Peace for the World

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

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

Big Banks and the White House Are Teaming Up to Fleece Poor People

Big Banks and the White House Are Teaming Up to Fleece Poor People

When Wall Street and its regulators talk about servicing the so-called “unbanked,” people who are generally disconnected from the banking sector, it often sounds like a mission to do God’s work — bank unto others as thou banketh for thyself.

“Basic financial services are out of reach for one in four individuals on Earth,” U.S. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew, a former Citigroup banker, said at a December speech launching the White House’s latest initiative targeted at the unbanked, which involves a partnership with JPMorgan Chase and PayPal.
report co-sponsored by JPMorgan Chase in 2014 speaks of the problem in similarly biblical terms: “Roughly 75 percent of the world’s poor — 2.5 billion people — do not have a bank account or otherwise participate in the mainstream financial system.” The lack of access to “secure, affordable financial products and services severely limits the global poor’s financial security and opportunities.”

Yet when bankers and regulators debate the travails of the unbanked or underbanked — effectively euphemisms for poor and lower-middle-class Americans — they usually avoid two key questions: Why is this cross-section of society so marginally attached to the banking system in the first place? And who is behind the provision of “alternative” services — high-cost loan sharks, payday lenders, cash checking stores, pawnshops — the poor turn to instead of banks?

In reality, it is the banks themselves that appear to have cut off and driven away the low-income consumer, not the other way around. Wall Street won’t make loans to the poor — at least not directly. But large banks, it turns out,are behind many of the predatory nonbank, high-cost lenders that notoriously prey on poor communities. Most recently, the same JPMorgan Chase that’s working with the White House to reach the unbanked partneredwith OnDeck Capital, an online lender that approves loans in a flash and charges eye-popping interest rates that averaged around 54 percent as of 2014.

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Facebook suspends user for posting historical photos of topless Indonesian women

A few of the photos featured in "The Culture of Real Indonesian Women" photo album. Pic: Screengrab off @DeaSB
A few of the photos featured in "The Culture of Real Indonesian Women" photo album. Pic: Screengrab off @DeaSB
by  -24th February 2016

FACEBOOK has suspended the account of a young Indonesian woman who posted historical photos of local women to protest the Indonesian Broadcasting Commission’s censoring of a beauty pageant recently.

Last Saturday, the Puteri Indonesia 2016 pageant was broadcast on local channel Indosiar, but viewers were puzzled when they saw that television censors were blurring out the chests and legs of some contestants who were wearing the traditional Indonesian kebaya, considered a national costume.

Of late, Indonesian conservatives have increasingly justified the need for censorship to “protect traditional Indonesian culture”.

This led Dea Basori, 23, to question the censors.

Speaking to Asian Correspondent, Dea said she decided to search the internet using the keyword “Indonesian women old photos” and compiled the pictures she found into a photo album on her Facebook account, which she made accessible to the public.


The pictures were mostly black and white images of Indonesian women throughout history, dressed in traditional attire. Many of the women in the photos were topless or bared their nipples.

“I did this to counter the censors and ask, ‘whose culture are you protecting?’ Is their definition of Indonesian culture a true reflection of it?”

She added that her album, entitled “The Culture of Real Indonesian Women”, received almost 3,000 shares within 24 hours of uploading.



However, on Tuesday night at around 7pm local time, Dea received a notice from Facebook informing her that her account had been suspended.

“Facebook told me to write an appeal if I wanted to get my account back up,” she said, adding that her account’s suspension was apparently a result of the photos, as her post had received about 50 reports for “nudity” and “explicit content”.

“The photos I posted are all over the internet; all I did was compile them. And besides, it’s a part of our history – how can people be offended?”


She also criticized Indonesian censors and conservatives for their contradictory stance: “Why are women told to cover up, but not men? We see men freely posting photos of their bare chests or going topless in advertisements. How can you sexualize women’s chests but not men’s?”

Dea, a dental student, is of Javanese descent and is proud of her heritage. She said she felt “sad” for those who felt the need to report the photos.

In her appeal to Facebook, she wrote that she understood that Facebook had the right to enforce its policy to keep the social media platform a safe place to socialize. But she felt that Facebook also had the potential to be used as a tool to educate people and be a safe space for discussion towards better understanding among the public.

“I saw the historical photos that I have collected so far as a valuable aspect of Indonesian history. They shouldn’t be contrived as pornographic, obscene, or scandalous photography, but rather as an aspect of history that could help society contemplate the over-sexualization of women’s bodies.

“There shouldn’t be intimidation towards individuals who are genuinely eager to educate the public about Indonesian history,” she said.

Below is a photo of the censored beauty pageant, which went viral among Indonesian netizens.


Who you marry is more important than genetics, upbringing in determining obesity risk: study

WATCH: Do you think your genetic makeup has pre-determined whether you’ll be obese? Think again, suggests a study.

IMG_7724By Carmen Chai-February 22, 2016


If you’re blaming your weight woes on your genetics and your upbringing, Scottish researchers say your parents are off the hook. In a new study, they say your partner and the lifestyle habits you forge together are much more important in determining your obesity risk.

The latest findings out of the University of Edinburgh may be promising for some: the research suggests that it’s your choices as an adult that trump your genetic make-up and the habits you forged as a child in determining weight gain.

“Although your genes play an important role in determining your chances of being obese, they are not the only determinants…by the time you reach middle age, your current lifestyle is a more important influence than your upbringing with regards to your obesity status,” lead researcher, Dr. Chris Haleyof the university’s Medical Research Council, told Global News.

“You can change your lifestyle, so you can play a part in determining your obesity status,” Haley said.

Haley and his team conducted their study with the help of the Generation Scotland project. It’s a national health database that the country is using to study a string of health-related issues.

In this case, they looked at the health records of 20,000 people from Scottish families to study the link between obesity, genetics and lifestyle habits.

The group looked at family genetics, home environments in childhood and in adulthood and then gathered 16 measures of health, such as waist to hip ratio, blood pressure levels, and body fat.

While plenty of research is shedding light on how childhood obesity puts people at risk of a lifelong battle with weight, Haley says that the lifestyle adults build with their spouses is the greatest influence on their chances of becoming obese.

It’s by middle age that choices about diet and exercise affected obesity risk most.

“The findings show that even people who come from families with a history of obesity can reduce their risk by changing their lifestyle habits,” he said.

“We have shown this by looking at similarities between siblings and couples with regards to obesity-related traits, and we find that if you do not count genetics, you have more in common with your partner than with your siblings or parents,” Haley warned.

So if you’re worried about weight gain, especially in middle age, try not to peg your woes on your genetics. Instead, pay attention to how you and your partner are living, the study says.


The full findings add to growing research on the obesity epidemic occurring around the world. In Canada, obesity rates have tripled since 1985, and almost two in 10 Canadians are obese, according to estimates conducted in 2014.

By 2019, the Canadian researchers said that 21 per cent of us will be obese, with a spike in the “very obese” category.

Some research points to childhood weight acting as a marker for obesity later on, while others say our car-dependent lifestyles and processed food-laden diets are the culprits.

Haley’s research was published in the journal PLoS Genetics. Read the study here.
carmen.chai@globalnews.ca

Radical cancer treatment seeks to control rather than destroy tumours

Experimental therapy tested in mice could lead to patients living healthy lives with tumours constantly kept in check with low doses of medicine
A single breast cancer cell. Tumours are collections of different cells, and some are more resistant to drugs than others. Photograph: Rex/Cultura
 Science editor-Wednesday 24 February 2016
A radical approach to cancer treatment which keeps tumours under control rather than destroying them completely may be more effective than conventional therapies, scientists say.

The idea draws on Charles Darwin’s 150-year-old theory of evolution and recasts tumours as diverse ecosystems of cells which can be manipulated to prevent them from growing out of control.
The strategy is highly experimental and has only been tested in mice, but successful trials in humans could usher in a transformation in cancer care, where patients live healthy lives with tumours that are constantly kept in check by low doses of medicine.

Routine cancer treatment assumes that patients do best when a therapy kills off the maximum number of malignant cells in their bodies. But tumours are collections of different cells and some are more resistant to drugs than others. A dose of chemotherapy will typically leave drug-resistant cells behind. 
Unencumbered by their neighbours, they can rapidly grow back when the treatment stops.

Scientists in the US wondered what would happen if anticancer drugs were used to shrink tumours without destroying the diversity of cells inside them. They hoped that the surviving cancer cells would stop more aggressive, drug-resistant ones from taking over, just as grass can prevent moss running wild in a garden.

Writing in the journal Science Translational Medicine, Robert Gatenby at the H. Lee Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, Florida, describes how his team tested the idea with the chemotherapy drug paclitaxel (or taxol) in mice with two different forms of breast cancer.

When the mice were given standard chemotherapy, their tumours shrank, but grew back as soon as the treatment ended. For the new therapy, mice were given initially high doses of drugs followed by ever lower doses. The strategy appeared to be more effective than standard treatment. Giannoula Klement, a cancer specialist at Tufts University School of Medicine in Boston, who was not involved in the work, said that in about 60% of the mice, the cancer treatment could be withdrawn completely with no further growth of the tumours.

In an accompanying article, Klement argues that to beat cancer, it must be considered as an ecosystem of different cells. “The likelihood that a ‘magic bullet’ against cancer is going to be found is nil. If we have learned anything from the eco-evolutionary model it is that unless we respect these eco-evolutionary laws, we will continue to play a cat and mouse game with cancer,” she writes.

Instead of eradicating cancer, the new goal for doctors needs to be prevention of cancer disease, she adds. “We need to stabilise tumour growth and enable gradual, controlled regression over time.”

Charles Swanton, a scientist at the Francis Crick Institute in London, who is part-funded by Cancer Research UK, said: “How cancers become resistant to treatment has been one of the greatest challenges facing doctors and their patients. This work tries to find a way around a phenomenon known as ‘competitive release’, where drug resistant cancer cells survive and take over the tumour once the drug-sensitive cells have been killed off.

“When this happens in cancers, the disease is often much harder to treat due to the limited number of drug options available. This new approach is looking into how to reverse this by using different schedules of chemotherapy to keep some of the drug-sensitive cancer cells alive to outcompete the resistant untreatable cancer cells. Although this has work has been done in mice, it shows promise and paves the way for clinical trials with new dosing schedules in patients.”

Rachel Rawson, a senior clinical nurse specialist at Breast Cancer Care, said: “The potential to reduce gruelling side-effects of chemotherapy, while increasing the treatment’s effectiveness, could dramatically improve the lives of people with breast cancer. This is an exciting avenue to explore. Chemotherapy can mean women live with debilitating sickness, fatigue and extremely distressing hair loss for many months, making every day a challenge.

“However, there remains a long road from this study on mice to any potential changes in clinical practice. And we want to reassure anyone concerned: the treatment currently out there has been successfully trialled on thousands of patients.”

Tuesday, February 23, 2016

Sri Lanka’s Victims Demand and Deserve Credible Justice

Image courtesy IRIN
Groundviews
Tamils protest against abduction and rape in Vavuniya and Kilinochchi


23 February 2016

Tamil civil society held protests in Kilinochchi and Vavuniya calling on the government to take action on the ongoing sexual violence that people in the North-East faced.

Hundreds of members of civil society including teachers, school children, businesses and professionals marched through Vavuniya demanding justice for a series of rapes that had occurred in the North-East over the past month. 

The protests were sparked by the 3 rape incidents over the past week that were reported in Vavuniya, Semmalai and Mallavi.

14 more political prisoners on a fast!

14 more political prisoners on a fast!

- Feb 23, 2016
Fourteen political prisoners being detained at Colombo’s Magazine Prison started a fast this morning (23). Arrested in 2013, 2014 and 2015, they have been produced before magistrate’s courts only, and charges are yet to be filed in the high court against them. They are fasting to demand freedom as they are being held without charges being filed.

Three of them were rehabilitated after the war in 2009 and were allowed to return home, after which they were arrested again.
Two prisoners at Anuradhapura Prison are on a fast for the second day today.

ranga kalanThis is the need of the hour
By Latheef Farook  :  

logoEvery Sri Lankan, keen on the welfare of at least our future generations, should appreciate Dr Ranga Kalanasooriya’s thought provoking article in the Daily Mirror on 19 February 2016 on the need for Buddhist and Muslim harmony.

Titled” An open letter to my dear Muslim brothers and sisters-Buddhist-Muslim relations could be warmer” Dr Kalanasooriya rightly pointed out  that main factors that fuel ethno-religious tension are  suspicion, lack of understanding and absence of direct engagement and both communities should do more to address those  issues”.

Generally speaking even today there is hardly an issue between Buddhists and Muslims who lived in harmony for more than 1000 years until 1930s when educated Sinhalese from the south began their racist politics and turned this island paradise into a killing field.

Throughout the four and half century Portuguese, Dutch and British colonial rules this harmony prevailed. Muslims fought colonial powers, integrated well with Buddhists and shared the country’s prosperity and adversity.

Even on the eve of independence though the Dominion Status Bill was detrimental to Muslims, yet they voted in favor and facilitated the country’s independence on 4 February 1948.In response then opposition leader S.W.R.D Bandaranaike assured that the Sinhalese will never forget this. What happened later is common knowledge.

After the independence both the United National Party and the Sri Lanka Freedom Party competed in their extremely dangerous vote catching strategy of promoting Sinhala interest   sidelining helpless Muslims.

Though this policy continued, yet the Muslims never failed in their responsibility.
For example in the 1980s Elam may have become   a reality had the Muslims in the North and East supported the Indian backed LTTE’s armed struggle for separate state as during the early stage of the war Sri Lankan armed forces were ill equipped and ill trained.

As a result Muslims paid a costly price and their misery continues to date.

They were massacred in mosques, entire Muslim population in the North driven out from their homes with only an extra clothe and Rs 150. They ended up in refugee camps where they still suffer abandoned by successive governments. In the east Muslims lost their lands and livelihood and lived under LTTE barbarity for almost three decades.

In December 2004 tsunami waves wiped out almost one percent of the Muslim population. East was worst affected.  Yet Ampara GA even failed to visit them leave alone helping.  Around four billion dollar tsunami aid was given to the government and yet the Muslim tsunami victims are still languishing in temporary sheds. What happened to the aid money which in fact is blood money? Politicians and officials robbed the money and got away with government blessings.

Saudi government built 500 houses for Muslim tsunami victims. They were prevented from being distributed. Now they are in dilapidated state covered by jungle.

When the LTTE was defeated in May 2009 Muslims, especially those from North and East, too were happy hoping they could resume their normal life.

However to their shock Rajapaksa regime unleashed an unprecedented violent anti Muslim campaign which caught Muslims unaware. This shameful state backed carnage, suspected to have been financed by Israel through Norway, struck at the very root of the community’s political, religious, economical, cultural and social life and thus its very survival. 

The state machinery and saffron mercenaries were fully exploited to drive terror into Muslims while mercenaries in the mainstream media were employed to poison the Sinhalese minds against Muslims. Thus the Buddhist-Muslim suspicion and misunderstanding.

The climax of this carnage was when state backed horrendous crimes were committed against Muslims at Aluthgama, Berwala and Dhargha Town under the watchful eyes of Special Task Force. Rajapaksa regime should be held fully responsible for allowing global anti Muslim war mongers to bring their war campaign to Sri Lanka and pit the Sinhalese against Muslims.

The result is the current unfortunate suspicion between the two communities though no Muslim poses any threat to any Buddhist or Buddhism. This situation was aggravated by the irresponsible media and lack of communication between the two communities.

Muslims, living scattered all over the island and politically disorganized, expected their political and religious leaderships to take the initiatives to clear the misunderstanding .Unfortunately, by and large; Muslim politicians have become sell outs and abandoned the community for positions and perks.
Equally disastrous is the Muslim religious body the All Ceylon Jamiathula Ulema, ACJU   which has miserably failed to guide the community to ensure the age old ties with the majority community is preserved.

Issues such as suspicion, lack of understanding and absence of direct engagement as pointed out posed by Dr Kalanasooriya and other issues were ignored or not properly handled by the ACJU.

 As a result, judging from the serious allegations in the social media, the ACJU and its leadership have lost the confidence of major section of the community. This is the reason why there have been calls on the need for   complete overhauling of ACJU   to suit the time.

Betrayed by politicians and ACJU, Muslim civil society has started taking numerous initiatives to reestablish the lost ties with Buddhists. This is a welcome sign.

It is also time that mainstream Buddhists, who genuinely follow Lord Buddha’s Buddhism,   to free themselves from racist elements and help build a society where all could live in harmony.

This is essential in view of the reality that this is a multi religious, multi racial, multi lingual and multi cultural society where all need to understand each other and move ahead avoiding past mistakes.

There is hope as numerous initiatives were undertaken from Buddhists too. For example activist and former Daily News Editor Jayatilleke De Silva and a group of Sinhala professionals organized a discussion forum of the three major communities at Mahaweli Centre in Colombo recently on how to bring better understanding among all. 

Such moves on the part of   Buddhists and Muslims alike should continue to save the country. Let us hope and pray at least future generations live in peace and harmony.

Island Needs to Mind its Mindfulness

concentration-vs-mindfulness-insight
Editorial writers should balance the pros and cons of important issues of the day with relevant facts and figures and demonstrate why one side is better without disparaging the adversaries or excessively praising the protagonists.

by Shelton A. Gunaratne, PhD (Minn.)

( February 23, 2016, Moorhead, Minn., Sri Lanka Guardian) 

I reckon that The Island editorial titled “ETCA and mandates” (Feb. 22, 2016), which has had 1575 hits by noon the following day, drew the attention of a large audience. This indicates the editor’s correct news sense in selecting timely topics to edify his potential readers.

I concur with the editor’s view that the attempt of the putative “yahapalanaya” clique to endorse the Indo-Lanka Economic and Technical Cooperation Agreement (ETCA) without giving adequate time for the press and the public to discuss the implications of its contents violates the democratic principles that they pledged to uphold in the 2015 presidential and parliamentary elections.

However, the editorial would have served a more useful purpose had the writer avoided his apparent petulance and restrained his predilection to humiliate the politicians he presumably despises.
The editorial asserts that the ETCA “will certainly sound the death knell for Sri Lanka’s IT industry still in its infancy; it will prove to be the kiss of death for other sectors as well with the passage of time. Any average person with an iota of intelligence will see that ETCA is heavily loaded in favor of India. Else, New Delhi would not have evinced so keen an interest in it and pushed for inking it in such a hurry. The government says ETCA will help create employment opportunities.”

Had the writer documented these claims with facts and figures, he would have become much more convincing than by insinuating the country’s parliamentarians to be “political blockheads bellowing rhetoric and subjugating the national interest to their political agendas.”

The editorial, therefore, has taken up cudgels for the Government Medical Officers Association (GMOA), which is opposing the ETCA because the influx of Indian doctors has the potential of affecting the salaries and job opportunities of local doctors under the agreement. Thus, the editorial praises the 22,000 doctors in the GMOA as professionals who are protecting our national interest because they have “courageously defended the public interest against commercial giants producing tobacco, alcohol and contaminated milk powder; it also threw its weight behind the national medicinal drug policy.”

 This evidence is commendable. However, it skips the instances where the Island editorially criticized the GMOA for excessive greed when they demanded higher salaries (February 11, 2001). Also, the Island editorially criticized the trade unions, including the GMOA for “feathering their nests much to the neglect of the public interest” (April 6, 2005). In yet another editorial, the Island blamed the GMOA doctors for having “had to rely on medical reps to know their drugs” (February 19, 2008).

 Omission of facts is a propagandist technique.

Editorial writers should balance the pros and cons of important issues of the day with relevant facts and figures and demonstrate why one side is better without disparaging the adversaries or excessively praising the protagonists.

 My criticism of the Island editorial is not an endorsement of the ETCA. It’s an instructional piece for improving editorial writing by avoiding the hoity-toity propagandistic approach of hurling “insults” (by intentionally skipping the Sila dimension of the Middle Path) at those who have opposing viewpoints. Because all living beings are composites of the Five Aggregates, we “hurt” ourselves by trying to “hurt” others.

I am also baffled by the  apparent  differences in the editorial policy toward India applied by the daily Island and  the Sunday Island. A decade ago, the Sunday editorial (September 4, 2005) praised india for being the one country that chose not to close its eyes to this[LTTE terrorist] reality, and it asserted: “India is the one country that can help us over this hurdle and she is morally obliged to do so, given the role she played in making the LTTE what it is today.” In another editorial one year later (September 10, 2006), the Sunday editor declared: “Good relations with India must be the cornerstone of Sri Lanka’s foreign policy. Some facets of Indian assistance in military and security spheres must be left unpublicized for good and obvious reasons.
Now, the daily Island editor appears to have reversed the Sunday editor’s India-pleasing policy.
(Dr. Gunaratne is a professor of communication emeritus living in Minnesota.)

PM reads riot act to critics of ETCA-

‘It is an unborn baby with a Raja Yoga’


article_image
By Saman Indrajith- 

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe told Parliament yesterday that the Indo-Lanka Economic and Technical Cooperation Agreement would be inked by mid-2016 and a special Indian delegation was scheduled to arrive in the country on March 04 to discuss its content.

PM reads The PM said the final draft of the agreement would be prepared after those discussions and could be presented to Parliament. But, he would not let anyone instigate people against the ETCA, he warned.

"By introducing the ETCA, we are promising to give birth to a child whose horoscope has a Raja Yoga. So, do not bother to check the horoscope of the baby not yet born," he said.

"I instructed Minister Malik Samarawickrama to draft this agreement and make copies and distribute them among all MPs so that we could discuss its content. The street is not the place to debate the content of the agreement. To take the matter to streets is unfair and an insult to the agreement when you can debate it here. We can further discuss the matter when we set up the Sectoral Oversight Committees. There is no meaning in harbouring unfounded fears about this agreement."

Chief Opposition Whip Anura Kumara Dissanayake: The fears are not unfounded. The subject minister has stated that the agreement will open the IT sector and marine sector to the Indians. He said the framework agreement would be signed in February. So, the concerns we raise here have a strong basis.

Prime Minister: Anyone can come to Sri Lanka and commence business here. But, the investors cannot bring down their people here to work in those businesses. We have a shortage of lecturers. We should make use of the opportunity to bring down qualified lecturers. The salaries of IT personnel in India are higher than ours. So, our IT experts can go there and get higher salaries. Opening the avenues for investment does not mean that people could travel here and there en masse.

NFF Leader Wimal Weerawansa: Doesn’t it mean that the job market will be opened up? We asked for a one-day debate on this matter. We hope the Prime Minister will agree.

Prime Minister: We can discuss the matter when the draft is ready. We are preparing a draft and India, too, is also asked to make one. We can go through both drafts and discuss its content. Technology is a service. We can throw it open. There was a time when the rulers were willing to permit any foreign investment if the investors were willing to pay them five million US dollars. Hambantota is a white elephant. After we bring the ETCA we can turn that white elephant into a green elephant.

UPFA Colombo District MP Bandula Gunawardena: Indians have been permitted to commence an ambulance service with the Health Ministry. Why is that?

Prime Minister: India has a special ambulance service. That service makes use of bicycles to reach the patients and help them if there is a traffic congestion. We plan to introduce this to Sri Lanka. We have given a one-year contract. Thereafter, we take it over and run it ourselves in the Southern and Western Provinces. People will like this. I ask those who oppose it whether they like to see people dying without medical help. We don’t want that to happen.

Anura Kumara Dissanayake: It is reported that this service will commence after bringing in 100 ambulances. Won’t the Sri Lankan government spend a cent on this project? Is it a gift? What is the deal behind this?

Prime Minister: We will inform the House of the content of the agreement. We will have to pay for the services obtained. First, it will come free of charge. We will have to bear the cost of maintenance.

Anura Kumara Dissanayake: That is wonderful. Hundred ambulances are given and taken without calling for tenders and we are to pay for the services.

Prime Minister: If you are asking for information and details we are ready to provide them. We will give details when the Sectoral Oversight Committees are formed.

NFF leader Weerawansa: Can’t you find a local investor for this?

Prime Minister: There is none. Find one for me if possible.

MP Weerawansa: what is the special reason for commencing this ambulance service with India?

Prime Minister: You name a Sri Lankan entrepreneur who can do this. There is none. We know the games you played when you were in power. If I am going to narrate them the people of this country will hate you more.

MP Chandrasiri Gajadheera: Prime Minister says we do not have investors. Have you done a feasibility study to check whether we have local investors?

Prime Minister: I have given my answer. I am not ready to respond to leftists who shout on behalf of the robber capitalist class. There is no Sri Lankan who can do this. If there is give us the name of that person, we can give him a province to operate. We can give him Kandy.

DLF leader Vasudeva Nanayakkara: Who is the robber capitalist?

Prime Minister: I have files on all of you. There is only one true leftist here. That is Dr. Jayamapthy Wickremaratne. He, too, is now in the UNP.