backbenchers have asked prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe to immediately investigate as to whether money had been given to the LTTE to change the public opinion in the northern province at the 2005 presidential election, where Mahinda Rajapaksa and Ranil Wickremesinghe were involved in a tight contest.

PM Wickremesinghe has agreed to hold an investigation.
At that election, Rajapaksa won with a majority of only 186,000 votes.
Nearly 300,000 voters in Jaffna, Wanni and the eastern province abstained as a result of the LTTE’s boycott call.
This has had a decisive impact on the election outcome, and had the voters been allowed to vote in freedom, the final result would have changed.
Sripathi Sooriyarachchi
The late MP Sripathi Sooriyarachchi revealed in parliament on 21 July 2007 that the Rajapaksa side gave money to the LTTE in order to change the election result.
Sooriyarachchi said he, together with Basil Rajapaksa, met LTTE representatives before the election and Rs. 200 million was given and after the election, billions of rupees more was given through various means.
The RADA housing project too, was one of those means, he revealed (utube has the video of his statement – Sripathy reveals money transactions with LTTE -

Tiran Alles
Later, ‘Mawbima’ newspaper owner, ex-MP Tiran Alles, revealed this deal, with an exposure of the persons involved, at the media conference he held at his home soon after it was targeted in a bomb attack (utube has the video of the statement – Mahinda Rajapaksa gave money to LTTE – Tiran.
Representing the LTTE in this deal was its campaign chief Emil Kanthan, who had once been the business partner of Alles. It was the two of them who had expanded Dialog’s services to northern province in 2002.
The preliminary discussion on giving money to the LTTE took place at the Rosmead Place office of Alles. It was attended by Basil, Emil Kanthan, former secretary to the president Lalith Weeratunga and Alles.
After the discussions in November 2005, a sum of Rs. 180 million had been exchanged in order to build trust between the two parties. The money was brought in large travelling bags and Basil gave them to Emil Kanthan in front of him, said Alles.
Later, Wijedasa Rajapaksa revealed that Rs. 784 million had been given before the presidential election.
This money was given from the millions of dollars received through the Singapore embassy for Rajapaksa’s campaign after being changed into rupees. The money was brought by a powerful minister of the government at the time and the head of a business establishment.
No LTTE connection
However, LTTE diaspora representatives who met two leading ministers of the government in London recently said the LTTE did not get that money.
They had pointed out that the election boycott was due to a political decision taken in order to defeat Wickremesinghe, as he had been trying to break the LTTE into two at the time.
This revelation raises the question as to who had received the money then.
Therefore, Karunanayake has pointed out the need to find out exactly as to what had happened to the money, adding that he is in the possession of several evidence in that regard.
Emil Kanthan
The business establishment head and Emil Kanthan, who is now in Dubai, are reportedly ready to reveal as to whom the money had gone if an investigation is conducted.
Also, one of the partners in this deal had received a big financial gratification from a foreign spy service, which had been invested in a media institution.
(Sathhanda – Subhash Jayawardena)

Rajapakses’ contract killers (ex) DIG Vaas Gunawardena and son sentenced to death along with four others !

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -28.Nov.2015, 9.00 PM) Ex DIG Vaas Gunawardena the ‘licensed underworld killer’ who did a number of contract  killings for cash rewards (blood money) during the Rajapakses’  most brutal and corrupt era, for and on behalf of the Rajapakses was sentenced by High court to death on one case of murder of the many.
This murder relates to the killing of Mohomed Shyam ,a footwear businessman of Bambalapitiya by shooting on 23 rd May 2013 after abducting him on the 22nd of May.The victim was abducted at Colombo and murdered at Dompe by shooting to his head and chest.
It was inside information division of Lanka e news always first with the news and best with the views that exposed this gruesome murder by Vaas Gunawardena for blood money amounting to  Rs. 3 million collected beforehand.This was reported by Lanka e news on 1st June 2013 ,when we  also revealed that Vaas Gunawardena has similarly committed 14 such murders. 
The Rajapakse regime a byword for lawlessness , however conducted the investigation pertaining only to this murder .This invetsigations was necessitated because  a relative of murdered Shyam was a close friend of Mahinda Rajapakse . All the other murders committed by Vaas on the instructions of Gotabaya were never investigated.
Be that as it may , in this case the three judge panel who heard the trial passed death sentences on all the six accused including Vaas and his son Ravindu Gunawardena.
It is noteworthy  , this is the first  time in Sri Lanka ‘s (SL) police history a death sentence was passed on a DIG of the police. The judgment was contained in 802 pages.Since the day the indictments were served on the accused on 31 st March 2014 , the trial continued to be heard .135 witnesses gave evidence . 
The president of the three judge bench delivered the verdict. The bench comprised Lalith Jayasuriya (president), Kusala Sarojini Weerawardena and Amendra Seneviratne . 
In addition to the death  sentence passed on Vaas Guinawardena ,  he was sentenced to 10 years rigorous imprisonment (RI) and  a fine of Rs. 10.000.00 too  was  imposed on him. His son and the other accused were each sentenced to a year RI plus  a fine of Rs. 5000.00 was imposed. 
The former Attorney general (AG) Palitha Fernando T at that time instructed  ex chief justice (CJ) Mohan Peiris to consider this as a special court    case , and to hear it  sans jury by a special three judge panel of the high court.Following the consent received from the ex CJ , the case was heard before this special three judge bench.
   
The  ex AG filed action  against all the accused based on charges of conspiring with Mohomed Fouzdeen and Krishantha Koralage between 2013 -04-04 and 2013-04-22 to murder Mohomed Shyam .
Accordingly , the 2nd , 3rd , 4th , 5th and 6 th accused were charged with abducting Mohomed Shyam and killing him at Dompe, while Vaas Gunawardena was charged with aiding , abetting and giving authority  to commit the crime.
Former IP Lakmina Indika Bamunusinghe , ex PC Gamini Atapatu Sanathchandra  (51799) , Ananda Pathirage Priyantha Sanjeewa (68656) , Kelum Rangana Dissanayake (61816) were also  found guilty and sentenced to death.
The investigation into this murder was conducted by a special team of  CID officers including  ASP Shani Abeysekera, CI Ranjith Munasinghe and  SI Upali Bandara .The additional solicitor general  Ms. Ayesha Jinasena  on behalf of the plaintiffs addressed the court on ten days for 57 hours.
Incidentally , Lanka e news some time ago reported an incident involving Ravindu Gunawardena (sentenced to death today) , in which , following a conflict between Ravindu and another student (both of whom were studying in the Malabe IT campus at that time) , Ravindu’s father Vaas Gunawardena who was  in the CCD then  brutally assaulted the other student after bringing him to Vaas’ home . Vaas’s wife too had put that student down on the ground, trampled his head and attacked him.Lanka e news at that time also carried photographs of the sons of Vaas flaunting the blood monies collected from  contract killings of their father , as well as photographs of Vaas ‘s wife and sons undergoing firearm  training. 
Based on reports reaching Lanka e news , an appeal has not been contemplated against the judgment so far. 
It is most deplorable and despicable that even after Vaas was found guilty and punished by court over this gruesome ruthless murder  , the venal and disgraceful  media coolies in Sri Lanka are still sympathetic towards him. For instance, despite the High court delivering a judgment based on evidence of 135 witnesses , one media coolie who was present gave undue publicity highlighting  Vaas’ statement that he did not commit the crime. 
Truly speaking , in any  country where laws are duly respected and justice is held aloft  ,  reports of this nature of  media coolies will be treated as a contempt of court, for the court spent over one year of its precious  time to hear this case ,  and took so much  pains to deliver a judgment contained in 802 pages! In this backdrop some stray media coolie who digs garbage bins to pick up news coming on the scene and trying to whitewash the criminal who commited a most ghastly and ruthless murder for blood money should  certainly be held liable to charges of contempt of court. No media has any moral or legal right  to directly or indirectly cast aspersions on a court verdict.
---------------------------
by     (2015-11-28 22:50:31)

Shyam killing:Vas, son, 4 others sentenced to death


article_image
by Chitra Weerarathne- 

A High Court of Trial-at-Bar yesterday, unanimously convicted the former DIG Gajendra Vas Gunawardene, his son Ravindu Vas Gunawardene and four other persons of the murder, abduction and conspiracy to murder of a businessman named Mohamed Shyam and imposed the death penalty on all of them.

The bench comprised Colombo High Court Judges, Lalith Jayasuriya (President) Kusala Sarojini Weerawardene and Amendra Seneviratne.

The Trial-at-Bar said that the prosecution had established beyond reasonable doubt that the six persons indicted were guilty of all the ten charges including the major charges of murder, conspiracy to murder and abduction.

The prosecution evidence was accepted by the court. The defence evidence was rejected. The Deputy Solicitor General, Ayesha Jinasena, told the Court that, according to the evidence, placed before the court, the persons indicted were guilty of murder, and death penalty should be imposed. She added that the DIG, being a senior police officer should not have got involved in such a crime. The people had lost the regard for the Police Department as a result.

The indicted persons yesterday in their dock statement before the imposition of the penalty, denied all the charges against them.

Vas Gunawardene, the former DIG said that the CID had not carried out a proper investigation; it, he said, habitually harassed the persons arrested and made them give statements. He said he had done his official duties properly.

Ravindu Vas Gunawardene, the sixth accused, in the indictment, said that he was proud to be his father’s son, as his father had served the country well. He was proud to be in jail with his father, he said.

The other four convicts were, L.T. Bamunusinghem, Inspector of Police, G. Sarathchandra P. Sanjeewa and K.R. Dissanayake all three of them police constables.

The date of offence, had been around April 23, 2013 in the Colombo District, the court was told

The death penalty will be effective as permitted by the Head of State.


Bathiudeen Slaps PRECIFAC, Appoints Tainted Officer To Top Post At Ministry


Colombo TelegraphNovember 28, 2015
In a shocking case showcasing gross abuse of ministerial powers, Lanka Sathosa Chief Engineer K Ariyawansha, whose services was terminated over a multi-million rupee fraud has been re-appointed to a top-post in the Industry and Commerce ministry by minister in charge of the subject Rishard Bathiudeen.
Minister Bathiudeen
Minister Bathiudeen
Lanka Sathosa too comes under the same ministry. Ariyawansha has been appointed as a senior consultant to the ministry.
The Presidential Commission of Inquiry to Investigate and Inquire into Serious Acts of Fraud, Corruption and Abuse of Power, State Resources and Privileges (PRECIFAC), which investigated the scam of over Rs 20, 000 million in Lanka Sathosa ordered Ariyawansha to be sacked and also to keep him out of employment from any state institution in the future.
Despite this order he has been recalled to duty by Industry and Commerce Minister Rishard Bathiudeen and Ministry Secretary T N Tennakoon. He has been appointed to a top post in the ministry.
A group of Sathosa employees last night petitioned the PRECIFAC against the minister’s decision to recall Ariyawansha.
Auditors and senior officers of Sathosa in a petition to the commission stated that Ariyawansha had been involved in several financial frauds at Lanka Sathosa which was proved during presidential commission’s investigation.
Instead of filing action against Ariywansha who was under an affiliated institution under the Industry and Commerce Ministry, Bathiudeen has re-appointed him directly to the ministry staff.
Sathosa officials now say that Ariyawansha is resorting to threats against Sathosa officers who gave evidence before the commission in connection with the case.Read More

Four women Mahinda most disliked

CBK_1
Mahinda incurred heavy expenditure to create a rift between the then United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Samantha Power working through Lobby Ford entity in the United States and win over Clinton. Mahinda was told by his Advisors on Foreign Affairs and International Relations that during the 2008 election campaign of Barack Obama Samantha Power had described Hillary as a monster and had insulted Hillary noting there was a rift between Samantha and Hillary.

by Upul Joseph Fernando 
(November 27, 2015, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) A glance to the past of Mahinda Rajapaksa’s Presidency that spanned nearly a decade would reveal that there were four female names he mostly disliked. The first of that four was Chandrika Kumaratunga. The second was United States Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power. The third was United Nations Human Rights Commissioner Navi Pillay. The fourth was former United States Ambassador to Colombo Michele J.Sisson. Of the four, Mahinda mostly hated or disliked Samantha Power. Whenever Mahinda met with his Cabinet colleagues he used to repeat, “That thin woman in the White House is the person who is creating all these problems for me”.
Mahinda incurred heavy expenditure to create a rift between the then United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Samantha Power working through Lobby Ford entity in the United States and win over Clinton. Mahinda was told by his Advisors on Foreign Affairs and International Relations that during the 2008 election campaign of Barack Obama Samantha Power had described Hillary as a monster and had insulted Hillary noting there was a rift between Samantha and Hillary.
So Mahinda waited till a battle erupted between Samantha and Hillary, but it never occurred. Thereafter, Mahinda pinned hopes on Hillary’s successor John Kerry. Kerry told the Senate that Sri Lanka would get pushed to the lap of China if the United States proceeded with war crimes charges against the South Asian island nation and also stated in a report that such a stance would be detrimental to the interests of the United States. What Mahinda gathered from that situation was that Kerry would overpower Samantha’s powers.
Whatever Mahinda dreamt and thought, Samantha Power was not ready to loosen her grip on Sri Lanka. The United States Ambassador Michele J. Sisson who was in Colombo at that time acted on the instructions of Samantha Power. At the time, the United National Party (UNP) experienced division and tension and with the late Sobhitha Thera creating a climate to introduce a common candidate to establish a just society, Michele J.Sisson visited the Naga Viharaya to meet Sobhitha Thera. The incumbent President Maithripala Sirisena was recognized for his services as Health Minister by the Harvard University under a USAID Programme and awarded a Harvard accolade when Michele was the US Ambassador in Colombo. When Mahinda announced the conducting of a Presidential Election, Michele left Colombo to work as the second-in-command to Samantha Power. Today she is the US Deputy Ambassador to the United Nations.
Samantha Power visited Colombo in 2010 and met Mahinda. She told him to draw up a mechanism to probe war crimes in the country. Mahinda started to hate her from that point. Thereafter, United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s Panel visited Colombo to investigate war crimes allegations. The UN Resolution against Sri Lanka on war crimes surfaced during the period Mahinda was trying to gather China and Russia to halt such exercise. While American Experts claimed that Mahinda’s popularity was increasing in the face of a war crimes resolution against the island nation, Samantha Power executed her agenda in Sri Lanka through Michele.
Rev. S.J. Emmanuel 
When the all-powerful Samantha Power visited Sri Lanka this week, Mahinda was just an ordinary Member of Parliament. Moreover, the Government had lifted the ban on eight Tamil Diaspora Organizations to coincide with Power’s visit. These Tamil Diaspora Organizations had dealings with Power in the past. The Rajapaksa Government banned these organizations being jubilant over Indian Congress Government’s refusal to grant the visa to Rev. S.J. Emmanuel who headed the largest Tamil Diaspora Organization. However, just two months before the last presidential election, the Spokesman for the Global Tamil Forum visited India. That was after Narendra Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party assumed office.
Mahinda’s ouster and the de-proscription of Tamil Diaspora Organizations by the Maithri-Ranil Government is a victory for Samantha Power’s agenda. When civilians were massacred in Sri Lanka, the United States maintained silence being unable to halt the war. Power had to embrace that defeat. Hence in 2010 Power arrived in Colombo as a defeated character. However, this time she arrived in Colombo with a victory smile.

Crimes OIC arrested on bribery charge remanded

Crimes OIC arrested on bribery charge remanded
logoNovember 28, 2015
The officer-in-charge (OIC) of the Crimes Unit of the Narahenpita Police Station who was arrested for soliciting a bribe of Rs 2.5 million has been remanded till November 30 after being produced before court. 
The police officer was arrested by sleuths of the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption yesterday at around 3.30pm yesterday (27) in the Kohuwala area. 
The Crimes OIC had requested for the bribe from a doctor in order to refrain from lodging a case against the latter regarding a certain transgression.
He was arrested upon accepting the sum of Rs 2.5 million.      

Head of Dialog, called to the CID

Head of Dialog, called to the CID
Lankanewsweb.netNov 28, 2015
Reports reaching us from police headquarters confirm that the CID is trying to take legal action against the chief executive officer of the Dialog Company and the Director General Dr. Shridhar Saaripuththa Hans Wijesuriya alleged for hiding evidence.

During the investigation of the murder of Wasim Thajudeen the CID focused its attention to the mobile conversations and it was revealed that it was the Dialog Company which has issued many sim cards to the alleged perpetrators.
 
Although the CID has requested the required data from the Dialog Company, so far the dialog has failed to provide. The CID has demanded these caller communication data during the 2012 period.
 
Mobitel & Etisalat
Apart Dialog the CID found sim cards issued by Mobitel & Etisalat companies and reports reaching us confirm that both the companies have provided those details to the CID. The Dialog Company has told the CID that since these data’s has been deleted from their database and they don’t have a way to retrieve and provide those. Despite Mobitel and Etisalat has provided these data to the CID a doubt has emerged why dialog could not provide these. Due to this problem the CID is unable to continue the investigation forward.
 
Hans’s father in law
The father in law of Hans Wijesuriya, Sunimal Fernando was serving as a consultant to the former president Mahinda Rajapaksa. Due to this both Hans Wijesuriya and Sunimal Fernando were great allies of the former president.
 
The former president’s son Namal’s name was also dragged into the murder of Wasim Thajudeen. The CID has focused its attention that Dialog failing to provide data was due to the relationship between Hans Wijesuriya and the president’s consultant.
 
Statement given by Hanz
When we inquired Hans Wijesuriya that can his company provide caller data of the sim card owned by the Dialog Company he said if a written request is made his company can provide these data. When we questioned Hans Wijesuriya why your company failed to provide the mobile caller data, he said that in order to give those data we need the telephone number of the person who called. After getting the number he said he would take action to provide those through his media secretary.
 
However following that there were no more calls from them he said.

Tahir Elci: Kurdish lawyer shot dead in Turkey

Channel 4 NewsPublished on Nov 28, 2015

Channel 4's Foreign Affairs Correspondent, Jonathan Rugman, sat down with Kurdish lawyer Tahir Elci on October 24th. Elci died after being shot during a press conference today.



Tahir Elci: Kurdish lawyer spoke of death threats

Channel 4 News

SATURDAY 28 NOVEMBER 2015

Channel 4's Foreign Affairs Correspondent, Jonathan Rugman, sat down with Kurdish lawyer Tahir Elci on October 24th. Elci died after being shot during a press conference today.


The Indian novelist recalls an extraordinary encounter in a Moscow hotel with the NSA whistleblower

Arundhati Roy with Edward Snowden and John Cusack. Photograph: Ole Von Vexhull

Roy with (from left) Daniel Ellsberg, Edward Snowden and John Cusack. Photograph: Courtesy of John Cusack


The Moscow Un-Summit wasn’t a formal interview. Nor was it a cloak-and-dagger underground rendezvous. The upshot is that John CusackDaniel Ellsberg (who leaked the Pentagon Papers during the Vietnam war) and I didn’t get the cautious, diplomatic, regulation Edward Snowden. The downshot (that isn’t a word, I know) is that the jokes, the humour and repartee that took place in Room 1001 cannot be reproduced. The Un-Summit cannot be written about in the detail that it deserves. Yet it definitely cannot not be written about. Because it did happen. And because the world is a millipede that inches forward on millions of real conversations. And this, certainly, was a real one.

The U.S. Air Campaign in Syria Is Suspiciously Impressive at Not Killing Civilians

The U.S. Air Campaign in Syria Is Suspiciously Impressive at Not Killing Civilians
The Pentagon says it has killed 20,000 suspected Islamic State fighters, with only two cases of collateral damage. Something doesn’t add up.
BY MICAH ZENKO-NOVEMBER 25, 2015
To intensify the U.S.-led coalition’s war against the Islamic State, also known as ISIL, the Pentagon is considering further loosening the rules of engagement (ROEs) that are intended to minimize civilian casualties and expanding the target sets that can be bombed. On Nov. 19, Secretary of Defense Ashton Carter told MSNBC that the U.S. military was “prepared” to change the ROEs, and indeed the following day it was reported that the coalition was seeking to increase airstrikes by “changing a policy to protect against civilian casualties in Islamic State-held territory.” The prospect of more bombs being dropped on more Islamic State-connected targets was also endorsed this past week by presidential candidates Hillary ClintonDonald Trump, and Chris Christie.
Although largely missed by the presidential candidates, the ROEs against the Islamic State have already been significantly relaxed. The week ending on Nov. 17 was the most intensive seven-day period of airstrikes — with 980 bombs dropped — since Operation Inherent Resolve (OIR) began in August 2014, according to U.S. Central Command (Centcom). Moreover, OperationTidal Wave II — an escalating series of strikes against Islamic State-controlled oil infrastructure — now includes the bombing of hundreds of oil tankers, which had not been targeted previously because, according to OIR spokesman Col. Steve Warren, “the truck drivers, themselves, probably not members of ISIL; they’re probably just civilians.” Now, those trucks are being shredded by A-10 Thunderbolt II and AC-130 Spectre gunships 45 minutes after leaflets are dropped on them reading, “Get out of your trucks now, and run away from them.”
The assumption of those endorsing relaxed ROEs is that a higher number of bombs falling on a larger array of targets will accelerate the destruction of the Islamic State. But that’s fantasy. The coalition’s 8,300 airstrikes may have destroyed more than 16,000 Islamic State targets and killed more than20,000 suspected Islamic State fighters — including “one mid- to upper-level ISIL leader every two days” — but this is wholly insufficient. Does Carter really believe that with just a little more air power, this enormous militant army will soon be degraded and destroyed?
The first problem with this theory is that large militant armies are not defeated, either exclusively or primarily, with air power. Military and civilian policymakers repeat the mantra that “you can’t kill your way out” of the problem posed by such adversaries, but then continue to call upon air power to do just that. This is despite the fact that all of the militant armies and terrorist groups that have been bombed and droned for the past 14 years have survived. None have been completely destroyed, which is allegedly the strategic objective against the Islamic State. Moreover, the size of the al Qaeda-affiliated groups that the United States claims to be at war with have either stayed flat or grown, while the total number of State Department-designated Foreign Terrorist Organizations has grown from 34 in 2002 to 59 in 2015.
However, the larger concern with this mindset is the assured growth of collateral damage and civilian casualties that will accompany significantly loosened ROEs. Last month, Lt. Gen. Bob Otto, the U.S. Air Force’s deputy chief of staff for intelligence, surveillance, and reconnaissance, observed that the coalition was “challenged in finding enough targets that the airplanes can hit that meet the rules of engagement.” However, he added an important caveat: “If you inadvertently — legally — kill innocent men, women, and children, then there’s a backlash from that. And so we might kill three and create 10 terrorists.”
There was a revealing indicator made public last week of just how challenging it is for pilots to prevent civilian harm while conducting “dynamic targeting” strikes — meaning against unplanned and unanticipated targets in a compressed timeline — despite all the checks and balances in place. Late on Friday, Centcom issued a press release that summarized the findings and recommendations of an investigation into an attack of an Islamic State checkpoint on March 13, near Hatra, Iraq, which “likely resulted in the deaths of four non-combatants” even though “all reasonable measures were taken to avoid unintended deaths of or injuries to non-combatants by reviewing the targets thoroughly prior to engagement.” This was only the second time, in 16 months of bombing, that the command has acknowledged civilian harm; the other being in May when Centcom published an investigation of a November 2014 strike against the so-called Khorasan Group that “likely led to the deaths of two non-combatant children.” In other words, everybody within the command structure, including the pilot of the A-10, did what they were trained to do, and four civilians were still unintentionally killed at an Iraqi checkpoint.
To truly appreciate how this could have occurred, it is useful to dig into the 56-page redacted report of the investigation that Centcom released on Friday. Most importantly, the U.S. military was only made aware of the allegations of civilian casualties by an April 2 email from an unidentified woman who claimed that her black Kia Sorrento 2011 sedan — “that consisted of the Driver, two women and three children” — was destroyed when “a Missile of International Air Forces stroke [sic] the Checkpoint.” The woman requested compensation for her car as “I have lost all my money and this car was all I have…. Thank you for concern.”
Prompted only by this email — as one command element put it, “the 609th AOC has not received a corroborating open source report of civilian casualties matching this strike location/time” — an initial civilian casualties (CIVCAS) credibility assessment concluded that the woman’s claim was credible. From there, an investigating officer was directed to “conduct a thorough review of the JTM [Joint Target Message] targeting and tasking cycle to determine if any errors occurred or process changes are required.” This investigation was conducted between April 22 and June 1, and consisted of extensive audio and video reviews, and interviews with all of the participants.
The investigation demonstrates how routine the events at the Islamic State checkpoint near Hatra were on that fateful day. The black Kia Sorrento and a GMC Suburban drove up to the checkpoint, pulled off to the side of the road, and the occupants of both vehicles began to “interact and act like they are associated with the [Islamic State] checkpoint personnel” for 40 minutes while seven other vehicles passed through the checkpoint. The person responsible for the final sign-off of the strike was the director of the Combined Air and Space Operations Center at Al Udeid Air Base, referred to as the Target Engagement Authority (TEA). The TEA makes clear that he authorized a strafing of the checkpoint personnel and that a single GBU-38 bomb be dropped on a guard shack. However, when he reviewed the target “at no point was there any discussion of vehicles in association with this strike,” and he did not “grant the authority to strike any vehicles.”
At this point, the report becomes heavily redacted, making it impossible to determine the specific chain of responsibility. However, it is clear that the A-10 pilot, after conducting multiple passes over the checkpoint, requests that the JTM be updated to include the two vehicles and all of the enemy passengers, or EPAX, since “these two vehicles appeared to be a part of the checkpoint.” The “Dynamic Targeting Chief” then checks with an unnamed “Battle Director” and verbally updates the JTM to authorize the A-10 to strike the vehicles. (This whole updating process takes only 80 seconds.) The A-10 pilot then repeatedly strafes “the EPAX and vehicles” and drops one bomb on the guard shack. The pilot later estimated “that time of flight of the [redacted] rounds is 3-4 seconds, from trigger squeeze to impact.” The investigating officer determined that “there is no evidence that the aircraft had any opportunity to detect civilians prior to their strike.” The presence of a child was only determined later by an imagery analyst and that “the small signature is only visible for approximately one second before rounds impact” and only by “pausing this tape on a large debriefing screen and measuring shadow height.” Needless to say, this degree of review and inspection is impossible when bombing a dynamic target.
The report ultimately reaches the critical conclusion, “The NCV [Non-Combat Victims] = 0 objective was not met,” (bold included in original), but then fully redacts the details of the “three execution errors leading to this objective not being met.” The reader can only wonder what those errors were or what corrective steps were implemented to ensure that they were not made again. Interestingly, the identity of the sender of the April 2 email was never determined, and there was no further communication from her. Thus, no financial compensation was ever offered for her destroyed Kia Sorrento nor was any given to the families of the four civilians killed. Who knows if any of the Iraqis impacted by the civilian casualties became more sympathetic to the Islamic State or felt alienated by coalition airstrikes?
On Sunday, President Barack Obama was specifically asked about “expanding the rules of engagement versus [the Islamic State].” To which Obama replied: “If we’re not careful about it … then you can alienate the very populations that you need to win over, because ultimately those are the folks who are going to have to drive ISIL out, stomp it out all the way.” The president seems to understand the dangers of dynamic targeting and collateral damage — and yet the paucity of publicly released investigations or claims of such events belies that there’s a real, ongoing problem here. Let’s restate the facts: 8,300 airstrikes, 16,000 Islamic State targets destroyed, more than 20,000 Islamic State fighters killed — and only two claims of collateral damage. Either the U.S.-led coalition is really, really, really good at bombing these days, or they are shooting first and not asking questions later.
Photo credit: SAMEER AL-DOUMY/AFP/Getty Images