Peace for the World

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

Thursday, February 25, 2016

Israel accused of trickery to snatch refugee lands


A march near the destroyed Palestinian village of Saffuriya by internal refugees marking the anniversary of the Nakba (MEE/Jonathan Cook)

Jonathan Cook's pictureJonathan Cook-Thursday 25 February 2016


Palestinian families warned of subterfuge designed to pressure them into signing over to Israel their rights to 1948 property 


ACRE, Israel - Palestinian leaders in Israel have warned that they suspect the Israeli government is behind recent efforts to trick the families of refugees from the 1948 war into signing away the rights to their lands.
The alert has been issued to an estimated 300,000 Palestinian citizens of Israel descended from refugees who were forced out of their villages during the 1948 war but remained inside the new Israeli state’s borders.
Palestinians refer to the dispossession of their homeland as the Nakba - the word for “catastrophe” in Arabic.
Experts say that Israel has been working to pressure refugees into selling the title to their lands for decades as a way to undermine a Palestinian right of return, one of the key demands in any peace agreement.
“Israel has a strong interest in reducing the number of refugees with a claim on these lands so that in the event of an agreement the issue of a Palestinian right of return is weakened,” said Hillel Cohen, a researcher on the Palestinian refugee issue at Hebrew University in Jerusalem.
“Israel hopes to be able to say to the international community, ‘But the refugees sold their land - where can they return to?’”
Khaled Suleiman, aged 64 and from the Israeli coastal city of Acre, told Middle East Eye his family was among those approached by lawyers trying to persuade them to sell.
Nearly 800,000 Palestinians like Suleiman’s parents became refugees in 1948 and were stripped by Israel of their rights to any property they could not carry with them, under legislation from 1950 known as the Absentee Property Law.

Barred from villages

 See more >>>

PA collaborates with Israel’s torture agency



Shikma prison in Ashkelon is the site of routine torture of Palestinians by Israeli interrogators, according to a new report.Rafael Ben-AriChameleons Eye



Charlotte Silver-25 February 2016

Palestinian prisoners are being held in painful positions for up to 35 hours, according to a new report.

The Israel Security Agency, known as Shin Bet, is confining detainees to filthy cells smaller than the size of an adult body stretched out, the report also reveals.
Compiled by the Israeli human rights organizations HaMoked and B’Tselem, the report focuses on the Shikmainterrogation center in Ashkelon, a city in present-day Israel.

It is based on 116 affidavits from Palestinian “security prisoners,” most of whom were still under detention when they testified.

The detainees – the majority men under 25 from the Hebron area of the occupied West Bank – recalled their arrest, transfer, interrogation and holding conditions to attorneys while sitting behind a glass partition, with their legs tied to the chair and under the supervision of a prison guard.

The report is a product of a three-year investigation. More than half of those interviewed reported they were forbidden to meet a lawyer or denied access to the International Committee of the Red Cross for all or part of their time at Shikma.

That is despite how Israel’s own prison rules stipulate that a prisoner must be allowed access to the Red Cross within two weeks of detention.

Collaboration

The report also highlights the collaboration between the Palestinian Authority Preventive Security force and Shin Bet.

Thirty nine of the detainees interviewed were arrested and interrogated by the Palestinian Authority before being arrested by Israel.

Most of those were arrested by Israel less than a month after being released by the PA, and usually interrogated about the same matters.

Adi Awawdeh, 21, was detained by the PA for 70 days, during which he was physically and mentally tortured. Just a week after he was released Awawdeh was arrested by Israel. When he arrived at Shikma, his interrogator showed him his file from the PA and said, “Here’s your file. It’s all ready. Do you want to add anything and save us some time?”



Read More

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani’s future is at stake in Friday’s vote for parliament and the Assembly of Experts. (www.president.ir via Reuters)

By Carol Morello-February 25

Iranians vote Friday in national elections that once had the potential to be pivotal until almost every would-be candidate advocating reform was barred from running.

With only a limited number of moderates and reformers on the ballot, analysts say the election is unlikely to foreshadow a history-making moment of change in Iran. The parliament and many other government bodies will continue to be dominated by conservatives, constraining the ability of Hassan Rouhani, Iran’s pragmatist president, to push through reforms.

But the election — the first since a nuclear deal lifted most of the international sanctions that had hobbled economic growth — is being closely watched nevertheless.

Though opposition activists call the election a sham, the vote totals could open a small window onto the Iranian appetite for change and Rouhani’s political future.

Many Western officials hoped the nuclear deal’s implementation in January would pave the way for Rouhani to introduce measures granting civil liberties and less Internet censorship, as he promised when he was elected in 2013. Now the best-case scenario is that urbanized voters in Tehran give Rouhani a small but strong minority to support economic reform.
“At the end of the day, it’s going to be seen as a referendum on Rouhani’s policies,” said Trita Parsi, president of the National Iranian American Council (NIAC), who is writing a book about the Iranian nuclear deal that was implemented in January. “We’ll see how many people back Rouhani, mindful of the fact he hasn’t delivered on opening up society, on civil rights or human rights.”

At stake are 290 seats in the parliament, or the Majles, an institution with limited powers but capable of blocking initiatives from the president’s office. There are 6,200 candidates, but that is barely half the number who initially registered to run. A hard-line body known as the Guardian Council disqualified more hopefuls than ever before in the 37 years since the Islamic revolution.

Read More

Outspoken Thai academic's family 'threatened' by military

Pavin Chachavalpongpun, a former Thai diplomat, gives regular lectures overseas criticising the junta and the Thai monarchy.PHOTO: ST FILE


FEB 25, 2016
BANGKOK (AFP) - A self-exiled Thai academic and strident critic of the ruling junta on Thursday (Feb 25) accused the military of harassing his family in Bangkok over his comments on the kingdom's monarchy, a taboo topic in a country with strict royal defamation laws.

Pavin Chachavalpongpun, a former Thai diplomat, gives regular lectures overseas criticising the junta and the Thai monarchy.

He draws admiration from many Thai dissidents for his no-nonsense commentary and has been a thorn in the junta's side since its 2014 takeover.

Thailand's military rulers revoked his passport in the wake of the coup.

They have also threatened to charge him with lese majeste, a crime that punishes criticism of the royal family with up to 15 years in prison.

Pavin told AFP that military officers have shown up at his family's home in Bangkok twice this week and threatened to summon the entire family to an army camp - a tactic the junta uses to silence its critics.
"It has nothing to do with me criticising the military, the main focus is on the monarchy," said Pavin, who works at Kyoto University but is currently a visiting scholar in the UK.

The alleged threats came after the professor gave two lectures at UK universities this week on the future of Thailand's monarchy, a sensitive subject as the kingdom's ailing 88-year-old monarch enters his twilight years.

Junta spokesmen told AFP they were not aware of the military visits and had no information about the allegation.

Thailand's military leaders have maintained a tight lid on freedom of expression since their power grab, routinely summoning the country's few vocal critics to army barracks for "attitude adjustment" sessions.
Lese majeste prosecutions have jumped over the past two years under the ultra-royalist military junta.
Sixty-six people have been arrested for the crime since the coup, with the majority spending at least a year behind bars while awaiting trial, according to the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH).

Those accused of lese majeste are often stained with a stigma in Thailand that can extend to their family members.

Thailand's King Bhumibol Adulyadej is the world's longest reigning monarch and worshipped as a demi-god by many Thais.

Thinking Allowed: Lawless lawyers

These lawyers were clearly insulting the Constitution by their criminal acts in lawyers’ uniform.

wolfpack-file_image( February 25, 2016, New Delhi, Sri Lanka Guardian) Clever lies become matters of self-congratulation. Solemn pledges become a farce — laughable for their very solemnity,” wrote Rabindranath Tagore. “The nation, with all its paraphernalia of power and prosperity, its flags and pious hymns… and the literary mock thunders of its patriotic bragging, cannot hide the fact that the nation is the greatest evil for the nation…”

The sound and fury over alleged “anti-nationalist” slogans at the Jawaharlal Nehru University and the belligerent, showy “nationalism” of people in public life reminds me of Tagore’s words from a hundred years ago. Is the nation really the greatest evil for the nation? I don’t know. But what I do know is that nationalism can be a heartless weapon in the hands of populist, politically motivated people. Anyone can be branded an “anti-nationalist” and be beaten up or clapped in jail. Anyone can pose as a nationalist and beat you up and clap you in jail. The police will look on. The law will look away. Even in Delhi, in the buzzing capital of a proud democracy.

JNU students’ union president Kanhaiya Kumar was arrested on sedition charges and branded an anti-national with no proper evidence against him, and beaten up by lawyers while in police custody in Delhi’s Patiala House courts last week. But a lot of people have been hit with the sedition charge — an academic here, a doctor there, a budding artist elsewhere, people whose views annoyed the government of the day. And under trials are routinely beaten up in police custody. So what is so special about Mr Kumar’s case?
It is special because it brings the festering wounds of our injured democracy out in the open — there is no veneer of doing the right thing or respecting the law. It shows how shamelessly politics can manipulate the rule of law. It shows that democratic institutions are not sacred anymore and we are not ashamed about it.

Europe braces for major 'humanitarian crisis' in Greece after row over refugees

EU ministers struggle to reach collective agreement on crisis as Austria and Macedonia press for reintroduction of national border controls


EU warns of humanitarian crisis as migrants move through Balkans – video


 in Brussels-Thursday 25 February 2016

European governments are bracing for a major humanitarian emergency in Greece amid rising panic that the EU’s fragmented efforts to cope with itsmigration crisis are nearing breakdown.

EU interior ministers met in Brussels on Thursday in their latest attempt to forge a common response, but the meeting was clouded by a ferocious row between Greece and Austria, which is spearheading a campaign to quarantine Greece and throttle the flow of migrants up the Balkans by partially sealing the Greek border with Macedonia.

If Greece is cut off from the rest of Europe’s free-travel Schengen area, Berlin predicts a humanitarian and security emergency within days.

Dimitris Avramopoulos, the EU commissioner in charge of migration, said contingency planning for a major aid operation was highly advanced and would be finalised within days. “The possibility of a humanitarian crisis of a large scale is there and very real,” he said.

A senior EU official involved in the planning said “the humanitarian dimension inEurope is becoming much more important than it has been until now”.

The shift in focus from taking in refugees to dealing with the consequences of keeping most of them out amounts to an admission of abject failure in developing coherent EU policies on the crisis.

Athens reacted furiously to the latest developments, recalling its ambassador from Vienna, accusing Austria of 19th-century behaviour, and blaming Europe for creating a crisis it was now preparing to relieve.


Read More

Indian farmers deep in debt, seek subsidies, help with insurance

ReutersBY RINA CHANDRAN-Thu Feb 25, 2016

MUMBAI (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Indian government action to increase spending on irrigation and crop insurance is not enough to end a cycle of indebtedness that has led to thousands of farmer suicides, and a complete overhaul of credit and subsidies to farmers is needed, activists said.

Drought in many parts of the country has hit rice, cotton and other crops, and lower world commodity prices have added to the farmers' plight.

More than half India's farming households are in debt, owing banks and moneylenders hundreds of millions of rupees, despite numerous loan write-offs by successive governments.

Tens of thousands of farmers across the country have killed themselves over the past decade, several farmers' lobbying groups said.

Finance Minister Arun Jaitley, who presents the federal budget for fiscal 2016-17 on Feb. 29, has to balance stimulating economic growth with aiding farmers and poorer sections of society.

Farmers' groups have been demanding better monsoon forecasts, bigger fertiliser subsidies and a state-funded insurance scheme for all crops, to help farmers improve yields and help prevent crop failures.
"The need of the hour is a focus on the dying farmer community," said activist Kishor Tiwari, who heads a task force set up to recommend action to tackle farmer suicides in Maharashtra, which accounted for more than half of all suicides among Indian farmers in 2014.

"Debt is a core issue, and it needs a long-term plan to resolve it," he said.

While inter-generational bonded labour in the farming community is no longer as common as before, the number of poor and landless workers who are in debt bondage is rising, particularly in agriculture, brick kilns and stone quarries, activists say.

Indian farmers seldom own the land they cultivate, and often take loans to buy seeds and fertilisers. Only about one tenth of India's 263 million cultivators take out crop insurance because of the high premiums.

Unpredictable weather and low crop yields have made farming unviable for many. Financial assistance provided by the government usually doesn't cover the losses, and some farmers have migrated to urban areas for low-paid jobs, even selling their blood to make ends meet.

Tiwari, in a plan submitted to the Maharashtra government, has recommended direct cash subsidies for farmers instead of the current indirect agriculture credit.

He also suggested the central and state governments help underwrite full crop insurance cover and promote the adoption of organic farming methods in drought-prone districts, to help restore soil quality and benefit from the higher price of organic produce, even though yields are lower.

A total of 5,650 farmer suicides were recorded in India in 2014, more than half of them in Maharashtra, according to the National Crime Records Bureau. The states of Madhya Pradesh, Telangana, Chattisgarh and Karnataka also had large numbers of farmer suicides.

The cabinet last month cleared a proposal for the country's first major crop-damage insurance scheme. 

The government has said it will reduce premiums to be paid by farmers, and ensure faster settlements.

Delays in estimating crop damage and paying claims are a big challenge, said Sunita Narain, director of non-profit Centre for Science and Environment in New Delhi.

The government must encourage the use of new technologies, including remote sensing and mobile-based image capturing systems to improve yield data and claims processing, she said.

"Insurance coverage has to be universal and payouts enough to cover losses," she wrote in a blog.
Farm output contributes about 15 percent to India's $2 trillion economy, and farmers and rural communities are a large and powerful vote bank.

Politicians have often promised to waive farmers' loan repayments, but have not addressed the underlying reasons for their chronic indebtedness, Tiwari said.

"Loan waivers are not the solution; it is like a simple dressing for a cancer tumour. You need to excise the tumour and address the cause of the disease," he said.

(Reporting by Rina ChandraRn, editing by Tim Pearce. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, 
the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, corruption and climate change. Visit news.trust.org to see more stories.)

Can talcum powder really cause cancer?

Johnson & Johnson has long marketed the talc-based powders as feminine hygiene products, and Baby Powder is widely available in the UK CREDIT: ALAMY 
Johnson & Johnson Baby PowderUsing powders in the female genital area can cause non-cancerous infections 
Using powders in the female genital area can cause non-cancerous infections  CREDIT:ALAMY


The Telegraph 24 FEBRUARY 2016

Pharmaceutical company Johnson & Johnson has been ordered to pay £51 million to the family of a woman who died from ovarian cancer.


Before her death, Jackie Fox claimed her illness had been caused by the company’s Baby Powder and Shower to Shower products, which she used for feminine hygiene purposes.

This week, a jury in Missouri decided her account was true and the court ordered the pay out. Johnson & Johnson is expected to appeal but the case is one of 1,200 lawsuits currently being brought against the company from American customers, who claim they were not told about the risks.

It raises one important question: can talcum powder actually cause cancer?

This is something experts are divided on – and the matter is made more complex by the fact that there are several different types of talcum powder.

Back when it first came about, the powder, generally contained talc – a mineral made of magnesium, silicon and oxygen – in its natural form.

Then, some of that talc was found to contain asbestos - a substance known to cause cancers in and around the lungs when inhaled.



When it was proven in the 1970s, all manufacturers stopped using this kind of talc. Instead they swapped to corn starch, which is currently used by most US companies and has never been linked to cancer in any way – or asbestos-free talc.

This is the kind of product that is present in J&J’s Baby Powder and is also used in most British versions of talcum powder.

Wednesday, February 24, 2016

VIEW THE AMNESTY INTERNATIONAL REPORT 2015/16

SRI LANKA 2015/2016

A new government in January brought constitutional reforms and promises of improved human rights protection. Many human rights challenges remained, including persistent use of arbitrary arrest and detention, torture and other ill-treatment, enforced disappearances and deaths in custody, and a long-standing climate of impunity for these and other violations.

Background

An investigation by the UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights into alleged abuses during the final seven years of the armed conflict and its immediate aftermath concluded in September that enforced disappearances, unlawful killings, torture and other ill-treatment, sexual violence, forced recruitment and child recruitment, direct military attacks on civilians, denial of humanitarian relief and systematic deprivation of liberty of displaced people on the basis of ethnicity could amount to war crimes and/or crimes against humanity. It recommended legal and procedural reforms to address ongoing violations, and the establishment of a hybrid special court, integrating international investigators, judges, prosecutors and lawyers to try those accused of alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity. The government signalled its agreement with the conclusions by co-sponsoring a UN Human Rights Council resolution in September calling for implementation of the report’s recommendations, including ensuring effective witness protection and consulting with victims and families in the design of truth and justice mechanisms.

Arbitrary arrests and detentions

Tamils suspected of links to the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) were arrested and detained under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) which permits extended administrative detention, and shifts the burden of proof onto a detainee alleging torture or other ill-treatment. In September the government pledged to repeal the PTA and replace it with anti-terrorism legislation that complied with international standards. It also pledged to review detention records and claimed to have released at least 45 detainees after “rehabilitation”. Some detainees were held for many years while waiting for charges to be filed or cases to conclude. Opposition leader Rajavarothiam Sampanthan told Parliament in December that 217 people remained detained under the PTA; most had not been tried. The number did not include those sent for “rehabilitation”, another form of arbitrary detention.

Torture and other ill-treatment

Torture and other ill-treatment of detainees – including sexual violence – continued to be reported and impunity persisted for earlier cases. In October, the Inspector General of Police ordered an inquiry into the alleged abuse of a 17-year-old boy and a man who were arrested in September in connection with the rape and murder of a five-year-old girl in Kotadeniyawa. Their lawyer said the two were beaten, stripped naked and photographed by police in order to obtain false confessions. Both were released without charge. Shortly before the incidents the government had promised the UN Human Rights Council that it would issue clear instructions to all branches of the security forces that torture and other ill-treatment, including sexual violence, and other human rights violations are prohibited, and that those responsible would be investigated and punished.

Excessive use of force

Complaints of excessive force in the policing of demonstrations persisted, and impunity remained for past incidents. Findings of military investigations into the army’s killing of unarmed demonstrators demanding clean water in August 2013 were not made public and no one had been prosecuted by the end of 2015. A magisterial inquiry was ongoing.

Deaths in custody

Suspicious deaths in police custody continued to be reported. Detainees died of injuries consistent with torture and other ill-treatment, including beatings or asphyxiation. Police claimed suspects committed suicide or in one case drowned while trying to escape.

Enforced disappearances

Court testimony by a Criminal Investigation Department (CID) official in connection with habeas corpus petitions by families of five youths who disappeared in 2008 from a suburb of the capital, Colombo, confirmed earlier reports by a former detainee that the Navy had operated secret detention camps in Colombo and Trincomalee where detainees were allegedly tortured and killed.
The Presidential Commission to Investigate into Complaints Regarding Missing Persons received 18,586 reports of missing civilians, but made little progress in clarifying their fate or whereabouts or bringing perpetrators of enforced disappearance to justice. In October the government, noting a widespread lack of confidence in the Commission, announced that they were replacing it with another body. In December, it signed and promised to ratify the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance and to criminalize enforced disappearances.

Impunity

Impunity persisted for alleged crimes under international law committed during the armed conflict, including enforced disappearances, extrajudicial executions and the intentional shelling of civilians and protected areas such as hospitals. Impunity also remained for many other human rights violations, including: the January 2006 extrajudicial executions of five students in Trincomalee by security personnel; the killing of 17 aid workers with Action contre la Faim in Muttur in August 2006; the January 2009 murder of newspaper editor Lasantha Wickrematunge; and the disappearances of political activists Lalith Weeraraj and Kugan Muruganandan in Jaffna in 2011. Army personnel and affiliates were questioned about the 2010 disappearance of dissident cartoonist Prageeth Eknaligoda. The investigation was ongoing at the end of the year.
The report of a 2006 Commission of Inquiry that investigated the Trincomalee and Muttur killings was finally released in October. It criticized original police investigations as lacking professionalism. The report of an investigation into civilian deaths during the armed conflict, also released in October, called for new legislation recognizing command responsibility and an independent judicial inquiry into credible allegations that members of the armed forces may have committed war crimes.

Human rights defenders

In January, severed heads of dogs were left outside the homes of Brito Fernando and Prasanga Fernando of the human rights organization Right to Life. They and colleague Phillip Dissanayake also received anonymous threatening phone calls alluding to their activism against police allegedly involved in enforced disappearances.
Human rights defenders in the north and east continued to report police and military surveillance and questioning around their participation in local NGOs and political meetings, demonstrations, campaigns for human rights accountability and key international events such as the UN Human Rights Council sessions. Activists from eastern Sri Lanka reportedly received anonymous phone calls asking for details of meetings they participated in, as well as anonymous threats after signing a statement calling for an independent international investigation into alleged war crimes.
Balendran Jeyakumari, an activist against enforced disappearances, was released on bail in March after nearly a year in detention without charge under the PTA. She was rearrested and detained for several days in September. On 30 June, the Colombo Magistrate’s Court lifted a travel restriction on Ruki Fernando which had been imposed in March 2014 on the request of the Terrorist Investigation Division (TID) after he and a Catholic priest, Praveen Mahesan, were arrested under the PTA following their attempts to investigate the arrest of Balendran Jeyakumari. Ruki Fernando remained banned from speaking about the ongoing TID investigation and his confiscated electronic equipment was not returned.

Freedoms of expression, assembly and association

President Sirisena declared 19 May, the anniversary of the end of Sri Lanka’s long armed conflict, to be Remembrance Day, and stressed that it was a day to commemorate all war dead. This move suggested that earlier restrictions on public commemorations by northern Tamils would be lifted. Although memorial events were permitted in most areas, a heavy police presence was reported at such gatherings in the north and east, and ceremonies were reportedly prohibited by the security forces in Mullaitivu, the site of the final offensive.
Complaints persisted of harassment and surveillance by security forces of people attending gatherings and engaged in activism, particularly in the north and east.

Justice system

The new government reinstated Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake, who was impeached in 2013 for political reasons. She immediately announced her retirement and was succeeded by Kanagasabapathy Sripavan. The new government enacted the 19th amendment to the Constitution which placed checks on the powers of the executive presidency, including ending direct presidential appointment and dismissal of senior judges and members of key institutions, including the Judicial Service Commission, and transferring those powers to a Constitutional Council.

Discrimination – religious minorities

Muslims and Christians continued to report incidents of harassment by police, members of the public and politicians, particularly in the context of political campaigning by hardline Buddhist political parties in the lead-up to parliamentary elections in August. Earlier incidents of violence and intimidation against religious minorities were not investigated. Deaths, injuries and property loss sustained by Muslim residents of Aluthgama Dharga Town and Beruwala in riots in June 2014 went unpunished.

Violence against women and girls

In May, the rape and murder of 17-year-old Sivayoganathan Vidhya on the island of Pungudutivu prompted large demonstrations demanding justice for cases of violence against women and girls. Local police were criticized for refusing to search for the missing teenager, reportedly telling her family that she probably ran off with a lover. In September, the rape and murder of a five-year-old girl in Kotadeniyawa led to calls for the death penalty to be reinstated, even after it became known that police had tortured two suspects in an attempt to force false confessions.
Evidence continued to mount that sexual violence may have been used systematically against Tamils (detainees, surrendered LTTE members and civilians) during and in the immediate aftermath of the conflict, strengthening calls for a justice mechanism to address war crimes. The 7 October conviction of four soldiers for the 2010 gang-rape of a woman in a Kilinochchi resettlement camp was widely seen as a small victory against the pervasive climate of impunity.
Cross party UK delegation meets TNA leader


 24 February 2016
A cross party group of UK politicians met with the leader of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), R Sampanthan on Wednesday. 



Fabian Hamilton MP, a shadow Labour minister, Colin Bloom of the Conservative party and Adele Poskitt, the ‎head of Smaller Parties Office at Westminster Foundation for Democracy met Mr Sampanthan at the Opposition Leaders' office in the parliamentary complex in Colombo. 

16 deported Sri Lankans arrested at BIA

2016-02-24
Sixteen Sri Lankans deported from Australia were taken into police custody on their arrival at Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA) yesterday, Police Media Unit said. It has been revealed that the suspects have travelled to Australia illegally by boats in 2012.
They are residents of Valachchenai, Udappuwa, Batticaloa, Chilaw, Wennappuwa, Kalavanchikudi, Andimunai, Arachchikattuwa and Negombo areas.
The suspects will be produced in Batticaloa Magistrate's court today. CID is conducting further investigations into the incident.

Hartal in the north seeking justice for a child

Hartal in the north seeking justice for a child

- Feb 25, 2016
The regular life of the public was severely hindered due to a hartal conducted in the North and North-Central provinces.

The public alleged against the police for arresting the suspects connected to a death of a thirteen year old school girl of the Bandarikulam Wipulananda School in Vavuniya who was raped and murdered.

The initial news on January 16th stated that this thirteen year old student, suicide herself by hanging.

During the post mortem the judicial medical officer confirmed that she was sexually abused due to nine nail marks found in her body.

Following the exposure of the news and police failing to arrest the suspects, a hartal was staged today 24th closing all shops.

The normal life of the people living in Vavuniya, Mannar, Mullaitivu, Kilinochchi and Jaffna was severely affected.

No transport
All Tamil medium schools were closed in the Northern Province and only Sinhala and Muslims schools were opened.
Due to no transportation many people could not come to work.

Due to pelting stones to people transporting busses many drivers abstained in driving public buses.
The child’s mother who was a teacher

The Vavuniya urban coroner informed the police that the child’s mother, who is a teacher, is connected to the child’s death.

Police investigations
Police spokesperson senior assistant superintendent of police Ruwan Gunasekara said according to information’s collected so far still no credible evidence has been found regarding the students death.

Senior ASP Ruwan Gunasekara said the Vavuniya police are conducting investigations to apprehend the culprits.

No violence was reported during the hartal but the security of the Vavuniya town was strengthened.

Some Imperatives In Constitution Making


By Somapala Gunadheera –February 24, 2016
Somapala Gunadheera
Somapala Gunadheera
Colombo Telegraph
The Government’s effort to make a new Constitution appears to be dragging its feet. With the resolution on framing a new Constitution getting postponed and re-fixed and a palpable indecision on the way to go, an impression is being created in the public mind that the project is still groping in the dark.
A Survey
The first imperative in framing a Constitution is to ascertain the views of the general public on the provisions to be included in the proposed legislation. A committee has been set up to report on this aspect and it appears to be going about its task with enthusiasm and wide publicity. It has drawn up a time table to visit all parts of the country and ascertain the views of the people.
The purpose of this survey ought to be to get a reliable idea on what would please the majority of the people in the final product. But can the current survey make a dependable assessment on this point? The initiative as structured, can only produce a ‘Pilgrims Progress’, detailing what individuals said to the reporters on their way. Such hearsay information cannot guide the framers of a Constitution through the pitfalls on the way to their destination.
The framers need reliable information on the issues involved, such as their relative importance, ratios and proportions of public support, optimum alternatives and what would be sustainable in the long run. That is a job calling for resort to a scientific statistical survey. Such technology and expertise is readily available locally and it is a pity that this resource does not appear to have been tapped so far. It is still not too late to commission such a survey to enable the framers to select their alternatives on firm ground.
Consultation
The survey report will disclose the total picture of the background to the framing. It will identify areas where a consensus has to be built up to minimize controversies that might crop up in due course. Building consensus calls for a representative body consisting of the interests involved in the final product. The Committee appointed to ascertain the views of the public has decided on second thoughts, to extend its time table to enable it to consult the stakeholders, the racial and religious groups etc. Their’s cannot be a ‘thus have I heard’ report. It calls for a deep knowledge of the rifts and divisions which can only be sorted out after a scientific survey. It involves selection of the parties to be consulted and calls for a forum at which the stakeholders can sit and reach consensus after intimate discussion.       Read More