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

Friday, September 23, 2016

TNA WELCOMES GOVT DECISION TO REHABILITATE & RELEASE 23 POLITICAL PRISONERS

fr-sathivail-july-2016-c-s-deshapriya-small
( Fr. Sathiveil, leading the campaign for the release of political prisoners, Aug 2016 Colombo ©s.deshapriya)

Sri Lanka Brief23/09/2016

The Tamil National Alliance welcomes the announcement by the government that a further twenty-three political prisoners will be released through the process of rehabilitation.
This is in keeping with the promise given to Leader of the Opposition Mr. R. Sampanthan and TNA Jaffna District M.P. and Spokesperson M.A. Sumanthiran at a meeting held at Temple Trees on the August 26, 2016 with Minister of Justice Wijayadasa Rajapaksa, Minister of Law and Order Sagala Rathnayaka, the Attorney General and other High Officials. We urge the government to continue this process of re-evaluation and release the rest of the political prisoners also without delay.
I have handed over a list of corrupt officials to BC: Ranjan


2016-09-23

Deputy Minister Ranjan Ramanayake on Wednesday (21) said he had given a list that contains the names of several ministers and opposition MPs who were engaged in corrupt activities to the Bribery Commission. 

Speaking during the debate on the motion to increase remuneration to the heads of independent commissions in Parliament, the Deputy Minister said he would continue to talk about these ministers and MPs. 

"I will name these MPs even though their names are expunged from the Hansard. Expunging their names from the Hansard will not stop our message from reaching the people" he said.

 "There are MPs who used to come to Parliament in taxis in the past but own helicopters and homes in Dubai," he said, adding that some members of Parliament even own apple orchards in Australia.

 He also advised journalists who gather at the Bribery Commission to cover a story to be watchful as many government MPs who called over to be interrogated often slip out the back entrance without being noticed. 

The MP said institutions that deals with corruption should be strengthened further as this would deter those who plan to rob public funds from engaging in such criminal acts.

 Mr Ramanayake lauded some judges and criticized others. " Some judges surreptitiously grant bail to those who are corrupt in the middle of the night," he alleged. (Yohan Perera and Kelum Bandara)


SAITM Says They Don’t Have Wasim Thajudeen’s Skeletal Remains


Colombo Telegraph
September 23, 2016
In a new twist to the Wasim Thajudeen murder case, South Asian Institute of Technology and Medicine (SAITM) Chairman Dr. Neville Fernando has said that his institute does not possess any skeletal remains of the late ruggerite, who was murdered.
Dr. Neville Fernando
Dr. Neville Fernando
In a statement issued, Fernando said, “SAITM records do not reveal that any specimen of the late Mr. Wasim Thajudeen was sent to the institution. SAITM states no authority has visited the institution or inspected any specimens that are in its custody, to date.”
Fernando however assured that he and his institute were willing to co-operate in any investigation and give access to its available specimens which according to Fernando are taken over following due and established process and are documented, supervised and certified by the relevant authorities.
“Such specimens at SAITM are securely kept in its museum and are used for teaching purposes only,” the statement said.
Fernando’s statement comes just days after the CID informed the Court that Thajudeen’s missing skeletal remains were at SAITM. According to the CID, ex-JMO Ananda Samarasekera had sent some of the Thajudeen skeletal remains to SAITM in Malabe.
In August, Health Ministry Secretary Anura Jayawickrema in a report submitted to the Colombo Additional Magistrate said that ex-JMO was responsible for the missing body parts of Thajudeen’s body. Jayawickrema said that Samarasekera had acted in an irresponsible manner when conducting the first postmortem, in which Samarasekera ruled Thajudeen’s death was due to an accident. The ex-JMO had later claimed that he had handed over the body parts to two minor staff to store in a freezer but both staff members had denied this.

Call to Indian Govt. to Release Parvez

Call to Indian government to release detained human rights defender Khurram Parvez 

Human rights activist Khurram Parvez
The following statement issued by the Sri Lankan Human Rights groups and civil society members 

( September 23, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) We, the under mentioned Sri Lankan citizens and organizations express our serious concern over the arrest and detention of the Mr. Khurram Parvez, Chairperson of the Asian Federation against Involuntary Disappearances (AFAD) and Program Coordinator of the Jammu Kashmir Coalition of Civil Society (JKCCS).

Mr. Parvez was barred by immigration authorities in Delhi airport from boarding his flight to Geneva to attend the UN Human Rights Council’s 33rd Session on 14th September. No official written reason has been given. Mr. Parvez was verbally informed that the Intelligence Bureau of India had ordered that he was not allowed to travel outside the country. Mr. Parvez was to lead the AFAD delegation and to attend various meetings with UN officials and representatives of Permanent Missions of UN Member States in Geneva.

Two days later, around 12.30am on 16 September Mr. Parvez had been arrested from his home in Srinagar and brought to the Kothibagh Police station. No justification was given for the arrest, and no arrest warrant was shown. Mr. Parvez was later hen taken to the Kupwara sub-jail, which made it difficult for him to communicate with his lawyers and isolated him from his family, both based in Srinagar. Even after a sub-jail authorities were served with the Sessions Court order quashing his detention, he was taken back to the Kothi Bagh Police station and later, Police have stated that Mr. Parvez is being taken to Jammu to be detained at the Kot Bhalwal jail. Seven days after being first detained in Srinagar, Mr. Parvez will now be lodged close to 300 kilometers away from his family and legal counsel, making access to both very difficult.

His legal team has been informed by the Police that that was being detained under the Public Safety Act, but they have not been provided any orders, warrants or grounds for detention. His lawyers had moved the acting Chief Judicial Magistrate, Srinagar, questioning his continued detention despite the Sessions Court order. The Police have been ordered to submit a report the next day.

We note that article 9(1) of the ICCPR, to which India is a state party, provides that “No one shall be subjected to arbitrary arrest or detention. No one shall be deprived of his liberty except on such grounds and in accordance with such procedure as are established by law. Article 9(2) states that anyone who is arrested shall be informed, at the time of arrest, of the reasons for his arrest. Article 14(3)(b) of the ICCPR is very clear in stating that everyone shall be entitled to communicate with a counsel of his own choosing.

The above provisions aim at ensuring that every deprivation of liberty will be in accordance with the law, in order to make sure the rights and safety of a person arrested are protected at all times, and that he / she will be entitled to due process not subjected to enforced disappearance, cruel, inhumane and degrading treatment etc. The actions taken by the Indian authorities against Khurram Parvez are in blatant violation of the above articles of the ICCPR and endangers the safety and rights of Mr. Parvez.

This appears to be a reprisal for his long years of human rights activism. The timing of the denial to travel and arrest appears to indicate the Indian authorities aimed to stop him from participating in the 33rd session of the UN Human Rights Council.

We demand the immediate release of Mr. Parvez. And in the meantime, to ensure his physical and mental well-being and to grant him free access to his lawyers and to allow him to freely communicate with his family.

Organizations
  1. Education Renaissance Programme
  2. Free Media Movement
  3. Human Rights Office, Kandy
  4. INFORM Human Rights Documentation Centre
  5. International Centre for Ethnic Studies
  6. Women Development Innovators
Individuals
  1. Ananda Jayasekara
  2. Angelica Chandrasekeran
  3. Anushaya Collure
  4. Balasingham Skanthakumar, Social Scientists Association
  5. C. Dodawatte, Free Media Movement
  6. Chameera Perera, Left Center
  7. Damith Chandimal
  8. Deekshya Illangasinghe
  9. Dharshanie Alles
  10. Fr. Nandana Manatunga
  11. Godfrey Yogarajah, Executive Director, World Evangelical Alliance – Religious Liberty Commission
  12. Hans Billimoria, The Grassrooted Trust, Sri Lanka
  13. K. Aingkaran, Attorney-at-Law
  14. K.J. Brito Fernando – President Families of the Disappeared
  15. Marisa De Silva
  16. Nalini Ratnarajah
  17. Philip Dissanayake – Secretary – Right to Life Human Rights Center
  18. Dr. Philip Settunga
  19. Ruki Fernando
  20. Samal Hemachandra
  21. Sudantha Madawa Fernando, Aluth Parapura
  22. Srinath Chathuranga, Aluth Parapura
  23. Thiyagaraja Waradas
  24. Udaya Kalupathirana
  25. Upul Wicramasinghe

SRI LANKA: AMENDMENTS TO CODE OF CRIMINAL PROCEDURE ACT GOES AGAINST THE INTERNATIONAL STANDARDS – HRC SL

SRI LANKA-CRIME-MEDIA

( Does Govt want to give Police unlimited powers re recording statements from suspects)
(SLB /23 Sep 2016)

Sri Lanka Brief23/09/2016

In a letter  Prime Minister Wickremesinghe, regarding the proposed amendment to the Code of Criminal Procedure Act depriving suspects of access to lawyers until their statements are recorded the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka  has called for  withdrawal of  the aforesaid amendment to the Code of Criminal Procedure and to continue to recognise and enhance the rights of suspects to have access to their lawyers. The letter says that ” the new Bill derogates from the rights already guaranteed by the State under Rules made by the inspector General of Police under the police Ordinance.”

Further it says that ” The new Bill is contrary to the accepted international standards of human rights which Sri Lanka is obliged to guarantee to its people. The attention of the Government of Sri Lanka is drawn to the relevant provisions of the lnternational Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR)”

The HRC-SL letter to the Prime Minister is given below:

Prime Minister of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka
Temple Trees. Colombo 3
Honourable Prime Minister,

PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO  THE CODE OF  CRIMINAL PROCEDURE DEPRIVING  SUSPECT OF ACCESS TO LAWYERS UNTIL THEIR STATEMENTS ARE RECORDED.

The Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka is gravely concerned, that the Bill published in the Gazette on the 1,2th of August 2016, proposing to amend the Criminal Procedure Code, will deprive suspects arrested and detained by the Police of access to Attorneys-at-law, prior to the recording their statement, and will adversely impact on the constitutionally guaranteed rights of persons including the citizens of Sri Lanka”
The Bill proposes to introduce a new section 37A to the Criminal procedure Code. The proposed Section 374(1) states rhal”ony person who hos been arrested and detained in custody, shall have the right to retain and consult on Attorney-ot-law of his choice ot his own expense, ofter the recording of his statements in terms of the provisions of subsection (1) of the section 770 and prior to being produced before a Magistrate.”

Although this section purports to give a right to arrested suspects to retain and consult an Attorney at-law, such right is granted only after a statement is recorded from the suspect. Between the time of arrest and until the time of the conclusion of the recording of a statement, the suspects are deprived of access to their Attorneys-at-law.

The new Bill derogates from the rights already guaranteed by the State under Rules made by the lnspector General of Police under the police Ordinance.

The Human Rights Commission notes that as a result of a settlement reached in the Supreme Court in a Fundamental Rights Application, the inspector General of Police made rules under the police Ordinance cited as Police (Appearances of Attorneys-at-Law at Police Stations) Rules 2012,” recognising the right of a lawyer to represent his/her client at a police station and requiring the officer in charge of the police station to facilitate such representation. These rules effectively recognise the right which all persons including suspects have to access their Attorneys-at-law at any time, including the period immediately after arrest and while being in detention.

The Human Rights Commission has observed that many instances of torture as well as cruel, inhuman treatment of suspects at police stations occur between the period of arrest and the conclusion of the recording of their statements. As such depriving suspects under arrest and detention of access to their lawyers until the conclusions of their statements will result in a greater risk of suspects being subject to torture, cruel and inhuman treatment as well as illegal arrest and detention by errant police officers.
The passage of the new Bill will hinder the efforts of the Government which has expressed its determination to stop torture in Sri Lanka.

The Human Rights Commission is equally concerned that the new provision will impinge on Fundamental Right of a fair trial guaranteed to an Accused under Article L3(3) of the Constitution’ The right to a fair trial begins from the time of investigation. The lack of a fair and impartial investigation will result in the deprivation of a fair-trial to an accused. The new provision, depriving suspects of access to lawyers during a crucial stage of the investigation will result in eventually the accused being deprived of a fair trial as a result of an unfair and partial investigation.

Furthermore, granting access to lawyers after the suspects’ statements are recorded and just before them being produced before a Magistrate is of little consequence. The new Bill is contrary to the accepted international standards of human rights which Sri Lanka is obliged to guarantee to its people. The attention of the Government of Sri Lanka is drawn to the relevant provisions of the lnternational Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR). lt has been observed that the right to liberty and security of persons and the right of due process established by law requires the State to permit access to counsel from the inception of the detention and that there ought to be prompt and regular access to lawyers.

The Supreme Court of Sri Lanka has upheld that the Right to a fair trial includes the accused being granted adequate time and facilities for the preparation of the defence and to communicate with counsel of one’s own choosing. This is also reflected in Article 14 of the ICCPR. Sri Lanka’s Code of Criminal Procedure has been criticised by international bodies including the UN Committee Against Torture of lacking ‘fundamental legal safeguards, such as the right to have o lowyer present during any interrogation ond…the right to confidential communication between lawyer and client.’ As such, it is necessary to strengthen, not weaken, the right of suspects to have access to lawyers.

Especially when Sri Lanka has embarked on a constitutional reform process, including the drafting of a new Chapter on Fundamental Rights that should accord with the highest international and national human rights standards, the presentation of this Bill is all the more problematic.

ln the above circumstances, the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka calls upon the Government of Sri Lanka to withdraw the aforesaid amendment to the Code of Criminal Procedure and to continue to recognise and enhance the rights of suspects to have access to their lawyers.
Dr N. D. Udagama,
Chairperson.
Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka

Gagan Air Force Commander wears uniform even after being sent home ! Demented or delusive ?


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -23.Sep.2016, 6.45PM) The former Air Force Commander Gagan Bulathsinhala who was best known for his worst corrupt activities during the period he held  the post , and who got thrown out from his position within the shortest period in the history of the Sri Lankan Air Force , is now engaged in another evil and villainous activity along with another group of henchmen of his aimed at disrupting and sabotaging the new administration of the Air Force , based on reports reaching Lanka e News inside information division.
This shameless discarded Commander has still not handed over  his official residence or his official vehicle to his successor. In addition he is still keeping back a security detail comprising 45 members illegally. Though  the defense secretary has given  written orders to hand over the residence back , Gagan the moron cum villain has still not honorably given up  the official residence ‘Air House’ despite the fact that Gagan has a house in Colombo. What is much more  ridiculous and ludicrous about this villainous joker is , even after retirement he attends functions wearing  the official uniform to the dismay and shock of all . 
Gagan ‘s official term ended on 2016-09 -12 , yet instead of retiring honorably like a gentleman , he resorted to all kinds of underhand tactics and hypocritical acts to continue in his post until the end. It is very unfortunate , Gagan was the only Air Force Commander who created an unwelcome history as the infamous Air Force Commander who retired and disappeared without telling anyone while also  scolding  the commander in  chief of the forces, whereas all other Air Force Commanders had been  following the tradition of meeting the retinue of officers and soldiers in their camps for the last time before retirement.

No matter what , Lanka news is inundated with a number of letters written by the soldiers of the Air force continuously against Gagan . Those letters  expressed the delight of the entire Air Force over the sensible, far sighted  and prudent  action taken by the commander in chief of the forces to send Gagan on retirement without granting an extension.
 
It is a well and widely known fact that any commander of the forces following his retirement is divested of his  privilege of appearing in his official uniform . He loses that privilege of wearing the official uniform even for a moment when taking part in functions or  parades  under the laws governing the Forces. Yet this infamous ex Air Force commander without an iota of shame ( how can he have shame when he was a most notorious corrupt Air Force Commander even while wearing the official uniform? ) attended the Air Force guard of honor wearing the official uniform.  By that he became the laughing stock not only among the Air Force but even among all the other three Forces. Gagan’s queer and demented  ways after retirement sent a wave of rude shock among all the forces.
An explanation ought to be demanded from him  in this regard , and Gagan shall  be instructed to abide by the laws governing the forces.
How Gagan followed the  jungle laws when he was the Air Force Commander is well known. Kapila Jayampathy who was the Director operations during that period , and who is now the Air Force commander was deprived of his status , official vehicle and  office . He was  only allocated a place in the underground area of the Air Force headquarters , which was no better than a prison cell. 
It is this Gagan the villainous scoundrel who is even now , after retirement depriving the current Air Force Commander Jayampathy of his official vehicle and residence .This in other words is misuse of state property. Consequently Jayampathy has to travel  to office daily from his residence located even farther  from Kottawa . He is forced to use another vehicle provided temporarily by another ministry .
Perhaps Gagan is taking advantage and resorting  to this villainy ,  thuggery and illegality  because of the leniency shown and the gentleman traits of the present Air force commander Kapila Jayampathy who is not taking  any drastic action . Yet this situation has created unrest and unpleasantness against Gagan’s attitude . At any rate hooliganism of hooligans ought not be given encouragement. 
Gagan’s aim and objective by these illegal and villainous action is to sabotage the administration within the Air Force. Hence , a stern order shall be issued that he returns the official residence and the vehicle forthwith which he is holding back for the last two weeks . He shall also be ordered to hand back the security detail .If he does not obey , he shall be hauled up before the military court.   In the past  by summoning Sarath Fonseka before the military court it has been confirmed that under the disciplinary code of the forces , action can be taken against an officer within six months of his retirement . This law no doubt applies to Gagan too.

Moreover , the new Air Force commander shall be compelled to launch investigations into the monumental corruption activities of Gagan when he was the Air Force Commander . This will be in the best interests of the forces and the nation.
Meanwhile , the new commander shall take immediate action to revoke the ban imposed on Lanka e news within the Air force by Gagan for exposing his illicit and corrupt activities.  The new Commander of the Air Force had  announced that the viewers have a right to read reports of every media sans a ban , and that right applies not only to Lanka e news readers but every media . The new Air force commander conducting himself as a  true and bold commander asked  , if the media has a right to criticize the president and the prime minister , why not the commander of the forces ?  He is therefore ready to face any criticism , he pointed out.
---------------------------
by     (2016-09-23 12:19:44)

Rise Against ETCA: JVP Leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake Tells Public


Colombo Telegraph
September 23, 2016
The controversial Economic and Technological Cooperation Agreement (ETCA) with India continued to face protest after protest, with the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) too calling on the people to join hands and rise against the government decision to sign the agreement.
Addressing a seminar on ‘Trading, Sacrifice and ETCA’ in Colombo this week, JVP leaderAnura Kumara Dissanayake said that the agreement will see the influx of low grade IT professionals to the country, which will result in the country’s youth losing job opportunities and Indians gaining.
“If talented Indian IT professionals want to go abroad they select Europe and America. Hence, the highest strata in India would never come to Sri Lanka. The middle strata would remain in India. It is the lowest strata that would come to Sri Lanka. There is a huge unemployment issue in India. As such, youths in Sri Lanka would not get any opportunity in India through the ETCA,” Dissanayake said.
anura copy
“We must launch a struggle and defeat the government’s plan of signing this agreement in India. They are lying about this agreement,” he said.
Dissanayake said that when ETCA is signed that would mean the future of Sri Lankan youth will be sacrificed and they will have no jobs specially in the IT sector. “The government is also planning on signing such an agreement without the basis of any scientific evaluation,” he said.
He also accused both President Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe of being ‘property auctioneers’ by attempting to sell the country’s resources as well as focusing on wrong economic policies. “Some said Ranil was an economic expert. But his strategy is all about selling, and sacrificing. He wants to sell state enterprises; sacrifice state institutions and natural resources – by signing agreements such as ETCA to open the service sector which will have dangerous repercussions,” he said.
Dissanayake said that the JVP is against selling. “The economy in our country is very small. The goods and services trade is only Rs.11, 000 million. The total investment is only US$680 million. Our share in the world market is only 0.05%. Exports earn only US$ 10000,” he said.
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Friday, 23 September 2016

Awake, O sleepers, the time to do some real work has come!

logoAdmit it. The headline floored you. There you were on a Friday morning muttering “TGIF!” loudly and fervently if you’re the boss… or furtively under bated breath if you’re a wage slave – like me. Then along comes some ham-fisted headline like this, like a double-decker bus down High Level Road, and hits you in the solar plexus, like a sack of potatoes swung to the midriff or an extra portion of French fries under the belt. Oomph! Ouch! That hurt. What, our elected representatives – work? Not in a month of Sundays; not if their lives depended on it and not just your votes come their election time again!

Is that what I hear you think? Well, say it again. It’s official. Work is what you do when you’re in the office, under the eyes of a watchful clock or supervisor, and ensconced in productive labour. And now, also, what you do when you’re not in, clocked out, and simply sitting in public transport waiting to be taken where you can sign in or punch in. Or at least that’s what some enterprising folks in Europe would have the rest of us lazy postcolonial slackers believe.

untitled-4According to a recent report on online site Quartz, “A court has ruled that time spent travelling to and from work is ‘work’.” In qz.com’s >Getting There> segment, it is revealed that the lateral-thinking tribunal has given a verdict in favour of employees over their slave-masters. Since “time spent travelling to and from work should count as actual work”, corporate establishments will now have to pay their workers for sitting in a train crammed tighter than the proverbial tin of Norwegian salmon or sweating it out in sardine-packed public buses en route to the slave camp. In the opinion of this EU court, many blue- as well as white-collar workers who have no fixed place of work – like technicians such as electricians, social service workers or specialised caregivers, and millions of myriad sales reps – must be recompensed for the rush-hour trauma they suffer in order to work. Or get to work.

The European Court of Justice can’t leave getting there well alone, apparently. As if to add insult to injury to the company laws over which they sat in judgment, the ECJ deemed it mandatory that no worker must be compelled to labour – even with love – for more than 48 hours per week. It evidently has the health and safety of Europe’s increasingly Asian, African, and Middle Eastern workforce at heart. Not only is a minimum rest period now guaranteed to Europe’s toiling masses, but the EU’s working time directive inures workers from the vagaries of captains of commerce and industry too, who close down regional offices due to cost control factors, and the vicissitudes of commuting to which this subjects employees.

Gravamen

Well now, this is all truly cultured of a civilisation that was swinging through the trees when a certain resplendent isle was working tirelessly to make itself the granary of the east – to say nothing of being the acme of religious philosophy and the epitome of a political system that worked better than its colonising opponents claimed when they invaded us to liberate the enslaved masses. But who’ll pay a plumber to sit like a plum pudding in a crowded Colombo-bound suburban bus while the bathtub leaks and the taps run dry? Worse yet, I can just see my insurance sales agent padding up my annual vehicular bill with detours to drop off his children at school – or visit a cinema to relieve his tired ever-working mind of the storm and stress, generally generated when his clients go through the fine print for small details such as hidden supercharges!

Maybe the worst fallout from our European friends’ socioeconomic rashness is yet to come. Already I can hear the busy minds of our diabolical politicos in an Eastern hemidemisemi-paradise ticking over in double time like some fiendish metronome hell-bent on serving its selfish interests. Where once upon a time some of our political servants in the super-luxury class demanded an extravagant importation of cars so that they could visit their electorates in comfort and safety, they might now demand time off from their representative duties to drive their vehicles to and from ‘work’. Worse than these perhaps unfounded fears is the wild imaginings of my mind as it contemplates the wicked and wily schemes of opportunistic politicians who might capitalise on the redefinition of work taking place at the heart of our planet’s politically sophisticated centre.

Here is what could well come to characterise soon the work done and work demanded in order that payment in cash and kind be merited by our members of parliament and bureaucratic mandarins:

Attacking one’s personal and one’s party’s political enemies in person, print, and at protests – in thought, word, or deed… work!?

Kissing babies. Which paid up for enterprise could easily degenerate into making babies for their political cohorts to kiss. Gives ‘workingman’ new meaning, eh.

Ceremonially declaring open buildings, events, business establishments, etc. The inordinate number of corporate houses and civil society institutions which require a politician to ‘grace’ their ceremonious functions – when all that these worthies have done of late is to disgrace themselves and scandalise the nation – leaves me speechless; but not the politicos concerned, who generally proceed to hold forth on republican virtues which are more honoured in the breach than the observance. All in a day’s work.

But of course as you the discerning reader would have realised by now, this is not the shape of things to come in a possible future political culture. It is the state of the nation’s political ethos as it is.

All of this is preamble. Now we come to the res.

Work v. work

All of the above facetious poking of fun at politicos must serve a purpose. If this column is to take its mandate to explore realpolitik in its present incarnation seriously. And if readers who are serious about democratic-republicanism are to take that avatar of pragmatic politics seriously in the national interest.

Which is to say that from time out of mind, arguably since Aristotle realised that man is a political animal (and probably headed off to the pub for a pint with his pals to celebrate that keen insight) politicians have ‘worked’. For themselves, their parties, their partisan agendas, their petty political interests; even the larger broader national interest in times of national crises like war, famine, economic meltdown. There comes a time in every polity’s maturity and midlife crisis, however, when citizens suspect that their elected representatives are not capable of doing a decent day’s work in the people’s interest – not if their lives depended on it. Such times militate in favour of movements and revolutions ostensibly attempting genuine reform of the state of the nation. Words such as “new” combined with “political culture” and “new” juxtaposed with “a … deal” begin to acquire fresh vitality. There is an exciting sense that the typical bloated corrupt regime’s ‘work’ is coming to an end at the hands – and voting feet – of their nemesis: the enfranchised citizen. A hush about a new ‘WORK’ – in all caps – is shouted out where once it was whispered.

That this brave new ‘WORK’ of reforming and reframing the republic has fallen into some state of disrepair is being suspected by even the most charitable of the Government’s interlocutors today. This is not to say that some solid ‘work’ (in the sense of basic good governance and restored confidence in the fundamentals of state administration) hasn’t been done to restore the diurnal doings of our late great democracy to some semblance of normalcy. We had forgotten – for a decade or more – what governance (leave alone good) looked like… So we’d be forgiven by being grateful and not a gobsmacked at its re-establishment. But there is also a disappointment that the greater ‘Work’ (with a cap) envisaged – a sea-change into something richer and not at all strange or stale as the old familiar bread and circuses – has not quite happened.

Sure, something happened and has happened; and some things are still happening to make the heart glad and the media as much as motley sycophants sing their governing mandarins’ praises. But is it WORK? Or work, and business and politics as usual? The jury is still out on that one.

Let me in the interim, as a working suggestion, propose three areas inter alia in which our duly elected leaders might consider more concerted labours of love.

AUTHORITY: Under previous egregiously egotistic regimes, chief executives were notoriously atheistic to criticism. Today, presidents and prime ministers are still being treated like sacred cows… by both civil society as an amorphous group comprising God knows whom… as well as media – an amoral gathering of gadflies who nevertheless play a part in the maintenance of republican virtue and integrity. Could it be a work in progress that senior governmental leaders still feel the stings and barbs of critical engagement such that they interpret these not as the slings and arrows of the outrageous fortune which brought them to office, but as personal attacks? Would it be too much to ask them not to interpret it as insult or injury – but embrace the boldness of their interlocutors as not loving them less, but the republic more? Work at it, dear sirs!

ACCOUNTABILITY: Much was made of the deterioration of transparency under a bygone government whose misdemeanours smacked of impunity. But even today there are blue-eyed boys who seem to be facile at evading the long arm of the law vis-à-vis COPE… or party favourites ensconced in Parliament and Cabinet, as a bulwark against chauvinistic forces which could trump them at future elections. Would it be too much to ask that highbrows in Government work at more closely matching the principles they espoused on the campaign trail with the values they seem reluctant to embrace in the convenient political marriage?

ACCEPTABILITY: Although no one remembers the old hat of the 100-Day Plan any more, the framers of our would-be social contract did warn us that they were concerned about the decline and fall of ethics and morals. Today the fine print we failed to read is coming back to bite us in the backside. Time for independent-minded citizens and guardians of civil liberties to watch the dogs who puritanically preach against the indulgences of the masses which they disapprove of – while self-indulgently supplying ways and means for their cronies and cohorts to indulge themselves! You cannot preach temperance and sobriety to folks who are forced to watch while politicians on the public purse live it up in style like there was no tomorrow – and today, while presidents preach about societal vices like public consumption of alcohol, our women and children are being consumed in private by perverts, twisted school principals who administer corporate punishment for a sadistic whim, and powerfully protected paedophile rings which have positioned Sri Lanka as a child sex-tourism haven since Hikkaduwa opened its beaches to hippies. Work on that, would you, Mr. Workingman’s Wonderboy!

Hope none of these are too Herculean for the true Workers of our late great Republic being resurrected behind the veil away from prying public gazes. We the Masters of the Servants of the people would very much like to be able to say one day – perhaps at the very next polls – that desideratum of every decent democrat elected to office: “Well done, thou good and faithful worker!”

Investigation begun on another suspected fraud by Prasanna


FRIDAY, 23 SEPTEMBER 2016
It is reported that the Special Police Division has commenced another investigation against former Chief Minister of Western Provincial Council Prasanna Ranatunga and three senior officials on a complaint made by 30 Members of the Provincial Council including its Leader of the Opposition Manjusri Arangala stating that the former Chief Minister and the officials had misappropriated Rs. 70 million of public funds.
The Special Division recorded statements in connection with the complaint from Mr. Arangala and five other Members of the PC yesterday (22nd).
Statements from 15 more members have been already recorded say reports.

Yoshitha's request postpones until the 28th

Yoshitha's request postpones until the 28th

Sep 23, 2016

For money laundering offence former President's son Yoshitha Rajapaksa is on bail term allowed by the High courts.

He had made an application to travel abroad.Whether his travel is to be allowed or not was paid attention to when the case was heard at the High courts today the 22nd instant. This decision whether to grant him permission or not would be notified to him on the 28th instant the related authorities of the High court had quipped.
 
This decision had been conveyed  by the High court Judge AAR Heiyyantuduwa the intructionsof the Attorney General.The request was to travel to Melbourne in Australia to take treatment to an injury that had occurred to Yoshitha while playing Rugger.
 
For this purpose the permission is sought for one month. Yoshitha Rajapaksa  has been released on bail from the case of  the money laundering offence

AG had not acquitted Yakada Sudha and Anusha Pelpita ; no pressures exerted or conspiracy -if necessary case can be filed again !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -23.Sep.2016, 5.05PM) The case filed by the Children and Women’s Bureau against 12 suspects including Sudharman Radeliyagoda  the ex news Director of ITN , Anusha Pelpita the ex Director of Telecom Regulatory Commission , and Sepala Ratnayake  on child molestation charges with intent to secretly  detain a child , had been withdrawn on the advice of the Attorney General (AG) , sans  any  pressures exerted by  anyone .  
The actual reason for the withdrawal is due to  technical grounds militating against  proceeding with the case, informed sources within AG ‘s department disclosed.
Meanwhile, the high rung police officer of the Bureau who conducted the investigations has left the Bureau after receiving a promotion as DIG. 
The oral statements made and the answers given during the investigation cannot be used during the case proceedings , and therefore other evidence becomes  necessary in this case . Since such evidence is not strong enough, continuing with the case has become difficult.
Based on these and other grounds , the charges filed had to be withdrawn , but  the accused have not been exonerated of the charges or acquitted  . Hence , if necessary the case can be filed again , and investigations can be pursued.  In the circumstances nobody had exerted any pressure or there has  been no  conspiracy ,  according to sources linked to the AG .
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by     (2016-09-23 11:39:21)

A study in hypocrisy

A Palestinian and an Israeli settler walk on opposite sides of a concrete barrier in the occupied West Bank city of Hebron, February 2012.Ryan Rodrick BeilerActiveStills

Michael Lesher-22 September 2016

“They don’t understand,” said a young man outside an Orthodox New Jersey synagogue where I often pray, spreading his hands helplessly to emphasize the great gulf between the consciousness of religious and non-religious Jews. “We put God first.”

He was explaining why Haredi Jews in Israel have managed, by vociferous protest and government-busting threats, to force the government to cancel 17 out of 20 “infrastructure projects” that Israel Railways had planned to build on the Jewish Sabbath.

And, of course, he was right: Orthodox Jews do put God’s law ahead of every other consideration. That is, sometimes we do.

Inconveniencing the rest of the country in deference to Orthodox Sabbath prohibitions was evidently one of those times.

In fact, despite the uproar precipitated by its partial victory over the government, Israel’s Orthodox leadership isn’t satisfied: it is still demanding the cancelation of the remaining three construction jobs scheduled for Saturdays, even though police claim that canceling the three projects could endanger lives. 

The rabbis are also insisting on reduced Friday afternoon and Saturday night rail service, which will pose a hardship to many Israelis, including thousands of soldiers.

But what can you do, as the young Orthodox Jew asked outside the synagogue, when Jewish law is at stake?

I only wish it were that simple.

What about laws prohibiting theft?

Yes, Haredi leaders are sure to protest vigorously about a train or bus or movie theater running on the Sabbath. But when was the last time anyone heard a complaint from any of the major Orthodox rabbis in Israel — or anywhere else, for that matter — about the Israeli government’s systematic theft of other people’s property? That is, about the occupation of the West Bank?

This isn’t an idle question. Tolerating the expropriation of Palestinian land cuts to the heart of traditional Jewish doctrine. Halakhah, or Jewish law, includes ethical imperatives as well as ritual decrees: bloodshed, violence, theft and deceit are all expressly forbidden by the same Torah that prohibits specified labors on the Sabbath.

Jewish tradition even merges such ethical norms into considerations we would describe today as questions of “national security.”

Commenting on Deuteronomy 25:17, Rashi, the great medieval glossator (quoting a rabbinic text), warns that an entire Jewish community can be placed in fear of an enemy attack if its inhabitants keep dishonest weights and measures — that is, if they permit themselves to steal even trifling amounts. For those who take such texts seriously, how much greater must be the danger to Israelis who participate in the forcible robbery of land and resources from an entire people?

This, of course, is exactly what is happening in the region, which all 15 judges of the International Court of Justice agreed to designate as “Occupied Palestinian Territory.”

“Israel’s ideological and political goals have proven more exploitative than those of other settler regimes,” wrote Sara Roy, senior research scholar at Harvard’s Center for Middle Eastern Studies, in an authoritative 1995 studyquoted here from Norman Finkelstein’s Beyond Chutzpah, “because they rob the native population of its most important economic resources — land, water and labor — as well as the internal capacity and potential for developing those resources.”

The Israeli scholar Neve Gordon has documented how, besides the outright seizure of land and water, Israel’s occupation has cost Palestinians billions of dollars through oppressive taxes and regulations. Theft doesn’t get much clearer than that.

Resounding silence

Yet Israel’s Orthodox Jewish leadership remains silent about the evils of Israel’s occupation, even as tens of thousands of Haredim settle in illegal West Bank colonies.

That silence can’t be explained away as ignorance, either; it’s a bad case of lopsided priorities. Only last month,Orthodox publications were agog over the “Freedom March” planned by human rights activists for 2 September, a Friday afternoon, near a checkpoint at the Gush Etzion settlement, “to protest Israeli administrative detentions without trial and in solidarity with [Palestinian] hunger strikers” who languish in Israeli prisons despite never having been charged with a crime.

Was it the arbitrary incarceration of Palestinians that bothered the editors of the Orthodox Jewish press, which “broke” the story? Or the fact that the site of the protest was a highway built for Jews only and on Palestinian land? No. They were upset because the demonstration might make it harder for Orthodox Jewish settlers to get home in time for Shabbat.

Never mind that Israel’s checkpoints impose a living hell on Palestinians all over the West Bank, including East Jerusalem, every day of the week.

Never mind that the rabbinate’s vaunted willingness to bend Sabbath laws when lives are in danger — though not in the case of the additional construction projects they want to cancel, where the rabbis claim “alternatives” are available — evidently applies only to Jewish lives.

The endless death toll of Palestinians that is the grimmest regular feature of the occupation doesn’t appear even to figure in their calculations. For the Orthodox editors, as for the rabbinate, technical Sabbath observance (voluntary or not) matters; Palestinian human rights do not.

Fortunately, there is another approach to the Sabbath, and it’s one we Jews urgently need to recapture. 

This approach recognizes the Sabbath as a celebration of human freedom and dignity, in contrast to the specter of Egyptian slavery out of which the Jewish nation emerges in the Hebrew Bible. It embraces the peace of the Sabbath as a precious alternative to the thinly disguised violence that underlies the competition and stress of the working week.

Viewed from that perspective, the Sabbath could never serve as a cover for Israel’s occupation of Palestinian land. On the contrary, Orthodox Jews who cling to its strict observance would insist, at the same time, that Jews should never be the cause of another people’s oppression.

If we in the Orthodox community embrace that view of the Sabbath, we can turn religious energies toward deeper compassion for the victims of occupation and a deeper resolve to fight it along with other human evils.

If we don’t, we’ll be left with the monstrous caricature defined by the Orthodox rabbinate’s skewed priorities, as reflected in Israel’s Operation Cast Lead in 2008-09. That military assault on Gaza commenced on a Sabbath with an offensive by fighter jets, attack helicopters and drones that killed more than 200 Palestinians on the first day alone. Yet throughout the bloody 22-day carnage that ensued, and in honor of the holy day, the Israeli army refused to allow desperately needed aid shipments into Gaza on any Sabbath.

In those dark weeks, the Orthodox leadership didn’t protest the Israeli government’s abuse of the Sabbath. No wonder other people “don’t understand” us now.

Michael Lesher, a writer and lawyer, is the author of Sexual Abuse, Shonda and Concealment in Orthodox Jewish Communities (McFarland). He is a member of Jewish Voice for Peace. Website:www.michaellesher.com

How Failed Peace Talks in Syria Help Al Qaeda

If the West can’t deliver for Syria’s mainstream rebels, maybe al Qaeda will.
How Failed Peace Talks in Syria Help Al Qaeda

BY JOHN HUDSON-SEPTEMBER 23, 2016

It didn’t take long for the breakdown in cease-fire talks between the United States and Russia to affect the situation on the ground in Syria. Early Friday, Damascus heavily bombarded rebel-held neighborhoods in eastern Aleppo in a bid to retake the divided city.

But the West’s failure to silence the guns of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad could also have a more insidious effect over time: the merger of mainstream rebel groups in Aleppo with Jabhat Fatah al-Sham (JFS), an al Qaeda-affiliated group formerly known as the Nusra Front.

“We’re seeing everything being done to force together all the groups inside Aleppo today,” Bassma Kodmani, a senior member of the Syrian opposition’s High Negotiations Committee, told Foreign Policy. “That’s a deadly direction for everyone.”

For weeks, mainstream rebel groups resisted efforts to merge with JFS, fearing that it would expose them to American airstrikes. And on Sept. 9, the United States and Russia brokered a cease-fire that promised to halt the Assad regime’s barrel bomb attacks and provide urgently needed humanitarian aid to besieged rebel-held areas — as long as the rebels dissociated from hard-line Islamists.

But on Thursday night, Moscow and Washington failed to find a way to revive the short-lived cease-fire during what U.N. special envoy to Syria Staffan de Mistura called a “long, painful, difficult, and disappointing meeting.”

The gathering of the International Syria Support Group, which includes the United States, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, Iran, and several other countries, occurred on the sidelines of the annual United Nations General Assembly. In the middle of the meeting, the Syrian government announced the beginning of a new military operation in eastern Aleppo, blowing up any possibility of resuscitating the cease-fire accord.

A senior U.S. official described the meeting as “contentious” in a conference call with reporters, and said it would take “extraordinary steps by the Russians and the regime” to restore the cease-fire.

“The ball is very much in the Russians’ court to come back to us with some ideas that are serious,” the official said. “That would be above and beyond the types of things they have been willing to agree to in the past with regard to air activities over large parts of Syria.”

A visibly frustrated Secretary of State John Kerry left the gathering, saying he would meet again with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on Friday, but expressed concern about reports of the Assad regime’s new offensive.

“I am no less determined today than I was yesterday, but I am even more frustrated,” Kerry said.
Now that the cease-fire is officially dead and the Assad regime is waging a new offensive in Aleppo, Syria experts say mainstream rebels may find themselves forced into closer military ties with al Qaeda-aligned Islamists in order to stand a better chance against Assad’s military.

“The only carrot was the aid and access Kerry supposedly secured from Moscow,” said Andrew Tabler, a Syria expert at the Washington Institute for Near East Policy. “That didn’t happen.”

Opposition forces are unlikely to separate from extremist elements if Washington can’t get Russia to rein in Assad, another analyst said.

“From the armed opposition perspective, the cessation of hostilities process cannot proceed without first achieving civilian protection,” said Nicholas Heras, a Syria expert at the Center for a New American Security. “U.S.-backed armed opposition groups simply won’t even begin to roll back the influence of extremist groups with ties to al Qaeda like Jabhat Fateh al-Sham and Ahrar al-Sham within the rebel movement without more forceful U.S. action.”

Kodmani, whose group has long sought to distinguish members of the mainstream opposition from Islamists, said the absence of diplomatic progress makes it difficult for the political arm of the Syrian opposition to maintain credibility with Syrians on the ground.

“We are here as the moderate opposition,” she said. “If this opposition does not deliver anything to the people and the moderate groups on the ground, where are the alternatives? What is it?”

Any further cohesion between the rebels and hard-line Islamists could spell trouble for efforts to revive a cease-fire agreement, as well as other U.S. efforts to arm Syrian opposition forces to defeat the Islamic State. It would also fuel Moscow’s longstanding complaint that Washington and its Sunni allies have failed to separate legitimate members of the Syrian opposition from radical Islamic groups.

In an interview with The Associated Press on Thursday, Assad said the five-and-a-half-year war in Syria would “drag on” for as long as the United States and its allies support militants he called “terrorists” in Syria. The defiant strongman said he gives little credence to what U.S. officials say.

“American officials — they say something in the morning and they do the opposite in the evening,” he said. “You cannot take them at their word, to be frank. We don’t listen to their statements, we don’t care about it, we don’t believe it.”

Aleppo residents tell of onslaught as airstrikes enter second day

‘Anger has filled everyone who remains in this city of rubble … God curse humanity if this is what it has become,’ says nurse

The body of an infant is retrieved from the rubble of a building in the al-Muasalat area of Aleppo. Photograph: Thaer Mohammed/AFP/Getty Images-Rebels fire a rocket in the town of Azaz in Aleppo province. Photograph: Anadolu Agency/Getty Images
A destroyed ambulance is seen outside the Syrian Civil Defence HQ after airstrikes in Ansari.
 A still image from a video posted on social media shows a baby being rescued from rubble in Aleppo. Photograph: Reuters Tv/Reuters-A destroyed ambulance is seen outside the Syrian Civil Defence HQ after airstrikes in Ansari. Photograph: AP


Residents of rebel-held east Aleppo have described scenes of devastation after one of the heaviest and most sustained nights of bombardment the city has experienced. Activists claimed that Syrian and Russian warplanes attacked the city hours after the announcement of a major new offensive dashed any hopes of restoring a US-Russian ceasefire.

At least 91 deaths were recorded in the province on Friday, but activists said the figure was probably an underestimate because many bodies remained buried in rubble.

One attack, on a town west of Aleppo city called Bashqateen, killed 15 members of a family who had been sheltering in a residential building housing internally displaced people, activists said.

As the bombing entered a second day, three medical facilities and two centres belonging to the White Helmets, a volunteer rescue group, were hit in airstrikes that disabled some of their vehicles, cut off roads in the city and left victims trapped in collapsed buildings. The White Helmets said more than 40 buildings were destroyed.

Activists posted images of huge craters that they alleged were the first instances of warplanes dropping bunker buster bombs – a claim the Guardian could not independently verify.

“Are we in the era of technology and civilisation?” said a resident of eastern Aleppo. “Is this Russian civilisation and democracy? The killing of children, women and elderly people?”

The Syrian military announced its new offensive late on Thursday as the US secretary of state, John Kerry, met his Russian counterpart, Sergei Lavrov, and other foreign ministers on the margins of a UN summit in New York, with the ostensible hope of restoring a week-long truce that collapsed on Monday.

Kerry and Lavrov met again on Friday, but they appeared to have made little progress towards a ceasefire. “I met with the foreign minister, we exchanged some ideas and we had a little bit of progress,” Kerry said. Earlier, when asked by reporters whether the truce could be reinstated, Lavrov said: “You should ask the Americans.”

Aleppo, once Syria’s commercial capital, is divided into a western portion controlled by the government and an eastern area held by rebels. The eastern part has been besieged for two months, with an estimated 250,000 people in dire need of humanitarian aid.

In a stark illustration of the challenges facing rescuers on the ground, dramatic footage emerged of a girl being pulled from the ruins of a building and rushed away for treatment. Five-year-old Rawan Alowsh could be heard wailing on the footage, broadcast by Sky News from the Bab al-Nairab district of Aleppo.
Rawan was shown later on Friday recovering in hospital. Neither her parents nor her four siblings were reported to have survived the attack.

Medics in eastern Aleppo spoke of their despair at international efforts to alleviate their suffering and anger at the continued assault on the population. Bara’a, a nurse at a hospital that doctors in Aleppo refer to with the codename M2 to conceal its location, said she had witnessed several children brought in with severe injuries on Friday.

“It is so saddening,” she said. “The strikes and massacres do not stop. Bombings, siege, homelessness, exhaustion, fear, manpower shortage. The silence of the world is killing us.

“Anger has filled everyone who remains in this city of rubble. Many of the wounded are children and, when you look in their eyes, they weep and say we have nothing left. Curse this justice. They lose their limbs and become disabled for life and their only sin is that they are the children of Syria.

“They have burned their childhood and their innocence and made them homeless in their country and all we get in return are words and promises from outside. God curse humanity if this is what it has become.”
Activists claimed the government and its Russian allies had deployed phosphorus and cluster munitions as well as barrel and vacuum bombs. It was unclear if government forces were planning an imminent ground incursion into the rebel-held districts, but some observers interpreted the intense shelling as a sign that such an effort would follow in due course.

Scouts on the city’s eastern outskirts reported that pro-government positions, which are dominated by Iraqi militias, were making plans to advance in large numbers.

Abu Yousef, a former teacher from the Bustan al-Qasr district of east Aleppo, said: “For many months now, the Shia militias have gathered near the airport. They are Iraqis mainly and they came here in big numbers in July. There are several thousand of them and they are very sectarian.

“They do the fighting, the Iranians give the orders and the Syrians army follows. All the eastern approaches to the city have been destroyed. And the bombing today was crazy. Rubble is bouncing around. They are dropping every type of bomb they have. They are getting ready to invade.”

Syrian army launches major offensive against rebel-held areas in eastern Aleppo

A Syrian military source told Agence France-Presse that the timing of the ground operation would “depend on the results of the strikes and the situation on the ground”.

Activists said the government of Bashar al-Assad also bombed one of two water distribution plants in the opening move of what the military command described as an operation to reclaim the opposition-controlled eastern districts of the city. “We need a miracle to save us from inevitable death,” said a doctor in the city.

One western diplomat said he did not believe that the rebel-held districts were in immediate danger of a ground incursion. Speaking on condition of anonymity, they said that at the meeting in New York on Thursday, Lavrov had denied there was any offensive planned to retake Aleppo.

“It seems highly improbable that there would be a quick defeat of eastern Aleppo,” the source said. “The only way to take it is with such a monstrous atrocity that it would be remembered for decades or generations. To take it quickly, much of Aleppo would be destroyed.”