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

Wednesday, December 2, 2015

A death sentence for battling Syria’s censors?

This photo of Bassel Khartabil wearing a Palestine-themed necklace is one of only a handful that Noura Ghazi has of her husband after the Syrian government confiscated their computers.
Budour Youssef Hassan-1 December 2015
Bassel Khartabil’s loved ones have been kept in the dark about his fate. Although the Palestinian software developer is believed to have been sentenced to death in Syria, this has not been officially confirmed. Some rumors suggest that the execution has already been carried out.
The lack of reliable information is proving extremely stressful for his wife, Noura Ghazi.
“I’m losing weight and my hair is falling out,” Ghazi said. “I don’t even know whether he’s alive or dead.”
In October this year, Khartabil was transferred from Adra, a prison in Damascus, to an unknown location.
The following month Ghazi was contacted by people claiming to be insiders in the Syrian government. They told her that Khartabil had been sentenced to death.
She has not been given further details. The only thing she has been able to verify, with the help of other detainees in Adra, is that military police had removed Khartabil from his cell in that prison.
Khartabil, also known as Bassel Safadi, has been imprisoned since 2012. As a result, he and Ghazi have been forced to live apart for most of their relationship.
They met in April 2011, at a time when there was much hope among political activists. Taking heart from the unarmed uprisings that brought down dictators in Egypt and Tunisia earlier that year, they joined a social movement against Bashar al-Assad’s autocratic rule.
Indeed, their first meeting occurred when both were on their way back from a protest in Douma, a city near Damascus.
Khartabil was in Syria on vacation at the time. He held a job in Singapore and had originally planned to return there. That changed, however, after he met Ghazi, a human rights lawyer.
Khartabil used his computer skills as part of a quest for freedom. He provided the Electronic Frontier Foundation, an international civil liberties group, with information about websites blocked by Assad’s regime.

Romantic

“He wasn’t a typical Internet geek,” Ghazi said during a Skype interview from Damascus, where she pledges to remain. “He is unbelievably romantic. He used to give me a red rose every day since we became lovers until the day of his imprisonment.”
The couple were to get married in March 2012. Just a few days before their scheduled wedding date, Khartabil was arrested by Syria’s military intelligence services.
He was interrogated and tortured for five days, then brought to his home, where his computers were confiscated. For the following nine months, he was held incommunicado in two military-run detention centers.
Eventually, Khartabil was taken to Adra in December 2012. Although Adra is nominally a civilian prison, Khartabil was tried by a military prosecutor.
At no point was he allowed to have a lawyer. He was not informed of what charges he faced.
The move brought a modicum of relief to Ghazi as she was now able to visit her fiancé. The couple managed to sign their marriage contract in prison.
A political dissident who was held in Adra at the same time as Khartabil said it was deeply moving to see Ghazi visit her new husband.
“I was filled with hope every time I saw those two beautiful lovers reunite in such a tainted place,” the former prisoner told The Electronic Intifada on condition of anonymity.
Khartabil tried to keep his mind active within the prison. He and fellow inmates arranged classes in Arabic, English and mathematics. As they were only permitted to visit the prison library once a week, ardent readers within the prison had books smuggled in from outside.
Nonetheless, Khartabil became increasingly depressed. His wife was his sole source of strength.

Silenced by fear

Khartabil is one of more than 1,000 Palestinians imprisoned in Syria. At least 427 Palestinians have died since 2011 after being tortured in Syrian jails, according to the Action Group for Palestinians of Syria.
Almost certainly, those figures are underestimates. According to Ghazi, it is “to be expected” that some families have chosen not to publicize the detention of a loved one. “For more than 40 years, we have been silenced by fear,” she said.
Born in Damascus in 1981, Khartabil belonged to a family from Safed in the Galilee region of historic Palestine. It was attacked by Zionist forces during the Nakba, the 1948 ethnic cleansing of Palestine’s towns and villages.
Khartabil was committed to both the struggle for Palestine’s liberation and to achieving political change in Syria. According to his wife, he was committed to “collective emancipation.”
He is one of many Palestinians to have taken considerable risks in Syria. His bravery is similar to that of Niraz Saied, a photographer who grew up in Yarmouk, a Palestinian refugee camp in Damascus.
Saied photographed Yarmouk while it was being bombed from the air by Syrian government forces. He wasarrested and jailed by Syria in October this year.
Khatarbil’s convictions were shared by his wife. “I grew up in a [Syrian] family that considered the Palestinian cause our own,” Ghazi said.
“The walls of our house were saturated with maps of Palestine and images of Handalah,” she added, referring to the iconic refugee boy drawn by the assassinated cartoonist Naji al-Ali.
When she once told Khartabil that Palestine was the only place she was prepared to live, apart from Syria, tears welled up in his eyes. Asserting the right of Palestinian refugees to return home was his “ultimate dream,” Ghazi said.
Ghazi always knew that challenging the Damascus regime carried risks. Her own father, a political dissident, had been jailed when Hafez al-Assad, Bashar’s father, was president during the 1980s.
Still, she cannot understand why the regime is so determined to punish her husband at a time when Syria is at risk from extremist groups like Islamic State.
“If anyone can offer an alternative to terrorism and extremism and can actually rebuild the country and give it some hope, it is Bassel and people like him,” she said. “But they are jailed, tortured and threatened with execution.”
Ghazi has kept herself busy by writing a book about her husband. It is partly based on letters she wrote to him in Adra, which Khartabil has translated from Arabic to English.
She is hoping to publish the book soon. Her dream is that its publication will coincide with his release from prison. But she is finding it hard to remain optimistic.
“If I see him again, I might just pass out,” she said. “I just want to hug him and never let go. I want to tell him that my life isn’t worth living without him. Our country is burning; Bassel and I are two small details amid the wreckage.”
Budour Youssef Hassan is a Palestinian writer and law graduate based in occupied Jerusalem. Blog:budourhassan.wordpress.com. Twitter: @Budour48

Russia accuses Erdogan family of doing business with IS

Russia's defence ministry says it has proof Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan and his family are involved in the illegal smuggling of oil from Islamic State-held territory in Syria and Iraq.

(Isis: how the terror group made its billions)
Channel 4 NewsWEDNESDAY 02 DECEMBER 2015
In a briefing in Moscow, defence ministry officials displayed satellite images which they said showed oil tankers heading from IS territory to Turkey.
The officials did not say what evidence they had that President Erdogan and his family were involved, an allegation he has strongly denied.
Russian Deputy Defence Minister Anatoly Antonov said: "Turkey is the main consumer of the oil stolen from its rightful owners, Syria and Iraq.
"According to information we've received, the senior political leadership of the country - President Erdogan and his family - are involved in this criminal
business."

'Marvellous family business'

Mr Antonov said President Erdogan's son, Bilal, headed a big energy company, while his son-in-law, Berat Albayrak, had been appointed energy minister. "What a marvellous family business," he added.
The ministry said the same criminal networks which were smuggling oil from Islamic State-held areas to Turkey were also supplying weapons, equipment and training to the extremist group.
Last week, President Erdogan said Turkey only bought oil from legitimate sources and was taking steps to combat smuggling. He called on those making the allegations to provide proof and said he would resign if the claims were shown to be true.

Plane shot down

Moscow's relationship with Ankara has deteriorated since Turkey shot down a Russian military plane on the Turkey/Syria border that it said had strayed into Turkish air space.
Last week's confrontation is the most serious between a Nato member (Turkey) and Russia in half a century.
Russia and Turkey are also at odds over the Assad regime in Syria, which Moscow is trying to bolster and Ankara would like to see removed.

Iraqis think the U.S. is in cahoots with the Islamic State, and it is hurting the war


While testifying before the House Armed Services Committee on Dec. 1, U.S. Defense Secretary Ash Carter said that the United States is deploying a specialized expeditionary targeting force to help Iraq put additional pressure on Islamic State. (Reuters)

December 1

 On the front lines of the battle against the Islamic State, suspicion of the United States runs deep. Iraqi fighters say they have all seen the videos purportedly showing U.S. helicopters airdropping weapons to the militants, and many claim they have friends and relatives who have witnessed similar instances of collusion.

The Islamic State is one of the most well-funded terrorist organizations in the world. So where does it get its money? (Jorge Ribas/The Washington Post)

Photographer accused of sexually assaulting teens at his studio

Photographer
Tuesday, December 1, 2015
A 56-year-old Toronto photographer is being accused of using his job to prey on teenage girls during shoots.
Toronto police say the man owned a business called Y2K Studios, which was located in a plaza in Scarborough in the 2000s. It also went by the name of Siva’s Studio.
During that time, police allege the accused sexually assaulted teenaged girls who paid for his services as a photographer.
On Monday, a suspect identified as Sinnarajah Sivasubramaniam turned himself in to police in Scarborough.
CP24 Toronto's Breaking NewsHe was charged with three counts of sexual assault and three counts of sexual interference.
He appeared in court at 1911 Eglinton Avenue East on Monday morning.
Police believe there may be other victims who have not yet come forward.
Anyone with information regarding these incidents is asked to contact police at 416-808-4200, or Crime Stoppers at 416-222-8477 (TIPS).

Climate Change and Terrorism

climate_change
The idea is to cap the rate of global warming at 2% Celsius compared to the current 2.5 – 3 % C., by reducing the dependence on fossil fuels and shifting towards cleaner energies such as wind and solar power.
by Victor Cherubim
( December 1, 2015, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) The fights against terrorism and global warming are closely linked according to French President, Francois Hollande, as he opened the “Big Circus” of 145 World Nations’ Leaders, including President Maithripala Sirisena and some 195 participating nations at the “Conference sur les Changements Climatiques, at Paris –Le Bourget this morning 30 November which lasts until 11 December 2015.
Many of us know that the 2009 Copenhagen Accord on Climate Change was too ambitious, trying to cobble up a process of obligations on nations both large and small, with diverse economies and requiring vast sums of money involved in compensatory damages, that it was unworkable. We also know that US was not a party to the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, Thus some agreement at this UN Climate Change Conference in Paris, the 21 yearly session of the Conference of Parties (COP 21) to the 1992 UN Framework Convention, is eagerly awaited.
The Two Big Global Challenges today 
Many experts agree that Climate Change can contribute to an uncertain world order where terrorism can thrive. This is because no single government can on its own tackle floods, drought, rising sea levels which are likely to increase as the Earth warms, due to man-made emissions of Co2.
A recent report on Sustainability states:
“There are dangers in the world, these always have been and there always will be. Politicians are quite adept at identifying a dizzy array of possible threats, but they are lousy at putting those threats in perspective”
H.L.Mencken stated: “the whole aim of practical policies is to keep the populace alarmed (and hence led to safety) by menacing it with an endless series of hobgoblins, most of them imaginary.
Imaginary or not? 
Imaginary or not, tell the farmers in Bangladesh inundated with salt water from their rivers, the flood victims of Sri Lanka, the Maldivians with sea level rising, or the drought stricken people of Syria, that Climate Change has not exacerbated the damage to their way of life, and you will hear a different story.
Tell the same story to U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry and he will tell you that the crisis in Syria was not primarily caused by Climate Change, but the devastating drought over years in Syria clearly made a bad situation a lot worse.
UK Chief Scientific Advisor, David King has warned that the most severe problem that we are facing today is Climate Change, and he says more serious than the threat of terrorism.
Why Jobless?
Large numbers of young people all over the world are jobless and frustrated. Climate Change triggers severe disruption with ever widening consequences for local, regional and global security. Droughts, famines, weather related disasters could and do more than aggravate already existing tensions within and among the youth of nations, possibly threatening the survival of low lying island nations, destabilising global economy and inciting violence among the young.
Why Survival?
I need not hasten to state that Climate Change affects life support systems on which both human and other species are dependent on survival. Global surface temperature no doubt, has risen about 0.8% in the last 125 years. Since the beginning of time, creatures adapted to changes in their environment. Such adaptation has always meant survival of the fittest. Evolution no doubt works that way. But mankind has the advantage of being able to think ahead and prepare for the changes to come.
What needs to happen at COP 21 at Paris? 
The idea is to cap the rate of global warming at 2% Celsius compared to the current 2.5 – 3 % C., by reducing the dependence on fossil fuels and shifting towards cleaner energies such as wind and solar power.
That’s what needs to happen? Will that happen?

COP21: Coping With Climate Change


    Colombo Telegraph
By Asanga Abeyagoonasekera –November 30, 2015
Asanga Abeygoonasekera
Asanga Abeygoonasekera
Our civilization is fuelled 85% by fossil fuels, releasing 110 million tons of pollution into the thin atmospheric layer every 24 hours. As carbon dioxide levels increase temperatures, the effect of this energy is the cumulative equivalent of detonating 400,000 atomic bombs per day, 365 days per year” – Al Gore (Davos WEF, 2015)
The city of Paris, soon after the Friday the 13th attacks, will be hosting one of the largest global conferences titled the Paris Climate Conference (COP21) in Le Bourget. This conference aims to show the world that leaders believing in liberal democratic values aim at creating a better environment for the future standing united, despite obstacles.
In support of the Paris climate conference, top global CEO’s from 150 countries from 78 companies who generate $2.1 trillion of revenue have signed a declaration. They pledge to support public private partnership to secure a more prosperous world tacking the biggest global challenge –climate change. The aims of the conference include delivering a new climate change agreement that will put the world on track to a low-carbon and ensure a sustainable future while keeping the rise in global temperature to less than 2 degrees.
Negotiators from 195 countries will attempt to finalise a new treaty and political leaders from 147 countries will address this conference. Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena has united with global leaders at the United Nations Climate Change Conference of the Parties 21 (COP21). Sirisena has been a supporter of a better environment and efforts toward minimizing the carbon foot print from the days he was the Minister of Environment. The Sri Lankan President made a statement in New York while addressing the UN Summit for the Adoption of the Post-2015 Development Agenda. He states “Sri Lanka will be fully committed to dealing with the 13th Sustainable Development Goal relating to climate change, we will strive to minimize risks of possible environmental hazards.”
Unfortunately, his new government’s budget has increased the price of electric cars significantly discouraging electric vehicles. This needs to be revised if we are supporting a carbon free world as the entire world has moved towards this path- we need to support and encourage electric vehicles toward sustainable energy. Over the previous regime, the coal power plant implemented stood as a threat to our environment and future generations. It is important that the President initiates a strategic environment committee to overlook new initiatives and projects and identify sustainable environment friendly projects from ones that may lead to creating further environmental destruction.                                           Read More   

Record rains flood Tamil Nadu; more to come

People travel on a boat as they move to safer places through a flooded road in Chennai, December 2, 2015. REUTERS/Stringer




























The Morung ExpressDecember 2, 2015
The heaviest rainfall in over a century caused massive flooding across Tamil Nadu, driving thousands from their homes, shutting auto factories and paralysing the airport in capital Chennai.
The national weather office predicted three more days of torrential downpours in the southern state of nearly 70 million people.

Doctors Could 3D-Print Micro-Organs with New Technique


Researchers have figured out a way to print 3D blocks of living stem cells
LiveScienceby Charles Q. Choi,-December 01, 2015

Gone are the days when 3D printers merely built plastic trinkets — scientists say 3D-printed structures loaded with embryonic stem cells could one day help doctors print out micro-organs for transplant patients.

Embryonic stem cells, obtained from human embryos, can develop into any kind of cell in the body, such as brain tissue, heart cells or bone. This property makes them ideal for use in regenerative medicine — repairing and replacing damaged cells, tissues and organs.

Scientists typically experiment with embryonic stem cells by dosing them with biological cues that guide them toward developing into specific tissue types — a process called differentiation. This process begins with the cells forming spherical masses called embryoid bodies — an activity that mimics the early stages of embryonic development. [7 Cool Uses of 3D Printing in Medicine]

Previous research suggested the best way to grow embryonic stem cells is not in flat lab dishes, but in 3D environments that mimic how these cells might develop in human bodies. 
Recently, scientists developed 3D printers for embryonic stem cells. A 3D printer works by depositing layers of material, just as ordinary printers lay down ink, except it can also lay down flat layers on top of one another to build 3D objects.

Until now, 3D printers for embryonic stem cells just generated flat arrays or simple mounds, called "stalagmites," of cells. Now, researchers say they have, for the first time, developed a way to print 3D structures laden with embryonic stem cells.

"We are able to apply a 3D-printing method to grow embryoid bodies in a controlled manner to produce highly uniform blocks of embryonic stem cells," study co-author Wei Sun, a professor of mechanical engineering at Tsinghua University in Beijing and Drexel University in Philadelphia,told Live Science.

In principle, these blocks could be used like Lego bricks to build tissues"and potentially even micro-organs," Sun added.

In experiments, the researchers simultaneously printed out mouse embryonic stem cells with a hydrogel, the same kind of material from which soft contact lenses are made. Because embryonic stem cells are relatively fragile, the scientists made sure to protect the cells as much as possible — for instance, by finding the most comfortable temperature for them and increasing the size of the nozzle used to print them out.
Ninety percent of the cells survived the printing process, according to the new study. The cells proliferated into embryoid bodies within the hydrogel scaffolds and generated the kind of proteins that would be expected from healthy embryonic stem cells, the researchers said. The scientists also noted that they could dissolve the hydrogel to harvest the embryoid bodies.
The size and uniformity of embryoid bodies can greatly influence what types of cells they become. The researchers said their new technique resulted in better control over embryoid body size and uniformity than previous methods could achieve.

"The grown embryoid body is uniform and homogenous, and serves as [a] much better starting point for further tissue growth," Sun said in a statement. "It was really exciting to see that we could grow embryoid bodies in such a controlled manner."

"Our next step is to find out more about how we can vary the size of the embryoid body by changing the printing and structural parameters, and how varying the embryoid body size leads to 'manufacture' of different cell types," study co-lead author Rui Yao an assistant professor at Tsinghua University in Beijing, said in a statement.

In the long term, the researchers would like to print different kinds of embryoid bodies side by side. "This would promote different cell types developing next to each other, which would lead the way for growing micro-organs from scratch within the lab," Yao said in a statement.
The scientists detailed their findings online Nov. 4 in the journal Biofabrication.
Follow Live Science @livescienceFacebook & Google+. Original article on Live Science.

Tuesday, December 1, 2015

Evidence of another torture cell revealed in buildings formerly occupied by Sri Lanka's army
01 December 2015
Evidence that a torture cell existed in the Varani army camp was released by former Tamil National Alliance parliamentarian Suresh Premachandran on Monday.


Mr Premachandran said that he had been shown a house occupied the army that was used as a torture cell in area formerly occupied by Sri Lanka's army in Jaffna.


The 526 division had occupied the house until May 2014 said the former TNA MP.  Mr Premachandran added that blood prints on the wall suggested that people taken to the army camp for inquiry were tortured in the room. 

UN confirms existence of secret torture camps in Sri Lanka, calls on gov to reveal other possible locations (18 Nov 2015)Sri Lanka continues 'multifaceted assault of terror' on Tamils under new government (28 Jul 2015)

Tamils still held in secret Sri Lankan military camps (31 Mar 2015)


வரணியிலும் சித்திரவதை முகாம் : சான்றுகள் இருப்பதாக சுரேஸ் தெரிவிப்பு

Diaspora Hails De-listing, Offers Assistance

Father S. J. Emmanuel and David Poopalapillai--------------------------------------V. Rudrakumaran
by Easwaran Rutnam-Tuesday, December 01, 2015
Reconciliation moves in Sri Lanka has received a much needed boost with the Tamil Diaspora offering assistance after the government de-listed several organizations accused of having links with the LTTE.

Sri Lankan Tamil Politics, Sumanthiran And Wigneswaran – OpEd


BY  
Eurasia Review
The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) emerged as the chief political entity representing the Tamil community in Sri Lanka with the downfall of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in 2009. Despite the lack of meaningful political achievements in the last six years, the party seems to be gaining more acceptance within the Tamil community. This is evident from the fact that in the last general election, the party managed to increase its parliamentary representation by two more seats. Therefore, the developments and/or issues within the party have the capacity to impact the interest of the Tamil community. This article looks at a possible leadership struggle within the TNA.

Sambandan’s Leadership

Rajavarothayam Sambandan, as the leader of the party, was in an unenviable position after 2009, due primarily to three reasons. One, the party lacked decision making experience as the LTTE made all decisions, and the TNA was expected to simply carry out those decisions. The party did its best to implement LTTE’s political decisions. Two, during the war, the party did not operate in a normal political environment, which damaged its capacity to develop a culture of inclusiveness and democratic decision making. At the operational level as well as the decision making level, it is in fact a party of few individuals. Three, it is a coalition of Tamil political parties, which compelled the leadership to focus more on party cohesiveness rather than socio-political issues of the community.
Presently, Sambandan is pretty elderly and he may probably retire from active politics sooner rather than later. His pace is already too slow. Sambandan’s retirement would force the TNA and the Tamil community to search for a new leadership from within the next generation (not in terms of age) of Tamil politicians. This is where the focus could turn to Canagasabapathy Wigneswaran and Mathiaparanam Sumanthiran. Both have been creating controversies and have been at loggerheads. Perhaps, the war has already been started between the two. The cold-war between Wigneswaran and Sumanthiran is certainly on.

Wigneswaran’s Politics

Wigneswaran’s nomination for the chief minister position of the Northern Provincial Council (NPC) raised many eyebrows. He was an outsider and lacked political experience. These two elements, probably contributed to Wigneswaran’s politics as the Chief Minister. Wigneswaran’s politics in the last two years point to two clear trends: (1) he has been radicalized, and (2) his actions are divisive.
Wigneswaran probably was the most moderate Tamil chief ministerial candidate the South could yearn for in 2013. For example, Wigneswaran, in the run up to the Northern Provincial election, accused political parties in Tamil Nadu for unnecessarily interfering and taking advantage of the Sinhala-Tamil issue, which he insisted was an internal affair. He also wanted the Tamil Nadu parties to stay away from the Sri Lankan conflict so that the Sinhala and Tamil people could find a solution on their own without outside involvement.
This was exactly the Sinhala position vis-à-vis the conflict. Tamils traditionally refused to accept the “internal problem” argument and were hell-bent on internationalizing the conflict. Since, Wigneswaran’s position went against Tamil nationalist views, the TNA had to claim that this was Wigneswaran’s personal opinion; not of the party. This was in 2013.
Today, Wigneswaran certainly is one of the most assertive personalities within the Tamil polity. He calls the violence committed on the Tamil people during the last phase of the war “genocide” and wants international community to intervene to punish perpetrators of violence and to find a solution to the ethnic conflict. Recently, for example, during a meeting with Samantha Power, Wigneswaran emphasized the need to pressure the Sri Lankan government to address grievances of the Tamil people. He no longer believes that issues could be resolved bilaterally.
An interesting question is, why did Wigneswaran transform into a radical warrior suddenly? Perhaps, there are several reasons including the fact that the government is slow in finding solutions to Tamil issues. However, a notable feature is that he became really tough after the collapse of the Rajapaksa government. For example, he resisted the Sivajilingam sponsored “genocide” resolution in 2014. Reports indicate that Wigneswaran was “skeptical” of the use of the word “genocide” in the resolution. In 2015, Wigneswaran himself tabled the genocide resolution of the NPC.
This probably allows him to lead a hardline faction of the TNA and the Tamil community. However, he is engaged in radical politics while alienating the TNA as a party. After winning the chief ministers position with the assistance of TNA votes, Wigneswaran decided to be “neutral” in the last parliamentary election. However, he indirectly asked the Tamil people to vote for the Tamil National People’s Front (TNPF). Was there an ethical problem in asking (indirectly) the Tamil voters not to vote for the party while continuing with the position secured with the TNA votes?
Wigneswaran did not think so.
Wigneswaran’s attitude certainly created a rift within the TNA, with Sumanthiran taking the charge against the Chief Minister. It would be interesting to see, if the “neutral” Wigneswaran will seek the TNA sponsorship in the next provincial council election or lead his own group. In fact, Wigneswaran presently maintains that he is not a member of the TNA and he does not have to be loyal to the party. The TNA obviously, is struggling to effectively deal with Wigneswaran’s revolt.

Sumanthiran’s Theories

Wigneswaran’s recent politics should have made Sumanthiran’s cause relatively easy. However, the new politician has been making statements that has created resentment against him within the Tamil community. First, Sumanthiran went to Switzerland and claimed that what happened during the last phase of the war, according to internationally accepted definitions, was not “genocide.” It sounded like Sumanthiran was arguing in the International Court of Justice, of course representing the offender.
He also called Wigneswaran’s genocide resolution “foolish.” The Tamils were upset and blamed Sumanthiran for serving the agenda of external forces. Sumanthiran missed the points that the Tamils have been using the term genocide to mean that serious acts of violence were committed on their community and the genocide case will not go to an international court.
Adding to the Tamil frustration, Sumanthiran recently demanded that the NPC pass a resolution calling the Muslim expulsion from the North by the LTTE an act of “ethnic cleansing.” Remarkably, Sumanthiran claimed that if the NPC does not pass such a resolution, the world will not take their claims of genocide, seriously. There are two important factors here. One, Sumanthiran did not explain how an NPC resolution on Muslim expulsion would change the international attitude on the question of genocide. Two, if this is such an easy task, why did he not approach his party to sponsor a resolution in the NPC. After all, the NPC is controlled by the TNA.
Instead, he went public. Obviously, he was taking advantage of the opportunity to criticize Wigneswaran. Sumanthiran is also leading a demand for the ouster of Wigneswaran from the Party. Sumanthiran has been criticized heavily within the Tamil community for his recent attitude and according to reports from the North,even posters have come up against him.
Obviously, there has been a cold-war between the two most prominent next generation leaders of the TNA. Both obviously are leading factions loyal to them while being delegitimized among others. This could lead to an imminent crisis within the TNA, especially in the post-Sambandan era. One has to wait and see how the party will respond to this emerging challenge.