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

Sunday, January 8, 2017

South Korean monk critical after fiery protest against sex slave deal with Japan


People watch a statue symbolizing women forced into wartime Japanese military brothels in front of the Japanese Embassy in Seoul, South Korea, Sunday, Jan. 8, 2017. Pic: AP
8th January 2017
A SOUTH KOREAN hospital says a Buddhist monk is in critical condition after setting himself on fire to protest the country’s settlement with Japan on compensation for wartime sex slaves.
A hospital official says the 64-year-old monk suffered third-degree burns across his body and serious damage to his organs. He’s unconscious and unable to breathe on his own.
Police say the man set himself ablaze late Saturday during a rally in Seoul calling for the ouster of impeached President Park Geun-hye.
In his notebook, the man called Park a “traitor” over her government’s 2015 agreement with Japan that sought to settle a long-standing row over South Korean women who were forced into sexual slavery by Japan’s World War II military.
Many South Koreans say Japan’s compensation is not enough.
On Friday, Japan is recalled its ambassador to South Korea over a statue commemorating the Korean “comfort women” who were forced to work in Japanese wartime military brothels during World War Two.
The term “comfort women” is a euphemism used for the girls and women who were subjected to the practice. South Korean activists estimate that there may have been as many as 200,000 Korean victims.
Chief cabinet secretary Yoshihide Suga said the statue in the southern city of Busan was “extremely regrettable” and stated that Japan has asked for its removal.
He said Japan would also postpone bilateral “high-level” economic dialogue, as well as suspend talks on a new currency swap arrangement with South Korea.
The two nations had agreed last August to start talks on a new currency swap to bolster defenses against global uncertainties.
“Without building relations of trust, it won’t stabilise,” Finance Minister Taro Aso told reporters, referring to the currency swap arrangement.
Additional reporting by the Associated Press and Reuters

Cold weather kills 12 in Poland


Shotlist


Warsaw, Poland - Jan 7, 2017
1. Various of people getting off public transport, walking, standing on streets
2. Vehicles waiting in line
3. Moving vehicles
4. Car being towed away
5. Various of traffic on street
6. SOUNDNBITE (Polish) Dawid Marciniak, official, Poland's General Police Headquarters:
"A total of 21 traffic accidents have occurred during the past 24 hours, leaving four dead and 27 injured."
7. Various of icy river
8. SOUNDNBITE (Polish) Dawid Marciniak, official, Poland's General Police Headquarters (partially overlaid with shot 9):
"We are now patrolling in the areas where the homeless frequents and take rest. We would communicate with them and provide emergency rescue if necessary. We would also send the homeless to reception center."
++SHOT OVERLAYING WITH SOUNDBITE++
9. Floating ice on river
++SHOT OVERLAYING WITH SOUNDBITE++
10. Various of floating ice on river

Storyline


Cold weather has caused 12 deaths in the eastern European country of Poland since the beginning of 2017.

Police said multiple deaths were caused in traffic accidents as heavy snowfall and below-freezing temperatures sweep the country and freeze roads.

"A total of 21 traffic accidents have occurred during the past 24 hours, leaving four dead and 27 injured," said Dawid Marciniak, an official of Poland's General Police Headquarters.

Marciniak said, the homeless are extremely vulnerable to the cold snap, with some found dead while lying on the ground. He said the authorities are providing extra homeless services to avoid people's exposure to the extreme cold weather.

"We are now patrolling in the areas where the homeless frequents and take rest. We would communicate with them and provide emergency rescue if necessary. We would also send the homeless to reception center," said Marciniak.

A sharp cold front swept a large part of Poland this week, bringing the temperature down to minus 21 degrees Celsius in the capital city on Saturday.
he death toll in Chicago is equal to that of a war zone.

HomeChicago is America's third largest city, but its murder rate is worse than the two biggest cities, New York and Los Angeles, combined. Chicago saw a 50 percent increase in murders in just one year, from 486 in 2015 to 762 in 2016.
Tio Hardiman, co-founder of Violence Interrupters, a Chicago-based advocacy group, called 2016 "the year of the renegade."
"You have so many guys out here that are trying to prove a point, that killing people in Chicago is just totally out of control," Hardiman told Al Jazeera.
Chicago City Council candidate and grassroots activist Zerlina Smith agreed.
"Someone could be on the side of your house dead at anytime; it's scary," she said. "And when you get out of your car or you walk from the bus stop [you ask yourself if you] will you be the next victim."
The death toll in Chicago is equal to that of a war zone and recent studies have found residents showing signs of PTSD as a result of the trauma. Northwestern University recruited 72 women from a federally qualified Chicago health center to better understand the phenomenon. What they found was startling.
"More than half of the women reported experiencing a traumatic event that was often violent or sexual in nature," researchers reported, including one woman who "reported watching her son shot more than 10 times" before he died.
Inger E. Burnett-Zeigler, a clinical psychologist who worked on the study, observed gruesome accounts of traumatic experiences "coming up time and time again."
Overcome by emotion, several women found completing their stories to be daunting. 
"Those intense emotions sparked by thinking about the traumatic event are a telltale sign of PTSD," "Chicago Tonight" Kristen Thometz producer said
Chicago did not go one week in the past year without a fatal shooting; the longest time without a murder was just four days.
Watch:
Alexandra Rosenmann is an AlterNet associate editor. Follow her @alexpreditor.

Saturday, January 7, 2017

Reckoning with Reconciliation

Dr. Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu
Friday, January 6, 2017
The Consultations Task Force (CTF) on Reconciliation Mechanisms’ final report which was released this week drew controversy for suggesting the need for international persons in a special court along with a special counsel to hear cases of war crimes. Executive Director of the Centre for Policy Alternatives and member of the CTF, Dr. Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu in an interview with Daily News explained that international persons were only recommended to assure credibility in a judicial mechanism and that they could be phased out once local capacity is built.
Excerpts follow:
Q: Your report had expressed frustration among the people and yet another task force was interviewing them. At the same time, Minister Rajitha Senaratne said the government would not appoint foreign judges and while the committees can submit reports, the government makes the decision at the end of the day. Then do you think that the people were right in being weary?
A. At the very beginning people did come and express their frustration but then they were pleased, that this was the first time that a government was asking them for an opinion about a particular policy before a policy decision was made. At least that’s what they thought and so did we.
Secondly, the Task Force did set out to find out what people thought. If there were pre-determined decisions taken, with respect to the special courts or anything else, the people were told that they had to make up their minds within that framework and provide whatever recommendations they had.
What we wanted, before the consultations took place was for the government to do an outreach programme and explain to the people as to why transitional justice was necessary, why they were proposing these four mechanisms and what the do’s and don’ts were with regard to its structures.
The report was compiled on the basis of what people said to us. It is up to the government to take from it or not, and hopefully explain to the people why it is taking recommendation A as opposed to B.
Finally, in October last year there was a resolution co-sponsored by Sri Lanka at the UN Human Rights Council that allowed for international participation in these mechanisms.
Q: Do you think that if these outreach programmes had been done by the government, the people would have been more open?
A. One thing we can presume is that they would have been better informed as to what the government intended and what the government was thinking with regard to all this.
Q: But we have repeatedly heard the President and Prime Minister insist that reconciliation is a priority of the government and that we need to have it?
A. One thing everyone could agree on is that reconciliation must happen. What is important, is ‘what one means by it’ and ‘what is one going to do?’ Some may think that setting up a commission was what reconciliation is all about while others may think of something else.
The difference in opinion lies in what you mean by reconciliation and what institutions and processes you want to establish to achieve it.
Everyone in Sri Lanka has a notion of reconciliation but they were being asked to comment on mechanisms, the government of Sri Lanka was proposing.
Q: One of the recommendations was the need to have international judges and a special counsel for a special court system. While many may have wished for this, this seems to be the one which would attract most opposition?
A. It needs to be explained properly. The whole purpose of any court is to administer justice. Thus there needs to be faith, confidence and trust in that institution to be able to do so. Unfortunately the situation in this country is such that there are a substantial number of people and a fair number of them are victims, who do not trust the existing system. And most of them happened to be in the North and East, who turn around and say that if it’s completely domestic, it will not be credible. Then you have cases like the murder of Raviraj where people say ‘I told you so’. So that’s a strong body of opinion that needs to be taken into account. There’s another body of opinion which says, this is a sovereign country and that bringing in internationals is not right.
The issue here is, would bringing in internationals really be an encroachment of our sovereignty?
We are recommending for example some internationals on these benches; at least one in order to build credibility and to deal with the suspicion that things would be biased if it is entirely domestic. And then the ‘international’ can come out and say if things are not being followed according to due process.
Also if there is evidence for prosecution of such crimes, these have never been prosecuted in Sri Lanka before so you need that international expertise. We are also saying that this does not have to be a permanent feature. Once the technical and capacity questions have been addressed and local expertise is built up, then internationals can be phased out. It has happened in other countries.
I don’t see what the fuss is about, people are simply trying to make a lot of political capital out of this. End of the day, we have to ask ourselves what’s this special court all about and what is this accountability mechanism all about and look at the most efficient way we can get the justice we wanted.
We are not saying that all members of the security forces have to be put in the dock because they are guilty of war crimes. That’s nonsense. There will be certain instances of it and you cannot bring these things into court unless you have hard evidence. So this is not some sort of witch hunt.
If people do have hard evidence of such cases, even the security forces would have a hard look and say we too need to salvage our honour and have a proper mechanism to investigate it.
Q: The Security forces too have made submissions and insisted that no such crimes had ever taken place?
A. Their argument was that we surely support reconciliation but as far as we are concerned, we never practiced any war crimes, if there was, it should be investigated and brought to justice. They were very reasonable. But yes, they do start from the position that no crimes against humanity happened.
Q: There are allegations that the report is ‘pro-UN’ or ‘pro-West’?
A. They would say that anyway. There are people in this country who were in power and the like who would shout ‘western conspiracy’ ‘imperialism’ or ‘traitor’- it is tiresome. We need to move forward and we are unable to do that with such shrieks.
We had over 7,000 submissions and those who have doubts can read their accounts and ask the people.
Q: The Hybrid Court model was recommended earlier too and not responded to positively by the government?
A. Taken well by the government or not when the people make such a submission made to us, do we turn around and tell the people ‘look the government may not like it?’ No, we are duty bound to convey what they think.
Q: Do you think that the Consultation Task force is yet another box to be ticked off?
A. It just as well could be. It is up to civil society to tell the government and ask whether they are serious about transitional justice or not.
Q: The report also shows a divide in terms of what the people in the North and South want. The North seems to be seeking for the need to have the truth established and investigated while the South is more insistent on moving on and burying the past. How would a government reconcile the two demands?
A. You have to ask the government. There are different opinions across the country in respect to certain aspects of reconciliation. It is not correct that the North said this and that the South said this. There are commonalities and differences between the two. The government then has to go out again and find out what is common among them, what their core understandings and values are before they set up any of these mechanisms. What we can report is a variety of views across the country.
But in the North and East you have more people who would turn around and talk about international participation. In the South there will be more people who say there should not be any international participation.
But at the same time, in the South too you had people saying yes there should be international participation. It’s not clear cut.
Q: What did you find about reconciliation?
A. People across the country are very convinced of the importance of reconciliation moving forward. They have suggestions to make with regard to the four conventional pillars from accountability, reparations, guarantees of non-recurrence and truth.
They want the truth established and acknowledged, those who gave orders to be held accountable, they want to be part of any reconciliation mechanism set up, they want them located in places they have access to and for it to operate in languages they understand.
They see these factors important and want action. They are tired of commission after commission.
Q: Many of what is recommended is not new. Hasn't it all been said before?
A. Yes, most of what has been said, has been repeated, there’s nothing earth shattering. But what is interesting is that the people’s views and opinions are different to what the politicians make it out to be.
There is remarkable coincidence between what people in the North and South say.
There is no sharp divide between the two; to the great annoyance of nationalists from both sides.

The 1982 Referendum & July 1983


Colombo Telegraph
By Rajan Hoole –January 7, 2017
Dr. Rajan Hoole
Dr. Rajan Hoole
We pause here to describe the atmosphere of repression and insanity that prevailed during the run-up to the infamous Referendum which in many direct ways set the stage for July 1983 and for the JVP’s insurgency of 1987-90.
The 4th Amendment over extending the life of parliament was submitted to the Supreme Court by the Attorney General Shiva Pasupathy in early November 1982. The AG maintained that the Court had no jurisdiction over the Amendment if it had the backing of at least two-thirds in the House and was approved at a referendum.
Chief Justice Neville Samarakoon then asked why it was referred to the SC if the SC had no jurisdiction over it.
The Attorney General replied that such a ref- erence was mandatory under Article 122 of the constitution.
CJ asked: “What do you want me to do?”
AG : “…to say that you have no jurisdiction.”
When one comes across such an exchange in the highest court of the land over a major amendment to the Constitution, it was a sign that a black comedy was being played out in the affairs of the nation.
In challenging the 4th Amendment S. Kanagaratnam appeared for C.V. Vivekanandan and Felix Dias Bandaranaike (FDB) appeared for himself. A key point in FDB’s case was proviso (a) to Article 75 which said: “Parliament shall not make any law suspending the operation of the Constitution or any part thereof.” (Sun 4.11.82)
To an ordinary layman this was a clear pro- hibition against not holding elections and ex- tending the life of parliament, as ought to be the case in any decent constitution. However, the Supreme Court of the new era approved the Amendment by a majority of 4 against 3.
FDB then came back with a second challenge to the Amendment citing Article 123(3) of the Constitution: “If the Supreme Court entertains a doubt regarding an urgent bill, then it shall be deemed to have been determined that the bill is in- consistent with the Constitution.”
FDB argued that the narrow majority by which the Supreme Court gave its approval en- tailed a doubt. This turned out to be of no avail.
In presenting the 4th Amendment to Parliament on 4th November, Prime Minister Premadasa declared that “the Bill seeks to ensure a prosperous and righteous society!”
It would have been a comedy if not for the grave consequences for the nation.jr-jayewardene-and-rohana-wijeweera
On 3rd November 1982, the day before the 4th Amendment was presented to Parliament, the Communist Party paper Aththa, the only effective opposition daily, was sealed at 8:30 PM. The next issue had already been printed, and its editorial was titled, ‘The dictatorship of J.R. Jayewardene is already here’.
The sealing of the Aththa was raised in parliament by Sarath Muttetuwegama the next day. He pointed out that under the sealing order made by the Competent Authority Douglas Liyanage acting for the Ministry of State, no time limit had been given.
Anandatissa de Alwis, Minster of State, replied that he would not enter into an argument on this matter, but would merely point out that the Competent Authority has decided that this paper [Attha] violates security and causes public disorder. This reply made a mockery of accountability before Parliament, where ministers are answerable. It was as though Parliament had abdicated to shadowy officials. As to Competent Authority Liyanage’s democratic credentials, he was a leading figure in the coup attempt in 1962!
Prime Minister Premadasa added his own argument: The Aththa was sealed under Emergency Regulations, and since Muttetuwegama had voted for the emergency, he has consented to the sealing of the paper!
The sealing of the Aththa, the passing of the 4th Amendment, and the unprecedented repression that ensued and lasted until the end of the Referendum, were orchestrated by the UNP in the most unscrupulous manner. The pattern had a plan and organisation reminiscent of the man- ner in which the July 1983 violence was staged.

A report on reconciliation


article_image
by Sanjana Hattoruwa- 

Last week, the Consultations Task Force (CTF) handed over its final report to former President Chandrika Bandaranaike-Kumaratunga. It was supposed to be handed over to the President. However, he wasn’t present at the ceremony, on a date and time his office had negotiated after many delays spreading over months. As widely noted, the CTF comprised of eleven members drawn from civil society and was appointed by the Prime Minister in late January 2016, to seek the views and comments of the public on the proposed mechanisms for transitional justice and reconciliation, as per the October 2015 UN Human Rights Council resolution on Sri Lanka, co-sponsored by the Government of Sri Lanka. Accordingly, you would expect the PM, whose brainchild the CTF was, to be present at the handover ceremony. He wasn’t either.

The optics of the PM’s and President’s combined absence – no accident - will be the defining frame through which government writ large engages with the substance of the report. Already, the Justice Minister has dismissed the CTF’s findings. The Cabinet Spokesperson went on record saying that a key mechanism flagged in the report was not one the Government of Sri Lanka or the UN had agreed to. The comprehensive rebuttal over Twitter from the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights was unequivocal in its support for the report, and key recommendations therein. To date, the President and the PM have not issued any press release or statement welcoming the report. The Official Secretariat for the Coordination of Reconciliation Mechanisms (SCRM), now the custodian of the report, has no demonstrable capacity to champion any of the recommendations, and furthermore, in an incredible display of incompetence, managed to make a complete hash of the report’s release to the public on the web.

It remains to be seen whether civil society, quite vocally critical of the Rajapaksa regime’s unwillingness and inability to deliver key recommendations in the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) report, will hold this government accountable for, what will invariably be given the signs, the non-implementation of many CTF key recommendations. An acronym soup of official entities risks confusing the general public as well. The CTF, as noted in the report itself, even though set up by government, was debilitated in its ability around public outreach during consultations. Funding was crippled – much slower than expected, far lower than required. The official entities tasked with reconciliation have no coherent coordination framework. Consultation fatigue has set in amongst the general public, with many, even as they engaged with the CTF, clearly noting that they were hugely sceptical of any meaningful redress and reform. Above all, the timbre of the public mood the CTF report clearly flags is far removed from a healthy democracy. Legitimate grievances, from those in the South and families of the military, to those in the North and families of the disappeared, undermine all the rosy scenarios painted by government around a stable, just, peaceful future. This is not some academic argument or the wild imaginings of a few at the helm of CTF. A complete, trilingual archive of submissions, which for the first time in any national consultation held to date in the country will be made public in the months to come, will support and strengthen the report’s thrust.

The CTF is a historic achievement, and by far, one of the most far-ranging consultations around four key mechanisms of transitional justice and reconciliation conducted in any post-war context. Instead of having institutions, frameworks and mechanisms imposed on them, citizens were asked for their opinion around what was important to focus on, why, how and with whom – including the capture of aspirations, concerns and ideas well beyond the four specific mechanisms the CTF was anchored to. You would think that as a consequence, the release of the final report would bring with it a flurry of mainstream media attention, analysis and engagement. This hasn’t happened – the English press has focussed on a single topic - the issue of international involvement in judicial mechanisms. Nowhere is it made clear that the recommendations are reflective of the submissions made by those across the country. Editorials in the Sinhala press have already dismissed the CTF, calling it an NGO canard – unsurprising, given the nationalism that so often cloaks Editorial gaze. At the press conference held by the CTF last week at the Media Ministry, at least one journalist from a leading TV news station sitting in the front row didn’t know what he had come to cover, until he was informed by a colleague what the CTF was. This anecdotal story is more broadly indicative of what we can expect from mainstream media by way of critical engagement with the CTF’s findings.

The CTF’s press conference underscored other structural concerns I had with the final report. What was a process of consultation mandated and initiated by government, is now pitched as a report that is a clarion call for civil society to hold government accountable around implementation. This shift here is telling and perhaps the result of the CTF’s inability, at least for now, to openly criticise the PM for not following through with the promise of consultations. Though the report emphasises the critical role of civil society, it is essentially a complete revamp of the State as it is structured now. This is a task for government. And herein lies the rub. The entire report is written with the assumption that government will champion its recommendations. If it was evident even during consultations – with plenty of evidence on this score – that the government would not in fact take kindly to what was proposed, the report should have been structured around what could be done despite government, and re-focussed recommendations around regional, international, media and civil society strategies to diplomatically and by other means strongly encourage political office to take heed of vital recommendations in line with existing commitments at the UN in Geneva.

A report that pegs the success of reform to a government that isn’t really interested in it stands little chance of success. Further, there is no prioritisation of the recommendations, which when reading the report can be seen as overwhelming – even to government. Arguably, this will come by way of consultations around how the recommendations can be implemented, but we don’t find in the report safeguards against filibuster by focussing on the least important points, and in the noise and attention generated as a consequence, pushing to the periphery far more important recommendations that need to be urgently implemented. An inadvertent consequence of strong, sustained civil society advocacy and activism around the recommendations may also be that it gives life to what leading critics of the report, including from within government, misleadingly say it is – an NGO campaign. If the government itself doesn’t give life and leadership to reform and reconciliation, civil society cannot fill the gap. And since this isn’t about regime change but rather State reform, it is unclear to what degree civil society itself has the competency and capacity to engage with government, over the long-term, to achieve intended outcomes. And finally, no political party, even though invited by the CTF, made any representation or submission whatsoever. Beyond the bi-partisan coalition in power, this suggests the political firmament of Sri Lanka is hostile to or at best dismissive of the CTF’s recommendations and by extension, what so many citizens so desperately want to see, achieve and feel, post-war.

The great pity of merely quoting politicians, reading slanted Editorials and news features, hostile opinion pieces and other material against the CTF and its findings is that they will be entirely unreflective of the rich, textured and multi-faceted foci in the report, anchored to the thousands across the country who, despite visible and repeated intimidation, came out and spoke their mind. Even in the passages and points dealing with the military and their opinion, there is opportunity for engagement and negotiation. Arguably, at close to 1,000 pages spread over two volumes, this will be read completely by just a handful at best. Even the Executive Summary is too long for most. Much will need to be done to communicate back to those who engaged what the report focussed on, and beyond, how a government fearful of pushback from the South, the military and Buddhist clergy can be supported, without being co-opted, in a courageous reform agenda.

The CTF is a historic attempt. Let our disagreement as well as our support be based on what’s in the report, which essentially requires us to read, at the very least, the Executive Summary. One also risks disappointment to hope there is the political will to take the key recommendations forward. This will require compromise on all sides, but is there any task more important than this? The sustenance of a government that embodies everything that is denied to citizens must not be how history records this time. The CTF’s report is cartography we must explore.

Else we will forever be lost.

SRI LANKA PRESIDENT REJECTS FOREIGN JUDGES



Sri Lanka Brief07/01/2017

In the wake of the Consultative Task Force calling for foreign judges to hear war crime charges, a government minister said yesterday that President Maithripala Sirisena categorically ruled out the participation of foreign judges to hear or inquire into war crime allegations.

Addressing a hurriedly called press conference at the President’s House, State Minister of Finance Lakshman Yapa Abeywardene reaffirmed the President’s position. He said only logistical and IT assistance would be obtained to expedite the judicial process, when the judicial mechanism was set up to probe the alleged crimes.

Responding to journalists on the suggestions that had been made by the Consultative Task Force on Reconciliation Mechanism to include foreign judges in the judicial process that is to probe war crimes, Minister Yapa said President Sirisena was very clear on this matter and added he has more than once said there will be no foreign judges in the local judicial mechanism and it will not be a hybrid court as suggested by certain groups.

“President Sirisena and the government have full confidence in our judiciary, legal process and judges. We have extremely eminent and experienced judges and our judges have served in various countries and global organizations that have given much credit to the country.

Minister Yapa said Sri Lanka expects to submit a progress report to the UNHRC in March and explain the measures take by the unity government to promote reconciliation, rule of law, inter communal harmony and strengthen democratic institutions and the concept of good governance.

Sri Lanka’s Constitution or the Criminal Procedure Code do not provide for the establishment of a judicial mechanism with foreign judges to adjudicate alleged war crimes. As such the issue of establishing a so-called Hybrid Court does not arise and the government’s intention was to establish a credible domestic mechanism comprising of our own judges, acceptable to the local and global community.

“The government under no circumstances will target war heroes, field commanders of the three armed forces or the political leadership for war crime charges or haul them before a court or tribunal. But we have to deal with those if there are any, who have violated the International Humanitarian Law on an individual level,” he stressed. (Sandun A Jayasekera)

Justice and Buddha Sasana Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe yesterday said that he was not ready to assess the Consultation Task Force on Reconciliation Mechanisms’ (CTFRM) recommendation to include foreign judges, lawyers, and investigators in the transitional justice mechanism.

“I cannot make a statement on the inclusion of foreigners in the reconciliation process right now. I can say that we have communicated our position on the issue to the UN Commission on Human Rights. We are an independent nation that can make the final decisions,” Rajapakshe said.

The minister did say, however, that it would be very difficult to include judges in the proceedings under Sri Lankan law.

“Under the Constitution, no foreigner can sit as a judge. The recommendations will be difficult to institute because of this,” he added.

Rajapakshe also hit back at the idea that those who had suffered abuse during the war had little trust in the judiciary.

“No one is complaining about the independence of the judiciary. I have full faith that the Sri Lankan judiciary can handle this important task fairly and professionally,” he said.

He also complained that some members of the CTFRM were prejudiced and unfit to be a part of the task force

Foreign judges won’t be accepted; * Minister Abeywardena declares at President’s House
Minister Abeywardene addressing the media(Pic by Saman Abesiriwardena)

by Shamindra Ferdinando

State Finance Minister Lakshman Yapa Abeywardena yesterday rejected a comprehensive set of proposals, including foreign judges and other personnel in accountability mechanisms to address the grievances of the war affected.

An eleven-member Consultation Task Force on Reconciliation Mechanisms (CTFRM) on January 3, handed over a dossier containing far reaching proposals.

CTFRM headed by attorney-at-law Manouri Muttetuwegama dealt with contentious issues of demilitarization, lands, Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) as well as bifurcation of the Attorney General’s Department to pave the way for a Department of Public Prosecutions.

Secretary to the CTFRM Dr. Paikiasothy Saravanamuthu said that they wanted the government to formulate a new Act to replace the PTA in line with international standards.

Addressing the media at the President’s House, State Minister Abeywardena said that the government wouldn’t accept such proposals.

Matara District MP reiterated the UNP-SLFP coalition’s confidence in the local judiciary. “Whatever various interested parties say, we have faith in our judiciary.”

When The Island pointed out that Muttetuwegama’s outfit had been asked to come up with a formula by the government and the recommendations were in accordance with Geneva Resolution co-sponsored and unanimously adopted in Oct 2015, State Minister Abeywardena insisted that Sri Lanka no longer faced threat of sanctions and hybrid courts in the wake of Maithripala Sirisena’s victory at the January 2015 presidential polls.

State Minister Abeywardena refrained from commenting on The Island observation that the Geneva Resolution referred to foreign judges including Commonwealth members.

State Minister Abeywardena said that the country was moving ahead under President Maithripala Sirisena’s leadership. The international community had changed its attitude towards Sri Lanka in the wake of the introduction of the 19 Amendment, he claimed.

www.island.lk

Looting of national mineral wealth, under the nose of the HE


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -06.Jan.2017, 11.30PM)  Now he is about to start the 3rd and most probably the crucial term that will decide the fate of him as well as the nation. Despite of many endeavours that he has engaged in the last two years, with utter successes and probable failures, the best “litmus test” is the performances of the ministry that is allotted for him.   Being an undisputed vocal champion of environmental protection sans what happens in Wilpathu and Wayamba Environment Act, we shall have a close look to measure his wisdom on the environment and the natural resources just running a small test on the “Function of the Geological Survey and Mines Bureau” the institute that entrusted to secure the national mineral wealth which is under his watch. 
Under the present administration the looting that was initiated in the mineral sector, decades ago, prosper far and large mainly due to the ignorance of the line ministry. Sand and gravel mining extended out of portion with colossal damage which the nation has to pay sooner or later. Sand permits were given only under political influence and Yanoya is one of the living example for such violation. The Wilgamuwa remain as “non-liberated area” as even the police reluctant to entire. In such area sand operation is unto themselves, hardly any law and run by politicos who were closed to the MR regime and known as “kings of ethanol”. The day-light robbery of sand on the flood plains extended from Maoya to KirindiOya and destined to consume most of the rivers and tributaries island-wide, as the HE preaches his environment protection slogans. 
The precious national mineral wealth particularly vein quartz, graphite and mineral sands are in-line for abuse, as politicos work closely with their cronies who were illegally implemented at the Geological Survey and Mines Bureau. The most valuable vein quartz resource in the country, Randeniya-Wellawaya, has been offered to a company which the chairman of the Geological Survey and Mines Bureau Happen to be the Chairman of such company as well. No either environment impact assessment and mineral exploration survey was conducted for this particular venture, which is a requirement for issuing such licenses. The Minister either have no clue what is happening in his own ministry or might have vested interest on such eventualities. The many that the Company would be extracting on this national mineral wealth exceeds 2 billion and where the money ends up is one of the “million-dollar question”. The Ministry simply allowed the officers of the Regulatory body of the national mineral wealth to be engaged in commercial activities with conflict of interests. 
The countries’ prime share of minerals is undisputedly being graphite. However, it is handled in a manner that the country loses millions is the foreign stock markets and a bunch of manipulators, having a close links with inside-officials, controlled the whole of the graphite wealth with under-dealings and third-party selling. The way the things adversely progress in the mineral sector, the country will be considered as a nation with depleted mineral resources with colossal environment damage in 2025 instead the philosophical lengthily TALKS of the line Minister happened to be the President of the nation. Unfortunately, the misdeeds of the Institute may mount into a few volumes considered the cement industry, mineral sands and each and every natural resource that occurs in this land.  And this is an Institute who failed to adhere the court decision by the Supreme Court since 2002, as still the Bureau neglects to quantify the Eppawala phosphate deposit, a clear violation of the court order and a contempt of court. A man who publically committed to re-establish the battered law and order of the land shall begin at home. 
One of the most important institutes of the land, which is empowered to secure the nation’s mineral wealth, running a prolong time in head-less manner. Since April 2016 the head of the institute, Director General, is on temporary basis and the line ministry failed to find a proper appointment for the same. Understandably the temporary appointment has gone to the length only to fulfil political desires just to obtain favours for the possible permanency and safeguarding his cronies in the ranks of Geological Surveys, who involved in colossal corruption that exceeds many millions. 
The way the Minister handled one of the institutes that comes under his preview may portray how he will be handling the nation in the next few years.
Note: Special compilation and you can chalk the facts and if you run this in parallel to the 3rd year initiation that would be very appropriate as GSMB is spending millions to enhance the HE image and cover the GSMB misdeeds via a series of publications. 
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by     (2017-01-06 23:08:02)

Progressing, Not Knowing Where


Colombo Telegraph
By Ranil Senanayake –January 7, 2017
Dr Ranil Senanayake
Dr Ranil Senanayake
Sri Lanka has opted to enter the global economic system with a very poor appreciation of the scientific considerations of the different options and paths available. In the global financial system, growth is seen as engine of development, but the source of power that has been chosen to propel that growth is making this nation dangerously vulnerable to the emerging global reality of Climate Change.
Power, as is used in the present context, is energy in a state utilizable for our uses. It is inexorably tied to the economy of any nation. However, power should be categorized into two distinct groups: Internalized power or power that can be generated locally within the boundaries of a given nation and externalized power or power that has to be obtained from outside the nation and has to be imported.
If the rate of growth is constrained by internalized power, it will produce excellent effects vis-à-vis inflationary trends in the economy. Conversely, if growth is dependant on externalized power, the economic system becomes hopelessly locked into whatever inflationary cycle that the external suppliers are prone to, and any internal attempts in controlling it are useless. Given the exponential rise in the environmental and social cost of fossil energy, the wisdom of attempting to develop based on the consumption of externalized fossil power is questionable.
The promotion of the current perverted vision of ‘development’ where massive projects, consuming huge quantities of cement (sixteen times more potent than gasoline in producing fossil carbon dioxide), steel where every ton of is responsible for 1.2 tons of CO2 form the basis of this ‘development’ must be questioned.pollution-in-the-indian-ocean
Pollution in the Indian Ocean
It is such uninformed ideas of development, of unplanned construction and undervalued human health that seek the creation urban centers carrying a massive fossil carbon footprint. Growth for the sake of growth without directing it towards a nationally accepted plan reeks of self-interest. An example is the promotion of a megapolis without considering the Carbon cost of the air conditioning and coolants needed for such a megapolis. This jump in our Carbon footprint makes us irresponsible in terms of our international obligations to address Climate Change.
As an island state we have not been responsible by the sea around us either. Sri Lanka is exposed as the worst polluter of the Indian Ocean. The new maps on human impact on the world’s oceans are now on the web. Although there had been regular commentary on the need of every government and various authorities to be cognizant of oceanic health, it was a shock to see the evidence that is now before us. The map of the Indian Ocean shows an ugly halo of pollution and ocean impact that rings the ocean around Sri Lanka.
The irresponsible use of our land, cutting the forests, eroding the soil and drenching it with artificial fertilizers and agro/ industrial toxins, finally result in polluting the ocean. The biological indicators of a healthy shoreline are the rock pools, once the rock pools that fringed our shores were alive with fishes and even corals, all the rock pool corals were lost by the 80’s. The inshore corals and the fringing shallow reef was next and finally the deep reef. We saw this national patrimony degrade and disappear within our lifetime. Those who have experienced the biodiversity of the Welawatte canal, before the advent of the textile mills pumping their affluent into it, will know the changes. It was a time when coral reef fish such as Butterfly Fish (Cheatodons ) could be seen under the road bridge at Welawatte. The toxic affluent changed the clear waters to a dark, opaque hue and destroyed all the things that lived in and along the canal. Even at that time, many of us realized the damage that was being done to our inland waters by irresponsible industrialists, predictably the politicians and bureaucrats ignored public concern, but the extent of the damage to the ocean around us was not even remotely realized until the advent of satellite sensing.
A study of the satellite data also indicates that a major source of marine pollution comes from the shipping that goes through our waters, polluting without any care, what will happen, when the dirty, bunker fuel burning, cheap freighters begin to call in at Hambantota?

After going round in circles in 2016, which way(s) will the government go in 2017?


article_image
by Rajan Philips-

Even the most ardent supporters of the Sirisena-Wickremasinghe government would have been disappointed with the government’s performance in 2016, and many of them would be hoping for some positive turnarounds in the New Year that is just starting. The government’s meandering ways over the last two years are arguably the result of the mismatch between the unique expectations that were created and confirmed by the 2015 January presidential election, on the one hand, and the peculiar composition of government that took office after the election, on the other. After initially emerging as a minority government, the Sirisena-Wickremasinghe (S-W) government was expanded following the August 2015 parliamentary election to include a sizable chunk of the SLFP that was defeated in both the January and the August elections. This ‘peculiar’ composition would seem to have affected the government’s ability to satisfactorily meet the people’s expectations raised at the January 2015 election.