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

Monday, May 30, 2016

Philippines: Rodrigo Duterte absent from his own proclamation ceremony by Congress


Front-running presidential candidate Mayor Rodrigo Duterte clenches his fist during a campaign sortie. Pic: AP
Front-running presidential candidate Mayor Rodrigo Duterte clenches his fist during a campaign sortie. Pic: AP

 

PRESIDENT-ELECT Rodrigo Duterte was officially proclaimed the 16th president of the Philippines on Monday, but snubbed the session at Congress to run “errands” in Davao City instead.

Duterte will succeed outgoing president Benigno Aquino, who steps down next month after six years in office. Maria Leonor Gerona Robredo, better known as Leni Robredo, was proclaimed the 14th vice-president in the same session.

However, Duterte announced last week that he would be absent from the proceedings, instead choosing to tie up loose strings in Davao City, where he has been mayor for over 22 years.
The Philippines’ new hard-talking president-elect won the May 9 elections by a landslide, claiming over 40 percent of 44 million votes due to a campaign that promised to reduce crime in the country by drastic measures.

Duterte has already announced a raft of changes he plans to make when he comes into power next month, the latest being a bizarre announcement to change his working hours from 8am to 5pm to 1pm to midnight instead.

According to the Straits Times, Duterte told a press conference that began around midnight last night: “I don’t care about your 8am-5pm schedule. I’ll be sleeping by then. How can you make me work?”

He also reportedly wishes to remain in Davao City until he gets used to life in the presidential residences, saying he would rather take commercial flights to and from the capital of Manila every day than move.
“My bed is here. My room is here. My home is my comfort zone. It’s important that I can sleep and take a shower comfortably,” he said, in explanation.

Duterte is expected to announce his cabinet on Tuesday. Robredo, who is an ally of Aquino, told reporters after the proclamation that she shares similarities with Duterte and hopes they will work well together.

A Brexit campaigner handing out leaflets in Glasgow. Photo by Griff Witte/The Washington Post (GW/Griff Witte/TWP)
 When Scotland voted in an independence referendum in September 2014, nationalist leaders pitched it as a once-in-a-generation chance to break a three-century-old bond.

But less than two years after Scots opted to remain in the United Kingdom, the specter of secession again looms over the lush green expanse of the British isles. The trigger this time is another referendum with existential impact: next month’s vote on whether to leave the European Union.

If Britain chooses to ditch the E.U. despite a vote to stay from the Euro-friendly Scots, nationalist leaders here say they will revive the push for an independent nation in order to keep Scotland inside Europe. And they think that the second time around, they would win.

“Pulling Scotland out of the European Union against our will would be a change in material circumstances,” said Alex Salmond, who led the push for independence in 2014 and now represents Scotland in the British Parliament.

 
In that scenario, he said, there will be “a referendum on Scottish independence within the next two years. And this time, the result would be ‘yes.’ ”

The potential for a British breakup as fallout from the June 23 referendum underscores just how much is at stake when the country decides whether to become the first nation to withdraw from the 28-member E.U.

A shock to the global economy, a rupture in the Western alliance and a change in occupancy at 10 Downing Street are all possible consequences of a British vote to leave — popularly known as “Brexit.”
The very existence of Great Britain could also be on the line.

British Prime Minister David Cameron reluctantly offered the public a direct say over the country’s E.U. membership for much the same reason he acceded to the Scottish call for an independence vote in 2014: He thought it was the only way to settle the fundamental questions at the heart of British identity. Is the United Kingdom part of Europe or not? Is it one nation or two?

But the potential for a British exit from the E.U. to reawaken the push for Scottish independence reflects just how badly Cameron’s strategy may have backfired. Instead of laying the issues to rest, critics say he may have unleashed the age of the “neverendum” — a prolonged period of turbulence that does not stop until the public votes to take Britain out of Europe and split Scotland from the United Kingdom.

“In order to put these questions to bed for a generation, you need a vote of 60-40,” said Menzies Campbell, a veteran Scottish member of Parliament who supports keeping Scotland in Britain and Britain in the E.U. “If the losing side gets 45 [percent], they’re not going to give up.”
 
That was what pro-independence Scots won in the 2014 vote. Since then, their side has delivered a pair of electoral thumpings: The Scottish National Party won by huge margins in both the 2015 British parliamentary elections and in the Scottish parliamentary contests this month, suggesting that the appetite for independence has hardly ebbed. Opinion polls show that Scotland would be about evenly divided if the independence vote were re-run today.

If Britain chooses to leave the E.U. next month — despite Scottish objections — that could tilt the balance in the nationalists’ favor, reinforcing divisions between north and south.

The visceral anti-E.U. sentiment that runs through English politics can hardly be found north of Hadrian’s Wall, the ancient stone fortification that bisected Britain during Roman times. Polls show a decisive advantage for the “in” campaign in Scotland, while England flirts with “out.”

The reasons for the difference are both historical and contemporary. Scotland has long had a close affiliation with continental Europe, going so far as to side with the French in wars against the English. As citizens of a small nation, Scots see membership in a broader European community as a comfort; the English are more likely to see rival power centers on the continent as a threat.

“There’s an emotional connection between Scotland and Europe,” Campbell said. “We’ve never had the residual antagonism toward Europe that has been maintained in England.” 

But perhaps the most important reason for the split in opinion is immigration.

In crowded England — which makes up nearly 85 percent of the U.K. population but only about half the land — many people regard arrivals from elsewhere in Europe under the E.U.’s free-movement rules as an unwelcome burden. In sparsely populated Scotland — the entire population of 5 million is roughly equal to the inner boroughs of London — there is plenty of room for newcomers.

“Scotland is not full up,” Salmond said. “We’re much more like America of 100 years ago than the England of today.”

Scotland is not the only place in the United Kingdom where next month’s referendum threatens to bring politically destabilizing consequences. In Northern Ireland, where a tenuous peace has held for nearly two decades, a vote to leave would add a new line of partition to the Emerald Isle, with the Republic of Ireland inside the E.U. and the counties of Northern Ireland outside it.

Analysts have warned that such division could hinder the economy, prompt renewed border controls and revive dangerous levels of sectarianism. In an echo of the nationalist push in Scotland, Catholic leaders in the generally pro-European north say that if Britain opts to leave the E.U., there should be a referendum on the reunification of Ireland.

Surveys suggest that Protestant voters would block any such move and keep Northern Ireland inside the United Kingdom. The polls in Scotland are far less clear, but the determination of nationalists to hold another referendum is not.

“The nationalists will use any justification to call another vote,” said Ross Thomson, a Conservative member of the Scottish Parliament who is among the few elected officials in Scotland campaigning for Brexit. “It doesn’t have to be the E.U. They’ll just do it when the polls look good.”

Other Brexit advocates who favor keeping Scotland inside the U.K. say they do not think the E.U. matters enough to Scottish voters to make a difference in an independence vote. 

“It’s very soft support,” said Robert Malyn, a pro-Brexit campaigner who was handing out fliers one recent afternoon at the central train station in Glasgow, Scotland’s largest city. “The E.U. is not loved enough to be a red line.”

The lack of enthusiasm is reflected in the difference between this campaign and the one in 2014. During the run-up to the independence vote, all of Scotland — from the Gothic back alleys of Edinburgh to the remote valleys of the Highlands — seemed bathed in the dueling paraphernalia of the “no” and “yes” camps. Signs hung from storefronts, buttons peeked out from jacket lapels, and fierce debates erupted nightly in pubs and across dinner tables. 

This time, there is virtually no visible evidence that in less than a month, Scotland — and the United Kingdom — will be making such a consequential choice.

“The E.U. is such a big institution, and it seems far away from everybody. It’s a hard thing to get your head around,” said Jonny Ross-Tatam, president of the students’ association at the University of Edinburgh.

Still, Ross-Tatam has been making the case among his fellow students for why it matters to stay in the E.U. If Britain leaves, he said, research funding would be jeopardized, and students could lose their ability to live, work and study across the continent.

“We can go to Sweden, Germany or France and not pay anything in tuition,” he said. “This vote is one of the biggest decisions that our generation is going to have to make.”

That is what campaigners on both sides told Scots in the lead-up to the 2014 referendum. But these days, such monumental decisions are coming often — and there could be another one looming.

Indeed, Salmond said that a second independence referendum will be held sooner or later, regardless of which way Britain votes next month.

“Independence is inevitable,” he said. “We’re just debating time scale now.”

Karla Adam in London contributed to this report.
tamil nadu, bonded labourer, brick kiln, tamil nadu bonded labourer, bonded labourer freed, brick kiln labourer, tamil nadu news, india news, latest news
According to a bonded labourer, they were promised salaries of Rs 350-Rs 400 per day for construction work taken up at Pudhukuppam in Thiruvallur district. (Representational photo) 

Indian Express:May 30, 2016,

A raid by authorities rescued 328 bonded labourers, including 106 children, from a brick kiln in Thiruvallur district in Tamil Nadu.

The labourers rescued hail from Odisha and were allegedly made to work for 12 hours per day on a salary of Rs 20, officials said.

The raid was conducted by a district administration team led by revenue official S Jayachandran on Saturday based on inputs from an NGO, International Justice Mission, about the plight of the labourers.

Those have been provided Rs 1,000 each by the district administration which has requested the Southern Railway to attach three extra bogies in a train to send them to Odisha this evening, Jayachandran told PTI.

According to a bonded labourer, they were promised salaries of Rs 350-Rs 400 per day for construction work taken up at Pudhukuppam in Thiruvallur district.

“But, we were working (in the brick kiln) here on a mere salary of Rs 20 per day for 12 hours,” another bonded labourer said.

“We had to work for long hours. Most of us were not allowed to access basic food and toilet facilities,” the labourer said.

He claimed that some of the labourers were working for several months. Some of the rescued children were below the age of 15, he added.

The owner of the brick kiln, who had employed the labourers, is absconding and a case has been registered, an official said.

Infections resist 'last antibiotic' in US


Bacteria

BBCBy James Gallagher-27 May 2016

The first case of an infection that resists the antibiotic of last resort - colistin - has been detected in the US.

The 48-year old woman from Pennsylvania recovered and the infection was vulnerable to other antibiotics.

However, colistin is hugely symbolic as it is used when other drugs fail and officials warned the world was now reaching "the end of the road" for antibiotics.

Colistin resistance was first discovered in China at the end of 2015.

The study sparked concern around the world, and intensive testing rapidly discovered bugs that can resist colistin in Europe and Asia.

Now data from the US has identified the first case in a patient, who had a urinary-tract infection, as well as colistin-resistant bacteria in farm animals and meat on supermarket shelves.

It is not clear where the infection came from as the patient had not travelled recently and colistin is not widely used in the US.

Bleak future

The DNA that gives bacteria resistance to colistin - the mcr-1 gene - can spread rapidly between species.
The concern is that colistin resistance will now hook-up with other forms of antibiotic resistance to create infections that cannot be treated.

Thomas Frieden, the director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, said: "The more we look at drug resistance, the more concerned we are.

"The medicine cabinet is empty for some patients, it is the end of the road for antibiotics unless we act urgently."

However, Dr Beth Bell, also from the CDC, said in an interview: "Luckily haven't seen actual bacteria that are resistant to every single antibiotic."

Commenting on the reports Dr Nasia Safdar, from the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, said: "The results are very concerning.

"It is almost inevitable that more cases will come to light. It's just a matter of how quickly things spread. With carbapenem-resistant Enterobacteriaceae, soon after the initial description it became fairly widespread and not just in the US but globally.

"It wouldn't be a stretch to say that we are towards the end of effective antimicrobial therapy for antibiotic resistant bacteria."

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Sunday, May 29, 2016

Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena Defends Returning Land To Tamilians

Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena Defends Returning Land To Tamilians
Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena also said his government has taken "every step" to ensure the national security. (Reuters file photo)

Latest News TodayMay 28, 2016 

COLOMBO:  Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena has defended his government's decision of giving back miltary-occupied lands of Tamils, saying the community has waited 27 years for it.

"We are being accused of giving back lands of the Tamil. I ask you if your own property is held by the military, how would you react?" he said yesterday while addressing the Sri Lankan community in Japan.

"They have waited not one or two years but 27 years to get their lands back," Mr Sirisena said.

His remarks came in reaction to criticism from Mahinda Rajapaksa's followers who accuse the Sirisena government of appeasing the Tamil minority by relaxing some of the stringent security measures that prevailed under his predecessor.

His government has released some of the Tamil civilian land held for military purposes during the 30-year conflict.

Despite the defeat of the LTTE through military means, the root cause of the Tamil conflict still remains, he said without elaborating, and so his government was keen to ensure there is no repetition of an ethnic separatist conflict in the island.

He also said his government has taken "every step" to ensure the national security.

"There is no threat whatsoever. We have taken every step to ensure the national security" despite rumours spread by political opponents, he assured the community. He was attending the G7 summit as a special invitee - the first time ever Sri Lanka's head of state had been invited for the same.

"Since our government came in, we have had excellent cooperation from all our friendly nations. The countries who had sidelined us have welcomed us with hands of friendship. As you know our defence sector training has come from India, US, Britain and Pakistan. These things have improved now," he said.

The Struggle To Free The Tamil Political Prisoners & To Answer For The Displaced In Sri Lanka


Colombo Telegraph
By Ranjan Fernando –May 29, 2016
Ranjan Fernando
Ranjan Fernando
We are on the brink of a Fascist takeover, I feel. I cannot ‘prove’ it as one would a scientific hypothesis. Hence it is a collection of feelings based on what one hears, what one sees etc. In particular, I bring as a witness Prof. Sarath Wijesooriya, the successor to Ven. Sobitha whose impressive collection of civil organizations along with the Tamil votes brought about the downfall of the unlamented Rajapaksa regime.
In his regular writings to ‘Ravaya’, Prof. Wijesooriya chronicles a litany of lost hopes, betrayals, corruption and spinelessness of the new regime that he with millions of equally fair-minded citizens helped to found. But now he is ready to take up cudgels against them instead of merely complaining and moaning about their misdemeanors. The good Professor is in fact informing us of instances where the government is wheeling and dealing with Rajapakses for party political reasons thereby delaying, obstructing the legal process.
Vavuniya_prison01He once reminded me of Tsereteli and other ministers in the pre – revolutionary Kerensky regime in Russia, who played a similar role. The very weakness of that regime paved the way for Lenin, who was willing and ready to take power. Conversely, similar situations were obtained in Spain with General Francisco Franco coming to power in 1936, rise of Hitler (who was a mere Corporal during World War I) in Germany in 1934 etc, where the weak went to the wall yielding power to the strong. Prof. Wijesooriya now demands unequivocally and correctly that we should turn our backs on this degenerate regime and kick – start the good hearted civic populace to create the ‘just society’ that we all yearn for. Otherwise history will repeat itself, first as farce and then as tragedy. From homestead to the streets – let the march begin!
My second witness is none other than the Prime Minister’s own elder brother, Shan Wickremesinghe. In his daily morning progamme in TNL, the radio and TV channel that he owns, he openly chides and criticizes the many misdoings of this government and its officials. Now they are two sane and respected persons that the country listens to.
Sinhala farmers settled on state land in Batticaloa

29 May 2016
Eastern Provincial Council officials say a "well-planned strategy" was underway to settle Sinhalese farmers on state lands with the backing of a Buddhist monk. 

District Secretary PSM Charles and Agriculture Minister of the Eastern Provincial Council K.Thurairajasingham made the discovery during their visit to the border of Mathavanai and Mayilathamadhu, just within the borders of the Batticaloa district. 

In Senkalady and Kiran Divisional Secretariats, state lands have also been acquired illegally and at least 300 families are living in temporary shelters. The construction of a Buddhist Vihara is also under way in the middle of the resettlements. 

The Chief Monk of the Vihara told government officials that they had been living in these areas since 1967 and following the resumption of war in 2006, they displaced to other Sinahala areas. They claimed they resettle in their own lands three years ago and most of the families are engage in farming for survival in paddy fields located adjacent to the resettlements. #

A meeting called to discuss the illegal settlement was held without media presence. A Tamil freelance journalist in Batticaloa was evicted from the meeting scheduled to discuss the ongoing, illegal settlement of Sinhalese in the border villages of the district. He was told by the officials at the secretariat that the meeting was ‘strictly for higher officials only’ and was thrown out from the building by police constables. 

M Nilanthan was at the District Secretariat to report on the meeting called by Ms Charles to discuss the issues. 

The officials told him that they were instructed by the secretary not to allow any media personnel at the meeting since it’s was only for higher officials who were attending from various departments, including from the land survey department and the forest conservation department

DIRECTIVES ISSUED BY THE HRCSL ON ARREST AND DETENTION UNDER THE PTA


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Sri Lanka Brief29/05/2016
Sri Lanka Human Rights Commission has issued detectives for arresting and detaining persons under the Prevention of Terrorism Act. The directives are based on directives issued by previous heads of state and binding international human rights law standards.

If implemented properly these directives are bound to improve the human rights in Sri Lanka and police will have to act legally in making arrest and detentions.

Read the directives as a PDF here Directives-on-Arrest-Detention-by-HRCSL-E-
English

Failed and failing states proliferate

Lanka can learn from countries on slippery slopes 


article_image
Oh death, here is thy sting!

by Kumar David- 

The promise of good governance (yahapalanaya) has become a stick with which to beat the government. The Joint Opposition does not miss any opportunity for ridicule; editorials echo. There is truth to the groan that achievement falls short of promise; but it is also true that governance is better than in Rajapaksa times. An executioner’s dagger has given way to imperfect democracy; no more do white vans ply their frightful trade. Pervasive top-down corruption has waned; even critics do not accuse Sirisena and Ranil of personal corruption (the bond scam is an unexplained exception); cabinet norms are remote from Rajapaksa era rule by robbers. True a goodly portion of the rogues jumped ship and it is hardly an achievement that this government is not as appalling as its predecessor.

Nonetheless the risk of back sliding is ever present. In this piece I will to point to danger markers using examples from elsewhere. This is not an idealist critique that fails to take cognisance of what can and cannot be done. For example I recognise that Sinhala reality constrains devolution and that a secular state is infeasible in societies where the people’s consciousness is primeval. These are burdens any modernising project will have to haul around like a ball and chain. I can recall from my young days the LSSP’s liabilities in its now long forgotten gilded age.

Still, there is always something that can be done. This essay explores failures in state building in other parts of the world and ekes out a lesson or two. What can we learn from Iraq, Syria and Venezuela? Though in a different league, partisan politics is pushing America towards the abys of structural meltdown; this topic merits mention too.

Iraq and Syria

One can go back to George Bush and the 2003 invasion, or further to Baathist dictatorships, US imperialism’s greed for oil and imposition of subservient tyrants and monarchs, or one can go all the way to 1916 and the Sykes-Picot ‘line in the sand’ carving up the Middle East. A Lankan tale of woe too can have its ‘once upon a time’ anywhere between 1505 and 2009 and still make sense. There is no natural starting point, so why not start with the here-and-now. An indisputable here-and-now truth about Iraq-Syria is that faith in the ability of the state to survive or the capacity of governments to govern has evaporated. In a decade will either exist as a nation sate in its present form?

Take Iraq; corruption and incompetence are at staggering levels; the state is dysfunctional, literally; basic services have collapsed. Endeavours to create a cabinet of technocrats buckled due to in-fighting. Parties to the mêlée and conflict between and within communities and foreign ‘fixers’ include America, Iran, Grand Ayatollah Sistani (Shia ‘archbishop’), and Muatada al-Sadar, the radical Shia cleric whose storm troops control the streets of Bagdad. ISIS, stand-in for unrepresented Sunnis brings up the exterior-rear. Power blocks around Ministers plunder their fiefdoms but cannot be removed due to the balance of power between contending forces – sounds familiar? Conflict between communities is called sectarianism over there (between majority Shia and minority Sunni religious sects, though the Kurds are another issue). We call it communalism; four communities, Sinhalese, Ceylon Tamils, Muslims and Upcountry Tamils are the dramatis personae who too obey the laws of prejudice rather like falling apples obey the laws of gravity.

There are three defining dimensions to the catastrophe in Iraq; sectarian conflict among the people, foreign meddling and third a populace that has no experience or appreciation of democratic practices. Fortunately Lanka is relatively free of the second and third but the first we have groaned under for more than half a century. We should not be complacent that nemesis was averted for ever in 2009. If the underlying fears of the minorities are not addressed, tragedy will return in many shapes. The true obstacle to conciliation is the intransigence of the people themselves, not extremism of leaders which is but a reflection of the doggedness of prejudice among the masses. Plato despised democracy; if he were here today he would say it paves the way for Lankan chauvinists and American Trumps.

The entire Middle East represents versions of the Iraqi ingredients – dictatorship, conflict between communities and great power intervention. War deaths in Syria in 2016 average 50 a day; hospitals and civilians are routinely targeted. The Regime, Russia and the US blamed; Assad’s attacks on Aleppo, the biggest city gave rise to international outrage but ceasefires breakdown again and again. ISIS and Jabhat al-Nusra, the local al-Qaeda affiliate, are accused of countless violations. And so it goes on. Though it is extreme to compare the Middle East to Lanka at this point in time it is not alarmist to fear catastrophic outcomes anywhere in the world when underlying ills are not addressed.

Venezuela

What went wrong in Venezuela; after all, the Chavez regime set out to improve mass living standards, devolve power to the grassroots and enhance popular democracy? But now 400% inflation is forecast for 2016; public servants are allowed to work for only two days a week to save electricity and shops close at 7 pm for the same reason. Initial impeachment proceedings against Nicolas Maduro drew 1.85 million signatures in six days, nine times the 200,000 needed. After they are verified by the electoral commission the opposition needs to collect four million signatures to launch a referendum proper and then obtain 7.6 million to remove President Maduro. Now the oil tap is turned off. The state has broken down, its structures are dysfunctional.

Why did this happen after a relatively bold and well intentioned start, flush with oil revenue? Stated in five words: The government’s damnable economic incompetence! A lesson for simpleton leftists is that a government may be leftist, people oriented and rosy with socialist intentions but if economic decision makers are morons it will be disaster. However well-intentioned woe betides inept regimes. Venezuela’s descent into the abyss proves that competence cannot be exchanged for socialist enthusiasm.

America and the rest of the world

Sri Lanka does not exist on a separate planet; the world is more integrated than ever before; if we do not take note of how the world is changing – and I have little confidence that the people of our Island will – we are in for a rough ride. Still I guess "it is a far, far, better thing" to go to our end with our eyes open than deluded by nationalism and religiosity.

I am indebted to a piece in the Guardian of 19 May by Jonathan Freedland ("Welcome to the Age of Trump") for some of the ideas that follow. First a quote:-

"(T)o reckon without a trend visible across the democratic world; populists and demagogues are making extraordinary strides, the examples too numerous to list. The world’s largest democracy, India, is now led by a Hindu nationalist with an authoritarian streak. In Turkey, Erdo?an, whose AK party won a sweeping victory, is more dictatorial with each passing year. In France, Marine Le Pen and her nativist Front National denounce a political establishment which "has betrayed the white, non-Muslim people". Hungary’s Prime Minister Viktor Orbán makes a similar pitch. German regional elections produced a surge for a party making the same case: the far-right Alternative für Deutschland. The tune is echoed by the Danish People’s party, the Swedish Democrats, which has roots in neo-Nazism, the party formerly known as the True Finns as well as the People’s Party of Switzerland. In Holland the notoriously anti-Muslim Geert Wilders is dominant. Britain has its low-tar version in Nigel Farage, leader of the UK Independence party which garnered four million votes at 2015."

The question all this implicitly poses is whether the pursuit of democracy is worth the candle. A 2011 survey found that 34% of Americans want "a strong leader who doesn’t have to bother with Congress or elections", the figure rising to 42% among those with only secondary education. So does one in three Americans prefer a dictator? Like the Europeans they feel betrayed and the palpable measure of betrayal is the economy. You read it everywhere: The rich get richer and everyone else goes to the bottom. A staggering 55% of Americans are poorer in real terms than they were 15 years ago while the top 10% got 75% richer. Is it surprising that many have lost confidence in the norms that underpin liberal democracy?

Well St Paul should take a peek at the rising death rate, the final arbiter of life, of less educated middle-aged white Americans - see chart. It provides ghoulish evidence for Trump’s appeal. The system (capitalist system) is in decay driving even white workers to the wall. A friend demurs: "There is nothing wrong with capitalism per se, morons running central banks and governments are blundering" he says. I could buy this if calamity was confined to one, two or three cases, but it is endemic so it has to be systemic.

Is any of this relevant to Lanka apart from the truisms that Americans, Europeans and the whole blooming lot of us live on the same planet and if they sink they will take us down with them? Well yes, there are goings-on in Lanka that are an eerie rerun of the mayhem the Republican Party (GOP) incited during the Obama presidency. Create bedlam in Congress, block anything and everything this hated black man attempts to do, encourage the nut-cases in the Tea Party (TP) to incite havoc. Donald Trump (DT) is just the expected conclusion of this process.

Two forces in Lanka, the Joint Opposition and ethnic-religious extremism, which will countenance no resolution of minority issues, are our version of Europe’s far-right and America’s DT-TP-GOP alliance. Let me not end on a sour note; all bookies currently offer 4:1 odds against a Trump presidency and there is a better than 50% chance that our chauvinists and the Joint Opposition can be routed. Even Europe may swing right for a period but it can never again return to fascism.

If Lanka is to make an ell of progress it must cut the Gordian knot, renounce the past and turn to a new direction. Old categories, unitary, federal, language, religion, political tradition, have all to be jettisoned and replaced by a utilitarian and pragmatic attitude to statecraft and policy. "Fat hopes" you mock me! Well my way has hope; your way is to rot in the same foul old broth!
Sri Lankan police shoot at Tamil youth in Mullaitivu
29 May 2016
Sri Lankan police on Saturday shot at a Tamil man in Mullaitivu after he demanded to see an arrest warrant.
Police in civil pictured with the gun used to shoot at the Tamil man
The 27 year old man, Vivekanandan Thijeevan was at home in the highly militarised Keppapilavu mode village when two police officers from the Mulliyawalai police station arrived stated they the magistrate had issued an arrest warrant for him.

When Mr Thijeevan demanded to see the arrest warrant prior to being taken in custody, one of the police officers who was dressed in civilian clothes fired two shots at his feet, before forcibly taking him into custody.
The policemen were photographed by a relative of Mr Thijeevan


His mother, V Indrani, who contested the parliamentary elections last year as a Tamil National People's Front (TNPF) candidate, is scheduled to file a complaint at the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka's Vavuniya branch tomorrow. 

A court case was previously filed against him over a land mining case in the region with a court date already set as July 30th.

In the Aftermath of Floods: Reflections on Flood Aid and Youth-led Mobilization in Colombo



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NETHRA SAMARAWICKREMA on 05/27/2016

Last weekend was Vesak, but the streets of Colombo were uncharacteristically quiet. In place of the usual crowds pouring out onto the streets to view the lanterns, and the rambunctious dansals distributing food to passers by, a sombre mood settled across the city. Over the past week, Sri Lanka was hit by the worst floods since the 2004 Tsunami. No one had been prepared for the rains, which came at the heels of a heat wave that parched the earth, dried up the rivers and tributaries, and left Sri Lankans across the country sticky, sweaty, and disgruntled. Just ten days ago, most conversations I had begun with people complaining about the heat: අම්මෝ පුදුම රස්නෙයි! ஐயோ! சரியான சூடு! When the skies finally opened up, many of us welcomed the rains with open arms. After months, the heat finally abated. Everything was green and glowing. I too drank in the rain-soaked breeze that wafted through the windows with delight. None of us imagined that this long-awaited monsoon was in fact, a devastating cyclone that was traversing the Bay of Bengal.

The torrential rain left in its wake, floods and landslides that the Disaster Management Center estimates affected 427,918 people, displaced 319,000, killed 104 and rendered 99 missing. While startling, these numbers don’t begin to describe the devastation: Three villages were buried under landslides in Aranayake. In Colombo, as the waters of the Kelani swelled and overflowed, suburban neighborhoods and informal settlements along the river were inundated, and in some cases, completely submerged, with only the rooftops of homes exposed. Many of Colombo’s low-lying suburbs became hard to access, leaving communities cut off from access to essential items for days. On Sunday May 22nd, even as the rains finally subsided, around 500 people remained marooned on an island that formed in Kanuketiya, Malwana, only accessible by boat.

As the depth of the devastation became evident, it drew a remarkable public response. At train stations, scores of people heading to work gave away their lunch packets to be distributed to the flood-affected suburbs. Supermarket shelves carrying water bottles and dry rations rapidly emptied, all purchased hastily for donations. Religious sites such as churches, temples and mosques housed displaced people and became key centers of relief work, sometimes working with each other to collect and distribute dry rations, as the Galle Muslim Cultural Association and the Sri Sudharmalaya Temple did over the weekend. While we saw a similar response in the aftermath of the 2004 Tsunami, what was different this time was the alacrity and inventiveness of the island’s youth in harnessing their social networks and popular services to organize.

PickMe, Sri Lanka’s homegrown alternative to Uber, inserted a flood relief button on its App, and its three wheelers showed up at users’ doorsteps to ferry donations to flood relief centers at no cost. A popular site of e-commerce, Takas.lk, enabled people to buy flood-relief items online and dispatched their trucks to flood-affected areas. Some of the most swift, efficient and robust relief efforts came from the twitter-savvy generation that sprung into action, coordinating relief work through Facebook and WhatsApp groups, sending updates and collecting relief through twitter hashtags. Requests have been pouring into these online forums and groups—for jeeps and trucks to deliver goods, for boats to support rescue operations, for medicine, for volunteers to pack and deliver—sometimes to be answered within minutes. Much of this communication has been taking place in Sinhala and Tamil; this utilization of social media for flood relief efforts has not, by any means, been limited to Colombo’s English-speaking hipsters.

As an anthropologist, I have long been skeptical of the politics of aid distribution, especially by aid agencies and state bureaucracies. Humanitarian missions often harness discourses of disaster and catastrophe to mobilize support, yet underneath the glossy posters of third-world women and children “waiting” to be saved, lie a darker set of power-relations of race, class, and privilege that separate those who give and those who receive. Moreover, with the rise of entire institutions that subsist on catastrophe, on being the collectors and distributers of aid, a large proportion of relief funds become absorbed into sustaining these institutions as well as their experts who rush to devise solutions with little understanding of the needs and social dynamics of the communities they service. As we saw in Sri Lanka’s Tsunami reconstruction efforts, such haphazard solutions produced scores of uninhabitable homes as well as new problems related to land, gender, and ethnic and religious relations caused by aid providers’ lack of attentiveness to people’s needs and social structures.

Carrying all these reservations, I still decided to try volunteering with several groups. I stuck with one that most appealed to me:  a collective made up of several youth organizations that came together under the hashtag #FloodReliefLKA. Operating out of the JCI Secretariat, they organized through social media, collecting information about specific needs of different communities from state officials, camps housing displaced persons, other volunteers, and members of affected neighborhoods.

As information streamed in, the organizers got on their phones and laptops, tapped into their networks, posted on Facebook, Twitter, and WhatsApp groups to collect whatever was requested as fast as possible—dry rations, cooked food, medicine, milk powder, cleaning supplies and more. As word got out, volunteers streamed in, as did people carrying bag loads of donations. These were recorded, sorted and stored in a large community hall. At any given point, the hall was full of volunteers, willing to do whatever was needed at hand. Most people had never met before. On the first day, while preparing 100 packages of dry rations, I knelt in front of a row of hastily arranged piles of water, rice, dhal, and biscuits, stuffing them into bags as fast as I could. By the time I sealed my fifth bag and looked up, all 100 had been packaged, ready to be passed along a chain of people standing in line to load them onto trucks heading to Kaduwela. All this, within minutes. “The sheer power of numbers,” I thought, marveling also at the speed at which things could get done when needed in Sri Lanka, where everyone complains about heel dragging and inefficiency.

Over the next three days, it became clear to me that there was something different here to the humanitarian efforts I have come to be so skeptical of. For one, this collective was run on a purely voluntary basis—there were no overhead costs, no salaries to pay, no rent or transportation costs, as everything from the trucks and jeeps to the pens and paper used were offered by those who came to help. All the funds donated were spent on buying items as needed. There was no bureaucracy to deal with—just 6-10 young women and men with laptops and notebooks, checking in with each other to make decisions, calling out whatever they needed and asking people to sign up. I was struck by the willingness of volunteers to show up and do what was required, regardless of how mundane or arduous it was. Some took inventories. Others sorted clothes. Those who had vehicles ferried goods across the city. In places harder to access, volunteers took boats or walked, such as two engineering students from Moratuwa University who waded neck-deep in contaminated water to get dry rations across to families in homes inaccessible by trucks. While few openly discussed it, many people noticed and later wrote posts about how a diverse and polyglot mix of volunteers worked on flood relief together. No one refused to deliver aid to places of worship that they wouldn’t pray in, or chose suppliers to buy relief items based on their last names—all decisions people make on a daily basis in Colombo, where encounters across ethnic, religious and class lines are a part of everyday life, as is the suspicion, distrust, and fear of others that deeply divide our city.  Alongside this, the greatest strength of the collective was, perhaps, their willingness to stop and critically think about what they were doing, and to listen to what people who were affected by floods wanted. After several days, upon realizing how complicated, thorny, and sensitive the work of relief distribution was, the organizers stopped work and sent volunteers to harder to access suburbs to talk to people and figure out what their immediate needs were. Later that evening, we all sat down and discussed what we found, made priority maps for each area, and got back online, trying to harness donations for as many requests as we could. As I write, we are still trying to meet those requirements.

What I witnessed at #FloodreliefLKA was a network of temporary alliances that formed, stringing together young people across Colombo to respond to the devastation unfolding before our eyes. As we have seen in Sri Lanka and beyond, spaces of empathy and solidarity often open up in the first flush of a disaster; yet, sustaining the openness and collaborative spirit that emerges in such moments is much harder when aid provision becomes bureaucratized, publicized, and turned into revenue-generating enterprises. Already, we are seeing a host of advertisements for micro-finance provisions for flood victims, and self-congratulatory messages about flood aid collected and distributed by media outlets turning their relief efforts into promotional campaigns. Furthermore, as the Tsunami starkly showed in 2004, aid reaches communities unevenly. While accessible areas in Colombo’s suburbs and sites such as Aranayake have seen a surplus of aid, we have heard little about aid provision to the North or to communities less accessible from the centers of operation in Colombo. It is critical to keep in mind that unless concerted efforts are made to attend to power-relations of locality and geography, in the process of relief provision and reconstruction, existing hierarchies of ethnicity, class, caste, and gender can become reinforced. Yet, as the waters recede and the dust settles, there is something worth holding onto in the spaces and possibilities for collaboration that emerged, albeit briefly, in the early days of the floods.

Lankapage LogoMay 29, Colombo: The Chief Minister of Eastern Province Nazeer Ahamed condemned the decision taken by the tri-forces to boycott events he attends as a political decision and said everybody involved in the dispute at the event in a Sampur school should apologize for their wrong actions.

In a letter to the President and Prime Minister, the beleaguered Chief Minister pointing out that the Sampur Maha Vidyalaya is a school under the Eastern Provincial Council, blamed the organizers and the governor for not directing the officials to follow the "proper protocol" at the event.

He said the officials should apologize for not following the proper protocol and the naval officer subjected to his verbal abuse should apologize for his "grossly offensive conduct, an offence under the Penal Code."

The Chief Minister said It would be in the best interest of the country for the responsible officers to apologize and he would not hesitate to apologize to all those who were present at the event.

"I would not hesitate to express my unequivocal regret and apologies to all those who were present, including the staff and students of the school, the foreign dignitary and the concerned naval officer for my strong but justifiable reaction."

The Chief Minister at an event on May 20 in Sampur Maha Vidyalaya, where Eastern Province Governor Austin Fernando, who was the Chief Guest and US Ambassador Atul Keshap were also present, has berated a navy officer telling him to "just get out from here."

"Get out from here idiot. If you don't know what protocol is, just get out. Who the hell are you to stop me? Even you, Governor don't know what the protocol is. I respect the Excellency the Ambassador much more. You should know Governor, you should know the protocol," the Chief Minister was seen saying to the Navy officer in a video clip of the event.

The Navy has submitted a report to Defense Secretary Karunasena Hettiarachchi calling for appropriate action on the verbal assault directed at the Navy officer by the Chief Minister. The Defense Secretary said the report handed over by the navy was forwarded to the President and the Prime Minister.

The Prime Minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe called for a report from the Chief Minister as well as from the Navy and said he would submit both reports to the President. He said the President will make a decision after reviewing the reports.

Full text of the Chief Minister's letter:

Sampur Maha Vidyalaya is a school under the Eastern Provincial Council. It is not a national school.
A well- known business organisation in Colombo had volunteered through the Sri Lanka Navy to donate computers and other items to the school. In appreciation of this good gesture, in my capacity as the Chief Minister of the Eastern Province, I attended the function held at the school. The Hon. Minister of Education of the Eastern Province Hon. Thandayuthapani also attended the function. The function was organised by the school.

As I arrived at the function, the Hon. Governor's name and the name of HE Atul Keshap, the Ambassador of the USA in Sri Lanka were announced by the compeer who was the English teacher of the school. My name or the name of the Minister of Education of the province was not announced, though both of us had arrived. The Hon. Governor perhaps, noticing the lapse, signaled me to come up to the stage.

When I came up on stage, a naval officer who was acting as the 'master of ceremonies', physically obstructed me from proceeding to take my place on the stage. It may be due to the fact that he was trying to stop the media personnel getting on to the stage. His grossly offensive conduct, an offence under the Penal Code, shocked me. I censured him, questioning him as to who he was to stop me. I also blamed the Hon. Governor for not directing the officials to follow proper protocol. I felt insulted in the presence of a foreign dignitary and a large public gathering.

Though it was clearly a usurpation of the functions of the Eastern Provincial Council and in violation of the country's Constitution, I attended the function without raising any issue, out of respect to Your Excellencies and the foreign guest in attendance in the province of which I happened to be the Chief Minister.

I also understand that the Tri-Forces have today decided to boycott functions attended by me even before Your Excellency the President had looked into the matter. I condemn this as a political decision by the forces whose leaders appear to have joined hands to look at the issue from the limited perspective of protecting the offenders within their ranks and not from the broader prospect of establishing truth and justice.

In any event, the issue has broader implications. It would be in the best interest of the country for the responsible officers to apologise. I would not hesitate to express my unequivocal regret and apologies to all those who were present, including the staff and students of the school, the foreign dignitary and the concerned naval officer for my strong but justifiable reaction.


I wish to leave any further steps in this regard in the hands of Your Excellencies.