Peace for the World

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

Thursday, January 26, 2017

When China’s Feminists Came to Washington

When China’s Feminists Came to Washington

No automatic alt text available.BY KIM WALL-JANUARY 25, 2017

Zhang Ling was dressed like a revolutionary from the Spanish Civil War. With a long braid emerging from a scarlet beret and clad in trousers a color she described as “communist red,” Zhang had driven her Honda from her home in upstate New York the night before, inspired rather than frustrated by hours of traffic jams: every passing car, she said, seemed to have been driven by a woman. “Women occupy the highway now, and the city tomorrow,” she said.

Swallowed in a sea of pink pussy hats, Zhang, a professor of cinema studies at the State University of New York, smiled when she saw American protesters raising banners with the Maoist slogan, “Women hold up half the sky.” But the reference saddened her too; a flashback to the People’s Republic where she had grown up, one where rosy-cheeked iron ladies had worked farms and factories alongside male comrades, until China took a turn toward capitalist individualism and away from (sometimes honored and sometimes ignored) socialist ideas of gender equality.

Ling was one of several dozen activists in China’s feminist movement who traveled across the country for the Women’s March on Washington on to join millions of Americans as they took to the streets protesting Donald Trump, a day after his Jan. 20 inauguration. Trump’s policies look destined to resonate far beyond America’s borders; millions of women’s rights advocates staged their own protests worldwide, in cities from Copenhagen to Riyadh. Mainland China, where protests are often harshly punished, was not among them. For Chinese activists living Stateside, that presented an irresistible opportunity.

Many Chinese feminist activists appear to have taken Trump’s campaign rhetoric personally, as an extension of the “straight man cancer” (read: everyday sexism) so widespread, and so reviled, in China. Shortly after the election, prominent feminist Zheng Churan posted on Twitter an image of her looking sternly into the camera, holding a sign in English: “feminists are watching you.” ”Although we are far away in China, we have seen the news reports of you being constantly involved in gender discrimination,” Zheng wrote in an open letter posted to WeChat. ”Just like cancerous cells, straight-man cancer spreads everywhere damaging feminist movements and undermining social equality. It is pervasive.”

Zheng knew well the dangers of patriarchal authoritarianism: the year before, she and four other high-profile activists – who would become known as the Feminist Five — were detained for months, before international outrage triggered their release. (None of them attended the Woman’s March.)

Now, as promised, more than 30 mainland Chinese women living in the United States had organized over WeChat, a social-networking app massively popular in China, and traveled to the capital. Few of them had met in real life before, but almost all of them wore the same t-shirt, spelling out in bold Chinese characters, “This is what a feminist looks like.”

“I never had this kind of experience before,” said Huang Yuhan, 29-year PhD student. Huang had come from Indiana, where she researches pop-cultural representations of the Cultural Revolution, and where she said she had become acutely aware of U.S.-style threats to women’s reproductive rights. In China too, female bodies remained politicized, though in an almost diametrically opposed manner. A few weeks earlier, many Chinese women had condemned their government’s offering to remove — free of charge — the contraceptive implants it had forcibly implanted in hundreds of millions of women as part of the (now-discarded) One-Child Policy, while giving no public apology for having required the implants in the first place.

The biggest draw for Huang was perhaps the thrill, and catharsis, of partaking in her first large-scale protest. “That’s also why I’m here: I want to see, to experience what it’s like to be in such a huge crowd. In China we don’t have that many demonstrations.”

Wang Zheng, Professor of Women’s Studies and History at the University of Michigan, grew nostalgic about the battles of her youth as she overlooked the masses perched on a metal pole, clutching a “Keep Abortion Legal” sign. Now in her 60s, her last protest had been a pro-choice rally in Los Angeles in the 1980s; a time when she felt China was a beacon of egalitarianism compared to the United States. “For my generation, we are all feminists,” Wang recalled.“I always felt pity for those American women — they didn’t even have maternity leave.”

Growing up in socialist China, Wang had taken gender equality for granted, only to see it regress. To some Chinese activists, Beijing is now less interested than bringing women in the workforce and more interested in a return to neo-Confucian family structures, revealed in the popular notion that any unmarried women older than 27 are “leftover women.”

The harsh treatment of Chinese feminists and the state-run effort to harden gender roles convinced Wang and others that they have something to offer their American counterparts.

Shortly after the election, Liu Xintong, a 26-year graphic designer based in New York, helped pen a note on a Chinese feminist Facebook page “to all Feminists impacted by Trump’s Triumph,” advising them to not “let the disappointment turn you against one another.” The day after the march, the page ran a message to readers that Chinese feminists had “put our bodies on the streets to amplify the brown, black, and beautiful voices.”

Liu told Foreign Policy she felt “very privileged to be in D.C. Imagine others in China doing frontline work — they are facing far more pressure.” With experience fighting an often repressive government unburdened by notions of free speech and assembly, the Chinese Feminists offered advice via Facebook to U.S. readers; “Don’t wait for the system to correct itself for you,” because “now we all have walls to tear down.”

While their turn-up in Washington was intended to signal solidarity with U.S. allies, it was also a message to Chinese President Xi Jinping’s administration, who had detained the Feminist Five for  “disturbing public order” following “subversive” campaigns against sexual harassment on buses and for more readily accessible women’s bathrooms. The pictures of the group posing with a whirlwind of colorful banners outside Trump International Hotel — ”Nasty Chinese women say no!” and, “Mr. President: sexism and misogyny is a disease; feminism is your cure” — were generously shared on Chinese social media.

Living overseas had been what Liu called a “feminist awakening,” allowing her to explore layers of her own identity — as Asian, a woman, and queer, to name a few — in a country where dissidence was not a crime. Though Chinese opponents have sometimes dismissed China’s women’s movement as the result of foreign meddling and “external forces,” Liu saw feminism as engaging problems that had to be understood globally. “They always said democracy is a western disease — that’s their way of wording their propaganda,” Liu said about the Chinese leadership. “But for us, we never think of feminism as a Western term.”

The night culminated at a Cheesecake Factory on the D.C. outskirts. Over dessert, amidst applause, Lu Pin, a visiting scholar at Columbia, stood up to announce the launch of a new U.S.-based NGO, the Chinese Feminist Collective, which had just acquired legal status. She envisioned it as a support network for the next generation of Chinese activists, and a launching pad for activist initiatives back home.

“We need to create new front lines,” Lu said.“Even if we’re in the United States, we can still contribute to Chinese feminism: the topics we can freely discuss here, we may not be able to talk about in China.” With over 328,000 Chinese currently studying in the United States, Lu was optimistic that U.S.-based advocacy could inspire at least some to advance feminist causes when they returned home.

In the meantime, Lu hoped they could share with Americans what they had already learned.

“The Chinese feminist movement has always progressed in this harsh reality,” she said. “Chinese people are very knowledgeable about how to fight a dictatorship.”

Image: Mengwen Cao

Lebanon's protesters: Arrested as civilians, tried by military


Human rights groups call for end to unfair extrajudicial process where children and civil activists are routinely dragged into military courts
A YouStink protester is surrounded by riot police in clashes in Beirut (AFP)

Kareem Chehayeb's pictureKareem Chehayeb-Thursday 26 January 2017
BEIRUT - On 30 January, 14 civilians will face three years in prison in a military court trial for their involvement in #YouStink protests against Lebanon's rubbish crisis.

India mulls reviving colonial-era gold mines with $2 billion reserves

Schoolchildren play in front of an abandoned shaft at Kolar Gold Fields, located in the southern Indian state of Karnataka September 9, 2011. REUTERS/Swetha Gopinath
Schoolchildren play in front of an abandoned shaft at Kolar Gold Fields, located in the southern Indian state of Karnataka September 9, 2011. REUTERS/Swetha Gopinath

By Neha Dasgupta | NEW DELHI-Thu Jan 26, 2017

India is planning to revive a cluster of colonial-era gold mines - shut for 15 years but with an estimated $2.1 billion worth of deposits left - as the world's second-largest importer of the metal looks for ways to cut its trade deficit, officials said.

State-run Mineral Exploration Corp Ltd has started exploring the reserves at Kolar Gold Fields, in the southern state of Karnataka, to get a better estimate of the deposits, according to three government officials and a briefing document prepared by the federal mines ministry that was seen by Reuters.

The ministry has also appointed investment bank SBI Capital to assess the finances of the defunct state-run Bharat Gold Mines Ltd, which controls the mines, and the dues the company owes to workers and the authorities, said the officials, who are involved in the process.

India, the world's biggest gold importer behind China, spends more than $30 billion a year buying gold from abroad, making the metal its second-biggest import item after crude oil.

Gold is a mainstay of Indian culture, serving as the primary vehicle for household savings for hundreds of millions of people in Asia's third-largest economy. Gold jewellery is considered one of the best gifts for gods and humans alike, and the spike in demand during the wedding season that peaks in November and December can move global prices of the metal < XAU=>.

Balvinder Kumar, the top civil servant at the federal mines ministry, said getting the Kolar mines going would help the government bring down its import bill.

Initial Mineral Exploration Corp estimates show reserves worth $1.17 billion in the mines, according to the briefing document. Another $880.28 million in gold-bearing deposits is estimated left over in residual dumps from previous mining operations.

"These mines have huge potential," Kumar said, adding that the initial estimates were conservative. "We feel there is more. The whole belt has a lot of potential in terms of untapped gold."

The document does not give an estimate of how much it would cost to restart the mines.

India imports 900 tonnes to 1,000 tonnes per year, but local gold output is miniscule, at 2 tonnes to 3 tonnes per year.

TROUBLED MINES

The Kolar fields, located about 65 km (40 miles) northeast of the technology hub of Bengaluru, are among the world's deepest gold mines.

Mining was started there by John Taylor and Sons, a British engineering firm, in 1880, when Britain ruled India. The area, now mostly a ghost town, still has the colonial-era clubs, houses and even a golf course that were built for its executives.

India took over Kolar soon after independence in 1947, but struggled to profitably mine the reserves. In 2001, Bharat Gold was forced to cease operations due to mounting losses, the result of a large, unproductive workforce and dated, economically unviable methods of mining.

Over the next 15 years, successive federal and state governments have tried to revive the mines or to sell them off, often disagreeing on the course of action and taking their disputes to the courts.

The two have to agree because the federal government has the "surface right" over the mines, but Karnataka is responsible for granting the licence to operate there. In 2013, Karnataka let Bharat Gold's mining lease expire.

Now, both the federal and the state governments want to have another go at reviving the mines, hoping to learn from past mistakes, according to the briefing document and the officials. The federal government has already sent a request to Karnataka to renew Bharat Gold's mining lease.

The document seen by Reuters says Bharat Gold owes "huge liabilities" to the central and state governments, as well as banks and the electricity authorities in Karnataka. SBI Capital is looking to give an assessment for a one-time settlement of its dues, according to the document and the officials.

The investment bank is expected to give its report by the end of this month, while Mineral Exploration Corp would complete its assessment by July, according to the officials.

If the reports show that mining is viable, the government would seek to restructure Bharat Gold to restart mining there more efficiently, the officials said.

Kumar, the top mining official, said the next step would be to seek the federal cabinet's approval to get the project going.

(Additional reporting by Rajendra Jadhav in MUMBAI; Editing by Paritosh Bansal and Alex Richardson)

Families of slain Filipinos file first legal challenge to drugs war


26th January 2017
FAMILIES of alleged drugs suspects killed by Philippine police petitioned the Supreme Court on Thursday to force police to disclose evidence linking them to narcotics, in the first legal challenge to President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs.
Lawyers representing families of four men killed in a rundown Manila neighbourhood in August, and one survivor, urged the top court to allow scrutiny of police operations because the official accounts were “sheer incongruity” and read like movie plots “from bygone days of Filipino cinema”.
Duterte’s war on drugs has caused an international outcry, with human rights groups alleging widespread summary executions by police operating with impunity.
The tough-talking president said he would stand by police if suspects were killed because they put up violent resistance.
More than 7,000 people have been killed since Duterte took office seven months ago, about 2,250 in anti-drugs operations and the rest still being investigated. Police say many of those deaths are gangs members killing each other though critics blame many deaths on vigilantes in cahoots with police.
The petition asks the top court to compel police to suspend drugs operations in parts of the Quezon City area of Manila, where the four were killed, and make available the surveillance material and intelligence reports that had initially identified the victims as being drugs dealers. The families deny their kin were involved in drugs.
The government vehemently denies sponsoring extrajudicial killings, or police collaboration with assassins.
A spokesman for the Philippine National Police declined to comment on the petition saying the police legal office was studying it and would respond later.
Asked about the lawsuit, Presidential Spokesman Ernesto Abella said authorities had no involvement in extrajudicial killings and Duterte would allow the legal process to take its course.
The petition comes amid muted domestic dissent over a campaign that has broad public support.
Duterte has launched torrents of verbal abuse at anyone who has spoken against the campaign, from rights groups and senators to catholic priests and Western governments.
The complaint said police had fabricated death certificates and incident reports to conceal operations taking place outside their jurisdiction.
It said the petition was only possible because police had failed to kill one of the men, vegetable seller Efren Morillo.
In an interview last year with Reuters, Morillo said he had no involvement in drugs and survived because he played dead. He said he heard his friends plead for their lives before being shot and the only people armed were police.
In a speech on Thursday, Duterte said dozens of police and military had been killed during the crackdown and his message was clear that they could use deadly force to defend themselves.
“I take full legal responsibility,” he said. – Reuters

Human-pig 'chimera embryos' detailed


Pig embryo
JUAN CARLOS IZPISUA BELMONTEImage caption---The embryos were allowed to develop for 28 days

BBCBy James Gallagher-26 January 2017

Embryos that are less than 0.001% human - and the rest pig - have been made and analysed by scientists.

It is the first proof chimeras - named after the mythical lion-goat-serpent monster - can be made by combining material from humans and animals.

However, the scientific report in the journal Cell shows the process is challenging and the aim of growing human organs in animals is distant.

It was described as an "exciting publication" by other researchers.

To create a chimera, human stem cells - the type that can develop into any tissue - are injected into a pig embryo.

Human cells injected into a pig embryo
JUAN CARLOS IZPISUA BELMONTEImage caption---The spherical pig embryo is held in place while a tiny needle is used to inject human cells

The embryo - now a mix of human and pig - is then implanted into a sow for up to one month.
The process appears very inefficient - of the 2,075 embryos implanted only 186 continued to develop up to the 28-day stage.

But crucially there were signs that human cells were functioning - albeit as a tiny fraction of the total tissue - as part of a human-pig chimera.

"This is the first time that human cells are seen growing inside a large animal," Prof Juan Carlos Izpisua Belmonte, from the Salk Institute, told the BBC News website.

Human and pig cells
JUAN CARLOS IZPISUA BELMONTEImage caption---Human cells, coloured green, were found in the four-week-old embryo

Commenting on the inefficiency, Prof Belmonte said: "Humans and pigs are separated by a long time in evolution."

Development in the womb is also much faster in pigs - pregnancy lasts less than four months compared with about nine in people.

"It is like a freeway with one car going much faster than another - you're more likely to have an accident," Prof Belmonte said.

He added there was a "long distance" between now and growing animals with human organs - such as a heart, pancreas or liver, that can be transplanted.

However, in the meantime the Salk researchers argue that making chimeras with more human tissue could be useful for:
  • screening drugs before human trials
  • studying the onset of human diseases
  • understanding the earliest stages of human embryo development.
  • explaining differences between organs in different species
Dr Jun Wu, part of the research team, told the BBC: "[Getting the efficiency] in the range of 0.1% to 1% human cells should be enough.

"Even at this early stage [28-days], billions of cells in the embryo would have millions of human cells, then testing would be meaningful and practical."

There was no evidence that human cells were integrating into the early form of brain tissue.

Organ breakthrough

On Wednesday, a study in the journal Nature showed how organs could be grown in one species for use in another: by making some room.

Rats were genetically modified so they could not produce a pancreas - the organ crucial for controlling blood sugar levels.

Mouse stem cells were injected in the deficient rat embryos, promptly took advantage of the missing pancreas and grew a mouse one there instead.

This was then transplanted back into mice to treat diabetes.

The work to try this in humans and pigs is already under way.

How gene editing works

Although in the long term cows look likely to be a better host for human organs as both cow and human pregnancies last about nine months.

The field is also ethically charged, the US National Institutes of Health at one point imposed a moratorium on funding the experiments.

The researchers have done only research that is legal, but they are aware of the controversy.

Prof Belmonte said: "We are restricting development to one month in the pig, the reason is this is enough for us now to understand how cells mix, differentiate and integrate.

"One possibility is to let these animals be born, but that is not something we should allow to happen at this point.

"Not everything that science can do we should do, we are not living in a niche in lab, we live with other people - and society needs to decide what can be done.

Dr Wu said: "When the public hears the world chimera it is always associated with Greek mythology, there is always this associated fear.

"But angels are chimeras, it can be a positive image and hopefully help with a worldwide shortage of organs, not create a monster."

Chimera

THINKSTOCKImage caption-Chimeras are named after the fire-breathing beast of Greek mythology

Prof Bruce Whitelaw, the interim director of the Roslin Institute where Dolly the sheep was cloned, said: "This is an exciting publication.

"It clearly demonstrates that human stem cells introduced into the early pig embryo can form a human-pig chimera.

"This is the first scientific publication to achieve this result.

"This is a first in the development of chimeric animal production and paves the way for significant advances in our understanding of development in the embryo and hints towards future novel biotech applications."

Prof Robin Lovell-Badge, from the Francis Crick Institute, said: "An ability to make interspecies chimeras would be valuable in terms of providing basic understanding of species differences in embryo development and organ function.

"It would also offer the possibility of growing human tissues or organs in animals for transplants - although this is still a long way off.

"The goals of this study are therefore highly laudable."

Follow James on Twitter.

Wednesday, January 25, 2017

SRI LANKA/WORLD: ‘Silenced Shadows’: A fine presentation of compassionate resistance Poetry in Sri Lanka


By Basil Fernando-January 25, 2017

The Amnesty Intentional has published a collection of poems titled ‘ Silenced Shadows’. It’s a collection of 15 poems and translations of the said poems into all three languages, Sinhalese, Tamil and English. Originally, Amnesty International called for poems on enforced disappearances in Sri Lanka and selected 15 poems for publication. Five of the poems were written in Sinhala , five in Tamil and five in English. Now a very powerful collection of poems are available for readers in all the three languages.

The 20th Century generated a genre of poems which are now known as compassionate and resistance poetry. This particular genre of poetry was a response of the creative minds throughout the world to the changed circumstances of the 20th Century which can also be characterised as the most brutalised century in the human history. As the life got more and more inhumane and forms of human cruelty became one of the most shocking experiences of this century, the creative minds responded in reasserted the basic human values and protested against the widespread brutalisation and dehumanisation.

Sri Lanka was no exception to this general trend of decadence, violence and degrading the humanity and the human civilisation itself. Insurgencies And counterterrorism, both relied on violence in its most extreme forms and the result was a widespread fear that was spread through the entire country. South, and North and the East were all affected by forms of violence which was hitherto unknown in the island. This island which was once known as the paradise of the orient began to manifest many aspects of hell not only for many persons but for the nation as a whole.

Most forceful expression of this situation was the enforced disappearances that took place in large scale in all parts of Sri Lanka. Enforced disappearances had all the characteristics of a perfected violence which combines extreme efficiency in execution of persons on the one hand and on the other, every form of the attempt to erase all evidence so that any attempt to ensure a justice to the victims will be almost impossible. Perfection of efficiency in execution is one of the most prominent aspects of 20th century violence. The gas chambers of the fascist regime of Hitler; the CHEKA of the socialist and communist Russia, ending also with the vast scale extrajudicial execution of persons and the most brutal forms of imprisonments known as the Gulag. Many other countries also saw various new forms of highly sophisticated violence and Israel became the agent of spreading such ideologies and techniques in that direction. In the Arab world, many forms of violence were experimented with both by international power blocks as well as local rulers and local insurgents known also as terrorists. A narration of all the experiences of most brutal forms of violence in the 20th and 21st centuries will be a task that would take a very long time and very many pages. It is suffice to say that there was a generalised situation of easily turning to the most efficient forms of execution of persons and also torturing of human beings.

Sri Lanka is now known as the second in the list of countries where enforced disappearances have been widespread. This means there are tens and thousands of families and literally hundred thousands more individuals who are affected directly by the disappearances of persons who are either a family member or somebody who had been closely known as a friend or a neighbour. Vast number of persons in the country in all parts of the country, are carrying within themselves a deep forms of agony and suffering and anxieties and worries and above all an overwhelming sense of fear and distrust as a result of this widespread practice of enforced disappearances.

The collection of poems, Silenced Shadows has placed in the hands of a reader a very rich and moving narratives that brings the reader to the close experience of those who have suffered from this form of brutality but the poets have placed this vastly traumatic experience within a humanistic perspective of enormous love for those who have suffered. The poets have become protesters. They protest in the name of most deeply held beliefs that they carry within themselves, such as deep love for their family members, a deeper love for humanity and a deep sense of disgust at the types of violence that the people have suffered in Sri Lanka.

On a separate Article we will deal with the individual contributions of the poets and try to present the perspectives within these separate pieces of creative art. At this stage we would recommend this for all readers and we hope that the book will be available to everyone in Sri Lanka. As the books have versions in all there languages, Sinhala Tamil and English that rare the most spoken languages in Sir Lanka , the publishers of this book have made a very valuable contribution to a piece of very powerful creative writing which should hope to influence the thoughts of persons of all communities.

Enforced disappearances in a theme that is a common experience of all irrespective what ideas, or ideologies and beliefs, and faiths that they may have. When the very foundations of humanity is being challenged, and when there are attempts to respond to such challenge in a powerful way by creative minds of community, it is the duty of the community to take a serious note of such expressions of very deeply concerned persons.

We believe that this book is a suitable piece of material to be introduced to all schools, universities and educational institutions; particularly it should be among the texts that are used in education of law, political science and all social sciences. Also this is extremely useful as they could see how in the name of efficiency facilitated by modern science extreme acts of brutality is being committed and reflecting on such experiences they could form their own perspectives about what contributions that they could make in order to avoid such terrible experiences.

The book will also be very extremely useful for all those who are leading opinion in Sri Lanka. The kind of in-depth reflections that is found in these poems will help to improve the quality of writing in all three languages and thereby help to generate a new reflections and new forms of enlightenment in this island which has unfortunately faced very hard experiences in eh recent decades.

Chief Minister writes to Sri Lankan president as Vavuniya hunger strike continues for third day


Home25 Jan  2017
Hunger strikers in Vavuniya continued their protest for a third day, demanding information about their missing family members.
One woman participating in the fast was hospitalised after losing consciousness.
C V Wigneswaran, Chief Minister of the Northern Province wrote to the Sri Lankan president, urging him to send a senior minister to give the hunger strikers some assurance and to set a time frame for ascertaining the whereabouts of the disappeared persons on behalf oh whom the campaign was taking place.
See the Chief Minister’s letter below.
Your Excellency,
You may be aware of the Fast undertaken by the relatives of those who are Missing and those Political Prisoners in incarceration opposite Vavuniya Police Station. For the third day they have not consumed any water let alone food. Many are quite old and are now looking extremely tired. Soon they would get dehydrated. Unless something is done immediately we may lose the valuable lives of some of the Satyagrahis.
May I be permitted to say that this is not the first time I had occasion to address letters of this nature to Your Excellency. On earlier occasions too I had written on behalf of fasting persons and Your Excellency was pleased to take steps in that regard though nothing concrete came about in the long run.
Sir! your Government came into power inter alia with the goodwill and franchise of our people. There were considerable expectation when Your Excellency was elected as President. Generally your Government opined that the PTA must be withdrawn, that Political Prisoners must be given an Amnesty, that immediate steps must be taken to inquire into the fate of Missing persons and so on.
The Office of Missing Persons is presently only in name. It has no teeth. Even if it starts functioning in earnest the Panel of Inquirers cannot take effective steps against Military suspects. They need to forward their views to the Courts, consequently resulting in heavy delay.
The fasting individuals are very weak and old. Anything could happen.
May I suggest as follows –
01.  That your Excellency direct a Senior Minister to go over to Vavuniya and give the Satyagrahis some assurance.
02.  A time frame be given for proper steps to be taken with regard to those Missing and / or Disappeared to ascertain their whereabouts.
03.  One of the fasting individuals, a female, is holding a picture with her daughter standing beside Your Excellency. At least her whereabouts could be immediately ascertained and she could be released to her mother.
04.  Once the PTA is withdrawn automatically many political prisoners would have to be released. Therefore the withdrawal of the PTA must be undertaken immediately. After all the Government has given an assurance to the world at large that the PTA would be withdrawn.
Your Excellency would have come to know that at Keppapilavu lands other than those of the displaced were earmarked for release today by the Army. Steps need to be taken to allow those displaced to go back to their own lands.
I appeal to Your Excellency to kindly take immediate steps to wean away the fasting individuals from proceeding with their fast. Any delay would be to the detriment of all of us.
The tremendous expectations and hopes our people placed in Your Excellency seem to be eroding in recent times and Your Excellency must take note of their feelings not only for political reasons but also for ethnical and humanitarian reasons. I am sure Your Excellency will not let down our people.
Thanking you.
Sincerely
Justice C.V.Wigneswaran
Chief Minister,
Northern Province 

A Midsummer Night’s Dream at PM’s Office

 ‘These will be going to the world as the official recommendations and observations of a task force appointed by the Prime Minister and which functioned under the Prime Minister’s Office and which held meetings with stakeholders throughout the country.’


By C. A. Chandraprema-January 25, 2017, 12:00 pm


Former President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga receiving controversial report prepared by 11-member Consultation Task Force on Transitional Justice and Reconciliation at the Presidential Secretariat on Jan 3.

Writing to Reconcile: A personal journey



Image from Write to Reconcile

SHYAM SELVADURAI on 01/25/2017

Last fall, in Toronto, I went to see a play that was written by one of the writers in this anthology, Sindhuri Nandakumar. The play was called A Crease in my Sari and told the story of a young Sri Lankan Tamil woman, born and raised in Canada who found herself in a relationship with a Sinhalese man, whom she had met in the coffee shop. The young woman, Maheshwari, had been purposely raised by her mother in a western suburb of Toronto, away from other Tamils who generally live in the eastern suburbs. So, apart from one Tamil friend, she had no real contact with her community and heritage. Now, however, finding herself falling in love with this Sinhalese man, Chanaka, she also found herself confronted with the realities of the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka. Chanaka, with all the naïve optimism that majority communities can afford to have, believed that love conquers all and that their ethnic difference was no barrier. This was partly his charm for her.

But the history of the country both young people had left was insistent, and it would not allow either of them to ignore it. It was the winter of 2009 and the war in Sri Lanka was in its last phase. Soon, Sri Lankan Tamils in Toronto were protesting against the Sri Lankan government, most famously carrying out a sit-down in the middle of a Toronto expressway. Maheshwari discovered that Chanaka’s father was in the army, and that Chanaka believed this was a just war, a humanitarian effort with zero casualties. As the play progressed, Maheshwari grew increasingly politicised and, in the end, their relationship was unable to bear the weight of history.

After the show as I walked to the train, I was lost in thought remembering my own thoughts and feelings during those months in 2009; remembering how I didn’t want to join the Tamil protesters because they were protesting under the Tiger flag, but how I also couldn’t join the counter-protest by the Sinhalese in Toronto, as they had taken up the zero casualties-humanitarian approach, which I found ridiculous.

I hadn’t thought about those months in a long time. In fact, I hadn’t considered them as constituting a “memory”, by which I mean something that one recalls as a seminal moment, something worth mulling over. The protests and news from Sri Lanka had taken their place in the daily busyness of my life – made up of teaching, marking papers, shovelling snow, waiting in the freezing cold for buses, cooking, shopping, cleaning, going to the opera and theatre, and reading some good books. A good part of those months was spent worrying about the health of my ailing aunt, making many long trips to an eastern suburb to help her cope, taking turns with my sisters in the hospital when she was admitted for a few weeks. All these realities diluted the effect of the protests and the end of the war.

Yet now, because of the play, those months had become a “memory” – a historic moment I had lived through. Because of the play, the memory of my thoughts and feelings and awareness of the ending war had detached themselves from the multiple distractions and busyness of my days, as lived in that time, and become crystallised as a memory. Had become metaphorized.

This is what good narrative does. It takes an experience or moment in history, isolates it from the quotidian business of living, and holds it up to us – that moment now glistening like a newly cut gem. The experiences of the young man and woman in the play were very different from my own. I was much older than them, for one. Unlike the woman, I was born and brought up in Sri Lanka and had, over the years, maintained contact with the country. Unlike her, I was very clear on what my position was during those last months of the war. Unlike the young man, I had no naivety about what was going on over there. And yet, different as our experiences were, the narrative I had seen unfolding on the stage had rung a bell in me; had brought to the surface my own experience of that historical moment, lifted now out of the soil of the mundane. Good narrative does this. It opens up our own memories and feelings and helps crystallise them.

It is my hope that this anthology performs a similar function. Though the experiences the reader reads about might be very different from their own, I hope reading these pieces lifts their own experience of the war and post-war period out of the mud of daily existence and raises it up to the light. I hope that they keep these memories with them, because to forget them means that our violent shared history runs the risk of repeating itself.

This is the third year of Write to Reconcile and very likely its last. It is hard to believe that this project, that I conjured up in my head in 2012, ever came to fruition, and even harder to believe that there have been three instalments of Write to Reconcile, each producing an anthology of work about the war and post-war situation.

For those who are not familiar with Write to Reconcile, a short word on it: the project was born out of my belief that good literature has the power to heal wounds in a situation like Sri Lanka’s, by initiating a conversation between its divided communities. Good literature gives people a chance to look into the lives and experiences and points of view of the “other”; gives them a chance to see the “other” as human just like them, with points of view that, although different from their own, are also valid.

At the beginning of each Write to Reconcile, we put out an island-wide call for applications and selected participants to represent a diversity of experiences – ethnic, religious, geographic, and economic. The project was open to Sri Lankans living in the country and from the diaspora between the ages of 18-29. It was also open to all Sri Lankan teachers and professors, as I hoped that the creative writing craft I taught during the programme would be used by them in their classrooms. The entire programme was free of charge. At the beginning of each Write to Reconcile, the selected participants met for a week-long residential workshop, during which they got to know each other and also learnt the craft of creative writing from me. We made it a point to hold these workshops in different parts of the island with the goal of exposing participants to the different ways the war affected different communities. Past Write to Reconcile workshops were held in Colombo, Jaffna, Kandy and Batticaloa.  This time, the residential workshop took place in Anuradhapura, because I was keen to expose participants to the Sinhala Border Villages and the Vanni, in the hopes that the experiences of these people might be reflected in the anthology – either directly, or as a felt experience transformed into another context. The Vanni, where the last phase of the war was fought, bears the deepest scars of the war. We were very lucky to meet so many people there who were willing to share their experiences with us, to let us into their lives and painful histories. I think we were all deeply moved and changed by this experience.

Following the residential workshop, each year Write to Reconcile conducted an online forum where every participant workshopped 2 pieces of writing. This year, I introduced an innovation to the forums by allowing a selected amount of diaspora participants, who had not attended the residential workshop, a chance to participate only online. I felt this increased access for diaspora participants, many of who do not have the means or the time to fly to Sri Lanka. Following the online forums, each participant picked one of their submissions and worked with me to refine it for this anthology.

One of the questions I am often asked is how Write to Reconcile has influenced and changed my own writing. This is a difficult question to answer because “influence” works in a strange and indirect way. Often it takes many years for a period or important incident to work its way into my fiction. So, time and distance are necessary before I will be able to know how this program has affected my own work.

There are, however, some things I can say about how Write to Reconcile has changed me as a person. Before I started this project, I had very little contact or even access to other Sri Lankans outside my own family and social circles. Sri Lankans outside of my social world seemed as foreign as non-Sri Lankans. I didn’t know how to bring myself, with my own sets of beliefs, attitudes and personality, into interaction with these other Sri Lankans.  The 74 participants I have worked with over the three Write to Reconcile programmes were carefully selected to represent the widest spectrum possible of Sri Lankans. They have, through their generous goodwill, given me a chance to learn how to bring myself into an easy relationship with Sri Lankans different from myself. I have also got to know the thoughts and feelings of the younger generation, all of who were born and raised during the war and to whom this post war period – which was the “normal” my generation longed to return to – is strange and abnormal. I have got to know these 74 people not so much in a social way but, rather, through editing their work. You really do get to know the mind and soul of a person when you pore over their words for long periods, when you spend a lot of time in the worlds they have created, absorbing their unique vision and then helping them shape and sharpen that vision. It is a very profound way of “knowing”, to engage in this way. It is this “knowing” I take with me from the project, this feeling that I have lived and experienced these other different realities; which has also made me socially at ease in these other realities. I am curious and excited to see in what way my work on Write to Reconcile will change my own work some years from now.


Keppapilavu villagers protest, despite military threats


Home25 Jan  2017

The people of Keppapilavu, Mullaitivu held a protest to coincide with the visit of the Sri Lankan president, demanding their own lands be returned to them.
Although President Maithripala Sirisena cancelled his visit, reportedly due to poor weather, a public function was held to mark the return of some Mullaitivu lands.
However many displaced Tamils maintain that the released lands are not usually their original properties, but alternative lands.
The Keppapilavu residents protested, with boards demanding they be allowed to return to their traditional lands and homes.
Earlier in the week Keppapilavu locals were warned against protesting, by Sri Lankan army officials, who threatened that the villagers would remain permanently displaced if they did not accept the alternative lands and compensation that were offered to them.

GL Peiris – In Most Self-Righteous & Most Outrageous Form


Colombo Telegraph
By Shyamon Jayasinghe –January 25, 2017
Shyamon Jayasinghe
Shyamon Jayasinghe
Yesterday’s (24/1/17) Daily Mirror reported Professor GL Peiris (GLP) making a comically self-righteous and tragically outrageous statement that former Central Bank Governor, Arjuna Mahendran, should not be allowed to attend any official state delegations, official meetings and take part in any official discussions. “Otherwise people get the notion that he is not guilty and that is why he is still engaged in State decision-making.”
I was one of the many who welcomed GL’s entry into politics in Sri Lanka- many decades back. Here, I thought, is a highly educated man-a Rhodes Scholar and a former Professor of Law in our Universities. I think it was Chandrika (CBK) who had invited him and, despite my reservations about CBK as an amoral non-doer, I had cast aside that reservation for a moment. My predictions went wrong before long. GLP evinced repeated signs of being a failure as a Minister of government and he didn’t impress at all. Did he jump on board with Ranil Wickremesinghe’s short-lived government? Ranil has been a early detector of people’s abilities and so he had little patience with GLP. The Professor left the Ranil -fold before long. He joined the UPFA government of Mahinda Rajapaksa and was party to the most corrupt, oppressive and abusive regime that my country ever had. I do not know about the times of our Kings. GL was first Minister of Foreign Affairs and later Minister of Export Development & Trade under that totalitarian system of misrule. Can he count any one bit of significant policy outcome for which he could claim authorship under that regime?
Peiris
Peiris
This absence of any policy outcomes was common among almost all Ministers in the Rajapaksa Regime. For policy formulation became the territory of the siblings in an operation that was unashamedly a family affair. Bandula Gunawardane was no good in education, for instance. Johnny was useless in Trade & Cooperatives except to feather his nest. So with the rest of the incompetent bunch. Ministers were left to do their own personal harvesting and be prepared with their hands to vote for family proposals. And so we have patriot Wimal Weerawansa now languishing in jail-under arrest.
To do justice, GLP did not resort to looting. He lives a bit in the corner of my softness because of that. GLP is a man with his own means and accreditation. My worry of late, however, is not about GLP’s incompetence but of his passion to back the High King at all unconscionable cost. In the process, GLP has almost unconsciously been dragged into the lying breed of pollies that my country now boasts of. Our brand of tea has been surpassed in the international consciousness! The old cliche says, “if one lies with the dogs, one awakes with ticks.” GLP is getting ticks all over-it seems!
I have deliberately employed the adjectives “self -righteous,’ and ‘outrageous,’ at the opening paragraph. In addressing the Press (reported in the Daily Mirror above) GLP talks with an unreal sense of self-righteousness in attacking Arjuna Mahendran and the general charge of public corruption. Was GLP sleeping like Rip Van Winkle during the ten year period of the government of which he had been Minister? Suddenly waken up to ‘see’ corruption in our Central Bank? An example from the CB of his time were the Greek Bonds where our country lost millions. The CB then conducted business with Arjuna’s son-in-law’s very same Perpetual Treasuries. Bonds were, then, given on private placements where chosen cronies got the deals. GLP had been silent at this fraudulent practice of fattening cronies. Furthermore, Perpetual Treasuries had at that time unloaded bonds on the ETF. The next of a legion of deals was the infamous hedging exercise where we lost billions. GLP had been silent then because he was asleep.