Peace for the World

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

Friday, March 18, 2016

The Pentagon Wasted $500 Million Training Syrian Rebels. It’s About to Try Again

The Pentagon Wasted $500 Million Training Syrian Rebels. It’s About to Try Again.

BY PAUL MCLEARY-MARCH 18, 2016

President Barack Obama has signed off on a new plan to train Syrian rebels to fight the Islamic State, a move that comes just months after the Pentagon shut down a more ambitious train-and-equip program that burned through hundreds of millions of dollars with little to show for the effort.

The effort is part of a Pentagon push to capitalize on recent momentum in the long campaign in the Islamic State, which has been battered by coalition and Russian airstrikes, ground attacks by a Syrian army that has been refittedby Moscow, and ongoing assaults by U.S.-armed Kurdish, Yazidi, and Sunni Arab fighters. The militants have lost about 22 percent of the land they once controlled in Iraq and Syria in recent months, and Washington wants to move on the group’s capital of Raqqa sooner rather than later. And with no significant influx of U.S. or allied ground troops on the way, Pentagon officials believe that training local forces to take the lead is the best way forward.

The new plan promises to be more narrowly focused than the previous one, which embarrassed the White House by producing virtually no fighters. The original $500 million training program began in the spring of 2015 with talk of fielding a force of about 5,000 rebels by the  end of the year, but due to desertions and attacks by other rebel groups produced only about five trained fighters before being shut down in October.

When informed of that number during a Senate Armed Services Committee hearing last September, Arizona Republican Sen. John McCain thundered that the Pentagon’s plan was “divorced from the reality” of the urgency of the situation on the ground.

Since then, though, U.S. special operations forces have continued to work with individual Syrian Arab commanders, bringing them to Turkey for training before infiltrating them into Syria with American-provided equipment. There are also about 50 American commandos on the ground inside Syria, helping to direct the fight against the Islamic State.

The new training program endorsed by Obama will expand those contacts by bringing very small groups of fighters out of the country for training in infantry tactics, though officials would not describe in detail what the training would consist of, where it would take place, or how many fighters it hoped to graduate and get back onto the battlefield.

“This is part of our adjustments to the train-and-equip program built on prior lessons learned,” said Col. Steve Warren, spokesman for the U.S.-led military coalition in Baghdad. The Pentagon wants to “accelerate” the coalition’s counter-ISIS campaign, he said, but “the provision of our support to these local forces will be measured against their performance” in fighting ISIS.

American forces and their proxies on the ground have had a difficult time recruiting for the program inside Syria, as the Americans demand that any trained forces fight only the Islamic State, and not the Assad regime.
There is no word when the new program will get off the ground or how much it might cost, but it has the full backing of the incoming commander of the U.S. Central Command, Gen. Joseph Votel, who tried to tamper congressional expectations and concerns over the size and scope of the program last week.

Testifying before the Senate Armed Services Committee, Votel described it as a “thickening effort” designed to increase the competence of a small number of fighters who can then go back and share the lessons learned with other rebels.

“I do think it is helpful to have people who have been trained by us, who have the techniques, who have the communications capability and the resources to link back into our firepower,” Votel said, alluding to the potential ability of rebels to call in U.S. airstrikes. “We’re trying to avoid the problem that we had the last time, where we didn’t know what their allegiances are.”

Military officials will probably remain cautious about the program, given last year’s embarrassing attempt to build a Syrian force. It took months of vetting by U.S. officials to decide who to let into the program, raising howls of protest on Capitol Hill over the slow pace of building the force as ISIS gained ground throughout northern Syria. And things went only downhill from there. In July, the first group of about 50 trainees to cross back into Syria were ambushed by the al Qaeda affiliate Nusra Front. The fighters mostly scattered and the U.S. military was unable to account for their whereabouts, or their equipment.

Then in September, roughly 70 other  trainees were forced to surrender most of their U.S.-supplied trucks and ammunition to Nusra once again, in return for safe passage through the group’s territory in northern Syria. By December, U.S. officials said there were fewer than 100 of the trained rebels still active inside Syria.

The latest training program will probably deal only with Syrian Arabs, Warren said, since Kurdish fighters have proven themselves the most effective fighting force in northern Syria. The Kurds have also caused Washington some headaches, however, given their willingness to work with Russian forces to attack other rebel groups, and attack rebels trained by the CIA.
Photo credit: MAHMOUD TAHA/AFP/Getty Images

Madonna pulling down fan's top 'could be sexual assault'

Josephine Georgiou says she has no intention of suing singer but without consent incident might lead to legal action, says expert

Madonna performing in Melbourne. A video of her yanking at a 17-year-old’s top on Brisbane stage has gone viral. Photograph: Graham Denholm/Getty Images
-Friday 18 March 2016

Many pop stars with three decades of global celebrity behind them are content to give up controversy and enjoy a comfortable circuit of greatest hits gigs. But at 57, it seems Madonna is set on still generating headlines.

Amid a brief but already incident-packed Australian tour – which began with the singer arriving on stage four hours late for a concert, dressed as a clown and riding a tiny tricycle – Madonna faces the theoretical possibility of a sexual assault charge after pulling down the top of a teenage fan who went on stage with her.

It comes amid a brief series of examples of slightly wayward behaviour by the singer, who has been embroiled in a court dispute with her ex-husband Guy Ritchie over their teenage son, Rocco.

The latest incident, in Brisbane on Thursday night, lasted less than a second but was, inevitably, soon being shared across the globe on social media.

It began when 17-year-old Josephine Georgiou joined the singer on stage during her second evening at the Brisbane Entertainment Centre.

“She’s the kind of girl you just want to slap on the ass,” the singer said admiringly of the barista and would-be model standing next to her. “And pull,” Madonna added, yanking down the girl’s strapless top to briefly reveal one breast, to aghast cheers from the crowd.

“I’m sorry, sexual harassment,” the singer continued. “You can do the same to me. Good luck,” she said, motioning to her own more robustly secured outfit.

Some Australian lawyers soon began speculating that such a move, if done without the consent of the other person, could constitute sexual assault.

Fortunately for Madonna, Josephine soon made it clear she was not about to go to the police.

“Seriously, why would I sue Madonna for the best moment of my life?” the teenager told Brisbane’s Courier Mail newspaper. “It was the best night.”

The fan said she had been wearing a top belonging to her mother which was too big, and she had been adjusting it as Madonna talked to the crowd. “She was calling me a Victoria’s Secret model the whole time I was on stage, which is so flattering,” Josephine said.

“Only I get to decide if I’m humiliated or not. Why would people assume I am humiliated by my own breast, nipple or body?

Most of the controversy attached to Madonna’s Australian tour has, in contrast, been over the more traditional pop star behaviour of turning up very late.

For the inaugural show in Melbourne, her first live appearance in Australia for 23 years, Madonna eventually reached the stage at 1am, and then performed a somewhat experimental circus-themed show called Tears of a Clown.

The initial Brisbane concert saw a three-hour delay, although the next night saw Madonna arrive on stage just 25 minutes later than billed.

The Melbourne concert sparked speculation she might have been intoxicated, with Madonna rambling, asking for drinks to be brought to the stage and reportedly falling off the tiny tricycle at one point.

She performed one song with a backdrop photograph of her 15-year-old son, Rocco, over whom she is engaged in a custody battle with his father, the film director Ritchie.

“Everybody knows the saga of me and my son Rocco. It’s not a fun story to tell or think about,” Madonna told the Melbourne crowd. “I probably would have enjoyed myself a bit more on this tour if he hadn’t disappeared so suddenly. I’m going to dedicate this song to him.”

A private hearing of the case at the family division of the high court in London ended last week. The judge is expected to deliver a ruling soon.

Mr Justice MacDonald had been told that Rocco was living with his father in England but his mother wanted him to return to her in the US. The judge had urged the couple to settle the issue outside the courts.

Last week the court was told that Madonna wanted to end the litigation and “heal the wounds” opened in the dispute with Ritchie.

3mn people take to streets in Brazil’s biggest ever anti-govt protest

Demonstrators attend a protest against Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff, part of nationwide protests calling for her impeachment, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, March 13, 2016. © Nacho Doce / Reuters-----
Former president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff. © Reuters
Demonstrators attend a protest against Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff, part of nationwide protests calling for her impeachment, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, March 13, 2016. © Nacho DoceFormer president Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva and Brazilian President Dilma Rousseff. © Reuters
Demonstrators attend a protest against Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff, part of nationwide protests calling for her impeachment, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, March 13, 2016. © Nacho Doce An inflatable doll known as "Pixuleco" of Brazil's former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva is seen during a protest against Rousseff, part of nationwide protests calling for her impeachment, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, March 13, 2016. © Paulo Whitaker
Demonstrators attend a protest against Brazil's President Dilma Rousseff, part of nationwide protests calling for her impeachment, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, March 13, 2016. © Nacho Doce / Reuters
An inflatable doll known as "Pixuleco" of Brazil's former President Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva is seen during a protest against Rousseff, part of nationwide protests calling for her impeachment, in Sao Paulo, Brazil, March 13, 2016. © Paulo Whitaker / Reuters

14 Mar, 2016 03:21
Some 3 million people have taken to the streets of Brazilian cities to demonstrate their disapproval of the country’s president, Dilma Rousseff, local media reported.

About 1.4 million people participated in the demonstration in Sao Paulo, and another million in Rio de Janeiro, according to Globo media outlet, citing the event’s organizers and the country’s security forces.

Protests took place in at least 17 regions across Brazil, Folha de Sao Paulo newspaper reported.

READ MORE: 'No to coup!' Rousseff supporters hit streets of Brazil following anti-govt protests

The nation’s capital, Brasilia, saw some 100,000 demonstrators surround the National Congress building in the biggest protest since last March, when about 1 million people took to the streets.

Protesters blame the country’s president for Brazil’s economic downturn over the past few years, as well as alleged corruption.

“The country is at a standstill and we are fighting to keep our company afloat. We have reached rock bottom,” 49-year-old protester Monica Giana Micheletti told Reuters at the Sao Paulo demonstration.

The Brazilian opposition has called for an investigation into some of Rousseff’s dealings, accusing her of tax violations and allegedly misusing state funds to finance her re-election last year, with the ultimate goal of impeaching her.

Tensions have also been running high since Sao Paulo state prosecutors asked a judge to order the arrest of Rousseff’s predecessor, Luiz Inacio Lula da Silva, on money-laundering charges a few days ago.

The request is now pending, and the prosecutors will shortly decide whether to proceed.

Rousseff has voiced her support for Lula, who is also viewed as the acting president’s political mentor.

The 70-year-old, who came from a poor rural farming family and went on to become a major labor leader and president, is known as a national icon and was still highly popular in Brazil at the time he stepped down.
Lula_De_Silva
Lula’s next role, institutionally, will combine coordinating measures to re-start Brazil’s growth while at the same time realigning the government’s base in Brazil’s notoriously corrupt Congress. He will be immune from the Car Wash investigation – but he can still be investigated by the Brazilian Supreme Court.

by Pepe Escobar

Courtesy: The Russia Today
( March 17, 2016, Moscow, Sri Lanka Guardian) Compared to the political/economic rollercoaster in Brazil, House of Cards is kindergarten play.
Only three days after massive street demonstrations calling for the impeachment of President Dilma Rousseff, and less than two weeks after his legally dubious four-hour detention for questioning, former Brazilian President Lula is about to spectacularly re-enter the Brazilian government as a Minister, actually a Super-Minister.

This is Rousseff’s one and only chess move left amidst an unprecedented political/economic crisis. Predictably, she will be accused on all fronts – from comprador elites to Wall Street – of having abdicated in favor of Lula, while Lula will be accused of hiding from the two-year-old Car Wash corruption investigation.

Lula and his protégé Dilma had two make-or-break, face-to-face meetings in Brasilia, Tuesday evening and Wednesday morning, discussing the detailed terms of his re-entry. At first, Lula would only accept a post in government if he becomes Government Secretary – in charge of political articulation; he would then be part of the hardcore hub that really decides Brazilian policy.

But then, according to a government minister, who requested anonymity, surged the suggestion of Lula as Chief of Staff – the most important ministry post in Brazil.

What’s certain is that Lula is bound to become a sort of ‘Prime Minister’ – implying carte blanche to drastically change Dilma’s wobbly economic policy and forcefully reconnect with the Workers’ Party’s large social base, which is mired in deep distress under massive cuts in social spending. If Lula pulls it off – and that’s a major “if” – he will also be perfectly positioned as a presidential candidate for the 2018 Brazilian elections, to the despair of the right-wing media-old elite-economic complex.

Lula’s next role, institutionally, will combine coordinating measures to re-start Brazil’s growth while at the same time realigning the government’s base in Brazil’s notoriously corrupt Congress. He will be immune from the Car Wash investigation – but he can still be investigated by the Brazilian Supreme Court.

Mumbai's Siddhivinayak temple to mobilise gold as India scrambles to cut imports

Commuters get out of a taxi in front of Shree Siddhivinayak Ganapati Temple in Mumbai March 12, 2015. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui/Files
ReutersFri Mar 18, 2016

The 200-year-old Shree Siddhivinayak temple in Mumbai has said it will deposit a portion of its gold hoard with a bank by the end of the month for recycling, responding to a government campaign to monetise some of the country's thousands of tonnes of privately owned stocks of gold and cut costly imports.

Officials from finance ministry and the Reserve Bank of India met on Friday to discuss modifying the much-publicised scheme after managing to attract deposits of only three tonnes of gold in four months out of an estimated pool of 20,000 tonnes stacked away in family lockers and temple vaults.

Indians love gold, both as a store of wealth and gifts for humans and gods alike, and the country's appetite for it is next only to China's. Annual imports run to as much as 1,000 tonnes, accounting for about a quarter of the annual trade deficit.

Dozens of rich temples have collected billions of dollars in gold jewellery, bars and coins over the centuries, hidden securely in vaults, some ancient and some modern.

One of them, the Shree Siddhivinayak temple devoted to the Hindu elephant-headed god Ganesha, is now examining various proposals and will soon choose a bank to deposit 44 kg out of its total stash of 160 kg of gold, said a senior official at the trust that manages it.

The official said they did not want to be named before a statement is issued, which is likely to happen next week.

India's economic affairs secretary, Shaktikanta Das, said after Friday's meeting that temple trusts have started expressing an interest in the monetisation scheme but did not name any.

Sri Venkateswara Swamy Temple, the richest Hindu temple in the world popularly known as the Tirupati Temple, said at the end of last year it could deposit more than 5.5 tonnes under the monetisation programme.

Apart from monetisation, last year Prime Minister Narendra Modi also launched a gold bond programme to soften demand for physical gold.

(Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav in Mumbai and Sankalp Phartiyal and Neha Dasgupta in New Delhi; Writing by Krishna N. Das; Editing by Greg Mahlich)
EU, Turkey reach controversial deal to return asylum seekers


Aid groups have slammed the deal, which will see asylum seekers forcibly returned to Turkey as of Sunday, as 'ugly and illegal'


Asylum seekers will be forcibly returned from Europe to Turkey starting on 20 March (AFP) 
Friday 18 March 2016
EU and Turkish officials have agreed a deal that will see hundreds of thousands of asylum seekers returned to Turkey in exchange for accelerated accession to the EU after hours of crunch talks in Brussels on Friday.
Asylum seekers will begin being forcibly returned from Europe to Turkey from 20 March, a spokesperson for European Council chief Donald Tusk told Sky News.
All 28 EU member states have agreed to the terms of the final deal set out by Tusk, an EU official told Financial Times correspondent Peter Spiegel.
The exact terms of the deal - which has been condemned by aid groups - have not yet been made public.
The announcement follows tense negotiations between officials hoping to clinch a deal to tackle the continent's worst refugee crisis since World War II.
In the early hours of Friday morning European leaders finally agreed on a common position to put to Turkey's prime minister over a breakfast meeting in Brussels later in the day.
The 28 states spent the day haggling over the proposal, under which Turkey would take all refugees and migrants from Greece, helping curb an unprecedented influx of 1.2 million people from Syria and elsewhere since 2015.
A senior EU official said it was "not a deal but a common position" to allow negotiations on a final text with the Turkish premier.
But the deal comes at a heavy price for the EU including an acceleration of Turkey's long-stalled bid for membership of the union, billions of euros in extra aid and visa-free travel, amid deep concerns over Ankara's human rights record.
Hours into the talks, an EU official told AFP correspondent Danny Kemp that "serious sticking points" remained: the legality of the deal, which some member states have questioned, EU accession and how the deal will be funded.
As he boarded a Brussels-bound plane in Ankara on Friday morning, Turkish Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu had described the proposed deal as "clear and honest" but added: "Turkey will never become an open prison for migrants."
Doctors Without Borders, which provides health services for people injured during the risky Aegean Sea crossing to Europe, has strongly condemned the deal as "ugly and illegal".

'Edge of international law'

The refugee crisis has left Europe increasingly divided, with fears that its Schengen passport-free zone could collapse as states reintroduce border controls and concerns over the rise of populist parties on anti-immigration sentiment.
European leaders voiced caution about whether they can finally seal the deal with Turkey, which has been trying to join the EU for decades.
Tusk said earlier he was "cautiously optimistic but frankly, more cautious than optimistic" while German Chancellor Angela Merkel warned there were "many things to resolve".
Other EU leaders voiced worries that the deal - under which the EU would take in one Syrian refugee from Turkish soil in exchange for every Syrian taken back by Turkey from Greece - would be illegal.
The aim of the "one-for-one" deal is allegedly to encourage Syrians to apply for asylum in the EU while they are still on Turkish soil, instead of taking dangerous smugglers' boats across the Aegean Sea.
Lithuanian President Dalia Grybauskaite said the plan was "very complicated, will be very difficult to implement and is on the edge of international law".
Belgian premier Charles Michel evoked concerns over Turkey's rights record and its conflict with Kurdish separatists, adding: "I can't accept negotiations which sometimes look like they are a form of blackmail."
Over dinner, Tusk presented changes to the deal such as a mention that the UNHCR must be involved in deporting people, that women and children should form the bulk of those taken under the "one-for-one" scheme and that all asylum applications must be dealt with individually, EU officials said.
The new draft also mentioned that an additional three billion euros in aid for refugees in Turkey would be conditional on the initial three billion euros from the November deal with Ankara being spent first.

Cyprus problem

One major hurdle that appeared to have been overcome was opposition from Cyprus, rooted in its long-standing tensions with Turkey over Ankara's refusal to recognise its government on the divided island.
Cypriot President Nicos Anastasiades indicated he could be ready to "compromise" on his objections to the EU opening new "chapters" in Turkey's accession process after earlier threatening to block the entire deal.
The deal also envisages major aid for Greece, where tens of thousands of refugees are trapped in dire conditions after Balkan countries shut their borders to stop them heading north to richer Germany and Scandinavia.
It says the EU will also help it deal with the huge logistical burden of ensuring asylum seekers on the Greek islands are registered and processed before being returned to Turkey. 

Jolie and Ai Wewei at Idomeni

Highlighting global attention on the issue, Hollywood star and UNHCR goodwill ambassador Angelina Jolie on Thursday visited the island of Lesbos, the principal port of entry for migrants to Europe.
Meanwhile in the bleak camp of Idomeni on the Macedonian-Greek border, Chinese dissident artist Ai Weiwei on Thursday had his hair cut by a migrant barber to draw attention to their plight.

New dengue vaccine proves 100 percent effective in trials


Aedes aegypti, the vector for dengue fever. Photo: James GathanyAedes aegypti, the vector for the dengue and Zika viruses. Photo: James Gathany

18th March 2016

A DENGUE vaccine called TV003, currently undergoing clinical trials, could be the next best defense against the spread of the disease, and could potentially lead to a vaccine for the Zika virus as well, say researchers.

A recent study published in Science Translational Medicinerevealed that the vaccine had proven 100 percent effective against a modified version of Type 2 dengue after being tested on a small pool of human test subjects.

Normally, vaccines are tested using a large sample population within an area where the disease is common, which tends to be costly and time-consuming.

But for this study, researchers used a model called the “human challenge model”, which saw participants being injected with a weakened version of the dengue virus six months after receiving the vaccine .

In the U.S.-based experiment, 21 volunteers were given the TV003 vaccine, while another 20 volunteers were given a placebo as a control.

After being “infected” with the virus, none of the volunteers who received the vaccine showed any symptoms, while the control group developed rashes and the dengue virus could be detected in their blood.

TV003, which has been in development for the past 15 years, is said to be effective as it contains all four types of dengue, but with mutations that make them less potent.

Stephen Whitehead, a researcher at the National Institutes of Health in the U.S. who worked on the vaccine, told CNN: “Control of dengue has certainly been a public health priority for many years. But getting there has not been easy.”

“The findings from this trial are very encouraging to those of us who have spent many years working on vaccine candidates to protect against dengue, a disease that is a significant burden in much of the world,” he added.


A larger trial for the vaccine is currently being conducted in Brazil, where dengue is prevalent and a more recent Zika virus outbreak has been linked to birth defects, particularly microcephaly, where babies are born with abnormally small heads.

Associate professor in International Health at the Bloomberg School of Public Health at Johns Hopkins University, Anna Durbin, who was also the lead author in the study, said researchers hoped to replicate the process with the Zika virus, as both dengue and Zika share similarities in symptoms and are transmitted by the same species of mosquito.

“We hope to do this with Zika virus. There’s an urgent need for a Zika vaccine,” she said.

Another dengue vaccine, known as Dengvaxia, is also being tested in Mexico, Brazil, the Philippines and El Salvador, but has proven to be less effective against Type 2 dengue compared to Types 1, 3 and 4.

Dengue is endemic to Southeast Asian countries. The World Health Organization says more than 390 million infections are reported every year.

Ebola outbreak: Guinea confirms two new cases

The Ebola epidemic in West Africa was the worst in history
A health worker wearing a protective suit treats Ebola patients in West Africa
BBC
18 March 2016
Two new Ebola cases have been confirmed in Guinea, almost three months after it celebrated the end of the outbreak.
Three other members of the family are suspected to have recently died from the virus.
The cases were reported in the southern region of Nzerekore, where the outbreak began in December 2013.
The Ebola outbreak killed more than 11,300 people - mostly in Guinea and its neighbours Sierra Leone and Liberia.
The new cases were reported by the World Health Organization (WHO) hours after it declared the latest Ebola flare-up to be over in Sierra Leone.
The WHO has warned that sporadic cases of Ebola are likely to re-emerge as the virus can linger on in body fluids of some survivors.
Analysis: Tulip Mazumdar, BBC global health correspondent
ealth workers check the temperature of person acting as a patient at a World Health Organization health center during a training session for the Ebola virus in the Liberian capital Monrovia, on October 3, 2014Image copyrightAFP
Image captionHealth workers struggled to cope with the outbreak
This is yet another blow in the long lingering fight against Ebola. But it is not unexpected.
Guinea was in fact the only one of the three worst affected countries that hadn't had a re-emergence of the virus after the outbreak was officially declared over there on 29 December 2015.
Both Sierra Leone and Liberia have reported little clusters of new cases after declaring the outbreaks over. But they've been dealt with quickly.
A risk of new flare-ups remains because Ebola can persist in body fluids of some survivors for months after they recover.
A very small number of new cases have been linked to sexual transmission.
The world is in new territory here - scientists are still learning as the worst Ebola outbreak in history continues to unfold.

More than 17,000 Ebola survivors are dealing with a wide range of complications and social stigma.
Some scientists say there's a risk the virus may become an ever-present disease in West African society.

Ebola deaths

Figures up to 13 January 2016

11,315
Deaths - probable, confirmed and suspected
(Includes one in the US and six in Mali)
  • 4,809 Liberia
  • 3,955 Sierra Leone
  • 2,536 Guinea
  • 8 Nigeria

Thursday, March 17, 2016

SRI LANKA: FULL REPORT OF THE SPECIAL RAPPORTEUR OF HRCSL (2006) ON CONFLICT RELATED HUMAN RIGHTS VIOLATIONS

akkareipattu
T. Suntheralingam was the SP appointed by HRC SLaa
T. Suntheralingam was the SP appointed by HRC SL---Akkaraipattu Mosque (2005)

(Grenade attack on  Jumma Mosque at Akkaraipattu On 18th November 2005 one of the issues investigated)

I. Introduction

Sri Lanka BriefThere was an escalation in violence in the country during the months of November and December 2005. Consequently there were allegations of human rights violations such as arbitrary killings, rape, harassment of persons during cordon and search operations, unlawful arrests and detention of persons both in the North and the East and to a lesser extent in the other parts of the country.
The Human Rights Commission (HRC) realizing the fact that its present cadre is inadequate to cope with the problems consequent to such incidents, thought it fit to appoint a Special Rapporteur with a team of two others to look into such incidents and advise the HRC on the measures that need to be taken to protect the rights of persons; to gather evidence from whichever sources possible in connection with such incidents and monitor compliance by the police and security forces with human rights norms; to guide the Regional Co-ordinators of the HRC in the North and East and to submit periodic reports to the Chairperson of the HRC.1

16 March 2016The UN Secretary General, Ban Ki Moon, on Tuesday said the UN Human Rights Council's work in countries including Sri Lanka had helped the international community's response to human rights emergencies.

"The Council's work on Burundi, Guinea, South Sudan, Sri Lanka, Syria and many other places has helped the international community to respond to human rights emergencies and work towards accountability," Mr Ban said at an event marking the tenth year anniversary of the UNHRC.

“Ten years on, I commend the Council on making important progress towards putting the human rights pillar back at the centre of the United Nations system,” he said.

See more here. The UN's failure to respond effectively to the deaths of tens of thousands of Tamils in 2009 as the Sri Lankan government's embarked on a military assault to defeat the Liberation Tigers of the Tamil Eelam, was heavy criticised by an internal review panel.

In its report, the panel concluded there was a "grave failure" on the part of the UN, acknowledging that upto 70,000 Tamil civilians could have been killed.

See more here.
 Leaked report concludes 'grave failure of the UN' in Sri Lanka

Tamil civilians plead with UN officials not to leave Vanni in September 2008. Photograph from TamilNet. See here

A leaked draft of an UN internal report on Sri Lanka concludes that "events in Sri Lanka mark a grave failure of the UN", reports the BBC.

The report, headed by former senior UN official Charles Petrie, points to a “systemic failure” and questions decisions such as the withdrawal of UN staff from the war zone in September 2008, after warning from the Sri Lankan government that it could no longer guarantee their safety.
One member of the UN team that left, Benjamin Dix, claimed to have disagreed with the pull-out, saying:
"I believe we should have gone further north, not evacuate south, and basicallyabandon the civilian population with no protection or witness. As a humanitarian worker, questions were running through my mind 'what is this all about? Isn't this what we signed up to do?'"
The report says that the situation on the ground was “catastrophic” and points out that:
"many senior UN staff did not perceive the prevention of killing of civilians as their responsibility - and agency and department heads at UNHQ were not instructing them otherwise," going on to describe "a sustained and institutionalised reluctance" among UN personnel in Sri Lanka "to stand up for the rights of people they were mandated to assist".
A Tamil asylum seeker who was formally a school teacher in the war zone told the BBC:
"We begged them, we pleaded with them not to leave the area. They did not listen to us. "If they had stayed there, and listened to us, many more people would be alive today."
The failure of the UN to publicise that the “large majority” of deaths were caused by government shelling is also detailed, with the report saying that the UN should have revealed what was happening to the world and done more to try and prevent it.
The report details that in New York:
"Engagement with member states regarding Sri Lanka was heavily influenced by what it perceived member states wanted to hear, rather than by what member states needed to know if they were to respond".
Not a single meeting was held at the Security Council or any other top UN bodies during the last months of the war.
Frances Harrison, author of Still Counting the Dead, told the BBC:
"The only way now for Ban Ki-moon to restore the UN's tattered credibility on Sri Lanka is to call an independent international investigation into the slaughter of tens of thousands of civilians in 2009".

Where Is The Academic Integrity?


Colombo Telegraph
By R S Pathirana Kaluwella –March 17, 2016
Are the academics using their benefits of country’s free education system in honourable and fair manner?
In 2012, the academics of the state University system in Sri Lanka and FUTA engaged in a long, hard trade union action demanding 6% of the GDP to be allocated for education. Among FUTA’s other demands, stoppage of politicization of Universities, ensuring autonomy of universities etc, are included. These demands, if realized well, are expected to make sure the state funded, free-education based University system in the country could function in its true spirit and intellectual capacity. The noble idea is to protect the free education system introduced & established by the late, great, Kannangara.FUTA 4
Now we are in 2016, and we have amply witnessed that such allocation has only been a demand; a far fetched dream with the present way of handling national education. However, to address grievances at certain level, remuneration of academics were somewhat increased through various allowances added to the salary, but not to the extent of preventing performing academics joining the private sector for better prospects or leaving the country for greener pastures.
This little write up aims to question a recent activity of some academics, that is not so honourable, not like the sort of academic involvement the country (used to) respect, because it has serious conflicts of interests.
One of the privileges the academics and certain administrative categories in the local state University system enjoy is the sabbatical entitlement, where, upon completion of some specific number of years of service, an academic is entitled for one year paid leave to engage in research and other scholarly activities. This in fact, in true spirit, add value to academics’ profession and to the relevant institution, and the state University system provide even the cost of air passage for overseas sabbatical placements, while the host institution pay handsomely for good academics.