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, February 18, 2017

Under enigmatic Patel, Indians failing to read central bank policy

The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) Governor Urjit Patel speaks during a news conference after the bimonthly monetary policy review in Mumbai, India December 7, 2016. REUTERS/Danish Siddiqui/File Photo

By Suvashree Choudhury and Rafael Nam | MUMBAI- Sat Feb 18, 2017 

Denny Jose, a small-town caterer in Kerala, was closely watching the RBI meeting last week.

Newspapers and markets were forecasting the Reserve Bank of India would cut its key rate by a quarter of a percentage point. But the RBI held rates and moved to a "neutral" policy stance, signaling an end to India's longest monetary easing cycle since the 2008-09 global financial crisis.

The move surprised Jose and crimped his expansion plans.

"We were planning to buy two commercial vehicles to transport food and were expecting a rate cut. Now, we're forced to defer that plan."

He was not the only one wrong-footed.

Under governor Urjit Patel, the RBI has significantly reduced communication with markets after he took over in September, an analysis of his public comments shows.

Some critics say that a lack of clarity is pushing bond yields higher, and that in turn could send interest rates higher and restrain economic growth.

A government source familiar with the RBI's thinking said that with modifications to the laws governing the bank and the introduction of a monetary policy committee, the governor was no longer sole arbiter of policy as prior RBI governors had been.

His views would not be reflective of the entire MPC, added the source, who declined to be named.

In an interview televised on Friday, Patel told CNBC-TV18 that the RBI was open to "valid" criticism.

"It's important that one grows thick-skinned fast in this business and I think we have done that," Patel said.

"We have gone about our work. We had undertaken major challenges during these past few months and valid criticism is something that we are open for and we take it in the spirit in which it is given and try to improve ourselves."

Central bankers around the world keep moves in benchmark interest rates a closely held secret before they are announced, but governors and other senior policy makers tend to guide markets, helping to avoid surprises that may cause volatility.

In his first five months in office, during which Prime Minister Narendra Modi abruptly abolished high-value currency notes and roiled economic activity, Patel gave nine public speeches or press conferences, according to Reuters analysis.

That was well below the level of his two predecessors in comparable periods of their tenures.
Moreover, Patel has presided over three rate decisions so far, and a majority of economists polled by Reuters before the decisions got it wrong each time.

Under both his predecessors, most economists accurately called the rate direction in the large majority of cases.

"The government's trying to boost growth that's been hit by demonetisation, but central bank communication is working in the opposite direction," said a senior Mumbai-based treasury banker, who asked not be named.

Some market watchers say it is early in Patel's tenure and that he should be given more time.
"He is dealing with ... the most radical executive decision in modern India's monetary history. In all fairness many are being too harsh on him," said Nishant Berlia, management board member at Apeejay Stya investment group.

BREEDING DEFENSIVENESS?

In December, benchmark 10-year bond yields rose at their fastest pace since the 2013 rupee crisis. And last week's surprise move to a "neutral" stance sent yields up by 30 basis points. Some traders said insufficient information about the RBI's thinking was one of the main reasons for the rise.

"Uncertainty in markets breeds defensiveness," said the treasury banker.

The sharp increase in yields has meant a lost opportunity for state-backed transmission company Power Grid Corp (PGRD.NS), which had decided to wait for a rate cut before issuing bonds to finance capital expenditure, said Ajay Manglunia, head of fixed income markets at Edelweiss, one of the underwriters.

The company was likely to issue bonds worth 20-25 billion rupees ($300-375 million), Manglunia added.

An official with direct knowledge of the matter said Power Grid had deferred the issuance and was looking for alternative funding sources. Power Grid did not respond to a request for comment.

"The volatility in the market has gone to such a level that credible investment is taking time to re-surface and issuers may be better off deferring the transactions," said Jayen Shah, head of debt capital markets at IDFC Bank.

The government source said the market had "misread" the role of the MPC within the confines of amendments to legislation, and noted that the changes made "inflation a much bigger focus for the committee with growth being secondary."

Defending the abrupt change in policy stance, Patel told CNBC-TV18 the RBI needed to look beyond muted headline inflation as it aims to achieve 4 percent consumer inflation.

Patel, a deputy governor since 2013, had been known within the RBI as reserved, insiders have said. He is widely regarded as having the professional and academic credentials to succeed, but the governor's role also involves communicating, some bankers say.

In public so far, he has done that significantly less than his two predecessors.

Duvvuri Subbarao, who started a five-year tenure in 2008 at the start of the global financial crisis, spoke 16 times in his first five months as governor, including speeches, interviews and policy meetings.

Raghuram Rajan, who took over in 2013 amid the rupee crisis, spoke 20 times in a similar period.

"It's important that the RBI clarifies interpretation of economic events and the likely direction of economic policies at times of uncertainty so that the market worries about the right things and doesn't get into a tizzy about the wrong ones," Rajan said in 2013.

QUIET COMMITTEE

Unlike under Patel's two predecessors, the RBI now steers its decisions through the six-member MPC, but other than Patel, board members have not yet spoken publicly.

"The MPC communication strategy needs time to evolve," said the government source, adding that over time, MPC members were likely to give more speeches and interviews as the situation normalized post-demonetisation.

One MPC member declined to comment and the others were not immediately reachable for comment.

The relative silence is stark when compared with some other central banks and their monetary policy committees.

U.S. Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen, for example, spoke publicly some 15 times in her first five months in various forums, aside from public remarks made by fellow monetary policy makers in the United States. The U.S. economy is, though, several times larger than India's.

Both Subbarao and Rajan used their interactions to soothe investors and achieve their goals.
Rajan, for example, told markets in November, 2013 that there was no "fundamental reason" for undue volatility in the rupee.

That helped soothe markets at the time; the 10-year benchmark bond yield eased by nearly 50 basis points in the following two months and the rupee recovered 4 percent during the same period.

Patel's relative reticence was perhaps most pronounced amid the extended cash crunch caused by demonetisation. Between Nov. 8 and the end of the year, Patel gave two interviews and appeared at two press conferences, leading to some criticism from the local media.

Saibal Sengupta, Chief Financial Officer of electronic goods maker Usha International, said he saw sales slide as liquidity evaporated in this period. Although he does not blame Patel personally, he says the RBI should have been more communicative.

"RBI communication definitely plays a critical role and in terms of demonetisation it obviously has a major impact," he said. "Communication should have been much better."

The government source said New Delhi was in the driver's seat during demonetisation and the RBI was the operating arm, so communication during that period was largely left to the government with the RBI focused on the mechanics.

(Additional reporting by Aby Jose Koilparambil in BENGALURU, Krishna Merchant from IFR in Singapore; Editing by Euan Rocha and Mike Collett-White)

Read Mark Zuckerberg’s full 6,000-word letter on Facebook’s global ambitions

Building Global Community

BY 
To our community,

On our journey to connect the world, we often discuss products we're building and updates on our business. Today I want to focus on the most important question of all: are we building the world we all want?

History is the story of how we've learned to come together in ever greater numbers -- from tribes to cities to nations. At each step, we built social infrastructure like communities, media and governments to empower us to achieve things we couldn't on our own.

Philippines: Thousands of Catholics march against war on drugs, death penalty


Participants join a "procession" against plans to reimpose death penalty, promote contraceptives and intensify drug war during "Walk for Life" in Luneta park, metro Manila, Philippines February 18, 2017. Source: Reuters/Romeo Ranoco
18th February 2017
THOUSANDS of Roman Catholics marched in the Philippines capital Manila on Saturday in the biggest gathering denouncing extra-judicial killings and a government plan to reimpose the death penalty for criminals.
Dubbed a “Walk for Life” prayer rally and endorsed by the Catholic Bishops Conference of the Philippines (CBCP), the gathering came just days after the church launched its strongest attack against President Rodrigo Duterte’s war on drugs.
Organisers claimed as many as 50,000 people took part in the march toward Manila’s Rizal Park, while about 10,000 based on police estimates stayed to hear speeches.
More than 7,600 people have been killed since Duterte launched his anti-drugs campaign seven months ago. More than 2,500 died in shootouts during raids and sting operations, according to the police.
Amid mounting criticism about a surge in killings, Duterte said on Saturday that the campaign was “by and large successful”.
Speaking at the Philippine Military Academy’s alumni homecoming in Baguio City, he said the drug problem was more complex than he initially thought, prompting him to seek military support.
“I need the help of each one, especially the military, not for social control but protection (for) the citizens from the lawless, the reckless, and the selfish,” the firebrand leader said.
Both the government and police have denied that extrajudicial killings have taken place. But human rights groups believe many deaths that police had attributed to vigilantes were carried out by assassins likely colluding with police.
“We cannot teach that killing is wrong by killing those who kill. It also increases the number of killers,” CBCP president Lingayen-Dagupan Archbishop Socrates Villegas said in a statement.
Archbishop of Manila, Luis Antonio Tagle, delivers a message to the participants of the “procession” against plans to reimpose death penalty, promote contraceptives and intensify drug war during “Walk for Life” in Luneta park, metro Manila, Philippines February 18, 2017. Source: Reuters/Romeo Ranoco
Manila Archbishop Luis Antonio Cardinal Tagle, who also joined the rally, called for strengthening and promoting the culture of non-violent movements.
In its most strongly worded attack on the crackdown on drug pushers and users, a CBCP pastoral letter read out at services across the country early this month said killing people was not the answer to trafficking of illegal drugs.
Nearly 80 percent of the Philippines’ 100 million people are Catholic and until recently the church had been hesitant to criticise Duterte’s war on drugs.
Senator Leila de Lima, a staunch critic of Duterte’s war on drugs now facing three drug-related charges, also joined the rally. She said the charges were meant to silence her.
“There’s no other reason because I’m innocent and not at all involved in the drug trade,” she said. “I’m here with the people because of our shared thoughts and opinion, and shared views, and shared convictions.”
Presidential spokesman Ernesto Abella did not immediately respond to Reuters’ request for reaction about Saturday’s rally. – Reuters

Face transplant recipient overwhelmed by result


In this Jan. 25, 2017, photo, face transplant recipient Andy Sandness is hugged by Dr. Samir Mardini, who performed his surgery. You can see light scarring under his eyes and across his temples.
The surgery took 56 hours and involved a medical team of 60-AP

BBC18 February 2017

On 16 June last year, Andy Sandness was wheeled into an operating theatre at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, to undergo one of the rarest surgeries in the world.

Three weeks later, he would gaze in a mirror, unsure what he would see.

Reflected back at him was the face of another man: the nose, cheeks, mouth, lips, jaw, chin and even the teeth of his donor, Calen Ross.

What the two men had in common was that they had both, at the age of 21, turned a gun on themselves.

Unable to speak clearly after seeing his new face, Mr Sandness wrote a note for his doctors and family to read: "Far exceeded my expectations."


      --Andy Sandness gets a new face after trying to kill himself

Andy Sandness before his surgery. His face is heavily scarred and his mouth is only an inch wide. He wears a prosthetic nose.
ERIC M. SHEAHAN/MAYO CLINIC/APImage caption---At the medical centre before his face transplant surgery


Mr Sandness, from Wyoming, was left with a face almost completely destroyed after his attempt on his life in 2006.


After extensive surgery, he still told people he had been in a hunting accident to explain his appearance.

This undated photo provided by Andy Sandness shows him before his injuries in 2006

Mr Sandness says he instantly knew he had made a terrible mistake after his suicide attempt in 2006

Mr Ross, who lived in Minnesota, did not survive when he shot himself in early June 2016, leaving behind a pregnant and devastated widow, Lily.

She was committed to fulfilling her late husband's wish to be an organ donor but was uneasy about the prospect of another man taking his face.

"I didn't want to walk around and all of a sudden see Calen," she told the Associated Press.

But she gave her consent after being reassured that Mr Sandness had his own eyes and forehead and would not be identifiable as her husband.

Dr Samir Mardani shows Andy, who is in a wheelchair and hospital gown, pictures of his children moments before they go into surgery. Both are smiling.

ERIC M. SHEAHAN/MAYO CLINIC/APImage caption--Dr Samir Mardani shows Andy pictures of his children moments before they go into surgery. The two say they are as close as brothers

Dr Samir Mardani, a specialist in facial reconstruction, spent more than 50 Saturdays over three years practising the surgery and transplanting the faces of cadaver heads.

They had estimated it would take years to find a matching donor, but five months after Mr Sandness was put on a donor waiting list - a match, in Mr Calen, was found.

The delicate and complex procedure included identifying nerve branches on the faces of both men and using electric currents to determine their function - smiling, or opening and closing the eyes, for example.

Dr Mardani stands next to Andy's hospital bed as he recovers from surgery
ERIC M. SHEAHAN/MAYO CLINIC /APImage caption--It was the first face transplant surgery at the medical centre

In this Jan. 24, 2017, photo, face transplant recipient Andy Sandness looks in a mirror during an appointment with physical therapist Helga Smars, right, at Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minn
Andy Sandness plans to return to Wyoming and work as an electrician

This was crucial for Mr Sandness to be able to do those things with his new face.

Mr Sandness, now 31, and Lily have not met. But he has written her a letter, in which he spoke of her husband's favourite things.

"He's still going to continue to love hunting and fishing and dogs - through me," he wrote.

An undated photo provided by his wife, Lilly, shows Calen
This undated photo of Calen Ross was provided by his wife

SRI LANKA TJ PROCESS TOO SLOW AND NON-TRANSPARENT, AMNESTY TELLS UNHRC 34.


Image: Participant mother to in a struggle get their occupied land back take a rest in front of Military warning.  (Feb 2017).

Sri Lanka Brief

17/02/2017

Sri Lanka committed with Resolution 30/1 to undertake a comprehensive approach to dealing with the past, including ensuring truth, justice, reparation and non-recurrence for human rights violations and abuses. This is an important step towards acknowledging the traumatic experiences of many thousands of victims over decades of armed conflict and insurgency, and accepting its obligations to provide them with effective remedies. Eighteen months later, while some progress has been made, the process has been too slow and non-transparent. Mixed messages from government officials are further eroding the confidence of thousands of families which have suffered deaths and disappearances, material losses and deep physical and psychological harm. Public frustration is evident over the slow pace of progress on these and other official undertakings, such as the concurrent reform of Sri Lanka’s Constitution, anti-corruption efforts and efforts to end police torture.

The number of cases potentially covered by the four mechanisms that the government has committed to establish – an office on missing persons, an office for reparations, a judicial mechanism with a special counsel, and a truth justice, reconciliation and non-recurrence commission – is vast. Former President and head of its Office for National Unity and Reconciliation, Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga, acknowledged that Sri Lanka had received 65,000 complaints of enforced disappearances since 1994 and it is likely that many thousands more have gone unreported. Other alleged violations and abuses include: arbitrary arrest and detention; sexual violence; extrajudicial executions; intentional attacks on civilians and protected buildings such as hospitals; the obstruction of humanitarian relief and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam’s conscription, enlistment and use of child soldiers and use of civilians as human shields during the armed conflict that ended in 2009. Torture has been common practice for decades and remains a matter of on-going and serious concern.

When Sri Lanka co-sponsored Resolution 30/1 in October 2015, it welcomed the participation of international investigators, prosecutors and judges. It must not back away from this commitment. 

International support will enhance the capacity of Sri Lankan institutions to deal with this large workload effectively. It will also help encourage trust and a perception of fairness on the part of victims, many of whom express deep disillusionment regarding the implementation of Sri Lanka’s commitments.

Implementing the Findings of the Consultation Task Force

A key commitment of the Resolution was to “safeguard the credibility of the processes of truth-seeking, justice, reparations and guarantees of non-recurrence by engaging in broad national consultations…”1, In January 2016, the government appointed the Consultation Task Force on Reconciliation Mechanisms (CTF) to carry out island-wide public consultations on the establishment of the new mechanisms.

1 UN Human Rights Council Resolution 30/1(A/HRC/30/L.29), https://documents-dds-ny.un.org/doc/UNDOC/LTD/G15/220/93/PDF/G1522093.pdf?OpenElement

Amnesty International’s written statement to the 34th session of the UN Human Rights Council
(27 February- 24 March 2017)

Sri Lanka must have foreign judges in war crime investigation: HRW

Foreign judges must oversee treatment of Tamils in Sri Lanka: HRWAn ethnic Tamil woman rides her bicycle as Sri Lankan army soldiers conduct a cordon and search operation in Jaffna, Sri Lanka, Tuesday, May 16, 2006. An ethnic Tamil woman rides her bicycle as Sri Lankan army soldiers conduct a cordon and search operation in Jaffna, Sri Lanka, Tuesday, May 16, 2006.

It's crucial that Sri Lanka employ foreign judges and prosecutors to ensure justice when bringing to trial those responsible for crimes against humanity during the country's civil war, Human Rights Watch urges.

By  Andrea Booth-17 FEB 2017 - 5:19 PM  UPDATED YESTERDAY 7:00 PM

Sri Lanka must employ international judges and prosecutors to ensure accountability during trials of those responsible for alleged war crimes against mostly Tamils, Human Rights Watch Australia's director Elaine Pearson told SBS News.

Ms Pearson's call, which echoes a recommendation in a 2015 UN Human Rights Council report of the OHCHR investigation of Sri Lanka, comes as Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesingh this week visited Canberra.

On Wednesday he beckoned asylum seekers who fled to Australia to return, assuring they would be "quite safe".

"They can come back to Sri Lanka and we will help them... but remember, they broke the law by attempting to come to Australia," he said.

A decades-long civil war in Sri Lanka ended with the defeat of Tamil separatists in 2009, prompting an international investigation into alleged crimes against humanity. The investigation found indications of "grave" violations in Sri Lanka between 2002 and 2011.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said in 2015: "Our investigation has laid bare the horrific level of violations and abuses that occurred in Sri Lanka, including indiscriminate shelling, extrajudicial killings, enforced disappearances, harrowing accounts of torture and sexual violence, recruitment of children and other grave crimes."

Both the Sri Lankan government and the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam were likely to have committed the abuses, the investigation found.

The investigation recommended Sri Lanka bring to trial those responsible for alleged war crimes in a court that was both domestic and international - where the international element would help ensure accountability.

It urged the country integrate "international judges, prosecutors, lawyers and investigators, that will be essential to give confidence to all Sri Lankans, in particular the victims, in the independence and impartiality of the process, particularly given the politicisation and highly polarised environment in Sri Lanka."

An ethnic Tamil woman rides her bicycle as Sri Lankan army soldiers conduct a cordon and search operation in Jaffna, Sri Lanka, Tuesday, May 16, 2006.
An ethnic Tamil woman rides her bicycle as Sri Lankan army soldiers conduct a cordon and search operation in Jaffna, Sri Lanka, Tuesday, May 16, 2006.

RTI Commission 'committed' to its strength and independence

RTI Commission 'committed' to its strength and independence

Feb 17, 2017

Issuing a Media Statement, Sri Lanka’s Right to Information Commission has stated that it is greatly encouraged by the support and interest evidenced by the public in regard to the effective working of the Right to Information (RTI) Act No 12 of 2016.

It has further stated that the five-member body, though still operating in an interim capacity with a skeletal staff from temporary premises (2- 203-204, BMICH, Colombo -07, Ph- 011 2691625) is committed to building a strong and independent operation with the expertise and capacity to support all seekers and providers of public information. The Commission, which came into existence in late December 2016, consists of Mahinda Gammanpila (Chair), AWA Salam, Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena, Selvy Thiruchandran and SG Punchihewa.
The Commission’s Rules on Fees and Appeals, together with three Regulations proposed by the Commission to the Ministry of Mass Media on Proactive Disclosure of Public Authorities (PAs), Appointment Criteria for Information Officers and an Open Re-Use Policy of all Information obtained under the RTI Act put Sri Lanka’s RTI Regime into the third best place in the world and the first in South Asia.
The RTI Commission has also pointed out in its Media Statement that a Public Notice published by the Commission in all three national languages on 29th of January and 2nd of February, 2017 emphasizes that the Commission intends have proactive public engagement. It states that participation and feedback by citizens is vital to bringing about a culture of accountability and openness in Sri Lanka which is the primary objective of the RTI Act.
The Media Statement points to the fact that the RTI Act was enacted to bring about a major democratising transformation of relations between Sri Lankan citizens and the government.  It imposes important new obligations of openness on PAs which cover constitutional and statutory entities, government departments and bodies, corporate bodies in which the government has a controlling interest, local and provincial authorities as well as courts, tribunals and institutions established to administer justice.
This also includes private entities working under contract, agreement, licence or a partnership with the government(where their statutory or public service or function is concerned), higher educational, private vocational or technical education institutions established, recognised or licenced under any written law or funded wholly or partly by the State and non–governmental organizations rendering a service to the public.
Citizens are now able to exercise a right to access information held by these Public Authorities, subject only for few exceptions, all of which are subject to the public interest override. New norms have now been established through the Regulation proposed by the Commission for PAs to proactively share information.
The Commission’s Rules gazetted on February 3rd puts a pro-public Fee Schedule into place and provides for informal hearings of appeals aimed at least possible burdens to be put on information seekers. The Rules also state that if an appeal is successful to the Designated Officer in a Public Authority or the Commission, fees for that information will not be charged. This is the first time that an Information Commission in South Asia has proposed this.
The RTI Commission monitors, adjudicates and supervises the working of the RTI Act. It has powers to summon information officers, look at information that is shut out from public scrutiny and prosecute directly in court. However, the Commission does not have a separate allocation in the Budget.
This led many editorialists and article writers to question as to why the Ministry was being provided by the Government with 25 million while the RTI Commission was given just 3 million in ad hoc allocations through the Office of the President. Despite the Ministry being given this sum, many Public Authorities do not have information officers and some have been hostile to people going to lodge information requests after February 3rd. Some however have been courteous though ignorant about the Act and had to be educated by the citizens seeking information!  

Friday, February 17, 2017

Kilinochchi business owners protest in solidarity with Pilavu

Home17 Feb  2017

Tamil business owners in Kilinochchi held a protest on Thursday in solidarity with the people of Pilavu that are protesting for the return of their lands.


Related Articles: 

Sri Lanka still unsafe for Tamil asylum seekers to return


The following statement issued by the Australian Tamil Congress (ATC)

( February 18, 2017, Sydney, Sri Lanka Guardian) The Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, speaking at a press conference in Canberra together with the Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull, urged asylum seekers who had fled the country to return. Prime Minister Wickremesinghe emphasized in his statement, “Come back; all is forgiven; it is quite safe in Sri Lanka; we are just starting the missing persons office.”
The Australian Tamil Congress (ATC) would like to categorically state that Sri Lanka has not reached a point where every Tamil asylum seeker can just return without worrying about the consequences; indeed Sri Lanka is far from it.
Juan Mendez, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on ‘Torture and other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment’, in a report released only a month ago, recommended to the international community “to ensure that the principle of non-refoulment is upheld by not returning to Sri Lanka persons, in particular Tamils, who may be at risk of torture or ill-treatment, in accordance with Article 3 of the Convention against Torture.”
The draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) remains in force, and there have been several arrests under this law in the past year. It has been reported that many people imprisoned under PTA were forced to confess under torture, and Sri Lanka has yet to come up with concrete plans to provide redress for those unjustly detained under PTA.
Nearly eight years after the end of the war, the Sri Lankan military is still occupying significant portion of the land belonging to the Tamil people and the military intelligence and interference is ever present in day to day lives of Tamils.
Former president Chandrika Kumaratunga, the chairwoman of the Office for National Unity and Reconciliation, stated that women who were widowed during the 37-year conflict were among the victims of abuse by officials who frequently demand sexual favours just to carry out routine paperwork.
ATC acknowledges that the present Sri Lankan government has made notable reforms in governance, particularly in relation to diluting executive powers and allowing for media and civil society freedom. However, the advances on issues that are critical for the wellbeing of Tamil people – returning land occupied by the military, releasing prisoners long held in detention, tracing thousands of missing persons, and ending abuses by security forces, including torture by police – are extremely slow to non-existent.
Most Tamils fled Sri Lanka due to persecution and torture by the state. Prime Minister Wickremesinghe’s statement addressing such people “Come back, all is forgiven’ is grossly insensitive to say the least. ATC would like to register its strong disappointment and condemnation. Such statements only reflect that even the current government has not acknowledged injustices inflicted upon the Tamil community.
ATC earnestly calls upon the Australian Government not to take any blanket measures towards Tamil asylum seekers, but to assess each individual case carefully; in particular, those with past political involvement should be assessed with extra care before decisions are taken on outcome and possible repatriation.

SRI LANKA: IMMEDIATELY RELEASE LAND OF THE PEOPLE OF KEPPAPILAVU URGE CIVIL GROUPS


Image: protesting villagers  Keppapilavu by @shalin.

Sri Lanka Brief17/02/2017

We, the undersigned civil society organizations, write this statement to express solidarity with protestors of Keppapilavu and condemn the Government’s lack of appropriate and timely response or action towards releasing their land from military occupation.

For over two weeks, villagers from Pilakudiyiruppu, Keppapilavu, have been stationed on the side of the road across from their lands, currently occupied by a Sri Lankan Air Force camp. On January 31, 2017, villagers went to the camp on the basis of a promise from authorities that their lands would be returned on that day. But when they arrived they were told that their land would not be released – leading the villagers to commence their protest across from the camp, stating that they would not move until they get their lands back.

The situation in Keppapilavu is indicative of the Sri Lankan Government’s misleading campaign and slow progress on releasing lands from military occupation across the North-East. Vast areas, including both private and state land remain occupied by the security forces. The Keppapilavu area has several large camps on private land, including fertile farm land. We are concerned by reports that the military is currently in the process of chopping down and burning trees and destroying foundations of homes of the 84 families from Pilakudiyiruppu concerned – a wanton destruction of a basis to rebuild the lives of villagers on their eventual return. It will be recalled that the armed forces have engaged in such illegal practices in the past as well, including under the previous regime.


Air Force personal  filming protesting villagers by@shalin

The conditions in the “Model Resettlement Village” which Keppappilavu villagers were displaced to in 2012 after 3 years in the infamous Menik farm camp, remain a matter of grave concern, with access to livelihoods such as farming and fishing severely restricted. The homes constructed by the military show signs of deterioration only two years after their construction.

Families in the Model Resettlement Village from other villages in the Keppapilavu area are also demanding a return of their original land – also currently occupied by the military in the area. With the Government’s moves towards reforms stalling, there is serious concern that land returns and demilitarization – core demands of Tamil people – are not moving ahead sufficiently. The Government has to exercise strong leadership and dismantle the vast military cantonments occupying private and state land in the North-East. Any hopes for justice, reconciliation and sustainable peace are seriously hampered by the apparent unwillingness and insincerity of the government to act on these matters.
We therefore demand that the Sri Lankan government:

– Meets the demand of the villagers protesting from Pilakudiyiruppu and return their lands as promised, and provide resettlement support to help rebuild their livelihoods and homes;

– Directs the military to stop any activities destroying the condition of the land they are occupying across the North-East; and 1 Many statements including those attributed to President Sirisena have been made about the possibility of lands being released. Such promises, the people of Keppapilavu point out, have been made in abundance in the past as well without any real follow-up and hence untrustworthy.

– Accelerates the process to return all occupied private and state land across the North-East.
Signatories:

Adayaalam Centre for Policy Research
Centre for Human Rights and Development (CHRD)
Centre for the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights (CPPHR), Trincomalee
Commission for Justice and Peace of the Catholic Diocese, Jaffna
Jaffna University Employees Union
Jaffna University Teachers Union
Mannar Citizens Committee
People for Equality and Relief in Sri Lanka (PEARL)
Tamil Civil Society Forum
Tamil Lawyers Forum
President steps in to break deadlock in constitutional negotiations

logofgjBy Dharisha Bastians -Thursday, 16 February 2017

President Maithripala Sirisena has stepped into break a deadlock in constitutional negotiations, holding a round of tripartite talks with the United National Party (UNP), the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) and his own Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) late last month. 

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe attended the tripartite discussions, together with UNP Chairman Malik Samarawickrema and Party General Secretary Kabir Hashim. TNA Leader R. Sampanthan attended with TNA Parliamentarian M.A. Sumanthiran. President Sirisena chaired the meeting, with SLFP Ministers Susil Premajayantha, Faizer Mustapha and Nimal Siripala De Silva also present. Daily FT learns that JVP Leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake was also invited to attend the talks but had been unable to participate due to other commitments.   The meeting took place on 30 January, subsequent to discussions between President Sirisena and the TNA about ongoing consultations on the new constitution. 

At the meeting, President Sirisena told representatives from the two main parties and the TNA that a new constitution and transitional justice was the “heavy baggage” the Government had to carry, Daily FT reliably learns. There was no question of either of these commitments not being delivered on, the President told the meeting. 

“My impression is that both the President and the Prime Minister are committed to a genuine constitutional process,” Opposition Leader R. Sampanthan told Daily FT. 

Sampanthan, who leads the TNA that is negotiating on behalf of the Tamil people on power sharing arrangements for the north and east, emphasised that it was necessary to build a “substantial consensus” that could be approved by Parliament and the people at a referendum. 

The fundamental reason for the failure of Sri Lanka’s last two republican constitutions, was the fact that they were not built on consensus, even between the two major political parties, let alone the representatives of the Tamil people, the TNA Leader explained. 

The 21-member Steering Committee tasked with drafting the new constitution hit major roadblocks at the beginning of this year, with the SLFP and the JVP requesting more time to study the proposals in the Interim Report, and provide inputs. The Steering Committee initially hoped to present its interim report to the Constitutional Assembly of 225 members of parliament by November 2016. 

Interim proposals to be submitted to the Constitutional Assembly were circulated among the membership of the Steering Committee since November 2016, the Opposition Leader said. After the interim report had been in circulation for several weeks, some members of the Steering Committee had expressed the view that they needed more time to study the proposals and make comments. 

“Consequently it was not possible to bring those proposals before the constitutional assembly,” Sampanthan said. “The delay in movement on the new constitution has been caused by this factor,” he added. 

Following the first round of tripartite talks, legal experts have been tasked with drafting a new, narrowed-down document, encompassing Steering Committee interim proposals already on the table, as a way to break the deadlock in negotiations, authoritative sources told Daily FT. The process is being coordinated by senior constitutional lawyer Dr. Jayampathy Wickramaratne. The fundamental sticking points in the ongoing negotiations relate to the structure of the state and power-sharing, the merger of the North-East and the question of affording primacy to one religion, Daily FT learns. 

Prime Minister Wickremesinghe has also convened a meeting of the Steering Committee on 21 February, Daily FT learns. 

Co-Convenor of the civil society movement Purawesi Balaya and academic Gamini Viyangoda told Daily FT that President Sirisena had confirmed the meeting of the three political parties had taken place, during a discussion with civil society representatives on 9 February. 

“The President said he was having talks with the UNP and the TNA to get consensus and come to an understanding on the constitution,” Viyangoda said. President Sirisena emphasised that the constitution would take priority, he added. 

The senior academic explained that while members of the SLFP were making statements that there was no decision yet on holding a referendum on the new constitution, the President did not “entertain that same idea.” 

“On principle, President Sirisena agrees that a new constitution must be put before the people to get their opinion on the document,” Viyangoda said in an interview. 

According to Viyangoda, at meetings with civil society representatives on several occasions President Sirisena had categorically ruled out contesting the presidency in 2020. “Members of his party are making statements claiming he will be a candidate at the next election to counter growing speculation that an outsider might be fielded as the SLFP’s presidential hopeful in 2020,” he explained. 

Attempt to assassinate Sumanthiran is a canard by government

February 17, 2017
It is being revealed that the news item stating that former LTTE members were planning to assassinate TNA Parliamentarian M.A. Sumanthiran has been created by the government to fulfil a certain political objective.
The Police Terrorist Investigation Division having information regarding the assassination attempt but the three armed forces and the CID not getting any such information regarding such an attempt by LTTE members or any move to reorganize themselves leads suspicion regarding the news about the assassination attempt.
Also, the three persons arrested at Killinochchi and have been remanded on charges of peddling drugs. A report compiled by the Police Terrorist Investigation Division has been handed over to the IGP but other intelligence services do not accept the information in the report.
There are contradictions among intelligence sections regarding the plan to assassinate Parliamentarian Sumanthiran and as a result it has not been a subject to discuss at the meeting of the Security Council.
As such, there is suspicion regarding the news item about the plan to assassinate Parliamentarian Sumanthiran as a move carried out to fulfil a certain political objective.
It is important to note that the Police Department is under UNP Minister Sagala Rathnayaka while the three armed forces and several intelligence divisions are under President Maithripala Sirisena who is also the President of the SLFP.
The leaders of both SLFP and UNP have been very careful about maintaining eh balance of power between the two parties.
Source: ‘Lanka Irida’