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, November 2, 2016

Asian police officer wins £470,000 payout for racial discrimination

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Wednesday 02 Nov 2016
PC Nadeem Saddique is just two months away from 25 years service, and yet the last six years have been a nightmare. 

The 46-year-old became the victim of racial discrimination and vicitmisation on 25 occasions on the grounds of his Pakistani origin and his Muslim religion. He was the only Asian in Cleveland Police firearms unit, but his efforts to move on and upgrade were, the tribunal found, thwarted by more senior officers operating in a culture of bullying and discrimination.

The employment tribunal today awarded PC Saddique £470,000 compensation – for loss of employment, personal injury and exemplary damages – but he says its brought him little relief have been hunted and singled out for years.

Cleveland Police has publicly apologised and said many of it’s policies have been reviewed as a result of this case – but none of the alleged discriminators have been disciplined or faced a disciplinary hearing.

Forced by tradition to give up inheritance, Indian women embrace property ownership


By Rina Chandran- Wed Nov 2, 2016

CHAKSU, India (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - Days before she was married 18 years ago, K. Bina Devi and her sister were called to the living room of the family home where they lived with their parents and four brothers.

There, in a short ceremony witnessed by village elders, she and her sister signed a piece of paper giving up their share of the family property to their brothers. Sweets were distributed and everyone congratulated her and her sister.

The custom of "haq tyag", or sacrifice of right, entails a person - usually a woman - relinquishing their claim on ancestral property. It is widely practised in the Indian state of Rajasthan despite a 2005 national law that gave women equal inheritance rights.

While haq tyag is voluntary, women come under enormous pressure to comply, activists said.

"If we don't do it, our family will boycott us," said Devi, 36, her head covered with the end of her green saree.

"Our relationship with the family will break, and people will speak ill of us," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation in Chaksu village, about 30 km (19 miles) from Jaipur city.

Haq tyag is justified on grounds that the father pays for his daughter's wedding, and therefore only the sons are entitled to a share of the family property.

Also, once she is married, a woman is seen as belonging to her husband's family with no claim on ancestral property.

In a bid to address the imbalance, Rajasthan and other states now offer lower rate mortgages and cheaper registration when a property is registered in the name of a woman.

"Haq tyag is a tradition, and it is voluntary," said Rajendra Singh Shekhawat, a joint secretary in the state government.

"In some cases, it may not be voluntary. But how can we check if the woman is signing willingly or not? That is why we have laws that encourage property ownership by women," he said.
NO SECURITY

One of India's poorest states, Rajasthan is known as much for its beautiful palaces and majestic forts as for its centuries-old traditions of honour and chivalry.

This is the state where the custom of sati, where widows threw themselves into their husband's funeral pyre, prevailed long after it was declared illegal in the 19th century. The law was strengthened in 1987 following the death of a young widow in Rajasthan watched by thousands.

Across India, only 13 percent of farmland is owned by women, according to census data.

Amendments in 2005 to the Hindu Succession Act, which governs matters of inheritance among Hindus who make up about 80 percent of India's population, made women's inheritance rights equal to those of men.

Yet some state laws run contrary to the legislation, and in states such as Rajasthan, women are made to forgo their claims.

Haq tyag itself is rooted in misogynistic customs and traditions, particularly in India's villages. These include limited education for girls, early marriage, financial dependence, and denial of the right to property.

"It is a deep-rooted patriarchy that tells women they are okay only as long as they have the protection of a man," said Varsha Joshi, an associate professor at the Institute of Development Studies in Jaipur, who has studied property ownership among women in rural Rajasthan.

"Women have no security, no guarantee of a roof over their heads. And it is assumed they will never go against their families or go to court over being denied their right to property," she said.
FINANCIALLY LITERATE

Increasingly though, women in Chaksu village and elsewhere in the northwestern state are having to tend to the land as their husbands migrate in search of work.

With their names missing from property titles, women are often unable to take loans or access government subsidies. They are in danger of being thrown out when the husband dies, as the property then goes to the sons or the husband's brothers.

Rights activists are raising awareness of the law among women, and encouraging men to take advantage of the perks.

"We have to be respectful of customs: we can't just go tell women to claim their rights, they will be ostracised if they do," said Kavita Mishra, head of the Centre for Community Economics and Development Consultants Society (CECOEDECON).

"Having a financial incentive is a great way to make the men see the benefit of registering property in the name of the women," she said.

Women are also becoming more independent and financially literate. Once confined to their homes and dependent on their husbands, women in villages are running small businesses with the help of microfinance, and working in state welfare programmes that provide 100 days' employment to rural families.

"They now have bank accounts and some financial independence. That has given them the ambition and the confidence to own a home or a plot of land," said Mishra.

In Chaksu, Devi belongs to a self-help group that sews camel-leather slippers for sale to a retailer in Jaipur, and helps members source loans to buy property.

"It's important that we women have something in our name. Otherwise we have no security," said Manju Devikumar, who heads the 10-member group.

"Things are changing. Laws give us equal rights even to own property, which we could never dream of," she said.

(Reporting by Rina Chandran @rinachandran, Editing by Ros Russell. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's rights, trafficking, corruption and climate change. Visit news.trust.org to see more stories.)

Landmark chronic fatigue trial could treat two-thirds

Exhausted childTHINKSTOCK

BBCBy James Gallagher-1 November 2016

A therapy that successfully treats two-thirds of children with chronic fatigue syndrome is being trialled for NHS use.

The disease affects one in 50 children, leading to mental health problems and missing school.

"If anyone has done a cross-country [run] or a marathon - that is how it feels all the time," said Jessica, 14.
The trial, on 734 children, will use intensive online therapy sessions to adjust sleeping habits and activity levels.

It also uses a form of behavioural therapy to help children with the disease adapt the way they live.
Studies suggest one in 100 children misses at least a day of class a week because of the disease.

When Jessica - not her real name - was 10, she missed the equivalent of a whole term in one school year.

She was diagnosed with chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) - also known as myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) - at the age of 11.


"I can't do the things my friends can do," she told the BBC News website.

"I've missed a lot of birthdays.

"When they have sleepovers, I have to sacrifice that.

"And I can only do mornings at school, so I miss a lot of lessons."

Prof Esther Crawley, a children's doctor and from the University of Bristol, said: "This illness is devastating. About 50% of teenagers are tired, but these children are different - they stop doing the stuff they want to do.

"The first thing they drop is socialising and fun things, then they drop school, so this is very different to teenagers just being tired."

'Lost friends'

Jessica's mother said: "It has been hell, it has been depressing.
"I have lost friends, she has lost friends.

"She loves Florence and the Machine and her best friends went [to watch the band play live], it is isolating because her friends were doing what her mind wants to do but her body cannot."

Prof Crawley is leading the FITNET-NHS trial, to see if online consultations work and are cost-effective for the health service.

It is being funded by the research wing of the NHS in England, but when the results are out all the devolved health services would then decide whether they wanted to introduce it.

Trials of the scheme in the Netherlands showed 63% of the patients given therapy had no symptoms after six months, whereas just 8% recovered without it.

The scheme offers behavioural therapy sessions to change the way children think of the disease and aims to reduce the time spent sleeping and sometimes cut activity levels.

The approach regularly receives criticism from some activists who argue it treats chronic fatigue syndrome as a disease of the mind.

Prof Crawley said: "A teenager might say, 'You are just trying to change my sleep', but do you know how much biology you actually change?

"Children who come to my clinic have low cortisol [stress hormone] levels in the morning, that is why they feel so terrible; by changing their sleep, we reverse that.

"The stuff we are doing is not a pill, but it might as well be."

Lizzie HorganLIZZIE HORGAN

Lizzie Horgan, 26, from Hertfordshire, is just getting back to work after being hit with chronic fatigue syndrome in 2015.

"One evening I came home feeling really unwell and passed out, I had no control over my body.

"I was initially really reluctant to take up the offer of cognitive behavioural therapy, as I assumed it was for something psychological, but actually it really helped me understand what was happening to my body.

"So I think the trial is really cool and really exciting."

The results of the study should be known in 2022.

Mary-Jane Willows, from the Association of Young People with ME, told the BBC: "It is a scandal, what other condition would you leave a child with - undiagnosed and untreated?

"And the trouble is the longer they are left, the more ill they become.

"This trial is hugely important, every day we are phoned by parents who are desperate to get treatment for their children."

Prof Stephen Holgate, from the Medical Research Council, said: "CFS/ME is an important disabling condition.

"It has been chronically underfunded for years; patients deserve high-quality research like this."
Follow James on Twitter.

JUDGE DECIDES TO HEAR RAVIRAJ MURDER CASE BEFORE A SINHALA JURY DESPITE LAWYER ‘S OPPOSITION


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Image: Funeral procession of  NaarajhRaviraj in Colombo (c)SLB.

Sri Lanka Brief01/11/2016

Colombo High Court Judge Manilal Waidyathilaka yesterday decided to hear the case related to the slaying of former MP Nadaraja Raviraj and his security officer before a specially constituted Sinhala speaking  Jury  despite the move was opposed by the Counsel appearing for the interests of the deceased MP Naarajh Raviraj reports Ceylon Today.

The case will be heard on a daily basis commencing 21 November.

The accused in the case had previously requested the High Court to hear the case before a special Sinhala speaking Jury.

However, the Counsel appearing for the interests of the deceased MP Raviraj opposed that move.
The Judge also issued notices on all witnesses to be present in Court on that date.

The Attorney General has indicted six suspects in the High Court over the assassination of the former MP and his security guard and the case will be heard sans three suspects who have avoided the Court thus far.

Interference from top into Lasantha murder investigation

Interference from top into Lasantha murder investigation

- Oct 31, 2016

Investigations into the murder of ‘The Sunday Leader’ editor Lasantha Wickrematunge are reportedly facing such a situation that they cannot proceed, due to the pressure being exerted on the CID from top government figures. Investigations so far have revealed that a team of 17 soldiers of Tripoli Army camp in Colombo had carried out the murder. They had left to carry out the murder from their camp.

Therefore, getting a court order, the CID has obtained a list of the 270 members of the said camp during the two days immediately prior to Wickrematunge’s killing. All of them were to be questioned, in batches of 20 at a time. The CID has summoned 20 of them on October 26 for questioning. Another 20 were to be summoned on the following day, but defence secretary Karunasena Hettiarachchi has told the CID that president Maithripala Sirisena had ordered that the soldiers be not summoned for questioning.
The president has objected to their being questioned on the basis that that could lead to a breakdown of their morale. At two recent functions, he has made public statements against ‘war heroes’ from being taken to courts.
Halt to investigations
Disrupting the questioning of the 270 soldiers has made it difficult to identify the 17 men responsible for Wickrematunga’s murder, and investigations cannot proceed without identifying them.
Wickrematunge’s remains were exhumed seven years after his murder, on 27 October 2016, for further investigation, and such interference has come in the way of enforcing the law against the killers.
Morale and supremacy of the law
Soon after assuming duties as the president, Maithripala Sirisena said that he would have ‘ended up six feet underground’, had he lost the presidential election. What he should understand is that, had he been defeated, it would not have been Mahinda Rajapaksa or Gotabhaya Rajapaksa who would have come to send him six feet underground, but the so-called ‘soldiers with morale’. As the president, he should at least act to ensure that the supremacy of the law reigns over all, irrespective of whether anyone had gone to war or not, or anyone is a war hero or not.

Human remains found in vacated military base in Batticaloa

Home02 Nov  2016
Locals in Batticaloa found human skeletal remains within an area of land that was previously used by the Sri Lankan military as a base. 
The remains were found while locals were digging for sanitation in a house opposite the Mariamman temple in Murakkoddaanchenai.
Locals believe that the area may reveal further remains as many Tamils went missing after being taken to the former military base during the 1990s. 
The police have been informed of the incident. 

REPORT OF THE HRC OF SRI LANKA TO UN CAT: AN INDICTMENT OF JUSTICE SYSTEM

deaths-in-custody

Sri Lanka Brief01/11/2016

Excerpts form the report of the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka to the Committee Against Torture, October 2016. Sub headings are from the SLB.

Introduction
  1. Following the 19th amendment to the Constitution in 2015, which established the Constitutional Council constituting members of political parties as well as civil society mandated to appoint members to the independent commissions, new members were appointed to the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka in late October 2015.
  1. In 2007 the Commission was downgraded to B status by the International Co-ordinating Committee of National Human Rights Institutions (ICC) for failure to adhere to the Paris Principles. Since the independence of the Commission was enhanced following the 19th amendment to the Constitution, and the reasons for the downgrading are being addressed, the Commission is in the process of applying for A status.

Transitional justice needs to go beyond war-related accountability



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By Jehan Perera-October 31, 2016, 8:00 pm


President Maithripala Sirisena addressing the Armed Forces, ‘Gallantry Awards 2016,’ last week said that certain media organisations, journalists, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs) and traitorous forces act without realizing the importance of ensuring national security. The President, who is constitutionally vested with the authority of Commander-in-Chief of the Sri Lankan security forces said he was not ready to compromise national security in order to please NGOs. A sore point for the security forces with regard to NGOs would be the demand for war-time accountability and for post-war demilitarization of the former war zones of the North and East. Some NGOs have been in the forefront of the UN-sponsored resolution that calls for an investigation into the past and for post-war demilitarization among others.

Earlier in the month the President came in for severe criticism from civil society groups including the one founded by the late Ven Maduluwave Sobitha who led the civil society campaign against the abuses of power of the previous government. This followed the President’s public criticism of state institutions investigating bribery and corruption. The Director General of the Commission to investigate bribery and corruption Dilrukshi Dias Wickramasinghe resigned following President Sirisena’s public criticism of three state investigative bodies for launching politically motivated probes. The President’s main complaint seemed to be that these investigations, in particular those involving the security forces, were taking place without his knowledge.

The President’s hard hitting and emotional criticisms of institutions that perform a check and balance function in the polity are a matter for concern. They constitute a setback to the government’s commitment to their avowed policy of good governance, articulated especially at the elections that brought them to power. However, in both instances the President also engaged in more reassuring actions. He has met with the civil society groups that criticized him and promised reform. In the meantime Speaker Karu Jayasuriya was able to inform members of independent commissions that neither the President nor Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe had negative attitudes towards any of the commissions. The Speaker also informed the commissions that the attitude of the President and the Prime Minister did not differ.

DISENCHANTMENT

At the present time there is growing disenchantment among those who voted for change at the last presidential and general elections. However, it is important to keep the larger picture in perspective. During the period of the previous government basic freedoms were curbed. There was no freedom from fear and therefore no freedom of speech. There was impunity, symbolized by the white van that took away dissenters. There was a total breakdown of checks and balances epitomized in the ruthless sacking of the former Chief Justice by means of a kangaroo court of Parliamentarians. It is important to note how much has changed for the better in the two years that have followed. Freedom from fear is absolutely necessary if the government is to be challenged as it ought to be by civil society and by institutions vested with the power to check and balance.

A major deficiency of the government is its lack of transparency. A part of the reason for this is that it is trying to resolve long lasting and deep seated problems such as the ethnic conflict. It is conducting negotiations with the Tamil and Muslim parties, who have confidence in it, but in secret as they fear that if the present positions they take are known to the general public they will create nationalist upheavals. Unfortunately what this means is that in today’s climate of freedom, all that is bad that the government is doing gets publicized, whilst the good it is doing gets hidden. The vain effort of the government to suppress the Central Bank bond scam has become known to the general public, much to its disappointment and anger.

The country is presently in a process of transition from a situation where war, authoritarian rule and corruption were uppermost to a situation where peace, reconciliation and good governance prevail. This process will not be a smooth or painless one. There are many vested interests at play. The government of national unity formed through an alliance of the UNP and SLFP bring together the new and old. Most of the government leaders today were leading members of governments of the past when war, authoritarian rule and corruption prevailed. Therefore, as in the case of the war-related accountability, there is reluctance to press ahead with investigating the past acts of corruption and bribery. It is notable that some prominent members of the opposition are keeping quiet on the controversies regarding bribery and corruption investigations.

COPE REPORT

The continuation of old practices with the new is to be seen most starkly today in the manner in which the investigation into the Central Bank bond scam is being conducted. The Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE) which is a parliamentary committee drawn from all parties found itself bitterly divided on the outcome on party lines. The Committee chairman Sunil Handunnetti of the JVP was even prevented from making a statement in Parliament on the way he was treated by other members of the committee whose views he did not share. The final report recommended penalties and other directives against Central Bank officials, including the former Governor, and Institutions responsible for the transactions and, to recover the losses incurred by the public and government. In addition, it emphasized that legal action be initiated against the persons and institutions responsible for the transactions.

So far the four pillars, or principles, of transitional justice that are being deployed in Sri Lanka are to ascertain what happened on the military battlefield. Transitional justice refers to the process that a country needs to go through if it is to make the transition from massive human rights violations to good governance and reconciliation. In the case of Sri Lanka, there has been a need for international pressure, as neither sections of the government, opposition, the armed forces or most of the people are keen to go into the past to investigate what happened in the war. They do not want to deal with the issues of truth, accountability, reparation or institutional reforms. The manner in which the investigations into matters of massive bribery and corruption are taking place, and the opposition to the truth coming out, and punishment being meted out, suggests the need for a similar emphasis on transitional justice to tackle this problem.

Chairman of the National Police Commission, Prof Siri Hettige, a most respected academic and public intellectual, has proposed the idea that the transitional justice process needs to be applied to issues outside of the narrow confines of war, and to governance issues in general. His view is but a reflection of the concern in the larger polity amongst who want a real change in the country, and are hoping against hope that the National Unity government headed by President Sirisena and Prime Wickremesinghe will deliver on its promise of good governance. But hope alone will not suffice. It is important that civil society and international pressure is brought to bear on the government to engage in a more broad based transitional justice process.

Ethnic Issue In SL: Power Sharing Is Counterproductive


Colombo Telegraph
By Dinesh Dodamgoda –October 31, 2016 
Dinesh Dodamgoda
Dinesh Dodamgoda
Many political and opinion leaders consider power sharing as a solution to the ethnic issue in Sri Lanka. Yet, power sharing is counterproductive and more likely to bring a recurrence of escalating conflict.
SL is for Power Sharing:
President Sirisena recently sought cabinet approval for an eleven-page draft of a national reconciliation policy based on the principle of power-sharing. In Delhi last year, Prime Minister Wickremesinghe also explained their effort in finding a power sharing and devolution based solution to the ethnic problem. The leader of the House Mr. Kiriella said that equal rights of the people should be ensured through power sharing with the periphery. Tamil National Alliance (TNA) MP Sumanthiran stated that they want a mechanism of power sharing consistent with federalism. Even the former President Rajapakse promised India the full implementation of the 13th Amendment plus.
Therefore, it is evident that almost all the mainstream political leaders believe power sharing as a magic formula that could solve country’s ethnic problem. However, power sharing is a counterproductive mechanism.
Power Sharing:
According to the Oxford Dictionary, ‘power sharing’ entered the English language as a term in 1972 in conjunction with the short-lived settlement in Northern Ireland. Power sharing institutions are to formulate institutions that distribute decision making rights between the state and society and within the state, among governmental organs and with a defined decision making procedure. As Arend Lijphart, the main consociational theorist, views, power sharing is a mechanism that secure participation of representatives of all significant groups in political decision making. Therefore, in an ethnically or religiously divided society a power sharing mechanism should secure participation of representation of ethno-religious elite from all significant ethno-religious groups in the making of governmental decisions.
Power sharing gives power to ethno-religious elite that comes from parties and groups which contributed or took part in creating, maintaining or ending ethno-religious conflicts. Therefore, the power that they would be given enhances these elites’ capabilities to press for more radical demands especially, once the violent phase of the conflict is over and the peace is in place. These capabilities give opportunity and power to these elites to ‘escalate conflict in ways that can threaten democracy and peace’[i]. This is evident in most of the conflict theatres especially, after severe conflicts such as civil wars.
These dangers are inherent parts of any power sharing mechanism, despite constitutional architects’ ability to include institutional constrains to limit such powers and capabilities that ethno-religious elites would be given to influence and control governmental decision making processes. Yet, power sharing institutions seek to ‘guarantee inclusive decision making, partitioned decision making, predetermined decisions, or some combination of these’[ii].
Inclusive decision making mechanisms in power sharing aim to include ethno-religious minorities’ will by guaranteeing participation of representatives of elites from main ethno-religious groups in the making of governmental decisions. This aim is to be achieved through mandates that guarantee allocated positions in the government such as appointing cabinet ministers from main ethno-religious groups or by providing opportunities for such ethno-religious groups to secure their representation in the state’s institutions through proportional representation (PR) systems.

Tuesday, November 1, 2016

HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDER FR. NANDANA MANATUNGA FACING POLICE HARASSMENT FOR SUPPORTING TORTURE VICTIMS

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Image: Rev. Fr. Nandana Manatunga demands immediate justice (c)s.deshapriya.

Sri Lanka Brief01/11/2016

A well known as a human rights defender Rev. Fr. Nandana Manatunga, is being harassed by the police including the OIC of Wattegama Police Station, the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC)  reports.  Rev. Fr. Nandana Manatunga is the parish priest of St. Mary’s Church in Wattegama, Kandy District. Following a land dispute with the owner of land ajoining the Wattegama Street, St.Mary’s Church, police officers began harassing the priest, impartially carrying out the rule of law. The Priest states that he supported several torture victims in their legal battles against their torturers. In this case, two police officers attached to the Wattegama Police Station, were sentenced to 7 years rigorous imprisonment on 3rd, December 2014. Nandana said that he has been subjected to police harassment in revenge for his supportive help for torture victimss. He demands immediate justice. This case illustrates the collapse of the rule of law in Sri Lanka, says AHRC.

CASE NARRATIVE:

According to information received by the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC), Rev. Fr. Nandana Manatunga is the parish priest of St. Mary’s Church in Wattegama in Kandy District. He is a well-known human rights activist and the Director of the Human Rights Office of Kandy.

St. Mary’s Church and its premises belong to the Roman Catholic Church, administration coming under the perview of the Bishop of Kandy. There was a long, boundary dispute with the owner of the ajoining land, due to his grabbing of land belonging to the church. The administration of the Bishop’s House in Kandy took legal action against him in the District Court of Teldeniya. This case is pending under No: L/170/13, where the church adminstration is the plaintiff and the ajoining land owner, Francis Richard, is the defendant.

In early 2016, Fr. Nandana learned that Francis Richard made a complaint against the church. On several occasions, police officers harassed Father when he inquired about the complaint. When Fr. Nandana went to the police station to clarify the situation, he was subjected to filthy language by Francis Richard and his wife. The police did not stop the abuse, simply allowing it.

On 28 January 2016, when he was called to the Wattegama Police Station for a complaint made by Francis Richard, reference No: MCR 2575/16CH/ 102-03-06, Fr. Nandana retained his attorney-at-law, Mr. Padmadakshan who accompanied him to the police station. But when the inquiry was called up, the Police Officer-in-Charge (OIC), dismissed the lawyer and would not allow him to represent Father Nandana. The Priest was strictly warned by the OIC not to come to the police station again. If there was any dispute in future, the police would produce both parties in court and execute a bond for keeping the peace.
Before this incident, on 17th June 2015, Francis Richard came into the mission house with one of his workers who was carrying a knife and threatening the priest. He then filed a complaint No: MCR 2286/15. It was not investigated, nor was the person who carried the knife called to the police station.

Again, on 13th August 2016 Francis Richard complained to the police. Police officer (No: 47062) came to St. Mary’s Church with Francis Richard and threatened the Priest. “Your priest is grabbing land and if he does not come to the police station, he will be arrested.” At that, the police officer and Richard who were good friends went to the complainant’s house for refreshments. Rev. Fr. Nandana, on 15 August 2016, did not go to the police station. He wrote to the OIC saying that he would not come given the above reasons. He lodged a complaint with the Senior Superintendant of Police (SSP), Kandy, regarding the continuous harassments and the non-investigation of his complaints. He reported the illegal inactions of the OIC and other officers of the Wattegama Police Station.

Considering the appeal to higher authorities and submission of the Teldeniya District Court proceedings, the priest, through his lawyer made the following request: copies of the complaints made against him and made by him from the OIC office. But his request was denied. He learned later, that all copies were given to Francis Richard.

Rev. Fr. Nandana states that the OIC and other police officers attached to the Wattegama Police Station, illegally harassed him. Further, they implemented the law maliciously. Fr. Nandana, states that two police officers from the Wattegama Police Station were sentenced to 7 years of rigorous imprisonment on 3th December 2015. Both were former police officers at Wattegama. He further reiterated, that as the Director of the Human Rights Office Kandy, he pioneered assistance work for these two torture victims. Both were brutally tortured by two police officers of the Wattegama Police. Fr. Nandana states that therefore it is obvious that Wattegama OIC and the police officers are using Francis Richard to facilitate these psychological harassements in taking revenge.

Rev. Fr. Nandana states that his fundamental rights were violated by Sri Lankan State Officers. He demands justice and is waiting for a fair and impartial implementation of the rule of the law by the police officers.

– AHRC

The COPE report on bond scams: Not two reports as claimed but single one by 25 members

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COPE report on bond scams

logoMonday, 31 October 2016

untitled-1The much talked about report by the Committee on Public Enterprises or COPE on the irregularities that are alleged to have taken place in the issue of Treasury bonds by the Central Bank from February 2015 to May 2016 was presented to Parliament on 28 October 2016 (available at: http://www.parliament.lk/uploads/comreports/1477651535015855.pdf).

These irregularities have been popularly branded by the media as ‘bond scams’, ‘bond scandals’ or ‘bond fiascos’ implying that they have helped one party to profit at the expense of another. The party reported to have benefited had been a primary dealer in government securities, namely, Perpetual Treasuries, which had started its business in February 2014 and went into making a gigantic amount of profits, according to published figures, within a matter of just 27 months. Those who had lost in the process are numerous in number, but the main victims have been the Treasury, EPF, other primary dealers and finally investors at large.

UNESCO Resolution: Zionist Media Spin & Sri Lanka’s Abstention


Colombo Telegraph
By Lukman Harees –November 1, 2016
Lukman Harees
Lukman Harees
“If the General Assembly were to vote by 121 votes to 1 in favour of “Israel” returning to the armistice lines – (pre June 1967 borders) “Israel” would refuse to comply with the decision.” Aba Eban (the Israeli Foreign Minister) stated arrogantly. New York Times June 19, 1967
The UNESCO Resolution on “Occupied Palestine” which was endorsed recently by its’ Executive Board comprising representatives from 58 states, and approved by 24 votes to 6, with 26 abstentions and two absentees, has already raised a hornet’s nest. Sri Lanka was among the abstentions. The situation stems from many misrepresentations about this Resolution, painted misleadingly by several news outlets fed by Zionist controlled Media over the past week, that UNESCO seems to have given short shrift to the Temple Mount, the most holy site in Jerusalem and has denied that the Temple Mount was ever the home of Jewish temples.
A cursory glance of a Google search on this subject will prove this contention. Few of those headlines were ‘UNESCO adopts resolution ignoring Jewish ties to Temple Mount’, ‘UNESCO resolution is a ‘disgrace to intelligent people,’ ‘UNESCO backs motion nullifying Jewish ties to Temple Mount’. The Guardian UK even changed its headline of one of its’ articles on the subject from ‘Israeli Anger at UNESCO Motion condemning ‘aggressions’ at Holy Site’ TO ‘ Israeli Anger at UNESCO Motion’s Failure to Link Holy Site to Judaism.’ (Thursday 13 October 2016). However, any sane and objective reading of the Resolution, in the backdrop of the circumstances which led to its’ adoption will show that the version rolled out by the biased Media, was not exactly the case, though usually perception may seem as reality. An unwary world was therefore misled to believe that the crux of the Resolution was to deny Jewish ties to this historic site, which was far from the truth. israeli-violations-in-and-around-the-al-haram-al-sharif-masjid-al-aqsa-compound-in-the-occupied-old-city-of-jerusalem-al-quds
Undeniably, two temples — the most sacred sites for the Jewish people in both ancient times and today — once resided at the Temple Mount. For Muslims the Temple Mount is known as Al-Haram al-Sharif (“the noble sanctuary”) and is the place where Prophet Muhammad (S) ascended to heaven.  It contains the Dome of the Rock and the Al-Aqsa Mosque, which both survive to the present day, making the site, one of the holiest sites for Muslims.. The site is also important to Christians. The Mount of Olives, where Jesus ascended to heaven, is located just to the east and the fourth century Church of the Holy Sepulchre is also located near the Temple Mount.

The Washington Notes


Featured image courtesy the Daily Signal

TAYLOR DIBBERT on 11/01/2016

America’s election day is quickly approaching and so writing about something besides the Trumpian phenomenon or Hillary Clinton’s emails or how deeply flawed U.S. democracy is – and there will be a lot of work to do post-election irrespective of who wins on November 8 – seems like a prudent course of action.

But let’s be clear, in the coming years, Americans of all stripes will need to recognize that we can’t take democracy for granted. Sure, our institutions are resilient and resoundingly so. Nonetheless, there is no place for racism, xenophobia, misogyny, et cetera in our political discourse. We have tons of work to do, dear reader; we must remain vigilant. This is important.

Clinton is obviously a deeply blemished candidate, though undoubtedly less blemished than Trump. In the spirit of full disclosure, I won’t be voting for either of them and I’d frankly rather turn to Sri Lanka-related matters at this time. Two very different visitors to Washington in late October are, at least indirectly, driving this piece. I met with them on the same day and both conversations could have carried on indefinitely.

In strange ways, the further away I am from my time living in Sri Lanka, the closer I get to my experience there. The more I appreciate that unique opportunity. The more I realize that doing another several years uninterrupted on the island probably isn’t in the cards for me. The more I think about those thoughts, those feelings, those smells, those sights, those relationships.

The drinks that I could have done without; the meals I shouldn’t have avoided; the passion that went unrequited. Yet, that’s all general stuff. Please join me on this brief journey. Let’s start in Washington and then move back to the island.

That feeling when you’re exhausted and think you can’t read anymore, but you need to finish the Sunday papers, all of them because Monday is coming soon. And if you’re reading the Sunday papers on Monday then that would mean you’re already behind and the week has just started. Who wants to feel behind on a Monday? You know you don’t.

That feeling that you want to ignore “Face the Nation” this week, yet realize you should at least check it out. You’re always left thinking that it should be a one-hour program, though you usually find yourself watching the entire thing.

That feeling you get when people in Washington are talking about the “big changes” in Sri Lanka. You are told about the “significant progress” and how happy we all should be. You are frankly thinking that very few people in general and one woman specifically – a person whom you will forever hold in the highest regard – has a truly nuanced understanding of Sri Lanka in this town.

That feeling when a senior Sri Lankan journalist is in Washington and you meet him for coffee at Union Station. You speak with him for nearly two hours and only leave because you have another commitment. You are basically on the edge of your seat the entire time. What an interesting person, what a pleasure it was to speak with him – if only there had been more time.

That time when you meet someone from the Tamil diaspora in Foggy Bottom. You meet at her hotel and then go to a place nearby. You don’t know what to expect, although there is obviously an unanticipated and subtle charm to her. How great that was, and what fun the next meetup will be.

And then you return to the time you spent – all that time – sweating it out on the island.

The final years of Mahinda Rajapaksa’s reign. Those passport checks at Omanthai. Rushing out to use the bathroom at Omanthai and always thinking that you were the only one who seemed to need to. The times when you know your phone is tapped and it could not be more obvious. Those long conversations in Jaffna. Screaming at tuk-tuk drivers. Feeling guilty about screaming at tuk-tuk drivers. Finally…finally being able to eat with one hand, and doing it confidently. Learning to love to eat with one hand. Wishing cigarettes weren’t sold as singles because then there would be no guilt the next day, and because then you would be able to breathe the next day. Wondering how to ensure that arrack is more readily available in the U.S.

Spending so much time in an office and usually enjoying it. Understanding that the war was over, yet feeling like you were invited, that you got a special invitation, a front row seat in some ways, to a conflict that continues to burn. Remembering that you were quite literally in a cocoon of Tamil and feeling embarrassed, truly embarrassed that you learned almost none of the language.

Thinking about the people with whom you had the privilege of working, and it was a privilege. Human rights work wasn’t exactly a safe space in 2011 or 2012 or 2013 or 2014 – far from it.

Feeling like you are a part of something bigger than any one person, that there is a sense of mission, a sense of purpose and that you find that quite appealing, as you have on other occasions, in other countries, but that the other occasions haven’t touched you in the way that Sri Lanka has.

Trying to write your heart out. Trying to capture the emotions, the feelings in language and knowing that you sometimes come up short, knowing that you will usually come up short, that you will almost always come up short – but that you must try again. That you can’t be afraid of failure because genuine achievement could be right around the corner, because you never truly know.
You never truly know what comes next.