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

Sunday, July 3, 2016

Time to Overcome Stiff Regional Competition

The following article based on the remarks by the writer at the Chief Guest at 177th Annual General Meeting of the Ceylon Chamber of Commerce, on July 29, 2016 

Athul_K

by Atul Keshap

( July 1, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Sri Lanka’s exciting transformation began in January 2015, when voters gave their mandate to President Sirisena to implement a reform agenda aimed at restoring democracy and human rights, establishing transparent governance, and rooting out corruption. The Sri Lankan people resoundingly endorsed this reform agenda again last August when they elected a parliamentary coalition committed to democracy, good governance, and economic growth under the leadership of Prime Minister Wickremesinghe.

With its renewed commitment to rule of law, equal administration of justice and economic opportunity for all, the government of Sri Lanka is moving beyond the acrimony of the past toward a future that is inclusive, just, peaceful, and prosperous. The international community has embraced this positive vision and extended its considerable support, providing enormous dividends for the Sri Lankan people.

Today, ladies and gentlemen, it pleases me to report that American relations with Sri Lanka are at an historic high. As President Sirisena and Prime Minister Wickremesinghe lead their government in moving ahead with needed constitutional reform, national reconciliation, and fulfilling their United Nations commitments, the United States will remain steadfast in our support of efforts to rebuild the economy, advance good governance, and ensure that all Sri Lankans can enjoy equal rights, equal opportunities and the full benefits of post-conflict development and prosperity, regardless of their ethnicity or origins.

American Partnership with Sri Lanka

The United States has provided development and humanitarian assistance to Sri Lanka for 60 years, improving countless lives. We have made substantial investments in every sector from agriculture to enterprise development, education, healthcare, energy and natural resources, good governance and humanitarian activities.

The case against Devolution – 2


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Major General Denzil Kobbekaduwa and others during operation liberation

by Izeth Hussain- 

The most cogent case for arguing that India bears the major responsibility for helping us to get out of the ethnic imbroglio consists of the developments that took place in 1987. I dealt with this case some time ago in a detailed article, so that I will do no more here than set out the essentials. According to the authoritative historian K.M. de Silva’s Sri Lanka and the defeat of the LTTE (2012) our troops led by Major General Cyril Ranatunge were well on the way to defeating the LTTE rebellion through the Vaddamarachi operation and its expected aftermath. That was prevented by the diktat of the Indian Government. It therefore undeniably bears part of the major responsibility for the continuation of the war for a further twenty two years, during which period 25,000 of our troops and 75,000 Tamils perished.

The other part of the major responsibility was borne by President Jayewardene who made himself the willing accomplice of the Indians. He virtually acquiesced in the lie that there were near-famine conditions in Jaffna and that death by starvation was imminent, whereas in fact there were severe food shortages which could have been easily corrected. There was no reason therefore to abandon the Vaddamarachi operation. He could have insisted that the continuation of that operation was possible without causing avoidable death and suffering, and that the SL Government was doing no more than carrying out its primordial duty in putting down an armed rebellion by force of arms. That argument would most certainly have been accepted by the international community and India would not have dared intervene. Instead he invited the IPKF to come in and the rest alas is history.

I am trying to establish two points at this juncture. I believe that Rajiv Gandhi acted with the best of intentions in intervening in Sri Lanka in 1987. In his political naivety he probably expected that the IPKF would quickly tame the Tigers, after which a political solution would follow without much difficulty, and then he would be praised by all sides for having avoided all the death and suffering that would have ensued from the Vaddamarachi operation. Instead, gory horror followed for twenty two years. He probably ignored the advice of his Foreign Office. I recall meeting the Indian Ambassador in Moscow after the LTTE broke the ceasefire on April 19, 1995. He had been the Foreign Office’s Advisor to Rajiv Gandhi, in which capacity he had headed five rounds of talks with Prabhakaran. He had become convinced that Prabhakaran was a psychopath, and that there could never be any political solution as long as the latter headed the LTTE. I recall also that RG’s former Foreign Secretary Venkateswaran observed about the Peace Accords, "They will blow up in our faces". I believe that it was the political naivety of RG and his associates that led to the 1987 intervention, not a sinister neo-imperialist drive. If it had been the latter, India would not have agreed to the withdrawal of the IPKF forces with nothing to show for the 1,200 men who had been killed here.

The second point I want to establish is that the Peace Accords of 1987 had no moral legitimacy behind them. They were not backed by the people who were not consulted through their representatives. The most important determinant behind Parliamentary decisions, in any case, were the undated letters of resignation which could be used by President JR to compel Parliamentary votes just as he desired them, regardless of the wishes of the people. To this day the widest segment of the people regard the Peace Accords as something that was imposed on us by foreign powers, and the resultant Provincial Councils as not much more than a criminal waste of the people’s resources. The moral grounds for rejecting 13 A are very compelling.

What can India now do to help us surmount the ethnic imbroglio? The imbroglio takes the following concrete form: the Government and the TNA could come to terms over a modified form of 13 A but thereafter the Government may find it impossible to deliver on that. To help us out, India could jettison 13 A on two grounds. Firstly, 13 A has no moral legitimacy as I have argued above. Secondly, the international community does not recognize any right of self-determination outside a colonial context, neither a right to set up a separate state nor to a measure of devolution. What would be the position of our Tamils if 13 A is set aside? Apart from the problems that have to be resolved consequent to the war, the position of the Tamils would be no different from that of our Muslims. As I have shown in the first part of this article, the problems confronting the Muslims are not of an intolerable order, not of an order that compels emigration. They are problems that can be resolved within a unitary state, without any devolution at all. My model for dealing with ethnic minorities is what has proved eminently successful in the West and elsewhere: a fully functioning democracy together with adequate safeguards for the legitimate interests of the ethnic minorities. Our Tamil expatriates are living quite happily under that dispensation, without any devolution at all, in several countries abroad. I see no reason why that should not be possible in Sri Lanka as well.

There are other arguments that can be adduced to show that Sri Lanka is peculiarly unsuited to devolution as the solution to its ethnic problem. It is surely wrong to think of devolution as the panacea for all ethnic ills, because it should be obvious enough that the devolution that may be successful in one place may prove to be disastrous elsewhere. In the case of Sri Lanka I have in mind what might be called a situational factor. We have the seeming anomaly of the conquered, the Tamils, demanding a wide measure of devolution from the conqueror, the Sinhalese. This anomaly is possible only because India has come to play a decisive role over our ethnic problem. Our Tamils are a minority in the Sri Lankan context but regionally – taking count of the seventy million Tamils in Tamil Nadu – they are in the majority, and behind that majority is the potential power of Delhi. That potential power can sometimes be deployed decisively in favor of the Tamils, as happened in the aftermath of the 1983 pogrom. Our Tamils could continue to hope that the huge asymmetry of power between the Tamils and the Sinhalese will count in their favour some day. It is a situation in which a wide measure of devolution could whet the appetite for more and more, until there is a confederal arrangement that would amount to a de facto Eelam.

Another reason why Sri Lanka seems to be peculiarly unsuited to devolution on an ethnic basis is that both of our major ethnic groups, the Sinhalese and the Tamils, seem to be peculiarly prone to racism. By racism I mean essentially the drive to treat the Other as inferior. Practically all ethnic groups can be expected to produce their quota of racists; they are usually a minority in numbers; and the majority in numbers in each ethnic group manages to contain and control them. The peculiarity in Sri Lanka is that the racists who seem to be no more than a lunatic fringe move to center stage at moments of ethnic crisis, and it is they who call the shots thereafter. It is a process by which every attempt at ethnic accommodation in Sri Lanka has been defeated over the decades. We might expect the same process to take over in forthcoming months. The way out is to move from ethno-democracy to citizen democracy in which the individual has an unmediated relationship with the State and the ethnic factor is downplayed. It is the model that has proved successful, by and large, in containing ethnic problems in the West. Very probably emphasizing ethnicity by allowing devolution on an ethnic basis will aggravate our ethnic problem, not solve it.

My essential argument in this article has been as follows. India bears the major moral responsibility for helping Sri Lanka move away from the ethnic imbroglio. This can only be done by jettisoning 13 A, and indeed the very idea of finding a political solution through devolution. The best way forward would be through the adoption of the Western model of a fully functioning democracy with adequate safeguards for the ethnic minorities. If, on the contrary, India insists on the full implementation of 13 A and even federalism, and the ethnic problem gets endlessly protracted, the question will arise whether India is acting in terms of a hidden agenda. Our ethnic problem will then have to be situated in the context of the fate of small nations in a new world order which could have as its obverse side a new imperialism. (Concluded).

izethhussain@gmail.com

CB Governor controversy ends on a most happy note !

President and P.M. concur to appoint Dr. Coomaraswamy a most illustrious economic expert

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -03.June.2016, 8.20AM) The government of good governance once again proved beyond  doubt that it is a reign that bows to the wishes of the people by appointing Dr. Indrajith Coomaraswamy ,a most illustrious economics science expert Sri Lanka ever produced , as the Central Bank Governor.
This decision was taken following discussions between the president and Prime Minister (P.M.) last morning.
Dr. Coomaraswamy born in Sri Lanka on 3 rd April 1950 is the brother of Radhika Coomaraswamy who is the representative of the civil organizations in the present  Independent constitutional council. Between 1973 and 1989 he was a staff officer at  the Central Bank data and economics research division  , and had also worked at the investigation  division. From 1981 to 1989 , he was an advisor in the ministry of finance and planning . In the final phase , he worked as  the Director in the economic affairs division of Commonwealth secretariat located in London . He was also assistant Director at the Commonweath secretariat.
He received his early education at Royal College and  at London Harrow College . Dr. Coomaraswamy secured his first degree at the most prestigious University in London – the world renowned Cambridge University which produces the most civilized famous citizens . He obtained his doctorate in economics science at Sussex University a leading University in England. Even though there were plenty of jobs available to him in England he preferred to serve his motherland and discharge his responsibilities towards the nation  by joining the Central bank of Sri  Lanka. 
While Coomaraswamy was studying in Cambridge University , he was an ‘A’ grade cricketer and was in the Rugby team of the University . After returning to Sri Lanka in 1973 and securing employment he was the captain of the  Sri Lanka Rugby team in 1974.
It is specially noteworthy that the appointment of world recognized economic expert as the Central Bank Governor has been welcomed by one and all. Among them is Dinesh Gunawardena.
P.M. Ranil Wickremesinghe’s flexibility at the right times in the end must be appreciated by one and  all. Though the former Governor was his best friend , yet in the end yielding to the wishes of the people despite it is most laudable and admirable vis a vis the conduct and  attitude of corrupt and crooked defeated Rajapakse regime. 
The P.M. agreeing to stall the extension of the term of Arjun Mahendran , and Thilak Marapone another  close friend of P.M. resigning immediately as  soon as an accusing finger was pointed at him must go down in history as remarkable achievements for good governance. These actions are in contradistinction   to those of the  corrupt rascals and scoundrels of the previous regime who robbed the country wholesale , yet refused to step down even after criminal  charges were filed against them.

The ace Rajapakse rogues trying to score plus points…

During the recent controversy surrounding the appointment of a new central bank Governor , the ace ‘rogues on behalf of rogues’ sought to exploit the situation to achieve political mileage. This attempt was most deplorable , despicable and detestable when considering the appointment of P.B. Jayasundara as the Finance Secretary during the Rajapakse regime’s ‘nefarious decade’
While the whole country was opposed to this appointment, the Supreme court too  delivered a verdict that he should be dismissed from the post of finance ministry secretary The SC also prohibited him from being appointed to any post in the State service. This verdict was based on his hedging soodhuwa involvement whereby the country lost many millions of rupees of pubic funds. (Owing to  this fraud , the country is still paying for the sins committed then by the Rajapakse regime). Yet , Machiavellian Mahinda Rajapakse , after the judge who gave the verdict went on retirement , re -appointed  Jayasundara to the post of secretary, Finance ministry . Believe it or not despite being the president of the country at that time , Mahinda took the most unlawful and obnoxious step to most uncaringly and contemptuously cast the SC verdict into the dustbin.
From that point of time all the rackets and illicit deals were indulged in  by Mahinda in collusion with this accomplished and confirmed rogue. Together with the other crook Ajith Nivard Cabraal , Jayasundara organized the Greek Bond racket which caused a loss of a staggering Rs. 70 billion to the country ! What is even most shocking is , though the people were vociferously clamoring to sack these two rogues , Machiavellian Mahinda never lifted a finger in that direction to sack them. The  rascals and rogues who went in processions now demanding the removal of Arjun Mahendran , and who even got injured with the police barrier falling on them , did not demand the dismissal of the Mahinda’s rogues at that time. All of them got together to rescue each other. 
In the circumstances discarded Mahinda seeking to score plus points exploiting Mahendran’s issue is a most laughable matter 
A most notorious  wheeler dealer who is associated with a so called anti corrupt organization , a monk and  an NGO racketeer cum serpent Shiral Lakthileke thanking the Rajapakses clearly proves the aims and objects of their ‘anti corruption’ efforts. If anybody like this wheeler dealer thanks Rajapakse representing a  whole  den  of most notorious rogues over the elimination of a single rogue , that individual must be subjected to a psychiatric evaluation.
 
Dr. Coomaraswamy will be taking over duties  as governor of Central bank from next Monday.
This is a perfect illustration that when two leaders of two main parties have formed a united government of good governance, and themselves  as president and P.M of the country and are well  intentioned  , nothing but good only can result to the country. The people must by now clearly understand this.  
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by     (2016-07-03 02:52:55)

Interview with Indrajit Coomaraswamy


Indrajit_C

QIndrajit, please, could I ask, with reference to Sri Lanka, was the politics and the civil war environment in Sri Lanka in the 1990s and your own nationality in any way problematic to your work in ComSec?

IC: No, not at all. You know, I’m an ethnic Tamil, but all the different governments in Sri Lanka were very supportive while I was in the Secretariat. The problems at the UN Human Rights Council and the accountability issues, as well as the controversy regarding the hosting of CHOGM, came to the fore after I left ComSec. I left EAD in October 2008 and the war ended in May 2009. There was no backwash effect, even though I came back to serve as Interim Director of the Social Transformation Programmes Division for six months in 2010.

( July 3, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Interview with Dr Indrajit Coomaraswamy, conducted 23rd September 2014 in London as part of the Commonwealth Oral History Project. The project aims to produce a unique digital research resource on the oral history of the Commonwealth since 1965 through sixty oral history interviews with leading figures in the recent history of the organisation. It will provide an essential research tool for anyone investigating the history of the Commonwealth and will serve to promote interest in and understanding of the organisation. Biography: Coomaraswamy, Dr Indrajit. 1950- . Educated at Cambridge University and the University of Sussex. Staff Officer, Central Bank of Sri Lanka, 1973-89, serving in Economic Research, Statistics and Bank Supervision Divisions, with a period of secondment to the Ministry of Finance and Planning. Joined the Commonwealth Secretariat in 1990 as Chief Officer, Economics, in the International Finance and Markets Section, later becoming Director of the Economic Affairs Division and Deputy Director, Secretary General’s Office, before leaving ComSec in 2008. Returned as Interim Director, Social Transformation Programmes Division, Commonwealth Secretariat, in 2010. Special Advisor, Galleon Group.


President calls the shots: Dr. Indrajit Coomaraswamy Central Bank Governor

  • PM, Malik called for meeting yesterday to be told of decision; Ranil agrees though he  preferred Charitha Ratwatte
  • Sirisena’s strong stand strengthens his position within SLFP and hold on Govt., VAT revision, revolutionary measures to liberalise economy
  • CID acts against Sajin Vass after demand by civic action groups; shocking details of alleged extortion; 15 bank accounts for Rs. 610 million
By Our Political Editor-Sunday, July 03, 2016
The Sunday Times Sri LankaPresident Maithripala Sirisena yesterday appointed Dr. Indrajit Coomaraswamy a renowned diplomat and economist, as the Governor of the Central Bank — ending weeks of speculation over who will take the post.
The move which climaxed a behind-the-scenes drama this week had pitted the two key players of the Government – the United National Party (UNP) and the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) — on a virtual collision course.
The first intimation of Dr. Coomaraswamy’s appointment came in the President’s twitter account. It said: “After consulting all parties relevant, I appointed Dr. Indrajit Coomaraswamy to head the Central Bank of Sri Lanka.”
Ahead of the appointment, Sirisena met Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and Development Strategies and International Trade Minister Malik Samarawickrema last morning. He conveyed his decision to appoint Dr. Coomaraswamy. The Premier agreed and Minister Samarawickrema also agreed to release Dr. Coomaraswamy who was serving as Advisor in his Ministry.
Premier Wickremesinghe told the Sunday Times: “Dr Coomaraswamy is a capable person. He comes in at a time when there will be a new Foreign Exchange Act, a Financial and Business Centre (at the Colombo Port City), and measures to strengthen Bank Regulations.” He said the country needed a person who could interact with the international community “when we are opening ourselves to the outside world.”
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe accompanied by outgoing Central Bank Governor Arjuna Mahendran is seen on Wednesday leaving the Central Bank where he and President Maithripala Sirisena discussed the appointment of a new CB Governor.


PM’s letter on Thursday
Aggravating the situation was an urgent letter Prime Minister Wickremesinghe wrote to President Sirisena on Thursday. It was on this day (June 30) that Arjuna Mahendran ceased to be Governor. He had assumed office on January 26, 2015 after the resignation, just after the presidential election, of the previous incumbent Ajith Nivard Cabraal. Mahendran served the remainder of Cabraal’s term.

Appoint A Pro Bono Advisory Council To The Monetary Board!


Colombo Telegraph
By Hema Senanayake –July 2, 2016
Hema Senanayake
Hema Senanayake
A new Governor to the central bank would be appointed soon. I am not sure who he or she is going to be. But what I am sure is that if the new governor thinks that this is a job he can do fairly easily with currently serving members of theMonetary Board and top bureaucrats of the institution and with the help of IMF economists then he or she is mistaken. Many economists and interested intellectuals including many lay readers on the subject have awakened to this truth now.
One of the readers of Colombo Telegraph, commenting on one of my recent articles had observed that given the mess … now entrenched in the Central Bank, it would need someone with extra-ordinary ability to be appointed as the governor. The extra ordinary ability which he was referring must be about the theoretical and practical know-how in regard to managing the country’s monetary infrastructure with a view to achieve the best possible economic growth for the wellbeing of our people.
Assuming that a new governor would be appointed to the central bank, in my view for the most responsible job in our governmental system, I invite him to think outside the box through which he may be able to develop the expected extra-ordinary ability. In order to think wisely and outside the box he may need to listen to some near extra-ordinary intellectuals who have submitted their analyses relentlessly in the recent past in order to put the central bank on correct path. Those people think outside the box and work outside the establishment.
As such I would propose that the government must immediately appoint a pro bono advisory council to the Monetary Board under which the Central Bank functions as its operational arm. This kind of advisory council exists even in the United States. It advises the Federal Reserve Board which is equivalent to our Monetary Board. The said advisory council is named as The Federal Advisory Council (FAC). Its function is defined as follows: “FAC, which is composed of twelve representatives of the banking industry, consults with and advises the Board on all matters within the Board’s jurisdiction.” (Official website, Federal Reserve)
Such a council, possibly with a fewer number of members, is badly needed for Sri Lanka. Yet, this must be a pro bono council and this is important due to two reasons. First, some serious economists with integrity do not want to get remunerated by political masters. Secondly, when the council is on pro bono basis there won’t be any unqualified friends of politicians who would be interested to get appointed. I believe, there are qualified Sri Lankan economists with intellectual integrity who could be appointed for the council.
I am serious on this suggestion. Why? Forget about bond scams, yet the central bank has been at low ebb professionally in managing monetary infrastructure and advising on fiscal policy to the government. Let me justify my argument with citing just two real examples. One example is to prove the weaknesses of existing system or the establishment which weakness we want to eradicate by appointing a pro bono advisory council to the Monetary Board. The other is to prove the lack of economic wisdom on the part of IMF economists so that if anybody thinks that IMF economists can advise us accurately then he or she might understand that such thinking is not close to reality.

Sri Lanka: We lock them up and throw away the key

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( July 3, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Judges and magistrates who do not understand the Bail Act are contributing to dire overcrowding in prisons that sometimes hold close to twice as many inmates as they are designed to house, law reform activists say.

Statistics show that while prisons should hold 11,762 inmates, in 2015 they had a daily average of 16,000 to 19,000 with a daily average population of 8,406 remand prisoners.

For every convicted prisoner there are three remand prisoners in jail. The annual admission for the year 2015 is 113,734 of which 89,586 were remand prisoners. Only 24,148 were convicted by a court.

Some prisoners are awaiting decisions from appeals, others are awaiting trials/ cases postponed and have been granted bail but are still locked in due to rigid bail conditions that they have no capacity to fulfil.

Lal Wijenaike, Chairman of the Committee on Public Representations on Constitutional Reforms, said prisons were crowded because remand prisoners were kept behind bars for long periods. Even those who have committed minor offences are kept for two to four weeks without bail. They can be easily sent out on bail,” he said.

Mr. Wijenaike maintained that a person should be denied bail only if s/he were violent and posed a threat to society or had a history of previous offences or might abscond.

About 10 percent of those arrested and remanded were convicted. “There is a serious flaw in the law,” Mr. Wijenaike said. “It is important to change the attitude of society and judges. Even young people and married men are being kept in remand. There is a dire need for the law to change.”

Mr. Wijenaike said the judges’ interpretation of the Bail Act was wrong and the country needed a new Act.
He believes judges do not have the correct understanding of the Bail Act, leading to situations where, say, a person is given a six-month sentence after trial but has already served over 18 months to two years in remand.
Mr. Wijenaike further said the public’s attitude towards the accused should change. ”If the case is not concluded the suspect is not guilty. The person may be enlarged on bail,” he said.

A senior human rights lawyer, Kalyananda Thiranagama, is a voice crying out in the wilderness for the rights of prisoners. He said he has been pointing out unlawful sentences and procedural anomalies in the criminal system for several years.

Illegal jail sentences are issued by magistrates covering up to 30 years, he said. According to the Penal Code Act (PCA) a magistrate court can give a sentence not exceeding four years. “But we find them announcing over 10, 12 sometimes up to 30 years. This is illegal,” Mr. Thiranagama said.

He said judges and the lawyers were aware of this but were ignoring the issue. Consequently, prisoners stayed in prisons without Legal Aid for months, if not for years. “This has been happening for the last 35 years, since 1981, resulting in crowding of prisons,” he said.

The Judicial Services Commission (JSC) rejected these claims. The commission’s Secretary, Pradeep Jayatilake, said suspects were charged according to varying statutes of the Penal Code and if there were any complaints the JSC would take them up.

The Lawyers for Human Rights and Development has taken up the cases of 25 prisoners and is contesting their sentences before the Court of Appeal. The prisoners have been picked from the Bogambara, Kalutara and Ratnapura prisons.

Mr. Tiranagama also pointed out that prisoners have to spend long sentences in prisons when they have multiple offences and judges omit to state their sentences should run concurrently. Consequently, the Prisons Department added up the sentences and incarcerated the prisoner for the term of consecutive sentences.

Prisons Commissioner-General H.M.N.C. Danasinghe said in instances where a prisoner has convictions on multiple counts the file is sent to the magistrate for advice. But if the magistrate does not reply the sentences are calculated in consecutive terms. “We do not have authority to determine what is correct,” he said. He said that under 300 of the CCPA only sentences given on the same day could be considered as concurrent sentences.

The Legal Aid Commission (LAC) has also stepped forward to help these unfortunate victims. Chairman Rohan Sahabandu said Legal Aid was being given to most prisoners who lack legal assistance. “The Prisons Department writes seeking our assistance for prisoners locked in for a long time. We get a list from the Prisons Department and help out those who need assistance with bail. We take cases such as maintenance, divorces, domestic violence,” he said.

LAC senior member U.R. de Silva said sometimes the police and the public alike want an accused to be kept behind bars. When there is a public outcry to keep the accused in prison saying that s/he poses a threat to society but the magistrate grants bail, the magistrate is suspected of being partial.

He said confessions made to the police or to the media are not acceptable by the law as there are concerns that they might have been made under duress. Under section 25/26 of the Penal Code only confessions made in courts are accepted. Exceptional circumstances would be under Prevention of Terrorism Act or under emergency regulation where the confessions are made in the presence of an Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) or a higher-ranking officer.

According to the LAC there are currently about 956 suspects who have been given bail and yet languishing in jail as they cannot fulfil the bail conditions. This includes 140 from the Mahara Prison, 119 at the Magazine Prison and 100 at Bogambara.

The Bail Act, Mr. De Silva said, has no uniformity and as such sentences passed are completely at the discretion of the magistrate. When there are multiple offences tried in different courts, one court might grant bail and another does not, depending on the attitude of the judges. Sometimes two different orders are given – one to remand and other to grant bail. “We are trying to bring in guidelines so that justice will be served in the courthouse,” he said.

Another factor that hinders bail is the complexity of the bail conditions. Bail conditions require that the sureties the suspects produce are high-ranking public servants. Many remand prisoners are unable to produce these sureties and languish in jail. Even if they find such a guarantor that person has to reside in the area where the incident occurred. Their Identity Cards are checked and in addition have to produce a letter from the Grama Sevaka confirming that s/he is a resident of the area.

Additionally, the person giving the surety has to possess property worth Rs. 500,000 or over and has to obtain a certificate from the Grama Sevaka to this effect. To get this certificate a payment of 1.5 per cent of the value of the property has to be paid as fee. Sometimes the passport of the guarantor is impounded.
With such restrictions it is seldom that people come forward to help the accused. This has resulted in many people being kept in jail for a longer period than the offence entails.

Another problem faced is the practice of requiring the accused to report to the police station in the area where the incident took place. This also breeds corruption where police officers are bribed for favours.
Mr. de Silva said the LAC had put forward many suggestions to circumvent these problems where the persons on bail could visit the closest police station to mark his attendance.

In non-summary cases including rape, murder and child abuse the Magistrates Courts and the High Court often send the file to the Attorney-General’s office for advice. The “no date cases”, as they are called, very often get misplaced and the accused languishes in remand jail for months or years. There is no one assigned to follow up the cases.

In other instances, the police sometimes fail to submit the Information Book (IB) to the AG’s office. The IB is important as the Attorney-General’s office acts on the evidence logged in the book to make decisions.

Sad list of forgotten suspects behind bars

Among the 126 “no-dates” cases languishing in prisons is case No. NS 168 at the Kaduwela Magistrate’s Court where, although police have forwarded the Information Book (IB) to the Attorney-General’s office the accused has been in remand prison for the past 10 years (since September 2006) with the Attorney-General still to make a decision on processing the case, the Legal Aid Commission (LAC) said.

In another non-summary case (No. 2924 at Walasmulla Magistrate’s Court) the accused has been in remand since 1994, for 12 years. There is no clue about the whereabouts of his file. The LAC is trying to trace it. The police have not forwarded the IB extract to the Attorney-General’s office.

In case No. 28158 at the Udugama Magistrate’s Court the suspect, who was arrested for murder in 2006, is still in remand. The LAC has requested details from the Attorney-General and has also written to the Magistrate’s Court and to the police to find out the exact position of the charge.

In case No.98305 at the Mahiyangana Magistrate’s Court the subject was arrested in 2008 and is still in Badulla remand.

LAC senior member U.R. de Silva said that there were several cases from 2010 involving people arrested under the Prevention of Terrorism Act, Emergency Regulations, and for the possession of narcotics.
The Penal Code requires that a maximum period a suspect could be kept in remand prison is two years, after which s/he should be released. The LAC said about 1,195 people are in jails for small offences and cannot pay fines.

“These people are unnecessarily in remand. The crowding in prisons can be solved easily. Stringent bail orders should be relaxed and non-summary cases heard quickly,” Mr. de Silva said.

Most importantly, judges had to be educated in the law and their attitude changed. “The bail is in the law and there is a provision for bail order,” he said.

Yahapaalanaya’ gives position to Kanthi who cheated money from ‘Deyata Kirula’

Yahapaalanaya’ gives position to Kanthi who cheated money from ‘Deyata Kirula’

Jul 02, 201
Coming to power with a big hullabaloo to eliminate thieves, frauds and the corrupt, the ‘Yahapaalana’ regime, too is proving to be no different, or rather worse, on that account. There is news that a female additional secretary of a ministry, who was accused of abusing state funds and imprisoned during the Rajapaksa regime, has been reinstated by the ‘Yahapaalanaya’. This is about her.

In 2013, the ‘Deyata Kirula’ exhibition was held at the premises of Hardy Technical College in Ampara, and its organizing chairman was minister Ranjith Siyambalapitiya. Additional secretary to Telecommunications and Information Technology Ministry Kanthi Gunawardena did the coordination work as its CEO. She had given a Rs. 17,700,000 contract to build lavatories at the exhibition premises to the husband of her younger sister. Kanthi herself filled the tender application. Furthermore, the application from the registrar of companies to register a company to the name of her brother-in-law, who did not have a construction firm to his name until then, too, was filled by her in her own handwriting.
After making the payment for the hurriedly registered company of her brother-in-law, it became known that Rs. 15,000,000 of that money had gone to Kanthi’s bank account. She had not at least taken steps to be careful in this fraudulent act, maybe because of the political influence she had enjoyed at the time.
But, in 2014 itself, the frauds in ‘Deyata Kirula’ came to be revealed, and Kanthi was arrested, produced before the Colombo magistrate’s court and remanded on charges of abuse of state funds. She was released on bail six months later. The best part of the story comes in 2016.
Under the ‘Yahapaalana’ government that came to power with tons of promises to eliminate corruption, Kanthi was reinstated by the Public Services Commission secretary Gamini Seneviratne, as an additional secretary to the Land Reclamation Ministry. The case against her is pending before courts. She is still on bail. Not even a disciplinary inquiry has been conducted against her. With the blessings of ‘Yahapaalanaya’ she has been reinstated.
People had a big dream that under the new government, the establishment of the independent commissions will bring positive results for democracy in Sri Lanka. For whoever’s wants, what the ‘Yahapaalana’ regime too, does is to give positions to the corrupt. This is the ‘Yahapaalana’ regime turning its backside and showing its nudity to the people, who had had great expectations of good governance.

Gammanpila gets bail ! Details of verdict to dismiss erring judge Abeyratne alias ‘Pissu Poosa’ leaks out


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -02.June.2016, 8.20 AM) It is well to recall even  before bail was granted yesterday to the fraudster Udaya Gammanpila, Lanka e news reported that  the equally fraudulent Supreme court (SC) judge Upali Abeyratne of the pro MaRa team was making announcements of the verdict even before the Fundamental rights petition of Gammanpila was heard . As we revealed so it happened today , when Gammanpila and Sydney Jayasinghe were enlarged on bail when the case was called up .
Gammanpila was released on a cash bail of Rs. 25,000.00 and three surety bails of Rs. 500,000.00 each while Sydney Jayasinghe was released on a cash bail of Rs.15000.00 and two surety bails of Rs. 500,000.00 each. The passports of the two accused were also impounded and their foreign travel were barred.
Meanwhile one of our  readers has sent in details regarding Abeyratne’s  ‘bandicoot’ activities.  According to that revelation , three judges of the SC have delivered a verdict earlier on to dismiss Abeyratne from his judicial post. The letter along with the full disclosure are hereunder.
Editor
Enews
Dear Sir,
Thank you very much for writing about Upali Aberatne
Actually his appointment to Supreme court should have been null and void for the mere reason that President Rajapakse appointed him as the twelfth judge at the time of the appointment.
We are taken by surprise by the fact that nobody took it up even when a new president came in.
WHEN YOU EXAMINE THE HISTORY OF UPALI ABERATNE YOUR FINDINGS WOULD BE AS FOLLOWS.
1. After an inquiry 3 supreme court judges ruled that he be dismissed from the service. (He was a district judge then)
2. To Judicial Service Commission an Appeal was forwarded on his behalf and Fize Mustafa represented Aberatne and too mild Chief Justice GPS De Silva decided to transfer him to Monaragala with a demotion instead of dismissal.
3. When Sarth Silva became the CJ the demotion was set aside and he was later appointed to High Court and Colombo station was given. When RAVAYA questioned continuously how a newly promoted judge was given a Colombo station Sarat Silva was forced to transfer him to Kegalle.
We came to know little bit of his dirty history thanks to Mr. Victor Iven
We are at a loss to understand as to why Victor Iven who fought his battle single handedly did not take any action about his own excersices for justice after Sarat Silva retired. 
Thank you


---------------------------
by     (2016-07-03 03:09:42)

Kerala Ganja worth Rs.10 million seized in Jaffna

28 June 2016
A haul of Kerala Ganja with a staggering street value of 10 million rupees was seized by the Special Task Force (STF) at Achchuveli in Jaffna yesterday. The haul, weighing 91.519 kilograms, was detected in a search operation conducted along the Achchuveli-Valalai coast in Jaffna. Two suspects who were allegedly transporting the Kerala Ganja were also arrested by the STF. 

The STF had received a tip-off regarding a Kerala Ganja smuggling racket centered in this area, which had reportedly been active over a long period of time. The arrested suspects, aged 24 and 24 years, are residents of Valalai and Ilavalai. 

The Kerala Ganja has been handed over to the Achchuveli Police for further investigations. The suspects are also due to be produced before the Mallakam Magistrate's Court in Jaffna today. 

Story and Pix by Romesh Madhusanka

05 (2)03 (5)04 (7)01 (6)

100,000 child workers in Sri Lanka

eye

by Anushiya Sathisraja

( July 3, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) There are almost 100,000 child workers in Sri Lanka, with girls working mostly as domestic helper in towns and boys doing agricultural work in the villages.

Schooling is a distant dream for many children, the survey by the Labour and Trade Union Relations Ministry shows, with 13.9 per cent of the child labour population being aged five to 14 years – the period when school attendance is compulsory.

Child labourers in the rural sector (58.7 per cent) showed a preference to attend school compared to children in the urban (39.1per cent) and estate (10.5 per cent) sectors. In the estate sector, nine out of every 10 children in child labour do not attend school (89.5 per cent).

Most – 70.3 per cent – of 107,259 children from 20,000 households surveyed last year were in the age group of five to 16 years, working in “elementary occupations” as “street vendors and mobile vendors, street services, domestic helpers, agricultural and related labour workers, labourers engaged in mining, construction, manufacturing, transport and related workers”.

Girls were mostly paid monthly while most boys were paid daily.

Three in every five child labourers are engaged in hazardous work, the survey stated. Employed children who work for more than 43 hours a week in any industry are considered to be engaged in hazardous forms of child labour.
Child-Labour-Graphic

Globally, the number of children in child labour has declined by one-third since 2000, from 246 million to 168 million children – but more than half of them, 85 million, are in hazardous work (down from 171 million in 2000).

Labour Department Women and Children Division Commissioner Padamanathan Mahadevan said many children were found working in production lines such as finishing and packaging. The children were allowed inside the factories due to a lack of age verification procedures.

Under the Act. No. 47 of the Women, Young Persons and Child Act, employment of a child below 14 years is a punishable offence and a child between the ages 14-18 years can only engage in non hazardous form of work which does not affect the health, safety and morals of a child.

An employer could be fined Rs. 10,000 or six months imprisonment for employing an under-age child, a senior police officer in the Women and Children Bureau said.

Labour and Trade Union Relations Minister W.D.J. Senewiratne said the government plans to eliminate child labour from Sri Lanka by the end of this year.

“Last year, the Labour Department received 155 complaints with regard to child labour cases but there could be many other hidden cases,” a departmental spokesman said.

The incidence of domestic child labour reported to the Labour Department has steadily declined due to extensive awareness campaigns, according to the National Child Protection Authority. “We conduct awareness programmes on preventing child labour in communities around the island and also carry out coordination to ensure that children remain or return to schooling,” NCPA Chair Natasha Balendra said.

“We plan this year to conduct research in Unawatuna and Hikkaduwa on child sex workers, targeting children, parents, teachers, police, probation, guesthouse workers and other, and then conduct a workshop with a view to finding strategies to enforce the law preventing the sexual exploitation of children, particularly in coastal areas.”

Responding to findings of many children engaged as estate labour, the Chairman of the Uva Shakthi Foundation in Badulla, Suresh Nadesan said that educational centres have been established in 14 estates in Nuwara Eliya, Badulla, Kandy, Ratnapura, Galle and Kegalle, three of which have been accredited and absorbed into the non-formal education unit of the Education Ministry.

Isis claims responsibility for Baghdad car bombing that killed 78

Sunday 3 July 2016

At least 83 killed in two separate attacks on Iraqi capital, say officials

At least 83 people have been killed and 176 wounded in two separate bomb attacks in Baghdad, Iraqi officials have said.

In the deadliest attack, a car bomb hit Karada, a busy shopping district in the centre of the Iraqi capital, killing 78 people and wounding 160, according to police and hospital officials. The explosion was the most lethal single attack in Baghdad this year.

It struck as families and young people were out on the streets after breaking their daylight fast for the holy month of Ramadan on Sunday morning.

Islamic State claimed responsibility for the bombing in a statement posted online, saying it had deliberately targeted Shia Muslims. The jihadist group considers Iraq’s Shia Muslim majority to be heretics and frequently targets them in attacks in Baghdad and elsewhere. The statement could not be independently verified. In May, the capital was rocked by a series of blasts that killed more than 150 people in seven days.

Firefighters were still working to extinguish the blazes and bodies were still being recovered from charred buildings at dawn on Sunday. Many of the dead were children, according to reporters at the scene. Ambulances could be heard rushing to the site for hours after the blast. A witness said the explosion caused fires at nearby clothing and cellphone shops.

Men carried the bodies of two victims out of one burned building and a crowd looked on from the rubble-filled street as firefighters worked at the site.

Isis issued a statement claiming the suicide car bombing, saying it was carried out by an Iraqi as part of the group’s “ongoing security operations”.

Hours after the bombing, Iraq’s prime minister, Haider al-Abadi, visited the blast site. Video footage uploaded to social media showed an angry crowd, with people calling Abadi a “thief” and shouting at his convoy.

In the second attack, an improvised explosive device went off in eastern Baghdad, killing five people and wounding 16. No group claimed responsibility for the attack.

The casualty figures were confirmed by police and hospital officials, who spoke anonymously because they were not authorised to release information to the press.

The Baghdad attacks come just over a week after Iraqi forces declared the city of Falluja “fully liberated” from Isis. Over the past year, Iraqi forces have racked up territorial gains against Isis, retaking the city of Ramadi and the towns of Hit and Rutba, all in Iraq’s vast Anbar province west of Baghdad.
Despite the government’s battlefield victories, Isis has repeatedly shown it remains capable of launching attacks far from the front lines.

Before the launch of the operation to retake Falluja, Iraq’s prime minister was facing growing social unrest and anti-government protests in Baghdad sparked in part by popular anger at the lack of security in the capital. In one month, Baghdad’s highly fortified Green Zone, which houses government buildings and diplomatic missions, was stormed twice by anti-government protesters.

Isis still controls Mosul, Iraq’s second largest city, as well as significant patches of territory in the country’s north and west.

At the height of the extremist group’s power in 2014, Isis put nearly a third of the country out of government control. Now, the militants are estimated to control only 14% of Iraqi territory, according to the office of the prime minister.

Egypt three years on: Division, anger and no way out

Five years of revolution and counter revolution, and Egypt is as divided as ever (AFP)
An Egyptian military helicopter flies over supporters of Mohammad Morsi Cairo 2013 (AFP)


MEE contributor-Sunday 3 July 2016

CAIRO - Imagine breaking through a wall to escape your captors, only to crash into something much stronger on the other side. That, says Aya, is how the spiral of Egypt's recent past feels.
“It’s hard to explain and it’s hard to deal with,” she told Middle East Eye. “There is trauma. The country just hasn’t recovered.”

Egypt has since 2011 been convulsed in revolution and counter-revolution; from the fall of Hosni Mubarak's military dictatorship, through the mass protests against his Muslim Brotherhood successor Mohamed Morsi on 30 June 2013, to the army coup led by Abdel Fattah al-Sisi four days later.

The hopes of the so-called Arab Spring gave way to repression, division and, greatest of all, a sense that nothing will get better.

And for Aya, whose father was exiled as a Brotherhood member after the fall of Morsi, there is no way out. Whatever the failings of Morsi, she believes the protests against him “were planned and organised 100 per cent [to serve] the military”. 

She remembers "disturbing and depressing" nights of “dark streets, fights, and people breaking down” near her home in Ittahadeya, near the presidential palace and one of the major protest sites.

“It is still isn’t over. That’s why it’s hard to look back while we’re still living its consequences ... we’re living its consequences every day,” Aya said.

Indeed, in the three years since the army reasserted its power, Sisi, who officially took power as president in 2014, is now leading a country “that remains in a human rights crisis,” according to Human Rights Watch.

Mass trials, thousands of people sentenced to death, the suppression of free speech and protest, a growing insurgency in Sinai by Islamic State sympathisers, and a military back in power labelling all opposition enemies of the state or "terrorists".

Salma, another Cairene, contemplates those dark nights three years ago and what followed with a shudder.

“The worst thing [after 30 June] was when people were getting killed,” she said. "For me it was not about Morsi leaving, but about the military coming back with a stronger grip.”

"Rabaa was the biggest shock," she said, in reference to the killing of hundreds of Morsi supporters in Rabaa square on 14 August, 2013.

"That they kill 10 or 20 people in the streets, that always happened," she said. "But with Rabaa, there was so much disbelief and depression."

Since then “it only gets worse and worse”.

Ahmad first took to the streets on the "Friday of anger" against Mubarak in 2011, then protested against the rule of Morsi, and once again against the army after his removal.

"Naturally I protested against the Muslim Brotherhood because it was clear there was a deal between them and the military that made them [betray] the revolution,” he said.

But he saw something different on those fateful nights three years ago. “People that were with us were new faces, and that was because the media was mobilising,” he said, adding that the remnants of the old regime, the felool, were also “sending people”.

Ahmad lost a friend to the carnage of the protests - Gaber Salah, an activist known as Gika, was shot dead by police.

The 30 June protests for Ahmad meant fighting with the people who chanted and stood with the police, the very same people who killed Gika.

“We clashed with them, but we couldn’t do anything to stop it.

“I remember that I and a number of my friends were not celebrating like everyone else,” he said. The day was a gateway for what was to be “the worst period that Egypt has ever been through, without a doubt.”
Not all of Egypt is opposed to Sisi's removal of Morsi, nor his strong-man leadership.

Norma, an elementary school teacher who supported ousting Morsi and Sisi’s run for the presidency, said the military’s work ethic was providing a boost for economic development, while the Muslim Brotherhood’s politics had been damaging to people's perceptions of religion.

“The military is successful in its implementation of projects; when they take on something, they get it done … they will improve Egypt's infrastructure,” she told MEE.

Government supporters continue to celebrate Sisi's actions, with 30 June now publicly spoken of as a “revolution” and officially a public holiday.

The latest celebrations took place on Thursday in various squares across the country, with songs that praise the military.

Police forces took part in and “protected” the demonstrations, in stark contrast to their violent confrontations with anti-regime demonstrations.

For Ahmad, that is a symbol of Sisi's Egypt. "You are facing the strongest force in the country, a force that is clenching your soul with its fists.”