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 20, 2016


Colombo Telegraph
By Sarath Wijesinghe –June 19, 2016 
Sarath Wijesinghe
Sarath Wijesinghe
Justice is not only be done it must seem to be done
Citizen is expected to be given their cherished Nation to the hands of honest leaders of integrity on trust for a limited period to administer the Nation on trust as “Temporary Trustees”. Some trustees are elected, some appointed. President Prime Minister and Speaker are elected and the Chief Justice, Auditor General Attorney General and the Governor Central Bank are appointed. Appointments should be made with utmost care and trust to select the best candidate of integrity and honesty. Their conduct should be whiter than white. There should not be direct or indirect benefits to him or the family members which included son-in laws. This sacred position is bound by written and unwritten guidelines under the principles of good governance. Actions must be transparent and appointments made are to be impartial as in the case of Mc Carthy-1924- Judge declared that” not only justice be done, It must seem to be done” in the case where the court staff member was convicted on a traffic offence which appealed against the judgement. This principle and adage applies to all corners of good governance including administration and appointments to high positions. This is of universal application to be followed in any democracy. Honesty, uprightness, honesty, morality, truthfulness, sincerity and integrity is demanded on the appointment of the HIGH POSTS deciding the future of economy monitory control fiscal policy and strategies on development and future prosperity in a Nation. Do we maintain these principles in our cherished Nation or is it followed on appointment of the CB Governor and is the citizen and the civil society happy and contended with his performances as impartial and honest, Is a moot issue to be argued?
Arjuna Mahendran
Arjuna MahendranControversy over the appointment of the Governor Central Bank
Governor Central Bank is the head of the Central Bank and the Monitory Board in change of the entire banking system in Sri Lanka as the regulator and the office that initiates controls administers and strategize the economy and fiscal policy of the country with the massive structure and Central Bank set up. He decides the monitory policy and advises the Sate on all monitory matters. Maintenance of economic and financial and economic stability, and Employees Provident Fund also come under the Central Bank Governor. He possesses enormous powers and the decisions have direct impact on the economy and the future fiscal policies as deciding factors of the economic prosperity or downfall. He in person as well as the position he holds has become controversial with the bond scam involving his son –in- law “Arjun Aloysius” accused of previous deals on EPF, alleged to have earned billions within few days allegedly manipulating the bidding process by him and his father –in –law “Arjuna Mahandran” a 55 year old Oxford Educated able Singaporean Banker currently questioned by the Committee of Public Enterprises and facing a law suit in the court of appeals. A three member committee of young lawyers appointed by the Prime Minister has determined in the course that it merits and warrants an inquiry due to the conduct of the Governor in the bidding process. Leave to proceed was not granted at the Fundamental Rights application on the grounds that no rules have being violated in the process, though the petitioners have submitted on the colossal loss of billions of rupees caused and resulted during the thirty year bond period. Does it mean that Bribery and corruption is permitted if rules are not broken is another moot issue?
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Sri Lanka: Writ of Quo Warranto on CB Governor

Arjuna-Mahendran-CBSL

( June 20, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The following Writ of Quo Warranto was submitted by Executive Director of CaFFE, on the controversial governor of the central Bank of Sri Lanka;

Savant’s statues to be shipped to Sri Lanka


2016-06-20

Sixteen impressive statues of the Tamil savant Thiruvalluvar, made in Chennai, will be shipped to Colombo to be installed in 13 schools and 3 colleges in the island nation this week. 

The nearly 6.5 foot high statues made of fiberglass depict the sage sitting on an adhara peedam (pedestal) 1.75 foot high. 

They would be shipped to Colombo on Tuesday to be installed at 16 locations.

 “Our gift to Sri Lanka will help to further strengthen relations between Indian and Lanka. 
This will also highlight the importance of Tamil (language) and Thiruvalluvar’s Thirukkural in short and sweet lines,” says V.G.P. Santhosam, chairman of VGP group of companies and founder of VGP Ulaga Tamil Sangam on Sunday. The VGP Ulaga Tamil Sangam is the donor of the statues. 

These statues would be installed in the Tamil dominated areas like Savagachery, Kilinochi, Mullai Island, Mannar, Puliyangulam, Thirukonamalai, Puttalam, Mattakkalapu, Mattalai, Kalmunai, Kambaga, Navalpitti, Theraniyakal, Attan, Pandaravalai and Erakuvalai.

 The VGP Ulaga Tamil Sangam, which has a tradition of providing Valluvar statues to various countries, immediately accepted a proposal and got the statues done, Mr Santhosam said and lauded the efforts of Sri Lanka’s education minister V.S. Radhakrishnan and Sri Lanka’s coordinator K. Sachidanandam for their efforts in this direction. Speaking to DC, Janikaraman, sculptor said the statues could withstand the vagaries of nature. “It took nearly two months to make the statues. We decided to make the conventionally accepted sitting posture of the sage,” he added.

 All the statues were displayed before the secretary of Sri Lanka education department Tissa Hewavitharana and Sri Lanka Deputy High Commissioner V. Krishnamoorthy at Sathya Studios in the city on Sunday. Acknowledging Mr Santhosam’s gesture, Mr Tissa said the gift of 16 statues of sage Thiruvalluvar to Sri Lanka was a matter of pride and privilege to the people of Lanka.

 “The Thirukkural has been translated into 62 languages of the world including your neighbouring language Sinhalese. The people of Tamil Nadu should be proud to hear that there are three translations of Thirukkural in Sinhalese,” Mr Tissa said. This effort would go a long way in further strengthening the cultural cooperation between the two countries, said Mr. Krishnamoorthy. (Deccan Chronicle)


logoUntitled-4Monday, 20 June 2016

Overview
The National HR Conference (NHRC), the premier people event in South Asia, is just around the corner. This time they have picked an opportune theme entitled ‘HR Ecosystem for Competitiveness’. My intention is to explore the fascinating scenario of the HR Ecosystem and to have a glimpse through the ten Gs. 
Figure 1: HR Ecosystem through ten Gs                                                        Source: Dharmasiri (2016)


Ecosystems in a nutshell

Ecosystems are so essential to nature. The typical biology textbooks call it a community of living organisms. They provide the basis for survival and sustainability. This article explores the nature and features of an ecosystem in relation to Human Resource Management (HRM). It also attempts to link the HR ecosystem for competitiveness, in four levels, namely ground, group, general and global. Expanding the seven-G framework of HRM in an institutional context to cover industrial to international perspectives, a novel ten-G approach is proposed.

HRM in focus

It is worthwhile recalling the way we defined HRM for Sri Lanka. Based on the brainstorming conducted as a team and feedback obtained from professionals and professors, the following definition emerged: “A strategic and integrated approach in acquisition, development and engagement of talent, using relevant tools, with proper policies, practices and processes in creating a conducive climate towards achieving organisational excellence and societal wellbeing (IPM, 2014).”

Untitled-1What we meant by strategic is working towards achieving the overall goals and specific objectives of the organisation. It is essentially aligning with broad organisational priorities. It highlights the strategic significance of HRM and the holistic role it should play.

Talent refers to three Cs going in line with Prof. Dave Ulrich (2009), namely, competence, commitment and contribution. We consciously included the term Conducive Climate in our HRM definition, meaning a supportive environment within an organisation. The end result of all HR endeavours, the way we see, is having twin aspects - Organizational Excellence and Societal Wellbeing.

HR Ecosystem through the ten Gs

It is indeed fascinating to see how HRM operates at various levels within an institution as well as outside an institution

I propose an HR ecosystem as a combination of ten Gs, namely, Goal, Get, Give, Grow, Glue, Glow, Guard, Grapple, Grip and Gratify. They are related mainly to four levels, from micro to macro. I would identify them as Ground, Group, General and Global. Let’s go through the details with examples.

Ground level

I propose this as the institutional or organisational context. It could be private or public. The first seven Gs are very much in existence here.

1. Goal: This occupies centre stage in setting the direction of the entire organisation. It revolves around the strategic intent, comprising vision, mission or aspiration whatever the terminology may be. Aligning the grooming of people with the goals of the organisation should be the right approach. There are numerous occasions where people are unclear about their top goals and priorities.

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JVP’s “Siri Aiya”: The Great Survivor


somawansa_fileby Dharman Wickremaratne

( June 19, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) In the late 1980s the Janatha vimukthi peramuna(JVP) was active only in 19 out of Sri Lanka’s 25 districts. It was not present in the five districts of the North and Batticaloa District in the East. Accordingly there were 19 JVP District Secretaries. The Central Committee comprised politburo members, district secretaries and secretaries of the military wing.
In`1986 to 1989 the party’s politburo(PB) members were Rohana Wijeweera, Upatissa Gamanayake, Sumith Athukorala, D.M. Ananda, Saman Piyasiri Fernando, Piyadasa Ranasinghe, H.B. Herath, Gunaratne Wanasinghe, R.B. Wimalaratne, Somawansa Amarasinghe, Shantha Bandara, Nandatilaka Galappaththi and Lalith Wijeratne.

D.M. Ananda and Saman Piyasiri although not necessarily senior, became the most active members during the last years of the insurgency. D.M. Ananda functioned as Party’s Political Secretary of the Western and Sabaragamuwa Regions while leading the party’s student, women’s and bhikku fronts. Saman Piyasiri Fernando alias Keerthi Wijebahu was the leader of the military wing – Deshapremi Janatha Vyaparaya (DJV). During the final stages it was the two of them who led the JVP when Rohana Wijeweera lost control of the party.

In the end it was only Somawansa Amarasinghe who survived out of all JVP Politburo members. It was he who took the decisive steps after a difficult journey in reorganising the party which had almost disintegrated and brought it back to active politics in 1994. Many among others also made a major contribution to the JVP’s revival.

At the time Somawansa Amarasinghe was known as ‘Siri Aiya’ alias ‘Uncle Reggie’ alias Reginald Patrick. In the latter half of the 1980s during the JVP’s second insurgency he maintained regular contacts with human rights, cultural and media circles in Colombo and coordinated with JVP leaders and people’s organisations. He was the unseen hand behind many demonstrations. A first cousin of the then Minister Sirisena Cooray – President Premadasa’s ‘right hand’ man – was married to a sister of Somawansa Amarasinghe.

Except four of the above 13 JVP Politburo members the others were the writer’s professional associates. There were many instances when they visited the editorial office and the writer’s home during 1986-90. Among them was ‘Siri Aiya’ who always wore long-sleeved shirts. He was proficient in English. His red-and-white car was a familiar sight. He often visited the writer in the early hours of the day. The father of one child his wife Irangani Malani Munasinghe was a school teacher in Kalutara.

Araliyawatte in Lilambe area Wariyapola, the house at Gonapola junction Batuwita and the mansion, Katugaha Walawwa at Neluwa near Atampitiya Road were purchased for the party under the name Reginald Patrick. During JVP Leader Wijeweera’s last days Somwansa was his best friend in the party’s inner circle.

Somawansa’s father was John Amarasinghe who first served in the police and later in the Irrigation Department. Mother was a housewife. Somawansa is the youngest in a family of four elder brothers and three sisters . Born in Payagala, Kalutara, he entered Kalutara Vidyalaya as a grade two student after having his primary education at the Kalutara Ladies College. Later he served as a Irrigation Department technical officer in Colombo, Galle, Kalmune, Bibile and Rajangana.

In 1969 he attended JVP classes conducted in ‘Danoris Aiya’s trade union office in the Land Development Department, Castle Street, Colombo. It is said that Navaratne Banda made Somawansa join the party. He was provided with a Honda motorbicycle No. 5 Sri 6022 on the party’s behalf.

During the April 1971 JVP insurgency the plan was to give Somawansa the job of driving the vehicle carrying Prime Minister Sirima Bandaranaike once she was abducted from er Rosmead Place residence. He was assigned to the task because of his driving skills, according to Piyasiri Kularatne. Although Somawansa was waiting near the Ritz Cinema Borella on April 4, 1971 till 11.30 p.m. to join the Rosmead place operation no one came. He then went to his place of residence at Kotahena in a hired vehicle, carrying the bag of bombs. Later he was arrested and detained at the Galle,welikada and Jaffna prisons. Rohana Wijeweera met Somawansa for the first time in 1975.

In December of the following year Somawansa was released along with several others including Kelly Senananayake, Upatissa Gamanayake and Ragama Somay. Thereafter Somawansa appealed for the release of the remaining political prisoners and helped to reorganise the party. His headquarters was Siripala’s house at Dewanampiyatissa Mawatha, Maradana.

Among the photos in the police notice issued following the proscription of the JVP in 1983, was that of Somawansa. The authorities also had a list of 380 JVP activists. Simultaneously with the ban on the party Somawansa began working incognito with other party activists. He was appointed a Politburo member after coming to Colombo in April, 1984 following Lionel Bopage’s resignation from the party. Sumith Athukorala, Piyadasa Ranasinghe,Nandathilaka Galapathi,Gunarathne Wanasinghe,Shantha Bandara,Saman Piyasiri Fernando and D.M. Ananda also became Poliburo members in the same year.


It was Somawansa who took Wijeweera and his family to the house in Walhaputenna, Haputale. According to the statement of Wijeweera’s wife Srimathie Chitraganie Somawansa played the role of Wijeweera’s brother-in-law. It was he who took Wijeweera’s children to buy their school uniforms. It was in March 1988 that Wijeweera went to reside in the house at Ulapane.

In the meantime Somawansa was also active working with people’s organisations in Colombo. He was frequently seen at Gothami Vihara, Borella. When an armed gang broke into the Gothami Vihara on September 7, 1988 and abducted eight bhikkus of the Manawa Hithawdi organisation after seizing all documents, Somawansa who by then had gone ‘underground’ gave a phone call to Amnesty International in London which in turn called Minister Ranjan Wijeratne and requested that those taken into custody be provided with security. Later they were freed on the intervention of the then UNP Mayor of Colombo Ratnasiri Rajapaksa.

Although Somawansa’s wife and son were sent to Japan in April 1989 for their safety they returned to Sri Lanka in September of the same year. Later they resided on the ground floor of a Muslim-owned house near Trinity College, Kandy. Somawansa again succeeded in sending them to a friend’s house in Kerala, India towards the end of 1989. From there he sent them to the UK via Thailand and Italy.

The last JVP politburo meeting presided over by Wijeweera was scheduled to be held on November 11, 12 and 13, 1989. But Wanasinghe and D.M. Ananda did not turn up raising Somawansa’ suspicions. He promptly informed Wijeweera to take safety precautions but the latter did not take the warning seriously. The Government declared a curfew on November 12 causing the JVP to end the Politburo meeting in the afternoon of the same day.

After the meeting Saman Piyasiri, Lalith Wijeratne, Gamanayake and Wijeweera left by car. Shantha Bandara went separately. Somawansa Amarasinghe and Piyadasa Ranasinghe left for Madawala returning from where Somawansa gets off at Trinity Hill. Piyadasa Ranasinghe was arrested at Kandy. In the evening of the same day H.B. Herath was taken into custody at his home in Galaha. In the same evening Wijeweera and the following morning Gamanayake were arrested. Somawansa’s intuition helped him to survive.

It is thereafter that he decided to flee the country. Matale Wicky alias Selva helped him to escape. A leading JVP actvist Wicky (Wickramasinghe) was a wholesale manager at Eswaran Brothers, Colombo and resided at Alwis Avenue, Kotahena. Somawansa wearing a verti and a ‘pottu’ on his forehead disguised himself as a Tamil obtained an Indian Visa after going to the Indian Hgh Commission with Wickremasinghe. Although Somawansa came to the Galle Face Hotel that day no one recognized him.

However Somawansa wanted to avoid air travel since it was a risk and decided go by sea. In early March 1990 he fled to India in a double-engine boat after paying Rs.50,000 to a boat owner in Kalpitiya. In India he met his wife Irangani Munasinghe and son in Kerala and sent them to the UK via Thailand and Italy. Somawansa traveled to Italy via France and thereafter to Switzerland.

Legal action was filed against Wickremasinghe alias Matale Wicky and Army Captain Nissanka in High Courts for helping Somawansa Amarasinghe to escape. Wickremasinghe pleaded guilty and was given a five-year suspended sentence. Capt. Nissanka was given a 15-year suspended sentence but was acquitted on appeal. The writer once met Captain Nissanka with BBC Sinhala Service Sandeshaya Producer Chandana Bandara’s London home. The writer also met Wickremasinghe in Madras (Chennai).

In 1994 the JVP contested the Parliamentary Election via the National Salvation Front. Later Somawansa returned to Sri Lanka and has been engaged fulltime in JVP activities since then.

The above is the true story of the role Somawansa played internationally in reviving the JVP after the reign of terror in the 1980s, despite various criticisms about him.

(The writer is a Senior Sri Lankan Journalist who could be reached at ejournalists@gmail.com)

‘If only minister Arjuna Ranatunge had a tail , the cattle rogues would have killed and eaten him’

-Arjuna demands Rs. 500 million compensation for exposing his harem furniture !

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News- 20.June.2016, 11.30PM)   ‘If only minister Arjuna Ranatunge had a tail , the rogues would have killed and eaten him ’ a political analyst said. This view of the analyst was based on a statement made by the minister after convening a press briefing yesterday. 
The minister yesterday announced that he is going to claim compensation in a sum of  Rs. 500 million from each of the trade unions leaders for criminal defamation . These are the trade union leaders who seized the furniture while they were unlawfully being  made in the carpentry division of the Port for Arjuna’s harem misusing Port resources .
Based on our inquiries , Arjuna has only barked like a stray dog at the press briefing without effect ,because so far no letter of demand has been sent to any of the trade union leaders until today.
In case Arjuna sends such a letter of demand , he would go down in history as the only politico in the whole world who had claimed compensation for defamation from trade union leaders during their struggles. These trade union leaders represent about ten thousand workers of the Port. Moreover he  is claiming compensation from the leaders of the trade unions of the very SLFP, the party  he represents. This stupidity of Arjuna is unsurprising because he is one who sent a hollow letter of demand to the deputy speaker of Parliament too claiming compensation.
This is the same  Arjuna who was a contestant for   the top notch position in Sri Lanka’s cricket , and after losing elections ,  sent a letter of demand to Thilanga Sumathipala the winner, claiming compensation. Apparently , sending letters of demand is his favorite sport  like children throwing paper balls at each other . No matter what , so far no case has been filed against the deputy speaker – none that we know of !
What Arjuna should have done when charges were mounted against him of making furniture illegally for his harem was , and if he is  claiming  those were indeed made for the Port residences , he could have simply explained that  there is a shortage of furniture in those residences, shown what are the requirements and made public the relevant orders placed.  Instead , Arjuna who is guilt ridden and therefore cannot offer a proper explanation , even without sending a letter of demand had  suddenly popped out like a jack in the box and emptily screamed ‘ I shall claim compensation’ before the media.
In the midst of the ludicrous and ridiculous  announcement of Arjuna ,  the grave  accusations against his outrageous nepotism ,and the robberies committed jointly with his crooked brothers under the Rajapakse regime , another statement which makes everyone without exception roar and roll with laughter has been made by him in relation to himself  and his crooked brother,  Dhammika ,the Ports chairman  against whom already there are cases pending in courts on grave  charges of corruption and who is now pilfering  even grains of sugar and salt from the Port kitchen.
 Arjuna stated thus …
‘Since the day I came to the ministry of Ports, I took  a lot of pains to curb and  eradicate corruption and thefts. Now when the chairman and I are trying to halt the robberies , those who are affected and going to lose thereby are hurt ‘
When he said , ‘those who are affected …’ he was referring to the ten thousand workers who are drawing  monthly salaries , which includes the three union leaders – how ridiculous  ?  
In the circumstances , is there anything wrong in saying  ‘If only minister Arjuna Ranatunge had a tail , the cattle rogues would have killed and eaten him  ?’  


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by     (2016-06-20 21:34:13)
Army appoints Court of Inquiry to investigate Lasantha and Ekneligoda cases

Army appoints Court of Inquiry to investigate Lasantha and Ekneligoda cases

Army appoints Court of Inquiry to investigate Lasantha and Ekneligoda cases

June 20, 2016 

logoTwo Court of Inquiries were established to investigate the misplaced documents in the cases pertaining to the disappearance of journalist Prageeth Eknaligoda and murder of Lasantha Wickramatunga, the Army said in a statement today. 

The Army has also dismissed allegations that it did not support in investigations into the murder of senior journalist Lasantha Wickrematunge. 

The statement also added that regardless of status, the army is committed to uphold the law of the country and it will not hesitate to capture the wrongdoers.


Here is the Withanage report that exposed ‘patriotic’ Gota’s unpatriotism! 

Here is the Withanage report that exposed ‘patriotic’ Gota’s unpatriotism!

Jun 20, 2016
As promised last week, we are publishing here the report of the Withanage Committee that inquired into how former defence secretary Nandasena Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, the first respondent in the white flag murders, Welikada inmates killings and several other murders, swindled more than Rs. 170 million from the Colombo Pentagon in cohort with architect Muditha Jayakody.

This report was handed over to the government more than six months ago, but the defence ministry keeps delaying the implementation of recommendations contained in the report, which gives rise to doubts as to whether Gotabhaya’s invisible hand is still very much alive at the ministry.
The Withanage report and the letter by the secretary to the president that appointed members to the committee are given below:

Sri Lanka reneges on rights probe resolution



2016-06-20
Colombo has reneged on its resolution to probe alleged human rights abuses during its 30-year civil war  

The ethnic problem in Sri Lanka defies solution as Colombo has gone back on the resolution it cosponsored with the U.S. at the 31st session of the U.N. Human Rights Council in Geneva.

The resolution required Sri Lanka to take a number of measures, including the setting up of a credible justice process with the participation of Commonwealth and other foreign judges and defense lawyers, to investigate allegations of violence and abuses of human rights during the 30-year civil war.

Speaking at the opening of the 32nd session on 13 June, U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein said Sri Lanka should implement the resolution in full, release all political detainees immediately and comply fully with international human rights norms.

Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe have declared no foreign judges are needed and they can resolve problems within the country without outside intervention. Sirisena went to the extent of saying the message of reconciliation should be delivered more to the Sinhala Buddhists in the South than to the Tamils in the North. 

It is important for the international community to use their leverage to ensure Sri Lanka implements what it had agreed to before peers. By cosponsoring the resolution in October 2015, Sri Lanka agreed to a hybrid judicial mechanism comprising a court with both national and international judges.

The resolution cast a responsibility on the Sri Lankan government to reform its domestic law to ensure that it could implement effectively its own commitments. Among other things, the resolution committed Sri Lanka to initiate a high level review of the Prevention of Terrorism Act and its regulations and the Public Security Ordinance Act with a view to repealing them and the formulation of a new security framework fully compliant with international law. So far, no concrete steps have been taken by the government.

According to Colombo’s Daily Mirror, the government would enact three new Acts, the National Security Act, Prevention of Organized Crimes Act to replace the existing Prevention of Terrorism Act, and the Intelligence Act aimed at preventing reemergence of terrorism. The government proposed to incorporate some of the provisions of the National Security Act in the new Constitution to make this basic law. Defense Secretary Karunasena Hettiarachchi said all these legislative measures were still in the formative stage.

Meanwhile, Sri Lanka continues to use the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act to detain individuals without charge despite pledging to revoke it immediately in Geneva in October 2015. Revoking PTA is crucial to protect human rights of ethnic Tamils. India got sucked into the Sri Lankan imbroglio to protect the rights of minority Tamils.

The BJP government by a quirk of events finds itself on the side of the Sinhala majority and China. Sirisena, during a recent stopover in New Delhi, obtained Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s support to his government’s defiance of last year’s UNHRC resolution.

Yi Xianliang, Chinese Ambassador to Sri Lanka, while extending his country’s unqualified support to Sri Lanka in Geneva, advised Colombo to keep foreign judges out of the reconciliation process. After so much bloodshed, the Tamil problem in Sri Lanka is back to square one. 

(Asia News Network/The Statesman)
Editorial

Bajaj Qute..! The death traps will run in the Sri Lankan roads..!

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -18.June.2015, 8.30PM)  Amid the  quarrel   of recent vehicle tax increase   an effort is  being taken by the David Pieris  Motor Company (DPMC) with the association of  short sighted government officials to introduce another aggressive pest into the overcrowded Sri Lankan roads. It is the Quadricycle which was imported somewhere around  Two years back by David Pieris Motor Company. Initially the quadricycle was called Bajaj RE60 and now it has been renamed as Bajaj Qute with the classification  of Small Car. According to the Bajaj Auto India, the  vehicle will be introduced in to 16 countries including the countries in Africa, South America Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Indonesia and Turkey. However while Rajiv Bajaj, CEO of Bajaj Auto India is dreaming on export markets, still the Government of India has not cleared the so called "Small Car" on Indian roads due to the safety concerns as well as the legal issues for introducing this vehicle category in to the Indian vehicle registration regulations.

The Qudricycle or Bajaj RE 60 was not new to Sri Lanka as the David Pieris Motor Company was in a constant struggle to register this vehicle in Sri Lanka during last couple of years. However the effort of the company was not become a success as  disagreements  of  Department of Motor Traffic and Police Traffic Division.   The main concerns of then the two departments were that the vehicle is unsafe and this poor vehicle cannot be given the  registration status as a motor car as DPMC wishes.And most importantly this vehicle category is not included in the present Motor Vehicle Act in Sri Lanka.  Thus unless amending the act, there are no provisions for the registration of this vehicle in Sri Lanka.

However  David Pieris motor company was  trying to convince the DMT officials  in many ways to get the registration of this Quadricycle as a motor car. Now the company has got another leap with the recent increase of tax of the three-wheelers and this time the company has come up  with  a new concept  which has renamed  the Bajaj RE 60 as Bajaj Quet  "Small Car" to hide  the  actual class of their Quadricycle powered by 216 cc single cylinder engine.

According to the  motor vehicle classifications definitions worldwide, there are certain aspects  to be fulfilled qualify as passenger motor car. However the the capability of this vehicle definitely does not  match with these  requirements .

The technical specification of Bajaj Quadricycle are as follows

Engine Displacement - 216.6 cc
Maximum Power - 13 BHP @ 5500 rpm
Maximum Torque - 19.6 NM @ 4000 rpm
Transmission/Gearbox - 5-speed
Top Speed (KMPH) - 70 kmph
Mileage (Certified) - 36 kmpl
Kerb Weight - 400 kg


The specification shows how this vehicle is underpowered and unsafe to drive with passengers (approximately 700Kg  gross weight with 200cc pulling power and maximum 70 kmh speed)

During the last couple of years this vehicle was a  permanent showpiece of the Sri Lankan auto shows to convince the authorities to get the registration in Sri Lanka . However the approval was not granted by the Department of Motor Traffic and Sri Lanka Police due to the incompatibility with the existing regulations.  In fact for the  registration of their motor vehicle in Sri Lanka it is required to amend the motor traffic and other related regulations.. So the question is does Sri Lanka really need this vehicle on our roads and how it contribute to  our economy and society. ?

The most important and annoying thing to consider as Sri Lankans that this vehicle which manufactured in India has not granted its approval for the registration in India. And the matter has now gone to the Supreme Court of India, and   petitioners argues that the vehicle is unsafe for the Indian roads and not to be allowed to register in India. In this context how the David Pieris  decides that this vehicle fits to Sri Lanka. However now this Quadricycle is already here and  government institutions are being continuously lobbied by DPMC  to get the registration  in Sri Lanka .
What is the ethics of this practice ? Are we such a foolish nation ? why the  authorities allow these practices and let our  people to die in these  death traps which have been rejected even by the mother land. Do we need any more  nuisance on Sri Lankan roads on top of the existing Indian origin three wheelers problem ? Who regulates our motor traffic law is that the Department  of Motor Traffic or by the substandard automaker s in India. Where all our low experts have gone ?.

The technical and legislative  problems of these vehicles are , if these vehicles are  given the registration status under the motor car  category,  these death traps will be able to run in the Sri Lankan roads with  maximum 70kmh and 100 kmh speed limits . Are these  vehicles fit to drive at 70 kmh or 100kmph with 200cc motor cycle engine. How they market this vehicle as a small car having fitted with 200cc engine. The other thing that Quadricyles  in the other parts of the world has maximum speed limit with 45kmh and this Quadricycle is said to have 70kmh maximum speed. So this is exceeding the accepted limits of this category and do we allow these  to kill our people on the  roads and pay  our hard earned foreign exchange to the Indian companies for rubbish like this.  

It  is  necessary to investigate that who are the officials  working for the interests of private companies and   how this company has approached the Sri Lankan government authorities to implement their agenda on this uncertified and disputed vehicle in its motherland.  

While the Colombo and other main cities in Sri Lanka is now experiencing a chronic and severe traffic conditions,  who are the foolish officials or politicians trying to introduce another nuisance to our roads. It  is needed to investigate the driving forces behind this  foolish move. In fact this is something more to our popular proverb that,  as these stupids   are trying to bring another woman suffering from flu while still being  married to a women  with cough.

Moreover,  if the Government want to encourage middle income people to buy  a car , doesn’t this futuristic government have any other quality alternatives rather than offering this  odd and shameful option for the people of this country ?.

So what would be the next motor vehicle introduced  in Sri Lanka by the racketeers like this with the support of our institutional stupidity,  Human pulled auto rickshaws… that’s what the only vehicle still we could not see  on our roads,  unlike our regional neighbors.
by Special Correspondent 
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by     (2016-06-18 14:59:12)

Corruptions found in the Sabaragamuwa transport board

Corruptions found in the Sabaragamuwa transport board
Jun 20, 2016
Reports reaching us confirm that the government is losing large revenue due to the illegal activities of the Sabaragamuwa provincial council.
Sabaragamuwa provincial council is losing large money when authorities issue stealthy route licenses bypassing the tender procedures.
Meantime the fuel expenses of the chief ministers vehicle is also borne by the Sabaragamuwa transport board.
Although large money is spent for unnecessary expenses reports confirm that service is obtained from workers without paying the cost of living allowances

A vivid reimagining of Palestinian symbols

“The Loud Silence II,” Ibrahim Al Mozain, acrylic on paper, 40x55cm, 2012.

Nora Parr-17 June 2016

The vibrant and complex works of Gaza-born artist Ibrahim Al Mozain were on exhibit at his first solo Ramallah show in the West Bank city’s Zawyeh Gallery this month.

Al Mozain was born in Rafah refugee camp in 1961 and educated at the School of Visual Theatre in Jerusalem. He currently lives and works in Ramallah, where he remains involved in Palestinian theatre as a director and set designer.

The Loud Silence gathers into one place three distinct phases of the artist’s larger-than-life paintings, which together tell a complicated story of loss and collective transformation.

The layering of symbols brings together poignant Palestinian imagery — martyrs posters, women in traditional robes, and hints of village scenery — and questions gender and sexuality (the mustachioed women, in particular) amid bright, sometimes screaming, colors.

“Untitled” by Ibrahim Al Mozain, watercolor on paper, 64x48cm, 2005.

Painting of three elongated and abstracted facesWeaving in an ancient Greek myth of sex, blindness and prophecy, the works revive and reimagine perennial symbols in Palestinian art. From the mother, to the martyr, and the idyllic landscape, Al Mozain’s work asks: what do these images symbolize today?

Agonized waiting

Beginning with early explorations of the body, Al Mozain makes a first study of faces. These figures haunt each and every canvas, and once perfected are used within revealing reinterpretations of what are now familiar Palestinian symbols of waiting women, hilly landscapes and hero-fighters.

Al Mozain’s six-panel “Solitude” (2009) perhaps best exemplifies the early work on layered themes. 
Ghostly faces of simple and almost identical figures, represented by a shadowy silhouetted bust, peer out, separated from each other by the empty space between the canvases. Mouths are closed, except for one in mid-scream, and even when two or three figures float into the frame, they are alone with no sign of an interaction beyond bodies in space, eyes looking past the viewer.

Expressions of connection-in-separation and agonized waiting characterize this early phase, and the shadowy figure comes to form the basic outlines of all the characters who appear in the later works of the collection.

“Teresias” by Ibrahim Al Mozain, oil on canvas, 120x75cm, 2012.

Painting of woman with mustache standing in front of abstracted birdBearing mustaches and at other times not, sometimes a woman, sometimes a man, the now ubiquitous solitary face makes the perfect canvas for Al Mozain’s exploration of layered dualities.
The transition from study to theme is played out in Al Mozain’s 2012 works.

The child “Hero” (2012), playing on the shores of Gaza, a boat listing behind him at sea, shadows the face of the women holding boats and fish in “The Loud Silence I” (2012). These women offer the fruits of the sea as the child watches — a new Handala. But unlike Naji al-Ali’s iconic cartoon of a refugee boy perpetually facing away from the page toward an unseen Palestine, Al Mozain’s hero faces the viewer.

The child’s figure stands in not only for the loss of a homeland writ large as al-Ali’s Handala does, but for Al Mozain the figure of the boy becomes the template for each and every one of his later characters. Rather than a boy experiencing perpetually the loss of a homeland, these figures embody the loss and own it as they recreate national mythologies to better represent the present day.

Al Mozain’s silent figure is transfigured in the subsequent canvases of “The Loud Silence” sequence. First he stands looking at the viewer, but in “The Loud Silence II” he disappears, referred to by the image of the fish hung on the wall of the salon occupied by two waiting women. They wait for the fish that the “hero” bears witness to in the first of the canvases.

In “The Loud Silence III,” the framed image of the fish transforms into the framed image of the martyr hung on a wall inhabited by a man and woman. In the foreground of this last panel in the series, the face of the child (who is now the fish and the martyr) reappears, hovering in the foreground.

Mythical prophecy

The figure makes yet another transformation as it is built into the artist’s thinking on the Greek figure of Tiresias in a series of works beginning with “Underworld I” and “Underworld II” (both 2009) to “Jealousy” (2014).

In these, the recurrent face becomes that of the mythological character. Turned from man into woman and back again, Tiresias, the blind prophet, embodied multiple dualities as the man/woman made his/her way through a Greek world of myth, gods and creatures with the strange ability to understand the song of birds. In his canvases, Al Mozain plays with the elements of the myth by painting full-figured women, birds on shoulders and thick black mustaches on their faces.

In the myth as well as the canvases, figures come to represent a series of previously unconnected symbols: 
for Tiresias, the male and the female, the blind and the sighted. For the face of Al Mozain, distinctions between what is traditionally present in Palestinian art becomes inverted, sublimated into what was once absent but now made visible.

The waiting woman becomes, in “Tainted Spring” (2014) and “Desire” (2014), the waiting man. In the songbirds that dot canvases of many works in the collection the natural landscape is made to speak, not only symbolizing traces of the past but mythical prophecy for the future.

These layered and inverted symbols push viewers to think beyond static categories, from those of gender to the at times rigid construct of national imagery. They demand the questions: what happens to Palestinian imagery when the waiting woman becomes the waiting man? How does loss change when it must incorporate these shifts in symbols, the disappearance of categories?

Then, most alluringly: what sort of productive myth emerges from these layered questions, and how might that myth see Palestine and Palestinians through the coming phases?

All images copyright the artist and courtesy of Zawyeh Gallery.

Nora Parr holds a PhD in Arabic Literature from the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), 
University of London, and is currently in Jerusalem as a Research Fellow at the Kenyon Institute.

Bad boys not Boko Haram: how the media misinterprets African violence


Residents in Niger have rejected a recent report on youth clashes they say is reductive and portrays them as ‘animals’ 
People demonstrate against Charlie Hebdo in Niger’s capital, Niamey. Zinder saw many similar protests. Photograph: Boureima Hama/AFP/Getty Images 
 
Ibrahim Yahaya Ibrahim in Zinder for African Arguments-Monday 20 June 2016 
 
For the past six years, the city of Zinder in Niger has been gripped by American-inspired gang violence, a phenomenon international researchers and local journalists have struggled to understand. 
 
The street violence is popularly referred to as the Yan palais. In the local Hausa dialect, “palais” is a word for young people who mimic the clothes, drugs, music and sexualised culture of their western counterparts.

But while some journalists have offered insight into what’s happening and why, others have been accused of exaggerating the violence and over-simplifying the causes.

A recent 4,000-word report in the US publication Foreign Policy described Zinder as devastated by “days and nights of brutality”, street fights, murder, rape and armed robbery. There are “cut bodies”, “slit throats”, “crushedbones” and machetes “dull from years of cutting into bodies”, wrote journalist Jillian Keenan earlier this year.

But for those who know Zinder, the article presents a distorted reality. I recently translated the story, titled Dead Man’s Market and the boy gangs of Niger, into Hausa, and shared it with residents in the city, including members of the palais. Many claimed they didn’t recognise what they read.

“It was true that there were fights between palais youths, and people did use machetes, and there were deaths, but her description is much exaggerated,” said Ohlala, a well known palais leader. “There were certainly less than a dozen deaths in the whole five years [from 2010 to 2015] when violence was the most intense,” he added.

Oumoul Kheir, a local resident in her 50s, asked: ““Are we animals? How do these people think of us? People do not slit other people’s throats just like that.”
The author discussing youth violence with members of palais super mecs. Photograph: Ibrahim Yahaya Ibrahim 
 

DMX in Zinder


There is no doubt that there has been a rise in urban violence in Zinder over the past five years.
In 2009, the city’s police registered 258 acts of violence. This number increased in 2010 and 2011 to 551 and 952 respectively. The number of reported violence incidents peaked in 2012 at 2,016, before dropping to 1,243 in 2013.

This rise is grave, but you could argue that it’s notable only because thecity was historically peaceful.
Another mistake the article makes, as many have before, is to try and draw a conclusive link to Islamist militancy, arguing that because of local poverty, the young gangs are potential recruits for Boko Haram, which is based in neighbouring Nigeria.

In reality Zinder’s youths are inspired by American gangs. The city’s graffiti culture references DMX, Bad Boyz, Outlaw, Black Power and Gangsters City, while many of them sport baggy trousers, dreadlocks and mohawks.

According to the article’s logic, it must be puzzling that a “poor” and “dusty” city like Zinder, with a large Muslim population and located in the confluence of Boko Haram, Islamic State (Isis) and al-Qaeda, is not teaming with jihadi cells.

Perhaps the article should instead focus on the differences between Zinder and other towns in the Sahel region that do have this problem: why are some inspired by western gang culture and others look to Isis?

Veiled colonialism

 

Descriptions of the Yan palais phenomenon reflect a wider problem in western coverage of Africa, much of which features veiled colonial discourse imagining primitive and savage populations.

The catalogue of shocking images and stories of war, famine and disaster coming from the continent make the narratives in stories like Foreign Policy’s seem immediately understandable.

The article ends on a note of hope about the decline of the violence, but the only actor credited with playing a role is theinternational United Nations agency for children.The efforts of Zinder’s residents, whose lives are most affected, go largely unmentioned.

Government efforts to improve policing are omitted, as are job training programmes and the Fadas and Palais Movement for Youth Promotion, which offers young people a peaceful venue to settle disputes.
Religious leaders who organise public prayers and preach for peace are also overlooked, as are the parent associations and women’s movements who advocate for better education.

Once again, Africans appear as the victims, lacking the initiative to address their own problems, waiting desperately for others to come to their rescue.

A version of this article first appeared on African Arguments