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

Wednesday, August 24, 2016

What is the difference between the wasteful exercises of the two morons?

-Namal’s night race and Arjuna’s tallest Christmas tree at Galle Face - leaders frown

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -23.Aug.2016, 7.00PM)   Minister Arjuna Ranatunge who during the entire recent past was enmeshed and embroiled  in conflicts with the Ports trade unions , whereby his sordid traits and unscrupulous nature were exposed well and truly, and which earned him  disrepute and disgrace , however managed to surmount the problems (at least for the moment) he faced with the trade unions using his political muscle by  associating   himself with the UNP trade unions after   duping the prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe .Yet , according to informed sources within the Port , the port trade union disputes are still fiercely burning under the ashes within and outside the Port.
 
Though the P.M. intervened to resolve the dispute in the Ports , he didn’t  allow  Arjuna  to partake in the foreign tours of the P.M. aimed at taking decisions regarding the Ports . The P.M.’s two Chinese tours are examples . Arjuna who is dismayed and disillusioned over this , is through his lackeys and lickspittles carrying on a vicious campaign across  the entire Port that it is the P.M.  and not he who is seeking to sell the Port.

Arjuna who sneaks on the P.M. to president….

Arjuna who got dislodged from the favorable position he wielded with the P.M. , had now ingratiated himself into the favor of president , and begun   sneaking on the P.M. to the former. At the opening ceremony of a section of the  underground  complex of the Port that caught fire , Arjuna invited the president but not the P.M. On that occasion he used the president to announce that no profit making State Institution shall be privatized , in order to give a slap in the face of P.M. indirectly .Meanwhile Arjuna had seen to it when giving jobs in the Port , recommendations of not even a single UNP M.P. is given  consideration.
The UNP supporters within the Port who were bitterly disappointed over appointments being given only to the SLFP ers  had made a complaint to the P.M. 
Based on reports, when granting employment, Arjuna has ‘sold’ a large number of jobs through Asoka Abeysinghe an ex pradeshiya sabha member , Attanagalle, a favorite henchman of Sarana Gunawardena ; a relative of Ranatunge family  and  a sidekick  of younger brother  Ruwan Ranatunge ;and Bus Podda alias Kapila Gunasekera.

Chandrika resists appointment of Arjuna as electoral organizer.

Arjuna who tried to become the UNP organizer for Wattala by currying favor with the P.M. , later when he befouled this and was unsuccessful in this effort  , crawled  himself into the vicinity of the president , and is now like a worm  trying to creep into the position of SLFP Wattala electoral organizer in all eagerness. 
Arjuna is a politician who beat  all Olympic records in somersaulting by having been with every political party of the country except the TNA. This notorious renegade  is therefore left with only the TNA to turn to - the only party remaining for him to join to contest elections.
It is a well and widely known fact that throughout his putrid political career  he had been somersaulting from one party to another while also discarding those who helped him without any sense of gratitude. Owing to this and his sexual frustration he was dubbed ‘Somersault Sultan’

No sooner Chandrika Kumaratunge a former president heard that Arjuna the infamous turncoat was aspiring to be an  SLFP organizer,  than she had phoned the president and expressed her absolute resentment while opposing the appointment. In justification, she had recalled the incident in which , Arjuna left her and the   party in the lurch to cross over to the UNP during the last elections even without informing her by  deserting the SLFP  organizer post he held for Attanagalle- the ancestral Bandaranaike electorate that was entrusted to him .
At this moment when the SLFP is moving ahead steering clear of rogues  and the corrupt of the party , Arjuna Ranatunge who had been the center of a storm of  controversy and castigated publicly for his despicable nepotism , corruption and frauds ,yet   making an empty  exhibition of himself ,seeking cheap publicity and  pursuing  cheap political agendas are  obviously being rejected by the new generation. Hence , Chandrika has advised president Maithripala to think twice before making him an SLFP organizer.

Arjuna to  erect  tallest Christmas tree in Wattala to secure organizer post…

While there are so many more useful and purposeful things to be done for the development of the Port in the best interests of the country , megalomaniac Arjuna sans grey matter, on the other hand seeking  to build a tallest Christmas tree wasting public funds just to gain  cheap self-publicity , has been frowned upon by political leaders. The world’s tallest Christmas tree is going to be erected at Galle Face green to be exhibited during the forthcoming Christmas.
The hidden motive behind Arjuna’s anxiety to become an electoral organizer of a Christian preponderant  zone is no secret and is common knowledge to all. 
Though the knowledgeable engineers involved  in this tallest Christmas tree erection at Galle Face have direly warned Arjuna of the grave dangers lurking in this project  at a place like Galle Face green which is most windy specially during the Christmas season ,  Arjuna the duffer who is best known for his worst buffoonery and  tomfoolery wherever he had been had not heeded their advice .

When launching on this project Arjuna revealed to the media that because he doesn’t want to play  second  fiddle to anyone , he is creating the tallest Christmas tree of  the world .
If passenger vessels are arriving in the Colombo Port along with passengers ,and if  this project is to attract them , it is understandable . But the fact of the matter is , only just one passenger vessel enters the Colombo Port annually. In the circumstances , this is another of Arjuna’s monumentally wasteful exercise at State expense in keeping with his puerile mentality , reckless profligacy and utter stupidity .
The masses for good governance who are expecting ‘change’ are naturally questioning  fiercely ,what is the difference that exists between Namal Rajapakse’s  much cursed and criticized night races held at Galle Face green wasting public funds to inflate his maniacal ego  and  enter the Guiness book of (ignominious) records, and the wasteful exercise of erecting the tallest Christmas tree by  Arjuna again at colossal public expense , to gratify  his own puerile ambitions  and boost his infernal ego centric goals ?
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by     (2016-08-23 13:41:38)

Group of Talawakele estate workers stage strike

Group of Talawakele estate workers stage strike

Lankanewsweb.netAug 23, 2016

It is reported that estate workers at the Eastern section of Talawakele Holyrood estate have resorted to strike action.The group consists of around 300 estate workers who had struck work and had organized a clamour on the 22nd instant.

The cause for the strike had been as the administrators of the estate had failed to offer sufficient work for them ,for supplying inferior quality medicine for protection against leeches and for some other reasons as well..
The estate workers who had struck work had blamed the administrators that as a result of inferior medicine the attacks from leeches have caused harm to their legs and as a result the exercise of plucking tea leaves has hindered.
It is reported that the workers who struck work had demonstrated in front of the tea factory. Our reporter had added that a discussion between the management and the workers has been scheduled this evening. The strikers had pledged that if sufficient solutions are not offered they will continue the strike.

Mixed feelings one year on



Featured image courtesy Thuppahi

RAISA WICKREMATUNGE on 08/22/2016

One year ago, on August 18, a new Parliament was elected on an ambitious premise of good governance. The public voted for change, and for an ambitious overhaul of the status quo.

A year later, the public has mixed feelings about whether this new unity Government has succeeded. A Twitter poll taken by over 90  people showed that most felt there was only a slight improvement compared to previous years.
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The poll is, of course, by no means indicative of national opinion, but is an interesting insight into what Groundviews’ readership feels about this Government’s performance. The poll shows that only 22% saw an improvement, and 19% felt the situation had worsened.

For context, Groundviews also spoke to members of civic society on their views about the current Government, in the context of their respective fields of work.

“While there was public expectation there would be a revolution, there has been more of a reconfiguration [of governance]. The achievements of this Government have had mixed results. We’ve seen a lot of legislative activity, but questions and doubts hanging over implementation,” said barrister and Executive Director of Transparency International, Asoka Obeysekara. “While bridging the gap can’t be done overnight, not enough is being done to change the public mindset.”

“Public consent for legislation is needed as well, so that the public can feel invested in it,” he continued. 
However, the signing of the Open Government Partnership in November showed a willingness to continue commitments similar to the pledges made during the Presidential election. The passage of the RTI Act too was positive, but a firm and committed civil society to ensure that the Government stuck to its promises was crucial at this juncture, he added.

Senior Lecturer at the Department of Philosophy & Psychology, at University of Peradeniya and former Minister of Mass Media and Information, Charitha Herath said the current Government was better in terms of policy-making (through the passage of the 19th amendment and the RTI Act) but also concurred that implementation was weak and not result-oriented. As a result of this, people’s quality of life and purchasing power was affected. “The previous government over-reached in terms of their role in the social space. However this Government overestimates the role of the market, in a country like Sri Lanka in my view,” Professor Herath said. Certain essential services such as transportation, education, healthcare, environment and security should fall more under the purview of the state. There was a lack of clarity where the market should enhance their capacities as opposed to the state, and vice versa.

Science writer and development communication consultant Nalaka Gunawardene said that following the ‘decade of darkness’ of the Rajapakse regime, the benchmark had been set so low that the current government should not be measured by the same standards. “We must look at what was pledged and the practise. Perhaps it’s too soon to judge too harshly, but the first year sets the tone and should give us a sense of direction. It’s been very confusing, because this is a many-headed government,” Gunawardena said. While there were many promising steps made in reconciliation accountability, economic reforms were being announced but not pursued in an organised and systematic way. “This is putting political reform at stake,” he said.

Further, where the government was succeeding, they were not effectively communicating this to voters. The Government should be in charge of the narrative and tell its own good stories, rather than being reactive to the Rajapakse loyalists. “The Government needs to get its act together, far better than it has in its first year,” Gunawardena added.

Senior journalist and regional gender coordinator for IFJ Dilrukshi Handunnetti said that from a media perspective, Sri Lanka has made some progress, one year later.

“First, and perhaps the most important is the change in the atmosphere. For years, dissenting journalists had to fear for their safety and some have paid with their lives. The political culture that can take significant criticism and does not feel the necessity use the state machinery to silence journalists is perhaps the biggest achievement recorded by this government,” Handunnetti said.

Along with this there has also been some systemic change, albeit not entirely successful, within state run media institutions. Nevertheless, the space has been created for better journalism within these institutions, she added.

The introduction of the Right to Information Law was a significant step, particularly since the previous dispensation was not even inclined to discuss the positive attributes of such a law.
However, many challenges remain, she added.

“The sense of normalcy journalists experience is incomplete, if it is not shared by all. There cannot be surveillance of journalists in the North, a continuing practice – though reduced, according to journalists there. Also, there can never be a normal media landscape unless impunity ends. For this, the State must demonstrate sincerity by expediting the investigations on the murder, assault and abductors of journalists, charge those responsible and bring closure. So far, investigations have not been concluded and journalists, much like the war-affected civilians, await justice and reparation,” Handunnetti said.
The liberalisation of the state media should be completed through the promised process of converting state-run media houses to public service media institutions, as in many other countries. Otherwise, these institutions would remain in government control and could be used as political tools during election time.
Media reforms, including legal reform, will be incomplete unless implementing mechanisms are transparent and accountable. The implementation of RTI will be undoubtedly challenging given Sri Lanka’s culture of secrecy that dislikes proactive disclosure and conflicting laws such as the Official Secrets Act. As such, the entire body of legislation needs amendments for RTI to become a practical reality, Handunnetti said.

Human rights activist Ruki Fernando said the appointments to the National Human Rights Commission based on the 19th amendment, as well as that of the constitutional council, were positive steps as they had asserted their independence and taken definite policy positions in the field of human rights. “However the institution as a whole has a long way to go. They are state-centric and unresponsive, even incompetent. So while the Commissioner is independent the institution itself has not moved forward so much,” Fernando said.

The passage of the RTI Act was also positive, but there was minimal progress on transitional justice. The passage of the OMP Act was a significant milestone, but there were certain questions raised on the process behind it, leading to a lack of confidence. “The President and the Prime Minister have not been strong advocates of transitional justice, particularly among the Sinhalese.” As such, Fernando said the process was driven by international pressure, indicative of the fact that only Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera was a strong advocate of the process. “There has not been much outreach done locally.”
Violations too continued to occur. Human rights defender Jeya Kumari had been summoned yet again for questioning by the TID, while another human rights activist in the North had recently been threatened by a provincial UNP politician, not to get involved in issues pertaining to land. A culture of military surveillance and intimidation still persists, including the military acquisition of land, with the military still intruding on civilian activity despite recent assurances from Minister Samaraweera that the country would be demilitarised by 2017. “There is a lot of progress that still needs to be made in terms of human rights,” Fernando said.

For a more detailed look at the shifting perspectives on human rights over a year, a report was just released by INFORM Human Rights Documentation centre.

Freelance consultant Sharanya Sekaram spoke about youth issues, in the context of being appointed a Youth Parliamentarian in 2016, from the Minister’s List (i.e. directly appointed by the Prime Minister.)
“One key difference is that the Youth Ministry is no longer a separate entity, but falls under the purview of the Economic Development Ministry, under the Prime Minister. I saw this as positive, as it showed a direct commitment by the Prime Minister to the critical importance of engaging the youth,” Sekaram said.

This was a positive difference compared to previous years, she added, having engaged with former Youth Parliaments in the past. The 2016 Youth Parliament had also been representative, with quotas for student prefects, and university students in addition to the Minister’s list. The Youth Federation Club had ensured representation from the district to the national level as well.

However, Sekaram said that there were some missteps. As a prerequisite, members had to attend 3 day programmes which could have been better planned out and condensed. The members were put into different committees to debate various issues, with no consideration for past expertise. In practise, the Youth Parliament also ended up being almost a replica of the real thing, with Parliamentarians more interested in grandstanding, as opposed to applying their own belief systems. Most of the young Parliamentarians had never held jobs, but were attempting to make a career out of politics.

The result of this was young people who had perhaps worked on the private staff of Ministries but had otherwise never worked full-time engaging on issues like education, employment and urban development.
Women were also underrepresented – though less so than in Parliament. However men still took the primary position, with women mostly not speaking up on issues.

“I didn’t see an effort to address the root causes of the problems in Parliament – why some politicians play to the gallery but don’t adhere to personal belief systems, why the public does not hold Parliamentarians who do so accountable. While the programme is a fantastic opportunity to see what young leadership in Sri Lanka looks like, it could be better structured to address these issues.” Sekaram said. In this sense, the current government had a lot to do before ensuring that youth were properly and effectively engaged in Parliamentary process, going by the youth Parliament model.

From an economic perspective, Sri Lanka is yet to see a comprehensive development strategy from the Government, one year on, Chief economist from the Ceylon Chamber of Commerce,Anushka Wijesinha said.

“We have a statement by the PM last November, and we hear that a more fleshed out plan will be revealed by him later this month or next. That is important to articulate clearly to domestic and foreign stakeholders alike on what the government’s plans are, and bring in some consistency and stability,” he added.

There were positives – that Sri Lanka has reset foreign relations with strategically important countries over the past year.  “This is probably the biggest win, in terms of government performance and its impact on business. Trade and investment is intrisincally linked to foreign policy and so good foreign relations helps advance trade and investment relations too,” Wijesinha said. The IMF package too helped give the government some breathing space needed for reform.

However, these gains were marred by policy uncertainty, particularly with regards to tax. Changes in taxes like VAT while announced haven’t gone through, while there was no roadmap for implementation for capital gains taxes. Foreign Direct Investment has not increased as expected, though there is considerable interest, as evidenced from visits from delegations from Norway, Chile, Mexico and Bahrain to name a few. “Converting that to results is now key,” Wijesinha said. The economy is also beginning to move away from the heavy dependency on public to private investment, which is a positive step, as is a much more open space for debate and even dissent on economic policy issues. “Whether [the discussion] is around the CBSL Governor or on tax policies…this is a very good thing. A contestation of ideas is needed to to come with a better path for the Sri Lankan economy.” Wijesinha said.

Yet despite the positive steps, many corporate executives were critical of progress made by the Government, a recent survey conducted by the Economist Intelligence Unit of the Ceylon Chamber of Commerce found. In fact, 49% of those surveyed gave the government a 2 out of 5 in terms of how successful their action has been on policy – though 41% also said they were optimistic the Government would deliver on its economic promise in around 4 years.

Interfaith issues has recently been in the news, particularly with the recent disruption of a peaceful vigil on equality. With this in mind, Groundviews spoke to visiting Fellow at the Institute of Advanced Islamic studies, Malaysia Amjad Mohamed-Saleem, who said “We have an opening up of the space for interfaith dialogue. It is welcoming that the President has appointed a new committee. ”

However, Saleem noted that the re-emergence of groups such as Bodu Bala Sena and Sinha Le in the public consciousness, as evidenced by the disruption of the Different Yet Equal vigil, highlighted deep-seated issues that needed to be addressed. “More work needs to be done at the grassroots [to address these issues]” Saleem said.

Senior Researcher with the Consultation Task Force on Reconciliation Mechanisms Chulani Kodikara said that from the perspective of women’s political participation, there has certainly been an improvement compared to the Rajapakse regime. “Many of us felt the Rajapakse era was regressive in terms of women’s rights – for 10 years there was a space emphasising family values over women’s autonomy.”

In this sense, Kodikara said she thought this government had made improvements over the past year, but the full extent was yet to be seen, given ongoing processes of constitutional reform and transitional justice. She added that at times, the Government showed a propensity to carry out such reform without adequately listening to society and women’s rights activists for real needs.

While the Local Government Authority Act of 2011 had given token attention to women’s participation in government, the new Government’s commitment to a 25% quota was an improvement. However there were some weaknesses, Kodikara pointed out. “Although the proposal does increase the number of seats awarded to women, it doesn’t challenge the incumbents.” Kodikara said. Rather, the current system empowered the party to select women candidates. “These women can’t go to the electorate and seek votes. 
This bypasses the electoral system.” While the new system would allow for more than 2000 women in local government, (compared to around 100 earlier) there was no explanation as to allocation of resources. 
A huge challenge was that under the proportional representation system, women had to compete at the Pradeshiya Sabha level, with men who often had much more access to resources. Being responsible to represent the whole Pradeshiya Sabha rather than the smaller wards was also an additional burden. “So the quota proposed is problematic, and we can’t be fully happy with it. For other issues, we will have to see until after the constitutional reform process to see whether they will be recognised.”

An uphill battle to be fought was the argument of “quality vs quantity.” “We always argue that these are two different issues – that women should have the right to be represented, irrespective of what they bring to the table.” Following on from this there was also a need to build women’s leadership skills moving forward, Kodikara said.

Dr Sepali Kottegoda, Executive Director of Women and Media Collective said the new Government’s promise of good governance offered a new platform and a different political context for women to advocate for gender equality. “The 25% nomination quota for women is a very positive step, and something we have been advocating for 20 years,” she said – even if it was only for nominations. “Sri Lanka doesn’t offer a social, political and economical environment to get voted in, just because our social development indicators are better than many in the South Asian region.” While it was positive that one woman had been appointed to the National Police Commission, the WMC wanted to see 30% representation of women in decision making bodies related to governance overall, she added.

Another positive step was the constitutional reform process, where the Government had attempted to be inclusive. “Women were given the space to voice issues, and many seized the opportunity in all districts, whether the North and East or the South. Citizens were told we can speak on any issue, even without expertise, which has never been the case before. We have never been invited to participate in such a process,” Kottegoda said. The WMC were till looking at how the law could be more gender responsive, and were looking at making submissions to the Fundamental Rights and the Law and order Committees.

The question now was to see whether the Government would take up the submissions made. Over the past year, the number of reported gang rapes, sexual and physical abuse appeared to have gone down, which either meant the media was not reporting on such cases, or the number of incidents had reduced, in relative terms, she added.

However, delays in the legal system with pursuing cases of violence against women, sex workers, and transgender people continued to persist, as the Attorney General’s department said they were overburdened. “People are languishing in jail, others are languishing waiting for justice. These cases are in limbo. The Attorney General’s department should find a solution to this,” Kottegoda said.

Reflecting the results of our Twitter poll, it’s clear that civil society feels that while there are some positives, there is a lot that needs to be addressed in order for the currently elected Government to live up to its promise of good governance. These issues, while multi-faceted and difficult to address, are nevertheless vital to be tackled in the coming year, and beyond. Not doing so will lead to an increasingly disillusioned populace, which could unravel the positive steps that have been made, particularly dangerous as Sri Lanka is only now taking the first tentative steps towards its own transitional justice process.
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Even today, after a historic defeat of an all-powerful President and removal of substantial powers of presidency and the establishment of independent commissions, the three wheels of good governance – the Government, the State and the people – seem to wobble along unable to realign themselves to new norms of behaviour

logoWednesday, 24 August 2016

Untitled-7By the end of 2014, after years of an extremely powerful presidency, the line dividing right and wrong had moved towards wrong. Rogue behaviour among Ministers and Parliamentarians, senior or junior officials, provincial and local politicians had become the norm in Sri Lanka.

Even today, after a historic defeat of an all-powerful President and removal of substantial powers of presidency and the establishment of independent commissions, the three wheels of good governance – the Government, the State and the people – seem to wobble along unable to realign themselves to new norms of behaviour.

Rogue ministers and rogue officials undermining Yahapalanaya?

As many have said before, politicians and public officials are merely reflections of society which they represent or serve. Their rogue behaviour reflects the acceptance of rogue behaviour in society. The sardonic remark that we need to elect a new people is cute, but of little practical value. The wheels of government and the state need to be straightened and realigned – but some rogue ministers and officials do not seem to have got the Yahapalana memo.

As I write, a not-so-senior public official is being harassed by a Senior Minister for not letting through some shady tenders. The senior officials are playing along with the Minister, forcing the officer’s hand, seemingly not registering that they can be held accountable if they allow the misuse of public funds as a result of these manipulations.

After 18 months of a Yahapalana or good governance Presidency, and 12 months of a Government elected on a Yahapalana platform, we are yet to see any rogue politicians or officials from the past convicted for misuse of public funds. Many arrests, but no convictions yet. No wonder the rogues are emboldened and the meek are relenting.

The fact that the present Government is a minority one dependent on some of the same rogues for survival is perhaps a factor. As I see it, there are three ways keeping the Yahapalana agenda on track. First and second, the events leading up the presidential election tells us that honest officials supporting each other and civil society stepping up pressure can be effective. Thirdly, we need to constantly educate ourselves about the newly-established Commissions and learn what we can achieve through those.

Honest officials should support each other

July 14, 2016 was a special day because a Police officer was felicitated by civil society organisations in an elaborate ceremony worthy of the officer. The police officer was Gamini Navaratne, the retiring Senior Deputy Inspector General of Police for Administration and Election.

We are all familiar with the role played by Mahinda Deshapriya who reenergised the voters and officials running the 2015 presidential election when he went on record on 7 August 2015, on the eve Presidential election, saying, “Why shoot below the knee? If anybody comes into polling station to tamper with polling boxes, shoot them in the head I would say.”

He will be rightly remembered with gratitude for those words for a long time, but in the Commissioner’s own words in the introduction to the book published in the event of Navaratne’s felicitation on 14 July, he says:

“Last year we held two national level elections – the presidential and the general. Of those two much is talked about the presidential election. As far as the Department of Elections is concerned, all elections are equally important to us, but, if the majority of people want to credit us with exceptional service at the presidential election of 2015, I would humbly accept the honour under one condition. My condition is that most of the credit should go to former Senior Deputy IGP Navaratne and his team. It is true that I played a critical role in the past presidential election and I seem to have emerged as the ‘main actor’ of a political drama. However, the behind the scene, the whole drama was produced and enacted by Navaratne and his team.”

In his speech Navaratne recalled how critical was the “shoot in the head” speech by the Commissioner Deshapriya in giving moral strength to his team of Police officers, and he further revealed details of how the two worked in close collaboration.

I am fortunate to know some other exemplary officials in public service. Although none come close to having the Deshapriya-Navaratne kind of powerful partnership, it is heartening to note that a small network of these officials is emerging. If the present government does not do its part and support this network by speeding up the cases against the rogues, these honest officers will be over powered by rogues again.

Civil society has to keep up the pressure

July 14, 2016 was a special day for a second reason. The same day I was fortunate to attend the re-launch of the Manthri.lk website by Verite Research. The event was well-attended by Parliamentarians from all parties. The sensitivity shown by young Parliamentarians to the performance indices of Manthri.lk was particularly heartening.

The current focus of Verite is on the legislative performance of MPs. A second track of performance measures for the Cabinet of Ministers and the senior officials too is needed. Parliament is trying reinvigorate the Oversight Committees for Ministries, but without civil society oversight, these Committee reports will be buried in the Parliamentary web site.

Purawesi Peramuna and other Yahapalana organisations too are active, but we need a more concerted approach. In the case of some rogue ministers, they seem to be critical actors in a difficult balancing act of maintaining a post-election coalition, but we should not give up.
Independent Commissions need to be tapped 

The original 1978 Constitution vested all authority over public officials in the Cabinet through Article 55 which said “Subject to the provisions of the Constitution, the appointment, transfer, dismissal disciplinary control of all public officials is hereby vested in the Cabinet of Ministers and all public officers shall hold office at pleasure.” It sounds draconian although there were laws and conditions which made it not so easy to fire a public official.

The 19th amendment replaces Article 55 it by new clauses which gave the Cabinet of Ministers only the powers relating to appointments, promotions, transfers, disciplinary control and dismissal of heads of departments, and policies relating to all appointments, promotions, transfers, disciplinary control and dismissals. Powers over the public officials other than the heads of department are vested with an empowered Public Service Commission.

Statutory bodies established under specific acts are outside of purview of the Public Service Commission. They are governed by provisions in the respective Acts where, typically, the governing board of the entity has full authority to appointment, promote, transfer or disciplinary control and dismissal of its staff. However, a minister may fire the governing board without assigning any reason. Although the staff can still resort legal procedures if due process is not followed, staff in these authorities are more vulnerable if they choose to follow the law in the face of undue influence by a minister.

TISL In Crisis: Staff Alleges Procedure Violation, Nepotism, Penalization Of Staff And Insider Dealings


Colombo Telegraph
August 22, 2016
The Sri Lankan Chapter of the global anti-corruption body, Transparency International (TI) appears to be battling a corruption crisis of its own with long standing staff members of the local chapter leveling serious allegations of corruption and malpractices at TI Sri Lanka (TISL).
Shan
Shan
In a letter addressed to TISL Chairman, Lakshan Dias, three staff members, Shan Wijetunge (Senior Manager, Advocacy & Public Relations), Ananda Jayasekara (Programme Manager) and Jagath Liyana Arachchi (Manager, Advocacy & Legal Advice Centre), who also identified themselves as whistleblowers brought to light a series of issues facing the local chapter, while also requesting Dias to carry out an independent and impartial inquiry without any of the Board Members of TISL being involved in such an inquiry.
According to the three whistleblowers, there has been serious corruption and malpractices carried out at TISL including; violation of procedures in recruitment, awarding of contracts without calling for quotations, removal of three senior employees by citing false information even when the funds were available, violation of organisation manual, ill treatment meted out to staff members as well as nepotism & insider dealings.
Jagath
Jagath
“We appeal for your intervention and take appropriate action to conduct an impartial inquiry in to the following allegations and take preventive measures. We do have credible information to prove the allegations and willing to share them when an inquiry is being held,” they said in the letter.
Ananda Jayasekara, who has worked for TISL for ten years continuously although under several contracts renewed periodically alleged that he was victimised after whistleblowing. This is a clear violation of TISL’s own Whistleblower Protection Policy, says Jayasekara. Its whistleblower protection policy says: “TISL encourages staff members to expose any such behavior and is committed to providing whistle blower protection for such staff members. TISL will not tolerate harassment, retaliation or any type of discrimination against a whistleblower.” (Read the full policy here)
In June, former Executive Director of TISL, S. Ranugge openly questioned the integrity of TISL’s Board of Directors, accusing them of ‘illegal, irrational and unethical’ actions and decisions with respect to the termination of his (Ranugge’s) fixed term contract and the recruitment of the new Executive Director. Ranugge has furthermore alleged that members of the Board have been engaged in politics for personal gain and to reward friends with positions in the staff.
Ananda
Ananda
Meanwhile, the global anti-corruption body itself announced that they were inquiring in the various issues at the Sri Lankan Chapter. In a tweet on August 18, Transparency International said, “We take these issues seriously and are looking into this.” They made this statement in response to a question posed by journalist Rohan Jayasekera who asked how TI was addressing the current problems at its Sri Lanka chapter.
We publish below the whistleblowers’ letter in full:
Mr.Lakshan Dias,
Chairman
Transparency International Sri Lanka
No.5/1,
Elibank Road,
Colombo 05
Dear Sir,
Appeal to Conduct an Impartial Inquiry in to the Corruption & Malpractices Happening in TISL
The purpose of this communique is to enlighten you on the recent and current happenings within the organization. These unhealthy developments not only have stood contrary to the vision and the mission of the organization but also have tarnished the good name acough its anti-corruption activities.

Tuesday, August 23, 2016

Israeli activist seeks asylum in Canada

Israel is tightening its crackdown on Palestinian, Israeli and international activists.Ryan Rodrick Beiler
Gilad Paz told The Electronic Intifada that he landed at Montreal airport on 11 August-Gilad Paz

Ali Abunimah-22 August 2016

An Israeli citizen is claiming asylum in Canada, citing his government’s escalating repression of political activism, particularly the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement.

Gilad Paz told The Electronic Intifada that he landed at Montreal airport on 11 August, after traveling from Tel Aviv, and immediately asked for political asylum.

He said he told the Canadian asylum officer that he is a BDS and human rights activist.

Paz, 34, is an attorney who specializes in civil cases and employment law. He has also been a member of Amnesty International’s Israel section and the leftist Zionist party Meretz for several years.

He said he did his obligatory military service at a desk job in the Israeli air force and that he never had a combat role.

Paz, who was born in Israel, is pessimistic about the country’s future without a fundamental change. “I don’t see a future for this country. Maybe with the two-state solution, but I do not see any horizon for that right now,” he said. “It’s a dream that is never going to come true.”

Alternatively, he said, there could be a one-state solution with equal rights for all: “Maybe this is the best solution. Maybe it is the only moral solution.”

But nothing is going to happen if people can’t push and advocate for change, and he sees that right under growing threat.

“Evil intentions”

Gilad Paz
Paz says his BDS advocacy has taken place online, especially on Facebook, and he acknowledges that he has yet to face any personal consequences for speaking out.

Long-time activists in Israel familiar with BDS circles there told The Electronic Intifada they did not know Paz in person.

While Israel has jailed many Palestinians over mere Facebook posts, it has not used this kind of repression against Israeli Jews.

“There is nothing that was done yet, but I am assuming that after the speeches of Erdan it will become a reality very soon,” Paz said.

He was referring to recent speeches by public security minister Gilad Erdan, the Israeli official in charge of combating the BDS movement domestically and internationally.

Earlier this month, Erdan and interior minister Aryeh Deri formed a task force to prevent the entry of foreign activists Israel claims are affiliated with organizations that support BDS and expel those who have already entered territories under Israeli control.

“This is a necessary step, given the evil intentions of the delegitimization activists working to spread lies and distortions about the reality in our region,” Erdan said.

Paz told The Electronic Intifada he had been thinking seriously about seeking asylum since a speech Erdan gave in June at the Herzliya conference, a high-profile annual gathering of Israel’s political and military elites.

“The message has to be that it’s not worth being a BDS activist,” Erdan said. “Anybody who works to delegitimize Israel, to bring an end to the Zionist enterprise, they should know that there will be a price.”

“I made the decision after the speech of Gilad Erdan; I concluded that I am not going to have any choice,” Paz said. “I am assuming that this speech and the [transparency law] was aimed to give a clue to people that we do not have any more place in Israel.”

Denying entry

The crackdown against Palestinian and international activists is already intensifying.
Earlier this month, members of a delegation of five US citizens were interrogated about their political activitiesand denied entry by Israel.

And last week, Charlotte Kates, coordinator for the prisoner solidarity group Samidoun, was denied entry as she attempted to join a group of European parliamentarians and lawyers traveling to Palestine in support of hunger striker Bilal Kayed.

Kates, a US citizen, said she was interrogated about her support for BDS and her online activities. She said she was denied entry after refusing to provide lists of names of contacts and activists.
Perhaps the highest-profile assault on freedom of expression so far has been Israel’s effective travel ban onOmar Barghouti, the Palestinian human rights defender and co-founder of the BDS movement.
Israel imposed the ban in April, soon after public threats by Israeli ministers.

Attacks and threats

At the time, Amnesty International strongly condemned these threats, warning that “an escalation of acts of intimidation by the government and attacks and threats by settlers and other non-state actors have created an increasingly dangerous environment” for human rights defenders in Israel and the occupied West Bank and Gaza Strip.

The group expressed particular concern for the “safety and liberty of Palestinian human rights defender Omar Barghouti, and other boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) activists, following calls alluding to threats, including of physical harm and deprivation of basic rights, made by Israeli ministers.”

Paz also cited the so-called transparency law as part of the reason he now feels unsafe in Israel. The new law willrequire more than two dozen Israeli human rights groups to prominently declare that they receive more than half their funding from foreign governments.

“The law, written in a way to exempt many organizations that support government policies and settlement activities, including those that receive foreign private donations, sets back freedom of association in Israel,” Human Rights Watch has said.

UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said he was “deeply troubled” by the law.

Even the European Union, which rarely criticizes Israel, said that the requirements “imposed by the new law go beyond the legitimate need for transparency and seem aimed at constraining the activities of these civil society organizations working in Israel.”

September hearing

In 2013, Canada’s then Conservative government added Israel, excluding the West Bank and Gaza Strip, to a listof designated “safe countries” where the presumption is that “it is less likely for a person to be persecuted compared to other areas.”

In 2015, a Canadian federal court threw out government rules that limited appeals by aslyum seekers from these supposedly safe countries, calling them discriminatory.

From 2004-2013, Canada gave permanent residence to a total of 684 refugees and their dependents from Israel, roughly the same number as from the “State of Palestine,” Honduras, Angola and Egypt.

The acceptance rate for applicants from Israel has varied from year to year. Statistics, however, cannot predict what will happen to any particular person since all cases are supposed to be decided on individual merit.

Gilad Paz is preparing for his asylum hearing he says is scheduled for 29 September. His claim would have to succeed despite the fact that he has a thin resumé as an activist, notwithstanding Israel’s clear moves against human rights defenders.

Asked what he would do if his claim is rejected, he said, “In this case I will have to appeal or take the risk and come back to Israel and see what will happen.”

“I’m very, very afraid what is going to happen because the Israeli government knows I claimed asylum,” Paz added.

Iranian soldiers: Why we are fighting in Syria

Social media sites show photos of Iranian soldiers in combat poses - but behind the bravado, some volunteers are more fatalistic

Jonathan Steele-Tuesday 23 August 2016

TEHRAN - Sayed Mohammad Hosseini sat pensively on a metal bench beside the graves of dozens of Iranian men who, like him, have served in Syria.

He says he is a sniper, now on a month’s home leave from service in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo.
But he is not the type who tries to forget the war during his time away from the front.

Mourners at the Tehran funeral of three Revolutionary Guards killed in Syria in June 2015 (Atta Kenare/AFP)-Tehran mourners kiss the casket of Brigadier General Mohsen Ghajarian, killed in Aleppo, in February 2016 (Atta Kenare/AFP)
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Air strikes in Aleppo: scores of Iranians have died fighting there and across Syria (George Ourfalian/AFP)-Former Iranian president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad at the Tehran funeral of Abdollah Bagheri, October 2015 (AFP)

“I’ve been here every Friday during my leave and I go back to Aleppo in a week’s time,” he explained, as we chatted beneath a cool grove of trees in the vast Behesht-e Zahra, some 24 kilometres southwest of the Iranian capital.

The cemetery contains thousands of graves of men killed in the war on Iran that was unleashed by Iraq’s then-leader Saddam Hussein in 1980.
'I’ve been here every Friday during my leave and I go back to Aleppo in a week’s time'
They are now being joined by a growing number of volunteers who have gone to Iraq or Syria during the last four years and were “martyred” there, as Iranians of all political persuasions describe their deaths.
There is no official figure for Iran’s casualties - but foreign analysts estimate they amount to about 400 deaths, including those of several high-ranking officers.

The fact that Iranian troops were fighting in Iraq and Syria was initially suppressed in the Iranian media, but discretion was relaxed when the Islamic State (IS) group advanced through large parts of Iraq in 2014.

Kayhan Barzegar, director of Iran’s Institute for Middle East Strategic Studies, told Middle East Eye: “The authorities are confident that the Iranian public supports Iran’s presence in Iraq and Syria in terms of defending national security and pre-empting Islamic State’s attempts to cross Iran’s borders”.

Bright yellow flags mingle with tombstones of teen 'martyrs'

Social media sites now regularly show pictures and selfies of volunteers in combat poses in Iraq and Syria. In the Behesht-e Zahra cemetery, a row of bright yellow flags stood conspicuously before the front line of tombs alongside one of the main thoroughfares.

One of the flags was embroidered with the name al Fatemiyoun, a brigade that has served for several years in Syria.

A row of black ants scurried along the side of a low black stone tomb covered in dried rose petals and a single faded gladiolus. Etched on a plinth at the head of the grave was a photographic image of a young man with the cupola of a large mosque behind him.
Air strikes in Aleppo: scores of Iranians have died fighting there and across Syria (George Ourfalian/AFP)

The inscription on the slab that covered his remains gave his name as Mohammad Hossein Akbari, age 17.  Another line read: “Defender of the Zeinab Holy Shrine,” a place of international pilgrimage in southern Damascus where Shias believe Zeinab, the grand-daughter of the Prophet Mohammed, is buried. (Sunni Muslims believe she was interred in Cairo).

Other tombstones carried a line of writing that read: “Place of Martyrdom” and unashamedly proclaimed “Syria”.

The faces on several graves, most of them teenagers, had the characteristic Central Asian features of Hazaras, a Shia minority who form about 10 percent of Afghanistan’s population. Tens of thousands have sought asylum in Iran in the 20 years since the Taliban took power and their homeland dissolved into civil war and subsequent foreign intervention.

Many earn their livings in Iran as low-paid building workers: some were tempted by offers of citizenship to volunteer to fight in Iraq and Syria.

'I think the war will go on a long time'

Hosseini said he had served 18 months in Syria, first in the battle against rebel positions in Daraya, a suburb of Damascus that has been under government siege for more than two years, and now in Aleppo. The divided city has been ruined by four years of fierce fighting, which has intensified during the past fortnight.

Most of the city’s eastern region is under rebel control. An effort last week by the Syrian army and Iranian forces, backed by Russian air strikes, to surround and squeeze them into surrender, failed when the rebels sent in hundreds of reinforcements.  

The grave of a Afghan fighter killed in Syria (Jonathan Steele/MEE)
Hosseini foresaw no imminent breakthrough. I asked him if the Syrian government had a chance of regaining the whole city. “Fifty-fifty,” he answered laconically. “I think the war will go on a long time.”

He put the blame on Saudi Arabia for increasing the supply of weapons to the rebel forces, but also accused the US of facilitating arms deliveries.  

Hosseini said that the recent re-branding of the al-Nusra Front, al Qaeda’s affiliate in Syria, as an independent organisation known as Jaish al-Fateh al-Sham (Army for the Conquest of the Levant) did not signify any change in its militant ideology.

He said the US-supported group, Ahrar al-Sham (Freemen of the Levant), was linked to Jaish al-Fateh al-Sham, and could not be described as moderate. “They also behead people.”

The one sign of optimism he detected was a change in Turkey’s policy. President Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s recent reconciliation with Russia’s President Vladimir Putin and their commitment to fighting terrorism together might result in greater efforts to stop arms coming across Turkey’s border to Aleppo’s rebel fighters, he said.

'The war in Iraq and Syria is a holy war'

Alireza Moradi, a 29-year-old clerk in a private firm who was visiting the cemetery with Hosseini, was equally bleak about progress in the Syrian war.

Like his friend, he showed none of the bombastic optimism that combat troops and ex-soldiers often feel required to produce in encounters with the media. He had spent three months in the Iraqi city of Samarra, site of another revered Shia shrine and a month in Aleppo. Moradi also served in Damascus for seven months as a volunteer for the Basij, a paramilitary force subordinate to the Iranian Revolutionary Guard, he said. His service ended in early 2014. 

“I think the war in Syria will go on at least 20 years,” he said. “Have you heard of the al-Nusra front?  Some of their militants and commanders are from Chechnya. They are well-equipped and experienced after crippling the Russians in Chechnya for 20 years. It’s very hard to fight them.”

But Moradi was in no doubt that, without the help of Iranian volunteers, the Syrian army would have suffered severely. “The volunteers are more effective than the Syrian army. The Syrian army has experienced a lot of disasters within their families. They are confused,” he said, in an apparent implication that many Syrian families are divided in their loyalties towards Assad. 

He gestured towards the graves of the Afghan martyrs. “They go with nothing except a Kalashnikov and 45 days of military training. It’s divine assistance and invisible help that lead them.” 

I asked whether such young and inexperienced volunteers should be warned not to go. He replied: “I have to clarify something. Some people believe the Afghans volunteer to go in return for money or citizenship. This is a big lie. They believe in their religion.

"Wanting to defend it is not a matter of how young or old you are. They beg to be sent to Syria and they go enthusiastically. The war in Iraq and Syria is a holy war. Daesh (IS) kills Christians and Muslims, Sunni and Shia.”

Moradi said he thought that the war was being boosted “behind the curtain” by arms manufacturers and oil companies, as well as by several foreign governments.

“I wouldn’t say that Israel, which isn’t considered by us to be a country because it’s occupying Palestine, is directing the war. But its interests are for the fighting to continue and Sunni and Shia states to be in conflict and therefore remain weak.”

This article is available in French on Middle East Eye French edition.