Peace for the World

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

Thursday, May 26, 2016

Teen cancer death rate causes alarm


Teen with doctor
BBC26 May 2016
Too many teenagers and young adults are dying of some types of cancer, a Europe-wide report warns.
Their survival rates for cancers such as leukaemia are much lower than in younger children, says a report in the Lancet Oncology.
The researchers suggest differences in tumours, delays in diagnosis and treatment and a lack of clinical trials for that age group are to blame.
Cancer Research UK said it was crucial to find out what was going wrong.
The study analysed data from 27 countries on nearly 57,000 childhood cancers and 312,000 cancers in teenagers and young adults.
Overall, five-year survival rates were higher in teenagers and young adults at 82% compared with 79% in children.
But those better prospects were largely driven by the older age-group getting cancers with a better prognosis.
The overall rate concealed areas of concern where survival was "significantly worse" for eight cancers commonly found in both age groups.
The five-year survival rates for:
  • acute lymphoid leukaemias were 56% in teenagers and young adults & 85.8% in children
  • acute myeloid leukaemias 50% in teenagers and young adults & 61% in children
  • Hodgkin's lymphoma 93% in teenagers and young adults & 95% in children
  • non-Hodgkin's lymphoma 77% in teenagers and young adults & 83% in children
  • astrocytomas (a brain cancer) 46% in teenagers and young adults & 62% in children
  • Ewing's sarcoma of bone 49% in teenagers and young adults & 67% in children
  • rhabdomyosarcoma (soft tissue tumours) 38% in teenagers and young adults & 67% in children
  • osteosarcoma (bone cancer) 62% in teenagers and young adults & 67% in children
Dr Annalisa Trama, from The National Institute of Cancer in Milan, Italy said: "The good news is that the number of children, adolescents and young adults surviving for at least five years after diagnosis has risen steadily over time in Europe.
"However, we found that adolescents and young adults still tend to die earlier than children for several cancers common to these age groups, particularly blood cancers."
Dr Alan Worsley, from Cancer Research UK, said: "While it's great news that the number of children, teenagers and young adults surviving cancer continues to improve, it's also clear that for some cancers, survival in different age groups is improving faster than in others.
"We need to find out whether adolescents are faring worse because of how their cancer is managed in the clinic or whether it's because the underlying biology is fundamentally different at these ages.
"Answering these questions is a big part of the reason why we've launched the Cancer Research UK Kids and Teens campaign."

Wednesday, May 25, 2016

U.N. Secretary-General Front-Runner Faces Internal Uproar


U.N. Secretary-General Front-Runner Faces Internal Uproar BY COLUM LYNCH-MAY 24, 2016

Helen Clark, the U.N.’s development czar, has emerged as a front-runner in the race for U.N. secretary-general, inspiring international hopes that a powerful woman could lead the world’s preeminent diplomatic organization for the first time. Back home in New Zealand, where Clark served as prime minister from December 1999 to November 2008, the teenage pop star Lorde declared she was “all in” for her “awe-inspiring fellow countrywoman.” Fans produced T-shirts proclaiming, “Aunty Helen for UN Secretary General.”
But many of her own U.N. colleagues are not rooting for her. Clark’s seven-year stewardship of the U.N. Development Programme (UNDP) has left a trail of embittered peers and subordinates, who accuse Clark of ruthlessly ending the careers of underlings in her quest to advance her candidacy and of undercutting the U.N.’s promotion of human rights. In the most controversial move, Clark’s top managers allegedly drove one UNDP official out of her job in retaliation for participating in an investigation that sharply criticized the agency’s response to mass atrocities in Sri Lanka, according to internal U.N. emails and several current and former U.N.-based officials and diplomats. The offices of the deputy U.N. secretary-general and a top aide to U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon lobbied Clark’s office to rescue the UNDP official’s career, but they were unsuccessful.
UNDP denies it retaliated against the employee or that Clark played any role in denying her a job. Clark’s supporters concede her popularity may have taken a hit after she led a traumatic restructuring of the development agency from September 2013 to September 2015, sacking more than 200 staffers at UNDP’s New York headquarters, part of an effort to thin the ranks of senior management in New York. But they say it is a testament to Clark’s leadership that she had the grit to undertake such painful cuts — something that few other U.N. managers have achieved. Even her detractors say she has been a tenacious advocate for her agency’s interests. “She is one of the most aggressive turf warriors the U.N. has ever seen,” one senior diplomat said.

But there have also been casualties during her tenure, notably Lena Sinha, a Swedish-American dual citizen, who was forced out of UNDP after helping craft a landmark report on the U.N.’s shortcomings in the final months of the Sri Lankan civil war, ending a 15-year career there.
Sinha’s fall from grace — which has not been previously reported — highlights a broader resistance within the U.N. development agency to play a more proactive role speaking out against human rights abuses in overseas missions. UNDP manages the most senior officials in most of the U.N.’s far-flung offices, and U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and human rights advocates believe the agency should play a more pro-active role in spotting and reporting abuses before they erupt into full-blown crises.
More than four years ago, Sinha was appointed to serve as chief of staff on a high-profile panel producing a report on the mass atrocities in Sri Lanka. The Petrie report — named after the lead author, Charles Petrie, a former U.N. official and occasional advisor to the U.N. chief — provided a damning account of the U.N.’s “systemic failure” to advocate for the protection of hundreds of thousands of Tamils caught in the line of fire in the final months of the country’s brutal civil war in 2009. It criticized senior officials in New York, as well as UNDP’s leadership team in Colombo, charging they routinely downplayed the extent of the Sri Lankan government’s complicity in killing the vast majority of the more than 70,000 civilians who died in indiscriminate shelling. The U.N. team in Sri Lanka “did not perceive the prevention of killing of civilians as their responsibility — and agency and department heads at UNHQ were not instructing them otherwise,” according to the Petrie report.
The Petrie report was endorsed by the U.N. chief, and its recommendations formed the basis of Ban’s push to step up the U.N.’s human rights advocacy around the world. In November 2013, Ban launched his “Human Rights Up Front” initiative, which instructed all U.N. agencies to place the protection of civilians from atrocities at the forefront of their missions and to speak out publicly when abuses occur.
The undertaking had enormous implications for UNDP, which administers a stable of more than 130 resident coordinators who serve as the face of the United Nations in most countries. First, it placed greater pressure on the officials — many of whom are primarily responsible for running development programs — to take on a stronger role in promoting human rights. But it also risked complicating their relations with host governments, many of which see the promotion of human rights as an unwelcome challenge to their sovereignty. A sharp rebuke of a country’s human rights abuses can get a resident coordinator expelled, jeopardizing the U.N.’s development and humanitarian operations there.
The Petrie report’s release infuriated UNDP’s brass, who felt it maligned the U.N. development agency, presented an unfairly harsh account of UNDP’s top official in Sri Lanka, and posed a potential threat to its leadership in far-flung operations.
“It seems that UNDP, and Helen Clark in particular, took the Petrie report personally,” said Edward Mortimer, who served as a top advisor to former U.N. Secretary General Kofi Annan. But “even if you think the report is wrong it is not a reason to discriminate in giving them a job.” Mortimer, who became an active proponent of human rights in Sri Lanka after leaving the United Nations, served as an informal advocate for Sinha, bringing her case to the attention of officials in Ban’s office.”
In a confidential point-by-point rebuttal obtained by Foreign Policy, UNDP rejected some of Petrie’s key findings. It claimed the Petrie report was deeply flawed and that its authors were not “sufficiently rigorous” in their assessments of the U.N.’s alleged failings. It accused Petrie’s team of citing documents out of context and failing to consult sufficiently with UNDP or other agencies. It pushed hard against plans by Petrie that would dilute its control over the U.N.’s field operations, including a proposal to strengthen the role of the U.N. high commissioner for human rights, saying what was needed was more money to fund the U.N.’s response in the face of crisis.
“Only UNDP in the entire UN system has the operational presence, capacity and broad development and policy mandate, and financial resources to manage the RC [resident coordinator] system,” the confidential UNDP report stated.
The Petrie report, meanwhile, fueled resentment that one of UNDP’s own had played a role in the report.
Word quickly filtered around UNDP’s New York headquarters that Sinha was finished.
Sinha would later recall in a July 2015 email to a UNDP human resources official that two days after the formal release of the Petrie report she was “informed that UNDP had convened a ‘high-level crisis meeting’ regarding the Sri Lanka report, with the findings and recommendations, and my role therein, discussed, and that it was said that ‘I would never work for UNDP again,’” according to the email, which was reviewed by FP.
Christina LoNigro, UNDP’s press secretary, said no such decision had ever taken place. She said Sinha had simply been unsuccessful finding a New assignment. Another senior official reached out to FP after learning it was investigating the case claimed that Sinha had not faced retaliation. The official, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said that while Sinha was a smart and capable official she lacked the kind of extensive field experience needed to rise in UNDP. “I don’t think she was retaliated against.”
Still, after 15 years of employment with the development agency, UNDP’s top managers stopped offering her new assignments. She applied for more than half a dozen UNDP jobs but failed to even get shortlisted. Shortly after, Sinha was placed on leave without pay.
In the meantime, Sinha took up an unpaid job at the Global Centre for the Responsibility to Protect, a New York-based human rights advocacy group, living off her savings and analyzing atrocities in Syria. She hoped the matter would blow over and that UNDP would ultimately welcome her back in. But that was not to happen, and after four years in limbo, she accepted a severance package earlier this year and left.
“I was, of course, shocked by the developments following the completion of the Sri Lanka review,” Sinha told FP. “I tried to remain with UNDP,” she added, but “as it became clear that I would be unsuccessful in obtaining further regular appointments, I agreed to voluntary termination of my permanent contract with the U.N.”
Petrie — a veteran U.N. player who once worked for UNDP — characterized UNDP’s treatment of Sinha in an email to FP as “an extraordinary demonstration of vindictiveness and abuse of authority.”
“At the time I thought the whole approach was extraordinarily stupid,” he added. UNDP, he noted, was in the midst of launching a management reform that would result in scores of job cuts. “They could have discreetly terminated her contract a few months later as part of the reform. But I wasn’t surprised by the way Lena was treated. It fits a very familiar pattern.”
Petrie said it was his “understanding that the message conveyed to Lena, of never being able to find work with UNDP, followed a senior management meeting with Helen Clark.”
UNDP’s LoNigro, denied that Clark played any role in the decision to deny Sinha employment, saying, “issues related to her employment status were dealt with at the working level in the organization and not at the level of or at the instruction of the administrator.”
Either way, the controversy was subsequently brought to her office’s attention by Ban’s office, which sympathized with Sinha’s plight. U.N. Deputy Secretary-General Jan Eliasson and Susana Malcorra, Ban’s chief of staff at the time and currently a candidate for secretary-general herself, reached out to Clark’s office to urge UNDP to back down, according to emails and sources briefed on the exchanges.
Ban’s office learned about Sinha’s situation as early as November, 2012. His top advisors grew concerned that a high-profile case of potential retaliation against a U.N. staffer who had participated in the Petrie report would undermine public confidence in the U.N. chief’s initiative.
In July 2013, several months before Ban was due to launch his human rights initiative, the secretary-general’s office contacted Clark’s office to raise concern about the political implications of a public battle over Sinha’s case. A short time later, Sinha received a call from UNDP’s human resources office. It had found a temporary assignment reviewing UNDP staff diversity policies. That assignment was extended until the fall of 2013. But a full-time job never materialized.
Several sources that had been briefed by Ban’s office said that both Eliasson and Malcorra had spoken directly to Clark. According to those accounts, Clark said she was unaware of Sinha’s case but that she would look into it.
UNDP denied that either Malcorra or Eliasson had spoken directly to Clark about the matter. “UNDP, not the administrator, was asked about the status of the staffer in question,” LoNigro said. “No link was made to Human Rights Up Front, and the response from UNDP was that she had been unsuccessful in job fairs.” Stephane Dujarric, a spokesman for the U.N. secretary general, said “we have no recollection of direct contact” between Eliasson and Clark.
Human rights advocates tracking the case said it was travesty of justice that those who were criticized in the report suffered no disciplinary action while Sinha saw her career destroyed.
“UNDP has it tragically backward, apparently retaliating against a staff who helped document the U.N. failings in Sri Lanka, while promoting staff who were actually responsible for those failings,” said Philippe Bolopion, the deputy director for global advocacy at Human Rights Watch.
Bolopion claimed UNDP has resisted Ban’s efforts to strengthen the U.N.’s human rights advocacy and that the Sinha case sent a chilling message to any U.N. employee who might be tempted to speak about the world body’s human rights failings.
“Ban Ki-moon can promote ‘Human Rights Up Front’ all he wants, but UNDP has been notoriously slow getting on board,” Bolopion said.
UNDP’s LoNigro challenged that assessment, saying Clark was appointed co-chair, along with Eliasson, of a high-level working group implementing Human Rights Up Front, testifying to Clark’s commitment to implementing Ban’s human rights initiative.
“We expect resident coordinators to recognize and respond to serious human rights concerns and their cause, and will provide you with support in doing so,” Clark and Eliasson wrote in a July 29 joint letter to UNDP’s resident coordinators.
Following the launch of the Human Rights Up Front initiative, UNDP’s resident coordinators received special new training on the issue. “As a result, human rights have a more prominent role in the world of the U.N. country teams than ever before,” LoNigro said.
But human rights advocates and many officials in the U.N. say they remain unconvinced.
One U.N. official raised concern in an email to a colleague that Clark had used her position to weaken some of the U.N.’s chief most important initiatives, and to veto any policy that challenged UNDP’s interests.
For instance, the official noted, Clark and her aides sought to dilute a key proposal to deploy teams of human rights experts and conflict specialists to countries beset by a sudden influx of violence. The idea was that these teams — operating under the authority of the High Commissioner for Human Rights and the U.N.’s top political adviser — would have greater freedom to promote human rights. But Clark’s team pushed back, demanding that the UNDP administrator provide “clear direction” to any such human rights team, according to an email from a UNDP official involved in the internal negotiations. Clark’s office also fought internally to ensure UNDP staffers secured most of the resident coordinator posts. Current or former staffers from UNDP currently have about 50 percent of such posts, far more than any other U.N. agency.
Human rights advocates inside and outside of the U.N. have also voiced frustration that the lessons of Sri Lanka have yet to be learned at UNDP. In Myanmar, for example, the UNDP-led mission has come under criticism for inadvertently abetting a system of government-sponsored discrimination against the country’s minority Muslim Rohingya population, and failing to speak forthrightly enough about abuses against the group. More than 100,000 Rohingya have fled the country in recent years, and those that remain face pervasive discrimination.
“The U.N. Secretary General’s ‘Human Rights Up Front’ doctrine was aimed at helping the U.N. system and others learn from the mistakes of Sri Lanka (among others) and avoid allowing this subservient attitude toward the state become an excuse for aiding and abetting abuses,” stated a confidential October 2015 independent report, commissioned by the office of the U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights and obtained by FP. “It is difficult to see that learning in this respect is happening effectively….The situation bears a striking resemblance to the humanitarian community’s systemic failure in the final stages of the war in Sri Lanka.”
Photo credit: LISA MAREE WILLIAMS/Getty Images

FLUCTUATING FORTUNES OF GOOD GOVERNANCE)IN SRI LANKA

index
(By Rasika Jayakody)

Sri Lanka Brief
24/05/2016

Yahapalanaya, in Sri Lanka, is a thing of fluctuating fortunes.

Soon after the new Government came to power in January, it established the Financial Crimes Investigations Division (FCID) to probe into alleged acts of bribery and corruption under the previous administration.

On the other hand, the Bribery Commission was strengthened under the provisions of the 19th Amendment, making it more independent and empowering its functioning.

At the same time, a Presidential Commission was established to investigate into large-scale corruption and abuse of power. The commission was entrusted with the task of probing into some of the much-talked-about cases in the recent past. That was the brighter side of yahapalanaya, which made almost every citizen of the country happy.

However, the same yahapalanaya has a darker side too. Although institutions have been set up, many who campaigned to bring the current administration to power, 16 months ago, are utterly dissatisfied with the progress of the inquiries. They claim that those who were responsible for acts of large-scale corruption have ‘dodged’ law enforcement authorities, with the blessings of some top-notch members of the present Government. The public at large view the Government’s anti-corruption drive with a modicum of suspicion.

This lethargic approach compelled four ministers of the national unity Government to present a joint-Cabinet paper to the weekly meeting of ministers, requesting a report on the progress of the ongoing anti-corruption investigations.

The joint-Cabinet paper, presented by Dr. Rajitha Senaratne, Patali Champika Ranawaka, Sarath Fonseka and Arjuna Ranatunga, put forward the following requests:

* The Cabinet of ministers requests details and follow-up action on every complaint lodged by the civil society groups with various government bodies looking into bribery and corruption. We also wish to know the legal status and background relating to the progress of those investigations.

* The Cabinet of ministers also requests details about the progress of the work carried out by the institutions attached to the Sri Lanka Police and other commissions, including the Presidential Commission.

* The Cabinet requests details about action taken by the Attorney General’s Department in relation to the said investigations.

We also propose to take a collective action to expedite and fast-track the functioning of the law enforcement process in this regard.”

President Maithripala Sirisena, however, vetoed this Cabinet paper, saying the Cabinet meeting was not the appropriate place to discuss such things.

The President further clarified his position saying any ‘Cabinet discussion’ on anti-corruption investigations would allow their opponents to dub the government’s anti-corruption drive as a political witch-hunt. The President, however, assured that he would give a separate discussion to the four ministers who wished to discuss the issue.

Six days after the presentation of the joint-Cabinet paper, the government made an unprecedented move by appointing former Telecommunication Regulatory Commission’s Director General Anusha Palpita as the Additional Secretary of the Home Affairs Ministry. The appointment drew the attention of many as Palpita was known to be a close associate of the former first family and his name mentioned in connection with many controversies.
Interestingly, both Palpita and former Secretary to the President Lalith Weeratunga had been indicted by the Attorney General (AG) in connection with the misappropriation of Rs 600 million from the SLTRC, between the period October 30, 2014 and January 5, 2015. It was alleged that the money was used to distribute ‘sil redi’ among Buddhist devotees in the run up to the last Presidential election.

FCID investigations revealed that the two officials had transferred the money to a personal account belonging to the former President’s Secretary.

According to the indictment filed by the AG, the accused were charged under Section 21 Public Property Act of 1982 and the SLTRC Act no 25 of 1991. What requires emphasis is the fact that Palpita is an accused in a criminal case involving Rs. 600 million.

Palpita also found himself in hot water over a court case involving a 14-year old child who appeared in a news item during the last Presidential election.

In the news item aired on state- run ITN at the time, the child claimed that Maithripala Sirisena, who was the Common Candidate of the Opposition at the time, was detaining his mother.

This incident led to legal action involving eight suspects including some high profile officials such as former diplomat Sepala Ratnayake, former Telecommunications Regulatory Commission Director-General Palpita, former Deputy General Manager of ITN Sudharman Radaliyagoda and ASP Sarachchandra Gunathilaka.

The Police reported that the suspects had allegedly used the child for a news item during the last Presidential election without his guardian’s consent.

It was also revealed during the case that Palpita was heavily involved in the election campaign of the former President, deviating from the standard practices followed by government servants.

Palpita’s appointment, however, sent shockwaves across the ‘Yahapalanaya’ camp. Many expressed surprise as to how an accused in a criminal case obtained a senior appointment in the government sector, while the Public Services Commission (PSC) was functioning. If the appointment has been done without the knowledge of the PSC, it indicates that the high-powered commission is in a drugged slumber!

“The appointment is absolutely illegal and cannot be justified under any circumstances,” said senior lawyer J.C. Weliamuwa, a stalwart of the Lawyers’ Collective as well as the Purawesi Balaya Organisation.

“It is common knowledge that Palpita is an accused in a criminal case. According to the law of the country, an accused in a criminal case cannot hold a position in the government. On the other hand, there were various allegations leveled against him, when he was a senior official under the previous administration,” he added.

“This appointment sends a wrong message to investigators and prosecutors. It shows certain individuals, currently under investigation, show strong links with the present government. It indicates they have ‘muscle’ to overpower or to circumvent the law enforcement mechanism of the country. This, needless to say, hampers the ongoing anti-corruption investigations,” Weliamuna said. It was also revealed on Tuesday, that the Lawyers’ Collective was planning to issue a strongly worded statement against the appointment.

Quite surprisingly, Palpita was appointed to a ministry placed under the UNP, a party that strongly campaigned for good governance before the last Presidential election. Our multiple attempts to contact Home Affairs Minister Vajira Abeywardena to get a comment on this appointment did not bear fruit due to the minister’s busy schedule.
NPC urges North-East federal state with land and police powers


25 May 2016

Putting forward its proposals for a political solution to the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka and constitutional reform, the Northern Provincial Council urged a federal state structure of two broad linguistic states, including the Sinhala speaking states of 7 provinces and a Tamil speaking North-Eastern state parliament with full land and police powers.

Stressing the importance of ensuring equality within the devolved areas, the NPC called for a Muslim autonomous Regional Council within the North-East state.

The NPC also stated the military should be removed as an occupying force from the North-East, and the Prevention of Terrorism Act should be repealed.

The document was formally handed over the leader of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) R Sampanthan.

Find full document here in English and Tamil.

Extracts of key proposals reproduced below: 
"Sri Lanka must basically and fundamentally be declared to contain two broad linguistic States, the Northern and Eastern Province consisting of Majority Tamil speaking State and the other seven Provinces consisting of Majority Sinhala speaking State.

It is essential that a federal system of Government is adopted in preference to a unitary system of Government.

Within the Tamil speaking regions of the North and East of Sri Lanka synchronizing with the present Northern and Eastern Provinces there shall be a Muslim autonomous Regional Council. The situation, extent and jurisdiction of this autonomous region need to be discussed among the Tamil and Muslim Peoples‟ Representatives. The Tamil speaking North Eastern linguistic State will constitute the North Eastern State Parliament. Similar arrangements for the Upcountry Tamils need to be formulated within the Sinhala linguistic State.

North Eastern State Parliament, North Eastern Muslim Regional Council as well as the Upcountry Tamil Regional Council should have full powers of devolution to attend to their own affairs. Adequate self rule must be provided to these State Government and Regional Councils.


The Official and National languages of Sri Lanka shall be Sinhala and Tamil and English shall be the link language. All transactions, records and court proceedings in the North Eastern State shall be in the Tamil language with translations kept in Sinhala and English.

Self rule of every State Government and autonomous Regional Council must be recognized and ensured by the Federal Government.

The principle of equality among all citizens whatever their languages, religion, caste, creed or region must be stressed and weight age to all communities must be given in the political, administrative, educational, economic and other fields including employment. Equal opportunities of
employment to all citizens in Federal Government Service must be ensured.

Sustained propaganda against the Tamil speaking peoples through distorted Government approved school text books must be done away with. Sri Lankan history must be correctly depicted in line with International standards, not bowing down to sectarian or parochial demands.

Land within the State limits must come under the control and purview of the State Government. The Federal Government should not use any power over such lands except with the consent and concurrence of the State Government or Regional Council where the land is to be used for the benefit of the people of such unit.

Full Police powers must be given to State Government. The Federal Police shall look after the implementation of the Federal Laws.

The Prevention of Terrorism (Temporary) Provisions Act must be repealed and the general civil law of the Country be brought back.

Due to the modern methods of surveillance and communication the need for any occupying Military Force in the North and East subsequent to the ending of the war, becomes redundant. A process of Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration (DDR) regarding ex-combatants must be undertaken to reintegrate former combatants into civilian life.

In view of the makeup of the Constitutional Council directed to formulate a constitution which consists members of the majority community in large numbers, in order to ensure that a permanent and sustainable solution to the National problem could be arrived at, an initial Agreement between the present Government and the Tamil leaderships must be entered into recognizing the Tamil speaking Peoples‟ right to their individuality in the areas of their continued historical habitation viz the North and East of Sri Lanka. The Agreement must reiterate in the event of the unilateral abrogation of the submissions made by the leaders of the Tamil speaking peoples by the numerically strong Sinhala Members of Parliament, it should be possible for the Tamil People to hold a referendum in their areas of historical habitation to decide on their political status. Such an Agreement must be underwritten by the United Nations and/or other friendly countries. The process of initial negotiation between the Sri Lankan Government and the Tamil Leaders shall be with the participation of US, India, EU, Japan and other Countries mutually agreed upon.

Clash of civilisations


MAY 24 2016

In the Buddhist society everybody was equal before the state; and all property, in particular the land belonging to the state. Caste based on ethnic and racial differences was done away with. However in place of that, there developed the caste separation based on crafts and professions, associated with the agricultural society rooted in a centralized irrigation system. Cultured elites were paid officers of the state while the peasantry gave a share to the state coffers and also gave free labour for constructions and services of the state, during off season Elara Dutu Gemunu war; was it a tribal war or a war between two different civilizations Many different views are expressed. Some are scientific. Many are biased to fit chauvinist positions held by political leaders. We have to get the facts and figures correct and analyse the socio-economic development of the Lankan society.
At the time of the supposed arrival of Aryan people from North India to this island between 6th and 3rd Century BC, those who lived here belong to the South Indian megalithic culture. It was a commune society based on small tank-villages.

This was an intrusive culture thought to have originated, on the basis of recent discoveries, in the Nubian region which came into South India sometime after 1000 BC. It was metal used with implements chiefly of iron. A settlement had four distinct areas: a habitation area, a cemetery, a tank and fields. Dravidians who built the fabulous cities of Mohenjo-daro Harappa and taught the Nomadic Aryan invaders how to irrigate with dams and canals, had shifted to the South. The South Indian megalithic culture may have had descended from them.

Indigenous civilization

With the advent of Aryan people, there were in the island two or three distinct racial elements. Before 250 BC, before Mauryan Dynasty, Aryans could not have come in great numbers. Nor did they add much to the indigenous civilization. They also knew agriculture and may have started their traditional subsistence village societies based more on animal husbandry. They did not have proper kingship and their village communes were led by ‘Gaminis’. Aryans unlike the indigenous islanders at the time of intrusions were war-like people and were better equipped with military technology.

Theirs was a patriarchic society as opposed to the mother god culture of Dravidian people.

However, the real dawn of civilization came with the introduction of Buddhism. Recorded history started with the elite acquiring a literate culture. Spread of Buddhism among the Sinhala Kshasthriya and other elite castes had a social significance. It means the development of the society from both small-tank village and dam-river valley culture to an organised large-tank culture. Large tank irrigation systems necessitated a centralised society with a finer organising of labour. This could be achieved only by abandoning the strict semi-racial caste divisions of the old Brahaministic society, in place of a social division based more on the services of an irrigation system. Asoka’s version of Theravada Buddhism provided the ideology for this change. Thus Buddhism became the religion of the elite of the centralised agricultural society, where water management and maintenance of dams and canals was done by the state.

Dravidian language

By studying early cave inscriptions, it is claimed that the language of the people at the time of Devanampiyathissa was a variation of Magadha Prakrutha, spoken language understood by both the elite and the lower masses. It is most probable that the Sinhala language developed from the spoken language of the common folk, along the Pali Sanskrit line and departed from the rest of Dravidian languages due to the continuous influence of Buddhism.

Clearly before Buddhism got rooted here, there was no difference between Lankan and Pandean kingdoms. Both were ruled by Aryan Kshasthriya elites though people belonged to Dravidian race. There was close kinship between the two royal houses.

In the Buddhist society everybody was equal before the state; and all property, in particular the land belonging to the state. Caste based on ethnic and racial differences was done away with. However in place of that, there developed the caste separation based on crafts and professions, associated with the agricultural society rooted in a centralized irrigation system.

Cultured elites were paid officers of the state while the peasantry gave a share to the state coffers and also gave free labour for constructions and services of the state, during off season. The first and second Dravidian invasions came in 3rd Century B. C. Sinhala elite were displaced and majority of them were forced to take refuge in the South. In the meantime, the Dravidian elite at Anuradhapura attempted to re-organise the society in the form that existed in South India at that time. With their irrigation know how, small tanks and dams were improved at the expense of the centralized irrigation system.

This would have made them popular among the lower classes while the surplus depreciated. Buddhism was left out as it went against the structure of the society.

Prince Gamini was a prominent village leader of the Sinhalese people that eked out an existence in Ruhunu. He mobilized, this defeated and driven out people to win back the control of the irrigated land that their fore-fathers helped to develop around Anuradhapura. His victory created a fully developed centralized irrigation based agricultural society, with Buddhism as its ideology. The Buddhist monk Mahanama who wrote Mahavamsa, devotes most of it to this epic story of how Sinhala elite brought all people inhabited this island under its domination and established itself at the apex of an Asiatic state structure. So historically it is a clash of two socio-e-conomic formations: Asiatic centralized state structure and village commune based state structure. 

SRI LANKA: CABINET APPROVAL TO ESTABLISH OFFICE OF MISSING PERSONS

Calling for Justice for the disaapeared in Sri Lanka (c) sunanda deshapriya
(Calling for Justice for the disappeared in Sri Lanka (c)sunanda deshapriya)

Sri Lanka Brief25/05/2016

The Cabinet of Ministers on Tuesday the 25th  approved the establishment of an Office for Missing Persons. The Office will help several thousands families of missing persons across Sri Lanka to discover the fate of their loved ones, and the circumstances under which they went missing.  The need to set up such an office is particularly acute as Sri Lanka has one of the largest caseloads of missing persons in the entire world – the result of uprisings in the South and the war lasting nearly three decades. This Office is the first of the four mechanisms dealing with conflict-related grievances that the new Government pledged to establish and legislation will soon be presented to parliament to make that commitment a reality.

Sri Lanka has a long history of recognizing and assisting missing persons through ad-hoc structures. Law enforcement mechanisms have traditionally held responsibility for searching for missing persons.
However, the Southern uprisings and civil war, created the need for new commissions to deal with this issue. The 1995 Zonal Commissions, established by former President Kumaratunga, and a subsequent follow-up commission, investigated cases beginning in 1987. More recently, the Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) noted that the GoSL is “duty bound” to ensure that allegations of missing persons are properly investigated.

The LLRC asserts that relatives of missing persons have the right to know the whereabouts and the “truth about what happened” to their loved ones. This allows them the possibility of ‘closure’ and also enables them to seek appropriate legal remedies. However despite these commissions, some formed in the aftermath of the LLRC recommendations, and which have collected over 20,000 complaints, the vast majority of cases still remain unresolved.

By contrast, this permanent Office will ensure that measures are taken and recommendations made so that Sri Lankans no longer have to fear being disappearance. The new office has been established to systematically address the issue of missing persons after a rigorous review of best practices both in Sri Lanka and across the world – including Uganda, Bolivia, Argentina, and Uruguay which have all had missing persons offices.

Chile, El Salvador, Guatemala, Peru, Ghana and South Africa, which also had commissions that dealt with the issue of missing persons, were also studied.

The OMP will be composed of commissioners and officers of the highest moral integrity, constituted at the highest level by the President, on recommendation of the Constitutional Council. It will have a victim and witness protection unit and will also provide victims access to administrative, legal and psychosocial support, when victims may require it. This Office will not duplicate the work of other Commissions. It will absorb previous records in to a centralized system, aiming to complete outstanding investigations and finally provide families with the answers that they have long sought. The OMP will work in tandem with the other post-conflict mechanisms, and along with the implementation of the convention on enforced disappearances, will prevent the re-emergence of the white van culture contributing to the safety and security of all Sri Lankans.
Student attacked by Sinhalese for Mullivaikkal remembrance



25 May 2016

A Tamil student at the Eastern University was attacked by Sinhalese students after he posted a picture commemorating the Mullivaikka; massacres on May 18 on a Facebook page. 

N Lumeskanth, 22, was on his way home after an exam in the campus, when a group of Sinhalese students approached him and demanded to know whether he uploaded the picture in question. As he confirmed that it was indeed him, the group tried to forced him to remove the picture immediately. When he had told them that his mobile phone was not in his possession to make any changes, the students started to attack him. The sustained assault only stopped after other Tamil students intervened. 

Mr Lumeskanth was admitted to Senkalady hospital on Tuesday with an injury he received to his left eye sustained due to the repeated hits to his face. 

Speaking to journalists from the hospital, Mr Lumeshkanth explained how he was attacked in broad day light within the university premises. 

Mr Lumeshkanth runs a Facebook page named ‘Management Faculty Union of Eastern University’ to share news related to university academic activities and related news, on which he shared the picture in question. 

Eravur Police is currently investigating the case after a complaint was lodged.

Lifetime Commitment Award’ To Dr Brian Senewiratne


Colombo Telegraph
By Usha S Sri-Skanda-Rajah –May 25, 2016 
Usha S Sri-Skanda-Rajah
Usha S Sri-Skanda-Rajah
On May 15, 2016, the Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam (TGTE) at the Fifth Sitting of the Second Parliament presented TGTE’s prestigious, ‘Lifetime Commitment Award‘ to a Sinhalese, Dr Brian Senewiratne – an 84 year old Senator in the TGTE. It was in recognition of, “his lifelong commitment and invaluable and dedicated contribution rendered to the Eelam Tamil Nation in educating the Sinhala Nation and the international community – in furthering the cause of human rights, human dignity, and gender justice and of the liberation of Tamil Eelam.”
The award was presented to Dr Brian Senewiratne by TGTE’s Prime Minister, Visuvanathan Rudrakumaran in the presence of Speaker, Nagalingam Balachandran, Deputy Prime Minister, Ambalavaner Thavendra Rajah, Senators, Members of Parliament and many distinguished guests.
As a fellow Senator of the TGTE, I had the, “high honour” of introducing Dr Senewiratne at the award ceremony. Referring to him, as I have always done, as “Our Sinhala Hero”, I had to go back 68 years to be able to only scratch the surface of this larger than life personality that the TGTE was honouring:
Brian's Award CeremonyDr Senewiratne’s commitment has not only been lifelong but remarkable: In 1948 as a 16 year old schoolboy he protested at the disenfranchisement and decitizenisation of nearly a million Plantation “Indian” Tamils in one of the first Acts of the newly independent country, Ceylon; in 1956, as an undergraduate in Cambridge University, he refused to meet his uncle, Prime Minister S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike in London who had changed the Official Language from English to Sinhala Only because he felt strongly that it was discriminatory, unjust and undemocratic; in 1971 he also strongly opposed the so-called “Standardisation of university entrance marks” introduced for admissions to the universities, obviously directed against Tamil-medium students where Tamil students had to obtain a higher mark than the Sinhalese to enter the University, stating that this was blatant discrimination in education; in 1972 as a Senior Lecturer in Medicine at the Peradeniya University in Kandy, he took up the cause of the Plantation Tamils again when his aunt, Prime Minister Sirima Bandaranaike took no action when her Sinhalese goons hounded out Plantation Tamils from their miserable shacks and were dying on the streets of Kandy; in 1977, then in Australia, he continued to challenge the Sri Lankan government under J R Jayewardene accusing him of devaluing Parliament and setting up a Presidential dictatorship and for circumventing the constitutional safeguards that had been designed to protect the Tamils against the “tyranny of the majority”; in 1983, after the massacre of Tamils in the July 1983 pogrom, he published a book: “The 1983 Massacre – Unanswered Questions” in which he held that the Jayawardena government was responsible for this crime; in 1984, his publication: “Human Rights Violations in Sri Lanka” was banned in Sri Lanka.
‘Something is rotten’

logoThursday, 26 May 2016

The appointment of ex-TRC Director General Anusha Palpitato high bureaucratic office in the Home Affairs Ministry and tolerance of senior officials publicly hobnobbing with sinister and notorious corporate entities like the Avant-Garde Chairman smacks of the new administration’s disdain for its own Yahapalanaya slogan and reinforces growing perceptions of Government complicity in stalling or delaying corruption cases against powerful sections of the ex-regimeUntitled-2

Untitled-4 Deputy Minister of Social Empowerment and Welfare Ranjan Ramanayake received a rude shock during a VIP homecoming at the Hilton Colombo on 13 May. As the film star politician went from table to table greeting people at the reception, he suddenly caught the eye of a person he had no intention of being accidentally pictured with. 

Ramanayake did an about-face, but he was not quick enough for Nissanka Senadhipathi, the controversial Chairman of Avant-Garde Maritime Services, the shadowy security firm under investigation for money laundering and weapons smuggling. Senadhipathi rounded on Ramanayake to say ‘no hard feelings’ about the UNP MP’s sustained attacks on corruption, and specifically Avant-Garde and its Chairman. “You’re only doing your job,” Senadhipathi said, patting the Deputy Minister on the shoulder before Ramanayake moved swiftly away. 

Rakitha Rajapakshe, son of Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe, married Lakna Adikari this month. The wedding was held at the Cinnamon Grand Colombo and the homecoming was at Hilton Colombo. VIPs in the Government and Opposition were invited to both ceremonies. Both were opulent affairs. 

Ten years ago, Rakitha Rajapakshe, then an adolescent, reportedly accompanied his parents on a trip to the US. Photographs of this trip were exposed by Field Marshall and MP Sarath Fonseka, to highlight the connection between the Justice Minister and Senadhipathi, who appeared to have accompanied the Rajapakshe family on the tour.

The ‘other’ Minister 

In November 2015, Law and Order Minister Tilak Marapana was forced to resign his Cabinet portfolio after he declared Avant-Garde had been his client at one point, and then proceeded to defend the company in Parliament against serious corruption, weapons smuggling and money laundering charges levelled against it by State law enforcement authorities. 

During the same debate on 6 November 2015, Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe also launched into a passionate defence of Avant-Garde, saying he agreed with the Attorney General’s conclusion that there was no case to be filed against the security company, and claiming to have prevented the arrest of former Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa in connection with the case. 

Both Ministers were taken to task at the next Cabinet meeting and flayed by the Opposition and the media for their positions, but only one resigned. The other has continued to hold office as the Minister in charge of Justice in Sri Lanka, at a time when the Government is under heavy fire for delaying corruption probes and prosecutions against powerful sections of the former regime and allegedly making ‘compromises’ with notoriously corrupt individuals and entities. 

A case in point was the appointment of former Telecom Regulatory Commission (TRC) Director General Anusha Palpita as Additional Secretary to the Ministry of Home Affairs this week. Palpita and the former TRC Chairman and Presidential Secretary Lalith Weeratunga have been indicted in the Colombo High Court on charges of misappropriating TRC funds to the tune of Rs. 600 million to finance former President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s sil redhi distribution campaign ahead of the January 2015 presidential election. 

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Aranayake disaster: Search for over 100 to be abandoned



by Maheesha Mudugamuwa- 

Search operations conducted by security forces to trace those still missing due to the recent landslide in Aranayake in the Kegalle District would have to be stopped within the next few days, Officer overseeing the operations at Aranayake, Major General Sudantha Ranasinghe said yesterday.
Flood Sri Lanka
Maj. Ge, Ranasinghe told the media at the Disaster Management Ministry that 28 bodies and some body parts had been recovered by the security forces. Eight bodies had not yet been identified, he said.

After consulting the relatives and the people living in the area, the security forces would stop the search operations within the next few days, Ranasinghe added.

Over 100 of persons are still missing and they are believed to have been buried under the mud.

Emergency boat services conducted in Colombo during last week had been stopped as the flood waters had receded in many areas, he said.

In Aranayake, over 3,000 people, affected by the landslides, and over 4,000 others have been relocated to 19 safe places since last week.

According to the Disaster Management Centre (DMC), over 20,000 in the people in Kegalle District had been affected by last week's disaster and over 250,000 people distressed by floods.

Meanwhile, State Minister of Lands T.B. Ekanayake said the Survey Department had identified 145,000 blocks of lands for disaster victims in Kegalle, Ratnapura and

Kandy on the recommendations of the DMC and National Building Research Organisation (NBRO).

The government had decided to give 10 to 20 perches of land each to the affected families, he said.

The Housing Development Authority (HDA) would take the responsibility for constructing new houses for the victims, he said.

Meanwhile, the Meteorology Department yesterday said the South-west monsoon condition had now established over the country and therefore showers or thunder showers with strong winds could be expected at times in the Western, North-Western, Southern, Central and Sabaragamuwa provinces.

The NBRO also further extended its landslide warning to Kandy, Ratnapura, Kurunegala, Nuwara Eliya, Matale, Kalutara and Kegalle.

Anura Senanayake’s kan getta (fake robber) who crept into the Museum and Ranil’s Dhan getta (fake benefactor)


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -25.May.2016, 7.10PM) Like how foolish monkeys dance attendance on  the Kings ,some  strange blokes are dancing attendance on  Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe .These blokes  hoping to make Wickremesinghe a greater  Buddhist began  a tooth relic exposition at Temple Trees in conjunction with the Wesak. 
However , these blokes could not look for methods  to decorate the surroundings . It was Ven . Theeniyawela Palitha Thera who undertook the task of exhibiting the relic. By then Theeniyawela who was basking in Ranil’s patronage  had got a Buddha statue out from the Museum exerting  the  influence he wields with Ranil .
Lo and behold ! to everybody’s consternation the statue fell down and a part of  it got chipped off. The administrators of the Museum had however opposed this statue being taken out, yet Theeniyawela the monk  and ‘broker’  who knows no greater a boss than Ranil has cast the laws into the dustbin and acted high handedly. But now this stealthy action has misfired .The foolish monkeys like those around the King ,by trying to make Ranil a greater  Buddhist have chopped  Ranil with the sword !
During the ‘nefarious decade’ it was the ‘Kan getta’ (fake robber) that destroyed the Museum. Now , a ‘Dhan getta’ (fake benefactor) had appeared to destroy the Museum.
If the good governance government does not safeguard and live up to its name by enforcing  the law duly to the letter as regards Theeniyawela , without any trace of doubt Ranil  will get destroyed by the sword of the foolish monkeys .
By a special correspondent
Translated by Jeff
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by     (2016-05-25 13:49:12)