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, January 14, 2017

Sri Lanka: The moral factor in our politics

The crucial point about the big multinationals is that their investments are on a huge scale and on a long term basis. That would presuppose some degree of confidence and trust in the host Governments.

by Izeth Hussain-

 ( January 14, 2017, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) I have done my share of reading and thinking about morality, a pursuit that could be very interesting but also very difficult and very time consuming. I stopped that pursuit sometime in the first half of the ‘nineties after browsing through a biography of John Dos Passos at the American Library. He was not a philosopher but a writer of fiction whose trilogy USA will I believe come to have classic status. I hold that most creative artists capable of attaining classic status are also capable of dazzling insights that are beyond the ken of common humanity. A famous instance is that of D.H. Lawrence who went on a walking tour of Germany and sensed many years in advance the grisly horror awaiting the Germans: the advent to power of Hitler and the Nazis.

Dos Passos also showed insight in a letter in which he wrote that the moral sense is part of the human equipment for survival. When I read that I concluded straightaway that I did not need to pursue the question of morality in politics any further. I made sense of Dos Passos’ remark along the following lines. Human beings are social beings who cannot survive as individuals without a society. What holds the society together? There have to be beliefs, from which derive values, from which derive norms of behavior: in other words a moral system that dictates what can be done and what cannot be done, what is right and what is wrong. There is no known society that is without a moral system. Something so ubiquitous has to have a fundamental justification. The evident justification is that a society cannot hold together without norms of behavior behind which there is a moral system.

As I wrote in my last article, After two years (Island of January 7), the 1977 UNP Government provided a vivid illustration of that fact. It was not a case of double standards in which hypocrisy pays tribute to virtue, something in which practically all Governments indulge. It was a case of outright and outrageous attack on moral standards in public life by President JR and the Jay Gang. I prefer the term “Jay Gang” to the term “Government” because it was not the Government as a whole that was involved but a segment of the UNP power elite, JR and the Jay Gang, that could commandeer the power and apparatus of the State to carry out the rape and attempted murder of public morality. I gave instances: the public thrashing of Sararthchandra and Buddhist monks for daring to speak out against the ills of the liberal economy; the abuse and threats by the Jay Gang against Supreme Court Judges for daring to give a verdict against the Government; the elevation to high UNP status of the convicted gang rapist Gonawala Sunil. In accordance with the theory enunciated in the preceding paragraph, the Sri Lankan State was in a state of disintegration by 1988.

In my last article I wrote as follows: “There was a failure in attracting foreign direct investment: the big multinationals stayed aloof from Sri Lanka not only after the 1983 holocaust but even before that – the reason for which requires exploration”. We usually think of that failure only in terms of the 26-year civil war. I have not seen any explanation for that failure during the considerable period of the first five years of the 1977 Government. We must recall that President JR proclaimed “Let the robber barons come”, and that he had as his exemplar the Singapore success story in which foreign direct investment played the crucial role. But the robber barons didn’t come; only the small-time garment manufacturers did to a significant extent, in the expectation of making quick profits and making a quick getaway if it became necessary. The usual explanations would focus on purely economic factors such as the inadequacy of a docile labor force, the inadequacy of technically qualified personnel and so on. I would find such explanations unconvincing. For me the convincing explanation would focus mainly on the inadequacy of the moral factor in our politics, though not on that factor alone.

The crucial point about the big multinationals is that their investments are on a huge scale and on a long term basis. That would presuppose some degree of confidence and trust in the host Governments. Would that have been possible with the 1977 Government? I will mention just a few details, more or less at random, to show that the moral factor was conspicuous by its absence right from the inception of that Government. It should not have been too difficult to move towards a definitive solution of the ethnic problem by holding the promised All Party Conference and allowing some measure of devolution to the Tamils. Instead JR launched the first anti-Tamil pogrom just three weeks after coming to power, and he kept up the anti-Tamil violence until a civil war became inevitable after 1983. He had a huge Parliamentary majority and could have safely entrenched a fully functioning democracy. Instead he violated democratic norms by for instance depriving Mrs. Bandaranaike of her civic rights, which outraged even his Western supporters. And so on. The truth is that there was no major FDI because President JR and the Jay Gang were morally too low grade to be trusted.

But what hard evidence do I have to show that the moral factor counted most in preventing major FDI? More than one of my readers has sent me a study prepared by Ajit Kanagasundram explaining the contrasting performances of Singapore and Sri Lanka. He is an ex-banker who has worked in both countries and is therefore eminently fitted to provide that explanation. He writes that Singapore has an enormous amount of capital to invest abroad, and has set up industrial parks in China, India, Myanmar, Indonesia, Vietnam, etc. He did what he could to direct Singapore FDI to Sri Lanka, but without success. He writes “Why not in Sri Lanka? Because they do not believe that we will carry through our part of the bargain in providing the necessary infrastructure and tax concessions and regulations, bribery may be required and our labor was considered lazy and unreliable and prone to strike, compared to those in, say Vietnam”. The moral factor, more specifically the inability to trust us, looms large in that explanation.
I wrote in my last article that a moral rottenness was installed at the very core of the Sri Lankan state after 1956. The reason was that the quick rise of the Sinhalese lower middle class to positions of power and affluence was possible only through the state sector, and that meant that the resources of the state were commandeered inordinately for the benefit of that class. It was a form of theft, and the State kleptocracy established after 1956 was strengthened with successive Governments and became part of the natural order of things in Sri Lanka. Positions of high office in the state have been determined far more by ethnic and other affiliations than by merit. I am told that the situation is only marginally better in the private sector. That has meant that able Sri Lankans, the best and brightest of their generation, have fled the country to prosper abroad, and that has been going on for decades. The consequence is that the Sri Lankan ability to deliver on this, that, and everything is very low indeed. We are therefore in stark opposition to Singapore where the merit principle reigns supreme.

I realize that what I have been trying to do in this and the previous article is to develop a cultural critique of Sri Lankan politics. My focus has been on the moral factor which should really be seen as part of the broader culture of Sri Lanka. By culture I mean culture in the anthropological sense: the ensemble of beliefs, values, and norms that shape behavior in a society. I don’t think there can be much doubt that the Confucian culture has been peculiarly conducive to economic performance, the explanation for the excellent performance of the East Asian economies and to a lesser extent the South East Asian economies. It may be that some cultures conduce to excellent political performance.  But Sri Lankan culture has a peculiar potency to mess up our politics. Can that be changed?
Where is democracy in Sri Lanka heading to?

2017-01-14

It is now time that we discuss some key factors relating to democracy, given that the name of our country is the ‘Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka.’ But, unfortunately, ours is still far from being a true democratic state. 


Democracy, which refers to the idea that people should rule themselves, was first established in Greece in the 5th century B.C. Henceforth, many countries, using different methods, have experimented to govern their societies and it is today recognised as the best form of governance. 

Six Police Officers Sentenced To Death


Colombo Telegraph
By Basil Fernando –January 14, 2017 
Basil Fernando
Basil Fernando
Last week in the High Court of Badulla 05 police officers and a security officer were sentenced to death for causing the murder of Sadun Malinga a 17 year old young boy. The boy and four of his relatives had gone to the town for the purpose of some business when police suddenly arrested them beat them in public and thereafter arrested them and took them to the police station and further tortured them. As a result Sandun Malinga became seriously injured and the relatives who were with is tried to get the attention of the police to get medical care for the boy immediately. However the police ignored all such requests.
Next day the parents of the boy came to the police station and saw his condition, and again tried to get the attention of the police and also some higher up police officers in order to get some medical attention for Sandun Malinga . The police refused and instead, produced the five of them before a lady Magistrate.
When they were produced a lawyers as well as the victim himself tried to get the attention of the Magistrate to the condition which Sandun Malinga was and tried to get her to make an order to refer him for medical assistance. The Magistrate too ignored these requests and did not take any trouble to consider the condition of the young boy. She instead ordered all five of them to be remanded at the request of the police.
The next day morning Sandun Mlinga was with his brother and was suffering from a serious condition and even then prison authorities failed to provide immediate medical attention to the boy and in the morning the boy die d in his brother’s arms inside the police station.
It was for this that the the high court sentenced the officers to death.
The death sentence on the police officers did not receive much media attention. Sentencing of six, persons connected with the police station should have been a news that should have received serious attention of the Sri Lankan society as a whole and for that purpose the media should have highlighted this issue and created opportunity for discussion of the case, so that the meaning of this sentence would have been brought to the homes of people and also to all police officers throughout the country, so that it could have some beneficiary effects in the prevention of similar deaths in the future.
Arrests Without Justifiable Grounds
Among the matters that should have been discussed are first of all the issue of arrest without any justifiable ground. It has become a common feature throughout police stations in Sri Lanka to arrest without any substantial grounds justifying this arrest. There are many instances in which serious injustices have happened and in some in which even very serious injuries have been caused on the innocent persons, simply because the police take this liberty to arrest anybody if they so wish. And most persons arrested by them are even without slightest evidence to connect them to any crime.
One of the most glaring examples of a similar case was the case of Gerald Mervin Perera who in 1992, was arrested without any reason by a number of policemen acting under the instructions of a Superintendent of the police . He was assaulted severely, at the Wattala police station with the hope that he may be able to divulge some information regarding a triple murder. The injuries were caused were so much that it ultimately caused a kidney failure. His life was saved only by the intervention of his wife and some local politicians who facilitated him to go to a private hospital in which he remained in a comma for nearly two weeks.
The matter later came before the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka headed by late Justice Mark Fernando who delivered a landmark judgment in this case. The Supreme Court found that there were no grounds to arrest Jerad Perera and even if they have arrested him he could have easily been released after a first few questions have been asked’ as the police would have discovered that this man knew nothing about any crime. The court went on to observe that even after injuring him the police failed to provide immediate medical care to Jerad Perera.
The Court came to the conclusion that the failure to provide medical care in such circumstances amounts to a violation of a fundamental the right to life. And the Court found that all the police officers have violated the basic right of the accused. In that case the court awarded exemplary compensation ordering the state to pay the full amount of medical costs which was over 900 000 rupees to the private hospital and also to pay a similar amount to Jerad Perera as compensation.
The matters that have not received adequate attention of the national police commission ,the IGP, and the other high ranking police officers in the police service of Sri Lanka, the Ministries of Justice and law and Order and also of the judiciary and the Attorney General’s Department are first of all the issue of arrest without substantial grounds for arresting a person. It is quite well known that in high profile cases which involved politicians who are known to the country, the criminal investigation division CID) takes a lot of precaution in order to have a thorough inquiry to satisfy themselves of the evidence available of an accused before taking the steps of arresting such an accused. However this is not the case at the police station level, where almost every police station arrested persons purely without any warrant or any justifiable grounds for arresting the person. This matter needs very careful consideration and instructions need to be issued either by way of legislation or by regulations in order to stop this practice immediately.

Sri Lanka: Sheep and goats

While Wimal Weerawansa is being hauled over the coals, rampant vehicle abuse continues unchecked by those in political and official authority. It would be no exaggeration to say that many highways and even another Hambantota port could have been built with the price that the taxpayer have paid over the years on abused official transport.

by Manik De Silva-

( January 15, 2017, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) It is not for us to judge whether former Minister Wimal Weerawansa is guilty or not of flagrant abuse of public property, as alleged in charges filed against him by investigatory authorities of the State in ongoing court proceedings. He has been remanded on these charges and will probably be bailed out as the long drawn legal procedure drags on as they always do in this country. The business of determining guilt or otherwise is not the task of the media or of public opinion. That is the job of the courts. But everybody in this country knows all too well that politicians of all hues, from the dawn of Independence up to the present day, have abused public property. This was not a problem that had assumed today’s gigantic proportions in the early post-Independence years when most politicians had a sense of right and wrong and public servants did their jobs without fear or favour. We need hardly labour the fact that this is no longer the case. Abuse of State-owned vehicles, particularly, by politicians as well as officials has grown unbelievably with each administration outdoing its predecessor.

It has been alleged that Weerawansa had caused a loss of Rs. 90 million to the State by hiring and releasing about 40 vehicles to various persons including his close relatives during the tenure of the previous regime. In its editorial yesterday, The Island commented that if the very serious charges preferred against the former minister are proved at a fair trial, deterrent punishment should certainly be imposed. Ninety million rupees is certainly not peanuts and the vast majority of Lankans will not see that kind of money in their lifetimes even though the rupee is no longer what it was and anybody who owns a motorbike is a laxapathiya. But compared to the alleged bond scam that ran into billions of rupees and profited a company controlled by the son-in-law of the then Governor of the Central Bank on a scale unseen in the commercial history of this country, the former minister’s vehicle abuse cost would be a mere bagatelle. While statements have been recorded over the bond matter, there have been no high profile arrests as in the case of Weerawansa. His party had last week tossed out the names two other vehicle beneficiaries serving as deputy minister in his ministry and the chairman of a corporation under it and dared the powers that are to probe them as well. Those worthies have now switched allegiance, like many others we might add, with one even securing admission to Parliament on the UNP National List! They now belong to the protected species.

While Wimal Weerawansa is being hauled over the coals, rampant vehicle abuse continues unchecked by those in political and official authority. It would be no exaggeration to say that many highways and even another Hambantota port could have been built with the price that the taxpayer have paid over the years on abused official transport. Instead of doing something about that, we are treated to hearing our leaders both in government and opposition justifying the duty free vehicle permits worth millions being issued to MPs. These are often flogged at mind-boggling prices no sooner they are issued and such brazen actions defended on the basis that the present system of elections require massive expenditure and costs incurred must be recouped. This implies, as we have said before in this space, that the taxpayers owe their lawmakers a living – not an ordinary living but lavish one with all the trimmings. When no less than the prime minister says that MPs must be paid a monthly allowance of Rs. 100,000 as they would otherwise have to find ‘sponsors’ to run their electoral offices, we can only resort to the pithy Sinhala idiom to ask karta kiyanneda?

It was reported that in the course of the investigation of the Weerawansa case it has been stated that officials must know their jobs. That suggests that political functionaries held to account for wrongdoing are taking recourse in the age old strategy of passing the buck. They may have ordered the release of a vehicle to so and so appears to have been the excuse, but the allocation is made by an official on whom it is incumbent to do only what is proper and legitimate. So the buck must lie at the official’s door. Given that one Ministry Secretary who recently held back on doing what he believed was illegal was told to “sign or resign,” what are hapless officials expected to do? Unfortunately the fact is that many bureaucrats are anointed in high office by political patronage. Meritocracy has long flown out of the window and seniority too is not always respected. Patronage appointees bend over backwards to please their patrons and there are few with the backbone of the late IGP Cyril Herath to tender their resignation rather that fall in line with improper political demands. To his credit, Herath also declined a compensatory diplomatic appointment sop thrown in his direction. But most officials are compliant and do as bidden with a supplicatory ehei hamaduruwaney.

It is a long time since the late President J.R. Jayewardene pledged a dharmishta government. 

Yahapalanaya today is attracting as much derision as dharmishta did then. The present government was elected to office to change everything that was wrong in the way the previous administration conducted business. Progress of bringing the guilty to book is painfully slow and the foreign minister has spoken in London about special courts in the offing. There must be no selectivity between sheep and goats on who is being held to account. It was recently reported that a minister’s son without a Sri Lankan driving licence met with an accident and the matter was settled on a payment. That may be well and good if normal process regarding speeding or reckless driving is followed. But importantly, the minister also must be held to account for his son driving an official vehicle. That is what is expected of real yahaplanaya than the spurious product on offer today.

( Manik De Silva is the editor in chief of Sunday Island, a Colombo based weekly, where this piece was first appeared)

Who is day dreaming? Mahinda Rajapaksa or Maithripala Sirisena 


article_image
by Rajan Philips-January 14, 2017, 7:21 pm

2016 ended with a whimper for Sri Lankan politics; 2017 has begun not with a bang, but political banter. The banter is about who will topple whom and who is day dreaming. They are all daydreaming, all three of them, Mahinda Rajapaksa, RanilWickremasinghe and Maithripala Sirisena. According to President Sirisena, his former boss, and predecessor, is daydreaming when he (Rajapaksa) says that he will topple the government in one week or two. But Mr. Sirisena did not let the former President finish his dream. It would have been a dreadful end because the dream would have reminded the former President that he could no longer be president, and at the first crack of any unlikely opportunity to topple the government, the best he can do is to become Prime Minister under President Maithripala Sirisena. They could both be dreaming hoppers.

President Sirisena is also daydreaming, but vicariously through the Central Committee of his bifurcated party. The SLFP Central Committee has apparently adopted a resolution naming Maithripala Sirisena as the ‘SLFP’ candidate for the 2020 presidential election. The President was there, but didn’t say yes or no. He was daydreaming. Or, was he having nightmares in broad daylight? He should be. Wouldn’t it be something for Maithripala Sirisena to run as the new incumbent candidate of the same party that sacrificed its former incumbent candidate on the electoral altar the last time around? What would be President Sirsena’s balance sheet on the term that he would have served, and his manifesto for the new term his party is dreaming he would be seeking? Imagine, the same SLFP ministers who silently stood behind Mahinda Rajapaksa as he went down to defeat seeking a third term, now donning Version 2 of the yahapalanaya pacakge to help Maithripala Sirisena win just a second term.

Ranil Wickremesinghe must be having multiple dreams, given the many irons that he has been throwing in as many a fire. He reminds one of Leonid Brezhnev, the former Soviet Leader from 1964 to 1982, second only to Stalin in longevity. There is nothing common between the Sri Lankan PM and the former Soviet boss; the connection is in one of the many jokes about Comrade Brezhnev. The old Soviet society was as well known for its jokes as it was for vodka and swearing, for the jokes were outlets for the people’s political emotions and they reflected the swings in public mood. One Brezhnev joke went like this: Stalin, Khrushchev and Brezhnev and the Communist Party entourage are on a train from the Kremlin to Siberia. The train suddenly stops in the middle of nowhere, at the dead of night. The leaders wake up and inquire from their aides what was going on. The Politbureau is summoned and Stalin goes first: "Send the train engineers to the firing squad and get a new team of engineers". Khrushchev deadpans: "We must convene the whole Central Committee and take a collective decision." Finally, Brezhnev: "Let us pretend the train is moving and go back to sleep."

The Soviet joke captured the people’s mood during the soporific last years of the Brezhnev era, when everything was pretended and nothing happened. Prime Minister Wickremesinghe is hardly soporific; if at all he is hyper-active. He has let loose so many initiatives on so many fronts it is very difficult to keep track of them all. But after two years in office, the Prime Minister is not sleeping but pretending that everything is fine and there is nothing to worry about. Wake up in the morning, that is the government’s full term for you, everything would be fine. Yahapalanaya would have been started on all its fronts, but don’t ask how it would end on each front because that would be the end of history for Sri Lanka. The dream must not end.

Full term, but on Rajapaksa agenda

The Sirisena-Wickremasinghe government would likely serve out its full term, but it is becoming increasingly clear that it would do so implementing Mahinda Rajapaksa’s agenda that the common opposition so vehemently decried in the two 2015 elections. If you will notice, there is a clear division of labour between the UNP and the SLFP factions of the government (and cabinet) in implementing the Rajapaksa agenda. The UNP is taking care of the economic part of the agenda; the SLFP, the political part of the agenda; and it is a joint venture between the two when it comes to the corrupt parts of the Rajapaksa agenda.

To its credit, or discredit, the UNP leadership in appropriating the economic part of the Rajapaksa agenda has somehow managed to take ownership of all the blunders and corrupt failings that were associated with the original Rajapaksa projects. It is now up to the UNP to not only explain and justify what Rajapaksa started in Hambantota, but also deal with SLFP protestors against the magnified extension of what was started by the previous government. What smarts and what a turnaround! But it is not so much of a turnaround for the SLFP in taking up the political part of the Rajapaksa agenda. The SLFP, despite its division between the government and the opposition, seems united in insisting that the presidential system should not be abolished and that the constitutional changes should be limited to what can be achieved within the ambit of a two-thirds majority in parliament and without requiring a referendum.

On the other hand, it is curious that the SLFP (government) Central Committee that is running shy of facing the local government elections, or a constitutional referendum, is getting ready to face the next presidential election with Maithripala Sirisena as its candidate. If President Sirisena were to go along with the CC resolution, he would be the common SLFP candidate in 2020, and not the common opposition candidate that he was in 2015. He would be Version 2 of Mahinda Rajapaksa, and the SLFP CC must be daydreaming to think that such a candidacy could be successful in the next presidential election. While it would not be fair to assume that President Sirisena would abide by the ill-advised and premature SLFP resolution, it is fair to suggest that the President should direct his party in the government to focus on helping him fulfill the agenda that he was elected for by the people in the January 2015 election before publicly daydreaming about the next election.

It is also curious that the SLFP thinking, without daydreaming, is predicated on the assumption that President Sirisena is the only national figure who can again amass the same plurality of votes (Sinhalese, Tamils and Muslims) that vaulted him to victory in 2015. But this assumption does not sit well with their positions on the constitution and the recent report of the Consultation Task Force on Reconciliation Mechanisms. It is not just the SLFP position, but the position of the whole government and especially of the two government leaders, President Sirisena and Prime Minister Wickremasinghe, that is becoming a concern. Here again, the government, inadvertently or otherwise, is following the Rajapaksa example on the recommendations of the LLRC reports.

In that instance, at least Mahinda Rajapkasa formally received the LLRC report and even made headline photos of his trying to read it while reclining on an easy chair. In contrast, President Sirisena and Prime Minister Wickremesinghe have run shy of even being seen with the new CTF report, leaving it to former President Chandrika Kumaratunga to do the honours of receiving the report from the Task Force members. The two leaders were not only not seen, but they also do not want to be heard on the new report and its recommendations. They can both run from the results of their well-intentioned initiatives, but they cannot hide from the commitments that they have been making so handsomely since 2015.

Another war hero arrested by CID!

Another war hero arrested by CID!
Jan 14, 2017

The CID today (14) arrested Lt. Commander Anil Dhammika Mapa of the Navy on charges of the abduction, extortion and enforced disappearance of a Tamil resident of Kotahena in 2008. Evidence is also being gathered against the suspect for having taken apart a van owned by the missing man and selling same.

Abducted during the period of the war, the Tamil man was kept at Welisara navy camp and questioned. His van was taken apart at the same camp. Then, the parts were taken out of the camp and assembled. The CID has recovered the van.
The Navy officer had also extorted money from the arrested man’s family.  
The CID is facing strong opposition from the Navy over the arrest. He is due to be produced before the Colombo magistrate.
A senior Navy official told Lanka News Web that the CID continued to harass war heroes of the Navy. The government should immediately pay attention to this as it will affect the morale of the war heroes, he said.

Navy Commander Gets Mervyn-type Relief


Vice Admiral Ravi Wijegunaratne | Photo credit royalcollege.lk

Colombo TelegraphJanuary 15, 2017
The Navy Commander Vice Admiral Ravi Wijegunaratne is set to get relief of the kind that former minister Mervin Silva got after engaging in acts of thuggery when the victim of the verbal and physical abuse perpetrated by Wijegunaratne pleaded that investigations be stopped.
Ranga Kalansooriya, Director General, Department of Government Information told Colombo Telegraph that Roshan Gunasekera, the victim, had intimated to officials of the department who had sought to record a statement by him that he was not interested in pressing charges or having an investigation carried out.
Mervin Silva, likewise, got off scot-free on numerous occasions after assaulting people, including journalists. On one occasion Silva even invited the media to watch him tie an official to a tree for not toeing the line. The entire incident was recorded, but in the end the victim pleaded that it was something he had wanted done.
Similarly, Wijegunaratne has been caught on video abusing the victim verbally while assaulting him. Kalansooriya, at the time, offered that the journalist had violated professional ethics, essentially justifying the action of the Navy Commander.
The assault drew the ire of rights groups and led to protests in Colombo as well as prompted statements from media rights groups abroad condemning the Navy Commander and demanding appropriate action from the Government.

Sri Lanka: Malik’s Deal Abandoned — Millions Wasted!

Millions wasted on abortive deal with United States lobby firm

( January 15, 2017, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) “A deal with a Washington DC “lobbying” firm by Development Strategies and International Trade Minister Malik Samarawickrema “to increase economic ties” with the United States has now been abandoned,” a Colombo based weekly, The Sunday Times reported.

According to the report, “ this is after more than US$ 150,000 or Rs. 22. 5 million of Sri Lankan taxpayer’s money has been paid out to this firm. It is not immediately clear whether the firm ST&R (Sandler, Travis & Rosenburg) was able to deliver tangible results for the money already paid to them.”

“It is now claimed that one of the aims for hurriedly hiring the firm, when a presidential election campaign was under way in the United States, was to determine whether Sri Lanka could make an entrée into the Trans Pacific Partnership (TPP). This is a massive trade deal agreed to in 2015 by the US, Australia, Japan, Malaysia, New Zealand, Canada, Mexico and other countries to “deepen economic co-operation and boost growth” by reducing tariffs.”

“However, during the election campaign and even after his victory, President-elect Donald Trump repeatedly pledged to scrap the TPP.”

The Sunday Times reported the controversial deal exclusively in its front page lead story on August 21 last year. The story revealed how promoting a non-existent “peace process” was also made one of the tasks given to the “lobbying” firm. The total cost of the Agreement with ST& R was then placed at US$ 630,000. The report revealed that even the Foreign Affairs Ministry was unaware of the deal. The US firm, it was revealed, has been picked without a competitive bidding process or a tender.

“Minister Samarawickrama defended this move with a statement saying the Sunday Times was writing “baseless” stories and pointed out to the scope of the agreement which was approved by the Attorney General and the Cabinet of Ministers and how the funds would come from the national budget etc.”

In response, the Sunday Times asked him why he picked this firm without a bidding process and why he was doing so during an election campaign in the US, and reminded the Minister of the on-going investigation into money laundering by the previous Government which also hired US lobbying firms.

A senior Government official, who did not wish to be named, pointed out the folly of signing this agreement when the US presidential election campaign was under way. “If they had waited until the polls were over, and seen how best to lobby the new US Administration, the public money which was squandered could have been saved. This is how careless people can get with public funds when they do these things without consultation,” said the official.

Arjuna’s support for Vasu’s case – state counsel to back opposing side 

Arjuna’s support for Vasu’s case – state counsel to back opposing side

Jan 14, 2017

Mahinda Rajapaksa faction’s Vasudeva Nanayakkara has filed a FR petition in the Supreme Court against the leasing of the Hambantota port to China and the setting up of a China-Lanka industrial park in the adjoining area, and ports minister Arjuna Ranatunga is reportedly supporting the case. Arjuna and his brother, Ports Authority chairman Dhammika, have been opposing the handover plan from the outset.


The ‘Yahapaalana’ government has been trying, as the only available alternative, to lease the Hambantota port, which has sent the country into billions of dollars into debt and has become a white elephant, in order to earn income and reduce the country’s debt burden, but the Ranatunga brothers are working to their own personal agenda and sabotaging it by provoking trade unions, the media has reported previously. Media reports said a request for a 300 million dollar commission was behind the anti-China campaign of the Ranatungas.
Anyway, Arjuna has instructed that president’s counsel Sanjeewa Jayawardena be made the lawyer for the Ports Authority in this case. He may be appointed by the Ports Authority, but on Arjuna’s advice, the lawyer will work to the advantage of Vasudeva’s complaint. Arjuna has given a lawyer at state expense to work against it.
When considering politics of the Ranatunga family, what is noteworthy is that the entire family unites to protect the corrupt amongst them, despite their being divided politically. For instance, Prasanna is still a diehard Mahinda loyalist, while Arjuna holds a key ministerial position in the government. Furthermore, Nishantha, who swindled Sri Lanka Cricket money during the Mahinda rule is still free. Arjuna cries foul about the corruption and fraud that had taken place at SLC in the past, but he is careful to save his brother from blame. Once he said publicly, “My younger brother Nishantha is not a thief. At worst, he might have taken something without telling anyone. But, he is not a thief.”

Take action regarding loss of Rs.15 billion from EPF or we take action – Unions tell Central Bank

Privatization of Fifty Government Institutions  Imminent – Cautioned Wasantha Samarasinghe
January 14, 2017
The President of Inter-Company Employees Union and the Member of the Central Committee of the JVP Wasantha Samarasinghe said members of more than 200 trade unions will storm the Central Bank over the alleged loss of a sum of Rs. 15 billion from the EPF through the Central Bank bond scam. He said this action was agreed by the representatives of trade unions who met in Colombo on Sunday.
Mr. Samarasinghe said several reminders were sent to the Governor of the Central Bank asking him to take action regarding the loss to EPF due to purchase of 95% of Central Bank bonds by Perpetual Treasuries Company that has been involved in the bond scam according to COPE report. The Central Bank was given time till 18th January to respond but they have not received any favourable response from the Central Bank pointed out Mr. Samarasinghe.
He said trade unions decided to storm the Central Bank premises and also to take strict trade union action if the Central Bank management fails to take corrective action before next Wednesday.
Mr. Samarasinghe said the President, the Prime Minister, the Finance Minister and the Central Bank Governor had been requested to take action regarding the issue several times but there hadn’t been any favourable response.
Six arrested with Kerala Ganja

Six arrested with Kerala Ganja

logoBy Admin-January 14, 2017

Sri Lanka Navy personnel in coordination with Sri Lanka Police arrested 6 persons with 3.5 kg of Kerala Ganja at two separate locations. 

On receipt of intelligence information yesterday (13), four suspects who were transferring 2.5 kg of Cannabis by a three wheeler in Peliyagoda area were arrested by the naval personnel attached to SLNS Kelani in the Western Naval Command with the assistance of Peliyagoda Police. 

 The suspects and cannabis were handed over to Peliyagoda Police for onward investigations, SLN media unit said.

 Meanwhile, Coast Guard personnel attached to Sri Lanka Coast Guard Waruna in Wellawatta and officials of the Narcotic Special Unit, during a search, arrested another 2 persons who were transferring 1 kg of Kerala Cannabis. 

  The suspects had used a motorcycle for the transportation of cannabis in Peliyagoda area. The two persons along with cannabis were produced before the Narcotics Bureau, Colombo for further investigations. 

Lakshman Wasantha reverses decision after getting back Hingurana Distilleries


Lakshman Wasantha reverses decision after getting back Hingurana Distilleries

Jan 14, 2017

Plantation industries deputy minister Lakshman Wasantha Perera has changed his decision to get onto the platform of the ‘Peraliyaka Erambuma’ rally due to take place on January 27 in Nugegda, reports say. His change of heart comes after president Maithripala Sirisena intervened to resolve the problems at his Hingurana Distilleries company.

It was ex-president Mahinda Rajapaksa who had given Lakshman the SLFP Matale organizer position and the candidacy to contest the elections. A wealthy businessman and lawyer, he also acquired Hingurana Distilleries during Mahinda’s rule. From the beginning, he described himself as a ‘Mahinda’s man.’
 
Accused over various irregularities, Hingurana Distilleries was sealed by the Excise Department in July 2015 on a charge of defrauding Rs. 27 million of tax money. Lakshman was connected to the ethanol racket that had been going on, on a massive scale during Mahinda’s period. However, the legal issues faced by Hingurana Distilleries have now been resolved thanks to president Sirisena’s intervention.
 
Changing his decision to link up with the Mahinda faction, Lakshman has told his friends, “I thought of leaving. But, the boss got my matter resolved. Why should I leave? The other thing is that I do not have to bribe them like in the past. After getting this during the Rajapaksa’s period, there was no end to paying bribes. Now, I am free of all those. I am better off now.”

Is Labour Friends of Israel an Israeli embassy front?



Asa Winstanley-12 January 2017

It uncovers a startling reality: many of the organizations posing as independent support groups for Israel are operated effectively as covert extensions of the Israeli embassy.

Speaking to an undercover reporter, a key Labour Friends of Israel officer clarified the need for secrecy.
“We work really closely together,” said Michael Rubin. “But a lot of it is behind the scenes.”

Labour Friends of Israel, which counts dozens of lawmakers among its supporters, is a pro-Israel lobby group inside the UK’s main opposition party.

The Al Jazeera reporter was posing as a Labour activist wanting to volunteer for Israel. Known to them as “Robin,” the reporter had been put in contact with Rubin by the embassy’s senior political officer, Shai Masot.

Masot was caught on camera during the six-month investigation plotting to “take down” senior government minister Alan Duncan and other lawmakers.

Masot approached Robin with the idea of starting a youth wing of Labour Friends of Israel. But he emphasized the need to keep the embassy’s role in the background: “You can tell him [Rubin] that I suggested to contact him, but not [tell him you have] my support because LFI is an independent organization.”
“No one likes that someone is managing his organization,” he said, with a smile.

Shai Masot

Masot was swiftly thrown under the bus by the embassy after Al Jazeera went public with its investigation. And on Wednesday the Israeli foreign ministry told Middle East Eye that Masot had quit the ministry altogether and would “not have any contact with the Ministry for Strategic Affairs in the near future.”

The latter ministry has been given a $45 million budget to try to sabotage the Palestine solidarity movement through what a veteran Israeli analyst has termed “black ops.”

In a meeting with the undercover reporter over drinks, Rubin emphasized the covert nature of the link.
“So we do work really really closely together,” he said again. “It’s just publicly we just try to keep the LFI as a separate identity to the embassy.”

This clearly raises questions over how separate an “identity” Labour Friends of Israel really is.

In September, a leaked Israeli embassy cable revealed an inter-departmental turf war over claims that one ministry had been “operating” UK groups in a potentially illegal manner.

Young Israeli Embassy

The activity of these groups was aimed at combating the boycott, divestment and sanctions (BDS) movement for Palestinian rights. Potential illegality is obviously something LFI would want to publicly distance itself from.

“Being LFI allows us to reach out to people who wouldn’t want to get involved with the embassy,” Rubin explained to Robin. “Keeping it as a separate thing is actually best for everyone.”

But he made clear that LFI’s chair, member of Parliament Joan Ryan, has active and regular contact with the embassy: “we work with the ambassador and the embassy quite a lot. So she’ll speak to Shai most days.”

He told Robin to discreetly keep Masot in the loop: “Having Shai helping in the background, yeah. I think definitely keeping Shai up to date and let him know what we’re doing.”

He worried about an image problem for the prospective Young Labour Friends of Israel: “I think we just have to be careful that we’re not to be seen as Young Israeli Embassy.”

The million-pound junket

LFI’s links to the embassy go further than being an “identity” for Israel. They seem to be financial too.
The film shows undercover footage at 2016’s Labour Party conference in Liverpool in which Masot tells LFI chairperson Joan Ryan “we’ve just now got the money, it’s more than one million pounds, it’s a lot of money.”

The money was apparently for junkets for Britsh MPs to Israel. In a response to Al Jazeera’s investigation, LFI issued a statement saying the money was in relation to a visit “advertised by and paid for by the Israeli embassy. It had nothing whatsoever to do with LFI delegations.”

But the undercover film shows that Masot’s offer of one million pounds ($1.2 million) in funding had been prompted by Ryan’s question, “what happened with the names that we put into the embassy, Shai?”
This indicates that the delegation had some sort of LFI involvement, even if it was not officially organized by the group.

Witch hunt

Michael Rubin was previously chair of Labour Students. In 2016 he led an investigation into supposed anti-Semitism at Oxford University Labour Club.

Former Israel lobby intern Alex Chalmers had made the allegations, based on little more than the fact that students had organized events in support of Israeli Apartheid Week.

The allegations sparked the anti-Semitism row that plagued the Labour Party and its leader Jeremy Corbyn for the best part of 2016. As The Electronic Intifada extensively reported, the row was for the most part a witch hunt aimed at destroying Corbyn, a vocal critic of Israel.

Rubin’s hasty investigation into the Oxford allegations, Labour activists told The Electronic Intifada at the time, was so obviously botched and marred by a personal conflict of interest that it was not credible.

The report was shelved by the party and instead superseded by two others, one by Labour leader in the House of Lords Jan Royall, and the second by human rights lawyer Shami Chakrabarti.

Chakrabarti concluded that “The Labour Party is not overrun by anti-Semitism.”

Questioned by The Electronic Intifada at the Labour Party conference in September about his role in the affair, Rubin refused to answer, and would only say “I’ve no idea what you’re talking about.”

Part two of The Lobby is broadcast on Al Jazeera English on Thursday at 2230 GMT and can be watched online in the video above.

We aren’t really gonna deport all those people, Donald. (AP Photo/Alex Brandon)

THE MORNING PLUM:

 

One big question that looms as Donald Trump takes power is this: Will Trump actually make good on the aspects of his program that embody Trumpism at its most cruel and inhumane? Trump promised to expand mass deportations and to end protections for those brought here illegally as children. Now he must decide whether to deliver on those promises — which, if carried out, will likely cause the broader public to recoil.

In a remarkable exchange with an undocumented mother last night at a CNN town hall, House Speaker Paul Ryan strongly suggested to her that the revocation of protections for the DREAMers brought here as children will not be carried out. That’s newsworthy on its own. But beyond that, the exchange also exposed the cruelty of stepped-up mass deportations for many other low-level undocumented offenders:

It’s a powerful moment, but the policy details lurking underneath the emotion are also extremely important. A woman brought here illegally as an 11-year-old child “through no fault of her own,” as CNN’s Jake Tapper put it, asked whether she and “many families in my situation” should face deportation. “No,” Ryan responded. After noting her love for her daughter, Ryan added:
“What we have to do is find a way to make sure that you can get right with the law. And we’ve got to do this so that the rug doesn’t get pulled out from under you and your family gets separated. That’s the way we feel. And that is exactly what our new, incoming president has stated he wants to do….I’m sure you’re a great contributor to [your] community.”
This might be a reference to the fact that Trump recently seemed to back off his pledge to reverse President Obama’s executive action protecting DREAMers from deportation, saying instead that “we’re going to work something out” for them. Indeed, under subsequent questioning from Tapper, Ryan explicitly said he and the Trump transition team were working on a “good, humane solution” for the hundreds of thousands currently benefiting from that executive action.

Crucially, this executive action (DACA) doesn’t just protect DREAMers from deportation. It also grants them work permits, which means that revoking it would revoke those work permits, driving untold numbers of young, assimilated, culturally-American immigrants back underground. Ryan alluded to this when he described her as a “contributor” to her “community.” And so, at a minimum, Ryan’s assertions would appear to mean that Republicans and Trump are trying to work out some way that the DREAMers can continue contributing to American life out in the open. (At a maximum, “get right with the law” means creating a path to legal status for those people.) Whether or not this actually ends up happening, the key point is that Ryan basically admitted that this is the moral imperative here.

But Ryan went further still. Ryan alluded to the need to avoid breaking up families like hers, while also acknowledging the need to solve the problem “writ large,” by which he meant, the problem of the 11 million — and he even said there wouldn’t be any “deportation force.” Ryan understands immigration policy. In 2014, he gingerly tried to walk his party towards embracing some sort of path to legal status for most undocumented immigrants. He appears to grasp that the core dilemma here is that most undocumented immigrants are more than mere lawbreakers — that stepping up deportations would break up families of people who have been longtime “contributors” to their “communities.”

Indeed, what this exchange also shows, by illustrating this fundamental dilemma in human terms, is that carrying out these core promises of Trumpism would be a political disaster. The DREAMers in particular are sympathetic figures. But so are many undocumented immigrants who came here as adults seeking better lives for their families. And such tales would be widely circulated by the national media. It isn’t just that these stories would make for good political ammunition. It’s that stepped-up mass deportations actually would be cruel and inhumane, and majorities of Americans would likely see them in exactly those terms.

Ryan seems to know this. The question now is what Trump will do — and whether congressional Republicans will go along with the worst. “Ryan is suggesting that mass-deportations are cruel and unworkable,” immigration attorney David Leopold told me today. “If Trump goes through with them, how will Republicans in Congress respond?”


Retired Marine Gen. John F. Kelly, President-elect Donald Trump’s nominee to head the Department of Homeland Security, said during his confirmation hearing Jan. 10 that “law-abiding individuals” living in the U.S. illegally are “probably” not a priority for deportation.(Reuters)

Richard Painter, who served as ethics adviser to former President George W. Bush, called the letter a “clear threat to pull the funding of the Office of Government Ethics” unless the agency follows the wishes of Trump and the Republican leadership. “They are saying lay off Trump and push through these nominees or we’ll kill the funding of OGE,” Painter said.
Congressional Republicans will not only abdicate oversight on Trump; they may now be taking active steps to frustrate it. This underscores how institutionally critical the news media will be in the Trump era.
* GOP WILL REPEAL AND REPLACE ‘AT THE SAME TIME': Paul Ryan, at a CNN town hall last night, made this promise:
“We want to do this at the same time, and in some cases in the same bill. So we want to advance repealing this law with its replacement at the same time.”
Given that Republicans are also moving to repeal much of the ACA right away, one imagines the “replacement” rolled out will be a white paper with minimal detail.
* TRUMP APPROVAL AT HISTORIC LOWS: New Gallup polling conducted two weeks before Inauguration Day finds:
Trump continues to garner historically low approval for his transition performance, with 51% of Americans disapproving of how he is handling the presidential transition and 44% approving.
Trump is well below 50 percent. By contrast, in Gallup polling, Barack Obama, George W. Bush, and Bill Clinton all started off at over 60 percent. Hey, nowhere to go but up!
Republicans don’t have a health care plan, but they do have a philosophy — and it’s all about less. Less regulation, so that insurers can turn you down if you have a pre-existing condition. Less government support, so if you can’t afford coverage, too bad. And less coverage in general…But the idea that it would lead to big cost savings over all is pure fantasy, and it would have a devastating effect on the millions who have gained coverage during the Obama years.
Trump may say he wants everyone to remain covered, but that is inevitably going to collide with congressional GOP philosophy, and that moment simply cannot be deferred forever.
* YOUR MORNING TRUMP TWEETS: In two tweets this morning, Trump said this about the latest unsubstantiated claims that Russia amassed compromising info on him:
Totally made up facts by sleazebag political operatives, both Democrats and Republicans — FAKE NEWS! Russia says nothing exists. Probably released by “Intelligence” even knowing there is no proof, and never will be. My people will have a full report on hacking within 90 days!
I’m sure “his people” can be counted on to provide an objective, in-depth rendering. This does appear newsworthy — he promised his people will put something out on all this.
* AND TRUMP’S CABINET IS WHITE AND MALE: An interesting observation from Jasmine Lee:
Trump’s cabinet so far is more white and male than any first cabinet since Reagan’s….[It has] a smaller percentage of women and nonwhites than the first cabinets of Barack Obama, George W. Bush, Bill Clinton and George Bush. If Mr. Trump’s nominees are confirmed, women and nonwhites will hold five of 21 cabinet or cabinet-level positions.
But whatever we do, let’s not say out loud that Trump plays “identity politics.”