Peace for the World

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

Wednesday, March 23, 2016

Good governance is not utopia…it’s making 

the best out of bad governing systems


“A map of the world that does not include Utopia is not worth even glancing at, for it leaves out the one country at which Humanity is always landing. And when Humanity lands there, it looks out, and, seeing a better country, sets sail. Progress is the realization of Utopias.”

2016-03-23
Wilde, ‘The Soul of Man Under Socialism’
Good governance…it’s more likely that those who desire foolproof and ideological-definitions-based systems of governance are immensely disappointed at the pace at which the present Government is going about establishing a more responsive system of governance. Placed against a backdrop of a disappointed public, who held high hopes of reverting to a more agreeable and endurable working structure of government, a government that is, for all ostensible reasons fair and balanced, a government that is more sensitive and responsive to the needs of the people instead of vested interests and wealthy lobbyists, one finds it extremely tough to pit a half-hearted governing structure, as evidenced today, against high expectations. 

The situation is even more exacerbated by sheer inaction on the part of the present Government on countering the Opposition’s propaganda and mudslinging. The depths to which the so-called joint opposition could dig into, despite the very powerful allegations against them both collectively and individually, tells a totally different story, a story of inoculating a large segment of our population from the shame of corruption and dishonesty. The past twenty years of governance has conditioned the people into wretched and miserable subjects of pawns in the cruel hands of the rulers. This segment of people has willingly subjected themselves into this abysmal status, they show no inclination whatsoever to unshackle themselves from the grip it has taken hold of them.

However much the present rulers thunder from their comfortable political platforms, the officialdom that has been desecrated and defiled to such an inexcusable extent, is playing an active role in this sordid enterprise of corruption, nepotism and terribly ‘bad governance’. The days of honest and efficient civil service have become relics of a bygone era. The days that civil servants used their decisive pen to approve or disapprove the allocation of funds for government expenditure are gone forever. Now politicians who have no clue about debit and credit, who simply cannot understand a financial statement, are dictating to this new set of ‘civil servants’ as to what project receives approval and what does not. This phenomenon has overridden the carefully constructed project proposals; it has eaten into the very core of the fundamental principles of civil service, it has devoured this once-sacred service lock, stock and barrel and if any investor intends to get his or her project through the red tape of bureaucracy, lure of foreign trips, ‘santhosams’ of single malt whiskey and dinners at five-star restaurants have become the order of the day. 

The unfortunate victims of this neo-bureaucracy are the ordinary folks of our beloved nation: Mudiyanse and Ran Menika in the hill country, Somalatha and Saranapala in the deep South, Ramanathan and Yogeswari in the North and Suleiman and Fathima in the East. The whole tapestry of our national life has become prey to this mean invasion of ‘bad governance’. Although this process was greatly accelerated during past two decades, it did not commence its woeful journey only in the nineties. Ever since Sri Lanka obtained Independence in 1948, ever since we became a self-ruled sovereign, each successive government and its leaders bear sixty per cent of responsibility for this disreputable decay in our national life, the balance forty per cent, of course, belongs to the gullible electorate.

Through the drifting mist of fragments of recent history, a more perceptible tableau emerges; in the waning light of nightfall, among the sad stanzas of a national tragedy, a lamentable saga is yearning for expression. That saga is not very pleasant to read nor easy to comprehend. Yet, in the context of the prevalent systems, as Winston Churchill lamented, “Democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others.” The utopia is receding.      

Visions of utopia may evaporate with the first light of dawn, expectations and hopes may be dashed in the determined chase after justice and fair play, the remnants of lofty hopes and justifiable goals may be scattered among the debris of yesterday’s dreams, but the tale of pursuit of absolute goals and abstract mirages will continue. Man’s inexhaustible thirst for a perfect union with those who sit over judgment of matters relating to all and sundry might never be quenched. But one cannot foreclose arguments for the pursuit of happiness and justice. Whether one is a socialist or a capitalist, Caucasian or Negroid, Sinhalese or Tamil, no power on earth could erect boundaries around man’s aspirations and dreams. But the real tragedy that seems to have befallen Sri Lanka and its polity is sheer apathy and complacency on the part of her people in the face of brutal attacks by the creations of the very system on her very premise of values. 

If the massive numbers and raucous cheering displayed at the recent rally held at Hyde Park by the joint opposition led by Mahinda Rajapaksa and his fallen bedfellows is any yardstick of their level of frustration and anger and the loss of ill-gotten privileges and wealth, what shames our country to its very soul is beyond the pale. Such a large segment of our people are so oblivious to the naked violations of human rights, not necessarily against Tamils, but the violent suppression visited upon sections of the majority Sinhalese as evidenced in the Rathupaswela and Katunayake fiascos, it talks more of deliberate countenancing of those violations and infringements. It ought to stir the nation’s conscience. But it did not. There in dwells the tragedy.

This tragedy has made its turn into a bizarre comedy in that, the other day the General Secretary of the United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) said that no action needs to be taken against those SLFP parliamentarians despite a ban on attending that rally being issued by the Party. A fundamental breakdown in discipline has occurred and the culprits are being let loose. This is precisely what has befallen our land -- a breakdown in discipline. Whether it’s on the road or workplace; whether it’s in schools or universities, or for that matter in clubhouses or political parties, when elementary discipline breaks down, social structures that sustain a developing nation crumble along with it. One might not notice the invisible failures of longstanding social growth, but the gradual decay in a society that is struggling to keep up with the fast-developing outside world sets in and that very indiscipline thwarts the advance of that nation. The utopia continues to recede.

That process has begun in Sri Lanka. Unless some drastic measures are taken and proper disciplinary mechanisms are put in place, the road to a utopia will not only be hard, it will be impossible to reintroduce a sense of discipline into the lives of men and women in the country. Preparatory work has already begun for an environment in which a tough authoritarian demagogue would be misread for a sensible alternative to anarchy and disorder. The average folks may settle for a populist agitator whose appeal is focused on the base instincts of man and a return to once-glorious military victories. A breeding ground for such authoritarian rulers is being prepared. And if that were to happen, the victory at the 2015 January Presidential Elections would be hollow and the efforts to bring it about in vain.

Sri Lankans are not sold on a mere notion of a utopia. But in relative terms, what is even marginally better than the previous State machinery would be hailed as a great relief. That sense of relief is visibly felt and enjoyed by a great majority of our people today. But without relief in the economic sphere, the people will subordinate good governance to their daily dire needs. A hungry stomach will overwhelm everything else and a crumb of bread would be a better alternative to tons of freedom and liberty.  

Utopia would remain a dream one should not dream of.
The writer can be contacted at vishwamithra1984@gmail.com

Geopolitics Of Indian Ocean: Sri Lanka Postwar Challenges In Reconciliation


By Asanga Abeyagoonasekera –March 22, 2016
Asanga Abeygoonasekera
Asanga Abeygoonasekera
Colombo Telegraph
President Sirisena who survived an assassination attempt several years ago, created the first sign towards true reconciliation by forgiving the LTTE rebel who was a key suspect. He even got the National Anthem to be sung in both languages Sinhalese and Tamil. These are positive signs of reconciliation. Prime Minister Wickremesinghe setup an advisory council for Young Global Leaders to advise him recently. From a close administration we have moved into an administration more outward and now we have media freedom restored fully, there are no blocked media sites. I see five challenges as a nation we need to overcome.
Good evening, Prof. Sara De Vido, distinguished scholars ladies and gentleman,
I was told it’s the first time a Sri Lankan and a South Asian speaker is delivering a lecture at Ca’Foscari University PISE lecture series and it is a great honour and privilege to speak at this prestigious University in Venice. This is the 6th International PISE (Philosophy International Studies Economics) Lecture and I wish your program great success.
Sri LankaI am certain we will have more academics and scholars who will visit in the years to come from Sri Lanka. I thank Prof.MatteoLegrenzi and the University for the kind invitation. Venice has been one of my favorite places since I was a child and I enjoy your hospitality and the beautiful city. Byron called Venice “the city is like a dream”, for me it’s a chemistry of poetry of light and water surrounded by narrow and gloomy lanes filled with romance.
Before I begin my lecture on “Geopolitics of Indian Ocean: Sri Lanka postwar challenges in reconciliation” a topic which I have spoken in United States earlier and few other places, I would like to offer my deepest sympathy to the innocent victims of the recent bomb attack two days ago in Ankara. This is the third attack in the Turkish capital in less than six months which shows the multiple security threats that Turkey now faces. A stable corner of the Middle East and the West’s crucial ally Turkey, now in a volatile region and at a dangerous moment. Pain of one nation should be pain of another as we are all interconnected in this world. This was the situation Sri Lanka faced for three decades and our streets were bombed by suicide attacks and we lost many lives. With the right political and military leadership with the courageous Sri Lankan military officers we crushed the rebels in 2009. From this day all Sri Lankans has enjoyed peace and we have not witnessed the ugly side of horror of war which I have witnessed since my birth and also became a victim due to the assassination of my father in 1994.
Transformer explosions: German specialists’
report today

Transformer explosions: German specialists’ report today



logoMarch 22, 2016
A report prepared by the group of German specialists, who arrived here to look into the recent explosions in several transformers belonging to the Ceylon Electricity Board (CEB), will be submitted today. 

The report will be submitted to the Chairman of the CEB, a source said. 

The group visited the CEB substation in Kotugoda on an inspection tour today as well. 

  An explosion had occurred in one of the transformers at the Biayagama substation while a similar explosion occurred at the CEB grid substation in Kotugoda on March 11. 

Colombo land corrupt deal of Rajapakses depriving State of Rs. 780 million revenue surfaces - New wheeler dealer is Ranil’s younger brother !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -22.March.2016, 10.35PM) A massive fraud involving a State land which deprives the state of a revenue of Rs. 780 million orchestrated by  Mahinda Rajapakse just prior to  the presidential elections is now being propelled and promoted with the full knowledge of the present prime minister (P.M.) Ranil Wickremesinghe ,  according to a most rudely shocking and deplorable report reaching Lanka e news inside information division.
Medamulana Mahinda Rajapakse a byword for worst corruption and crimes   who even treated elephants in the wild forests as his own  during his reign , on the 8th of January 2015  just ahead of   the presidential elections ,by tabling a special cabinet paper , transferred a valuable plot of Colombo  land , 130 perches in extent to a close businessman of his. 
The name of that businessman is Deshamanya M.A. Gunatileke , the Kandy Tyre house chief. 
The land is situated in a most valuable area , Colombo 2. The 130 perches land that extends from Vauxhall street to Beira Lake belongs to the State. The gross market value of land in that area is about Rs 12 million per perch , whereas Mahinda Rajapakse gave that land to his close pal at a price as low as Rs. 6 million per perch.
Of course the businessmans have been ready to line the pockets of Mahinda Rajapakse with many millions through this type of deals.
On the 8th of January Medamulana Rajapakse was fortunately defeated and Maithripala Sirisena took over the reins. With the overthrow  of corrupt Rajapakse the cabinet paper pertaining to the corrupt deal too went underground.  
It is common knowledge now that after the wheeler dealers of the Rajapakse’s ‘nefarious decade’ got displaced with the Rajapakses getting thrown out lock , stock and barrel, a new group of wheeler dealers have emerged of the government of good governance who are taking the place of the previous wheeler dealers. One of these wheeler dealers who stands out and  most notorious is Channa Wickremesinghe who is a brother of Ranil  Wickremesinghe. 
This Channa Wickremesinghe has come forward to put through the deal relating to this  Vauxhall street property. 
Accordingly ,the same cabinet paper of Mahinda Rajapakse is to be tabled now just like it was previously. That is , all arrangements have been made to transfer the 130 perches  land worth Rs. 12 million per perch at Rs. 6 million per perch to the same Deshamanya , the Kandy tyre house chief.

By   this deal the country stands to lose a whopping Rs. 780 million ! Therefore , what the cabinet of  government of good governance ought to have done is rescind  that corruption ridden  cabinet paper of ex president Mahinda Rajapakse which was not implemented, and re considered it afresh . A most valuable state land as this can  be transferred only after following the tender procedure duly. 
May we emphasize at this juncture that Lanka e news first with the news and best with the views , and always espousing the cause of justice and fairplay come what may in the best interests  of the nation , has no grudge or grouse against any businessman. If the project for which the Kandy tyre house chief is trying to get that land is going to be a successful one, well there is no harm done provided the land is given at the present market value , and not at the cheap rate. 
Therefore this  deal should not be concluded in a manner that the Lion’s share (illicit gain) creeps into the  pocket   of Channa Wickremesinghe , the brother of Ranil Wickremesinghe to the detriment of the country. These are State lands that   belong to the people. Just because Wickremesinghes are born in Colombo that does not mean those lands belong to them.
If  Ranil Wickremesinghe the P.M.has need to continue to be described as ‘Mr. Clean,’ this deal of his younger brother should be halted forthwith  and this  State transaction should be done  duly again . It is best if every stalwart and every heavyweight of the Government of good governance  bear in mind that the people of Sri Lanka emerged victorious via the Rainbow revolution on the 8th of January 2015 , not to wrest  the opportunities  for illicit deals from one family in order to grant  them  to another family.
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by     (2016-03-22 17:15:06)

‘Namal Malli, we’re saved’, Anura Senanayake’s message to Namal!

‘Namal Malli, we’re saved’, Anura Senanayake’s message to Namal!Mar 22, 2016
Both MP Namal Rajapaksa, who is a key accused in the Wasim Thajudeen murder, and retired senior DIG Anura Senanayake, who stands accused of aiding murder and concealing evidence in connection with the same killing, are in a very happy mood these days, reports say. That is because, from today (22), senior DIG S.M. Wickramasinghe has been appointed the acting IGP. Senanayake has sent a SMS message to Namal, informing him about the appointment.

IGP N.K. Illangakoon has gone on leave prior to retirement. He is due to retire in the second week of April. He will be succeeded by Wickramasinghe, who was in charge of Mahinda Rajapaksa’s security and is now in charge of the security of the incumbent president.
Police officers say Wickramasinghe and Senanayake are very good friends. Namal addresses Wickramasinghe as ‘Wicky uncle.’ It is this ‘Wicky uncle’ who had saved Namal over the accusation that he had sent a bodyguard near the president with a weapon with live bullets last year. The CID issued several summons to him to make statements, but using his official powers, Wickramasinghe avoided the summons, but in the end gave one. However, he got ASP Ariyapala, who took down his statement, to be transferred.
It is expected that all key positions in the police department will be changed once Wickramasinghe becomes the IGP. Thereafter, all thieves will have a time of relief with the dawning New Year.

Arrested for demanding sexual bribe


TUESDAY, 22 MARCH 2016
A 'Divi Neguma' development officer has been arrested by officials of Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery and Corruption for demanding a sexual bribe from a woman in return for making available Samurdhi aid and providing to a child aid given by the government for kidney patients.
He was arrested by a team of officials of the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery and Corruption in a hotel at Tissamaharamaya yesterday (21st).
The suspect is a resident of Tissamaharamaya attached to Katharagama Divisional Secretariat says the Director Investigations of the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery and Corruption Priyantha Chandrasiri.

By Ranil Senanayake –March 22, 2016
Dr Ranil Senanayake
Dr Ranil Senanayake
Colombo Telegraph
What do we call someone who threatens the Sri Maha Bhodi and our heritage? Once we had a terrorist outfit called the ‘Tigers’ who attempted to damage our living link to the Buddha, the Sri Maha Bhodiya. Should the label now be given to the gang who are attempting to build a 500 MW coal fired power station in Trincomalee (as stage I). They have been informed time and time again of the negative global experience on Coal fired power plants. They are aware of the damage to the health of the current and future populations living in the NCP. The fact is, that these people who are already suffering from being poisoning by agricultural water, will now poisoned again through the air. These realities seem not to bother the promoters of Coal fired power plants. Their profits seem to be more important than the health of the population living around. But the most disturbing and disgusting aspect of the cover up is that neither the CEB, CEA or any other so called ‘Sri Lankan’ institution with responsibility to the public, has pointed out the obvious cost we will have to pay with acid rain and heavy metal fallout from this power plant.
A 500-megawatt coal plant ( only the first stage of Sampur) burns 1,430,000 tons of coal, uses 2.2 billion gallons of water and 146,000 tons of limestone. It also puts out, each year
10,000 tons of sulfur dioxide. Sulfur dioxide (SOx) is the main cause of acid rain, which damages forests, lakes and buildings.
10,200 tons of nitrogen oxide. Nitrogen oxide (NOx) is a major cause of smog, and also a cause of acid rain.
3.7 million tons of carbon dioxide. Carbon dioxide (CO2) is the main greenhouse gas, which is the leading cause of global warming
500 tons of small particles. Small particulates are a health hazard, causing lung damage.
Coal fired power plants220 tons of hydrocarbons. Fossil fuels are made of hydrocarbons; when they don’t burn completely, they are released into the air. They are a cause of smog.
720 tons of carbon monoxide. Carbon monoxide (CO) is a poisonous gas and contributor to global warming.
225 pounds of arsenic, 114 pounds of lead, 4 pounds of cadmium, and many other toxic heavy metals
The list goes on, approving such a polluting monster not only threatens our well being, but runs directly opposite to the promise that our President gave the world at the COP21 in Paris last year when he announced that Sri Lanka will seek a fossil free future in our power generation. Perhaps this is the group hell-bent in destroying our Presidents reputation by giving lie to his international obligations.

Fonny’s ministerial position not legal

Fonny’s ministerial position not legal

Mar 22, 2016
Reports reaching us confirm that although field marshal Sarath Fonseka took oaths before the president last 25th as the regional development minister, the gazette notification for his ministerial position has still not been issued. Therefore his ministerial position cannot be legally accepted.

Due to this the privileges owned by ministers has not been granted and don’t have the legal capacity to issue orders as a minister. The cause for not issuing the gazette notification too has still not been revealed.

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

Dhammaloka Thera alleges foul play in Ven. Sobhitha’s death

*Ready to give evidence before a special commission 


article_image

by Harischandra Gunaratne, Ranil Dharmasena and Chaminda Silva-March 21, 2016, 10:25 pm

Ven. Uduwe Dhammaloka Thera yesterday said that the sudden demise of Ven Maduluwawe Sobhitha Thera had been due to a conspiracy. He called upon the government to appoint a special commission to investigate the death of the prelate.

Addressing a press conference at the Abhayaramaya in Narahenpita, Dhammaloka Thera said many bhikkhus were ready to come forward and give evidence before an independent commission.

Dhammaloka Thera said that Ven. Sobhitha had visited him several days before the latter’s demise and expressed displeasure at the direction the country was moving in.

He said Sobhitha Thera had been ill but never weak. A surgery performed on Sobhitha Thera had been successful and he had recovered. Therefore, there were serious doubts about his death. "When I stated that Ven. Sobitha Thera’s death was suspicious and there should be an investigation, some top members of the government sought to brush my

views aside. Instead of an investigation, they obtained statements from Mahanayakes to undermine what I said. I demand that the government hold an inquiry forthwith.

Ven. Elle Gunawansa Thera and Ven Muruttettuwe Ananada Thera also addressed the media.

Meanwhile, at a separate media conference yesterday at Pitakotte, Pivithuru Hela Urumaya leader and Parliamentarian Udaya Gammanpila called upon the government to hold an impartial inquiry into the circumstances which had led to the death of Ven. Sobhitha Thera.

Gammanpila urged both President Sirisena and Prime Minister Wickremesinghe to appoint an independent commission to inquire into the death of Ven Sobhitha if there was nothing to hide.

Gammanpila said Ven. Uduwe Dhammaloka Thera also had raised serious doubts about the prelate’s death, but the government had been silent.

A number of Buddhist monks had died under mysterious circumstances in the past and the governments in power had not cared to conduct investigations, he said.

Gammanpila claimed that Ven Gangodawila Soma Thera had also died under mysterious circumstances, but no proper investigation had been conducted into the death of Ven Soma."

Gammanpila said, "Revered teacher Ven Kotagama Vachissara Thera and Ven Labuduwe Siridhamma Thera, who rose against the then UNP governments also died under mysterious circumstances."

Police Spokesman ASP Ruwan Gunasekera said that there had been no investigation into the death of Ven Sobhitha Thera as there was no complaint of foul play. Some people had made various statements but none had lodged a complaint with the police upto yesterday, the police spokesman said. "If anyone lodges a complaint, the police are ready to investigate it."

Old Boys mafia spreads –Sumangala College OBA secretary assaults teacher ! Police afflicted with rigor mortis


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -22.March.2016, 7.00AM)  The secretary of the old boys association of Panadura Sumangala Vidyalaya has assaulted a teacher of that school 20th morning . Though a complaint was lodged with the police through the teacher , the police has not taken any action so far to arrest the assailant. Consequently the teachers of the school have boycotted the class activities yesterday(21).
As of late , there had been many instances of old boys of schools getting involved in affairs which don’t concern them. This behavior is in violation of the instructions in the circulars  sent by the education ministry  , and lately these incidents are on the increase . Some of these associations are even operating  old boys mafia organizations. 
Specially , the old boys association (OBA) at Panadura Sumangala Vidyalaya  is an illegal group, because the president of the OBA should by virtue of official powers  be the principal. But in respect of this OBA there is no such thing. In some leading schools, the OBA is controlling the playground, swimming pool and halls which is   illegal.

In some schools ,canteens are run by the OBA. By circular 2008/41 the education ministry has intimated that the old boys cannot collect monies from the present students in the school. Yet this practice is continuing and is  most deplorable.

Though the education ministry has issued circulars to control these activities, because no probe is conducted into these violations, these unlawful activities are spreading.  The Lanka Teachers association warns that this situation has  escalated to such alarming proportions the teachers are  falling  victims to assaults of the officers of the old boys association.
The Lanka teachers association has therefore urged the education officials to conduct a special investigation into the Sumangala vidyalaya incident exclusively  , and take transparent measures against the OBA and others who indulged in these illegal acts .
The Lanka teachers association affiliated to the JVP had demonstrated against the failure to arrest the assailant who launched the assault. 


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by     (2016-03-22 01:37:25)

A Tribute To Carlo Fonseka


Colombo Telegraph
By Laksiri Fernando –March 22, 2016
Dr. Laksiri Fernando
Dr. Laksiri Fernando
I was delighted to know Professor Carlo Fonseka’s popular writings are now published in one volume under the title “Essays of a Lifetime” (Godage, 2016). I came to know it through Kumar David’s succinct and witty review in the ‘Sunday Island’ and ‘Colombo Telegraph.’ Although I have not seen the book yet, I believe I am familiar with many of the articles as they were published individually before. My purpose however is not exactly to review them but to reminisce my recollections and encounters with him for whatever they are worth.
Scientific Firewalker
It is true that Carlo didn’t walk on fire, except perhaps once or twice, but he had many volunteers to do so in refutation of the supernatural power behind ‘fire-walking.’ Many of us of the ‘generation of 1960s’ used to admire Carlo along with Dr Abraham T. Kovoor for their rationalist views on many matters, most popular being on religious superstitions. These were the influences, apart from my own ‘Mahappa,’ who became a Buddhist in 1955, that drew me away from the Church for good. Therefore, Carlo was one culprit for my deviations.
Carlo Fonseka colombo telegraphI vividly recollect the picture of a young man hanging on hooks with a microphone in hand flanked by Carlo and Kovoor. Carlo being young, handsome and charismatic looking at that time, caught our attention most. This must have been late 1960s or early ‘70s. They were proving there was nothing supernatural about ritualistic hanging from hooks or fire-walking in religious festivals, Hindu or quasi Buddhist.
Those days, I believe, he was not yet drawn to left politics or Sama Samaja Party. Otherwise I could have met him as a ‘comrade,’ yet on the opposite or ‘revolutionary’ side.
I first met Carlo ‘man to man’ a long time after, when he came for a public lecture on ‘the mind,’ at the University of Peradeniya, somewhere in late 1970s. It was held at the Science Faculty auditorium. He brought a person, Sarlis, if I remember correct, a school teacher, who had exceptional brain capacity, as a demonstration tool. His argument was that the ‘mind’ is nothing but a product or functioning of the brain.
Towards the end of his lecture, Carlo introduced Sarlis and showed that as soon as you give a date (month and year), he could reveal the day of the week, after a quick mental calculation. There were calendars available to verify. Sarlis was spot on. After several rounds of testing by the audience, Professor Maheswaran from Mathematics, who was my neighbour at Upper Hantana at that time gave the current date as the question. It was a Friday. But Sarlis was doing his mental calculation, and the audience started giggling. He gave a wrong answer and the audience was overwhelmed by the giggle. He failed again and again without even a probability luck.
Carlo quickly came to Sarlis’ rescue. Carlo also took the opportunity to deliver another discourse on the brain. Sometime thereafter, Carlo also came to our Faculty of Arts and delivered some useful lectures to the students on Science.
‘Radicalisation’ among Sri Lankan Muslims

 2016-03-23
A number of recent opinion pieces penned by some well-known writers have drawn attention to the growing ‘radicalisation’ among the Muslims of Sri Lanka. Among the key concerns raised are that Sri Lankan Muslims are becoming ‘exclusivist’ and ‘self-alienating’ by following a strict interpretation of Islam, manifested in particular by the growing number of Muslim women who have adopted all-encompassing ‘alien, Arab attire’.
By conflating the veil with radical Islam, the writers, perhaps inadvertently, are feeding into Islamophobia, (an unfounded fear of Islam), and fanning the flames of social discord.
Most Muslim women choose to veil themselves because they view it as a religious obligation. It has no nexus whatsoever to the ‘radicalisation’ that is allegedly unfurling in the community. Veil-clad women do not represent nor do they promote a racist ideology. Furthermore, attacking or vilifying the veil will not make it go away; on the contrary a tolerant, plural and inclusive Sri Lanka has to accommodate all Muslims in whatever dress-code they choose to adopt.  The freedom to practice one’s faith is a basic human right that must be safeguarded. No one should attempt to interfere with someone else’s right to practice his or her professed religion in the manner he or she sees fit, so long as it does not infringe upon the rights of others.
That more and more Muslim women are opting to cover up – be it in the form of the hijab, the abaya or the niqab – does not warrant alarmist discourses. What should alarm all Sri Lankans is the daily record of rapes, sexual harassment of women and the growing insecurity for women, particularly those in the North. According to Women for Rights, every 90 minutes a woman is raped in Sri Lanka and an estimated 95% of women using public transportation are at risk of being sexually harassed.
What should be of concern to all Sri Lankans is the free accessibility to pornographic material (flowing in mainly from the West); in particular our children’s exposure to such destructive material which teaches them all the wrong things about sex. Even the screening of the sick-filth movie ‘Fifty Shades of Grey’, which glorifies the sexual exploitation of women, in Sri Lankan theatres did not attract the condemnation and opposition that it ought to have.
In view of much bigger and more pressing social problems, the veil is something that should neither worry those outside the Muslim community nor those within community who do not consider it an Islamic requirement. The veil – or particular types of it – is simply a piece of fabric; it does not in any way pose a threat to peace, stability and multi-culturalism.
And what does multi-culturalism really mean? It means respect for diversity, especially respect for religious and racial differences, not cultural assimilation. This includes respecting someone else’s interpretation of his or her religious obligations.
Moreover, identity is not something that is fixed. It is fluid and changes over time. The position that the items of clothing in focus, the niqab in particular, are imports from the Middle-East and do not form part of the traditional Sri Lankan Muslim woman’s attire begs the questions: what is traditional Sri Lankan Muslim attire anyway, and where did it originate from? Is it the saree? Is it the shalwar kameez? Are they not imports from India and Pakistan? And what about jeans and shorts? Should we, in similar vein, also be worried about women wearing Western attire on the premise that they are imports from the West and have nothing to do with traditional Sri Lankan attire? Taken to extreme lengths, does it then also mean that Sri Lankan Muslims should stop giving their children names of Arab origin?
The crucial point here is that a woman’s body is her business, and if she chooses to cover it up completely, it should not become a problem for anyone else. Attire is a personal judgement call; some women prefer to be seen in public with less clothing while others prefer a lot more. Ultimately, it is the woman who should make that decision.
With time, practices evolve. If women choose to shed the veil, then that too is their decision. But they must have the right to wear it if they want to. Let us not be so fixated on the Islamic dress-code and try to link it with radicalisation or extreme political violence without any concrete empirical evidence to establish such a link. There is no need to grossly over-react to a threat that is not there.
A study released last week by the International Centre for Ethnic Studies (ICES) in Colombo affirms that there is no real evidence to suggest that a jihadist movement exists in the East. The ICES study entitled ‘Fracturing Community: Intra-group relations among the Muslims of Sri Lanka’ authored by Mohamed Faslan and Nadine Vanniasinkam also points out, “the minority Muslim community is largely considered (by the majority communities) as a religiously homogeneous group when, in fact, they are splintered into various denominations which espouse different interpretations of Islam, values and practices. This ignorance of the plurality within the Muslim community and its internal politics could be a contributing factor to much of the prejudices held by individuals against the community.”
The paper further notes that “the ‘performance’ of difference among Muslim groups, visible in the form of jubbas, hijabs, niqabs, beards and the increasing number of mosques, has created an illusion of an increase in the Muslim population, adding to the fear and suspicion of the majority towards the motives of the Muslim community and its ‘repressive’ culture. These individual prejudices have in turn been manipulated by extremist nationalist groups like the Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) to incite hatred towards and violence against the Muslim community.”
If anyone intolerantly incites hatred, makes inflammatory remarks and thereby promotes communal violence (in the manner the BBS did triggering the Aluthgama riots in June 2014), then that is certainly something to be concerned about. Such persons should be dealt with under the laws of the land. 
The words of Palestinian-American peace activist Linda Sarsour certainly rings true for Sri Lankan Muslims today: “We’re working too hard to be accepted instead of working hard to be respected”.
Islamophobia has been on the rise for some time now; let us refrain from unwittingly contributing to its sustenance.
(Comments can be emailed to: ayesha_zuhair@hotmail.com)
- See more at: http://www.dailymirror.lk/107264/-Radicalisation-among-Sri-Lankan-Muslims#sthash.lCndSOhS.dpuf

A series of conference in Europe about the port city project and the environment destruction

A series of conference in Europe about the port city project and the environment destructionMar 23, 2016
Environment & Nature studies center has decided to convene a series of conferences in the European countries to raise awareness to Sri Lankan’s living in the Europe and international environmentalists about the environment destruction occurring in Sri Lanka through the national physical plan implemented through the current port city project. Coordinating environmentalist of the organization, Ravindra Kariyawasam has visited Italy in order to convene these meetings.

Environmentalist Ravindra Kariyawasam said the first meeting would be held in Valencia in Spain. The conference would be held during the world summit of land and natural resources held at the Polytechnic University in Valencia between March 31st and April 2nd.

During the conference a biodiversity destruction report and pillaging of natural resources in Sri Lanka would be given to the international environmentalists who participate in the summit.

The next conference is scheduled to be held in Verona Italy on 10th April. Next, the conference would be held in Germany and United Kingdom and Ravindra Kariyawasam said many invitations has come from Sri Lankans living overseas.

The conference held in EU countries is organized by the Italy – Sri Lanka assistance organization.

Following the conference a report would be submitted to the UN human rights commission in Geneva about the port city, national physical plan and the environment destruction committed in Sri Lanka, said Ravindra kariyawasam.

Bridging The Racial Divide

Featured image courtesy the Music Project

It can hardly be denied that divisions based on race has proved a major issue for Sri Lanka in the past. Racial discrimination propelled by the emergence of ethno-centric politics fuelled the civil war, and continued in its immediate aftermath as the country took its first tentative steps on the road to reconciliation.
It is important to remember this as March 21 marks the International Day for the Elimination of Racial Discrimination. To mark this day, Groundviewsfeatures the work of some organisations that have worked tirelessly towards reconciliation in the aftermath of the war. This work, much of which focuses on the youth, aims to encourage interaction and thus eliminate the distrust and fear that prevailed in the immediate aftermath of the war.
The Music Project
The Music Project is based on a powerful premise – that of using music to link communities together. It also aims to empower youth through music, giving them life skills and alternative career options.
The Project has three main components, as founder Shalini Wickramasuriya explained; the Orchestra Project, the Recorder Project, and Parallel Versing.
The Orchestra Project was actually inspired by El Sistema, a project born in Venezuela to give children alternative aspirations. In essence, music became a tool for social change, as this documentary illustrates:

In Sri Lanka, the Orchestra Project connects schools in Kurunegala and Thunnukai, Mullaitivu. Over 500 students participate in after-school programmes, learning to play the recorder, the violin, melodica and percussion. Twice a year, the students come together for UNITE, a 4 day residential programme which sees children from different areas performing together in a symbolic gesture:
“With the Orchestra Project, we work to provide access for the youth of two deprived farming communities who often do not gain entry to university, despite the Z score being as low as it is. The performances also build confidence, motivation and self esteem,” Wickramasuriya said.

The Urban Recorder Project is an after school project teaching over 1600 children to play the recorder. Currently partnering with the University of Visual and Performing Arts, the Project is conducting classes in Colombo.

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