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

Sunday, March 6, 2016

“They Were Only Doing Their Jobs!”


By Emil van der Poorten –March 6, 2016
Emil van der Poorten
Emil van der Poorten
Colombo Telegraph
Recently there has been a spate of appointments of camp-followers of the Mahinda Rajapaksa regime (MR1) to positions of responsibility and trust in government departments, research institutes and boards with operational and policy responsibilities.
When I have sought to engage some of the so-called movers and shakers and, particularly those loudly supportive of the current dispensation (MR2), I have been met with the response that forms the title of this piece.
To describe that response as being akin to what issues from the south end of a north-bound bull, would be an understatement.
I have had occasion recently to visit, frequently, a major health care institution in the Western Province which was deliberately neglected over the years of MR1 purely and simply because it bore the name of a past President of this country who wasn’t of the same political hue as the Rajapaksa Monarchy.
Among other things, it is patently obvious that the original structure, tile and fittings, particularly in the bathrooms, was of high quality but that neglect over more than a decade has taken its toll.Maithripala Ranil W Piv Via MS's FB
My initial impression was that there were a significant number of soldiers on the premises because, what turned out to be security guards were dressed in uniforms that, to the lay eye, were indistinguishable from the garb of battle-ready soldiers. The only difference – thank goodness – was the fact that they were not toting side arms or assault rifles. Not as far as I could see, at least.
Examination of their identification patches provided the reason for this uncanny and deliberate attempt to put a military face on a simply civil responsibility in a HOSPITAL, no less. The “unit” from where these men came was the subject of a piece I wrote some time ago on the subject of private armies and the effort being made in Sri Lanka to mimic what George “Dubya” Bush did years ago in Iraq with Blackwater Inc. which was found guilty of all kinds of atrocities. The identification patches said Rakna Arakshaka Lanka Ltd., (RALL) what I then identified (accurately) as the beginnings of Gota’s army, just the beginning of a far larger force with a sea -borne wing as well. A coincidental (?) footnote to that narrative would be the fact that the headquarters of RALL is just down the road from this hospital!

Vehicle of Deputy director medical services runs over student on pedestrian crossing !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -05.March.2016, 11.45PM)  A 14 year old student (girl) who was crossing the road along the pedestrian crossing at Eliyakanda , Matara was run over by the vehicle of the deputy director of the Matara general hospital this morning (03) at about 7.10 . The victim had sustained serious injuries, Matara police headquarters traffic division revealed.
The doctor after leaving his home located at Meddawatte , Matara was driving his vehicle towards his private medical clinic at Dickwella when this accident occurred. 
The victim is a year  ten student at Mahamaya Devi Balikawa, Matara and her thigh had been seriously injured owing to the accident , and is being treated at Matara general hospital.  Her condition is critical , hospital sources revealed.
The deputy medical director along with the vehicle were taken into custody , and were  to be produced before the Matara magistarte court.
Sergeant (19910) Anura supervised by Pathinayake IP monitored by Matara headquarters inspector Caldera are conducting investigations.

Incidentally , a health ministry   investigation is under way into about 150  staff members at Matara general hospital based on a complaint that they  keep away from duties , and come to work only during the few days when the monthly salary date draws near. 
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by     (2016-03-06 01:14:45)

Education Minister's knowledge is an issue …


Educational authorities discover new method of how HIV spreads
SUNDAY, 06 MARCH 2016
The statement made yesterday (5th) by the Minister of Education of the Maithri - Ranil coalition government Akila Viraj Kariyawasam indicates that measures are being taken by them to separate the mother, the only consolation of the Kuliyapitiya child who has been denied a school due to remours that have been spread regarding HIV infection, from the child. Isn't separating the child from the mother, who has been confronted with the intense pressure from the society and the unfortunate state her child has been subjected to, a vile act, specially, when the only consolation of this woman whose husband has died is her only child?
The Minister of Education says a court order would be taken to separate the child from the mother and hand over to probation care. He said the Zonal Education Director had told him that the mother has HIV and went on to say that the child could be infected with HIV since "he was sleeping under his mother's protection."
This displays the knowledge of the Minister of Education. A child doesn't get infected mere because it sleeps under the care of its mother. Doctors have assured that people do not get infected with HIV virus through air or touch.
'HIV' which stands for human immunodeficiency virus is infected through sexual contact, blood transfusions, accidental needle sticks or needle sharing, breast feeding and through organ transplantation with infected organs.
According to Mr. Akila Viraj Kariyawasam does the child sleeps with its mother like husband and wife? This statement is indeed a statement of a person with a distorted mind.
Doctors have not confirmed that child's mother has been infected with HIV and Dr. G Weerasinghe, a Consultant Venereologist of the National STD/AIDS Control Program, had confirmed that the child is not infected with HIV virus. The Minister of Education also states that he was elected to Parliament with more than 300,000 preference votes. He says he doesn't intend holding media pageants using the mother and the child.
According to information from Kariyawasam's own area the husband of this woman had died of a disease related to the chest. After a certain period a person with political backing attempted to entice the woman for an extramarital relationship. As she had rejected his advances this person, in a rage, spread the story that the dead husband had AIDS and she too had infected the disease.
Chaos in Kurunegala over child’s admission to a school





2016-03-05
The need of education for every child is mentioned in the UNHCR mandate, and also the UNICEF policy on children’s education   is quoted as thus , “We are committed to ensuring that all children – regardless of gender, ethnicity, socioeconomic background or circumstances – realize their right to a quality education.
To that end, UNICEF supports innovative programmes and initiatives that focus on the world’s most excluded and vulnerable children, including girls, the disabled, ethnic minorities, the rural and urban poor, victims of conflict and natural disasters and children affected by HIV and AIDS.’’  
Sri Lanka has a society which believes in anything which has “special’’ interest, which of course comes with the social background ,  and   give wings to any  story  without getting it confirmed first. This reminds us of the phrase saying ‘’ Making mountains out of molehills’’  and the burning incident in Kuliyapitiya  has raised such  concern, where a small child who had qualified for grade one admission was not admitted to the school due to a rumour which that his mother was HIV positive.
This implies a question of  how justifiable this accusation has been. Whatever the real circumstances might be , for a child of 6 years it is too much of a pressure, since he knows nothing of the situation. This was specially when it was proved that he was not infected with the deadly disease.

This bizarre, but heart warming issue did not take long to be exposed through the media, both internationally and locally.  After informing the necessary authorities, educational and divisional secretariats, the child was granted permission to enter Bohandiya Kanishta Vidyalaya , Kuliyapitiya , the closest school to his house.  
Though the child’s mother had appealed to the School authorities for her child to be taken to the school, they have not given an ear to it. Chandani De Soysa, the child’s mother , finally lodged a complaint at the Human Rights commission regarding this  problem.
The parents and the principal of the school were in unison in refusing child’s admission, even parents threatening to remove their children from the school if the child was taken in. Because of this problem, his admission to the school had been delayed. Rumours were spread fast saying that the child’s father was HIV positive, and the mother had been infected with the same disease.
 The  inquired from the relevant authorities about the situation, so that necessary steps were taken to solve the matter.  The  asked Ms. Kanchana  Subasinghe,  Kurunegala District Coordinating officer for the  Sri Lanka  Child Protection Authority  , about the situation.
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Thajudeen murder suspects intimidate witnesses!

Thajudeen murder suspects intimidate witnesses!

Mar 06, 2016
Two closest friends of the late rugger player Wasim Thajudeen, who know the real information regarding his murder, were summoned to the CID last week. Unconfirmed sources say their statements contradict each other. Jeyaprakash and Thowfiq had given their statements in fear and under pressure, covering up what had actually happened, say the sources. 

A check of their mobile phone bills confirm that these two are still having contacts with a young politician and the military officers suspected to be behind the murder.
 
The HQI and the crimes and traffic OICs serving at Kirulapone police during the period of Wasim’s murder on 17 May 2012, were summoned to the CID and their statements recorded. Also, the HQI and the crimes OIC of Narahenpita police gave statements.
 
It was the Kirulapone traffic OIC who had first gone to investigate a vehicle accident, and his statement says senior DIG in charge of Colombo urban area Anura Senanayake had arrived at the scene around 3.00 am. It is highly suspicious that a senior DIG arrives at the scene of a vehicle accident at that time of the day. From those days, we have been reporting that there is an invisible political hand behind this incident. Even after seven years, our suspicions have been confirmed.

My experience of Independence


Kishani Jayasinghe Wijayasekara
The Sunday Times Sri LankaSunday, March 06, 2016
Every performing artist dreams of that one event. One opportunity that changes the course of his or her destiny. That one unforgettable and special song/dance/painting/sculpture/role or oration that changes life as they know it and in some cases like this, even defines them.
As an opera singer, I have worked tirelessly for over a dozen years to perfect a highly technical, respected and beautiful form of singing and attempted to perfect a craft that few truly ever master.
To be an opera singer – or any performing artist – is to commit to a vocation and not merely a career. I always imagined it would be a particularly moving rendition of Puccini in Italian; or the luscious sophistication of a French Gounod or the musical genius of Mozart in German which would define me.
Never did I imagine that a beloved song I learnt to sing in primary school in my mother tongue, would be the golden anthem that would affect my life so drastically.
Performing for the 68th Independence Day Celebrations on February 4, 2016 at Galle Face Green, was for me an extremely proud and humbling moment.
An opportunity to give something back to my beloved country in the best way I could. Through song and music, doing what I love.
That should and could very well have been the end of it. But as fate determined otherwise, within a few hours, it was picked up by an anti-government website on social media (probably as being an easy target to incite the less well informed – something we will never truly know) and gained such terrifying momentum that within a few days it had turned into a cyber war.
Sri Lankans far and wide were discussing the pros and cons of everything ranging from Politics & Culture; Western influences & Eastern traditions; Inherent prejudices & Open mindedness; Operatic style & Folk song; Island mentality & Evolution; Nationalism & Internationalism; Freedom of speech & Responsibility of the media; Feminism & Gender equality and of course that beloved song – Danno Budunge – which will now always identify my musical journey and be irrevocably linked to my life forever.
Having an opinion is a good thing. Ideally it should be an informed opinion, but either way, it is our right, afforded by way of natural justice and often protected by Statute and therefore something to value.
An issue that polarises a nation is a very real phenomenon and nothing new. It is not necessary that we all agree. Tastes differ for a multitude of reasons, and sometimes it needs no reason at all. It is just something we feel and sometimes something we relate to or not at all.

Nirupama reluctant to go to FCID requests same preferential treatment given to Shiranthee !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -05.March.2016, 11.45PM) Former deputy minster Nirupama Roopika Rajapakse who was summoned to the FCID for questioning had  made a request to a leader of the high echelons of the government to make arrangements to conduct the interrogations  in a house of an elite like how Shiranthee Rajapakse for some time was allowed and questioned without appearing at the FCID, it is learnt.
Nirupama was  to be interrogated in connection with  the revelations made by Minister Ranjan Ramanayake during a media briefing recently . Those revelations were based on the disclosures made by  the Rajapakses’ ‘Royal astrologer’ Sumanadasa Abeygunawardena. 
Sumanadasa revealed that the ‘palace’ situated on about   20 acre land at Malwana belongng to Basil Rajapakse is in the names of Nirupama Rajapakse and her husband Thiru Nadesan. Sumanadasa also said , it is he who prepared the ‘nekath’ time (auspicious time)  and arranged the poojas (religious ceremonies) when constructing the Malwana mansion.  Nirupama was therefore summoned to the FCID for questioning in this regard. Nirupama is a daughter in law of Mahinda and Basil.
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by     (2016-03-06 01:15:37)

Govt cancels contract with company that provided security to IS

Govt cancels contract with company that provided security to IS
logoMarch 6, 2016
The Prime Minister has ordered the Culture Ministry to cancel the contract with a government owned security company that provided security at the Independence  Square.
This came after a silent protest was held within the Independence Square limited against the decision to bar young couples from sitting together at the Independence Square. The protest sparked after a footage went viral on Facebook showing security personnel ordering a couple to leave the Independence Square as they sat together at the venue.
Deputy Minister Harsha de Silva, in a Facebook status update said, “PM ordered the Culture Ministry to cancel the contract with this government owned security company, to remove the Director Operations and issue a statement. The LRDC Security company chairman has already complied with the last two in the last hour!
This afternoon on behalf of the Government I met with the ‘Occupy the Square’ protesters who had come to Independence Square to protest against the regular harassment of people couples by security guards who seem to have got enormous power to chase them away based on all kinds of weird interpretations of ‘decency’.
The Director Operations of the security company had been appointed to the post by the former Secretary Defence and is a sitting member of the Kotte municipal council!
In the video that is circulating widely the guards say they have been asked to chase couples away unless accompanied by children. Today they argued with me that holding hands, putting a hand on the shoulder etc are indecent acts and won’t be tolerated.
I reported the matter to PM who issued the above instructions to ensure that young people in this country can enjoy their freedom in a decent manner. This is the democracy we fought to establish in this country.”
Govt. should send Sandeep abroad: Gammanpila

2016-03-06
The government should send Sandeep Sampath Gunawardena, the victim of the hit and run accident allegedly involving Megapolis and Western Development Minister Champika Ranawaka, overseas for further treatment, MP Udaya Gammanpila said. 

Sandeep Sampath was hit by a jeep allegedly driven by the Minister in Rajagiriya is now being treated in the Intensive Care Unit of the National Hospital.   

Speaking at a media briefing MP Gammanpila, once the Ranawaka’s right hand man, said the government should provide the victim with the best possible treatment to save the reputation of the government. 

“It will be not good for the Minister, who played a main role in establishing the government, if he was to die. Therefore they should make every effort to provide him with the best possible treatment,” he said.  

 The MP questioned why Sandeep could not be sent abroad for treatment like Health Minister Dr. Rajitha Senarathne and Late Ven. Maduluwawe Sobitha Thera, who were flown to Singapore for further treatment.  

“Sandeep Sampath re-gained consciousness yesterday five days after the accident. Yet, he can’t open his eyes and he can’t speak. The government should intervene, the MP said. 

“His friends, who witnessed the accident, said they were being asked by people to meet the minister. They should not try to influence the witnesses in such a manner. We are doing what we can for them as they sought our assistance claiming their lives were at risk. We should be glad the youths have come forward against the injustice meted out to their friend by this powerful Minister,” the parliamentarian said. 

Refuting claims that 1000cc motorbikes could not be ridden in Sri Lanka, Gammampila said such motorbikes, including Sandeep’s had been registered with the relevant authorities. 
He stated the police had also not done their job properly in recording statements from the eyewitnesses and that they hoped to meet the IGP and the National Police Commission (NPC) with regard to the matter. (Piyumi Fonseka)

‘If you want a statement, get me down again at state expense’

‘If you want a statement, get me down again at state expense’

- Mar 06, 2016
“I am on vacation in Sri Lanka. I cannot waste my time at the CID during my vacation.  If you want a statement from me, send me a ticket at state expense. Normally I travel by business class or first class only. Also, book a hotel close to the CID for me to stay,” said former Army commander and present Sri Lankan ambassador in Brazil Gen. Jagath Jayasuriya to CID officials.

He was responding to a CID request over the phone to be present at the CID headquarters to record a statement from him with regard to the disappearance of journalist Prageeth Ekneligoda. CID officials have got to know that he was in Sri Lanka with foreign ministry approval and at state expense.
 
If Jayasuriya should come on a private vacation, he should bear all his expenses. But, the foreign ministry has paid for all the expenses for this visit. He has refused to be present at the CID, because he can use this chance to come to Sri Lanka again at state expense.
Israel accuses Palestinian of recruiting militants
Nazal, who’d been in Cairo as a student since 2007, was a member of al-Mujaheddin Brigades, Shin Bet says

Israel has demolished houses in the West Bank in retribution for attacks (AFP)
Sunday 6 March 2016
Israel's Shin Bet internal security agency said Sunday it had arrested a Palestinian for recruiting Palestinians in Egypt who received military training in Gaza before being sent to the West Bank.
The agency said Mohammed Nazal, 33, from the northern West Bank town of Qabatiya, was arrested in January at the Allenby crossing between Jordan and the occupied West Bank.
Nazal, who’d been in Cairo as a student since 2007, was a member of al-Mujaheddin Brigades, whose members have fired rockets at Israel and attempted other attacks, according to Shin Bet.
Nazal told investigators that "while in Egypt, he sought out and recruited students from the West Bank studying in Egypt, sent them for military training in Gaza and then planted them in the West Bank" to set up a military network, a Shin Bet statement read.
His Cairo apartment was a meeting place for militants from various groups, including Hamas, which controls the Gaza Strip, the agency said.
It said that Nazal's group and Hamas had ties that included training and the supply of arms, and that in Gaza, the al-Mujaheddin Brigades came under the auspices of Hamas, which funds and guides it.
The statement said Nazal was aware of "a major route for smuggling weapons from the Libya area to the Gaza Strip through Egypt,” according to the Times of Israel.
Nazal will be tried in a military court, the statement read.
The Shin Bet announcement came shortly after Cairo accused Hamas of involvement alongside the outlawed Muslim Brotherhood in last year's killing of Egypt's top prosecutor, Hisham Barakat, a charge Hamas swiftly denied.

Islamic State truck bomb kills at least 60 people south of Baghdad




ReutersHILLA, IRAQ-Sun Mar 6, 2016

A truck bomb at an Iraqi checkpoint south of Baghdad killed at least 60 people and wounded more than 70 on Sunday, medical and security officials said, and Islamic State claimed responsibility for the blast.
The suicide attack, involving an explosive-laden fuel tanker, is the second deadliest this year after one on Feb. 28 that killed 78 people in Sadr City, a Shi'ite district of Baghdad. This was also claimed by the ultra-hardline Sunni group that controls vast swathes of territory in Iraq and in Syria.

The escalation in Islamic State bombings suggests that Iraqi government forces are being stretched thin after their recent gains against the group in the western and northern provinces.

Responsibility for the bombing in Hilla, 117 kilometres (73 miles) south of Baghdad, was claimed in a posting on the website of the Amaq news agency, which supports Islamic State.

"A martyr's operation with a truck bomb hit the Babylon Ruins checkpoint at the entrance of the city of Hilla, killing and wounding dozens," the statement on the Amaq website said.

Hilla is the capital of Babylon province, a predominantly Shi'ite region with some Sunnis.

"It's the largest bombing in the province to date," Falah al-Radhi, the head of the provincial security committee, told Reuters. "The checkpoint, the nearby police station were destroyed as well as some houses and dozens of cars."

A provincial hospital official confirmed the number of casualties, adding that 23 of them were members of the police and other security forces that were manning the check point located at the northern entrance of the city. Brett McGurk, the U.S. envoy to a coalition fighting Islamic State, on Saturday told a news conference in Baghdad that Islamic State was losing the battle against forces arraigned against it from many sides in Iraq and Syria. He said the focus would turn to stabilizing cities seized back from them.

(Reporting by Ali al-Rubaie and Saif Hameed; Writing by Maher Chmaytelli; Editing by David Goodman and Stephen Powell)

The Time for an Independent Kurdistan Is Now

For too long, my people have been attacked, killed, and betrayed. We can no longer believe Washington’s promises or hope that Baghdad will help us.
The Time for an Independent Kurdistan Is Now

BY AZIZ AHMAD-MARCH 4, 2016

It was a bitterly cold, overcast day in the winter of 1991. I was only 4, but I still recall how we struggled up 6,000-foot-high mountains near the Iraqi-Turkish border. Twenty feet ahead, my mum was carrying my 2-year-old brother on her back as she trudged through the snow. Two days on foot had left her exhausted and weak.

As I trailed behind, dad kept urging me on. “Just over the hill, son.”

Dad was lying. I followed mum’s faltering footsteps as she plunged to the ground again. I stood over her crying.

We were among thousands of Kurdish families fleeing from Saddam Hussein’s army, which was bent on annihilating the Kurds.

It took five grueling days to reach the makeshift camp that straddled the Iraqi-Turkish border. The weather was harsh. There was no sanitation and little food or water. Every day was a ritual for survival: 
one sip of water per person from the cap of a bottle, a piece of dried bread, and a few frozen dates. Men clutched bags holding their families’ remaining possessions; women carried wailing children. This mass exodus, the flight of almost 2 million people, marked another climactic chapter in the long struggle of the Kurdish people with successive Iraqi governments.

Everyone had a story. This is mine.

My dad was a revolutionary fighter, known as Peshmerga — in Kurdish, “those who face death.” He had been fighting for autonomy since the 1960s and was part of an uprising to expel the Iraqi Army from the Kurdish provinces following the end of the Gulf War in 1991, when Saddam Hussein’s forces were weakened. The Shiite uprising in the south had emboldened the Kurds, but without U.S. support, Saddam’s army started to regain territory and take vengeance. The decisive use of Iraqi helicopters — sanctioned by the U.S. military — to level rebel strongholds forced the Kurds to flee.

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Pollster Lyubov Kostyrya, 47, poses for a photographer in front of an apartment building on March, 2 in Moscow, Russia. (Alexander Zemlianichenko Jr/For The Washington Post)
Russian President Vladimir Putin has an 83 percent approval rating. Lyubov Kostyrya’s job is to knock on doors to track it.

Every week, Russian pollsters dispatch an army of workers to canvas the country’s 11 time zones for peoples’ views on Putin, the economy and other issues. And so Kostyrya visits one home after another to learn what Russians are thinking. Two years after Putin’s ratings skyrocketed at the start of a geopolitical conflict with the West, they have stayed there, week after week, month after month.

On behalf of the Kremlin, pollsters in recent weeks have tracked economic sentiment in struggling industrial towns. They ran a snap survey to test support to spurn an electricity deal with Ukraine that left Crimeans in the dark. And they have kept close track of reactions to cease-fire negotiations with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

“Survey!” Kostyrya said after she rang the bell of yet another steel-doored apartment in a Soviet-era 12-story complex of identically laid-out dwellings on Moscow’s edge. “Can I ask you a few questions?”
Just over two years ago, as Russia headed toward the Winter Olympics in Sochi, Putin’s poll numbers were slumping. Only 61 percent of Russians approved of his job performance — high by Western standards, but the lowest for Putin since shortly after he took office. After Putin annexed Ukraine’s Crimean Peninsula, then stoked tensions with the West to their worst since the Cold War, Russians took their minds off their struggling economy and positioned themselves resolutely behind their leader.
 
It is a development that has flummoxed Western nations and frustrated Russia’s motley band of oppositionists. Some of them say that Russians are too scared to speak their minds to pollsters. Others claim that the poll numbers are manipulated, although most Western polling firms arrive at similar figures.

The pollsters say that the Kremlin is keenly interested in the results they turn up every week — and that it quickly reacts when it sees problems that could pose a threat to Putin’s ratings. Even as pocketbook problems have mounted, Putin has launched popular military campaigns in Ukraine and now in Syria.

What is going wrong with the Ruling party of Bangladesh

dhaka_life
It was last June, one of the Dhaka city dwellers called me several times for seeking an appointment with me. But he did not agree to speak any word over telephone why he wanted to visit me, even he did not agree which area of Dhaka from he was coming. It was not only apprehensive but strange also for a journalist now days.
by Swadesh Roy

( March 6, 2016, Dhaka, Sri Lanka Guardian) It is not only in the third world, but in the first world also- many bad things happen with the ruling party.  Despite that truth,  country like Bangladesh it occurs more. Why it occurs more- it is very academic matter; not for the journalist. A journalist can tell only, what he can see and get from confirm source. Sometimes, many affected people come to the journalist, they think that, they can get a solution or a help from the journalist.

It was last June, one of the Dhaka city dwellers called me several times for seeking an appointment with me. But he did not agree to speak any word over telephone why he wanted to visit me, even he did not agree which area of Dhaka from he was coming. It was not only apprehensive but strange also for a journalist now days. However, I gave him appointment, he came to me. His story was beyond of my imagination.  

He is a lower income group service person, serves a private organization.  He has rented a flat near his office and he got admitted his children in a school near of his residence. He has been living there for five years. When he rented the flat, he had to pay four months’ rent in advance. He knew that multistory building owner was a local powerful leader of Bangladesh national Party (BNP). He was a renter of that person last five years. He used to pay him every month. Recently a new person has come not only to him but all the 30 tenants of the flat also, and the new person declared , “ from now he is the owner of this building and now  every tenant has to deposit six months’ rent  as an advanced deposit money. If they do not fallow it, they have to leave the flat within one month. There previous deposit will not be counted.”
I asked him, “Why you with other 30 tenants are not going to protest it united way?” He told me with a very afraid face, “The new person is a powerful local Awami league leader. So nobody dare to tell anything in front of him. Besides, we are not getting trace of that previous owner, we have only heard, he left the area.” Then I told him why you the people were not going to court or the police station? His answer was, like the most of the tenants of the Dhaka, they have no agreement papers, and they did all verbally. So he asked to me, doing anything for him. I replied to him if he gave me details, then I checked it in my own way, and after that I could write on it.  He got afraid to hear me, and answered, “If I write, he will fall in more danger.” I told him, as a journalist, besides that I had no weapon. Journalist have only pen or keyboard, he can use it. Then he made a surprising request, “if I inform it in person to the Prime Minister, they will get rid of it.” Saying it, he contacted his eyes on my face with a big hope but my answer poured water on the flame of his hope-candle. I replied, as a journalist I could write only, besides I could not do anything on this matter. He left away, but before left the chair he told me, as man of pro liberation force, he came to me with a great hope, because he is a regular reader of my article. I felt pain after seeing her face, but it was true there was no other option for a journalist in that type of situation. However, I got more pain when a broken man was leaving me.

Singapore: Evaluating Shanmugam’s allegations against TOC and its effects



Pic: Business Times.by 4th March 2016

DURING a two-hour debate in Parliament on the Benjamin Lim case (March 1), Home Affairs Minister K. Shanmugam levelled several serious accusations against The Online Citizen (TOC) and the Law Society’s President, Thio Shen Yi. (Disclosure: I have contributed several articles to TOC before. See below for more details.)

These accusations, however, raise more questions than they answer and are inconsistent with his own conduct. There are, therefore, serious questions about whether Shanmugam has acted in good faith and whether such spurious allegations should be made in Parliament by a cabinet minister and Member of Parliament, especially given the polarising effects they have had.


Was it a “planned, orchestrated campaign”?

First, Shanmugam accuses TOC of having “gone on a planned, orchestrated campaign, using falsehoods, and has published about 20 articles or so as part of its campaign.” Given that TOC is currently only run by one person, Terry Xu, the claim that this was a “planned, orchestrated campaign” is laughable. Who was Xu acting in concert with?

In an editorial, TOC points out that “only four [articles] were written in-house. The rest were contributed by members of the public.” It is quite a stretch to imagine that TOC somehow managed to get so many members of the public to write in. In reality, the case of Benjamin Lim is one that is of great public interest. The letters from the public are proof that many people are dissatisfied with police conduct in general and have serious questions about their handling of the Benjamin Lim case in particular.

To dismiss public concern as a “planned, orchestrated campaign” is convenient, but foolish and disrespectful. The minister would do well to take notice rather than simply brush them aside. Even the Chinese Communist Party keeps a keen eye on the public mood.

This is not to say that TOC is perfect. It is my personal opinion that a few letters need not have been published. However, after speaking to Xu, I am convinced that he has done his due diligence in checking his facts. In any case, whatever the editor’s decision, and whatever mistakes he makes, readers can read and judge for themselves whether the articles and letters are sound.

The minister, on the other hand, has made a spurious allegation and unfairly tarnished TOC’s reputation. As someone who is speaking from a position of authority, he should be more careful with his words.

Did TOC put out “deliberate falsehoods”?

Second, Shanmugam alleges that TOC published “deliberate falsehoods”. By calling TOC’s factual mistakes “deliberate falsehoods,” Shanmugam suggests that TOC intentionally and maliciously concocted facts that it knew to be false. This suggestion is, again, rather ludicrous. Shanmugam has no evidence to suggest malice or to suggest that TOC had reason to know its statements were untrue at the time of publication.
Despite this, Shanmugam insists that the truth matters. If it does, why wait five weeks before clearing the air? If indeed public faith in the police matters, why wait until things have reached tipping point?

The government has many tools at its disposal which Shanmugam did not use. He could have responded on behalf of the police to correct the facts and he could have asked the public to allow the Coroner’s Inquiry to be completed first. He could have even issued take-down notices or requested that TOC correct its facts.

Instead, Shanmugam waited, and waited, and waited. Five weeks later, he says he will look into how to respond to inaccurate information online more quickly. One wonders where he has been these past five weeks. In fact, one wonders if Shanmugam has acted in good faith by withholding vital information only to publicly chastise TOC five weeks later.

Did TOC maliciously attack the integrity of the police?

Third, Shanmugam claims that TOC used the deliberate falsehoods to suggest that the police were lying, that the police intimidated Benjamin, and that the police pressured Benjamin to confess to a crime he did not commit must be considered in this context. He suggests that these untrue assertions “go to the integrity of the Police Force.”

The problem here, however, is that TOC had no way of knowing they were untrue at that time. Surely Shanmugam is not suggesting that no doubts may ever be raised about the integrity of the police? 

Indeed, if the Coroner’s Inquiry reveals police misconduct, it will have raised serious doubts about the integrity of the police. Or does Shanmugam deny the role of the media as the fourth estate?

Certainly, the media also has a responsibility to weigh the public interest value of a piece of news against the potential for causing public disorder. Not all that is newsy is worth publishing. Mr Shanmugam might have focused on this issue instead, although it is quite clearly unlikely that Singaporeans’ faith in the integrity of the police force will be so easily shaken. In any case, this is not a question I can answer for TOC.

Why the delay?

To explain this delay, Shanmugam offers two reasons. First, he says that he withheld comment “out of respect for the family, to give them some space and time to grieve.” This is disingenuous. The clarifications he eventually made in Parliament about what the police did on that day were in no way disrespectful. In contrast, his revelation of the details of the case during his ministerial statement were, in fact, disrespectful, for they suggested that Benjamin was not innocent even though the Coroner’s Inquiry was ongoing.

Second, Shanmugam says that he has kept quiet because of the ongoing Coroner’s Inquiry. The problem, however, is that sub judice rules do not mean that all discussion on the issue must cease immediately. Facts may be provided, questions may be tabled and general issues may be debated.

Shanmugam’s comments on what he saw on the CCTV recording in the lift, however, have no bearing on either maintaining the police’s integrity or the general issues. If there is ever an instance where sub judice should apply, it is to unnecessary comments like these. (Note: I say this merely as an illustration. I do not believe sub judice should be so loosely interpreted. I am also unsure if Benjamin’s guilt or innocence is a matter that falls under the Coroner’s Inquiry’s ambit.)

Moreover, Shanmugam has also asserted his own finding that “there is nothing so far on the evidence to suggest that Benjamin was mistreated by the Police.” This assertion has no relation to any of the pertinent facts, nor does it have any relation to the general issues. It is moreover, a central question for the State Coroner to consider.

Whether or not Shanmugam has thereby committed sub judice is not for me to say. It suffices for us to note that Shanmugam seems to raise the rule when it suits him and ignores it when it doesn’t. But if there are rules, we must all be bound by them or not at all. Ministers who are responsible for the government body under investigation are precisely the ones most invested in the outcome. They should be more careful about what they say.

Polarising opposing camps

As I read comments on this issue (and make many myself), I have observed a sad outcome. Rather than encourage mutual understanding, Shanmugam’s comments have tended to polarise opposing camps. This, I believe, is the result of launching an unreasonable attack against a cherished news site and against a voice of reason (Thio Shen Yi).

Rather than focus on reassuring the public that the government will continue to review its policies (something he did mention once in his statement), Shanmugam has wasted what little credibility he had with the segments of society that bear a strong distrust towards government. Instead of maintaining a reasonable tone (something he began with at the start of his statement), Shanmugam ended up making frivolous accusations.

It is unfortunate that the minister fails to understand the importance of having a robust media that asks tough questions and a Law Society that publicly discusses legal issues. Moreover, if we consider TOC a site that mainly appeals to disgruntled Singaporeans, most of whom make up the 30 percent who voted against the PAP, we ought to ask whether it is wise to alienate them even further. Is a tiny political victory over TOC worth the cost of further fragmenting society? I think not. But by making unfounded accusations against TOC, this is precisely what Shanmugam has done.

Shanmugam acknowledges that many who commented on the matter are “honest, reasonable people, who have genuine questions”. Indeed, I find Shanmugam’s ministerial statement to be an honest and reasonable one for the most part. I also acknowledge that the undue attention placed on the allegations against TOC was exacerbated by the lazy mainstream media which were only all too happy to jump on the juicy bit of news, reporting it in isolation from the rest of the statement (which was announced in many separate parts). It is therefore a pity that an opportunity to debate the larger issues was lost in an unnecessary scuffle amidst unspecified threats against unspecified persons.

To paraphrase Shanmugam’s closing words: If I may say this, at the end of the day, every Singaporean matters. It matters to the society. It matters to the government. It matters to all of us.

My fear is that Shanmugam and the party he represents will never understand this.

Disclosure: I have written several articles for TOC before, three of which touched on this case. 

Thefirst was a report on Thio Shen Yi’s commentary in the Singapore Law Gazette. The second was a commentary on Mr Thio’s strategy. The third was a collection of comments from readers. The first and third were named by Shanmugam in a document he circulated in Parliament. The accusations he makes are baseless. I have no involvement with any other articles on the Benjamin Lim case.