Peace for the World

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

Sunday, January 3, 2016

BBC Sinhala To End Nepotism; Looking For New Editor For Fresh Start

Colombo TelegraphJanuary 3, 2016

For the first time advertising the editor post of the BBC Sinhala Service, BBC World Service is to recruit a new editor to end nepotism and favouritism in the section, a source close to BBC told Colombo Telegraph.
BBCThe BBC has now advertised in its website, under the Careers Section the vacancy for the post of Editor of the Sinhala service, promising a salary in the range of 43000- 46000 sterling pounds per annum.
The advertisement says; “BBC Sinhala Editor will ensure content to the Sinhalese speaking audience in Sri Lanka and worldwide meets the highest standards of journalism and is always delivered in accordance with BBC editorial guidelines”. “It seems none of the permanent employees of the BBC Sinhala would be suitable to apply for the post”, someone who has seen the advertisement told Colombo Telegraph.
During last three years most of the senior BBC Sinhala broadcasters were sacked, forced to resign or removed from their duties and the section was under caretaker managers who were not the speakers of Sinhala Language.
Editor Priyath Liyanage was removed from his editorial duties in November 2013 due to unsound editorial judgements and since then BBC Sinhala service has been without a sitting editor to oversee the day today administrational functions.
In 2015, Senior Producer Chandana Keerthi Bandara was sacked on bullying and harassment charges and Producer M. J. R. David had to resign from his post due to ill health and also following a bullying and harassment allegations. The only producer remaining at the BBC Sinhala Wimalasena Hewage is to take voluntary redundancy with the proposed restructuring, Colombo Telegraph reliably learns.
Of the remaining two senior staff, presenter Saroj Pathirana was accused of a bogus marriage to get permanent residency in the United Kingdom. It is alleged that he married a woman who had her first marriage when Pathriana was a seven years old boy and the issue is now under investigation, Colombo Telegraph further learns.
                                                                                               Read More

Alliged War Criminal Blair wants to be peacemaker in Sri Lanka


( January 3, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Will former British Prime Minister Tony Blair be the latest peace maker in Sri Lanka’s reconciliation process?
The talk in the corridors of the Foreign Ministry in Colombo is that the prospects are high. They say the overtures to join in came from Blair, Britain’s Labour Prime Minister from 1997 to 2007. His main occupation now is a consultancy business and engaging in charitable work. He was also a West Asia peace maker who made more than 150 visits to the region, alas, to no avail.
One FO source whispered that he is now in contact with Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera with regard to his possible new assignment. The Foreign Minister was in Britain on holiday recently. The FO source pointed out that it was during Blair’s tenure that the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) set up its so called headquarters in London despite an official ban on the terrorist organisation. Then, when even former President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga, sought meetings with him through diplomatic channels during her frequent visits to Britain, she was understandably, rebuffed. The British Premier’s office took up the position that the then Sri Lankan President was merely trying to make what was a private visit seem an official one back to her constituency at home.
Now, that peace has arrived in Sri Lanka, the man who allowed Tiger guerrillas to direct a war from Sri Lanka is hell bent on accelerating the reconciliation process which is largely under Kumaratunga. Has he given up on West Asia and looking for a new assignment? Well, at least some of Blair’s new friends in Sri Lanka believe so.
Israel indicts two in deadly arson attack on Palestinian home


 Israeli prosecutors brought formal charges on Sunday against two Jewish Israelis accused of killing three Palestinians, all members of one family, in an arson attack in July.

Islamic State video shows murder of five 'British spies'

Terror group publishes execution video as it threatens UK with new terror attacks and call David Cameron an 'imbecile'

















An English-speaking Islamic State (IS) fighter, who threatened Britain in a video 

Telegraph.co.ukBy - 03 Jan 2016
Intelligence agencies were hunting a new ‘Jihadi John’ after an Islamic extremist with a British accent murdered five men accused of spying for the UK.
In a video released on social media the masked gunman warned David Cameron that the West could never win in the war against Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (Isil), while mocking the impact of RAF airstrikes.

India's Afghan consulate attacked after deadly air base siege

MailOnline - news, sport, celebrity, science and health storiesBy AFP-3 January 2016
Explosions and gunfire rang out Sunday as militants attempted to storm the Indian diplomatic mission in Afghanistan's Mazar-i-Sharif city, following a deadly assault on an air base in India near the Pakistan border.
The attacks threaten to derail Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi's bold diplomatic outreach to arch-rival Pakistan following his first official visit to Afghanistan.
No group has so far claimed responsibility for the raid on the consulate in the northern Afghan city, the latest in a series of assaults on Indian installations in the country.
 This photograph taken from a helicopter shows an aerial view of Mazar-i-Sharif in Balkh province on February 4, 2013
This photograph taken from a helicopter shows an aerial view of Mazar-i-Sharif in Balkh province on February 4, 2013 ©Noorullah Shirzada (AFP/File)
"We are being attacked," an Indian consulate official told AFP by telephone from inside the heavily-guarded compound.
"Fighting is still going on."
The official, who was hunkered down in a secure area within the complex, said all consulate employees were safe and accounted for.
Loud grenade explosions and gunshots were heard as an unknown number of assailants mounted the attack from a building close to the consulate, prompting Afghan forces to cordon off the area.
"The area is completely blocked by our forces," said Shir Jan Durrani, a police spokesman in Mazar-i-Sharif, the capital of the relatively tranquil province of Balkh.
"The attackers are holed up inside the building. We are cautiously conducting our clearance operation to avoid any civilian casualties."
Vikas Swarup, an Indian foreign ministry spokesman, told AFP that no Indian casualties had been reported so far.
The attack comes as Indian forces were again scrambled Sunday following a deadly assault by suspected Islamist insurgents on an air force base in the northern Indian state of Punjab.
Seven soldiers and six attackers were confirmed killed in the raid on the Pathankot base, which triggered a 14-hour gun battle Saturday.
Officials suspect the gunmen belong to the Pakistan-based Jaish-e-Mohammed, the group that staged the 2001 attack on the Indian parliament which brought the two countries to the brink of war.
The attack -- a rare targeting of an Indian military installation outside disputed Kashmir -- threatens to undermine the fragile peace process between the nuclear-armed rivals.
- 'Proxy war' -
The violence comes a week after Modi paid a surprise visit to Pakistan, the first by an Indian premier in 11 years.
The visit immediately followed a whirlwind tour of Kabul, where Modi inaugurated an Indian-built parliament complex and gifted three Russian-made helicopters to the Afghan government.
India has been a key supporter of Kabul's post-Taliban government, and analysts have often pointed to the threat of a "proxy war" in Afghanistan between India and Pakistan.
Pakistan -- the historic backers of the Taliban -- has long been accused of assisting the insurgents, especially with attacks on Indian targets in Afghanistan.
The latest unrest comes amid a renewed international push to revive peace talks with the resurgent militant movement.
Afghanistan and Pakistan are set to hold a first round of dialogue between Afghanistan, Pakistan, the US and China on January 11 to lay out a comprehensive roadmap for peace.
Pakistan, which wields considerable influence over the Taliban, hosted a milestone first round of talks in July but the negotiations stalled when the insurgents belatedly confirmed the death of longtime leader Mullah Omar.
The attack on the consulate in Mazar-i-Sharif marks the latest attack on an Indian target in Afghanistan.
In 2008, a car bomb at the Indian embassy in Kabul killed 60 people and the embassy was again hit by a suicide strike in 2009.
Nine civilians, including seven children, were killed in August 2013 when suicide bombers targeted the Indian consulate in the main eastern Afghan city of Jalalabad.
And in May 2014, gunmen launched a pre-dawn attack on India's consulate in the main western Afghan city of Herat before being repelled by security forces.
 Indian air force personnel gather at the airforce base in Pathankot on January 3, 2016
Indian air force personnel gather at the airforce base in Pathankot on January 3, 2016 ©Narinder Nanu (AFP)
 Indian army soldiers take up position on the perimeter of an airforce base in Pathankot on January 3, 2016
Indian army soldiers take up position on the perimeter of an airforce base in Pathankot on January 3, 2016 ©Narinder Nanu (AFP)

4 gunmen, 2 troops dead in attack on Indian air base

Pathways at the University of JohannesburgIndian security forces stand guard near a road barrier outside an Indian air force base in Pathankot, 430 kilometers (267 miles) north of New Delhi, India, Saturday, Jan. 2, 2016. Pic: AP.
by 3rd January 2016
AT least four gunmen and two Indian troops are dead after suspected militants entered an Indian air force base near the border with Pakistan.
Security personnel eventually secured the Pathakot base on Saturday evening after a 14 hour long gun battle.
The attack comes just a week after the first visit by an Indian prime minister to Pakistan in 12 years and is seen as an attempt to undermine peace initiatives between the two nations.
The assault began at 03:30 when a group of gunmen dressed in Indian army uniforms entered the living quarters.
Associated Press:
Air force spokeswoman Rochelle D’Silva says the gunmen entered the living quarters of the Pathankot air force base, about 430 kilometers (267 miles) north of New Delhi, but were not able to penetrate the area with fighter helicopters and other equipment.
Press Trust of India news agency is quoting police as saying that four attackers have been killed following the hours long gun battle and police have started an operation to clear a wider area of other possible intruders.
Gunfire was heard later in the morning and an air force helicopter was seen firing at an area inside the base, but police confirmed the base was secure by the afternoon and troops were continuing to comb the area.
The BBC said it is not clear who the attackers are but suspicion is falling on Kashmiri militant groups in Pakistan.
Pathankot is close to India’s border with Pakistan and lies on the highway that connects Jammu and Kashmir with the rest of India. Kashmir is divided between India and Pakistan but claimed by both nations.
“If there is any kind of terror attack on India, we will give it a fitting reply” – Indian Home Minister Rajnath Singh.
Both Pakistan and India condemned the attack.
Modi, at a speech in the southern city of Mysore, said: “I congratulate the nation’s security forces for turning the intentions of our country’s enemies into dust. They didn’t let them succeed. And I salute the martyrdom of the soldiers who sacrificed their lives.”
Pakistan’s Foreign Ministry condemned the attack. “Building on the goodwill created during the recent high level contacts between the two countries, Pakistan remains committed to partner with India as well as other countries in the region to completely eradicate the menace of terrorism afflicting our region,” it said in a statement.
Indian Home Minister Rajnath Singh told reporters that India wants peace with Pakistan, but “if there is any kind of terror attack on India, we will give it a fitting reply.”
Associated Press
Saudi Arabia severs ties with Iran

Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir announces that Riyadh has cut ties with Iran following protests at Saudi's Tehran embassy 

File photo shows Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir (AA) 

Sunday 3 January 2016
Saudi Arabia's foreign minister announced on Sunday that his country had severed ties with Iran, in a move that exacerbates already-existing tensions between the two regional powerhouses and threatens to derail peace prospects in Syria and Yemen.
Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir said that cutting ties was a response to Iranian demonstrators storming Saudi's Tehran embassy to protest against Riyadh's execution of Shia cleric Nimr al-Nimr.
Jubeir also said that all Iranian diplomats must leave Saudi Arabia within 48 hours.
He added that the attack on the Saudi Embassy in Tehran was deliberate and that the contents of the embassy were destroyed. There was no co-operation from the Iranian authorities, he said.
Most of the Saudi staff of the embassy have left via a flight from the UAE and are now in Dubai, the foreign minister added. He also accused Iran of hosting terrorists, including the leaders of al-Qaida. 
In a calm, but angry tones, Jubeir claimed to have defeated Iran in Yemen, referring to the Saudi-led coalition against Houthi fighters in the country. He added that Saudi Arabia would face Iran wherever it surfaced. 
 
The United States responded the Saudi move by encouraging diplomatic engagement. 

“We believe that diplomatic engagement and direct conversations remain essential in working through differences and we will continue to urge leaders across the region to take affirmative steps to calm tensions,” the Guardian quoted an Obama administration official as saying.
 
On Saturday, a mob attacked the Saudi embassy in Tehran and a consulate in second city Mashhad amid protests against Saudi Arabia's execution of Nimr.
 
The 56-year-old, a force behind 2011 anti-government protests in eastern Saudi Arabia, was among 47 convicted men put to death on Saturday in the kingdom.
 
The others were Shia activists and Sunnis who the Saudi interior ministry said were involved in al-Qaeda attacks, with some beheaded and others shot by firing squad.
 
Iran arrested 44 people over the embassy assault, which President Hassan Rouhani described as "totally unjustifiable".
 
But the Islamic Republic's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei condemned Nimr's execution, saying "God will not forgive" Saudi Arabia for putting him to death.
 
Jubeir responded on Sunday by saying: "Iran's history is full of negative interference and hostility in Arab issues, and it is always accompanied by destruction."

'Sectarian tensions' 

Nimr's execution was widely condemned.

UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said he was "deeply dismayed" while the United States warned that Riyadh risked "exacerbating sectarian tensions at a time when they urgently need to be reduced".
 
The European Union, Germany and France deplored the executions, while Britain, which is careful to protect trade and investment links with Saudi Arabia, reiterated its opposition to the death penalty.
 
Saudi Arabia's interior ministry said the executed men were convicted of adopting the radical "takfiri" ideology, joining "terrorist organisations" and implementing "criminal plots".
 
Executions have soared in Saudi Arabia since King Salman ascended the throne a year ago with 153 people put to death in 2015, nearly twice as many as in 2014, for crimes ranging from murder to drug trafficking, armed robbery, rape and apostasy.
 
Human Rights Watch said Saturday's "mass execution was the largest since 1980" when 68 militants who had seized Mecca's Grand Mosque were beheaded, and called it a "shameful start to 2016".
 
Amnesty International said Saudi Arabia was using Nimr's execution "to settle political scores".
 
But on Sunday Jubeir said those executed had received "fair and transparent" trials and were convicted of carrying out "terrorist operations that led to the deaths of innocents".
 
Relations between Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia and Shia-ruled Iran have been strained for decades, with Riyadh frequently accusing Tehran of interfering in Arab affairs.
 
Both countries are also divided over a raft of issues, namely the nearly five-year war in Syria, where Iran is allied with the government of embattled President Bashar al-Assad, and Yemen where Saudi is leading the fight against Zaidi Shia Houthi fighters it claims are backed by Iran.
- See more at: http://www.middleeasteye.net/news/breaking-saudi-arabia-severs-ties-iran-85335819#sthash.yDoyOP9J.dpuf

Refugee crisis could shake up German political landscape in 2016

German Chancellor and leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) Angela Merkel holds up her voting card during a vote on a resolution about refugees at the CDU party congress in Karlsruhe, Germany December 14, 2015. REUTERS/Kai Pfaffenbach
ReutersBY NOAH BARKIN-Sun Jan 3, 2016
German Chancellor and leader of the Christian Democratic Union (CDU) Angela Merkel holds up her voting card during a vote on a resolution about refugees at the CDU party congress in Karlsruhe, Germany December 14, 2015.REUTERS/KAI PFAFFENBACH
For the past decade, German politics has been a relatively dull affair, with Angela Merkel dominating at the national level and the major parties in agreement on all the big issues, from euro zone bailouts and refugees to the phase-out of nuclear energy.
But that may change in 2016, when five of Germany's 16 states hold elections in the build-up to the next federal vote a year later.
Not only is Chancellor Merkel looking more vulnerable than ever before because of her welcoming stance toward the hundreds of thousands of refugees fleeing war in the Middle East, but the rise of the anti-immigrant Alternative for Germany (AfD) party has injected a new element of surprise into the political landscape.
Add to that an unprecedented splintering of the electorate, which means that six parties have a legitimate shot of entering most state parliaments, and Germany's normally cozy, consensual politics begins to look a bit less predictable, and potentially more divisive, than it has in a long time.
The wild card is the threat of an attack by Islamist extremists on German soil, a risk highlighted on New Year's Eve when authorities received a tip that Iraqi and Syrian nationals were planning suicide bombings at train stations in Munich.
It could be fatal for Merkel, officials in Berlin acknowledge in private, if such an attack were carried out successfully by people who entered Europe with the flood of migrants, as was the case with two of the men involved in the Nov. 13 attacks in Paris.
Even if Germany is spared such a horror, the refugee crisis will continue to dominate the political debate this year, polarizing voters and emboldening Merkel's opponents on the right and left.
So far the most damaging attacks have come from her conservative sister party, the Bavarian Christian Social Union (CSU).
"If we don't see success in limiting the tide of refugees, we could have a grassroots political tremor in Germany," said one senior government official, who declined to be named because of the sensitivity of the issue.
"If Merkel doesn't deliver you could see the AfD approaching 20 percent in the polls," the official predicted.
AFD ON THE RISE
Currently the AfD is polling between 8-10 percent, roughly double the 4.7 percent the party won in the last federal election in 2013, when it narrowly failed to clear the 5 percent mark needed to enter the Bundestag.
That seems relatively harmless if you compare it to other like-minded parties across Europe, like the National Front in France, the Freedom Party in Austria or the Danish People's Party, which enjoy more than twice as much support.
But the AfD's rise looks more significant when one considers that it has occurred against a backdrop of infighting and financial trouble within the party that might have crushed it.
In the past half year, the party has weathered the departure of its founder, embarrassing slurs about African reproductive habits from one of its leading politicians, and a party financing law from the government that threatened to strip bare its coffers.
In response to the new law, the AfD asked its supporters for donations and raised roughly 2 million euros in just three weeks, a testament to its drawing power.
In three state elections that are due to be held in March, the AfD's newfound strength will be on stark display.
It is on track to win 7 percent in the western states of Baden-Wuerttemberg and Rhineland-Palatinate and roughly twice that in Saxony-Anhalt in the east.
"In every one of these elections, the performance of the AfD will be key in determining what constellations are possible," Torsten Krauel wrote in a front-page editorial in German daily Die Welt last week.
MORE FRAGMENTED
The rise of the AfD and a nascent comeback by the Free Democrats (FDP), a business-friendly, socially liberal party that was the kingmaker of German politics for decades before imploding in the last federal vote, means that there are now three legitimate right-of-center parties in Germany, including Merkel's conservative bloc.
Add to that the three leading parties of the left, the Social Democrats (SPD), Greens and hard-left "Linke", and German politics looks more fragmented than at any time since reunification in 1990.
Merkel could yet emerge as the big loser from the new German political landscape if she is unable to stem the tide of refugees in the months ahead.
If she is successful, it may be her coalition partner in Berlin, the SPD, who suffer most.
The rise of the AfD and return of the FDP would make it more difficult for the SPD to form left-leaning majorities at the state or federal level, condemning it to second-tier status for the foreseeable future.
And that weakness could turn the SPD into a more confrontational and unpredictable partner for Merkel as the next federal vote in 2017 approaches.
(Reporting by Noah Barkin; editing by John Stonestreet)

Italian government investigates after five pregnant women die in a week

Health ministry send teams to four hospitals in north of Italy, which has one of the world’s lowest maternal mortality rates
Italy’s health minister, Beatrice Lorenzin, who has called for investigations into the deaths of four heavily pregnant women. Photograph: AFP/Getty

 in Rome-Sunday 3 January 2016
The Italian government has launched a string of investigations after five heavily pregnant women died in less than a week, causing alarm in a country with a reputation for safe childbirth.
Italy’s health ministry has sent investigative teams to four hospitals in the north of the country following the deaths of women between seven and nine months pregnant.
In the most recent case, 30-year-old Giovanna Lazzari died on New Year’s Eve during an emergency caesarean at a hospital in Brescia. The mother-of-two was eight months pregnant and had been admitted two days earlier suffering from a fever.
“Giovanna sent me an SMS in the middle of the night, telling me she was in serious pain and that she wasn’t receiving attention from the doctors,” her husband, Roberto Coppini, told Ansa news agency.
He was later called to hospital by doctors and was told his wife had lost the baby, after which Lazzari was taken into surgery to remove the foetus. A hospital spokesperson was not immediately available to comment on media reports that Lazzari died of a haemorrhage.
Her death came two days after that of Marta Lazzarin, a 35-year-old travel blogger, who was taken to the emergency room in Bassano del Grappa suffering from fever and abdominal pain. According to reports, Lazzarin had already lost her baby when her waters broke, at seven months, and she subsequently suffered a heart attack.
Lazzarin’s husband, Chris, turned to their shared blog to publish a “bye, bye, my love” message, featuring a photograph of his pregnant wife and telling readers she had “flown to heaven”.
Days earlier, 39-year-old Angela Nesta also suffered a heart attack, shortly after giving birth to a stillborn baby at a Turin hospital. Her death came a day after Anna Massignan, 34, died on Christmas Day during an emergency caesarean in the Verona area.
The health minister, Beatrice Lorenzin, first ordered an investigation into the Turin case on Monday, while the other deaths prompted her to launch the broader investigation this weekend.
“[The task force] must ascertain if organisational faults contributed to the cause of deaths and if all the procedures to guarantee the quality and safety of care were respected,” the health ministry said in a statement. Representatives from the police, health agencies and local authorities have been ordered to report their findings to the ministry.
The fifth case, of a 23-year-old unnamed woman from Foggia, southern Italy, has not been included in the series of investigations. She died at full term while at home on 29 December, with the cause unknown, and doctors were able to save her baby by carrying out a postmortem caesarean.
The series of deaths has shocked Italy, which has a consistently low maternal mortality rate. Just four pregnancy-related deaths were recorded annually per 100,000 live births over the past five years, according to World Bank data. The UK ratio, falling from 10 to nine over the same period, is still more than twice as high as in Italy, while the US recorded a stable ratio of 14.
Although Italy is one of the world’s safest countries to have a baby, the birth rate has fallen significantly in recent years. Earlier this year, Lorenzin warned that Italy risked turning into a “dying country” as just 509,000 births were registered in 2014 – the lowest figure since the nation was unified in 1870.
While a falling birth rate reflects a broader trend across Europe, many Italians have said their country’s economic downturn has made it impossible to afford starting a family. Italy’s prime minister, Matteo Renzi, has attempted to overcome the financial hurdle by introducing a €80 (£59) monthly “baby bonus” for parents.
Visit loved ones with dementia even if they don't remember you - they still benefit, says charity 



  • By ANTHONY JOSEPH FOR MAILONLINE- 2 January 2016

    • MailOnline - news, sport, celebrity, science and health stories

    • The research was carried out by dementia charity Alzheimer's Society 
    • 42% of the public 'mistakenly' felt visits don't benefit them of the sufferer 
    • However, the charity added some sufferers still had an 'emotional memory
    • The charity said the findings showed a need for people to spend more time with relatives with the condition in order to prevent loneliness

    Visiting loved ones with dementia does benefit them even if they no longer recognise you, a charity claims.
    Research carried out by Alzheimer's Society said a poll of members of the public revealed 42% 'mistakenly' felt that once a loved one could stopped remembering them 'they don't benefit a lot from spending time with them'.
    The research also found 64% of people with dementia felt isolated from friends and family following diagnosis. 

    Dementia sufferers have an emotional memory, the Alzheimer's Society says

  • Dementia sufferers have an emotional memory, the Alzheimer's Society says

    Some 68% responded they would still keep up visits, but the charity said: 'Despite these good intentions, the lack of awareness of how important emotional memory is may mean that in their busy lives, people don't always follow up on their intentions and over half of those living with dementia are left feeling isolated.'
    The research also found 64% of people with dementia felt isolated from friends and family following diagnosis
    The research also found 64% of people with dementia felt isolated from friends and family following diagnosis

  • The charity added that some sufferers still had an 'emotional memory', saying visits could 'stimulate feelings of familiarity, happiness, comfort and security'.
    Two in five (41%) also said being unable to recognise friends and family would make them feel most isolated, ahead of a relationship breakdown or divorce at 19%. 
    In a separate survey of 300 people with dementia, 54% said they were rarely or no longer taking part in social activity and 51% said having someone to help them get involved would make them less lonely.
    Alzheimer's Society chief executive Jeremy Hughes said: ' After spending time with friends and family over the festive period, New Year can be a bleak and lonely time for people with dementia and their carers. 
    'It's so important for people with dementia to feel connected throughout the year.
    'Spending time with loved ones and taking part in meaningful activities can have a powerful and positive impact, even if they don't remember the event itself. 
    'We're urging people to get in touch with us and find out how we can help you stay connected.'

  • Saturday, January 2, 2016


    10th anniversary of 'Trinco 5' killings, still no justice

    02 January 2016


    Today marks the 10 years since the murder of five Tamil students, committed by Sri Lanka's Special Task Force, whilst they spent an afternoon on the beach in Trincomalee. 
    A memorial service was held in Trinco to remember the students that were killed by Sri Lanka's special forces.


    Photograph: TamilNet
    The five slain students, who were all 21-years-old when killed, are:
    Manoharan Ragihar (22.09.1985)

    Yogarajah Hemachchandra(04.03.1985)

    Logitharajah Rohan (07.04.1985)

    Thangathurai Sivanantha (06.04.1985)

    Shanmugarajah Gajendran (16.09.1985)
    To this day, no-one has been brought to justice for the murders.
    Earlier this year 12 people, including an Assistant Superintendent of Police, wereremanded over the killings. To date, none have been brought to trial. Instead, 2013 saw Kapila Jayasekara, who reportedly spearheaded the executions, promoted to DIG in the Amparai district.
    See a report by Tamils Against Genocide (TAG) into the murders, which indicates Jayasekara was present during the incident, with 6-7 armed masked soldiers, here.


    'We know the STF did it'

    Photograph: TamilNet
    Shortly after the murders, journalist Subramaniyam Sugirdharajan was shot deadafter publishing photos showing the bodies of the 5 students with point-blank gunshot injuries, disproving government claims that they were killed by a grenade explosion.

    In a 
    leaked US Embassy cable from Colombo in October 2006, the then US Ambassador to Sri Lanka Robert O. Blake met with Sri Lankan Presidential Advisor Basil Rajapaksa.
     
    The cable stated,
    "Speaking with surprising candor, Rajapaksa explained the GSL's efforts to prove that members of the Security Task Force (STF) murdered five students in Trincomalee in January: "We know the STF did it, but the bullet and gun evidence shows that they did not.  They must have separate guns when they want to kill some one. We need forensic experts. We know who did it, but we can't proceed in prosecuting them."


    'Unable or unwilling'
    The killings drew condemnation from various human rights organisations, with Jim McDonald, Sri Lanka Country Specialist of Amnesty International USA telling the Sunday Leader in 2013,
    “The failure to properly investigate this case despite a recommendation by a Presidential Commission of Inquiry established in 2006 and repeated in the 2011 report of the LLRC, clearly shows that Sri Lanka is either unable or unwilling to ensure accountability for human rights violations, leading victims and their families to seek justice at the international level”.
    Brad Adams, the Asia Pacific Director of Human Rights Watch, also said last year,
    "The government has claimed this case is a priority, including it in the now forgotten presidential commission of inquiry and in its response to the UN Human Rights Council, but actual progress in this case is sadly nonexistent".


    'They killed my son'
    The case became a rallying point for protestors, with over 700 activists in New York demanding justice for the killings, in 2012.
    Also in 2012, Amnesty International launched a “Write-for-Rights” campaign, highlighting the case of the “Trinco 5” and called for genuine investigations into this and the countless other human rights violations on the island.

    See the video below to hear Dr Manoharan, the father of one of the victims, speak about the campaign.
    Also see Amnesty International’s film on the murders entitled “Sri Lanka – Tell the Truth”below.