Peace for the World

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

Friday, January 29, 2016

Why Zika may be as tough to beat as Ebola

Child Neurologist Vanessa Van Der Linden observes the X-ray of a baby’s skull with microcephaly at the hospital Barao de Lucena in Recife, Brazil, January 26, 2016.  REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino
Child Neurologist Vanessa Van Der Linden observes the X-ray of a baby's skull with microcephaly at the hospital Barao de Lucena in Recife, Brazil, January 26, 2016. Health authorities in the Brazilian state at the center of a rapidly spreading Zika outbreak have been overwhelmed by the alarming surge in cases of babies born with microcephaly, a neurological disorder associated to the mosquito-borne virus. Picture taken on January 26, 2016.  REUTERS/Ueslei Marcelino - RTX24A51
January 28, 2016

ReutersTaraneh Shirazian, obstetrician and gynecologist at New York University Langone medical center has been seeing some very worried women — those with pregnancies who have traveled through Latin America and the Caribbean in the last few months. As the scale of Zika virus outbreak becomes apparent, they are terrified that their unborn children may have been affected.

She struggles to know what to tell them about the risk they may face. The data is simply not available. What is clear, however, is that the Americas appear to be facing a health crisis on a scale and potential complexity that could be compared to West Africa’s 2014 Ebola outbreak.

So far, thousands of children have been born in Latin America in recent months suffering from microcephaly — smaller-than-normal heads with resulting brain damage and associated problems. Scientists believe the cases are almost certainly linked to the mosquito-borne virus. The World Health Organization warned this week that the Zika virus might well spread across the Americas, including much of the United States.

Just like Ebola in 2014, this Zika outbreak represents a sea change and step up from previous, much more limited, occurrences of the disease. Zika was first identified in 1947 but has only been seen in significant numbers in humans since 2007, with cases skyrocketing in the last year. As a result, it is outstripping both the capabilities of already stretched local health systems and much wider global scientific knowledge.

The differences with Ebola, though, are equally stark and may make it even harder for countries, individuals and families to handle.

For most of its sufferers, of course, Zika is a much less serious disease than Ebola. Symptoms are usually limited to a mild fever and rash with up to 80 percent of sufferers showing no external signs of the disease at all. On that level, it hardly bears comparison to Ebola, which is believed to have killed more than 11,000 people in 2014, almost all of them in Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea. Symptoms were singularly horrific, massive hemorrhaging that left victims covered in highly infectious sweat and blood that carried the disease to those closest to them.

Breaking the cycle of infection for a disease like Ebola is a relatively simple, but psychologically brutal process. Populations have to be educated to avoid direct physical contact with the sick or dying, interacting with them only through masks and gloves and making sure those suffering most were kept on isolation wards — provided enough are even available.

As a 23-year-old journalist, I covered the 2005 outbreak of the Ebola-like Marburg virus in the northern Angola. One anecdote in particular stands out — a story that told the infectious disease specialists they were finally winning the battle for hearts and minds.

In a remote village near the town of Uige, a pregnant woman began vomiting blood. Had this happened earlier in the outbreak, her husband would almost certainly have looked after her, infecting himself and the rest of the family. Instead, he took no chances, removing the other children from the house and locking his wife inside. It took several days for medics to reach the village — she died inside the house. 
The rest of the family lived — but the man, unsurprisingly, was apparently psychologically destroyed.

Zika, though, is a different kind of cruel. The only significant worry, it seems, is over unborn children. The problem is, because the symptoms are so mild, women living in affected areas — now spanning some 20 countries across an entire continent — simply do not know until far too late whether they have been infected.

Even when ultrasonic scans are available — and in most places they are not — microcephaly is not usually detectable until relatively late in the pregnancy, often the last three months. Even in countries where abortion is legal at all, it is often illegal at that late stage. In some cases, microcephaly can only be diagnosed at birth or even in the weeks and months following.

The effects, though, can be awful — intellectual and physical disability, shortened lifespan, huge requirements for ongoing care as long as they survive. For poor families and countries this will be incredibly difficult to manage.

For now, there remains a huge amount we do not know — what the incidence rate is likely to be, how severe the arising disabilities, how wide the geographic scope of spread. Hardly surprisingly, even before President Barack Obama’s call for increased research, estimates were already ramping up. But they will take time. And the statistics that are most crucial will only come in as the number of cases rise.

Under such circumstances, warnings for potentially pregnant women to avoid huge swathes of Latin America and the Caribbean make perfect sense. But that does little good for the millions living in those countries.

Earlier this week, El Salvador took the unprecedented step of advising its own population to put off pregnancy for two years, presumably in the hope that by then the situation might be somewhat resolved. 
How achievable that is in a country with high illiteracy rates, extremely limited sex education and access to contraception is another matter. It might prove impossible in any country. For one thing, women in their late 30s or older are unlikely to want to wait.

For now, researchers in Texas working on a vaccine say it could be 10 years away — although the more scientists who join the battle, the shorter that process might be. In the meantime, the brunt of the effort against the virus will have to be an industrial fight against the mosquitoes that carry Zika and their habitats.

Already, Brazil has mobilized several thousand troops for that effort. As in West Africa, it’s not hard to imagine the United States and other major powers also joining the effort.

Ultimately, as with Ebola, the worse the outbreak is — and the richer the countries actually and potentially affected — the more resources will be plowed into it. If the worst comes to the worst, the United States would probably spend almost whatever it took to make sure Americans could safely procreate.

If the World Health Organization is right in its predictions of the spread of the virus, it could yet come to that. In the meantime, however — just as with Ebola — we look set for another spell of almost impossible medical policy challenges and countless personal tragedies and traumas.

Zika virus: Inside Uganda's forest where the disease originates



BBC29 January 2016
The Zika virus, which has been linked to thousands of babies being born with underdeveloped brains in Brazil, was discovered in a forest in the East African state of Uganda seven decades ago. BBC Africa's Catherine Byaruhanga visited the forest.

The Zika forest is not well known in Uganda, and most people will be hard-pushed to tell you where it is. The word itself means overgrown in the local Luganda language.

There is dense vegetation, a wide range of trees and lots of small animals. The only people you are likely to meet here are the forest-keeper and his family. They live in a small house made of corrugated iron sheets.

The virus was discovered in the forest - then a hub of scientific research in East Africa - in 1947 by accident by Ugandan, American and European scientists working on another viral disease, Yellow Fever.

While testing monkeys in the forest the scientists, whose research had been funded for a decade by the Rockefeller Foundation, came across a new microorganism, which they named Zika.

  • Spread by the Aedes aegypti mosquito, which also carries Dengue Fever and Yellow Fever
  • First discovered in Uganda in 1947 but now spreading in Latin America
  • Scientists say there is growing evidence of a link to microcephaly, that leads to babies being born with small heads
  • Can lead to fever and a rash but most people show no symptoms, and there is no known cure
  • Only way to fight Zika is to clear stagnant water where mosquitoes breed, and protect against mosquito bites

Thursday, January 28, 2016

Sri Lanka constitution: What’s in it for the Tamils?

Sri Lanka constitution
Sri Lanka’s president Maithripala Sirisena, left, shakes hands with former president Mahinda Rajapaksa after the swearing ceremony of Ranil Wickremesinghe as new Sri Lanka prime minister in Colombo last year. Pic: AP.
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by  -28th January 2016
SRI LANKA’S new government, which is taking steps to draw up a new constitution, is likely to cheat Tamils out of a political system that reflects their aspirations. Restrictions imposed by the government on the constitution-making process even before it has begun signal that Tamils will remain under-privileged citizens unless they mount a concerted challenge to the regime’s moves forthwith.
Presidential and parliamentary elections in 2015 resulted in the two loci of power – the presidency and parliament – pass to the two main political rivals, the United National Party (UNP) and United Peoples Freedom Alliance (UPFA). Today, Maithripala Sirisena of the UPFA is the country’s directly-elected executive president, while Ranil Wickremesinghe, head of the UNP, is prime minister controlling the country’s legislature. Wickremesinghe’s majority in parliament is strengthened by UPFA’s support for a limited time to push through important changes, including a new constitution.
The coming together of the two main parties to form a national unity government also brought the largest Tamil party – the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) – to parliament and its head, Rajavarothyam Sampanthan, to be the leader of the opposition. Sampanthan viewed his new role as one that would combine “the resolution of the national question through a new constitution” as well as “relating to the wellbeing of the whole country and its future”.
The main reason articulated by both the President and the Prime Minister for a new constitution is shortcomings in the current document – the Second Republican Constitution created in 1978 – which concentrates power in the all-powerful presidency. Critics of the present constitution argue that this has not only led to an elected tyranny in Sri Lanka, but is instrumental in exacerbating relations between Sinhalese and Tamils that led to the 30-year civil war where an estimated hundred thousand people died.

13-year-old found dead in Mawathagama

13-year-old found dead in Mawathagama

logoJanuary 28, 2016
The body of a 13-year-old child has been discovered at a residence in Palgaspitiya, Mawathagama. 
Police said that the body was found inside the kitchen of the house and that the cause of death has not been ascertained yet.
However, police suspect that the child was possibly murdered. 
Mawathagama Police  is conducting further investigations. 
[ வியாழக்கிழமை, 28 சனவரி 2016, 07:05.33 PM GMT ]
மாவத்தகம பொலிஸ் நிலையப் பிரிவுக்கு உட்பட்ட தல்கஸ்பிட்டிய தென்னந்தோட்டப் பகுதியில் தொழில் புரிந்த தமிழ் குடும்பத்தைச் சேர்ந்த 13 வயதுடைய சிறுமி பாலியல் வல்லுறவுக்கு உட்படுத்தப்பட்டு கொலை செய்யப்பட்டுள்ளார்.
இன்று காலை 8.00 மணி அளவில் பால் சேகரிக்கும் நிலையத்திற்கு பாலைக் கொடுத்து விட்டு வீடு திரும்பும் வேளையிலேயே இந்தச் சம்பவம் இடம்பெற்றுள்ளது. பால் எடுத்துச் சென்ற பிள்ளை வீடு திரும்ப வில்லை எனப் பெற்றோர்கள் தேடும் நடவடிக்கையில் ஈடுபட்டனர்.
எனினும் பல இடங்களில் தேடிப் பார்த்து விட்டு   பகல் 12 மணி அளவில் மாவத்தகம பொலிஸ் நிலையம்  சென்று முறைப்பாடு தெரிவித்துள்ளனர். அப்பொழுது பொலிஸார் சொந்தக் காரர்களின் வீடுகளுக்குச் சென்று தேடிப் பார்த்து விட்டு வாருங்கள் எனக் கூறியுள்ளனர்.
இவ்வாறு தேடும் போது மாலை ஆறு மணி அளவில் சமீபத்திலுள்ள வீட்டை சந்தேகத்தின் பேரில் சோதனையிட்ட  போது  அந்தச் சிறுமி கொலை செய்யப்பட்டு  துணியால் சுற்றி  சமயலறையில் வைக்கப்பபட்டிருந்தார்.
இந்தச் சம்பவத்தில் ஈடுபட்டுள்ளதாகத் தெரிவிக்கப்படும் சந்தேக நபர் நான்கு பிள்ளைகளின் தந்தை எனவும் இவருடைய மனைவி வெளிநாடு சென்று ஒரு மாதம் எனவும் இவருடைய பிள்ளைகள்  வீட்டில் இருக்க வில்லை. பிள்ளைகள் யாவும் தாயின் உறவினர் வீட்டுக்கு அனுப்பி வைக்கப்பட்டுள்ளதாகவும் தற்போது சந்தேக நபர் தலைமறைவாகியுள்ளதாகவும் தெரிவிக்கப்படுகிறது.
பொலிஸார் மேலதிக விசாரணைகளை மேற் கொண்டு வருகின்றனர்.
UK urged to pressure Sri Lankan president over UN resolution


28 January 2016

The British government has been urged to ensure Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena meets commitments agreed to under a UN Human Rights Council resolution passed last year, in a question raised in parliament today.

Wes Streeting, Member of Parliament for Ilford North and Vice Chair of the All Party Parliamentary Group for Tamils told parliament:
“It is completely unacceptable that the Sri Lankan President is not accepting international help with the prosecution of human rights abuses, which is vital to ensure that everyone, particularly the Tamil community, can have confidence that justice will be done. This was a vital component of the UN resolution we secured in Geneva."
“We all know the terrible human rights abuses that took place in Sri Lanka,” he stated, adding, “I hope that the British Government will do all it can to pressure President Sirisena to meet his obligations under the UN Human Rights Council resolution and I will continue to press our government to act on this issue”.
In response, Chris Grayling, the Leader of the House of Commons said, “We all want to see a long term solution to the dreadful events that are taking place in Sri Lanka”.
“We want to see a settlement that provides a stable and lasting solution for both communities,” he added. “That's enormously important.”

Principle Elements To Be Enshrined In The New Constitution


Colombo Telegraph
By Varatharaja Perumal –January 28, 2016 
Varatharaja Perumal
Varatharaja Perumal
To the Public Representation Committee on Constitutional Reform;
I, A. Varatharaja Perumal, former Chief Minister of the North-East Province of Sri Lanka, humbly submit this note of my Suggestions, before the Honourable Public Representation Committee, with an honest intention of presenting it to the consideration of the makers of the new Constitution of United Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka.
  1. Supremacy of the Constitution
  2. Basic Principles to be Entranced in the PREAMBLE
  3. Judiciary and the Administration of the Justice
  4. Structure of the Central and the Provincial States
  5. Electoral Reform
  6. Territorial Demarcation of the Devolution units
  7. Basis for Devolution of Powers
  8. Formation of the Central and the Provincial governments
  9. System of Exercising of Legislative Powers
  10. List of Executive Powers Instead of Lists of Legislative Powers
  11. During Emergency and Under the Public Security
  12. Public Administration Bureaucratic Structure (PABS)
  13. Provincial Police Administration
  14. Lists and System of Levying Taxes, Duties, Fees and other Revenue of and to the Provincial Administration
  15. DEVOLUTION COMMISSION
  16. Equality among the National Communities
  17. The Constitutional Provisions to Ensure Equality in the Employment of All the State Establishments and Educational Opportunities.
  18. National Planning and Financial Commission (HPFC) and Provincial Planning Commissions (PPC)
  19. Protocol Status, Rights, Privileges of the PECC Ministers, the PLAA Members and the Provincial Administrative Officers
  20. Status of Pre-Constitution laws including ordinances
  21. Interpretation of important terms and phrases
1. Supremacy of the Constitution                              Read More

Northern Civil Society Condemns President Sirisena’s BBC Statement

මෛත්‍රී
Sri Lanka Brief28/01/2016 
President Sirirsena’s  negative foreign participation in the accountability process has been condemned by  a statement drafted by Northern civil society and endorsed by number of organisations and individuals. Only few Sinhalese activists have  endorsed the statement, notably among them are Ruki Fernando and Herman Kumara and Brito Fernando.
SLB publishes the full statement below:
28th January, 2016
We the undersigned activists and organizations condemn President Maithripala Sirisena’s recent statements (BBC Sinhala Service, 21 Jan. 2016, Frontline, 14 Jan, 2016) wherein he appears to be indicating a withdrawal from the obligations the Government had committed to in the consensus resolution passed at the 30th Session of the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in October 2015. It is worth recalling that the Government as a co-sponsor of this resolution, was in a position to negotiate the exact terms of the resolution. Owing to the Government’s positions taken at these negotiations, the resolution in itself was a compromise, much to the disappointment of many victims and activists. The Government now appears to be backtracking from even these compromised commitments. The President in these interviews categorically stated that foreign judges and experts would not be part of the process. In his interview to BBC Sinhala Service he also went on to express his full confidence in the existing judicial system and in Sri Lanka’s investigative authorities. In that interview he added that if there was any international support necessary for Sri Lanka that it was only for economic development. On 26 January 2016, a few days after the Presidents interview to the BBC, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe in an interview to Channel 4 appeared to be engaging in damage control when he stated that that the Government will abide by commitments given in Geneva. These contradictions between the President and the Prime Minister are however not new and have been a constant feature of the Government’s public communications about their commitments under the resolution ever since the resolution was passed.
It is widely acknowledged that the victim communities in Sri Lanka consider a purely domestic process to be untrustworthy. The crimes that were committed and that continue to be committed are of a systemic nature and the security apparatus that is responsible for most of these crimes and the attendant judicial, legal infrastructure continue to remain the same. Lack of legal and judicial response in the face of continuing violations including torture, arbitrary detention, unlawful arrest and sexual violence does not inspire confidence in the local judiciary. Further, a backlog of thousands of cases remain unaddressed, with very few arrests and convictions in response. Hence international participation in transitional justice processes including criminal prosecutions become an important element to win the trust and confidence of the victim communities. It is important to understand that the issue with regard to the need for international participation is one relating to willingness and not just of capacity. The agreement in October 2015 to include foreign judges and prosecutors showed signs on the part of the new Government of a willingness to act on accountability issues. The withdrawal from such obligations today leads us to questioning the seriousness of the Government’s willingness.
                                                   Read More
Authorities in Sri Lanka 'discourage and threaten' relatives of the disappeared says US Ambassador






28 January 2016

The lack of proper investigations over the issue of disappearances sends a message of impunity to the perpetrators, said US Ambassador Samantha Power, in an address to the UN Security Council on Wednesday.

Speaking on the ‘Global Challenge of Accounting for Missing Persons’, Ms Power drew on her recent visits to Mexico and Sri Lanka, where she travelled to Jaffna and met with families of the disappeared.

Ms Power stated that both communities showed that there was an “enduring and all-encompassing, searing pain and hardship experienced by families who have had a loved one disappear”.

“In many instances, families’ sense of impotence was exacerbated by the routine failure of authorities to take basic steps to search for the missing or to bring to justice those responsible,” she added. “The lack of proper investigations doesn’t just hurt families – it also sends a message to perpetrators that they can continue to disappear people with impunity.”

“In both Mexico and Sri Lanka, I heard from families who reported cases to authorities, only to see them sit on key investigative leads or misplace crucial evidence,” she continued. “Others were discouraged or even threatened by the very officials whose job it was to help them.”

Ms Power went on to add:
“In Jaffna, Sri Lanka, just a couple months ago a mother told me how, in March of 2009 she had seen men in military uniforms abduct her 16-year-old daughter, and had been beaten when she tried to intervene. Yet despite promptly reporting that crime to officials, the mother told me, she had never heard anything back. She has spent nearly every day of the six years since searching for her daughter, whose whereabouts remain unknown.” 
The ambassador went on to note that some positive steps had been taken by the Sri Lankan government in passing legislation to issue “missing” certificates to the families of victims, stating that steps where needed in places like Sri Lanka, “which lack credible, comprehensive databases, and where building them could help thousands of families obtain answers that they have long yearned for”.

She concluded her remarks by quoting a verse from a song written about mothers in Argentina searching for their children missing from the country’s Dirty War, stating “it rings true for so many families of the disappeared worldwide”.
“We still sing, we still ask,
We still dream, we still wait,
For a different day,
Without burden or fasting,
Without fear and without crying,
Because to the nest,
Our loved ones will return.”
See her full remarks here.

A New Constitution; The Good, The Bad & The Ugly


By Chrishmal Warnasuriya –January 28, 2016
Chrishmal Warnasuriya
Chrishmal Warnasuriya
Colombo Telegraph
Distinguishing Between (National) Need and (Political) Want:
Last week I was invited to a panel discussion titled “Constitutional Models of Power Sharing in Multi Ethnic Societies” hosted by the Swiss mission in Colombo, moderated by Dr. Jayampathi Wickramaratne PC (now MP), a gentleman for whom I have the highest respect; having had the distinct pleasure of both practicing and drafting the law relating to Constitutions with him, most recently with the 19th Amendment. The primary lectures were by Prof. Eva Belser, Vice Dean at the Uni. Of Fribourg and Prof. Nico Steytler of the Uni. Of West Cape, South Africa, both displaying a high level of learning and practical intercourse in the subject area globally. I must thank them for opening our eyes to some concepts on which we can mould a true national identity within our diverse cultural, racial, religious and other divergences. However let me with equal haste add that whilst I agree completely that there is such a “national need” for a new ethos in formulating a new Constitution that will (hopefully) eliminate most of our long and protracted issues over ethnicity and language, I will in no way espouse to and will vociferously challenge the “political wants” of some who are now exploiting this need and hiding behind this debate for their own political merry-making and survival, globetrotting and partying on for a few years more until the next election.
Let us also not be misled into thinking that all our national woes will be solved with the waving of this constitutional magic wand! Our healthcare service where the poor patient is asked to sleep on the hospital floor or go out to the street vendor to get his own urine sample tested, or our dilapidated public transport system which only appears to cater to those who can’t afford a vehicle; not the political big- wigs who scream through the traffic in their duty free intercoolers whilst the poor tax payer who actually foots that bill ends up jammed on the road in a rickety old bus or worse, risking life and limb on the rooftop of a diesel engine train will not suddenly undergo some social metamorphosis just because we draft a new constitution. Let’s face it, as the present regime themselves admit, had their Lordship of the Supreme Court permitted them to transfer some of the Executive Power to the Prime Minister and Cabinet in the manner they proposed in the 19th Amendment, we will not even be discussing this new constitution today; possibly some other “carrot” would have been thrown our way to digest.
Thus being forewarned (and therefore forearmed) of that political reality of self serving political agendas, let us yet use this opportunity to have a meaningful dialogue over some possible constitutional concepts that we, as a nation, will need to decide on in our journey towards building a long-lasting Sri Lankan identity encompassing our unique diversities. With gratitude to the above Expert Panel (with their permission) I have built on their general direction and permitted my “local mind” to wander over the following thoughts.
The Term “Unitary” – Its Nature & Character:            Read More

Ranil tears into media


"Journalists’ hands aren’t clean" 


article_image
By Saman Indrajith-January 28, 2016, 10:44 pm

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday, in Parliament, lashed out at the media, accusing them of promoting racism.

"You don’t talk big because your hands are not clean. What are all doing with regard to racism? I mean all newspapers. I am asking the electronic and print media. What do you have to say about the incident at the Homagama Court? Write an editorial, if possible, on the Homagama incident."

The Prime Minister was participating in a debate at the time of adjournment of the House on the recent incidents in Embiliptiya and issues involving the police.

The Prime Minister’s statement:

"There are problems as regards police the world over. Following police shooting in Ferguson in the US, people took to the streets against it. Similar incident happened in England last year. Police have to maintain law and order.

Recently, we saw such problems here. Embilipitiya incident is only one of them. The other incident was with regard to the conduct of officers at the Kotadeniya Police station. That has been investigated and courts of law have been moved. If the police have done anything wrong, we have no intention of covering up their wrongdoings. We all came here after fighting for the need for restoring the rule of law. The British instituted the police here. Within 30 years of establishing the police in Britain, they established the police here. It is not only the police who are involved in maintaining law and order. Courts of law, the police and the media are needed for that purpose.

Courts were established in Sri Lanka in 1835. Sri Lanka was the first country in Asia and Africa to have a modern judicial system. We have forgotten that tradition. We have a similar history as regards the media, too. All these institutions are needed for maintaining the law and order and to restore the rule of law. The police cannot perform that task single-handed. What we have witnessed during the last ten years was that disintegration of those three institutions and the politicization of them. The Rajapaksa regime destroyed all those three institutions. We fought against it.

We need to modernise them. We have sought the assistance of Britain and other countries. We have to increase the salaries of the workers in those institutions. There was a time that Sri Lanka had the best police in the Asia. That was soon after the Second World War. Now, what do we have? We have to regain that position. We had an exemplary judicial system. All these institutions have been destroyed. Politicians got the police and army to kill people. We have to investigate those instances. We have to probe the shortcomings of the police. 

                                                     Read more...

Sri Lanka In 2016: New Constitution Offers Hope Of Addressing Old Grievances – Analysis

Sri Lanka's flag

Eurasia ReviewBy S. Binodkumar Singh*-JANUARY 28, 2016

The peace that was attained after a bloody war that terminated in the comprehensive defeat of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in May 2009 has been sustained through 2015 in Sri Lanka. Not a single incident of killing was recorded in 2015, a trend evident since November 2009, barring one incident on April 11, 2014, in which a Security Forces (SFs) team that launched a cordon and search operation in the forest area of Padaviya in Anuradhapura District was fired upon by the LTTE militants hiding in the forest and in retaliatory fire three armed local LTTE leaders were killed by the team.

Remarkably, the positive development commenced with the dramatic turnaround of a political fortune in the island nation. Pallewatte Gamaralalage Maithripala Yapa Sirisena, leader of the New Democratic Front (NDF), a conglomeration of several political formations opposing the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA), including the main opposition United National Party (UNP) emerged victorious in a keenly contested Presidential Election held on January 8, 2015. Sirisena secured 6,217,162 votes (51.28 per cent) against 5,768,090 votes (47.58 per cent) polled by Mahinda Rajapaksa, the incumbent President and candidate of the UPFA. Sirisena took oath as the Seventh Elected Executive President of the country on January 9, 2015.

Later, in the Parliamentary Elections held on August 17, 2015, voters gave a fractured mandate, with none of the parties securing a simple majority. UNP, led by incumbent Prime Minister Wickremesinghe, secured 106 seats, falling seven short of simple majority in a 225-memebr House; the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) secured just 95 seats. The main Tamil political party, the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) won 16 seats; and the main Marxist party, Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) won six. However, following a historic agreement on August 20, 2015, between UNP and the SLFP to sign a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU), the incumbent Prime Minister Wickremesinghe on August 21, 2015, took oath as the 26th Prime Minister of the island nation.

In another development, which is expected to have a far reaching impact on the reconciliation process President Sirisena on December 20, 2015, made a surprise visit to internally displaced persons (IDPs) camp in Konapulam of Jaffna District. Promising to provide land to settle the IDPs, the President on January 3, 2016, said “It is an ambitious target, but I will see that all the internally displaced people are given land to build homes. For many people the main issue was lack of land and that is something we will resolve in the next six months.” Further, on January 20, 2016, the President issued instructions to relevant officials to complete the resettlement of 44,015 remaining IDPs including 5732 members of 1688 displaced families living in displaced camps and 38,283 members of 11,073 displaced families living with their relatives in the Northern Province within six months.

Separately, although the talks on reconciliation between the TNA and the Government stalled since January 27, 2012, are yet to begin by the new Government, TNA was recognized as the Main Opposition and its leader Sampanthan was designated as Opposition Leader on September 3, 2015. Happy with the recognition, TNA spokesman M. A. Sumanthiran on September 4, 2015, stated “We will talk to the Government straightaway with a view to resolving the long outstanding matter.” Also welcoming Colombo’s decision to co-sponsor a draft resolution (A/HRC/30/L.29) that was tabled at the 30th session of the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in Geneva, the TNA in a statement on September 25, 2015, declared, “we are of the view that the draft provides a constructive starting point for what will inevitably be a long road to reconciliation.”

Meanwhile, presenting a resolution in the Parliament to set up a Constitutional Assembly (CA) to begin the process of formulating a new Constitution which will replace the Constitution adopted in 1978, Prime Minister Wickremesinghe on January 9, 2016, said “We will have the whole Parliament formulating the Constitution unlike the previous instances when the Constitutions were drafted outside Parliament.” 
Further, in a nationally televised Pongal (Tamil Harvest Festival) ceremony, on January 15, 2016, the Prime Minister said “we are ready to devolve power (to minority Tamils) and protect democracy. The Constitutional Assembly will discuss with all, including (Tamil-dominated) provincial councils to have a new Constitution. We will do that in a transparent manner.”

Similarly, President Maithripala Sirisena participating at the Thai Pongal ceremony held on January 18, 2016, in the Hindu College in Kalutara District, said “Building of the peace and reconciliation among the people in the country cannot be done only through enacting laws and adopting a new constitution. It can only be done through the religious philosophy. Therefore, I request every religious leader to come forward to take forward the program commenced by the government to build the peace and brotherhood by alleviating the fear and suspicion among every community in the country.”

Indeed, the developments through 2015 and early 2016 suggest greater stabilization and reinforce prospects for an enduring peace in Sri Lanka. However, challenges remain as the drafting of a new Constitution offers both a challenge and an opportunity to address the grievances of a long, twisted and violent history. The proposed Constitutional text must be placed before the public for their scrutiny and constructive views obtained and incorporated into the final text. The Constitution makers must be flexible in this regard and not stick to their own rigid decisions.

The new Constitution will govern the people of the island nation for quite some time in the foreseeable future as the present Constitution has lasted for nearly 38 years. It must not be rushed through, but sufficient time must be allocated for the public views to be taken. Lest the whole edifice will come crumbling down destroying the very foundations of Rule of Law thereby bringing misery and instability to the people in the beautiful pearl of the Indian Ocean.

*Dr. S. Binodkumar Singh is a Research Associate at the Institute for Conflict Management, New Delhi. He can be reached at: editor@spsindia.in

Messiahs Of ‘Good Governance’ At The Helm Of Incorrigible ICES In Sri Lanka


By Muttukrishna Sarvananthan –January 28, 2016
Dr. Muttukrishna Sarvananthan
Dr. Muttukrishna Sarvananthan
Colombo Telegraph
This is the third tranche of my expose` of the International Centre for Ethnic Studies (ICES, Colombo, Sri Lanka) and the International Development Research Centre (IDRC, Ottawa, Canada) on research and financial frauds committed in a research and advocacy project co-funded by the Department for International Development (DfID, UK), IDRC, and William and Hewlett Foundation (California, USA).
Two present members and one past member of the Board of Directors and one past Executive Director of the International Centre for Ethnic Studies (ICES) Colombo are/were members of the Friday Forum, which in its own words is “an informal and self-financed group dedicated to democracy, good governance, human rights and the rule of law. It has for over five years sought to alert the public on issues concerning the rights of the citizen. We work on a non-partisan basis and have been critical of both the Government and Opposition.”
The current chairperson of the ICES, Daneshan Casie Chetty – a retired Foreign Service personnel, is a member of the Friday Forum; Tissa Jayatilaka, Executive Director of the US-Sri Lanka Fulbright Commission, is a member of the Board of Directors of the ICES as well as the Friday Forum; Chandra Jayaratne, a member of the Friday Forum, was a recent past member of the Board of Directors of the ICES during whose tenure Mario Gomez was inducted as the Executive Director of the ICES in late-2012; a former Executive Director of the ICES (1999-2006), Radhika Coomaraswamy, was a member of the Friday Forum until recently.
Radhika Coomaraswamy is said to be a long-time friend of Navsharan Singh, Senior Programme Officer at the IDRC Asia Regional Office in New Delhi. Radhika Coomaraswamy was given an honorary title ‘Emeritus Fellow’ by the ICES in late-2014. Incidentally, most of the titles held by this retired international civil servant are honorary (Doctorate, Deshamanya – Pride of the Nation, and recently ‘Emeritus Fellow’ of the corrupt ICES), and not earned titles/qualifications. I would like to publicly ask the management of the ICES whether such bestowing to its former Executive Director was a quid pro quo for securing the aforementioned project from the IDRC.
None of my email communications about the ICES-PPID-IDRC project since December 2014 to the aforementioned two current members of the Friday Forum who are also members of the Board of Directors of the ICES (Daneshan Casie Chetty and Tissa Jayatilaka) have been acknowledged, let alone replied, except the very first snail mail communication to the chairperson Daneshan Casie Chetty which was just acknowledged but not replied to date (January 2016). This kind of indifferent behaviour is unbecoming of the messiahs of ‘good governance’ and does not bode well for accountability of the office bearers of non-profit institutions.