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

Thursday, January 21, 2016

Unholy crab walk etc


Editorial- 


No sooner had a Bill been presented to Parliament to discipline Buddhist monks than it was reported that some female MPs suffered sexual harassment at the hands of their male counterparts within the parliamentary premises. Minister Chandrani Bandara has undertaken to conduct an inquiry into the matter and submit its findings to Speaker Karu Jayasuriya. We bet our bottom dollar that nothing will come of the probe. In a country where mega bond scandals are swept under the carpet and serious allegations of corruption ministers level against one another go uninvestigated it is only wishful thinking that incidents of sexual harassment will be thoroughly probed and the culprits brought to book.

What is this world coming to when teachers are wary of taking children to Parliament owing to indecent brawls in which blows are freely exchanged and raw filth traded liberally, and female lawmakers are allegedly subjected to sexual harassment at the parliamentary complex itself?

Power seems to have more aphrodisiac properties than viagra. It causes politicians’ gray matter to diminish and their libido to go through the roof. Besides, a study is needed to find out whether there is a correlation between overnutrition which is common among male MPs thanks to heavily subsidised food in the parliamentary restaurant and their unusual concupiscence.

The same goes for provincial councillors. It was only the other day that a member of the Central Provincial Council found himself up a gum tree in Singapore, having groped a foreign woman. Central Province Chief Minister Sarath Ekanayake, in answer to a question from a journalist, chose to play down the incident calling it a minor matter. How would he have reacted if a female member of his family had been at the receiving end of that ‘minor matter’? Local government institutions also abound with anti-social elements of all sorts.

So, before recommending how errant monks should be dealt with lawmakers ought to put their own house in order as we have argued in a previous comment. They were only expected to confer legal validity to the Kathikawath of each Nikaya and Chapter and not to recommend what thoseKathikawath should contain as Ven. Prof. Bellanwila Wimalarathana Thera has told this newspaper in an interview published on the opposite page today.

President Maithripala Sirisena has promised to discuss the contents of the Kathikawath Bill with the members of Maha Sangha before it is ratified. Now that the government’s ill-conceived attempt has boomeranged, the President is obviously seeking to propitiate the monks on the warpath. The Bill at issue could not have been presented to Parliament in its present form without his blessings. The course of action he has proposed to make amends for the government’s betise may look sensible on the face of it, but the direct involvement of outsiders in amending a draft Bill already before the House may be inimical to parliamentary sovereignty. This is something those who jealously guard parliamentary privileges and sovereignty ought to give serious thought to. Here, one finds a textbook example of putting the cart before the horse. The government should have consulted the Maha Sangha in the process of drafting the Bill without plunging feet first into presenting it to Parliament. A way out may be for the government to bite the bullet and withdraw the Bill.

The only useful purpose the Kathikawath Bill has served is to galvanize the Nayake Theras into sitting up and taking notice of the pathetic situation the Sasana is in today owing to the misconduct of some monks. Had they risen from their slumber decades ago and taken action against the rogues in robes who have been enjoying the freedom of the wild ass to run riot in public on the pretext of championing pro-people causes, take to active dirty party politics and incite racial and religious violence perhaps there would not have been nay room for politicians to try to discipline monks.

There is no need for parliamentarians to make recommendation as regards Buddhist monks’ discipline. That is a task best left to the Maha Sangha and political leaders may play a supporting role. The Buddha himself introduced a code of ethics and guidelines for the Sangha 2,500 years ago. All that the present-day monks should do is to abide by Vinaya Pitaka consisting of rules governing the lives of Bhikkus and Bhikkunis besides procedures, conventions and etiquette required for healthy relations among monks and between the Maha Sangha and the laity. So, politicians need not expend their time and energy on a futile mission to reinvent the wheel.

If the Nayake Theras need legal recognition for the different Kathikawath already in existence, let the MPs do so without imposing dos and don’ts on monks.
Why we need to do more to attract FDI


Friday, 22 January 2016
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Sri Lanka in 2015 was way below the budget set for Foreign Direct Investments (FDI). The Government is making a huge effort to attract FDI because today FDI has become the major economic driver of economic growth. 

The effort made by the Prime Minister in Davos to attract new investment into Sri Lanka is a clear sign that the Government is ready to do business with the world. The private sector needs to support the effort and the bureaucratic system we have needs to overhauled in line with other markets.3

Today the most profound effect of FDI has been seen in developing countries where yearly FDI flows have increased. Today, China is at the forefront of FDI growth, followed by Russia, Brazil and Mexico.

Generally FDI refers to long-term participation by one country in another country. It usually involves participation in a JV, capital transfer, transfer of technology and expertise. There are two types of FDI: inward FDI and outward FDI, resulting in a net FDI inflow (positive or negative). There is substantial evidence that such investments benefits host countries.

In Sri Lanka, during periods of relative economic and political stability, FDI inflows have responded positively. Sri Lanka expects FDI to more than quadruple to $4 billion by 2020, currently we are less than $ 1 billion. Also with the advent and growth of the internet many traditional cases of FDI which required huge amount of capital and physical investments are slowly becoming obsolete. Therefore policymakers in developing countries must have the expertise to understand these new trends that has and will alter the playing field for FDI significantly.
 Benefits of FDI                                       READ MORE 

I saw Sumith pushed off the building, says wife

2016-01-21
Shashika Nishamani Munasinghe, the widow of Sumith Prasanna Munasinghe (29) who died after a controversial fall from a three-storey building in Embilipitiya two weeks ago, during a clash with the police said yesterday that she seen her husband being pushed off the building.

 Addressing a media briefing held in Maradana yesterday at which her daughter, mother and some of Sumith Prasanna’s relatives were also present, she said that they were not at all satisfied with the way the police investigations were conducted. 

“My husband was never involved in any sort of crime, but he had a habit of speaking out against injustice irrespective of the status of those responsible for the injustice. Today I have lost him because of that.

 "Attempts made by us to reveal what we saw that night have failed. The police ignored our revelations. There are many eye witnesses who are keen on giving statements to the police. But no statements from those who witnessed the incident were taken by the police during their so-called investigations,” she said. 

She described what she witnessed as follows.

 “At around 11.30 pm I heard a loud noise at the house party where my husband was helping the organisers. I came out of my house and ran towards that house. Several men were being beaten by men wielding batons. A police jeep was stopped in front. I ran here and there looking for my husband, despite my poor health. I found him arguing with some police officers. He was asking them not to break the law and to do their duty properly. I was afraid. I dragged him away and begged him to go home even if some injustice had been done. As we were leaving, the party organisers asked us to have dinner. Suddenly, some police officers came up and pointed my husband out to other police officers who were in plainclothes. They dragged my husband away by his collar. When I was clung to his hands, I was pushed away by the police. He was taken upstairs, then I heard the sound of glass breaking. I rushed upstairs and saw my husband being pushed out of the building. He was begging them not to beat him, but they paid no heed. Finally I found him on the floor in a pool of blood. No one offered to take him to hospital. Later he was taken to hospital in a three-wheeler but I lost him,” Sumith's weeping wife said.

 She said police had obstructed her when giving her statement at the DIG's office in Ratnapura. She was suspicious of the conduct of the police and the manner in which officers of the Embilipitiya Police and the DIG's office in Ratnapura recorded her complaint. 

The impartiality of the ongoing investigations was doubtful, she said. 

Meanwhile, Attorney at Law Vijitha G. Punchihewa, who is representing the victim’s relatives, asked the police to submit the police investigation report issued by DIG C.D. Wickramaratne on the death of Sumith Prasanna. 

Social activist Udul Premaratne, who is also a lawyer, said they would take legal action against, "another funny and dramatic turn of events" -- where Police Spokesman ASP Ruwan Gunasekara handled the witnesses on behalf of the police at the magisterial inquiry. 

He said this had already destroyed their expectation of an impartial hearing. (Piyumi Fonseka) 

Read More.

Rajitha lies to protect daughter-in-law

WEDNESDAY, 20 JANUARY 2016
Legal action would be taken against the statement made to the media by the Minister of Health Rajitha Senaratna on the 18th states the media spokesman for the GMOA Dr. Navin de Soysa.
Speaking at a media conference held yesterday the spokesman for the GMOA said the Minister of Health had told the media that at a meeting held between the Minister, the Prime Minister and the GMOA the GMOA had told the Prime Minister that GMOA had no objection to the medical school at Malabe but they had only an issue regarding its standard.
The spokesman for GMOA said legal action would be taken against the irresponsible statement of the Minister of Health who is also the co-cabinet spokesman and added that GMOA has not changed its stand of Malabe private medical school.
Minister Rajitha Senaratna, in the past, was one of the persons who was at the forefront in the campaign against Ragama private medical school that was taken over by the government. However, the complete change of his stance regarding the Malabe private medical school could be due to his daughter-in-law studying there state political analysts. At the media conference held by the Minister on the 18th a journalist suggested that he did not oppose SAITM at Malabe as his daughter-in-law was studying there.

Tackling The Burden Of Suicide In Sri Lanka

Colombo Telegraph
By Kasun Kodituwakku –January 21, 2016
Kasun Kodituwakku
Kasun Kodituwakku
Over 800,000 suicide deaths are reported every year, 75% of these origination from the lower and middle-income countries predominantly within Asia.
Sri Lanka was listed as having the 4th highest suicide rate in the WHO report of 2014. The conflict-ridden history of the country has meant that suicide has been a major burden of the previous three decades, nevertheless the measures and interventions implemented by the governing body has shown to positively impact suicide mortality rates, particularly legislations on pesticides. But the numbers of attempted suicides continue to increase, highlighting the inadequate attention given to the central determinants of suicidal behaviour. Means restriction and addressing social and economic factors whilst providing mental support via a robust healthcare system have shown to be key in tackling suicide.
Fig-2This report explores the dynamics of suicidal behaviour in Sri Lanka and the interplaying factors that contribute to the persistent national burden. It investigates the education and employment systems as well as assessing successfulness of interventions and policies implemented by the governing body.
Burden of Suicide
Suicide is a complex multifaceted behaviour, which is induced by various stresses and predispositions. It accounts for millions of non-fatal hospital admissions and over 800,000 deaths annually, a life every 40 seconds.1 Projections estimate mortalities to almost double to 1.53 million by 2025; with a further 15 to 30 million cases of attempted suicide, thereby demonstrating the major global health burden that suicide represents.2
Over 90% of suicides have been related to psychiatric illness in high-income countries (HIC)3, in which bipolar and major depressive disorders account for almost 60%.4
In the WHO 2014 report5, the overall suicide rate was marginally higher in HIC than low and middle-income countries (LMIC), 12.7 per 100,000 and 11.2 per 100,000 respectively. But the sheer population that reside in LMIC meant that it accounted for 75% of all suicides.
Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka is a small densely populated island located just off the southeast shores of the Indian subcontinent6. It’s regarded as a lower-middle income country7 with a relatively low expenditure on health – $89 per capita 8, 3.4% of the GDP6,9. But the widespread basic healthcare system available in Sri Lanka is admirable considering its economic profile. An extensive network of government funded public health units exists alongside a robust private sector providing basic health care to the majority10. Communicable diseases remain endemic in Sri Lanka; vector-borne diseases like dengue fever along with diarrhoeal diseases and hepatitis A pose the greatest threats6. Sri Lanka, like many LMIC, is facing the double burden of disease, today non-communicable diseases account for over 70% of mortalities, cardiovascular disease, chronic respiratory diseases and diabetes are extremely prevalent10,11. Mental health was previously a neglected topic, but in recent years especially post-conflict (1983-2009) there has been a greater focus on such conditions by the Ministry of Health. This resulted in the introduction of mental health policies and interventions to tackle the health burden; nevertheless only 1.6% of the total health budget is invested on mental health12.
A History of Suicide                                           Read More
Kidney surgeries for foreigners at SL hospitals suspended 

2016-01-21
The Health Ministry today instructed all Government and private hospitals in the country to suspend all kidney transplant surgeries for foreigners following reports of kidney selling racket.

The new regulation comes following a directive of Health Minister Rajitha Senaratne.

Indian media yesterday reported that Indian Police had filed cases against six Sri Lankan doctors working with four different hospitals in Colombo on charges of conducting paid kidney transplantations in violation of ethics.

Issuing a statement, the Ministry of Health said it had instructed hospitals to temporarily suspend kidney transplants only for foreigners.

However, Health Director General Dr. Palitha Mahipala said this would in no way interference with Sri Lankans going through kidney transplants in the government or private hospitals.

A special investigation would be launched regarding the alleged kidney racket, he said. 

Indian police focus its attention at six Sri Lankan doctors for kidney racket

Indian police focus its attention at six Sri Lankan doctors for kidney racket

Jan 21, 2016
The Indian police have started investigation suspecting six Sri Lankan doctors in connection with a kidney racket between India and Sri Lanka.

The media reported that the Indian police have able to arrest the main suspect and few others in connection with this racket.
Following information and investigation conducted by the Indian police information have revealed about six Sri Lankan doctors serving in four private hospitals in Colombo.
 
Information disclosed surface that these doctor’s subject people brought by racketeers to surgeries in private hospitals situated in Colombo.
 
However reports reaching us confirm that nearly 60 illegal kidney transplants have been done by these doctors and the main racketeer has taken a sum of nearly Rs. 2.7 million from each beneficiary.
Disciplinary action against Kotadeniyawa OIC and five others 
2016-01-21
Police said disciplinary action would be taken against the Kotadeniyawa OIC, an Inspector and four other officers for detaining two suspects, in connection with the investigation conducted into the Seya Sandewmi murder, in an illegal manner.  

Legal action would also be taken against two Sub Inspectors, a Sergeant and a Constable of the Kotadeniya Police.

The 17-year-old Suranjan Pradeep Senevirathna and 33-year-old Kelum Athanayaka who were arrested on September 11 on suspicions of Seya Sandewmi’s murder had lodged a complaint with the IGP alleging they were harassed and assaulted while in police custody.  

IGP N. K Illangakoon directed a senior DIG to look into the complaint.  Police said investigations revealed that the two suspects were held for two days illegally and that belongings of the suspects taken into custody have been misplaced.  

Police said a charge sheet will be filed against the officers.(Darshana Sanjeewa) - See more at: http://www.dailymirror.lk/103711/disciplinary-action-against-kotadeniyawa-oic-and-five-others#sthash.W68iQDDS.dpuf

Gota’s Additional Sec. gives evidence before PRECIFAC

THURSDAY, 21 JANUARY 2016 
Ms. Damayanthi Jayaratne,, an additional Secretary of  the Ministry of Defense when Mr. Gotabhaya Rajapaksa was its Secretary, who has been accused of compiling illegal documents to provide state owned firearms to Avant Garde Company and had secretly left the country while the Additional Solicitor General of Attorney General’s Department had instructed to arrest her gave evidence before the Presidential Commission of Inquiry to investigate and inquire into Serious Acts of Fraud, Corruption and Abuse of Power, State Resources and Privileges (PRECIFAC) today (21st).
It is in relation to investigations being carried out by PRECIFAC regarding frauds and corruption said to have been committed in Rakna Lanka Security Company.
It was reported that Ms. Jayaratna has been working as an additional secretary of the Ministry of Home Affairs in which Mr. Vajira Abeywardana is the Minister. It is stated that she has dual citizenship.

Ranwala Mahanaga college principal apprehended

Ranwala Mahanaga college principal apprehended

Jan 21, 2016
Commission to investigate Bribery & Corruption said that the commission has arrested the principal of the Ranwala Mahanaga Vidyalaya Kegalle today the 21st for the allegation of obtaining a kickback. Director investigations senior superintendent of police Priyantha Chandasiri said the principal has demanded a sum of Rs. 60,000 for entering a student for grade six.

Following a complaint to the Bribery & Corruption the officers has taken the principal into custody in the school. Priyantha Chandasiri said a monk who was working as a clerk in the school was also arrested in connection with this kickback.
 
The suspects would be produced to the Kegalle magistrate court.

Defying court ruling, French figures call for Israel boycott

Protestors defying a ban on Palestine solidarity demonstrations in Paris hold a banner saying “Stop the blackmail: Anti-Zionism is not anti-Semitism,” 26 July 2014. (Alain Bachellier/Flickr)
Ali Abunimah-20 January 2016

A group of prominent intellectuals and activists is defying France’s crackdown on the Palestine solidarity movement by publicly calling for the boycott of Israeli goods.

This comes just as the French prime minister has announced that his government plans to intensify its restrictions on free speech targeting the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement.

“This boycott movement is enjoying growing success around the world as the only nonviolent means to put pressure on Israel,” the public figures’ statement in the independent online publication Médiapart says.

“It permits everyone who wishes to peacefully demonstrate their solidarity and to protest the favorable treatment [Israel] receives from a large part of the international community despite its constant violations of international law,” it adds.

“It is why we call for the support and strengthening of the BDS movement and for the boycott of Israeli goods.”

Legal crackdown

The signatories are making their call in open defiance of an October ruling by the Court of Cassation.
France’s highest court of criminal appeals upheld the conviction of a dozen Palestine solidarity activists for publicly calling for the boycott of Israeli goods.

It also made France, in addition to Israel, the only country to penalize appeals not to buy Israeli goods.
But the French law, which includes criminal penalties, is arguably harsher than Israel’s, which allows boycott supporters to be pursued for financial damages, but not jailed.

The ruling by the Court of Cassation added to growing concerns about the harsh crackdown on free speech, backed by French President François Hollande, since the murders of journalists at the offices of the magazineCharlie Hebdo in January 2015.  READ MORE

FactCheck: how many more Kremlin critics have died suspiciously?

*On 1 November 2006 Alexander Litvinenko, an former officer with Russia’s FSB intelligence agency now living in London, collapsed after drinking tea with an ex-colleague, Andrei Lugovoi.-----*Politkovskaya was gunned down in the lift in her Moscow apartment block. Five men have been convicted of carrying out the killing, but the mastermind who ordered it has never been brought to justice.
The 55-year-old opposition politican was shot four times in the back as he walked across a bridge near the Kremlin in February last year.

Channel 4 News
By Patrick Worrall-January 21, 2016
On 1 November 2006 Alexander Litvinenko, an former officer with Russia’s FSB intelligence agency now living in London, collapsed after drinking tea with an ex-colleague, Andrei Lugovoi.
Litvinenko died three weeks later from what doctors eventually diagnosed as poisoning. He had drunk tea spiked with a lethal dose of Polonium-210, a highly radioactive isotope.
Today, an inquiry into the death found that Lugovoi and an accomplice, Dmitri Kovtun, assassinated the father-of-three on the orders of the FSB – the successor to the feared KGB.
The inquiry’s chairman Sir Robert Owen said the operation was probably personally approved by the agency’s chief at the time and by Russia’s president, Vladimir Putin.
Litvinenko is not the only outspoken critic of the Kremlin to be murdered or to perish in suspicious circumstances.
In Russia, journalists, opposition politicians and others who criticise the country’s leaders have a tendency to die young. Here are some of the most notorious cases.
Boris Nemtsov

The 55-year-old opposition politican was shot four times in the back as he walked across a bridge near the Kremlin in February last year.

January 21 at 3:12 PM
 Gaunt and frail, his organs succumbing to the cruelly destructive power of radioactive poisoning, Alexander Litvinenko lay in a London hospital bed in November 2006 and identified the man responsible for his impending demise: Vladimir Putin.

Nearly a decade later, an exhaustive inquiry by a British judge concluded on Thursday that the dying former KGB operative was probably right. For the first time, the Russian president was officially implicated in a murder that seemed plucked from the pages of a Cold War spy novel, but actually played out in the bar of a posh hotel in 21st century London.

The victim: an outspoken Kremlin critic who had defected to Britain, joined the payroll of British intelligence and accused Putin of vices ranging from corruption to pedophilia. The killers: a pair of assassins who, the report found, were almost certainly acting on orders from the Russian spy service, the FSB, and who left a trail of radioactive evidence strewn across London. The weapons of choice: one tea cup, and one massive dose of a rare nuclear isotope, polonium.

The conclusions instantly set off a furious diplomatic row, with British and Russian officials accusing each other of treachery and deceit. British Prime Minister David Cameron called the findings of “state-sponsored” murder in his capital city “absolutely appalling." A Kremlin spokesman, without apparent irony, said the report would “further poison the atmosphere.”  
More Read>>>

Assault at the Cathedral

broken_justice
Beyond the very serious criminal charges which are for the police and judiciary to resolve there additional serious questions.
by Michael R. Czinkota and Thomas A. Czinkota

( January 20, 2016, Washington DC, Sri Lanka Guardian) On New Year’s Eve, there were mass attacks on women in Cologne, Germany. More than a thousand young men, many of them with an apparent migration background, congregated next to the famous cathedral of Cologne where they assaulted, groped and even raped women passing by. Local police, far outnumbered, did not intervene in the mayhem. In the days to follow, police, press and government tried to downplay the disaster, in order to avoid controversy about migrants, of which Germany admitted more than one million in 2015, with many more to come.

Since then, statements by police who had been ordered to stand down, by eye witnesses and by social media, have emboldened the victims to file more than 625 criminal complaints with 40% of them related to sexual assault. Many of the alleged attackers are Arab or North African, which has led to severe discontent with the government and its migration policy. There have been a series of protests, particularly in eastern Germany, blaming Chancellor Angela Merkel’s government and her open-door refugee policies.
Beyond the very serious criminal charges which are for the police and judiciary to resolve there additional serious questions. First, are European countries such as Germany ready to accept so many refugees both mentally and physically? Second, given the huge number of migrants still in motion, who will provide them with a domicile? Third, and most importantly, the desire for temporary tranquility has invalidated the fight for the equality of women, shod the aversion of violence against women, and done so at a dangerous cost to societal transparency and progress.

For decades, even centuries, western countries have been trading partners with authoritarian regimes in the Middle East, selling weapons, automobiles and other lucrative products. But the encouragement of an Arab Spring has led mainly to an Arab Fall. Yet, a large financial overhang, mainly resulting from international business, has not led to an assimilation of values and behavior. Instead many funds are used to help the distribution of fierce rhetoric, giving rise to Osama bin Laden and many other extremists. These developments are paired with an asymmetry of political correctness in the Western World, leading to new rope which the victim sells to its miscreant.

With decreasing demands for mutual integration, concurrently rising migration and outdistanced procreation, there are fewer viable landing strips for students, women and willing economic participants.
Right now, many of the migrants seek out primarily Germany and Sweden as asylum territories, which is understandable in light of the accommodations and benefits offered. But there are also important cultural milestones and preferences of governments and citizens who receive the human wave. Integration means that hosts learn more about their visitors, but also requires the new arrivals to accept key standards and expectations of their hosts. Though large immigration is likely to dilute rigid norms, it also must lead to asymptotic movement towards established standards.

The EU, taking on a leadership role consistent with the Treaty of Lisbon, should pr0otect the human rights of asylum seekers, but also has right to determine where this protection should take place. For example, the Middle East and Africa have many locations where refugees can be housed, fed and clothed, and protected. Countries such as China and India could develop entire settlement policies for the resolution of a global problem. These are not meant to create new colonies, but rather endorse the establishment of pop-up protectorates, to temporarily provide succor, shelter and peace to refugees.

Third, and perhaps most chillingly because it can set the future rails for disaster, is the failure of the public media to distribute honest information rapidly. An almost week-long delay of media reports was broken only when too many other sources broke the mantra of keeping bad news about migrants out of the public spotlight. This is wrong! Silence is a blow to the victims of violence, and puts them into a position of unsupported game. Women deserve better.

The violent, brutal and sexist treatment of women must be combated radically.The event in Cologne reveals a major flaw societal shortcoming which cannot be tolerated. Germany is an internationalized country due to the composition of its population and its dependence on foreign trade. If it wishes to continue with its international leadership role, Germany must recognize that such role is one of immersion into the world which must result in simultaneous juridical, social and economic leadership. 
Female equality is a crucial entitlement for more than half of the population. To declare otherwise is wrong for the native locals as well for the wave of newly arriving migrants. The events in Cologne must not become the opening act for continued misery and disrepute.

The attempt to muffle the powerless laments of the victims with the blanket of public silence is most treacherous. One should not cry ‘fire’ in a cinema, but doing so is encouraged when the flames are in the roof. The suggestors, the targets of the suggestions as well as the self-motivated absconders with truthful information must recognize how their behavior has fertilized the ground for future misinformation and knowledge abuse. Effective steps must be taken to truly make a difference. It is time for such action with specific details clearly spelled out by democratic transparency. As was already promulgated by St. John:” And you will know the truth and the truth will make you free.”

Professor Czinkota presents international marketing at Georgetown University in Washington D.C.
Thomas Czinkota advises banks on information technology and stock market analysis

Thai junta under fire over detention of student activist Ja New

Pic: Facebook

by 21st January 2016

THAI military personnel apprehended a prominent student activist yesterday night and then allegedly subjected him to abuse before dropping him off at a police station.

The student activist in question, Sirawith Seritiwat, who is also known as Ja New, had previously led protests against Rajabhakti Park – a billion-baht military project that has been embroiled with allegations of corruption.

In addition to Sirawith’s arrest, three other activists were also detained, reports the Bangkok Post.

Sirawith’s arrest had been initially described as an ‘abduction.’ On Wednesday night, soldiers in uniform reportedly forced him into a vehicle outside Thammasat University. The New Democracy Movement, Sirawith’s organization, uploaded a video on Facebook purportedly showing the moment when that happened:

ภาพจากกล้องวงจรปิด นาทีที่จ่านิว (ใส่เสื้อสีขาว) โดนอุ้ม#ตามหาเพื่อน
Posted by ขบวนการประชาธิปไตยใหม่ New Democracy Movement - NDM on Wednesday, January 20, 2016
Sirawith gave his account of the incident to friends who visited him at the police station. They uploaded a video of the conversation on Facebook, reported Khaosod English.

In the video, he described being taken to a “grassy jungle” where the soldiers kicked him down onto the ground after he refused to squat. Then they began scolding him for talking to the media and questioning his sense of duty to the country, he said.

When questioned if he was physically hit, Sirawith replied, “They slapped my head once. Hit my back once and kicked once. That’s three.” He added that the men used something to poke at his body, but he could not confirm if it was a wooden stick or a gun barrel.

Here is Sirawith’s account of his arrest:

จ่านิวเล่าเหตุการณ์ระหว่างถูกจับกุมตัว
ฟังจ่านิวเล่าว่า ตั้งแต่ที่ถูกจับกุมจนกระทั่งนำตัวมาถึงสถานีตำรวจ เขาโดนอะไรมาบ้าง #ตามหาเพื่อน
Posted by ขบวนการประชาธิปไตยใหม่ New Democracy Movement - NDM on Wednesday, January 20, 2016
For their part, the Thai authorities denied that Sirawith was mistreated. Junta spokesman Winthai Suvaree said, “The soldiers treated him with honor. There was no violence as alleged by someone who tried to distort the facts.”
He asserted that the soldiers acted within the law because there was an outstanding warrant on the activist that was issued by the military court.
News of Sirawith’s ‘abduction’ and arrest was met with anger and condemnation:
Police deputy spox: 'Ja New' has arrest warrant for defying NCPO order not to go to royal park; could be arrested. https://twitter.com/treechada_tv24/status/689862510317416450 
Wonder if being abducted at night by hooded men in camouflage, taken in a vehicle with concealed plate, is a new -style 'arrest'.
The United States, a long-time ally of Thailand, reacted to the activist’s arrest with diplomatic caution. The U.S. State Department said the human rights situation in Thailand is concerning, but declined to comment on this particular incident.
When asked about the case, State Department deputy spokesperson Mark Toner said, “We remain concerned by continued limitations on human rights and fundamental freedoms in Thailand, including undue restrictions on freedom of expression and peaceful assembly, and would urge the Thai government to ensure full respect for freedom of expression and other human rights and fundamental freedoms. As to this specific case, as we get more details, we’ll comment.”