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

Thursday, November 17, 2016

Indian farmers fear lost crops and income after 'black money' move

A labourer sits amongst sacks of unsold potatoes at a wholesale market in Manchar village in the western state of Maharashtra, India, November 16, 2016. REUTERS/Shailesh Andrade-A farmer plucks marigold flowers from a field in Manchar village in the western state of Maharashtra, India, November 16, 2016. REUTERS/Shailesh Andrade
A vegetable seller waits for customers at a wholesale market in Manchar village in the western state of Maharashtra, India, November 16, 2016. REUTERS/Shailesh Andrade-A labourer sleeps on baskets of unsold tomatoes at a wholesale market in Manchar village in the western state of Maharashtra, India, November 16, 2016. REUTERS/Shailesh Andrade

By Mayank Bhardwaj | BAJNA, INDIA- Fri Nov 18, 2016

For Indian farmer Buddha Singh, who works a small plot of land in the village of Bajna south of New Delhi, the government's decision to abolish 500 and 1,000 rupee bank notes to crush the shadow economy could hardly have come at a worse time.

He and millions of other farmers cannot get enough cash to buy the seeds and fertilisers they need for their winter crops, threatening production of key commodities and hurting rural communities only just recovering after two years of drought.

"We can't buy our full requirements of seeds, fertiliser and pesticides on credit. There is a limit," said Singh, a turbaned man in his 50s, who tills a two-acre field near the highway running from the capital to the holy city of Mathura.

"We're running out of time as we've only 10-15 days more to plant crops like wheat, mustard and chickpeas," he added, to murmurs of assent from around 30 fellow farmers sitting under a neem tree and discussing their predicament.

India's 263 million farmers mostly live in the cash economy, exposing them to the full impact of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's shock Nov. 8 announcement that larger denomination bank notes would immediately cease to be legal tender.

Modi's drive to purge "black cash" from the economy has, at a stroke, wiped out 86 percent of the money in circulation. Delays in printing new 500 and 2,000 rupee notes mean that money could be tight for weeks to come.

While city dwellers are still queuing up to exchange or deposit old money at the bank, and to draw new funds, many villagers live miles from the nearest branch and have yet to see the new notes being rushed into circulation.

DRAGGED DOWN

Delays to the planting season that began last month threaten to dent India's agricultural and overall economic growth, wiping out gains for farmers who this year cashed in on decent monsoon rains after being hit by drought in 2014 and 2015.

Farmers who have already spent money on ploughing and irrigation to keep the soil moist can ill afford to leave their land fallow. Late sowing typically reduces yields and increases the risk that inclement spring weather could damage crops.

"In all likelihood we'll not be able to recover our cost of cultivation as the prime sowing time has nearly lapsed," said Prakash Chandra Sharma, another local farmer.

The farmers said they spent an average of 58,000 rupees ($855) per hectare to grow wheat, only to eke out an income of 70,000 rupees. That assumes a crop yield of about 3.2 tonnes per hectare.

A drop in wheat output would boost local prices that are already near record highs. Stocks are at their lowest level for nearly a decade, and even before the latest cash crunch, private traders were expected to import around 3 million tonnes this year.

Devinder Sharma, an independent food and trade policy analyst, said rural communities in particular would suffer from the demonetisation move.

"It's a little early to hazard a guess about the extent of crop loss," said Sharma. "But both rural income and demand will take a big hit before things start improving from April next year."

THANKS, BUT NO THANKS

In the latest in a series of ad hoc steps, the government on Thursday allowed farmers to withdraw up to 25,000 rupees ($368) a week against their crop loans to ensure that sowing of winter crops "takes place properly".

Shaktikanta Das, a top finance ministry official, also said a time limit for farmers to pay crop insurance premiums had been extended by 15 days.

But that cuts little ice with farmers, who often rely for their cash not on banks but on money lenders charging annual interest of up to 40 percent.

"Most farmers have already availed of their farm loan for the previous summer season and, for the handful who can still withdraw, the ceiling is too low," said Tejinder Narang, a New-Delhi-based farm expert.

After selling their rice crop last month, many are stuck with old 500 and 1,000 bills they can no longer spend.

They are only allowed to exchange 2,000 rupees into new money, and the rest must be deposited before the notes cease to be accepted by banks after Dec. 30.

"Four banks cater to 200 villages of about 2,000 people each. It's not easy to get your old currency notes converted," said Harbir Singh, another local farmer.
MARKETS IDLED

The breakdown in the cash economy is causing major disruptions to the supply of produce to India's cities, with payment alternatives such as plastic cards or digital wallet apps on smartphones yet to gain widespread acceptance.

At Delhi's Azadpur Mandi, Asia's largest fruit and vegetable wholesale market, traders said business was at a virtual standstill, and labourers who usually earn between $4 and $6 a day sat idle.

"The bosses are giving us 500 rupee bills, but we are refusing to take those notes," said porter Raju Kumar Rathore. "Then they are telling us to collect our money after a week or 10 days. For us that is a big problem."
($1 = 67.79 rupees)

(Additional reporting by Sunil Kataria in NEW DELHI and Rajendra Jadhav in MUMBAI; Editing by Douglas Busvine and Mike Collett-White)

100 people feared drowned as boat sinks off Libya

Survivors say inflatable boat carrying 130 sank after people-smugglers towed it to sea and took away its engine and lifejackets
 People waiting to be rescued on a boat in the Mediterranean earlier this month. Photograph: Andreas Solaro/AFP/Getty Images

 Migration correspondent-Thursday 17 November 2016 

About 100 people are feared to have drowned off the coast of Libya after their smuggler abandoned them on the high seas without a motor, increasing the Mediterranean death toll this year to an unprecedented 4,700.

The toll is now over 20% higher than last year’s total of 3,771, which was the previous annual record.
A boat containing about 130 refugees sank in the early hours of Thursday morning, killing about 100 people, some of the 27 survivors told Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), the medical charity now transporting them to Italy. Just seven bodies were recovered.

The inflatable boat sank after smugglers, who had towed the dinghy out to sea, returned to land with its engine and the migrants’ lifejackets, several survivors told MSF.

Abdoullae Diallo, an 18-year-old from Senegal, was quoted as saying: “At that moment I thought we were going to die. I knew we were not close to Italy and without an engine we could not get far. The smuggler told us we would be rescued, but I felt we were going to die.”

The events highlight the catch-22 facing the European rescue missions operating off the Libyan coast.
The vast majority of migrants are now sent to sea by smugglers without enough fuel or equipment to reach Italy, in the expectation that they will be rescued by the charities, navies and merchant ships sailing in the area. But when rescue missions were suspended in early 2015, in the belief that they were actively encouraging more people to put their lives at risk, more migrants came than ever before, and more of them drowned.

Refugee advocates such as MSF argue that the only effective response is to increase the number of legal routes available to migrants considering putting their lives at risk at sea.

Ed Taylor, a rescue worker who returned this week from four months onboard an MSF boat, said: “Europe cannot continue to pretend this isn’t happening. There is an urgent need for safe and legal ways to seek safety in Europe. Without them, and with such a focus on anti-smuggling operations, people are risking their lives in increasingly dangerous crossings as smugglers resort to progressively more inhumane acts.”
The 27 men now on board the  were on board a boat carrying 130 . They are the only survivors. This tragedy is just unbareable.
So many people have now drowned in the Mediterranean in 2016 that the final death toll could conceivably exceed not just the Mediterranean record, but last year’s global record of 5,729.
The high death rate is partly due to unusually high migration flows from Libya in October and November, months when departures usually tail off due to worsening weather.

While migration levels between Turkey and Greece have fallen significantly since March, after Turkey agreed to readmit people deported from Greece, crossings between Libya and Italy continue unabated. Over 167,000 people have reached Italy so far this year from north Africa, and the final annual total is likely to surpass the previous record of 170,000.

European countries are attempting to stem migration flows by providing more aid to African countries that agree to readmit deported asylum seekers. Additionally, navies from countries such as Britain are intercepting and destroying Libyan smugglers’ repurposed fishing trawlers after they enter international waters.

But the strategy has failed because the smugglers have instead packed their customers into disposable rubber boats instead. These can be driven by the refugees themselves, allowing the smugglers to remain at large in Libya. These inflatable boats are even more dangerous than the wooden ships they replaced.

Syrians are no longer using Libya as a springboard to reach Europe. Instead, Libya is mainly used by people fleeing war and poverty in Nigeria and Sudan, or repression in Eritrea and the Gambia. Others taking to the sea are migrant workers who tried to find jobs in Libya, but are fleeing after the Libyan civil war led to the collapse of law and order.

Many migrants are kept in slavery-like conditions by their Libyan employers, while others are tortured or extorted, sometimes by the authorities. Around 70% say they faced some kind of exploitation in Libya, according to research by the International Organisation for Migration.

Online calculator predicts IVF baby chances

This type of IVF is known as intra-cytoplasmic sperm injection (ICSI). The injected sperm fertilizes the egg and the resulting zygote is cultured until it reaches an early stage of embryonic development. It is then implanted into the uterusSCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY-Image captionInjected sperm fertilises the egg in Icsi, a type of IVF
BBC17 November 2016
Couples can find out their chances of having a baby over multiple cycles of IVF treatment, using a new online calculator.
University of Aberdeen researchers, who developed the tool, said it would help couples shape their expectations and plan their treatments.
The online calculator is based on data from more than 113,000 women who have gone through IVF.
A woman's age is the most important factor in her chances of having a baby.
After the age of 30, a couple's chances start to decline and keep on decreasing the longer the woman is unable to conceive.
There are other calculators that predict IVF success, but this is the first to give estimates for up to six IVF cycles and factor in the use of frozen embryos.

Predicting success

Couples can find out their chances both before and after their first IVF treatment - depending on the number of eggs that are collected, the health of the embryos transferred and the number of embryos collected for freezing.
Based on this information, a couples' chances can then be adjusted for further future cycles.

Fertility facts

  • one in six couples in the UK experiences problems conceiving
  • infertility in women is linked to age - the biggest decrease in fertility begins during the mid 30s
  • common causes of infertility in women include lack of regular ovulation, blockage of the fallopian tubes and endometriosis
  • but for 25% of couples, the cause of infertility is unexplained
  • in men, the most common cause of infertility is poor quality of semen
  • more than five million people had been born as a result of IVF or Icsi (intracytoplasmic sperm injection) by the end of 2013

David McLernon, research fellow in medical statistics at the University of Aberdeen, spent four years setting up the calculator using data from the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Authority, which collects information on all licensed fertility treatments in the UK.
He said the calculator should not be used by couples to decide whether or not they should have IVF treatment.
Instead, he said, it would help "keep them better informed and help them prepare emotionally and financially for their treatments".
And he said the tool could be used by clinicians, funders and policymakers too.
Mr McLernon's research in developing the calculator was not able to account take account of the woman's BMI, ethnicity, smoking status or alcohol intake in calculating IVF success - which can also affect fertility.
Susan Seenan, chief executive of patient charity Fertility Network UK said she hoped the calculator, which they helped develop, would help patients make more informed decisions about their fertility treatment.
But she added: "It is important to stress that the calculator should not be used in isolation. Anyone considering fertility treatment should discuss their individual chances of success with their clinician."

What is IVF?

In vitro fertilisation (IVF) is one of several techniques available to help couples with fertility problems have a baby.
During IVF, an egg is removed from the woman's ovaries and fertilised with sperm in a laboratory.
The fertilised egg, called an embryo, is then returned to the woman's womb to grow and develop.
It can be carried out using a woman's eggs and a man's sperm, or eggs and/or sperm from donors.

Wednesday, November 16, 2016

Protest in Batticaloa against Buddhist monk's racist verbal abuse


Home
16Nov 2016
A demonstration took place in Batticaloa on Tuesday calling for the arrest of a Buddhist monk who was captured on video shouting racist verbal abuse to a Tamil local government official. 
"You are a bloody tiger. My blood boils when I see you. You are a bloody dog. You are a Tamil Grama Sevaka," the monk, from Batticaloa Mangalaram, identified as Ampitiye Sumana said. 
(Photograph - @aroarun) 

Judge Ms. Abdeen reacts to LeN news report : I did go to prison but not in the night to meet Duminda, Tissa, Vaas, and a foreigner


LEN logo( Lanka-e-News -15.Nov.2016, 11.55PM) District court judge Ayesha Abdeen who Lanka e news exposed as have met infamous murderer cum heroin Kingpin  Duminda  twice  inside prison during prohibited hours , has responded to our news report advancing reasons in her defense.  Duminda is now in the death row after being sentenced to death   in connection with the murder of four individuals including Bharatha Lakshman.
The explanation she offered is , she is vested with official powers to visit the prison to conduct  inquiries under the Prison Tribunal . By virtue of those powers she visits the prison every Thursday , and that  last Thursday (10 th) too she went there , while adding that she went to the prison at about 12.30 p.m. and left at about 2.00 p.m. , and never did she visit the prison in the night.
She also had stated when she went to the prison on one of those occasions , she not only met Duminda Silva , but even Tissa Attanayake and  Vaas Gunawardena.  On the 10 th she went to the prison to meet a foreign prisoner who was facing heroin related charges, she added.  As it was alleged he was  assaulted by the prison officers when he was being taken to the court , she ordered that his spine be subjected to an X ray examination,  Abdeen had further explained.  
Ms. Abdeen elaborating further said,  the Prison hospital chief told her that Duminda is having a nerve ailment and that the prison hospital hasn’t the facilities to treat it.  When Lanka e news inquired from her , ‘is that chief , Dr. Lakshman Jayamanne ? ,’ she replied in the affirmative, and when  she  was asked how she responded to him , her reply was, ‘ true, true’, and said nothing else. When she was questioned whether she gave instructions  to take Duminda Silva to Jayawardena hospital , she denied having told such a thing.

Abdeen the judge who claims she was on the Prison Tribunal in 2015 , as well as  in 2006 and 2009 , also said , the magistrate of the area who is in charge of the prison has to forward a report to the Judicial Service Commission every month after an inspection of the prison, and  accepted, that responsibility is not hers , and it  belongs to the magistrate.

Abdeen also went on to assert  that she is against heroin dealers , and she took a lot of pains  to get  the wife of Wele Sudha arrested .Since  Lanka e news is misled by the allegations made by a judge who is an enemy of hers  , she requested that the news report be withdrawn.

The reply of Lanka e news to judge Ms.Ayesha Abdeen…

When Lanka e news inquired from a high rung officer of the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) for the second time regarding the answer given by Ms. Abdeen , he made it abundantly clear that those who are tasked with only the prison tribunal affairs , is not empowered to inquire into the health and welfare of the prisoners .That can be inquired only if those pertain  to the cases before the tribunal.

Therefore investigating the welfare of  Duminda Silva ,Tissa Attanayake and Vaas Gunawardena is trespassing on the laws , the JSC high ranking officer  clearly pinpointed, while adding there is evidence that  Ms. Abdeen  went to the prison on the 10 th night , and an investigation is to be launched by the JSC into this next week.
No matter what we wish to say a few words in relation to the request made by this judge to withdraw the news report. Let us state  in no uncertain terms that we never withdraw a news report which  is published by us , because before we publish a report we make absolutely sure what is true  after a scrupulous sifting and sorting . Hence , whoever is the subject of the accusation is only given an opportunity to furnish a reply . The reply of Abdeen is  hereinbefore noted   .

Connected report….
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by     (2016-11-16 01:26:28)

Immediately Detain Sri Lanka’s National Intelligence Chief: Diaspora Tamils Tell Swiss Authorities

Colombo Telegraph

November 16, 2016
Tamil Diaspora organisations have today called on the Swiss authorities to immediately detain and prevent Director of Sri Lanka’s Centre for National Intelligence, Sisira Mendis from leaving Switzerland until there is a thorough investigation into the serious charges of torture against him.
Sisira Mendis
Sisira Mendis
Sisira Mendis is currently in Geneva as part of a delegation to defend the government of Sri Lanka’s adherence to the Convention Against Torture before the UN Committee Against Torture.
“According to the report of the UN’s OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka, Mr. Mendis had command responsibility over police units known to routinely practice torture during the final period of the Sri Lankan civil war.” the BTF said in a statement.
“While USTPAC and BTF are encouraged by the government of Sri Lanka’s decision to engage the UN Committee Against Torture, we are dismayed that Mr. Mendis represents the government before the very UN Committee charged with ensuring governments stop torture,” Dr. Karunyan Arulanantham, President of US Tamil Political Action Council (USTPAC), said. “His attendance in Geneva deeply disrespects Sri Lanka’s torture victims and mocks the esteemed work of the Committee Against Torture.” he said.
Mendis served as Deputy Inspector General of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) and was also responsible for the Terrorism Investigation Division (TID) from March 2008 to June 2009. Both organizations are known for their routine use of torture.
“…[Mendis’] attendance in Geneva deeply disrespects Sri Lanka’s torture victims and mocks the esteemed work of the Committee Against Torture”. On the basis of universal jurisdiction, Dr. Karunyan Arulanantham added, “we call on the Swiss authorities to immediately detain and prevent Mr. Mendis from leaving Switzerland until there is a thorough investigation into the serious charges of torture against him.”
Bilingualism key to the future



2016-11-16


Northern Province Chief Minister C.V.Wigneswaran who had been in the centre of several controversies in the recent times had revealed an important move which was to be taken by his Council with regard to understanding between the majority Sinhalese and the minority Tamil-speaking people in the country.   -

During a prize giving ceremony at the Nallur Hindu College in Jaffna on Monday, the Chief Minister said that his administration was going to present an Act in the Council making it compulsory for the students of the Northern and the Eastern Provinces to learn both the official languages of the country -- Sinhala and Tamil. Discussions are underway with the leaders of the Eastern Province on the possibility of presenting a Bill in both Provincial Councils to this effect, according to the Chief Minister.  

He also said that the programme to teach both Sinhala and Tamil would be extended to the public servants as well in the two provinces, because both are official languages and knowledge in both would open more opportunities for the future. He pointed out that the lack of interest by Sinhalese and Tamils in learning each other’s languages led to mistrust among communities.   Many southerners might find it difficult to read Wigneswaran’s mind which seems to the South to be blowing hot and cold. He presented a resolution in January 2014 in his Council calling for an international investigation into the war crimes allegedly committed during the war. Then last year he adopted another resolution in the Council which claimed that genocide against Tamils had taken place in the North and the East during the war. And in September he irritated the South by holding his much publicized ‘Ezhuga Thamil’ demonstration. However, he refused to hoist the LTTE flag last month at a function organised by the pro-LTTE Tamil Coordinating Committee (TCC) at Harrow in London. And now he is going to make both official languages compulsory, claiming that they facilitate reconciliation.  

Nevertheless, move to teach students and public servants both Sinhala and Tamil should be commended. Though understanding each other’s languages does not necessarily bring in total reconciliation or understanding between communities, one must accept that it facilitates to that effect. In the light of the media being highly divided on ethnic lines, building bilingual and trilingual capacities among the people is becoming more and more a necessity, in order for them to judge the situations independently. People’s independence of the media of a particular language would push the media in general to be more objective.  

Lack of knowledge in each other’s language still creates new issues apart from the 30-year long bloody war that claimed thousands of lives. A good case in point is, the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress’s demand for a separate Tamil-speaking (serving) Kachcheri in Kalmunai, which has been interpreted by politicians in Colombo as a demand for a separate State.The demand for a separate Kachcheri was a result of the Tamil-speaking people in Amparai District facing many difficulties at the Amparai Kachcheri due to their lack of knowledge in the Sinhala language.  

Successive governments have started programmes time and again to teach both the official languages in schools, but with little success. There has always been a trend among Tamil and Muslim students as well as adults to learn Sinhala, while the interest among the Sinhala students in the South to learn Tamil cannot be called a trend, leading to the programmes to come a cropper. The simple reason is that Tamil speaking people -- Tamils and Muslims -- feel the necessity of Sinhala knowledge in their day-to-day life and not vice versa.   

However, the case with the people in the North and the East, irrespective of their ethnicity is different where people in those provinces have a propensity to learn Sinhala soon, as they have to interact with their provincial administration in Tamil while doing so with the Central Government in Sinhala.   
Nevertheless, all the grounds Wigneswaran had pointed out justifying the bilingualism are, no doubt, sound and acceptable and the Central Government, and more particularly the Provincial Councils, such as the Western, Central, Uva and Sabaragamuwa should take a leaf out of his book.

Budget 2017: The good, bad and ugly


Featured image courtesy Rukshan Abeywansha/The Nation

RAISA WICKREMATUNGE on 11/16/2016

Mixed feelings prevail in the wake of Budget 2017 being presented in Parliament.

Overall, the Budget was fairly holistic in coverage, being broadly linked to Prime Minister Wickremesinghe’s statements to Parliament earlier this month, Chief economist at the Ceylon Chamber of Commerce, Anushka Wijesinha said. The focus was on modernisation and innovation, social inclusion, investment and supporting the middle class.

Obstacles To Ranil’s Destiny


Colombo Telegraph
By Somapala Gunadheera –November 15, 2016
Somapala Gunadheera
Somapala Gunadheera
I was tempted to write this piece by the outspoken remarks of an Islandeditorial under the title “O tempora! O mores!” After highlighting a list of failures by a young minister holding an important portfolio, the editorial raised the question, “If it (the Government) had been really serious about developing vital sectors … it would have got very senior Cabinet members to helm the relevant ministries without turning them into playpens for politicians still wet behind the ears.”
It is public knowledge that the level of performance of the current executive is below par. Youth and inexperience, as pointed out by the above editorial, is only one of the reasons that have downgraded its output. While some operatives are ‘wet behind their ears’, at the other end of the scale are found some others who are ‘long in their years’. Listening to their trembling voices on the electronic media, one wonders how they could deliver the goods expected of them effectively. While all other vocations have an age of retirement, politics has become the exception in which one can stumble up to his death. It is hoped that the promised code of ethics, when it appears at last, would fix an inviolable upper limit to those who live by their votes. Fixing a minimum age limit for ministers and deputies would also control the scramble for portfolios, bringing our mammoth Cabinet within civilized standards. In addition, the move will act as a barricade against greenhorns who aspire to use their connections to handle portfolios in which they are out of depth. ranil-pm-media-newzeland
There are yet other Ministers who continue from crisis to crisis but they carry on unchecked in the face of sanctions and criticism. They appear to depend on old school ties. A fourth category is supposed to be under a cloud but they are allowed to continue in office without any visible investigations and indictments. These shortcomings have left a negative impression in the public mind, depressed by the belief that nothing positive happens, despite the immensity of the management team entrusted with a distribution of duties that has many gaps alongside duplications. The only activity that is conspicuous to the man in the street is a plethora of arrests and remands of prominent members of the last regime. Not one of those thus exhibited in public have been convicted by a Court of Law, so far. People are getting fed up with this exhibitionism and if any prosecution is successfully concluded at some future date, no one would take the matter seriously. A typical case, in which the process defeats the purpose!
Planters’ Association raises alarm on land redistribution proposals

untitled-2Thursday, 17 November 2016

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The Planters’ Association of Ceylon (PA) yesterday issued a statement raising serious reservations as to the feasibility and potentially ruinous impact of recent budget proposals on Sri Lanka’s plantation industry.

The proposal in question calls for a reduction in the maximum acreage that can be held by any stand-alone plantation company. Without being allowed to consolidate, each RPC is proposed to be drastically reduced down to a maximum extent of 5,000 acres. 

The Government also issued assurances that employment for estate workers would not be disrupted as a result of the new proposals.

The Association noted, with strong concern, a distressing lack of clarity around core aspects of last week’s Budget proposal - from its overarching goal of fragmenting the country’s plantation estates (which would compromise the sector’s ability compete within economies of scale), to a complete lack of any legal, regulatory or procedural mechanisms to enforce the overhaul called for by the Government’s proposal. 

In the case of some RPCs, the proposal could result in a slashing of RPC estates from 25,000 acres down to 5,000, all with no clear mechanisms for objective evaluation of the lands, a review and appeals process or plans for the relocation of estate communities as a result of the proposed restructuring.  

A further point of serious contention was the lack of consideration afforded to the impact of the proposals on RPC liabilities, which in turn are funded through borrowing from the country’s domestic banking sector. With substantial extents of RPC land having previously been advanced as collateral to support bank borrowing, the PA cautioned that Sri Lanka’s banking sector could also be placed in jeopardy by the radical alterations proposed in Budget 2017 as a result of the high exposure that the banking sector maintains to date in the plantation industry.

Similarly, the PA cautioned against the detrimental impact that the proposal would have on domestic and international investor confidence, given that the Government’s proposed measures would only be possible through the revocation of the 53-year lease agreement which was the legal basis upon which the RPCs were charged with taking over management of Sri Lanka’s plantation sector. With 23 years currently completed on the lease, the Government’s proposal to disregard this agreement, and totally disrupt the investments that have been made into these estates, half-way through a lease agreement, could only be seen as arbitrary and retroactive in nature.

In addition to concerns over instability the proposals could directly cause in the plantation and banking sectors, the PA also warned against the injustice that such measures would cause to RPC shareholders, which are comprised of a diverse spectrum of respected institutional investors and private investors. Given that all of Sri Lanka’s RPCs are publicly listed companies, the proposals would amount to a serious disruption of prestigious publicly traded companies that have supported the development of the Sri Lankan economy for decades.      

Finally, the PA issued a formal protest against the total lack of transparency and consultation in the formulation of the Government’s Budget proposals. The association noted with disappointment that the Government had excluded all major stakeholder groups from the discussion when formulating such a radical policy for the plantation sector. The Association noted that such a lack of clarity would only serve to create uncertainty and instability among stakeholder groups.   

The Planters’ Association concluded their statement by calling on the Government, even at this late stage, to enter into discussions with the PA and all major plantation stakeholders as a matter of urgency to engage in an open and fair discussion as to the merits, practical feasibility and negative ramifications of its proposal on the plantation industry in a manner that would result in a solution that is equitable to all stakeholders and furthers the long-term sustainability of the plantation sector. 

Transfer of judges: brings sunshine to justice and salutary changes in the courts..!


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -15.Nov.2016, 11.55PM)  It is a well and widely known fact that during the entire  nefarious decade there were  judges who  after  having breakfast daily at the Temple Trees and paying homage to  the Rajapakses  delivered  judgments prejudicial in favor of the Rajapakses during noon   when they  mounted the bench of the Kangaroo courts thereby insulting and disgracing the  sacrosanct judiciary and its sublime  values.  It is also a well known  fact that former  chief justice Mohan Peiris  was thrown out lock, stock and barrel  on the 8th of  January 2015 after much effort  as a  first step taken to elevate   the judiciary and conserve its sacrosanct values  in order that the  judicial tasks  would be performed duly in the best interests of the nation,  and the judiciary ,which was undermined and demeaned during the Rajapakse era on a scale unprecedented in Sri Lanka ‘s (SL) history.
Sadly however it is very unfortunate ,  though  the scoundrel Mohan Peiris was chased out on the 8 th of January 2015 , the judiciary that was politicized by the Rajapakses,  and contaminated from top to bottom with corruption and all the vices for so long has still not transformed into a judiciary dispensing pristine justice  longed for by the people.

It is following the launching  of the  independent judicial commission under the 19 th amendment ,the transition from the nefarious decade era to the  good governance era had become possible somewhat . After several decades , the independent judicial commission was able to transfer  70  judges without  the influence or pressures of the  executive or  other political forces. 
The notification issued by the deputy secretary of the Commission , justice Pamila Ratnayake on the 10 th revealed  that  70 judges have been transferred with effect from January 1 st , 2017. T is noteworthy Pamila Ratnayake who signed this notification  is also  transferred , as the additional district judge , Colombo.
Many of the judges during the nefarious decade   who were against   the dismissal of an ex chief justice (CJ)  and   championed  the cause of justice when the case against her ( ex CJ) was heard in just a night to chase her away illegally and un-ceremonially  , were given punishment transfers through the    manipulations  of  unscrupulous  corrupt Mohan Peiris who leapt  from Temple Trees backyard to the post   of chief justice,   consequent upon which  their powers were crippled , while those who were screaming ‘ hi hoy babiachchi’ via  the face book were empowered . 
However , if the present  list of transfers is examined , it is very evident those face book  ‘Hi hoy Babiachi’ screamers who rejoiced and reveled in others’ victimization  then have been divested of their ‘pomposity’ now.
No  matter what , it is the hope of the law  abiding citizens of the country that the erstwhile ‘MaRa courts’ will not metamorphose into  ‘Siracourts ‘ or ‘Wickremacourts.’ The honorable judges who were transferred should therefore understand  this as an intimate and integral part of the pursuit of true and revered justice .

It is the earnest anticipation of the civilized citizens including Lanka e news that the latest transfer of judges will introduce salutary changes in courts , and dispensation of justice will take precedence above all else.

The transfer list of the judges can be viewed by clicking here.
By Wimal Dheeraasekera
Translated by Jeff
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by     (2016-11-16 04:43:42)