Peace for the World

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

Saturday, February 6, 2016

Cancer risk or miracle cure? The truth about HRT

The truth about HRT

This year I turn 47 - the age that my mum had her menopause. She’s already told me about the hot flushes, night sweats and vaginal dryness I have to look forward to. But it wasn’t until I read Allison Pearson’s account in this paper of her own menopausal brain fog, anxiety, low mood, overactive bladder, zero libido and extreme irritability that I became utterly terrified. 

I have deadlines, a husband, a life. I need a working brain and bladder, and sex. For Pearson, it was hormone replacement therapy (HRT) that made her symptoms virtually disappear. But, like most women, I’d heard about the increased risk of cancer and heart disease.

Last November, the National Institute of Clinical Excellence (NICE – the body that recommends prescribing and treatment in the UK) issued guidelines on menopause, encouraging doctors to offer patients HRT while making clear the risks involved. 

Have all the studies been wrong? Or would I be risking my health with HRT? 

I set out to discover the truth. Each year, 1.5 million British women experience menopausal symptoms, but only one in 10 are prescribed HRT, largely because in the last decade doctors have become reluctant to offer it because of the perceived risks.

Indeed, according to NHS figures, prescribing rates for HRT have plummeted – in 2000 there were around 6 million prescriptions; by 2014 that figure was just over two million.

Yet in her article, Allison Pearson controversially stated: ‘I’d rather have 20 good years taking hormones and run a higher risk of cancer than live to a great age feeling anxious and pulverised by tiredness.’ She was inundated withreaders recounting their own fears about HRT, their GPs’ reluctance to prescribe it and, once finally on it, how they saw their symptoms quickly dissipate. 

Friday, February 5, 2016

Zeid to review UN recommendations

2016-02-06
The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein who will begin a four-day official visit to Sri Lanka today, at the invitation of the government, will discuss a range of current challenges and opportunities for strengthening the rule of law and enhancing respect for human rights in Sri Lanka, the UN Office said.
At the end of his visit, on Tuesday 9 February, he will brief the media on the outcome of his tour.
He will also discuss implementation of recommendations made in his report to the Human Rights Council, and in its subsequent Resolution 30/1 on "promoting reconciliation, accountability and human rights in Sri Lanka." The resolution, which was co-sponsored by Sri Lanka, was unanimously adopted by the Human Rights Council on 1 October 2015.

The High Commissioner will meet President Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, the Minister of Foreign Affairs and other Ministers, as well as other high-level Government officials at both central and regional levels. He will also hold discussions with a wide range of other interlocutors, including the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka, representatives of civil society, victims of human rights violations, and religious leaders. In addition to the capital Colombo, the High Commissioner will also visit Jaffna, Trincomalee and Kandy.

Govt. Must Educate Importance Of International Participation In Trials


By Veluppillai Thangavelu –February 5, 2016
Veluppillai Thangavelu
Veluppillai Thangavelu
Colombo Telegraph
The Commissioner of Human Rights Council Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein is scheduled to visit Sri Lanka on January 05, 2016. Apart from meeting the President, Prime Minister, the Opposition Leader and others he will also visit the North to see at first hand the post-war situation there.
The government is still struggling to stabilise the country politically and economically. Many problems related to rehabilitation and re-settlement of thousands of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) remain a daunting task to the government. Though more than 6 years have lapsed since the end of the war, thousands of IDPs are still living in welfare centres and make shift huts without basic amenities.
The inordinate delay in releasing private lands acquired by the armed forces to the rightful owners is causing lot of heartburn among them. The IDPs are losing patience after waiting, in some cases, for over 25 years that include 6 years after the war.
The government has appointed a high powered committee to take a census of the lands still under army occupation in order to release them to the owners. According to an army spokesman, lands required for public security will not be released, but adequate compensation will be paid to the owners.
Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein - The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein – The UN High Commissioner for Human Rights
Poverty is a gigantic problem in the North, which is emerging from a 30-year conflict that decimated the area’s economy along with the people’s livelihoods. Those who have been re-settled lack jobs, houses, toilets, drinking water, schools, hospitals etc.
Out of 25 administrative districts, people from 9 districts, including Mullaitivu, Moneragala, Mannar and Batticaloa had a higher rate of poverty in comparison with others. In fact, in Mullaitheevu which faced the brunt of the war, 30% of the people are living below poverty line at national level (UN Annual Report -2015).  According to Sri Lanka’s official national poverty line, a person is identified as being poor  if his or her real per capita consumption expenditure falls below Rs.3,967 (December 2015) per month.

President: Geneva Resolution misinterpreted to cause discord among armed forces-Media urged not to abuse freedom or face the consequences



By Shamindra Ferdinando- 

Alleging that an attempt was being made to misinterpret the Geneva Resolution, President Maithripala Sirisena yesterday emphasised the utmost importance of facing the Geneva challenge with patience, discipline and decorum.

President Sirisena, who is also Commander-in-Chief of armed forces, asserted that the country could regain international recognition by addressing issues raised in Geneva. He was addressing the nation from the Galle Face Green, Colombo before the commencement of military parade to celebrate the 68th Independence Day.

President Sirisena said his political rivals were hell bent on capturing power and various extremists were misinterpreting the Geneva process. The project was meant to cause turmoil among the armed forces as well as the public, he claimed.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein will arrive in Colombo tomorrow morning (Feb 6) on a four-day official visit to Sri Lanka.

The President alleged that his An Indian High Court tells citizens: Don’t pay taxes if Govt fails to curb graft!

political opponents had made an issue of the implementation of the Geneva Resolution, which he said would lead to the restoration of freedom, democracy and reconciliation. The government efforts were in peril due to ongoing disinformation campaigns, the President alleged.

The President urged the media to be responsible and function in a fair manner or face the consequences.

Had the previous administration taken appropriate measures to address accountability issues immediately after the conclusion of the Vanni battle in May 2009, Sri Lanka wouldn’t have had to face a resolution at the Geneva-based United Nations Human Rights Council, the President claimed.

The failure on the previous government had resulted in a process that culminated in the Oct 1 Resolution, he said.

The Sirisena-Wickremesinghe government co-sponsored the Resolution which called for the inclusion of the Commonwealth and other international judges.

Commenting on the change of government last year, the President said that he and the government had received a mandate to resolve the contentious Geneva issue and pave the way for true national reconciliation.

The President expressed disappointment that major issues that had been there at the time of the British quit Sri Lanka remained to be resolved. "Although we got freedom from the imperial rule, the foreign forces left our nation, leaving behind many problems they created during their rule."

The President pointed out that the Geneva issue had to be faced and resolved in a bid to protect the pride and dignity of the military.

Having castigated political rivals as well as extremist elements, the President urged them not to seek political power at the expense of genuine peace and stability.

Recalling the threat posed by the LTTE, President paid a glowing tribute to the military for eradicating terrorism. Over 6,000 officers and men died during eelam war IV, the majority of them in the Vanni offensive.

The passage of the 19th amendment to the Constitution to restore democracy had been a major victory achieved by the new government during last year, the President said. Having explained the significance of the establishment of Independent Commissions including the Election Commission and the measures taken to tackle waste, corruption and irregularities, the President stressed that as a result the parliament had been strengthened.

The President said that the new administration had restored media freedom in accordance with yahapalana policy. A future government would again curtail media freedom unless both journalists and media institutions acted responsibly. The President urged the media not to abuse the newly gained freedom.

Sri Lankan schoolchildren sang their national anthem in the island's minority Tamil language at Independence Day celebrations for the first time in 67 years Thursday, in a highly symbolic gesture after decades of civil war.

 04 Feb 2016
COLOMBO: Sri Lanka's war-battered minority Tamils welcomed the national anthem being sung in their language at Independence Day celebrations on Thursday (Feb 4) for the first time in 67 years as a "giant step" towards reconciliation.
The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) said the gesture, which saw schoolchildren sing Sri Lanka Matha ("Mother Sri Lanka") in Tamil at a military parade, signalled recognition the community were equal citizens.
"It may be a small symbolic thing, but it is a very important step telling the Tamil-speaking people that they are equal members of this country and the state recognises that," M A Sumanthiran of the TNA, the island's main opposition party, told AFP.
"It is in fact, a giant step from that perspective," Sumanthiran said, adding that he hoped more serious issues could also be resolved in the same spirit.
Every year since 1949, the first anniversary of independence from Britain, the anthem had been sung at the main national celebration only in Sinhala, spoken by the island's ethnic Sinhalese majority.
But on Thursday pupils sang in both languages at a televised military parade that also saw army tanks, gunships and fighter jets travel down Colombo's seafront promenade in front of thousands of flag-waving spectators.
The Tamils bore the brunt of the island's 37-year civil war that ended in May 2009 and claimed at least 100,000 lives.
But the election of reconciliation-minded President Maithripala Sirisena in January last year has helped to mend relations, and last year Tamils officially took part in national day celebrations for the first time.
The previous government of strongman leader Mahinda Rajapakse had banned the singing of the national anthem in Tamil at official ceremonies.
In a speech, Sirisena reiterated his pledge to allow an investigation into wartime human rights abuses following a UN Human Rights Council resolution late last year.
"By implementing the resolution we safeguard the dignity of the nation, the people and the armed forces ... and it helps us to be accepted as a respected member of the international community," the president said.
Sirisena's new government has pledged to set up special war crimes courts this year to investigate allegations that troops killed at least 40,000 Tamil civilians in the final months of the conflict that ended in 2009.
But opposition politicians, who deny war crimes were ever committed by a government-backed military, say the UN-mandated probe is intrusive and represents a threat to sovereignty.
UN rights chief Zeid Ra'ad Al Hussein is expected to travel to Sri Lanka on a four-day visit from Saturday, with his council due to review the country's progress in implementing the September resolution.
Tamils account for just over 11 percent of the island's population of about 21 million and are demanding greater autonomy in areas where they are concentrated.
Divorce to Davos!

Given the international standing of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, the reclamation and restoration process had been put on steroids 
logoDFT-12-02
Saturday, 6 February 2016
Just over a year ago Sri Lanka had all but divorced herself from the rest of the world. She had tightened a seat belt and was on the fast lane cruising at 100 mph down ‘Harare Street’ – final destination – ‘Mugabeland’. The only land on the face of the earth that has a profusion of “zerophiles” – a people forced to love and adore the never-ending zeroes boldly reflected on their absolutely useless currency.

If not for the political changes that took place subsequently in Sri Lanka, its nationals too would have had the not-so-pleasant experience of personally seeing, touching and smelling crisp Rs. 10,000 bills hot from the press duly signed by Mahinda Rajapaksa as the Finance Minister and of course the inimitable and irresistible Ajith Nivard Cabral as the then Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka.
Given the international standing of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, the reclamation and restoration process had been put on steroids
DFT-12-IN-01Anyone with common sense would doubtless acknowledge the stinging if not debilitating reality that could have consumed all and sundry if people had extended another mandate to perpetuate the supposedly benign and gnostically-tapered “Chintanaya” mantra. A former lawyer turned message merchant and businessman along with his coterie of eccentric ad-men and women summoned all advertising skill and courage necessary to embellish a war-winning President but failed to get him elected. There is a lesson for students of marketing here – if your core is weak, no amount of uproar will restore.

8 January 2015 came and a new President was enthroned. Just over a year Sri Lanka had once again become an integral part of civilisation. She is being welcomed all over, promises to engage and restore economic ties from nations who were once good friends continue to coalesce. It’s indeed poignant to note the number of countries we had unintentionally ignored not being fully cognisant to ensuing ramifications. Being adequately cerebral and sagacious is a sine qua non for an astute politician.
Given the international standing of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, the reclamation and restoration process had been put on steroids. True patriots work for the wellbeing of the people and not their families. We are not surprised that for the first time in history a Sri Lankan political leader had been invited to attend the exclusive Davos meeting. This may be anathema to Mahinda Rajapaksa and his company. Regardless they would go on their professed journey to obfuscate and discombobulate until dates for the next general election is publicly proclaimed.
                       - See more 

With SF’s ‘Re-Entry’ What Will Happen To The Attack On Keith And The Killing Of Journos?


Keith Noyahr, deputy editor of The Nation, wrote a story that military medals had been awarded not for bravery or other merit, but as favors to Fonseka’s friends. Shortly thereafter, on May 22, 2008, Noyahr was abducted, assaulted and tortured.
Colombo TelegraphKeith Noyahr, deputy editor of The Nation, wrote a story that military medals had been awarded not for bravery or other merit, but as favors to Fonseka’s friends. Shortly thereafter, on May 22, 2008, Noyahr was abducted, assaulted and tortured.February 4, 2016

With Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka joining the United National Front, questions have resurfaced about his involvement in attacks on media persons, including alleged abductions and killings of journalists, and whether justice will be meted out.

Keith Noyahr, the then Associate Editor of ‘The Nation’ newspaper, was abducted and severely beaten up immediately after he wrote an article titled ‘An army is not its commander’s private fiefdom.’ It is alleged that Fonseka was directly involved in the abduction.
According to a leaked US diplomatic cable dated June 2, 2008, Ambassador Robert Blake wrote: “ The Defense Secretary summoned two media workers from the government-owned publishing house. He reportedly harangued them for over two hours for participating in a rally to protest the abduction and beating of defense journalist Keith Noyahr. The journalists told us that Gotabaya told them that ‘groups that revere Army Commander Fonseka’ would kill them if they persisted in their campaign for media freedom.”
Gotabaya Rajapaksa said that as Lake House employees, they were government servants who had no rights to take part in protests. Further, he said that criticism of the military leadership, particularly Army Commander Sarath Fonseka, and the conduct of the war would not be tolerated. He told the media workers that there were large numbers of military personnel who ‘revered Fonseka like a God,’ and that he could not control these people.” the US Embassy Colombo informed Washington.
In this context, several media rights activists and organizations are pointing out that the credibility of the new regime has been compromised with respect to the commitment to restore law and order and more importantly guarantees given to the UN about investigating allegations of wrongdoing by the military during the last stages of the war.                                                    Read More

Sri Lanka’s Main Opposition, TNA Welcomes Anthem in Tamil

in Tamil
( Singing in Tamil on Independence day)
Sri Lanka Brief05/02/2016 
ECONOMYNEXT – Sri Lanka’s main opposition Tamil National Alliance welcomed the national anthem being sung at national day celebrations as a “giant step” towards reconciliation in a country emerging from decades of Ethnic war.
TNA legislator and spokesman M. A. Sumanthiran said he hoped that same spirit will be maintained in resolving the long-standing demands of the Tamils to have a greater degree of autonomy in the regions where they are concentrated.
He said Thursday’s winding up of national day celebrations with the national anthem in Tamil as a symbolic more with much deeper meaning.
“It is an inclusive approach. Goes with what the President said last year and this year,” Sumanthiran said.
“It may be a small symbolic thing, but a very important step in telling the Tamil speaking people that they are equal members of this country and the state recognises that. It is in fact a giant step from that perspective. I hope more substantial issues that remain to be resolved will be resolved from that perspective.”
Tamils began attending national day celebrations from last year after President Maithripala Sirisena came to power. (COLOMBO, Feb 4, 2016)

Bilingual Version of The National Anthem of Sri Lanka

The Rule of Law — What Does it Mean?

rule-of-law
The essence of a nation should be founded on human rights that are contrived from single instances of wrongs committed against the people.  According to this principle, a right becomes something that is legitimately due to a person which he can justly claim as secured to him by law, and which ensures that some wrong committed in the past is effectively precluded by the right so secured.

by Dr. Ruwantissa Abeyratne

( February 5, 2016, Montreal, Sri Lanka Guardian) President Sirisena, in his Independence Day message has said inter alia, “…This occasion is of special significance because we commemorate the dawn of freedom at a time coinciding with the taking of clear and resolute steps to firmly establish democracy and good governance, the Rule of Law, and a truly meaningful parliamentary system; to establish a long lasting and stable structure of good governance”.

The term “Rule of Law” is a term most often uttered by leaders and lawyers in a democracy.  It is commonly associated with the 19th century British lawyer Albert Venn Dicey who identified the Rule of Law as the cornerstone and fundamental postulate of the English Constitution.  According to Dicey, the Rule of Law was composed of three basic and inviolable principles: that government must follow the law that it makes; that no one is exempt from the operation of the law – that it applies equally to all; and that general rights emerge out of particular cases decided by the courts.  While the first two principles are easy to digest, the third brings to bear the fundamental premise that the courts could interpret the general rights of the people with their judgments.   In other words, courts could keep tabs on or rather monitor legislation with a view to obviating and effectively precluding collectivist legislation.

The Canadian case of Roncarelli v. Duplessis decided in 1959 by the Supreme Court of Canada best illustrates the second and third principles of the Rule of Law.  In the Roncarelli case the court handed down its decision that the Premier of Quebec Maurice Duplessis had acted beyond his authority (ultra vires in legal terms) in unilaterally revoking restaurant owner Mr. Roncarelli’s restaurant liquor licence without the proper legal authority.  The ground for revoking the licence was the fact that Mr. Roncarelli was a Jehovah’s Witness. Mr. Roncarelli’s lawyer, Frank Scott  – who later became  a distinguished Dean of the Faculty of Law at McGill University – summed it up perfectly when he said that no public officer has any power beyond what the law confers upon him and that  all are equal before the law.

Essentially the Rule of Law has two dimensions: everyone has equal rights and those rights cannot be arbitrarily taken away; and the courts must essentially play a pivotal role in separating arbitrary power of the legislature from the rights of the citizen.  In the context of rights, the basic pronouncement lies in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.  Alan Dershowitz, Felix Frankfurter Professor of Law at Harvard University, in his book “Rights from Wrongs” states that rights do not come from nature, as nature is value neutral, nor do they come from logic or law alone because, if rights emanated from law, there would be no basis to judge a given legal system.  Dershowitz maintains that rights come from human experience, particularly experience with injustice.

Our experience has taught us never again to tolerate a holocaust, never to curb freedom of expression and freedom of faith, and from that experience has stemmed the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and the United Nations Charter.  These documents, which embody fundamental rights are just pieces of paper if experience is not joined by logic.  The marriage of logic and experience in the wisdom of human relations is ingrained in ancient Jewish philosophy, which, according to Isaac Abravanal, recognized that experience is more forceful than logic but logic and experience are not mutually exclusive.  Without being applied to experience, logic tends to be hollow and directionless, but without the focus of logic, experience becomes multi directional and out of focus.  Good decisions come from experience and experience comes from bad decisions.  In other words, rights emerge from wrongs and not from ancient parchments or tomes of wisdom hidden away in a forgotten memory that is subsequently revived.

The essence of a nation should be founded on human rights that are contrived from single instances of wrongs committed against the people.  According to this principle, a right becomes something that is legitimately due to a person which he can justly claim as secured to him by law, and which ensures that some wrong committed in the past is effectively precluded by the right so secured.   A right should not be confused with power, the former being based on moral justification and expectation and the latter being based on enforceability.  Protection by the state of an individual, freedom to attend church or temple, and freedom to educate oneself are examples of a right where as sovereignty of State, authority to censor speech and enforce martial law are examples of power.  A wise nation distinguishes between the two and maintains a balance.

Human rights should be viewed as something more than a concept which acts as a cultural artifact.  They transcend fundamental rights, which are essentially political and civil rights, and expand to more basic rights such as the right to be equal to anyone with regard to the basic universal need for nourishment, shelter, clothing and education.  In order to make sure that they are enjoyed by all of humanity, any community will have to make sure that human rights are a matter of course and are ensured by a guaranteed and contrived effort by all.  Human rights and their worth cannot strictly be evaluated.  

Traditional modes of evaluation, with which the voter usually goes to the polls in a democratic environment to select the government, are “value for money”, efficiency of service delivery and customer satisfaction. At best, these yardsticks have largely been political and economic abstractions which have prompted some academics and practitioners to consider the subject of governance-evaluation as being immeasurable or too much trouble.

As for the role of the courts in ensuring the Rule of Law, and the impartiality and independence of the judiciary, the finding of the Supreme Court of Canada clearly subsumed the point in the statement of the  Chief Justice of Canada in the Provincial Court Judges decision handed down in 1997: “Judicial independence is valued, because it serves important societal goals – it is a means to secure those goals. 

One of these goals is the maintenance of public confidence in the impartiality of the judiciary, which is essential to the effectiveness of the court system. Independence contributes to the perception that justice will be done in individual cases. Another social goal, served by judicial independence is the maintenance of the rule of law, one aspect of which is the constitutional principle that the exercise of all public power must find its ultimate source in a legal rule”.

There should be nothing less in the Rule of Law.   The author fervently hopes that, on the occasion of the 68th anniversary of independence in Sri Lanka, these inviolable and precious tenets that make the Rule of Law truly sustain.  ESTO PERPETUA.
Foreign policy implementation should be led by Foreign Ministry

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logoFriday, 5 February 2016
The Sunday Times last Sunday had a headline that said a Committee headed by Charitha Ratwatte, a one-time UNP Chairman, will with immediate effect oversee the working of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs (MFA). The committee would be called the Global Affairs Committee. 

While this still to be officially confirmed, there is no question Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe’s understanding of international politics is outstanding and he is held in high esteem by senior politicians like Senator McCain and Collin Powell (both have told me in person), therefore the Prime Minister giving directions on foreign policy is a good thing. But for a committee sitting outside the foreign office giving directions may lead to bigger conflicts between the Prime Minister’s office and the Foreign Office. 

Mangala and his Deputy Harsha are very capable people with a lot of energy and can articulate very well our political and economic vision overseas. Mangala unlike most other politicians has a lot of political acumen and therefore he needs to be empowered fully to Untitled-1deliver and in return he needs to up his game. However, there is no question the foreign policy for the country must be determined by the President in consultation with the Prime Minister and the Cabinet of Ministers supported by a competent foreign service. 

Revive the Ministry

During the last administration, of the 49 posts, 35 heads of diplomatic missions were filled with political appointees, and this practice turned the Foreign Service into a branch of the UPFA. The politicisation of the Foreign Service led to the dismal state in the foreign relations sphere in the country.
Diplomacy plays a direct role in addressing the root cause of insecurity. Diplomatic initiatives build partnerships so that nations can work together to address bilateral and multilateral issues. Diplomacy refers to communication or negotiations tactics that use political and legal channels to address both bilateral and multilateral issues.  
                                                                          - See more


Legend along Littoral Landscapes: Tales from the Muslim World


The island of Sri Lanka, since ancient times, has featured prominently in the navigational and spiritual cartography of the Muslim world. The word of Persian origin ‘Sarandip ’ (سرانديپ) has long captured the attention of historians of the Muslim world. It has also played a significant role in the historical imagination of writers and story tellers through the Perseo-Arab world of literature and legend.
The South and South East Asian region is home to the largest number of Muslims in the world. Therefore, it is unsurprising that the legends, history and practice of the Muslims of Sri Lanka can be understood in the context of a very South Asian form of Muslim practice. Ritual and legend surrounding once prominent sites along the Southern coastline are particular to the island’s geography, landscape and high levels of interaction with travellers anchoring along the ports of Sarandip.
Sailing to Sarandip was of spiritual significance and also held the potential of being a prosperous trading venture. Sailors who made the journey to the island of Sarandip were those taking the journey from the West to the East to China through the Spice Islands of South East Asia or those sailing from the Far East to the West.
Meadows of Gold and Mines of Gems
Among the most prominent sailors sailing from the West to the East is Al-Masudi. Also known as the Pliny of the East, Masudi wrote a 10th century historiographical account titled Meadows of Gold and Mines of Gems. This historical work attempts to trace a history of the world from Adam and Eve to Al Masudi’s time. In his work Masudi speaks of the funeral ceremony of a King of Sarandip in which the King is cremated in camphor, sandalwood and other prepared spices. He further comments on vernacular musical instruments of the island which produce on man effects as diverse as laughing and crying.                                                   Continue Reading →

Ethnoreligious Nationalism & The Crisis Of Muslim Leadership


By Salithamby Abdul Rauff –February 5, 2016 
Dr. Salithamby Abdul Rauff
Dr. Salithamby Abdul Rauff
Colombo Telegraph
Ultra ethno-religious nationalism, government ignorance and betrayal of own leadership disturb the existence of Muslims in Sri Lanka
The Muslim ethnic minority of Sri Lanka has been facing an existential threat today that the community has ever encountered in recent times. The history points to that Muslim community of the country has been sporadically vulnerably targeted by recurrently surfacing ultra ethno-religious nationalism (whether Sinhala-Buddhist one incubated by those in political power or Tamil one actively practiced by Tamil militancy (LTTE) at the time of armed conflict in the country), ignored by governments and equally betrayed by their political leadership also when the leadership prioritised filling its own pockets and stomachs with perks and posts from successive governments at the expense of its people’s interests.
In 1987, when India’s and Sri Lanka’s governments signed an Indo-Lanka accord to settle Sri Lanka’s prolonged ethnic question, Muslims the second largest ethnic minority in the country after Tamils were systematically ignored by Sri Lanka’s government in the accord submerging their existence, aspirations, interests and problems under the guise of Tamil-speaking people. When Muslim community went to their political leaders for this injustice, leaders of the time were unreasonably muted.
Rauff HakeemIn 1990s, when ultra Tamil nationalism pursued with Kalashnikovs by Tamil Tigers in the north and east carried out an ethnic cleansing against Muslim community forcibly expelling tens of thousands of Muslims from the north despite the north being Muslims’ traditional homeland too, when the same Tamil nationalism massacred Muslims in the east at homes, mosques, rice fields and markets, the government of Sri Lanka simply disregarded its inherent obligation of protecting these innocent Muslims from these painful events. The response of Muslim political leaders to this vulnerability against their own community was nothing but some senseless rhetoric.

Harin gives awakening answer to Rocket Rohitha’s threat ‘dont trample the Lion’s tail and awake it’ (video)


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -04.Jan.2016, 7.30PM)  If  Rajapakses’ small brat cum big ‘rat’ Rocket Rohitha can threaten so wildly  ‘don’t trample the tail of the Lion and wake it’ while  they are out of power , this threat is clearly  an index that if they are in power they would cut the people into slices, said Digital minister Harin Fernando .
At a media briefing held at the UNP headquarters lastday , the minister made this disclosure  in response to the comment made in the facebook of Rocket Rohitha , the youngest son of Rajapakse . This brat had made this comment after his brother Yoshitha Rajapakse was arrested and remanded for involvement in a  colossal fraud and money laundering activities , and which comment was  publicised by the media.
The media footage of part  of the speech made by Harin is herein 
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by     (2016-02-04 16:13:30)
Who is behind “Sinha Le”



2016-02-05

What is this movement Sinha Le? Who is behind it? Who are the leaders? These questions had been within the society until a few weeks ago by a group of its leaders who emerged from nowhere who made a scene in front of the Dalada Maligawa in Mahanuwara.

 In fact the creatively designed Sinha Le logo started appearing on vehicles since late November last year. Many started wondering about this newly emerging possibly ultra-nationalistic movement. Most importantly the minorities started worrying whether the sigh of relief they were enjoying following the end of the Rajapakse regime has come to an end. 


In fact the emergence of Sinha Le (Lion Blood) was as far back as 2010 when a primarily designed web site appeared on internet, but with less or no attention. The owner-designer of the website was from Kurunegala but was trying hard to get the branding popular among the Sinhala – Buddhist populace with no success.  

The competition for ultra-nationalist leadership of Sinhala Buddhist during that time was a bit high – mainly as it was just after the end of the war. The vociferous Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) was gaining momentum under the ‘unsung’ state patronage, thus new movements like Sinha Le were not picking up, even within the cyber space.

Though repeatedly denied, BBS had an undeclared honeymoon with the then Rajapakse regime. At least the mere silence by the state when non-Buddhist establishments – predominantly Muslims - were attacked in several cities of the country was a clear sign of this undisclosed marriage. No arrests were made, no action taken against these unlawful acts of BBS. In contrast social media was full of pictures of the BBS leadership with the former Defence Secretary and the movement had a free hand to do anything as it wished.                                            - See more