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, June 13, 2016

'Our children will die of thirst': Egypt simmers as water shortages fuel protests


Anger at water cuts and poor infrastructure boils over into street protests in poorer parts of Egypt
Residents of the Nile Delta town of Borg Al-Borollos fill cans with water during a shortage in 2007 (AFP)

Karim El-Bar-Monday 13 June 2016
Drinking water shortages have left parts of Egypt going thirsty for up to two weeks in the run-up to Ramadan, with popular frustration over the failure of authorities to tackle the crisis spilling onto the streets.
The shortages have not only left many Egyptians unable to quench their thirst after fasting in scorching heat, but also their ability to perform ablutions - ritual washing before prayers - during Islam’s holiest month.
For some areas in the country’s south, the shortages last for days and are more likely to strike poorer areas with stronger severity, a resident told Middle East Eye.
The water shortages have exacerbated an already difficult Ramadan in Egypt which saw food prices increase by 12.7 percent in April compared to the same month last year, according tostatistics from Egypt’s Central Bank. The cost of rice, an Egyptian staple, has more than doubled compared to last year’s Ramadan.
Falling tourism revenues have sparked a currency crisis that has pushed up the cost of living, which is a further blow to the country’s most vulnerable, especially following government closures of Muslim Brotherhood and other Islamist-affiliated charitable organisations which have traditionally assisted them.

Boiling point

In recent days, residents of Egypt’s impoverished south have begun an escalating campaign of cutting off roads and highways to draw attention to their plight, according to a report in pan-Arab newspaper al-Araby al-Jadeed.
Amir Mamdouh, a lawyer and resident in the southern city of Aswan, told MEE on Monday that “the water cuts have become normal”, but that he had noticed a definite increase from the start of Ramadan.
He also noted that the severity of the cuts depended on where you live. More prosperous areas populated by businessmen and military and police officers suffered cuts of only half an hour each day, he told MEE.
“In the poorer areas there is no water for four or five hours,” he said.
“In Kom Ombo, Aswan, sometimes there is no water for days.”
Eman, another Aswan resident who declined to use her last name for fear of government retribution, told MEE that the motors that power home water supplies often do not switch off during the cuts, meaning people are charged for using water that they have not used, adding more frustration.
Last Saturday, a group of people from eight villages in the northern al-Dakahlia governoratedemonstrated outside the governor’s office in a rare display of public protest, according to Egyptian daily al-Masry al-Youm.
“Our children are going to die from thirst, but the government does not care,” one protester told al-Masry al-Youm.
Their water supply, which had suffered shortages over the previous eight summers, had reportedly been cut off entirely for 15 days ahead of the demonstration.
Consistent promises by local authorities to improve water infrastructure in the region have been left unfulfilled, they said.
“We have complained to all those responsible but to no avail, and all the head of the water company told us was that he did not have a solution for us except the water tankers,” one of the protestors told al-Masry al-Youm.
“But unfortunately, the water tankers do not come regularly and if it comes people with fight with each other, and I am afraid people will kill each other for a jerry can of water.”
Over the weekend, Egyptian media reported that armed men in the restive Sinai Peninsula seized a government-owned water tanker in the provincial capital of North Sinai province, al-Arish.
In areas of the southwestern governorate of al-Wady al-Gedeed, protestors forcibly shut downlocal water valves and illegally tapped into the drinking water supply themselves.
Government ministers have been keen to deflect blame, with Egyptian Minister of Water Resources and Irrigation Mohamed Abdel Ati blaming the drought in the Nile Basin region for the water shortages.
The protests and outcry have put pressure on regional governors. Luxor Governor Mohammed Badr announced over the weekend that he had earmarked more than $281,000 to fix and extend drinking water pipelines.

Infrastructure woes

Egypt has a track record of poor water infrastructure. The Aswan High Dam, which opened in 1970, is notoriously inefficient. The open canals are used to irrigate crops, for example, which means that up to three billion cubic meters of water – or the equivalent of 1.2 million Olympic-size swimming pools – is lost each year through evaporation.
For this reason, water crises are nothing new to Egypt. It has already fallen below the United Nations’ water poverty threshold, with per capita water availability decreasing by more than 60 percent over the past 40 years according to Egypt’s official statistics agency, CAPMAS.
The UN predicts that Egypt could become officially water scarce as early as 2025. Though lack of drinking water is the spark behind the current protests, over 80 percent of Egypt’s water is actually used in the agricultural sector to feed its booming population, which is expected to reach 116 million by 2030 according to some estimates.
The crisis comes in the midst of ongoing controversy over Ethiopia’s Renaissance Dam, which if completed would be the largest hydroelectric power plant in Africa. Ethiopia insists the project will not harm Egyptian or Sudanese interests, but Egyptian authorities are still concerned the project will decrease their share of Nile river water.
By late May, the dam was already halfway towards completion.
But dam and agricultural use aside, back in the streets of Cairo, in the central governorate of Giza, some residents put the blame directly on the government.
“How can (Egyptian President) Sisi tell us ‘Long live Egypt’ when we are going to die of thirst?” Mohammed el-Sayed, a local resident, told the Masr al-Arabiya website, referring to Sisi’s campaign slogan. “Are we not also from this country?”

Renewable energy to attract two-thirds of power plant investments

Workers clean photovoltaic panels inside a solar power plant in Gujarat, India, in this July 2, 2015 file photo. REUTERS/Amit Dave/Files

BY OLEG VUKMANOVIC-Mon Jun 13, 2016

Renewable energy sources such as wind and solar will attract two-thirds of all investment in power-generating plants between 2016 and 2040 in spite of persistently cheap coal and gas prices, a new report has found.

The forecast by Bloomberg New Energy Finance, the energy research unit of information company Bloomberg, expects some $7.8 trillion to be invested globally in renewables over the period, compared with $1.2 trillion for new coal plants - largely in India and other Asian emerging markets.

Gas will attract a relatively small $892 billion, it said, despite a projected glut of the fuel leading to lower power generating costs.

"One conclusion that may surprise is that our forecast shows no golden age for gas, except in North America," according to report co-author Elena Giannakopoulou.

"As a global generation source, gas will be overtaken by renewables in 2027. It will be 2037 before renewables overtake coal," she said.

While good news for helping decarbonise the world's electricity system, it is still not enough to meet the United Nations target to limit global warming below 2 degrees Centigrade.

Another $5.3 trillion in zero-carbon power investment by 2040 is needed to prevent carbon dioxide levels in the atmosphere rising above the limit of 450 parts per million, the report says.

Rising coal use in India and emerging Asia will push global carbon emissions five percent above 2015 levels by 2040, to 700 megatonnes, it said.

In China, weaker growth and a rebalancing of the economy away from heavy industry, as well as more renewables, will mean emissions peak by as early as 2025.

For Europe renewables will dominate with a 70 percent share in the continent's power mix by 2040, while the United States' share will jump from 14 percent last year to 44 percent.

A breakdown of renewable investments shows that of the $7.8 trillion overall, onshore and offshore wind accounts for $3.1 trillion, with solar taking $3.4 trillion and hydro-electric $911 billion.

(Reporting by Oleg Vukmanovic, editing by Adrian Croft)

Indonesian doctors refuse to castrate child sex offenders

Pic: AP


 

DOCTORS in Indonesia have declined to perform medical castration on those convicted of sex crimes against children.

This comes after President Joko “Jokowi” Widodo vowed to introduce chemical castration as part of government efforts to curb the rise in number of sexual assault cases involving children. The government is also mulling the death penalty for severe offences.

Citing medical ethics, the Indonesian Doctors Association (IDI) said its members do not want to be involved in inducing the castration on those convicted of the crimes.

“We are not opposed to the regulation adding castration as a possible punishment. However, the injections should not be administered by a doctor,” IDI chairman Ilham Oetama Marsis told a press conference late last week, according to Coconuts Jakarta.

Chemical castration involves the usage of drugs to reduce libido in men, stemming their sex drive and their ability to be sexually aroused.


Demands for harsher punishments have increased following the brutal rape and murder of a teenage girl by 14 men in western Indonesia in April this year, followed by a string of similar cases.

The new set of laws has received various reactions from the public, civil society groups, and even celebrities with some in favor of them, while others raised human rights concerns.

Dr. Priyo Sidipratomo, chairman of the Honorary Council of Medical Ethics (MKEK), said medical practitioners do not use their knowledge for non-humanitarian purposes.

“Doctors are charged with only using their skills for the benefit of humanity. Even in war, doctors must save humanity, even if it is the enemy,” he said.

Spread of human disease from animals mapped


Rats spread a variety of diseases, including Lassa feverTOM MCHUGH/SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARYImage caption-Rats spread a variety of diseases, including Lassa fever

BBCBy Helen Briggs-13 June 2016
Scientists say they have developed a better way to predict how animal diseases can spill over into humans.

Their model for Lassa fever, which is spread by rats, predicts that there will be twice as many human cases of the disease in Africa by 2070.

The method can be applied to other disease threats such as Ebola and Zika, they say.

Like the Ebola virus, the Lassa virus causes haemorrhagic fever and can be fatal.

Lassa fever virus currently affects between 100,000 and one million people a year in western sub-Saharan Africa.

A rat found in parts of the continent can pass the virus to people.

Scientists led by Prof Kate Jones of the Centre for Biodiversity and Environment Research at UCL looked at about 400 known outbreaks of Lassa fever between 1967 and 2012.

Lassa fever

Lassa virus is carried by the Mastomys rat, which is found in parts of Africa.

The virus is passed to people through direct contact with infected rats by catching and preparing them for food, or by food or household items contaminated with rat droppings or urine.

The virus can also be transmitted through contact with body fluids of an infected person.

Around 80% of people with Lassa virus have no symptoms or have symptoms that mimic other illnesses, such as malaria.

Symptoms include fever, fatigue, nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, headaches, abdominal pains, sore throat and facial swelling.

Source: World Health Organization

They developed a model to calculate how often people are likely to come into contact with disease-carrying animals and the risk of the virus spilling over.

It shows more areas of West Africa are at risk from Lassa fever spill-over events than previously thought.

Disease outbreaks

"Our model suggests that in future, it is likely to become a greater burden on local communities spreading to more areas with approximately twice as many spill-over events predicted by 2070," Dr Jones and colleagues from the University of Cambridge and the Zoological Society London report in the journal, Methods in Ecology and Evolution.

The method takes into account environmental change and the way human populations are expected to grow.

The projected increase in cases is largely due to climate change, with the rat that passes it to people (M. natalensis) thriving in hot and wet conditions, they say.

Meanwhile, growth in human populations in certain areas will mean more people coming into contact with the rodent.

"This model is a major improvement in our understanding of the spread of diseases from animals to people," explained Prof Jones.

Lassa fever virusLassa fever virus

"We hope it can be used to help communities prepare and respond to disease outbreaks, as well as to make decisions about environmental change factors that may be within their control."

Investment need

More than 60% of emerging infectious diseases originate in animals.

As well as well-known threats such as Ebola and Zika, other diseases including Lassa fever already affect thousands of people and are expected to spread as the world warms.

"Our new approach successfully predicts outbreaks of individual diseases by pairing the changes in the host's distribution as the environment changes with the mechanics of how that disease spreads from animals to people, which hasn't been done before, " said co-researcher Dr David Redding of UCL.
The researchers say the model can be refined to include diseases such as Ebola and Zika.

Prof Jonathan Ball of the University of Nottingham, who was not involved in the research, said if the models hold true, then future climate change and population growth will significantly increase the number of Lassa fever outbreaks - and this is likely to be true for other infectious diseases.

"The threat of emerging and neglected diseases will not go away and we need to invest in research and global healthcare systems to ensure that we are ready to deal with these threats and their consequences," he said.

Follow Helen on Twitter.

Qualified Tamils do not get  Government jobs

By P.K. Balachandran-2016-06-13
R. Sampanthan, chief of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) and Leader of the Opposition in the Sri Lankan Parliament, complained in Parliament on Friday that qualified Tamils are not getting government jobs.Sampanthan said that while Muslim leaders recruit Muslims; Sinhalese leaders get jobs for Sinhalese; and the few Tamils, who are in power, recruit some Tamils; qualified Tamils are unable to get into government service.
Discrimination against the Tamils has been a long-standing complaint in Sri Lanka, and there has been no change in the situation, the TNA Leader pointed out.
He demanded that government should present the ethnic distribution in recruitment for government jobs since the present regime came into existence in 2015.
Land Issue
Although the government has handed over to their original civilian owners, some lands taken over by the military during the war, most of the seized lands are still with the military, Sampanthan pointed out. During a recent visit to Valikamam in Jaffna District, and to Paravipachchan in Kilinochchi District, he could see requisitioned houses not being used by the Army. Why can't the Army give these back to their original civilian owners, he asked.
No Consultations
Sampanthan complained that the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe government has not been consulting the 18 Tamil MPs from the North and the East on development projects being executed or to be executed in the Tamil areas with foreign funds. The TNA especially ought to be consulted as 16 of the 18 MPs from the North and the East belong to it.
National Security
Regarding opposition from the Sinhalese nationalist side to the TNA's demand for the release of 150 LTTE cadres still in jail, Sampanthan said that only the grant of justice and ethnic equality to the Tamils can ensure national security, not the continued imprisonment of 150 LTTE cadres. He pointed out that the Rajapaksa Government had rehabilitated and released 12,000 cadres.
Sampanthan acknowledged that while the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe regime has taken steps to promote ethnic reconciliation, it could have done more since it came to power following the Presidential Election in January 2015 and the Parliamentary Elections in August last.
Sampanthan-Vigneswaran Conflict
Sampanthan's hard-hitting speech on the grievances of the Tamils comes in the wake of a series of hard-hitting statements by his rival in the Northern Province, Chief Minister C.V. Vigneswaran. Vigneswaran has been going hammer and tongs at the government for its failure to address the Tamils' grievances and aspirations and indulging in tokenism.
Vigneswaran is probably pitching for a second term as CM two years hence, or is preparing for a bigger role in Tamil politics. Recently, he declared an intention to tone up the administration and implement development schemes fast, while continuing to fight against the intrusive Sinhalese-dominated Sri Lankan State.
The Tamil media supports Vigneswaran's aggressive posturing and is critical of Sampanthan's allegedly 'cozy' and accommodative relations with the Sri Lanka Government. It was to negate this impression that Sampanthan told Parliament that the TNA will not join the government until the Tamils get a lasting political solution based on justice and equality.
Giving a foretaste of the toughening stance, the TNA abstained from voting in the No-Confidence Motion against Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake on Thursday. It said that the abstention was a protest against the government's failure to consult it on the development projects in the North and the East.
(ENS)
Parliamentary groups discuss Sri Lanka's human rights progress

13 June 2016

Sri Lanka has made little progress in fulfilling its human rights commitments, observed a panel at a British parliamentary event hosted by the All Party Parliamentary Group for Tamils (APPGT) joint with the All Party Parliamentary Human Rights Group (PHRG).

The event on June 7th opened with the screening of the documentary ‘Silenced Survivors’, a film featuring harrowing testimonies of Tamil torture survivors, recounting their experiences at the hands of Sri Lankan military and authorities and raising their fears of ever returning. The film was produced by investigative journalist Emanuel Stokes.

Opening the panel, APPGT vice-chair Wes Streeting MP said that the group’s priority was following up on Sri Lanka’s commitments to the resolution passed at 31st session of the UN Human Rights Council.

“We are pressing our government to hold the government of Sri Lanka to account,” Mr Streeting said. 

Ann Hannah of Freedom from Torture pointed out that while the UK government’s progress in recognising ongoing torture issues in Sri Lanka should be welcomed, the organisation remains concerned that the bar is too high for those seeking asylum.

Ms Hannah highlighted that “the government of Sri Lanka has railed against high international involvement” and also that the most recent UN resolution was a “compromise for survivors”.

Further stating that a political settlement should be seen as an inextricable part of accountability, Ms Hannah urged the UK government to ensure that it’s programs in Sri Lanka support the work of the Human Rights Council.

Janani Jananayagam of Together Against Genocide said that the only area of notable or durable progress was Sri Lanka’s ratification of the ICPPED (the International Convention for the Protection of Enforced Disappearances) but that the majority of the seven recommendations on justice remain unfulfilled, since neither the protocol of the Geneva Convention nor the Rome Statute had been ratified, and no domestic laws had been enacted to define war crimes, crimes against humanity, genocide and command responsibility.

Ms Jananayagam pointed to proposals for an Office of Missing Persons had been controversial due to the failure to hold public consultations as promised by the Sri Lankan government and highlighted several instances in which selective implementation of the resolution could prove counterproductive.

Further, Ms Jananayagam emphasised that most victims in the North-East are hardly engaged in the OISL process yet.

Chair of APPGT, James Berry MP, outlined the group’s three main concerns about Sri Lanka’s lack of progress. He stated that the consultation process had started belatedly, lacked the broad-reach it required to be effective and that not enough had been done with regards to witness protection.

Mr Berry also raised concerns about the composition of any tribunals, as Sri Lanka has repeatedly disregarded the requirement for international involvement. The APPGT are also concerned that nothing had been done about torture and attacks on journalists and human rights defenders, Mr Berry said.
Nicole Piche on behalf of the PHRG put forward questions to the British Foreign and Commonwealth Office on what actions will be taken concerning accountability and also on how UK financial assistance to Sri Lankan would be allocated and spent.

US-based Taylor Dibbert spoke on confidence-building measures and reasons to be worried, underlining that “in Sri Lanka there’s no real conversation about demilitarisation.” Mr Dibbert pointed to the Sri Lankan government’s appointment of several problematic military figures to high ranking positions of authority.

Emphasising failure to fulfil ‘little things’ such as the release of Tamil political prisoners, Mr Dibbert said that Sri Lanka should not be allowed to go to Geneva and use constitutional reform as an excuse for lack of progress and to buy more time and space.

The event ended with a question and answer session in which members of the floor pointed out the vast amounts of Tamil land yet to be released by the army in the North-East and also the hugely disproportionate number of soldiers stationed in relation to the area of the North-East.
 
ஐ.நா தீர்மானம் தொடர்பில் சுமந்திரன் – காங்கிரஸ் பேச்சுவார்த்தை






12-Jun-2016 02:50 pm
தமிழ் தேசிய கூட்டமைப்பின் பேச்சாளரும், நாடாளுமன்ற உறுப்பினருமான எம்.ஏ சுமந்திரன் அமெரிக்காவிற்கு விஜயம் செய்துள்ளதாக தெரிவிக்கப்படுகின்றது.

ஐக்கிய நாடுகள் சபையில் இலங்கை தொடர்பில் நிறைவேற்றப்பட்டுள்ள தீர்மானத்தின் தற்போதைய நிலைமைகள் தொடர்பில் கலந்துரையாடல் ஒன்றினை மேற்கொள்வதற்காக அமெரிக்க காங்கிரஸ் கட்சியினால் விடுக்கப்பட்டுள்ள அழைப்பின் பேரிலேயே அவர் அங்கு விஜயம் மேற்கொண்டுள்ளதாக குறிப்பிடப்படுகின்றது.

குறித்த கலந்துரையாடலானது நாளைமறுதினம்(செவ்வாய்கிழமை) அமெரிக்க காங்கிரஸின் இலங்கை சம்பந்தமான ஆர்வக்குழுவின் ஏற்பாட்டில் இடம்பெறவுள்ளதாகவும் தெரிவிக்கப்படுகின்றது.

இந்த கலந்துரையாடலில் இலங்கை அரசாங்கத்தின் சார்பில் அமெரிக்காவிற்கான இலங்கை தூதுவர் காரியவசம் பங்கேற்கவுள்ளதாகவும் தெரிவிக்கப்படுகின்றது.

இதன்போது ஐ.நா. மனித உரிமைகள் பேரவையில் இலங்கை தொடர்பில் நிறைவேற்றப்பட்ட தீர்மானத்தின் தற்போதைய நிலைமை குறித்து ஆராயப்படவுள்ளது. அத்துடன் இலங்கையில் முன்னெடுக்கப்பட்டு வருகின்ற புதிய அரசியலமைப்பு உருவாக்கம் தொடர்பிலும் பேசப்படவுள்ளதாக குறிப்பிடப்படுகின்றது.

இதேவேளை, அமெரிக்காவிற்கு விஜயம் செய்துள்ள தமிழ் தேசிய கூட்டமைப்பின் பேச்சாளரும், நாடாளுமன்ற உறுப்பினருமான எம்.ஏ சுமந்திரன் தெற்கு மற்றும் ஆசிய விவகாரங்களுக்கான உதவி இராஜாங்கச் செயலாளர் நிஷா பிஸ்வால் மற்றும் தேசிய பாதுகாப்புச் சபை உறுப்பினர்களையும் சந்தித்துக் கலந்துரையாடவுள்ளதாகவும் செய்திகள் வெளியாகியுள்ளன

Sunday, June 12, 2016

Why war crime trials and a political solution cannot go together ?

 2016-06-12
resident Maithripala Sirisena has once again ruled out foreign judges to probe the allegations of war crimes in the final phase of the war. He said instead the government would obtain foreign technical assistance for investigations.  His remarks came on the eve of the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC)’s 32nd sessions which begin in Geneva today.
Earlier, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe addressed at least some concerns of the security forces of which officers fear that  alleged war crimes trials would in effect turn into a mass witch-hunt . The Premier said in a meeting attended by the senior military officials that the charges would be presented individually, and that the forces would not be held responsible collectively. Nonetheless, there are pertinent questions that need to be answered.  Certain measures which were viewed as security necessities at the time of war may not appear so now. Yet, perhaps the very fact that they are not  fundamental concerns now is perhaps courtesy some of those measures.  The alleged ‘white flag incident’,  in which, terrorist top brass who  were pleading surrender were executed, is for instance now a moral question. However, if they lived another day to fight another war (like Rohana Wijeweera did after being released by JR), it would have become a far more pertinent life and death question. 
Also, another larger-than-life myth popularized by many circles, some willing propagandists of the LTTE, others bleeding heart-right activists, and many others simply shocked by such allegations, is that  the troops deliberately shelled civilians.  Leave aside the rules of war, and human rights conventions, such a tactic was counter-productive in  military and political terms itself, since that would only bring attention to a war, that the West wanted to stop, and Sri Lanka wanted to finish off. Yet, the fact remains that no war is fought, especially amidst heavy civilian density without collateral damages. Limiting them is the military planners’ responsibility. But, terrorist tactics would mitigate the efficacy of their best intentions -- as Velupillai Prabhakaran told KP that if more people were killed, the international community would intervene and offer Tamils the ‘Eelam’, as in the case of  Kosovo.  If the terrorists shells from civilian neighbourhoods, targeting  the advancing troops on the open terrain, the choice is either to sacrifice them, or to neutralize the fire. Sri Lanka choose the latter, and any rational state would do the same.  (The Americans defended using nuclear bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki for it, supposedly  saved half a million lives of American soldiers who would otherwise have  perished  fighting in the Japanese islands). 
Military strategies sometimes have a uniformed pattern. Sri Lanka was accused of limiting food supplies  to civilians held in the war zone during the final phase of war. Now the Iraqis, who with the help of their American partners have laid siege to the Islamic State-held Fallujah are accused of the same. Yet few, save the world agencies tasked with feeding the civilians seem to be bothered. Those measures, though obviously unsavoury could well be military necessities, as long as they do not lead to a full blown mass starvation. Few seem to be keen on resupplying  terrorists havens and fighting  a war. There is a self -evident logic for that reluctance.
However, running of abduction rings by a few rogue military ranks is a different matter that needs to be investigated and perpetrators brought to book. The final phase of the war ought to  be scrutinized to know exactly what happened, or at least to know whether those inflated claims of civilian casualties,  which are different figures for different people,  did actually occur. Concocting figures is easier when there are no means for verification.

"However, running of abduction rings by a few rogue military ranks is a different matter that needs to be investigated and perpetrators brought to book. The final phase of the war ought to  be scrutinized to know exactly what happened, or at least to know whether those inflated claims of civilian casualties,  which are different figures for different people,  did actually occur"

However, there is a far more significant issue at stake, which is overlooked by the champions of war crime trials. If the Sinhalese majority tend to consider their government as having  capitulated to international pressure to haul military personnel before war crime trials, it will seriously diminish the government’s capacity to promote reconciliation and a political solution. There is a negative correlation between the success of war crime trials and a prospect of  a political solution . In fact, it is rather simplistic to say that the governments in the past did not want to address Tamil grievances through Constitutional reforms. On each instance, other extraneous factors, the most consequential of which  during the 1980-2009 being the presence of the LTTE, seriously hampered those efforts. Now, the danger is that war crimes trials would have the same adverse impact. External threats (read as any threat out of the political mainstream of the South) had always hardened public opinion in the South.  Devolution when the LTTE was fighting its terrorist war was viewed not only  as a step towards separation, but also a capitulation ( and obviously the LTTE was not prepared to accept anything short of de-facto separation, no matter under which political jargon  the solution was framed)
Now that the LTTE has been conclusively defeated and that existential threat,which  was the main obstacle to a political solution removed from the  equation, the Sinhalese majority is more likely to consent to a political solution that grants extensive devolution to the North East.
Political leaders of all communities should grasp that historical opportunity. Instead, as some do, calling for bloody revenge (perhaps as a punishment for liquidating terrorists for good) would not serve the purpose.  It does make the Sinhalese bitter, which would again harden the collective position. On the other hand, it also fosters the collective Tamil sense of victim hood, both real and perceived, while in the process masking the responsibility of the Tamil political leadership in escalating the national question to a suicidal war for their community, in particular  and the country at large, in general. That is also a dangerous ploy which would foster ethnic polarization once again. 

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British High Commissioner says government is taking action on detention of British citizen
 

12 June 2016
The Chief Minister of the Northern Province C V Wigneswaran met with the British High Commissioner to Sri Lankan on Friday, where they spoke on the issue of the detention of a British citizen by Sri Lankan security forces.


British High Commissioner James Dauris told Justice WIgneswaran that his government had begun to initiate action on the arbitrary detention of Mr Velauthapilai Renugaruban, who was beaten and forcefully arrested by two men who entered his family home in Jaffna on 2nd of June. 

Though an official torture plea has not been extracted from Mr Renugaruban, the detainee's family and representative lawyer in Colombo claim he has been tortured in custody. 

Earlier The Guardian reported a Foreign Office spokesperson as saying, “We are providing support to a British man who has been detained in Sri Lanka and are in close contact with local authorities to regularly check his welfare is being maintained while he is in prison”.

British MP Gareth Thomas of the all-party parliamentary group for Tamils, also commented on the case, stating, “We continue to receive reports in the UK about people of Tamil background who have been tortured in Sri Lanka”. “The UK government is not doing enough to confront the Sri Lankan authorities about these claims,” he added.

The High Commissioner’s meeting with the Chief Minister was part of his trip to the Jaffna peninsula this weekend, where he also overviewed Sri Lankan military High Security Zones. 
Troops to stay in Tamil-dominated north: 

Army officer


Troops to stay in Tamil-dominated north: Army officer


logoJune 12, 2016
Sri Lankan troops will stay in the Tamil-dominated former war zone of North and look after the minority community, a senior army officer has said, virtually rejecting Northern Province Chief Minister CV Wigneswaran’s demand of withdrawal of military.

 “We are here to look after you, we will attend to all your needs,” military chief in the north Mahesh Senanayake said. 

He said that his job as the security forces commander in the north is to prevent a recurrence of conflict by looking after the Tamil community, he told reporters in Jaffna.

 Senanayake said that there will never ever be a separatist war in Sri Lanka’s north. 

His comments came as Wigneswaran last week demanded the withdrawal of the military from the north. 

“Even after seven years of ending the war, the military is remaining here. We want the police to do the job and not the military,” Wigneswaran said. 

-PTI -Agencies

$ 62 m ADB boost to revive fisheries industry in North
logolead-picMonday, 13 June 2016

On the request of Government, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) has provided preparatory technical assistance to formulate a project to revive the fisheries sector in the four conflict affected districts of Jaffna, Mannar, Mullaitivu and Kilinochchi under the Northern Province Sustainable Fisheries Development Project.

The $ 62 million ADB supported project intends to support Gurunagar and three identified feasible fisheries harbours in Point Pedro in the Jaffna district and Pesalai in the Mannar district, V. Sivagnanasothy, Secretary, Ministry of Prisons Reform, Rehabilitation, Resettlement and Hindu Religious Affairs said.

The Northern Province was one of the most productive fishing regions in the past. Fish production has decreased over the years due to the past 30 year old conflict that prevailed in the region. Fisheries infrastructure facilities are in the dilapidated stage and the proposed ADB funded project intends to develop fisheries harbours, anchorages, landing sites, and related infrastructure facilities.

Prior to  the conflict, the Northern Province accounted for 40% of the marine fish catch. By2009 however it has declined to 7%. However, with the lifting of restriction to access coastal waters, the contribution has increased to 12%.

Prior to the conflict, the Northern Province had only one fisheries harbour in the Jaffna peninsula which later came under the state authorities and as such the province does not have a single operational fisheries harbour with modern facilities. As a result, the fishing community is unable to fully engage in off-shore deep sea fishing. Lack of fishing harbour facilities and multiday boats with other facilities were limitations to developing the fisheries sector according to Sivagnanasothy.

The initial Due Diligence study identified Point Pedro as a sustainable location with a concentration of fisheries activities and the study proposed a harbour basin of 12 hectares, and a five meter depth in the harbour basin are conducive for off shore deep sea vessel operations. It will be similar to Dickovita harbour and has the potential to enable the fishermen to reach international waters. The tentative estimated cost is Rs.6 billion. The facilities include breakwater, a Quay wall, an auction hall, cool room and ice plants, and berthing, dredging and boat repairing facilities etc. This will enable the multiday boats to use the harbour for offshore deep sea fishing.     

The Gurunagar fishing harbour located in Jaffna district is proposed to be developed under the ADB Project with the depth of 2.5 meters. The tentative estimated cost is Rs.4.8 billion. Currently, a large number of one day boats and smaller boats are operating and the proposed facilities to be developed include marine structures such as breakwater, a Quay wall, an auction hall, cool room and ice plants, and berthing, dredging and boat repairing facilities etc. This will enable the multiday boats to use the harbour for offshore deep sea fishing despite the limitation of shallow water.

The third harbour will be developed in Pesalai, Mannar which is currently shallow but crowded with one day fishing boats and shore facilities are not available. It is proposed to have a depth of 3.5 meters here to support multiday offshore deep sea fishing. 

Currently in the Northern Province inadequate shelter from the northeast monsoon, inadequate depth for access and mooring, inadequate space for beach landing, and inadequate shore facilities have been constraints for fishing and boats are moored in shallow water.

Sivagnanasothy said the proposed ADB funded project therefore,  aims to develop and strengthen anchorages by protection through breakwaters, dredging of basins, access channels and development of shore facilities. It is proposed to develop anchorages in twelve (12)  sites in the Northern Province covering Mathagal, Munai, Polikandy east, Valvettithurai, Athkovilady, Thondamanaru, Mandaithivu and Thalathurai in Delft in Jaffna distirct and Pannakaddikoddu in Mannar and Palikuda, Nachchikuda and Valaikadu in Kilinochchi. 

Further, a large number of landing sites will be developed mainly with shore facilities but without marine structures, in Jaffna, Mullaitivu, Mannar and Kilinochchi said the Ministry Secretary. Due Diligence will cover possible developments in the landing sites such as Sampodai, Kakkaithivu, Aralithurai, Sakkodai, Senthankulam, Punkuduthivu, Kolombuthurai and Chulipuram in the Jaffna District and some other sites in the above mentioned districts.

The project will also support aquaculture development specially the brackish water aquaculture, non-conventional livelihood activities such as sea cucumber, seaweed culture and crab fattening which have high income and export potentials. 

The Ministry of Prison Reforms, Rehabilitation, Resettlement and Hindu Religious Affairs will be the executing agency for the $ 62 Million project and work in close collaboration with Ministry of Fisheries and Aquaculture Development, Ceylon Fisheries Harbour Corporation, National Aquatic Development Authority and other relevant agencies to implement the project. The project once completed will be the major boost to the fisheries sector in the Northern Province and contribute to improving the livelihood development of the resettled and conflict affected families.

In The Name Of Good Governance


Colombo Telegraph
By Rajeewa Jayaweera –June 12, 2016
Rajeewa Jayaweera
Rajeewa Jayaweera
One of the cornerstones of Yahapalanaya, President Sirisena’s battle cry during his Presidential election campaign, was Good Governance. Improvements have been observed in some areas in comparison to the pre January 09, 2015 era namely freedom of press and freedom of expression. However, matters in many areas such as Good Governance, Rule of Law, Transparency and Accountability remain unsatisfactory.
It has come to light, President Sirisena, prior to his departure to attend the G-7 summit in Japan had instructed Financial Crimes Investigative Division (FCID) Chief to refrain from arresting some state officials until his return. FCID had reportedly completed investigations against six former officials of the Tourism Promotion Authority who served under the Rajapaksaadministration on a charge of misappropriation of state funds for electioneering purposes. Those to be arrested were former Chairman and five Directors of the authority. Two of the said Directors are currently holding positions of Additional Secretary in the Prime Minister’s Office and a Director General in the Treasury. They are obviously senior members of the Sri Lanka Administrative Service (SLAS). Charges involve several cases of fraud amounting to over Rs 100 million.
Ranil MaithriUpon his return from Japan, President Sirisena has reportedly confirmed his instructions to FCID Chief. The six individuals were not to be arrested despite instructions from the Attorney General’s office.
The President has supposedly decided not to arrest and prosecute these officials due to a growing concern especially among senior state officials particularly from the Sri Lanka Administrative Service. In view of the several investigations and a few arrests, officials have begun to exhibit a certain degree of reluctance to carry out instructions deemed irregular from superiors, especially from Ministers and politicians in the absence of written instructions. They contend they may be hauled up before FCID or similar investigative bodies and held accountable for carrying out irregular instructions issued verbally by ministers and politicians, by a future government at a future date.