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, August 8, 2016

Republican Evan McMullin to launch presidential run against Trump

Little-known former policy director and CIA agent to announce independent run for president in contrast to Donald Trump
Evan McMullin, a little-known former CIA operative, is launching a third-party bid for president as a conservative alternative to Donald Trump.

 Evan McMullin has never previously run for office. Photograph: @evan_mcmullin/twitter
Evan McMullin

 in Washington, and  and  in New York-Monday 8 August 2016 


The independent run, first reported by BuzzFeed and MSNBC’s Morning Joe, comes as a faction of Republicans remain reticent to embrace Trump as the party’s presidential nominee.

McMullin, who until recently was employed as the chief policy director of the House Republican Conference, told ABC News there was still time to mount a campaign that could prove to be a spoiler in certain GOP-leaning states whereTrump has lost ground in recent polls.

“In a year where Americans have lost faith in the candidates of both major parties, it’s time for a generation of new leadership to step up,” he said in a statement. “It’s never too late to do the right thing, and America deserves much better than either Donald Trump or Hillary Clinton can offer us.

“I humbly offer myself as a leader who can give millions of disaffected Americans a conservative choice for president.”

A “McMullin for President” campaign fundraising website has been set up at EvanMcMullin.com, which features a picture of McMullin with the text: “Standing up to run for president because it’s never too late to do the right thing.”

McMullin’s candidacy is being pushed by backers of the “Never Trump” movement, which formed before the former reality TV star wrapped up the Republican nomination but has struggled until now to field an alternative candidate.

Better for America, a group formed by Never Trump proponents, indicated that some influential Republicans would come out in support of McMullin following his announcement. He is expected to file paperwork on Monday afternoon, but would nonetheless face hurdles getting on the ballot in states where the deadline has already passed.

Rory Cooper, a Republican strategist who counts himself among the Never Trump ranks, said it was important to have a candidate “draw a distinction between Trump and conservatism” regardless of the odds.

“There are clear and obvious hurdles to an independent run at this point, especially not being a household name, but I assume they are well aware of them and I’ll withhold judgment and keep an open mind,” said Cooper, who served as an aide to former House majority leader Eric Cantor.

“The next generation of leaders need to step up and start making a difference or conservatism will be electorally challenged for years to come.”

But as Cooper indicates, McMullin holds little name recognition even among Republicans in Washington. He has been a vocal critic of Trump’s on Twitter, but hardly a recognizable member of the “Never Trump” movement.

McMullin is 40 years old, unmarried and has never previously run for office. He holds an MBA from Wharton business school, which Trump attended as an undergraduate.

McMullin’s campaign website does not yet have a page outlining his policy platforms or one detailing his personal biography. The site, which was originally created in October 2011 and appears to have been updated on Sunday, links to his social media pages, including his Facebook and Instagram profiles, which do not have any posts.

McMullin has repeatedly denounced Trump as an “authoritarian” and used the #NeverTrump hashtag on Twitter, where he boasted 135 followers before his presidential announcement propelled him to more than 7,000 by mid-morning on Monday.

Prior to his announcement, McMullin’s most high-profile public engagement appears to be a TedX talk on genocide that he delivered at the London Business School in April. In the talk, McMullin recalled time spent studying in Damascus as a student and noted that he spoke Arabic, though on his LinkedIn profile he lists only English and Portuguese under languages.

McMullin served for more than 10 years as an undercover operations officer with the CIA’s National Clandestine Service, including posts in Africa, the Middle East and Asia, according to a short biography published on the University of Pennsylvania’s website, his alma mater.

Asked to confirm McMullin’s employment and to detail his career at Langley, CIA spokesman Jonathan Liu declined to comment.

He returned to the University of Pennsylvania this spring to deliver a lecture on the future of the Republican party. 

“I believe that our country is at an important point in our history and the decisions we make over the next year will drive, of course, the direction that our country takes,” he said in the lecture.

Though McMullin has never held public office, his mother, Lanie McMullin, is involved in local government, serving as the economic development executive director for the city of Everett, Washington, about 30 miles north of Seattle.

McMullin previously advised the House committee on foreign affairs on national security issues and was the chief policy director with the House Republican Conference.

Nate Hodson, a spokesman for the House GOP, said McMullin no longer worked as its policy director.
“The House Republican Conference has zero knowledge of his intentions,” Hodson said in a statement.
Cathy McMorris Rodgers, a Washington congresswoman and the House Republican conference chair, is supporting Trump.

McMullin’s Twitter profile reveals a sharp interest in the Syrian civil war and a disappointment with the US’s response to the conflict, still raging in its fifth year. By some estimations, the war has caused between 280,000 and 470,000 deaths, created millions of refugees and contributed to the emergence of the Islamic State group.

In 2001, McMullin worked as a volunteer for the United Nations high commissioner for refugees in the office of refugee resettlement, where he vetted and processed UN-recognized refugees from the Middle East and Africa for resettlement to third countries, according to his LinkedIn profile.

“People who talk tough about Isis, but then spend all of their time attacking refugees, know little about keeping America safe,” McMullin wrote in January during a Republican debate.
Spencer Ackerman contributed to this report.
  • This article was amended on 8 August 2016. A previous version incorrectly stated that Donald Trump has an MBA from Wharton business school; in fact, he attended classes there as an undergraduate.
Ibtihaj Muhammad isn’t talking about Donald Trump in Rio. (Andrew Medichini/Associated Press)

 
Ibtihaj Muhammad, the fencer who happens to also be the first American Muslim woman to compete in the Olympics while wearing a hijab, had strong words for Republican presidential candidate Donald Trump about his immigration plans for Muslims.

“I think his words are very dangerous,” Muhammad, who is competing in team sabre competition Monday morning, told CNN last week. “When these types of comments are made, no one thinks about how they really affect people. I’m African American. I don’t have another home to go to. My family was born here. I was born here. I’ve grown up in Jersey. All my family’s from Jersey. It’s like, well, where do we go?”
Muhammad’s comments came as Trump drew heavy criticism for his comments about the Khan family, whose son was killed while protecting his troops from a car bomb in Iraq in 2004. Muhammad has said little about politics since arriving in Rio de Janeiro for the Olympics, offering only a “Who?” when peppered by reporters during a news conference.

“I’m hopeful that, in my efforts to represent our country well as an athlete — that they change the rhetoric around how people think and perceive the Muslim community,” she told CNN.

Ibtihaj Muhammad is a fencer and the first American Muslim woman to compete in the Olympics while wearing a hijab.(U.S. Embassy London)

Muhammad, 30, is a Duke graduate and now lives and trains in New York. She knows that, win or lose, her presence in Rio is significant.

“I am excited to challenge the stereotypes and misconceptions people have about Muslim women,” she told the BBC. “I want to show people that we can not only be on any Olympic team, but on the U.S. Olympic team which is the strongest of the world’s teams.”

And she plans to continue to speak her mind.

“As a global community, we have to work harder to change our current situation. It is an unhealthy one.”

What Donald Trump is doing on the campaign trail

The GOP presidential nominee is out on the trail ahead of the general election in November.

Former Thai PM Yingluck says she ‘accepts’ referendum results


Thailand's former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra. Pic: AP.
Thailand's former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra. Pic: AP.

8th August 2016

THAILAND’S former Prime Minister Yingluck Shinawatra has remained magnanimous over the result of the draft charter referendum in the country which saw the majority vote in favor of constitutional amendments, providing the military more powers in the kingdom’s government.

Yingluck, who was ousted in a military coup in 2014, said she accepted the outcome of the vote although she had earlier called on the Thai public to go against the draft charter.

According to the Bangkok Post, Yingluck said she acknowledged the decision of the people, but insisted she be allowed to voice her opinions.

She said the outcome of the referendum was not surprising, as critics were barred from commenting on the draft charter. This made the circumstances different from other countries.

“I am sad, and regret that the country is stepping backward by accepting a constitution that may look democratic but really isn’t truly democratic,” she said, as quoted by the Associated Press.


“I’m not surprised with the results of the referendum because there was no opportunity to show our opinions or to criticize the content of the draft constitution to the full extent. It was one-sided and very different from any other referendum we’ve had, and from the rest of the world.”

On Sunday, Elections Commission (EC) officials said 61.45 percent voted in favor of the military government-backed constitution, while only 38.55 percent voted against after counting 94 percent of all ballots cast.

The country’s over 95,000 polling stations opened at 8am, and closed at 4pm. Though the EC predicted a turnout as high as 70 percent, this referendum reported a turnout even lower than the 2007 charter referendum, with only 55 percent out of 50.5 million eligible voters going to the polls compared to 2007’s 57.6 percent.

Meanwhile, Thailand’s current Prime Minister Prayuth Chan-ocha said the referendum is part of the government’s road map towards democratic political reforms.

He said the vote was necessary for a “bona fide democracy and thus for Thailand not to remain as a kleptocratic state.”

“The government will pay heed to the will of the people today and will do everything possible to address their concerns while providing a sustainable solution to our country’s political problems,” he said.

Additional reporting from Associated Press 

India's transgender community still waiting for toilets it was promised

A gender-neutral sign is seen outside the restroom in the Thomson Reuters Infinity building in Bengaluru. Photo by Arnav Srinivasan.-Transgender activist Akkai Padmashali has a sign for a gender-neutral toilet as the wallpaper on her mobile phone screen. Photo by Mrinalika Roy
Transgender activist Akkai Padmashali shows a sign for a gender-neutral toilet, which is the wallpaper on her mobile phone screen. Photo by Mrinalika Roy--Arnav Srinivasan (L) poses with a friend. Photo by Mrinalika Roy

BY MRINALIKA ROY-Mon Aug 8, 2016

Arnav Srinivasan, 37, works in one of Thomson Reuters' Bengaluru offices. He was born as Kalyani, a female, but identifies as a man. It was a big deal for him when the office introduced a "gender-neutral" bathroom.

"My friend gifted me a water bottle and said, you can drink water henceforth," he recalled. "I used to avoid drinking water for fear of going to the washroom."

Using public toilets in India is less a matter of choice than of ingrained instinct for most people. Men use the men's room, women the women's. Transgender people have a trickier space to negotiate - go where you think you should, or where other people think you should? Choosing the latter means dealing with stares, sniggering, taunts and threats of violence. And finding a "gender-neutral" or unisex toilet is rarely an option.

In 2014, the Indian Supreme Court accorded "third gender" status to transgender people and an individual's right to determine the gender they identify with. The verdict included a directive for separate toilets for transgender individuals in public places including hospitals. (The court ruling does not cover private businesses, said Danish Sheikh, a lawyer and activist for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgender rights.) Two years on, Mysore is the only city in India that boasts of a single "third-gender" public toilet.

There are 488,000 transgender people in India, according to the 2011 census. That's less than .04 percent of India's population, although transgender activists estimate their number to be six to seven times the official count. In the state of Karnataka, where Bengaluru is located, the official figure is 20,266. But in a country that guarantees equal access to public spaces, it has been difficult until recently for transgender people to get the government to pay attention to basic needs such as access to toilets.

At last count, Bengaluru's municipal corporation had 479 functional public toilets. None is gender-neutral or meant exclusively for people identifying as third gender. Dr. G.M. Vathsala, the city's health officer, said public toilets don't come under her purview, and referred calls to the engineering department, which did not return telephone calls.

"It is a basic right to have access to [a] sanitary and safe toilet. The government is doing nothing," said transgender activist Akkai Padmashali. "All other government policies for welfare of gender minorities [are] meaningless if the state cannot even guarantee us a toilet."

For Arnav, who identifies himself as a man but was assigned female sex at birth, venturing into bathrooms reserved for men was a perilous exercise. "It was a struggle. I would always ask a friend to accompany me and stand outside. There were times when men asked me what I was doing there."

Transgender activist Uma has a similar story to narrate. Uma, who identifies as a woman but was assigned male sex at birth, runs an organization called Jeeva that provides counseling to members of the transgender community in Bengaluru. "I want to use female toilets but I am never allowed inside as I look like a man outwardly," she says.

What about gender-neutral toilets? Uma says they "sound nice on paper. In reality, it would just lead to more cases of harassment against transgenders." Uma says many transgender women have faced harassment in public toilets, mostly from men. Unisex facilities would allow both men and women inside, and could lead to trouble, she said. "Third-gender" specific toilets on the other hand would be safer places.

Data collected by groups that study transgender issues in Bengaluru shows that most assaults on transgendered people occur in public parks and toilets.

Another option for transgender and "third-gender" people are "e-toilets," single-seat automatic toilets that are made for one person at a time to use, rather than a public lavatory with multiple stalls. Once someone gains access, the doors cannot be forced open. This ensures safety. Transgendered people can use them without fear of people barging in or being stared at.

The local municipal corporation has installed 75 e-toilets in Bengaluru and plans to install about 80 more with public and private funding, said S. Shekhar, whose engineering department is in charge of setting up e-toilets in the city.

(Editing by Robert MacMillan; You can follow Robert on Twitter @bobbymacReports | This article is website-exclusive and cannot be reproduced without permission)

One drug is 'new hope' for three killer infections

A child with leishmaniasis---The assassin bug spreads the Chagas disease parasite

Child with leishmaniasisThe assassin bug spreads the Chagas disease parasite
Sleeping sickness parasiteSleeping sickness parasite
The Trypanosoma brucei parasite causes sleeping sickness

BBCBy James Gallagher-9August 2016

One drug can treat three deadly and neglected infections - Chagas disease, leishmaniasis and sleeping sickness - animal studies show.

It has been described as a "new hope" for tackling the parasitic infections which affect millions of people in the poorest parts of the world.

The discovery, reported in the journal Nature, was made by testing three million compounds.
The new drug is now entering safety tests before human trials.

The three diseases are all caused by similar parasites, leading scientists to believe one therapy might be useful against the trio.
  • Sleeping sickness is caused by the Trypanosoma brucei parasite, which is spread by the bite of the tsetse fly. The disease is officially known as Human African trypanosomiasis, but takes its more common name from the coma that results when the parasite penetrates the brain. It is found in sub-Saharan Africa.
  • Chagas disease - or America trypanosomiasis - is caused by the Trypansosoma cruzi parasite. It can cause the heart and digestive system to become enlarged, which can be deadly. The "kissing" or "assassin" bug spreads the parasite. Chagas mostly affects people in Latin America, but has now spread to other continents.
  • Leishmaniasis is caused by infection with Leishmania parasites and is spread by the bite of sandflies. It causes a wide range of symptoms depending on which part of the body is infected, ranging from anaemia and fever to the total destruction of the lining of the nose, mouth and throat. It is found in the Americas, Africa and Asia.
Combined, the three parasites infect 20 million people and kill 50,000 each year, the research team said.
While there are some drugs to treat the infections, they are expensive and toxic and often need to be given via an intravenous drip, making them impractical in poor regions.

The researchers tested three million compounds, made by the pharmaceutical company Novartis, to find those that could kill multiple parasites in the laboratory.

One was then used as the basis of thousands of modifications to make the original 20 times more potent.
Tests then showed the upgrade - codenamed GNF6702 - could treat Trypanosoma brucei, Trypansosoma cruzi and Leishmania infections in mice.

Dr Elmarie Myburgh, one of the researchers based at the University of York, told the BBC News website: "What makes it special is the fact it is targeting all three parasites. That's the first time it has been done, so it is quite special.

"To me this is obviously a big deal, I'm in this field to try and make a difference, to get to a cure, and we're working hard in the hope that it gets to patients.

"There's been very little incentive to spend a lot of money on these diseases as they affect a very poor, and yet large, population."

Further refinements to the compound are taking place as the researchers ensure it is safe before starting human trials.

Recycling centres

The drug works by attacking the parasites' proteasomes. The structures recycle waste proteins in the parasite.

But crucially the chemical does not affect similar processes in mammalian cells.

Richard Glynne, from the Genomics Institute of the Novartis Research Foundation, told the BBC that attacking the proteasome was "not by design, more by serendipity".

It had been thought the proteasome was too similar across all species to develop a drug that would not be toxic to the patient.

However, he said there may ultimately need to be three separate drugs: "It may be a single drug for all three diseases may not be the best strategy.

"The biology of the diseases is different. For example in sleeping sickness the parasite is in the brain, so you need a drug that gets into the brain, so there are tweaks that may be required."

Dr Stephen Caddick, the director of innovation at the Wellcome Trust research charity which helped fund the study, told the BBC News website: "These are pretty nasty, highly prevalent parasites and affect people living in the most poverty-stricken parts of world. We need to make more progress.

"We continually face challenges getting medicines to those people and making affordable medicines is an important first step.

"This is quite an important piece of research, I'm excited by it, but there's still a long way to go."

Follow James on Twitter.

Sunday, August 7, 2016

.போரில் பாதித்த மக்களுக்கான நியாயத்தை வழங்கும் அறிக்கையை அரசு வெளியிடவேண்டும்-அரசை எச்சரிக்கும் கலாநிதி பாக்கியசோதி

07-Aug-2016 

போரில் பாதிக்கப்பட்ட மக்களுக்கு நியாயத்தை வழங்குவதற்காக அரசா ங்கத்திடம் கையளிக்கப்பட்ட யோசனைகள் அடங்கிய அறிக்கையை அர சாங்கம் வெளியிடவில்லை என்றால், அதனை தான் பகிரங்கமாக வெளியிடப் போவதாக நல்லிணக்கத்திற்காக மக்களின் கருத்துக்களை அறிய அரசாங்கம் நியமித்த நிறுவனத்தின் பிரதானியான கலாநிதி பாக்கியசோதி சரவணமுத்து  எச்சரித்துள்ளார்.
.போரில் பாதித்த மக்களுக்கான நியாயத்தை வழங்கும் அறிக்கையை அரசு வெளியிடவேண்டும்-அரசை எச்சரிக்கும் கலாநிதி பாக்கியசோதி
போர் மற்றும் போருக்கு பின்னர் நடந்த குற்றங்கள் சம்பந்தமாக நியாயத்தை நிறைவேற்றுவதற்காக பொறிமுறை ஒன்று ஏற்படுத்தப்படுமாயின் அதில் முழுமையாக அல்லது பெரும்பாலான பிரதிநிதிகள் சர்வதேச ரீதியில் தெரிவுசெய்யப்பட வேண்டும் என போரில் பாதிக்கப்பட்ட வடக்கு கிழக்கு மக்களில் அதிகமானோர் கோரியுள்ளதாக நல்லிணக்க பொறிமுறைக்கான செயலணிக்குழுவின் செயலாளர் கலாநிதி பாக்கியசோதி சரவணமுத்து குறிப்பிட்டுள்ளார்.

வடக்கு, கிழக்கு மக்கள் உட்பட நாடு முழுவதும் மக்களின் கருத்துக்களை கேட்டறிந்து செயலணிக்குழு தயாரித்த இறுதி அறிக்கை தயாரிக்க ப்பட்டு ள்ளதாகவும் மக்களின் கருத்துக்களை கேட்டறியும் விடயத்தில் இதுவரை அரசாங்கத்திடம் இருந்து எந்த தடையும் வரவில்லை எனவும் சரவணமுத்து குறிப்பிட்டுள்ளார்.

தான் உட்பட சிவில் சமூக செயற்பாட்டாளர்கள் நல்லிணக்க செயற்பாடுகளுக்கு பங்களிப்பு செய்து வருவதால், அரசாங்கத்திற்காக பணியாற்றுவதாக சுமத்த ப்படும் குற்றச்சாட்டுக்களை நிராகரிப்பதாக கூறியுள்ள சரவணமுத்து, பாதிக்கப்பட்ட மக்களுக்கு நியாயம் வழங்கப்பட வேண்டும் என்று பல வருடங்க ளாக பேசியவர்களுக்கு அதற்கான சந்தர்ப்பம் கிடைத்துள்ளதாக தெரிவித்து ள்ளார்.

ஐக்கிய நாடுகள் மனித உரிமை பேரவையில் கடந்த ஆண்டு நிறைவேற்றப்பட்ட கூட்டு யோசனைக்கு அமைய ஏற்படுத்திக்கொண்டு உடன்பாட்டின்படி உண்மையை கண்டறிதல், நியாயத்தை நிறைவேற்றுதல், மீண்டும் அவ்வாறான சம்பவங்கள் ஏற்படுவதை தடுத்தல் போன்றன குறித்து மக்களின் கருத்தை அறிய நியமிக்கப்பட்ட செயலணிக்குழுவின் பணிகள் எதிர்வரும் 10 ஆம் திகதி யுடன் முடிவடைய உள்ளது.

யாழ்ப்பாணம், கிளிநொச்சி, முல்லைத்தீவு, மன்னார், வவுனியா, திருகோணமலை, மட்டக்களப்பு, அம்பாறை மாவட்டங்கள், வடமத்திய, வடமேல், மத்திய, மேற்கு, ஊவா, சப்ரகமுவ, தென் மாகாணங்கள் ஆகியவற்றில் செயல ணிக்குழு மக்களின் கருத்துக்களை கேட்டறிந்துள்ளது.

Building Inter-Ethnic ‘Social Capital’ for Reconciliation

Tamil_People_Protest_File
The task of building reconciliation is multi-faceted and require different track level interventions. The task of ‘bridging social capital’ is a task primarily for the civil society. It cannot be expected from the political leaders. Political leaders of any country are strange animals.

by Laksiri Fernando

An association unites the energies of divergent minds and vigorously direct them toward a clearly indicated goal.” – Alexis de Tocqueville

( August 7, 2016, Sydney, Sri Lanka Guardian)  The need is true even in the case of the recent student clash at the University of Jaffna. Both Sinhala and Tamil students in the Science Faculty sat side by side, perhaps in two groups, in lecture halls and in science labs, interacting with their teachers vertically. But they hardly had horizontal connections among themselves. As Pratheep Kunarthnam writing on the subject asked, “Can any of the authorities explain why except in one or two faculties Tamil-Sinhala students do not even smile at each other even when they walk past one another?” (Colombo Telegraph, 20 July 2016). He also raised the question of ‘deteriorating relations between Tamil and Muslim students.’

It is normal when people enter school, college, university or workplace, they tend to interact with their ‘own people,’ unless one or two ‘enlightened souls’ take a special effort to break the ice. In the case of Sri Lanka, most of these places are mono-cultural (not multi-cultural) spaces, most often purposely created that way. Even then they find reasons to group with their village or caste people. I am not touching on the gender issue here because of its ‘sex-complexity,’ although for a healthy society, healthy gender relations are necessary beyond marriage or partnership.

Even if we consider humans as utterly ‘autonomous’ individuals, they do need grouping, socialization, interaction and net-works. When this happens within their own group or ‘in-group,’ it is generally called ‘bonding.’ That is how a society builds up ‘social capital’ for its survival and beyond. But in a multi-ethnic and a multi-religious society, there is something necessary beyond ‘bonding’ and towards ‘bridging.’ I am here borrowing simplified terminology and a conceptual framework from Robert Putnam and others on ‘social capital formation’ (“Making Democracy Work,” 1993).

A Conceptual Framework

How many ‘mono-ethnic’ societies or countries do we have today? The number is less than the number of our fingers. This is the reality in most countries that people have to face, whether you like it or not, and however much you argue about the predominance of your own group in your country or region. The building of ‘social capital’ is about networking for your personal and collective wellbeing, whether it is a funeral society, neighbourhood association, temple/church organization, drama society or lending association. This is important as building physical capital, financial capital or human capital. At a higher level, you may have to build student associations, women’s organizations, trade unions, human rights organizations, citizen’s committees or even more politically overt social justice movements. These are important for an efficient and an effective democratic society. This may be accepted without much controversy.

In general terms, the maturity of any democratic society could be judged or measured on the basis of the nature, the quality and the functions of these networks and associations which could also be called the civil society. If we wish a definition or an authoritative explanation on the matter, we can get it from Putnam, who was not the first to identify the phenomenon or process, but who was the first to elaborate, classify and use it as a criteria for assessing the maturity of democratic societies. As he said:

Of all the dimensions along which forms of social capital vary, perhaps the most important is the distinction between bridging (or inclusive) and bonding (or exclusive). Some forms of social capital are, by choice or necessity, inward looking and tend to reinforce exclusive identities and homogeneous groups. Examples of bonding social capital include ethnic fraternal organizations, church-based women’s reading groups, and fashionable country clubs. Other networks are outward looking and encompass people across diverse social cleavages. Examples of bridging social capital include the civil rights movement, many youth service groups, and ecumenical religious organizations.” (“Bowling Alone,” 2000, p. 23).

In the above work, Putnam was talking about the American situation (‘The Collapse and Revival of American Community’ as the sub-title), and his examples might not be the best for Sri Lanka. He did emphasise the importance of ‘bridging’ over ‘bonding,’ however the importance of ‘bridging’ is much more than he talked about, particularly in the case of Sri Lanka or any transitional or developing multi-cultural society. I am using the expressions ‘transitional’ and ‘developing’ both in economic and political terms.        
Present Context

As generally accepted, there has been a resurgence of the civil society organizations (or networking) in Sri Lanka that led to or accompanied by the democratic change in 2015. This was not exactly the case five ten years ago – first due to the bitter civil war and then the authoritarian regime that emerged after the end of the war defeating the LTTE. In heralding the authoritarian development, there was a different or a ‘primitive’ kind of social capital or networking that emerged based on the ‘kith and kin,’ ‘friendship alliances,’ ‘provincialism’ and ‘patron-client relations’ that in fact effectively overturned the democratic fabric. This is popularly called the Rajapaksa regime. Primitive kind of social capital emerging out of traditional sources is also something anticipated by the social capital theorists. There can be several other forms of ‘social capital’ that could be inimical to justice and fairness.

What made the democratic system barely saved was the resurrection of the nearly moribund civil society organizations (of lawyers, academics, professionals, journalists, students, citizens) and the emergence of new ones inspired largely by the international influence and civic consciousness. Two of the key objectives of the political change and thus the civil society were (1) the resurrection of democracy and (2) reconciliation of the ethnic conflict. I am not undermining the role of the political leaders or the political parties in the change, but emphasising the importance of the civil society organizations for the purpose of this article.

The above was possible because of the long standing traditions of civil society organizations and networks in Sri Lanka although they became disrupted and degenerated during the period of the war and even before. First to breakdown, due to the ethnic distancing and antagonisms of the post-1956 period, were the processes of ‘bridging social capital’ in the country. Then came the disruption of even ‘bonding social capital’ primarily due to political interventions, war and demoralization of the civil society actors since 1983. The new forms in fact had emerged. Jonathan Goodhand, Hulme and Lewer (2000) have investigated some of the transformations in different zones.

Even if we now assume – based on the democratic changes of the last year (2015), and still the vibrant activities of some of the organizations – that ‘bonding social capital’ is on track again, this article argues that ‘bridging social capital’ is still lagging behind which is much more important for the objectives of both ‘resurrection of democracy’ and ‘building reconciliation’ in the country.

Important Organizations  

It might not be too arbitrary to identify the following organizations playing a major role in the recent democratic change in the country. They are listed in the alphabetical order.

Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL)
Centre for Policy Alternatives (CPA)
Federation of University Teachers Associations (FUTA)
Free Media Movement (FMM)
National Movement for Social Justice (NMSJ)
National Peace Council (NPC)
People’s Action for Free and Fair Elections (PAFFREL)
Purawesi Balaya (People’s Power)

Among them, while the NMSJ and the People’s Power are new, or rather spontaneous, the others have had fairly a long standing existence in the country. The question which needs to be posed here however is whether they are only for ‘bonding’ or whether they have an objective for ‘bridging.’ ‘Bonding’ and ‘bridging’ or ‘bonding social capital’ and ‘bridging social capital’ are two different things particularly in terms of reconciliation after a conflict or war. While ‘boding’ tends to create networks within an in-group – within a particular ethnicity in this case – ‘bridging’ particularly means conscious efforts to transcend these barriers as a primary objective. No need to overemphasize such a need in Sri Lanka’s context today, whether in the South, East or the North.     

A quick glance at the composition of the office bearers or the active leaders of the above organizations reveal that the CPA and the NPC undoubtedly have this ‘bridging’ quality at least at the decision making level. But both organizations are primarily located in Colombo, of course playing an advocacy (vertical) role. The BASL gives a symbolic prominence for the ‘other ethnicity’ and its office bearers understandably are elected ones. The PAFFREL is fairly represented in the Board of Directors but not in the Secretariat.

Being a past member, I can be more critical of the situation of FUTA only having a Vice-President at present from Jaffna! There cannot be any doubt that the academics could play an active role in ‘bridging social capital’ in theoretical terms, and through academic solidarity and cooperation. One way might be to resurrect the University Teachers for Human Rights (UTHR) also for Reconciliation (UTHR&R) island wide. The FMM is also primarily in the form of bonding. While the potential of both the NMSJ and the Peoples’ Power (Purawesi Balaya) is so enormous in creating social capital in the country, transcending ethnic and religious divide, the present situation is almost completely confined to ‘bonding.’

Another important organization is the Citizens’ Movement for Good Governance (CIMOGG), although its role in recent political change in practical terms is not readily verifiable (at least for me). However it has noble objectives very much similar to building ‘social capital’ even with a People Empowerment Programme (PEP).   

Some Obstacles

While most of the obstacles that the civil society organizations are facing in moving beyond ‘bonding’ towards ‘bridging’ can be historical, there are certain ideological as well as practical reasons for the situation. When new organizations like the NMSJ or the Peoples Power are formed, it may be natural for them to begin within their known terrain. However, there should be some conscious efforts to move beyond. The past historical developments in the country, the state policies, terrorism and war have created enormous divisions even among the academics, professionals and social activists. There are unconscious inhibitions preventing joint work. These may be higher among the Tamils and the Muslims.

A seemingly ideological reason for the situation seems to be that most of the organizations that recently sprung to oppose authoritarianism, or to bargain based on their demands, whether FUTA, NMSJ or Peoples Power, work on vertical lines trying to influence the new government and the leaders. Their demands may transcend ethnic or religious lines. They may also be fully committed to reconciliation in theoretical terms. But their ‘vertical’ approach trying mainly to ‘influence the government’ not only betray the purpose but also represents a compartmentalized elitism unless they venture to build most necessary ‘bridging social capital’ in the country. Another mindboggling question is ‘why the hell’ they don’t coordinate each other and work together in achieving their seemingly similar objectives!

The task of building reconciliation is multi-faceted and require different track level interventions. The task of ‘bridging social capital’ is a task primarily for the civil society. It cannot be expected from the political leaders. Political leaders of any country are strange animals. They changes ‘colour’ after power like chameleons. The formation of ‘bridging social capital’ in society entails not only networking or forming multi-ethnic organizations. It is also a task of education, attitudinal change and building necessary skills.
  
One practical difficulty, among others, is the language barrier between the Sinhala speakers and the Tamil speakers. The promotion of English as the link language has not progressed well even in university education. However, to reach the broader sections of the people, the civil society organizations have to work both in Sinhala and Tamil, apart from English. This should be followed as a cardinal principle. That is the only way to attract ‘the other’ and create conditions for ‘bridging,’ whether your present base is Sinhalese, Tamil or Muslim. This is something terribly lacking in the present popular organizations.

Given the fact that most or almost all prominent organizations are Colombo based, and the emergence of such organizations in Jaffna or in the North/East were largely inhibited due to the war devastation, the failure of the present organizations to work in Tamil has been a major setback for ‘bridging social capital’ formation even after a democratic change last year. This is a major obstacle for ethnic reconciliation in the country as at present. The formation of social capital in Sri Lanka, linked to economy and polity and also in the context of ethnic conflict, is undoubtedly an area that needs new research by young academics.                    
Some Preliminary References
  1. Goodhand, Jonathan et al. 2000. “Social Capital and the Political Economy of Violence: A Case Study of Sri Lanka.” Disasters 24 (4).
  2. Halpern, David. 2005. “Social Capital.” Polity Press.
  3. Putnam, Robert et al. 1993. “Making Democracy Work: Civic Traditions in Modern Italy.” Princeton.
  4. Putnam, Robert. 2000. “Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community.” Simmon & Schuster.
  5. Putnam, Robert (Ed.). 2002. “Democracies in Flux: The Evolution of Social Capital in Contemporary Society.” Oxford.   
(There is another known study on a different dimension on Sri Lanka by Uphoff, N. and C. M. Wijayaratna. 2000. “Demonstrated Benefits from Social Capital: The Productivity of Farmer Organizations in Gal Oya, Sri Lanka.” World Development 28)  

Does The Constitution Restrict Religious Freedom?


Colombo Telegraph
By Mass L. Usuf –August 6, 2016 
Mass L. Usuf
Mass L. Usuf
A beautiful piece of legislation is seen in Article 10. It is a provision granting absolute freedom of the contents mentioned therein. This freedom is absolute because it does not fall within the purview of the restrictions placed on the exercise of fundamental rights vide. Article 15. It is an entrenched Article.
Every person is entitled to freedom of thought, conscience and religion, including the freedom to have or to adopt a religion or belief of his choice.” (Article 10).
“Religion” in Article 10 will clearly include Christianity, Islam and Hinduism. The status of Buddhism as far as religion is concerned will depend on how it is interpreted. As discussed earlier (Part I and II), it has to be clarified if it is going to be the original dhamma or the commonly used buddhagama (religion). The latter interpretation will be a deviation from the dhamma itself. It can be argued that Buddhists can be accommodated under ‘freedom of thought and conscience’.
The implication of this Article with that of others will be examined below. It must be appreciated that this is only an analytical exercise, the essence of which should not be vainly misinterpreted or distorted.
Manifesting Belief
Article 14 (1)(e) states, “Every citizen is entitled to the freedom, either by himself or in association with others, and either in public or in private, to manifest his religion or belief in worship, observance, practice or teaching.”
In addition to ‘religion’ the word ‘belief’ is mentioned here as part of the freedom to manifest. A comparative study on beliefs reveal an interesting diversity. In Christianity belief is a fundamental concept. Belief in Jesus Christ (Peace be on him) is a must for salvation. In the Book of Acts, it is stated,
“Believe in the Lord Jesus, and you will be saved, you and your household.” (16:31).
In the Islamic creed, the notion of salvation based on belief alone is nonexistent. Belief extends to believing in the Oneness of Allah, the angels, the revealed books, the prophets and the Day of Judgment (resurrection). After this belief, one has to work towards doing righteous deeds in order to achieve felicity. Therefore, belief and doing good deeds go together. (See Chapter 103, Al Asr of the Quran).
The dhamma on the other hand is not a belief system. For example, the dhamma does not say believe in Buddha and one will be saved or attain nirvana. It is strictly based on reasoning or understanding. I believe, the wider connotation of Right View (samma dhitti) explains it all in greater details. To make an observation in passing, if the Buddhists truly understand and practice samma dhitti, Sri Lanka will be a better place to live in. Such is the value of some of the teachings of the Buddha.
As it is, Article 14 (1)(e) may not be applicable to the Buddhists in so far as ‘belief’ is concerned. He will not be able to manifest his belief in the form of worship, observance, practice or teaching simply because there is no belief system. Note there is no mention of ‘thought and conscience’ in here.

Transitional justice: Lanka needs its own formula, says US law don

Ronald C Slye


The transitional justice field has created its own industry and language with a tendency to repeat mantras, resulting in the stifling of critical thinking, a visiting professor of transitional justice and international human rights law said this week.
“There are some good things one can learn from the transitional justice field,” said Prof. Ronald C Slye, from the Seattle University’s Faculty of Law. “But it’s almost created its own industry and its own language. And I think there’s a tendency to repeat certain mantras like, ‘The truth will set you free’. With many things like that, there’s a kernel of truth, but I think they tend to lead to a lack of critical thinking.”
The United Nations describes transitional justice as the full range of processes and mechanisms associated with a society’s attempt to come to terms with a legacy of large-scale past abuses. While this discussion is ongoing in Sri Lanka, it is still limited to certain civil society and political circles.“So, just because something worked in South Africa does not mean it’s going to work here,” Prof. Slye, who also specialises in public international law and international criminal law, said. “I think that’s a mistake many countries make. They say, oh, South Africa was so successful. Kenya was so successful or not. I think one needs to ask why it was successful or why it failed.”
On July 31, Prof Slye delivered the 17th Neelan Tiruchelvam Memorial Lecture titled ‘Difficult Issues, Strategic Choices: Crafting a Coherent Sri Lankan Transitional Justice Process’ in Colombo. Dr Tiruchelvam was killed in 1999 by a Tamil Tiger suicide bomber.
“Any sort of endeavour in a democracy needs very strong public engagement,” Prof Slye warned. “Otherwise, while decisions may be made, they may not last. If people don’t know what they are, or they have not been part of the process, they are less likely to support whatever decision that has been made.”
“Part of what I understand the problem to be here is that there has not been a lot of public discussion or communication,” he continued. “There are things happening. And there are also perceptions that things are happening without understanding what they are. That is something that has to be addressed.”
“You want a process like this to have support from a wide variety of stakeholders and constituencies,” Prof Slye said. “So, if it’s only a particular community that is supporting it, then it just means it will be less effective.”
The proposal for a hybrid court involving foreign judges has proved controversial. Prof Slye said foreign involvement could help provided the local judges had control. “The pros are that you can get some comparative experience,” he said. “There is that perception and reality of a more objective view from somebody from the outside who is not viewed as being aligned with a particular internal political or ethnic faction. This can increase the legitimacy of the processes both domestically and internationally.”
“The cons are that you don’t want to see it controlled by foreigners, both because that’s just bad but also because it is going to mean that the local population of Sri Lanka is not going to accept it,” Prof Slye emphasised. If it is controlled by foreign judges or it is perceived as being controlled by foreign interests, then its legitimacy will be undercut.”
“What is important if one is going to have foreign involvement is to be really careful about who those foreigners are,” he said. “You don’t want somebody coming in who thinks he or she has all the answers. You want somebody to come in who is somewhat humble.”
Prof Slye was one of three international commissioners for the Kenyan Truth, Justice and Reconciliation Commission. “One of the things in Kenya perhaps similar to Sri Lanka is that there are very strong ethnic divisions,” he explained. “People tend to view themselves in Kenya, first by their ethnicity, then by their national identity.”
“What was needed in Kenya, and has certainly not been accomplished yet, is to create a more cohesive sense of being Kenyan,” he said. “That is also something that is needed in Sri Lanka. So, creating a new constitution, creating an accountability mechanism, creating something like a truth commission or engaging in truth commission type processes could contribute to that, importantly.”
Civil society had roles in supporting as well as in monitoring and critiquing this process. “Individual civil society organisations need to be careful in not merging those two because, if you’re going to be part of implementing the process, then it’s harder to be a more objective critic or monitor,” he said.
These processes were difficult and somewhat sui generis. What happens in Sri Lanka will be influenced by Sri Lankan history, culture and ethnic differences. “Some victims and survivors may not want to talk about what had happened and I think that needs to be respected,” Prof Slye asserted. “And some of them want to talk about what happened, and that also should be respected.”
There was considerable fluidity in Sri Lanka that complicated ongoing efforts, he reflected: “You have a new coalition government. You have, not only divisions within the government, but within parties within the government. On the one hand, it makes things very complex politically. It also opens up opportunities because things are more open.”
However, it could go forth in a positive way or in a negative way. People on the ground and civil society should push things in a positive direction. Everything needs to be talked about in terms of the Sri Lankan experience. “I don’t think it’s necessarily bad that the UN Human Rights Council is prescribing certain things for Sri Lanka to do, but I think, ultimately, it is going to be a Sri Lanka decision,” he reiterated.
But nothing should be off the table, including punishment for wrongdoers. For Sri Lanka, if the starting point will be that certain people and certain communities will be off limits in terms of accountability, then, already that’s going down the wrong path,” he said.
This did not mean that there would need to be a spate of prosecutions. “It may have to lead to some,” Prof. Slye said. “Again, that is for Sri Lankans to decide.” Realistically, it would have to be decided who will be prosecuted and it would have to be publicly explained why. But there could be creative punishments, such as contribution towards reparations or community service. “What they have done in Colombia is interesting,” he described. “They have created peace tribunals where, if you reveal what you know about the past, you are subject to much lower sentences than you might otherwise be. So there are incentives, trade-offs, for getting that legal benefit. I think the big mistake is to just give people legal protection without getting anything in return.”