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

Saturday, December 3, 2016

ஒதியமலை தமிழர் பிரதேசங்களை கபளீகரம் செய்யும் வனத்திணைக்களம்

ஒதியமலை தமிழர் பிரதேசங்களை கபளீகரம் செய்யும் வனத்திணைக்களம்03-Dec-2016 
ஒதியமலை தமிழர் பிரதேசங்களில் பொதுமக்களின் சொந்தக் காணிகளை உள்ளடக்கிவனத்திணை க்களம் எல்லையிட்டுள்ளதாக அப்பகுதி மக்கள் குற்றம்சாட்டியுள்ளனர்அதுமட்டுமல்லாமல் வனஜீவராசி திணைக்களம் சிங்கள மக்களுக்கு விலங்குகளிடம்இருந்து பாதுகாப்பளிக்கும் நோக்குடன் பாதுகாப்பு வேலிகள் அமைப்பதின் மூலம் நன்கு திட்டமிட்டு தமிழ் மக்களின் காணிகளை அபகரிப்பதாகவும் பொது மக்கள் குற்றம்சாட்டியுள்ளனர்.

இவர்களுடன் மகாவலி அபிவிருத்தி திட்டத்தின் செயற்பாடுகள் தமிழ் மக்களின் பிரதான கருவேப்பங் குள த்தை அழிப்பதற்கு திட்டமிட்டுள்ளதாகவும்குற்றம்சாட்டியுள்ளனர்.

குறித்த குற்றச்சாட்டுக்களை அவர்கள் ஒதியமலை MU/123 பிரிவு கிராமசேவையாளரிடம் நேற்று) எடுத்துக் கூறியதுடன் குறித்த கிராம சேவையாளரைஅழைத்துச் சென்று பிழையான திட்டங்களையும் எல்லை களையும் காண்பித்துள்ளளர்கள்.

இதுதொடர்பாக குறித்த கிராமசேவையாளர் வனஜீவராசி திணைக்கள அதிகாரிகளுடன் தொடர்பு கொண்டு அவர்களை சம்பவ இடத்திற்கு அழைத்து வினவிய பொழுது அவர்கள் மகாவலிஅபிவிருத்தி திட்ட எல்லைகள் என்று கூறி மகாவலி அபிவிருத்தி திட்டமுகாமையாளரிடம் தொடர்புபடுத்தியுள்ளாதாக தெரி விக்கப்படுகின்றது.

தொடர்ந்து குறித்த பகுதி மக்களும் கிராமசேவையாளரும் மகாவலி அபிவிருத்திட்டமுகாமையாளரை அணுகிய போது அவர் எதிர்வரும் வெள்ளிக்கிழமை(9) அரசாங்க அதிபருடன்குறித்த இடம் பார்வையி டப்படும் என்று குறிப்பிட்டு அனுப்பியுள்ளதாகதெரிவிக்கப்படுகின்றது.

மகாவலி திட்டத்தின் நோக்கங்களில் விவசாய உற்பத்தியை மேம்படுத்துதல் என்னும்நோக்கமும் உள்ள டக்கப்பட்டுள்ளது.

ஆனால் விவசாயம் செய்யும் குளத்தை அழிப்பதற்குஅவர்கள் திட்டமிட்டுள்ளதாக பொதுமக்கள் சுட்டி க்காட்டியுள்ளமை குறிப்பிடத்தக்கது

INSTITUTING A CONSTITUTIONAL PRESS COUNCIL WILL HELP THE INDIAN MEDIA DO ITS JOB

reading-newspaper
Image:The media is meant to report the truth, but the structure and vested interests of the Indian press have stopped that from happening.

The daily dose of news. Credit: Mike Prince/Flickr CC BY 2.0

By -04/12/2016

Sri Lanka BriefJames Madison famously argued that “the advancement and diffusion of knowledge is the only guardian of true liberty”. Seen in this light, the media performs three crucial functions in society: it gives a voice to the voiceless, creates a forum for a dignified dialectic and constructs an agenda to produce democratic and progressive outcomes. To do justice to these responsibilities, it is imperative that the media report the truth objectively and portray a diversity of issues and opinions.

Unfortunately, the media in India has succumbed to misinforming to manufacture consent, tabloidisation for higher revenues and even creating or exacerbating societal tensions. Whatever the raison d’être for this sordid state of affairs, the upshot is that the media is either managed (by incentives to the channel or to specific journalists) or censored (by interference in content or outright suppression).

Censorship can be both internal and external. Internally, senior decision makers within a media organisation suppress or bypass credible stories because they have been personally compromised (by external influences) or because of their personal biases and interests (including but not limited to the hope of personal advancement). Externally, the media faces pressures from corporate or political ownership and from the government. Corporate and political ownership of media houses forces them to operate as profit-making or propaganda ventures. They no longer function as sources of truth, instead becoming mouthpieces for vested interests. Unfortunately, the complete lack of transparency in such ventures makes it nearly impossible to analyse the contractualisation of news in further detail.
On the other hand, it is easier to understand how governments coerce media outlets to dilute, self-censor or redact what is perceived to be objectionable. Factually, government advertisements form nearly 50% of the total volume of advertisements to an established newspaper. A Supreme Court committee has highlighted how governments (mis)use their publicity budgets to further their partisan interests. Consider the manner in which money was allocated by the government last year:

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As is evident from the tables, a media outlet’s public reach is not the yardstick for government expenditure. Even though India Today and ABP (electronic news), and Dainik Jagran and Dainik Bhaskar (print media) outperform others in terms of viewership and readership, a higher proportion of government advertisements are routed towards other outlets. No grounds have been specified for this differentiated disbursal, which certainly raises questions of propriety and hints towards selective patronage.

Where the carrot of advertising budgets fails, the stick of regulation is used to muzzle individual journalists as well as media outlets. As a recent report has highlighted, 2015 witnessed over 41 cases of censorship, 48 cases of defamation, 14 cases of sedition and eight cases of surveillance against individual journalists. Conversely, the recent ban on NDTV India exemplifies how media outlets are silenced. Such issues routinely occur because the government reserves the exclusive power to decree what is and is not in sync with the nation’s (or to be more accurate, the government’s) interests and hence arbitrarily expurgates programme content. This is especially problematic because an individual’s or civil society’s interests are often not aligned to those of the government. For example, the government may seek to mine in a sensitive area, something civil society may not necessarily endorse because of ecological or social concerns.

When that doesn’t work, non-state actors (and sometimes even the state apparatus, as in Chhattisgarh) are deployed to intimidate journalists or even inflict violence. The mysterious deaths of reporters covering the Vyapam and mining scams in Madhya Pradesh are just some of the many instances of inconvenient media coverage being excised through violence. According to a Press Council of India report, 80 journalists and five media persons have been murdered in India since 1990 (by May 2016, this had increased to 94). It is no surprise that India ranked a lowly 133 out of 180 countries in the World Press Freedom Index.

There is therefore an urgent need to protect journalists, while ensuring that the media as a whole functions objectively and adheres to journalistic ethics. Unfortunately, the present Press Council of India is wholly inadequate for several reasons. Its mandate is limited to only the print and not to the electronic, online or broadcast media; it has no powers to enforce its orders; it has powers to adjudicate, but usually resorts to mediation to placate vested interests; it has no role in shaping, furthering or implementing journalistic standards; and it has no powers to impose fines or penalties or take any action against offenders. Furthermore, numerous self regulatory agencies (News Broadcasting Standards Authority, Broadcast Editors’ Association, Advertising Standards Council of India and others like them) have proved to be weak and ineffective.

This regulatory vacuum has exacerbated the rot in the profession and incentivised interference from the government and nefarious corporations (who both resist accountability). It is therefore important that an empowered constitutional body which would oversee, protect and regulate journalists and media houses be institutionalised.

The advantages of such a body would be multi-fold. Being a constitutional body, it would be comparatively more immune from extraneous influences. Its membership (which should ideally include a retired Supreme Court judge as chairperson, a retired civil servant, two civil society activists and two members each from the print, electronic and online media) would require cross party consensus, and any alteration in its structure would necessitate a two-thirds majority in both houses of parliament.

This council’s oversight would cover electronic and online media organisations, on the lines of the Norwegian Press Council. Third, it would have a vastly expanded mandate and the powers of a civil court. Not only would it be able to take suo moto action, it would also be able to penalise and recommend action against offenders. The body will also have the power to regulate the excessive concentration of media outlets (print, electronic or online) with any one corporation. In addition, it would be able conduct periodic audits of the media, especially to ensure that its freedoms, ethics and standards are not impinged upon. These audits would have to be placed before parliament and mandatorily discussed by the concerned standing committee.

Finally, it is important to preserve a balance between protecting the media’s independence and regulating its excesses. The council may unsettle this delicate balance. Therefore, to ensure adequate safeguards the council’s yearly report could be voted upon by both the houses of parliament.

Penultimately, the aim of the media is to function as a nation’s conscience keeper. Unfortunately, it has been found utterly wanting in this regard, for which there are those who are more liable. However, it is equally true that all of us are somewhat responsible for the media’s perversion by being mute bystanders to the suppression of the truth. Without the truth, we have no way to reflect on or remedy the ills that plague our society. As a nation, if we are to keep rising to ever greater heights, we must embrace the truth, no matter how bitter or uncomfortable. Under the current socio-political climate in India, this is all the more essential. As George Orwell once said, “in a time of deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act”.
Pushparaj Deshpande is currently an analyst with the All-India Congress Committee. He has worked on legislation and policy with various MPs.

The media is meant to report the truth, but the structure and vested interests of the Indian press have stopped that from happening.

June 1983: Anarchy Loosed


Colombo Telegraph
By Rajan Hoole –December 3, 2016 
Dr. Rajan Hoole
Dr. Rajan Hoole
The killing of two Air Force men in Vavuniya by PLOTE militants, was followed by the security forces going on the rampage and widespread arson. Many felt that these reprisals would be continued in Trincomalee where elements already charged with patriotic fervor were waiting to let go. The PSO was promulgated and the security forces were given the ‘freedom of the battlefield’ to combat terrorism even in places where there was little evidence of it. What then happened in Trincomalee during June, was either not reported in the media or reported in a distorted manner despite the fact that the Tamils were living through hell.
There were a few stray items in the press suggesting that something disturbingly unusual was going on: Tamil youth killed in Mullipuram, Kantalai… Two huts burnt in Andankulam… A man shot in the leg in Kanniya… Bus proceeding to Jaffna shot at and set on fire, driver killed, several passengers hospitalised, and some ran into the jungle and are missing… Small child hacked to death…. In Moraweva (where the Sinhalese population was boosted by recent colonisation) four were shot and cut to death, of whom two were children 1 year and 4 years….
Most of these items were reports of what TULF MPs had said in Parliament and were frequently late, as getting information was difficult. The Press reported that there was a curfew in Trincomalee and that several persons were detained over the violence, but was extremely vague about what was really going on.
The first indication that what was going on in Trincomalee was planned and had official backing, strangely enough, came not from the media, but from a speech made in Parliament by Gamini Lokuge, UNP MP for Kesbewa, who had in May won a violent bye-election. He is one of those close to Mathew & Co. who had made Trincomalee their hobby-horse. He had recently taken over from a foreigner, Welcombe Hotel in Trincomalee. Renamed Seven Islands Hotel, it acquired a reputation as a meeting place of conspirators. gamini-lokuge
Lokuge said in Parliament on 27th June: “The Sinhalese people had banded themselves together in Trincomalee because they have been harassed by the Tamils there in the past. Are you [Tamils] trying to chase the Sinhalese people away as you did in 1956?
Even at this late stage, the Press continued to mislead. The Island of 29th June carried an item : “Army, Police open fire to stop mini-war in the Trinco bazaar area between Tamil and Sinhalese traders…. Two Hindu temples set on fire.” The Sun editorial of 2nd July asked whether it was the Armed Forces and Police being at loggerheads or commercial rivalry, that was responsible for the violence in Trincomalee?

Sri Lanka: Internal Attempt to Safeguard Rajapaksa Clan! 

rajapaksa

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( December 4, 2016, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) “A UNP minister within the Unity Government is exerting pressure on the police and investigating institutions engaged in investigating fraud and corruption charges against the Rajapaksa clan, in a bid to safeguard the Rajapaksas, a group of high ranking officials had informed the President during a meeting held last Thursday,” local media reports.

According to the report published by Sathhanda in which English translation published on Sri Lanka Mirror, ” subsequent to the telephone conversation to the IGP during a public event in Ratnapura and the media highlighting the issue, President Sirisena had summoned senior officials of the investigating bodies and questioned them individually regarding the pressure they face when conducting these investigations.”

The president had admitted in parliament that the actions of the IGP was wrong, when questioned by the JVP parliamentarian. Civil society groups and online social media networks have persuasively urged the president to sack the IGP over this incident.

Ability to oust him?

However, despite the pressure the president does not have the power to remove the IGP.

Such an appointment made by the president on the recommendations of the constitutional Council can be removed only through a no confidence motion brought in parliament.

These officials have informed the president that in most of the investigations being carried out, the said minister has been pressuring them and that they had to work under political interference which hampers their independent investigations.

Splitting up the SLFP:

The officials had informed the president that they are being pressurised to drop the investigations of the former Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa in particular.

It was revealed that while the Minister in question was in the opposition, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa had supported him in his business ventures and Gotabhaya is also a very close pal of the minister’s older brother.

The Minister’s brother is currently holding a prominent position in a government media institution.
However, the SLFP seniors had informed the president previously that there is a strong suspicion that this minister maybe acting on the instructions of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and protecting the Rajapaksa clan with the intention of splitting up the SLFP.

That call to the IGP and the undermining of law


Sunday, December 04, 2016

For close to ten years, Sri Lanka was ruled by a Presidency under which calls were openly given by politicians to heads of the judiciary, the police and hapless public servants ordering them to act or not to act as the case may be. This is not to say that such gross misrule started with the Rajapaksas. Before that, we had our peccadilloes, when political pressure was exerted by Heads of State on judicial and public officials in particular circumstances.

Reducing public officers to playthings

At times, the converse was true when the country’s historic judicial institution was reduced to a profound absurdity as a Chief Justice rashly appointed by former President Chandrika Kumaratunga in circumstances that can only be described as mala fide, plunged that Office into unprecedented political controversy (the Sarath Silva Court, circa, 1999-2009).

Regardless, it may generally be agreed that never was there such general despair as during the Mahinda Rajapaksa Presidency. As at the time of his electoral defeat in 2015, the sitting Chief Justice at the time was more in the abode of the President than in the halls of justice.

A single call from not only a scion of the Rajapaksa clan but also the local village thug professing to act on the orders of a Rajapaksa could reduce the Inspector General of Police (IGP) and a lowly Officer-in-Charge of a police station alike to a shivering nervous wreck. So let us forcibly remind ourselves of that none too recent history, even as memories fade in the face of exceedingly great frustrations with the spluttering ‘yahapalanaya’ successor to Rajapaksa rule.

No tolerating ‘figleaf’ excuses

Assuredly however, that history does not mean that the Unity Government is allowed to cling onto proverbial ‘figleaf’ excuses when its electoral promises are betrayed time and time again. Come to think of it, the Rajapaksa discarding of all minimum standards relating to governance was a blessing in disguise for current politicians who keep repeating as a mantra that the Sri Lankan people should be happy when crumbs are thrown from the ‘yahaplanaya’ table for, ‘at least things are not so bad as they were during the Rajapaksa era.’

Quite apart from this being an utterly unacceptable justification, this is also a dangerous one. It allows both the political regime and its blind supporters to live in a state of complacency which is fast belied by the rising public temper outside Colombo.

Not only are many ordinary people refusing to believe that mantra but also, this refusal is accompanied by the sneer that ‘well at least the previous characters robbed but got things done…now there is only robbing.’ In short, that thin majority which was snatched from the Rajapaksa jaws in the electoral victories last year is being whittled down to a point of virtual non-existence.

Shameful kowtowing to politicians

Let us be clear about one fact. At the core of the change in the public mood is the Government’s complete cynicism in regard to its good governance mandate. Nothing encapsulates this better than the recent charade captured on camera to boot, where the IGP is seen obsequiously speaking on the phone to, as now revealed, the Minister of Law and Order. Liberally peppering his conversation with servile salutes, the IGP promised to ensure that a particular high official (nilame) will not be arrested. As it so transpired, that worthy gentleman to whom such protection is given is apparently a close associate of the former regime against whom serious allegations of fraud have been leveled.

As in the case of the Central Bank bond fiasco, the incident itself was shameful enough but what follows is equally extraordinary. With mounting public outrage over this incident, the Speaker who is the Head of the Constitutional Council (CC) which made the recommendation to President Maithripala Sirisena to appoint the current IGP announced the intention to inquire into the matter, only to be reportedly brought up short by the Government itself.

If these reports are true, what right does the Government have to bring its weight to bear on the CC which has been loudly touted to be an independent institution as the architects of the 19th Amendment proudly claim?

Abstaining from shortsighted reactions

In Parliament meanwhile, an illustration of yawning gaps emerging in the Unity Government became clear during the votes on the budget when the President who was in the House at the time, unusually responded to a Rajapaksa-led Joint Opposition query by condemning the behaviour of the IGP and stating that he would call for an explanation.

Activists have called for the resignation of the IGP. But this is a shortsighted reaction which ignores larger issues at play. In other words, the problem is not so much the persona of the current IGP but the political culture. Absent change, a new IGP would face much the same dilemma as the unfortunate incumbent. This may be an issue which some may like to ignore for their personal conveniences but it remains true nonetheless.

For this was the precise issue in the Central Bank bond scam. It remains the issue in regard to the ongoing IGP controversy. When Constitutions are being drafted and ambitious transformations are promised of systems of governance, such incidents and the subsequent cover-ups indicate that this process is just an extravagant mockery. It is no comfort to maintain that the chain of political subversion is not as implacable as during the Rajapaksa period. This is a distinction palpably without a difference where the Rule of Law is concerned.

The dexterous undermining of governance

Most unfortunately, Sri Lanka has been unable to recapture the shining optimism which informed the 17th Amendment’s protection of public officers and judicial officers. In fact, the Removal of Officers (Procedure) Act No 5 of 2002 at the time, enacted as a supplementary law to the 17th Amendment, prescribed a separate safeguard for the removal of the IGP, placing it on par with appellate court judges. But what worth are such protections when the practical reality so evidently refutes the law?

And unlike the savage barbarity of the Rajapaksa misrule, here the undermining is done dexterously. This is the ultimate cynicism, practised through the shrill refrain that the 19th Amendment was manna from heaven to the teeming multitudes.

As we see now to our manifold dismay, this is far from the case.
IGP’s Sir could be anybody: Kiriella


2016-12-03

Anura K asks Law and Order Minister to reveal who the ‘Sir’ is The controversial cellular phone call to the Police Chief could have been from anybody, House Leader and Minister Lakshman Kiriella told Parliament yesterday. 

He said this when Chief Opposition Whip and JVP MP Anura Kumara Dissanayake asked whom the Police Chief was addressing as 'Sir' while answering a cellular phone call he received during an event on the previous day. 

“I raised this matter on Thursday but I did not receive an answer. Law and Order Minister should reveal to Parliament whom the Police Chief was addressing as 'Sir'," he said. 

"One 'Sir' instructed him not to arrest a Dishan Wickramaratne Gunasekara," the MP said. "The parliament has a right to know about it. Dishan Gunasekara was the former Basnayake Nila

me, a close relative of VVIP family connected to the previous regime. He was also the former acting director and chairman of the Ceylon Mineral Sands Corporation. There are several cases filed against him by the FCID. We want to know whether it is the minister who instructed the IGP not to arrest Mr. Gunasekera. What I believe is that for the IGP the 'Sir' can either be the minister related to the Police or the Prime Minister. So the relevant minister should reveal to the Parliament as to who instructed the IGP not to arrest Dishan."

 Mr. Kiriella said the MP is only interpreting an incident and the government is not prepared to answer questions which are based on interpretations. 

“The person whom IGP addressed as 'Sir' could be anyone as school teachers are also called Sir. I still call my school teacher sir,” the minister said.  (Yohan Perera)


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If you invest in education, then incomes will develop

– Pic by Shehan Gunasekara-
Friday, 2 December 2016

logountitled-3In the last 10 years global HR thought leaders have created a very powerful human capital view, that if you invest in your own education you’ll get returns in a better job and better income, and also that educated people stand a better chance of landing a job than those who don’t go to university.

Next, at a political level we had a very powerful human rights argument that education is a fundamental right, and therefore we need to do something in developing countries about getting children into schooling. Then there was the negative view that higher education was for the wealthy, the elite, and that it was very expensive. So many organisations questioned why you would put money into higher education when primary education was very much more important, and for the same amount of money could reach many more people.

Then a question that is often asked is, what is the real connection between education, innovation and economic development? If you take a simple human capital view of economic development, it’s fairly straightforward: if you invest in people’s education, then incomes will develop. But that presupposes that people are going to get jobs and that there’s something that’s actually driving the development.

The more important question is, how do jobs actually get created? How do countries take on new technologies and become effective producers? In this kind of argument it’s not just thinking about supplying the education, it’s saying that knowing where the possibilities for an economy to specialise and develop are going to be important in thinking about how economic development takes place.

It is not a simple universal model, where invest more in education, positive things will come out – but if you take a particular country, you can look at what capacity it already has in terms of education and training systems, its industrial system, the existing network between firms and the capacity of the state to support them, but also what positions it could possibly take up within the global system. Therefore policymakers need to look at a range of different factors rather than just invest more and more into education hoping the market will take care of the mismatch between the quality of high-skilled labour demanded and supplied and also provide the required new jobs for those coming out of the system.

For optimum impact on development

There is no doubt higher education is a key element of developing new innovations and thereby help GDP growth to accelerate. But another important role of higher education is around developing professionals. Professionals play a key role in meeting health, education, agricultural and water goals: engineers, doctors, nurses, teachers – the whole range of professionals who are vital for development. Therefore producing the right professionals for our future success, is key. Also there is a need for greater competition between education providers in a marketplace to bring about higher and higher quality of content for a lower and lower overall cost.

Investing in education

In the final analysis, investing in education and leaving it to the markets will only do so much. We need a new way of looking at the relationship between higher education, economic development and employment. The widely-adopted human capital view is that higher education increases skill and knowledge and results in higher income. In practice, however, geography, sectors, available skills and education systems and networks of companies, value chains, employment patterns and policy frameworks associated with each sector are equally important factors that are often ignored.

We have spent decade upon decade surrounded by a system that is, for all practical purposes, a “one-size-fits-all” system. All this must change with the upcoming policy reforms. Because quality improvements at that level affects employment creation and also for those young high-skilled workers to get “better” jobs. 

(The writer is a HR thought leader.)

Corridors of Power


article_imageby Sanjana Hattotuwa- 

I do not recall the exact moment, but I do remember a time when I was so frustrated with the Rajapaksa regime’s blatant disregard for the constitution that I wondered how best I could communicate a critique of power to even those who would vote for, and loved him. This was after the 18th Amendment, late 2010. I was interested in a way to engage with what I hated to see come about, in full knowledge, at the time, that those opposed to what Mahinda Rajapaksa did were in a minority. I had one relatively successful previous attempt which suggested when instead of presenting acontrasting opinion, which can be variously, violently and immediately dismissed, a way to debate the substance of a contentious issue is created, a rather different timbre of engagement ensues.

When Mahinda Rajapaksa was elected into office for the second time and for his 65th birthday, there was for some unfathomable reason a Guinness World Record breaking attempt to make the largest kiribath. Photos of the attempt are still easily discoverable online. Instead of merely calling out the former President on this colossal waste at what was the height of his popularity, WFP and UN figures for health and nutrition were used with statistics around thousands of IDPs languishing in camps at the time. Extrapolating from the ingredients the number of calories used, an attempt was made to demonstrate how the record-breaking kiribath could in fact have fed hundreds of families without basic food or nutrition, and for how long. The critique was data-driven from sources that could be independently verified. Instead of pitting disgust and outrage against adulation and adoration, the article resulted in comments that had those who said they voted for the former President say they were appalled at the meaningless waste around this attempt.

Could a similar effort be done around the concentration of power in the Executive after the 18th Amendment? I came up with an idea to flesh-out and clearly communicate the powers defined in a constitution - between citizens and the State, and also between the arms of government – using architecture. From palaces to churches, from mausoleums to entire cities, power – and more precisely, the nature of political authority – has gone on to define the architecture of a period, dynasty, regime, reign or Reich. I wanted to turn this on its head, using architecture to help explore and explain powers in a constitution that were, to the majority of citizens, abstract, complex words that didn’t really have any meaningful impact on their more existential concerns.

I approached two individuals, Asanga Welikala and Channa Daswatta, leading minds on constitutional theory and architecture respectively, with my idea. After Welikala’s initial research into over 40 years of Sri Lanka’s constitutional evolution, Daswatta and I, for close upon a year, met regularly in his office and later on, with his staff as well, to flesh out through architectural drawings, models and schematics the powers, for example between the centre and periphery, or between the legislature and the executive, enshrined in the constitutions of 1972, 1978 and key amendments thereafter. At the time we started on the project, no one could foresee what transpired on January 8, 2015. After the election of Sirisena, the project also embraced discussions around and the subsequent passage of the 19th Amendment. Those leading the drafting of the new constitution, as well as those close to and advising the President spoke during the course of the week the exhibition was held in Colombo, late 2015.

Many, including those who openly identified themselves as supporters of the former regime came up and said that the marriage of constitutional theory and architecture allowed them to see anew the challenges around the centralisation of power, and other aspects of our present constitution, like Article 9, the 13th Amendment and the independence of the judiciary, in a new, critical light. They noted that the exhibition’s appeal was anchored to its interrogation of power, instead of just being a trenchant critique of a particular individual who held the office of Executive President. A severely vision impaired person came up and said, just by carefully touching four models on display, that at the end of it, he could grasp what I had tried to communicate around the unsustainable nature of power as it was configured after the 18th Amendment.

Accompanied by his mother, a 12-year-old, with whom I talked at length based on what he saw and was able to peer into, left with a greater appreciation of the maddening complexity of government. His mother told me later on that the exhibition gave him a perspective around the constitution they would have as parents never been able to give, and school would never have even imagined imparting.

I took ‘Corridors of Power’ to Jaffna, Kandy, Batticaloa and finally to Galle this year. There is a deep, widespread interest in constitutional rule, and by extension, what goes into and what is left out of the new constitution. Apathy and disinterest is easy to come by, but is largely on account of a mainstream media and indeed, a government that for whatever reason, hasn’t the imagination, interest or resources to engage citizens around constitution making outside of episodic stories and consultations. In Batticaloa, we were inundated with questions around power, privilege, periphery-centre relations, religion, identity and devolution. Students from the Eastern University were interested in creating a short skit based on the exhibition, in order to carry on and promote discussions around constitutional rule. In Jaffna, at the historic Public Library were the exhibition was held, groups had animated discussions around what they wanted the new constitution to reflect and represent, going well-beyond the 19th Amendment and indeed, the 13th Amendment as well. In Kandy, at the General Post Office auditorium, I engaged with LSSP members and leftists, who critiqued the constitutional evolution since 1972 from a working-class perspective. In Galle, groups that came said the exhibition helped them think through not just citizenship and the nature of the State, but also the configuration of authority and the delegation of power within their own, large organisations.

Beyond the exhibition, there is a clear thirst across Sri Lanka for on-going engagement on the kind of government, governance and constitution people would like to see. I don’t believe this engagement will stymie complex negotiations around the constitution. I do believe, strongly, that the lack of sustained public engagement will result in an exponentially harder sell of any new constitution. Ultimately, if a small exhibition in just five cities was able to animate so many who didn’t fully realise the importance of constitutionalism, imagine what government and indeed, mainstream media can and arguably should do on a broader, deeper scale.

This is not happening. So, ask yourselves this - who really benefits from ignorance and apathy?

Arjun Aloysius: The James Bond of bond business


Just three days after last year’s presidential election, someone predicted the Perpetual Treasuries Ltd (PTL) bond issue on an online website for stock market investors.
The man wrote on Sri Lanka Equity Forum:“Perpetual Treasuries owned by Free Lanka Capital Holdings owners will mostly get a large amount of business volumes of Treasury Bills and Treasury Bonds business in new ‘Yahapalana Government’ of Maithripala-Ranil Regime since new Governor of Central Bank is tipped to be Free Lanka Capital’s driving force Arjun Aloysius’s father-in-law Arjuna Mahendran who is also the top Economic Advisor of Ranil Wickramasinghe [sic] since old times.”  

TISL Whistleblowers Ignored, Bullied, Victimised, And Corruption Inquiry Report Suppressed, S


Colombo Telegraph
December 3, 2016
The Sri Lankan Chapter of the global anti-corruption body, Transparency International (TI) is accused of suppressing the inquiry report of its own corruption and malpractices.
In August, Colombo Telegraph, reported serious allegations of corruption and malpractices at TISL. We reported that one of the whistleblower, Ananda Jayasekara, who had worked for TISL for ten years continuously although under several contracts renewed periodically, was victimised after whistleblowing.
Lakshan Dias
Lakshan Dias
In a letter addressed to TISL Chairman, Lakshan Dias, three staff members, Shan Wijetunge (Senior Manager, Advocacy & Public Relations), Ananda Jayasekara (Programme Manager) and Jagath Liyana Arachchi (Manager, Advocacy & Legal Advice Centre), who also identified themselves as whistleblowers brought to light a series of issues facing the local chapter, while also requesting Dias to carry out an independent and impartial inquiry without any of the Board Members of TISL being involved in such an inquiry.
According to the three whistleblowers, there has been serious corruption and malpractices carried out at TISL including; violation of procedures in recruitment, awarding of contracts without calling for quotations, removal of three senior employees by citing false information even when the funds were available, violation of organisation manual, ill treatment meted out to staff members as well as nepotism & insider dealings.
The TISL had tasked its Chairperson, Lakshan Dias, and former Chairperson and present member of TISL board J.C. Weliamuna to investigate the allegations against its Executive Director Asoka Obeyesekere. Whistleblowers had then pointed out that the independence of the investigation is compromised by the fact that Dias himself is a witness to the said allegations.
A few days after the Colombo Telegraph Exposé, on 5th September, speaking to several media organisations, TISL Chairman, Lakshan Dias had denied any wrongdoing and assured that the inquiry report would be made available to the complainants within three days.
Speaking to Colombo Telegraph one whistleblower has said yesterday that they had not received the inquiry report. “We are being ignored, bullied and victimised”, he said.
“This is a clear violation of TISL’s own Whistleblower Protection Policy, Ananda’s contract wasn’t renewed, Shan and Jagath left the organisation” a staff member of the Transparency International Sri Lanka told Colombo Telegraph on the condition of anonymity. “It’s a ‘climate of fear'” another staff member said. “A significant proportion of our staff are afraid to blow the whistle now,” she said.
The TISL whistleblower protection policy says: “TISL encourages staff members to expose any such behavior and is committed to providing whistle blower protection for such staff members. TISL will not tolerate harassment, retaliation or any type of discrimination against a whistleblower.”

“Gota’s show” in Los Angeles and “Chichies” show in Japan wasting massive public funds exposed by Mangala (video)


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -02.Nov.2016, 10.00PM) A whopping Rs. 27,700,000.00 (Rs. 27.7 million) of public funds was spent on the house taken on rent on behalf of Gotabaya’s  son residing in Los Angeles, America during the nefarious decade of lawless Rajapakses . In addition , a further sum of US. Dollars10,000.00 of public funds had to be expended owing to the losses caused by Gota’s son pertaining to the house. These colossal losses to the country were revealed in parliament on the 30  th (November) by foreign minister Mangala Samaraweera during the budget select committee sessions . Speaking further the minister disclosed that the youngest son of ex president Mahinda Rajapakse on his ‘Chichie’ tour of Japan spent Rs. 2,086,000.00  of public funds.
The minister in addition made more  shocking revelations which should have shaken the country to its foundation : 
During just two years , Mahinda Rajapakse had spent a huge sum of Rs. 2.3 billion (Rs. 2300 million!) on his foreign junkets , and a further about Rs. 340 million to a lobby Institution of the US to prepare  his speeches . 
JVP M.P. Handunetti made a request to appoint a parliamentary select committee empowered to investigate this reckless and ruthless abuse of colossal public funds . The Prime Minister too did not object to this. Accordingly a special select committee was appointed to probe into this colossal corruption and waste of public funds  that took place during the nefarious decade. 
The exposures made by Mangala Samaraweera relating to the ‘Gota’s show’ in Los Angeles ,and the ‘Chichies’ show’ in Japan are hereunder 
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by     (2016-12-02 17:06:37)
Police fire tear gas, water cannon at JO protest

Police fire tear gas, water cannon at JO protest

logoDecember 3, 2016

Police used water cannons and tear gas to disperse a group of protesters blocking the road near the Parliament Roundabout, Ada Derana reporter said.

 The protest was organised by the Joint Opposition demanding that local government polls be held immediately. 

 Parliament Road has been temporarily closed from Polduwa Junction and Jayanthipura Junction due to the protest.  A group of former SLFP local council members, who are supporting the Joint Opposition, are reportedly participating in the protest. 

Viceroy, Rajadhani Express & Expo

Viceroy, Rajadhani Express & Expo

 Dec 03, 2016

With the intention of developing railway tourism, institutions outside the Railway Department have got involved to operate trains with top facilities. Their main objective is to develop railway tourism. Special among these trains are ‘Viceroy’, ‘Rajadhani Express’ and ‘Expo’. These trains operate with the full mediation of the Department and the companies should pay for the services.

On that basis, media reported recently that the company that owns ‘Viceroy’ has avoided the payments due to the Department. Lanka News Web looked into the matter, and given below are the facts revealed therein.
‘Viceroy’ is owned by JF Tours. What is special in this company is that it has a connection to the present chairman of People’s Bank Hemasiri Fernando. Around 30 years ago, in 1984, Fernando mediated to work on this train. At present, his son has been given the task of running the company. In 1984, it cost Rs. two million to repair a steam engine that had been at the Dematagoda railway yard and add three compartments to make the train. Fernando paid all the expenses. Facts contrary to charges that payments due to the Department have not been paid have been revealed.
According to Department sources, JF Tours has not misled the Department or defaulted payments due to it. Except for two or three bills with certain issues, all other payments have been settled. The delay in the payment of these bills is due to a mistake by Department officials – that the bills have been prepared without considering the changes in the Colombo Consumers Price Index. By now, the company has got together with the Department and settled the matter. The company has promised to pay the money due.
Another thing came to light with regard to ‘Viceroy’, ‘Rajadhani Express’ and ‘Expo’. Department sources say there are no issues with regard to the first, but payments due to the two other trains have not been made. The company that runs ‘Rajadhani Express’ should pay Rs. 91,485,310 and the company that owns ‘Expo’ should pay Rs. 112,680,074 to the Department. All are dues since 2011. A related complaint has been lodged with the FCID.
Meanwhile, the media reported that Fernando had acquired Rs. 300 million from the People’s Bank and People’s Leasing through improper means to build a railway museum. According to reports, director boards of the two institutions have sanctioned the construction of the museum. The total estimated cost of the project is Rs. 500 m, and the bank has provided Rs. 300 m from its corporate social responsibility programmes. The balance is to be obtained from outside companies involved in CSR programmes.
The proposed museum is to be made the best of its kind in Asia. The task will be carried out under the supervision of a committee comprising 30 members from the Department. The present railway museum near the railway headquarters at Maradana will be absorbed into the new museum.
(Ashika Brahmana)