Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Monday, November 21, 2016

Video: Eraj, Mahinda’s former lackey gets guts from Ranil




“I have killed JVP members. I’m the owner of ‘PRAA’. Write it down. I don’t care. Don’t try to be thugs. We are not scared of thugs, remember that!” This is how the SLFP organizer for Beliatta electorate appointed by President Maithripala Sirisena threatened a group of youths at Gatamanna area at Beliatta on Friday (18th).
‘Marga’ organization is preparing to blast a rock in the area and the youths in the area engaged in an agitation against the move to destroy the environment.
Former Chairman of Hambantota local council and newly appointed SLFP organizer for Beliatta Eraj Fernando, the leader of the opposition of the Southern Provincial Council UNP Councilor Tennekone Nilame abused the youths in degrading language. They said they would not allow the members of the JVP to do politics in the area. Eraj Fernando, who was an ardent supporter of Mahinda Rajapaksa, wielding a pistol and with a gang of thugs, attacked a group of UNP Parliamentarians when they went on an observation tour to Hambantota Harbour and Mattala Airport on 17th April, 2014. The UNP Parliamentarians were chased away from the place with an attack of rotten eggs.
He, displaying that he was a fervent lackey of Mahinda Rajapaksa attacked a street drams troupe when they performed to express the arbitrary nature of Rajapaksa regime.
What Eraj Fernando is performing at present too is a display to show his master, Ranil that he is prepared to do any low act on behalf of him.
Mahinda’s lackey then has become a Ranil’s lackey at present and teams up with UNP Members to attack youths who attempt to protect the land they live in.
The ‘Rilagala’ rock is to be lasted to get rubble for the construction of the Southern Highway. However, Rilagala area is an eco system rich in biodiversity. The people in the area depend on water resources in the area for their daily needs of water.
eraj2

Response To Mahinda Rajapaksa’s Grievance On Government Media Repression


Colombo Telegraph
By Thisuri Wanniarachchi –November 20, 2016
Thisuri Wanniarachchi
Thisuri Wanniarachchi
Honorable MP,
Your new found interest in media freedom is heart-warming. We too strongly believe that any form of government media repression must be questioned and corrected. We also believe that all governments must be held accountable; the media should never be censored, journalists shouldn’t be abducted or disappeared. Instead they must be empowered, encouraged and welcome by all politicians and government institutions. And yes, as citizens we must all demand media freedom and improvement in our access to authentic information. But you Sir, are not one of us; you, former supreme leader, do not get to talk about media freedom, you lost that right the moment you betrayed the trust that a large portion of us put on you to ensure the democratic freedoms of not just some of us, but all 22 million of us. You failed us miserably.
Your 180 degree transition from an authoritarian leader who led by despotism to one that is criticizing the current government for its repression of media is quite fascinating. This very news site that you chose to share your grievances was blocked and inaccessible to all of us living in Sri Lanka during your administration. I do not believe it is a stretch to assume that the irony of the recent developments in your political journey can be grasped even by those who support you.

Mahinda Maithri
Your grievance, had it come from an ordinary, democratic, law-abiding citizen would have been one of substance. You mention that “not a day goes by without a major demonstration against the government.” I can see how this may confuse you. You see, this government happens to encourage the democratic freedom of assembly, an act that was met with real bullets during your tenure, killing innocent civilians whose demands were as simple as access to clean water. It would have also helped if the media organizations you mention were not ones that were tainted with conflicts of interest during your tenure.

The Transparency of the Media Secretary’s Action Regarding “Derana” is Problematic – Free Media Movement

The Transparency of the Media Secretary’s Action Regarding “Derana” is Problematic – Free Media Movement
Nov 21, 2016

The Free Media Movement likes to draw the attentionof media community to the actions taken by the Secretary of the Media Ministry against Ada Derana News, accusing it for falsification of a speech by President Maithreepala Sirisena.

FMM questions the availability of a system that a victim can lodge a complaint or initiate an inquiry on behalf of victims, against an act of violation of ethics by an electronic media. There is a self-regularizing mechanism guided by aCode of Ethics which is implemented by the media community, in a violation of ethics by print media such as inaccurate reporting, distortion, prejudice and contempt.
The system that has implemented by the government, named as ‘draconian law’ which is rejected by the media community is also available. However, there is no complaint or investigation mechanism guided by a common Code of Ethics for electronic media. In this context, the transparency of the action taken by the Secretary of the Media Ministry of accusing a media institution for prejudicing a party with the state power and initiating an investigation, is problematic. Further, according to the report by Derana TV, the second letter which requested a response within 7 days, was received by them leaving 1 day to respond.
The Free Media Movement has observed the ways in whichthe Secretary of the Media Ministry has been issuing statements and acting in a non-critical manner. Even though many parties kept silence due to grave
accusations of money-laundering and several malpractices, the cancellation of CSN license is also be considered as an unreasonable act. Another observation was the letter sent to media organizations requesting not to use the term ‘collective opposition’.
This incident related to Derana emphasizes the need of an acceptable, independent or self-regulatory mechanism for electronic media. As the FMM has lobbied many occasions, media can work freely without any government intervention and fear of losing the license, only through the establishment of an independent broadcasting authority as well as an independent/self regulatory system for ethics. Therefore, the moment has arisen for electronic media community to work together to achieve this goal.

Tamils succeeding from Jaffna: A star in the dark skies

 

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S. Ratnajeevan H. Hoole-November 21, 2016

Outlook for Jaffna

Having returned to Sri Lanka to settle for the third time, I cannot help wondering if Sri Lanka is really ready for progress. Signs were good, but not any more. The promised reforms have stalled. There are still signs of a police state and the Human Rights Commission confirms continued use of torture. Real estate is rising in value slowly compared to the rest of the country, driving Tamil investors to invest outside the North. Jaffna’s youth are satiated by luxurious lives with motorbikes and Android smartphones sustained by relatives abroad. But what of education to pull them out of dependency?

Education: Bad News

My former student, Dr. Roshan Ragel, at the Akaram Foundation Workshop in Jaffna on 15.10.2016, presented a metric chilling analysis of education. He represents another breed of Northern Province products who are well-accomplished but find they can only grow elsewhere. Using his metric of assessment which he calls the Normalized Metric Value, he showed that the Northern Province has undergone a sharp drop for overall university entrance from first place in the 1980s to eighth place today (out of 9) and the Eastern Province is still in one of the last places now as then. In contrast, over this period, Western Province has retained its second place while Southern Province has moved from third place to first:

These figures from Ragel indicate that within Northern Province, Jaffna District’s ninth place (out of 25) for overall admission is similar to the much improved Vavuniya District’s performance.

At the same meeting the Eastern Province Education Minister, The Hon. Singaravelu Thandayuthapani, spoke coherently showing there are still a few competent people remaining in Tamil areas. His data showed the same precipitous state in the East as indicated in Ragel’s.

We see the Sinhalese not qualifying in relation to their provincial share of the eastern population in each of the three streams, the Muslims doing relatively well in the biosciences, and Tamils surprisingly doing better in arts.

Other Sources

Other sources confirm this precipitous decline in Tamil performance. For example, in the exam to select nurses held in the 25 districts, Galle, Hambantota, and Kegalle had 455, 431 and 428 qualifying candidates while at the low end were Mullaitivu, Vavuniya, Mannar, and Kilinochchi, which had 7, 17, 18, and 18 qualifying candidates respectively. Jaffna did middlingly with 156 qualifying candidates while Trinco had 80, Puttalam 82 and Batticaloa 87. In contrast, Amparai had 228 qualifying and Monaragala with 153 matched Jaffna. Very recently both these districts were the most underperforming districts in the country.

As another source, consider the exam conducted on 29.11.2015 by SLIDA (Sri Lanka Institute for Development Administration) for the Election Commission for our recruitment exercise. SLIDA’s test consisted of an aptitude test and an essay test in the most appropriate language, Tamil or Sinhalese.

The pass rate for Sinhalese, Tamils and Muslims was 88%, 38% and 48% respectively – essentially, most Tamils who sat for the exam failed. Out of the 371 candidates, the first 10 in rank were Sinhalese and among the last 10 (all of whom failed) there were two Sinhalese, and one Muslim and seven Tamils. Among Tamils, while the IQ marks in the aptitude test were comparable, the marks for the essay writing were well below the Sinhalese’s. The matter needs attention.

Role of English

The low essay marks for Tamils shows they do not read. Exercising literacy is the key to education: from critically reading diverse materials as learners, and translating this growing adeptness with language and knowledge into writing. This literacy is particularly important for English, which is now the language of all international exchange. Without English literacy, access to knowledge becomes highly constricted, because academic knowledge is developed, gathered, and exchanged globally in English. English competency is therefore a mark of high quality education. Unfortunately, poor English proficiency is a serious problem that holds Jaffna back. Having been isolated for many decades, teachers across the district are unable adequately to guide ones education in English. This problem is widespread even at the top tiers of the university. When the university website has a Dean speaking of his "academic carrier" one would wonder if someone else carried his academic load for him. When a Senior Lecturer Grade I declares on the university website that "He has taughted" at Peradeniya’s Faculty of Engineering, anyone would naturally question the quality of the English medium courses at Jaffna and Peradeniya. The picture is grim as the University of Jaffna is led by a Vice Chancellor who wrote to her "Deans" ordering them to get senior staff to sign an urgent letter of support for Mahinda Rajapakse’s election because "we have to forwarding this" before 29.12.2014. Reference letters for students written in such English reduces the value of the students in the job market, since employers outside the community question both the legitimacy of the reference and the quality of the university.

Is Jaffna a Lost Cause? The case of Thevamaran

Can we Tamils ever come back to our pre-war, pre-standardization level of achievement? I was very despondent until I met Dr. Ramathasan Thevamaran this week at Rice University in Houston, TX. He studied at St. John’s College during the war years. He worked hard to pick up English, which his parents encouraged knowing there is no future without it. He went for classes to Mr. Alex Thambirajah of St. John’s to learn beyond the trivial OL syllabus. He went to V. Paranthaman of the university’s ELTU and did OL English Literature. He entered Peradeniya, and received many prizes at St. John’s. He topped the batch and entered CalTech, one of the world’s most prestigious science universities, and got his doctorate.

This October, Dr. Thevamaran published as the premier author in the journal Science on his research using nanotechnology with lasers to develop strong and tough nanograined metals. Scientists around the world vie to publish in this journal, and it is considered almost impossible to have a paper accepted by this rigorous and widely read publication. He is a credit to the innate potential of our students.

Thevamaran wants to come back to teach in Sri Lanka but all his mentors here, perhaps wisely, have advised him not to. Yet it is in getting people like him back that our future depends. Currently, he is part of a USgroup trying to get funding for Lankan scholars to do their doctorates. Unfortunately, our scholars are unable to write the required essays explaining why they want to do their doctorate in that particular programme. When advised to get help to get the essay and its grammar right, they say their professors have already corrected it.

Thevamaran recalls being taken by CalTech to meet Dr. Michael Nelson, a top Analyst on Technology Policy in Washington for the US Government who told their group:

"First Grade people hire first grade people and surround themselves with intelligent people. Second grade people hire third grade people."

This is Sri Lanka’s tragedy. Stooging by the third grade recruits is apparent in our university websites, with the VC on almost every page. TNA’s M.A. Sumanthiran publicly said at a seminar at Jaffna’s Managers Forum that because of quality they do not have MPs to man parliamentary committees. This in turn is because candidate nominations are given by our second grade politicians to third grade stooges without any party democracy. TNA MPs have no interest in our universities because their children get scholarships in India or they plan to send them to the West.

For Sri Lanka to do well, Tamils must do well. For Tamils to do well, our universities must do well. Stars in the dark skies like Thevamaran must be enabled to come back, not just in political sentiment, but in active changes led by the President and fostered in the university community.

Let’s Withhold Tax Payments Until MPs Pay Back Defrauded Tax On Car Permits


Colombo Telegraph
By Nagananda Kodituwakku –November 21, 2016
Nagananda Kodituwakku
Nagananda Kodituwakku
The State Minister of Finance Lakshman Yapa Abeywardena on the 25th of October 2016, responding to a question raised by media on MP tax free car permits being sold in the open market said that ‘selling of duty-free car permits made available to them was not a big issue’ and they had been following that practice for a long time raising money and therefore it was not a contentious matter though it was contrary to the law.
When the same question was put to Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake by the BBC fortnight ago he said ‘tax-free permit is an asset to a MP and therefore there is nothing wrong in selling them.’ Yet, he refused to accept that MPs were selling their permits defrauding the government tax revenue.
Now I invite the readers to examine the view expressed by the Minister of Finance, Ravi Karunanayake presenting his maiden budget on 20th Nov 2015 on the abuse of tax-free car permits during the previous Mahinda Rajapakse regime; which is self-explanatory.
… Honorable Speaker, the vehicle permit schemes have been politicized and misused and have created a huge revenue loss over Rs. 40 billion a year to the Government. I propose to abolish all the vehicle permits granted under different schemes, including to Parliamentarians. However, I ensure all government officers will be financially compensated for the benefit foregone. Further, all the vehicles purchased to the Government will be subject to all applicable taxes and necessary allocations will be provided in the Budget…
Yet, the people are aware that the same Minister re-commenced issuing of tax-free car permits to all 225 MPs within a period of three months from making this bold statement, seemingly to insult the intelligence of the people.
Being an investigative public interests litigation activist I have conducted an in-depth study into this abuse and found out that the total loss to the government revenue would be over 7 billion rupees as the result of the re-launching the tax-free car permit scheme for MPs by the Yahapalanaya administration.
By the end of the month of October 2016, 77 vehicles had been imported on these tax-permits, defrauding tax revenue, for instance, Rs 33,459,250 for a Toyota Land Cruiser and Rs 44,701,750 for a Hummer jeep. There are more vehicles arriving at the port on regular basis.
It is disheartening to note that this kind of utter waste of public funds is being taking place while people are being burdened with heavy taxes and are being compelled to protest against the budget proposals for the fiscal year 2016/17. It is also noted that the government has also proposed to allocate Rs 700,000/- per month for a vehicle that would be acquired on ‘Operational lease basis’ for 58 government MPs. This is on top of 225 tax-free permits already issued for unjust enrichment by defrauding the government’s tax revenue.

Budget 2017 is elitist

By Rathindra Kuruwita and Umesh Moramudali-2016-11-21
The Budget 2017 was created by the elites for the elites, Jaffna based researcher, Ahilan Kadirgamar said stating that the trade and financial liberalization along with privatization propagated by this Budget will take the country towards financial doom.
?: What is your overall view of the Budget?
A: I am very concerned about this Budget because this is what you call an austerity Budget. When you implement austerity measures the role of the State is going to shrink. In other words the State will provide fewer services to the citizens, especially the services that are essential to the lower middle class and working classes.
One of the reasons for this is that the government has promised the IMF that it will reduce the fiscal deficit, or what we call the Budget deficit. This is the difference between the government expenditure and the government revenues. We went to the IMF in March this year because the Sri Lankan economy was in crisis. But the crisis was not necessarily caused by the Budget deficit; it was caused by another deficit, in our external account. In economics we talk about the twin deficits, one is the government's deficit and the other is the balance of payments – imports versus exports. So, our imports were much higher compared to our exports so we didn't have the foreign currency to pay for our imports that's why we have to go to the IMF.
IMF agreed to give us a US$ 1.5 billion loan and other donors like the World Bank and the ADB agreed to give us an additional US$ 600 million; together that is only about US$ 2.1 billion. Due to this infusion in June, the government in July was able to borrow another US $ 2 billion, so the reason for them to go with the IMF Agreement was also to borrow more money.
The IMF and World Bank believe that Budgets should be balanced at any cost. In the past economists believed that during times of economic crisis the government has to take loans to stimulate the economy as private businesses won't do so. During boom times the government should pay back those loans. Instead, we have been compelled to balance the Budget at any cost. However, another way of balancing a Budget is to increase revenues.
What is special about this Budget is that there is a reduction in expenditure. The total expenditure for 2016, allocated from the Budget, was Rs 2,787 billion it has been reduced to Rs 2,723 billion in 2017, so there is a decline of about Rs 64 billion. In Sri Lanka's history it is unprecedented. You never allocate less than the previous year, because every year there is inflation and there is economic growth. When you have an absolute decline of Rs 64 billion, in reality it is like slashing your expenditure by 10 per cent or even more, because you haven't accounted for growth or inflation. That is why we call this an austerity Budget. Unfortunately very few of our economists have identified this point.
Look at the education allocation. Last year, from the 2016 Budget, the government allocated 2.7 per cent of GDP for education. We applauded it because it indeed was a significant increase compared to the previous years.
When the allocation for education was announced, the Finance Minister, Ravi Karunanayake, declared that they allocated Rs 250 billion for the sector but when people looked at the figures carefully they found that the Minister has reached this number (Rs 250 billion) through an accounting gimmick. The real figure according to me was something around Rs 130 billion but still it was an improvement from previous years. But, during the 2017 Budget, Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake said that the ministries in charge of education have spent only Rs 40 billion in the first nine months of 2016; because of that the Budget allocation for education for 2017 would be Rs 90 billion. But whose fault is that? Is it the fault of the people who had been demanding higher spending on education? I think the Minister of Education and the Minister of Finance can share the blame for that, they should have found a way to spend the allocation in a meaningful manner. The other question is, if the government spent only a fraction of the allocation for education in 2016, why wouldn't they do the same in 2017? How much of the Rs 90 billion, allocation will be spent?
?: The government believes that it can develop the country through increased financialization and liberalization. Various government leaders have repeated this, including the Prime Minister. What steps do you think the 2017 Budget has taken in this direction?
A: If you look at the plans of this government, you can identify three pillars of their economic policy.
Trade liberalization, for example through ETCA and proposed trade deals with China, Singapore and US. The government thinks we can develop the economy through opening up trade.
Financial liberalization through greater integration with global capital markets. For example, this is why they want to make the Port City a financial hub and through this Budget there are moves to financialize the economy in a serious manner.
Privatization, directly or through Public-Private Partnerships.
These are the measures through which the government plans to put Sri Lanka in an accelerated development path. But I believe that these steps will take us in a different and a horrific direction.
Greater income inequality, these measures will enrich the 1 per cent more, but the majority of the citizens will suffer. Even in their terms, I think it will be a disaster. I think the government won't mind an increase in inequality if the economy grows. But I would say even that will not happen. Trade liberalization at this moment is a really bad idea. The global economy is not doing well at all. In September this year the World Trade Organization made some important revelations. They said that trade is no longer outpacing economic growth as it used to. Trade has grown 1.5 times faster than the gross domestic product over the long term, and twice as fast when globalization picked up in the 1990s. This year trade will grow only 80 per cent as fast as the global economy, the WTO said, the first reversal of globalization since 2001 and only the second since 1982.
And the government wants to open up the economy now, at a time when no one wants to import and protectionists like Donald Trump are winning elections in the developed world. I have heard some economists say that trade liberalization will make us the gateway to Asia; I would say we will become the kitchen sink of Asia if we open up now. Everyone will come and dump their products into our market. Maybe our Prime Minister wants to help the world economy through trade liberalization, at the cost of Sri Lanka, but we are too small for even that to work out.
I am not for blindly opening up trade even in good times. I am not worried like the GMOA about foreigners flooding our country. Capital moves a lot freer than people and often with trade liberalization the bargaining power of the workers are weakened. People do not tolerate this forever, look at the US elections, the white working class helped the election of Trump. So their first pillar is bound to fall, having a devastating effect on us.
The second pillar is financial liberalization. Clearly they want to attract the global capital flows to Sri Lanka. We have seen this being tried for 40 years, in Sri Lanka and across the world. With financial liberalization we have seen an increase in inequality and frequency of financial crisis. Once you liberalize the financial sector, money can come in but it can also fly out fast. In fact the crisis in March was due to money going out of the country.
A lot of money that comes after financial liberalization goes into Finance, Insurance and Real Estate (FIRE). The global capital no longer comes and invests in factories but they get absorbed into FIRE sectors and most of these investments are speculative. They will come invest in real estate, create a bubble and make a quick buck. Not only the global elites but also the local elites will make a huge profit from this bubble. But when the bubble crashes, well then the ordinary Sri Lankans will have to pick up the pieces. We will have to bail out the local financial institutions.
The government has liberalized the banking sector and it is trying to liberalize and create a market for global insurance and pension funds. For example, the government introduced an insurance scheme for school children from the 2017 Budget and they will give subsidies to insurers for this. But how often do school children need these insurance policies? The insurance companies won't have to pay up at all. The government is just creating a huge market for global mutual and pension funds. As with trade liberalization, this makes easier for global capital to come, make a quick and significant profit and exit. Once again the 1 per cent will benefit but the rest will have to suffer.
The third pillar is privatization. As I said when they can't do it directly, it will be done indirectly through Public-Private Partnerships. I know that the government and the wonks try to market these partnerships as an elixir for everything but if you look at the experience from around the world we see that the public sector takes all the risk, the government gives subsidies and if things work out the private sector takes the profit through these partnerships. When things don't work out the people have to clean up the messes.
While it is true that privatization gives the government a quick and significant infusion of cash, we must remember that it is a onetime thing. The government can privatize an institution only once but what about the long run? The government likes to talk about corruption, so does the Opposition and they have established various institutions to investigate corruption but usually the biggest corruptions happen when you privatize. The State often sells institutions at a small price and often the private owner makes a profit from day one. This is a lot worse than the Treasury Bond scam, only it is legal.
?: What about the attack on labour? Since its election the government has been trying to change labour laws and if they are successful the bargaining power and the security of workers will be in jeopardy?
A: Indeed, in a way it is the fourth pillar of the government's policy. They want to attack labour through reforms to the laws. The government wants to allow the markets to determine important aspects such as job security and the number of hours that a worker has to put in. Our Labour Department already does not take any action against violations of the labour laws. The government wants to boost 'investor confidence' at any cost.
?: Infrastructure development is important to develop the economy; do you think the government has allocated adequate funds for this in the Budget 2017?
A: Infrastructure is important, but then again it depends on what kind of infrastructure we are talking about. I mean we need to upgrade our infrastructure related to health and education. What matters is identifying what people need and having a proper plan. We need to focus on infrastructure that promotes meaningful employment. Just building highways across the country will not be enough; we need to look at other aspects that make these highways useful. Look at the Southern Expressway; it is half empty all the time.
This government seems to believe that if they build the highways and power plants, the markets will take care of the rest. This is what the donors like the World Bank, the IMF and the ADB also promote. These agencies are also behind formulating our economic policy and most of our economists and think tanks also believe in this. Most of our economists and think tanks are in the payroll of these international agencies, so obviously they will support this government's economic policies. The public is not consulted or are aware of what is going on but ultimately it is the public who will have to suffer when we hit a crisis.
?: This government is big on reconciliation and economic development is also important for reconciliation. Especially, considering the economic woes faced by the Jaffna farmers played a role in the insurrection. How has the government attempted to address this, in this year's Budget?
A: Last year the government allocated Rs 14 billion for the Ministry of Resettlement and built 10, 000 houses. This actually benefitted the people and stimulated the economy because people in the area were able to work in the construction of these houses. In addition to these houses, the government also proposed to build an additional 65,000 houses and they tried to give the contract to a multinational company.
While the Ministry of Resettlement builds a house for Rs 800, 000, this multinational company proposed to build houses, with the same specifications, at Rs. 2 million each. And a lot of people were opposed to granting the project to the multinational company, for obvious reasons, and now the housing project has not been carried out.
Prime Minister once promised to convene a donor conference this year to seek funds for Northern developments but nothing has happened. The government keeps on making promises and keeps on breaking them, how can they win people over like this?
This year's Budget has nothing for the North and the East. I have been very critical of the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) and the Northern Provincial Council because they have done nothing for the people. But that is not an excuse for the government to let down the people.
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untitled-4logoMonday, 21 November 2016

The Digital Age is not new or alien to the financial services industry. When the new breakthroughs of information and communication technology (ICT) hit the world in the early 1960s, it was the financial services industry that embraced them before any other industry. It was done as a necessity rather than as a passion or fashion.

Two extremists of both factions financed and incited by satanic Gota remanded !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-Mews -20.Nov.2016, 11.45PM) As an answer to the  conspiracy hatched by  Gotabaya Rajapakse the devil incarnate who is stoking a new round of odious and obnoxious racism in Sri Lanka spending his own money , the good governance government promptly arrested a Sinhala Buddhist extremist as well as a Muslim Thawheed Jamath extremist , and remanded them thereby  setting a good example welcomed by all law abiding citizens.

Dematagoda Suresh Priyasad alias Dan  Priyasad the Buddhist extremist , with a view  to foment racial hatred between the two races , and to create communal unrest lied blatantly and brazenly that Rauf Hakeem , the Minister of water supply is trying to adulterate the tanks with poison with the aim  to destroy the Sinhala race within 24 hours . Priyasad who was therefore urging the Sinhalese to join with him to form suicide bomb squads against Muslims was arrested on the 15 th , and after he was produced before court he was remanded until the 25 th by judge Ms. Lanka Jayaratne . Priyasad  was remanded  on charges of stoking  racism and creating  communal animosity   between the races. 
The following day (16 th)  , the police arrested  extremist Abdul Razik Rafaideen the secretary of Thawheed Jamaath organization based on the same charges. Rafaideen  at a rally held on the 3 rd of November has made a number of references allegedly derogatory of Buddhism and  spoken in a manner that could provoke the people . Rafaideen was remanded until the 29 th. 
With  the new constitution and  with long lasting reconciliation efforts in place  in the country , based on information received by the State intelligence division , it is venomous and vicious Gotabaya Rajapakse the devil incarnate noted for his Satanic traits  who is financing both extremist factions , and it is under his monitoring these groups are being incited to create communal unrest from now itself in the country in order to disrupt the  reconciliation and sabotage the government’s progressive salutary  programs .
There are also reports that , it is this same devil incarnate who has all along been a lawless demon  who cannot think or act unselfishly  for the greater good of the country is bribing the media coolies and unscrupulous media Institutions to give the necessary publicity to these  extremists .
This was best illustrated when a ‘blind’ mediocre broadcaster  was arrested , this moronic mad hat was referred to as a patriotic leader  . 
No matter what race or religion these extremists and  fanatics belong , no mercy shall be shown towards them . It is people’s earnest anticipation that the laws which  are being applied to the extremists Dan and Razik shall be applied to the sordid media and journalists too that  are fanning and fueling racism .

More than the two extremists who are arrested , there are several  villainous media Institutions and unpatriotic  journalists that deserve punishment for engaging  in much more grave and dangerous anti national activities which can precipitate a national holocaust. 
The monk despite wearing the sacred saffron robe of  Mangalaramya   temple , Batticaloa who is  boiling  with maniacal  racist rage must be made to understand  these laws enforced against Dan  and Razik are tenable even in respect of him who is  insulting the sacred saffron robe ,not to mention the disgrace he and his  misconduct are   bringing upon pristine pure Buddhism.  If not , at least anti rabies medicine must be administered to such two legged mad dogs before those infect others with rabies. 
An individual , a true Buddhist who had the misfortune to witness the rage and crude behavior  of the Mangalaramaya  robed hooligan said , if only the government can duly enforce the laws against this robed goon , it will be a boon for the whole country , and the government would attain nibbana in this life itself  , for Lord Buddha never preached violence , racism , hooliganism or hatred, specially with the sacred robe on.
Lanka e news decided that the photos of the arrested extremists need not be published  because undue publicity is being given to these villains already by the other media. Please bear with us 
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by     (2016-11-21 05:03:13)

CALL FOR SOLIDARITY WITH THE ACTIVISTS WHO HAVE STOOD UP FOR WOMEN’S RIGHTS & AGAINST DISCRIMINATION

Muslim School Girls, sri Lanka (c)s.deshapriya
Image: Group of Muslim female students visiting Galle Fort,July 2016(c)s.deshhapriya

Sri Lanka Brief21/11/2016

Statement: Let’s come together to support our sisters who have raised their voice for women’s rights and against discrimination.

The constitutional reform process has initiated important discussions about legal reform. Among them is the need to better protect women’s rights and reform laws that discriminate against women. As women leaders who have worked for more than 25 years on women’s rights, we welcome this focus.

Thowheed Jama’ath Condemns Wijeyadasa’s Inflammatory Speech, Responds To All Allegations Against Muslims


Colombo Telegraph
November 21, 2016
Sri Lanka Thowheed Jama’ath (SLTJ) organisation has today condemned the statement made in Parliamentby the Minister of Justice Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe about the Muslim community. They have also responded to the allegations levelled against the Muslims by the minister.
We publish below the statement issued by Sri Lanka Thowheed Jama’ath by in full:
Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe - Minster of Justice
Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe – Minster of Justice
On last 18.11.2016, Hon. Minister of Justice, Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe addressed in parliament about the steps that the government of Sri Lanka has taken with regard to restraining the racialist activities in Sri Lanka. While accepting the minister’s views about taking severe legal action against those who involve and sow the racism in the country, we totally find fault on the knot that the minister has made between terrorism and Islamic organizations together with religious education institutes.
ISIS terrorists must be eradicated
Hon. Minister recorded a view point that 32 members of 4 Muslim families from Sri Lanka have gone to Syria to join the international terrorist movement, ISIS and the Sri Lankan people are much frightened with regard to it. Indeed, for the first time, the said view that some Jihad groups functioning in Sri Lanka have connection with ISIS is a point that was spread in Sri Lanka in the previous government.
However, the then Defence Secretary refused this opinion and issued a denial report in public saying that it is not only the wrong statement but also Sri Lanka has not got such an organization. Even when if it was later confirmed that a few members of a single family from Sri Lanka have gone to Syria to attach ISIS, the whole Muslims living in Sri Lanka and the total Islamic religious and civil organizations together fervently condemned this activity and had declared that ISIS was a vulgar terrorist organization and their entire agenda were un-Islamic. All the Muslims in person and with their organizations strongly said in their statements and reports that the activities of ISIS had no a minute connection with Islam and the entire Muslims in Sri Lanka were unsupportive to any form of terrorism.
No any Muslims in Sri Lanka agree with terrorism or terrorist activities. Thowheed Jama’ath, on behalf of all the Muslims in Sri Lanka, request the government of Sri Lanka to take necessary measures to immediately arrest any individual person or an organization if they keep link with any terrorist organization in Sri Lanka or outside the country.
When the situation is in such a condition, a matter that was wrongly spread a long ago against a particular community in the country and the proper answer was also given at the same time by the same community individually and organizationally, how a responsible Minister, all of a sudden, superficially without looking at the people, place, time and the situation can reveal such a statement in Parliament when the racist waves are intentionally being raised in the country against Muslims. This would definitely increase the density of the problem and fearing in all societies rather than reducing. We therefore would like to bring this matter to the utmost consideration of the Minister that tying all Muslims and Islamic organizations with terrorism will sharpen the volume of the issue between multicultural communities in our mother land.

World View: Sri Lankan Buddhist Monks Accused of Racist Hate Speech


  • Sri Lanka Sinhalese Buddhist monks accused of racist hate speech against Hindu Tamils
  • Sri Lanka says that ’32 élite, well-educated Muslims’ have joined ISIS in Syria
Image grab from video shows Buddhist monk using racist language to a Hindu Tamil civil servant, while policeman looks on and does nothing
Image grab from video shows Buddhist monk using racist language to a Hindu Tamil civil servant, while policeman looks on and does nothing
by JOHN J. XENAKIS20 Nov 2016
Sri Lanka’s bloody generational crisis civil war between the market-dominant mostly Buddhist ethnic Sinhalese and the mostly Hindu ethnic Tamils ended in May 2009, and in the seven years since then, the country has been devoted to achieving reconciliation between the two ethnic groups.
So a number of people in both groups are alarmed at the sudden occurrences of racist hate speech by Buddhist monks against Tamils. One video that’s gone viral shows a Buddhist monk using extreme racist expletives and abusive language to verbally assault and threaten a Tamil public servant, as a (presumably Sinhalese) uniformed police officer watched, without taking action.
In another incident, a Buddhist leader threatened a “bloodbath” in protest over the arrest of a self-proclaimed “Savior of the Sinhalese.”
However, the racist attacks are apparently more ethnically than religiously motivated, as Christian Tamils are also being targeted, as well as Hindu Tamils and Muslim Tamils. More than 70 percent of Sri Lanka’s 20 million people are Buddhists, about 13 percent are Hindu, while Muslims make up around 10 percent.
A joint civil society submission to the Committee on the Elimination of Racial Discrimination in August 2016 documented 132 incidents faced by Christians and 141 incidents against the Muslims, in a span of one year, since 2015. These incidents include attacks on places of religious worship, and minority religious communities being disrupted during times of worship and prayer. Even worse, no attempt has been made to prosecute the offenders.
According to Father S. J. Emmanuel, president of the Global Tamil Forum, the attacks are signs of increasing Sinhalese nationalism by Buddhist monks:
While the Sri Lankan Constitution clearly guarantees all citizens the right to equality, non-discrimination and freedom of religion and religious worship, the number of attacks against religious and ethnic numerical minorities across Sri Lanka, by ethno-nationalist majoritarian groups, typically led by one or more Buddhist monks, remains unchecked. Civil society groups have consistently documented and reported such attacks to relevant authorities. However, charges have never been brought against the perpetrators, despite the conduct of these monks being in clear violation of hate-speech and anti-discrimination protections under Sri Lankan law.
Both Christian and Hindu Tamil groups have called on the government to bring to justice all those in violation of Sri Lanka’s anti-discrimination and hate-speech laws, including Buddhist monks. This is not very likely to happen.
Sri Lanka is in a generational Recovery era, following the end of the civil war. This is a period of austerity when rules and institutions are devised by the survivors of the civil war to make sure nothing like it ever happens again. These rules and institutions survive for several decades until the Unraveling era, when younger generations have come to power, and the generations that survived the war are no longer running things.
These racist attacks by Buddhist Sinhalese against Hindu and Christian Tamils are the first signs of what’s to come in few years, when the first postwar generation comes of age, in the generational Awakening era. Sunday Leader (Colombo, Sri Lanka) and The Hindu (India) and The Island (Colombo)

Sri Lanka says that ’32 élite, well-educated Muslims’ have joined ISIS in Syria

Sri Lanka’s justice minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe says that 32 Sri Lankan Muslim have traveled to Syria to join the so-called Islamic State (IS or ISIS or ISIL or Daesh). According to Rajapakshe:
All these (Muslims) are not from ordinary families. These people are from the families which are considered as well-educated and élite.
There is a greater fear among the public about ISIS. If somebody tries to spread extremism in this country, we will not allow for that from today. The law of this country is no different to Buddhist monks or ordinary people.
However, the Muslim Council of Sri Lanka (MCSL) strongly objected to this statement, saying that the referenced incidents occurred over a year ago:
We strongly object to this misplaced statement. The facts given by the Minister were reported in the media more than a year ago when a Sri Lankan combatant died fighting with ISIS.
There have been no new reports of any others getting involved since this was reported last year.
It is believed that one family had gone to Syria to provide humanitarian support to the war wounded and refugees. Some of the men are alleged to have joined or forced to join the fighting forces of ISIS. The Muslim community, including the Muslim Council, Jamiathul Ulema and other organizations cooperated with the government in identifying the families to provide the necessary support for the intelligence agencies to investigate.
According to the MCSL, Sri Lanka is unlike other countries in that Sri Lanka Muslims have been condemning un-Islamic comments by Muslims, and there are no madrassas “indoctrinating its children with fundamentalism.”
This is entirely believable, and a credible contrast to Muslims in northern Africa, the Mideast and southeast Asia. All of those countries are in generational Crisis eras, with their last generational crisis war having been World War II or earlier, and so the popular mood in those countries is highly nationalistic and xenophobic toward non-Muslims or even Muslims in other branches (i.e., Sunni versus Shia).
But Sri Lanka is in a generational Recovery era, having just gone through an extremely bloody civil war that encompassed Buddhists, Hindus and Christians as well as Muslims. The population is war weary and eager to apply “lessons learned” from the civil war, creating laws and institutions to guarantee that no such horror will ever happen again. There will always be exceptions, but for the time being, Muslims in Sri Lanka are not jihadists and are not supportive of jihadists, as they are in the other 80 or so countries that sent young men and women to Syria to fight the genocidal actions of Bashar al-Assad. As years and decades go by, and new generations come of age, this attitude will change, of course, but right now there are few people who want to thwart the country’s attempt at reconciliation. Reuters and New Indian Express
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