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

Tuesday, February 28, 2017

Whither laws ? president cannot appoint a Vice Chancellor lawfully ! good governance stranded or strangled ?


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -28.Feb.2017, 11.30PM)  It is an unequivocal fact that  scoundrels and rascals of  the last nefarious decade who cannot understand the true meaning or purpose of good governance are   abusing good governance . This was best  illustrated when the villains of the corrupt nefarious decade, and some faceless  fawning judges who were thrusting their tails between their legs during the last regime opposed the appointment of Ramanathan Kannan as the high court judge by the    president lawfully and duly by virtue of the powers vested in him .
Now, there are widespread reports the ex Vice chancellor Sunanda Madduma Bandara , a henchman of Basil Rajapakse (by now  a byword for monumental corruption and was incarcerated several times ) without resigning his post is  protesting against the appointment of Professor D. M. Semasinghe as the Vice chancellor of the Kelaniya University 
Under the University Act, three names shall be forwarded to the president by the University administrative board , and the president is fully empowered to  select the most suitable candidate for the post of Vice Chancellor. It is stipulated  that the  candidate to be selected must have highest educational attainments ,and  advanced academic research skills.
Sunanda Madduma Bandara on the contrary had only one qualification favoring  his appointment  as Vice Chancellor during the notorious nefarious decade.  That only weird and vicious    qualification was , he is a most bootlicking stooge of most infamous Basil Rajapakse. He did not possess a doctorate (Ph.D.) or even  an M. Phil. qualification .  He only had  B.A. and M.A. degrees. Hence ,having  a Vice chancellor who has  no Ph.D. is something the whole University sphere should frown upon and  feel ashamed of .
One of the many crooked and sordid activities of unscrupulous stooges  like Sunanda engaged in during the notorious nefarious decade on behalf of the Rajapkses was , producing  falsified records and statistics to justify the rigged and  computer manipulated fraudulent election results when Rajapakses held elections and  referendums.
Semasinghe the Dean of the Commerce and management faculty who  possessed a B. Com. , M.Com., and Ph.D. qualification  was therefore  rightly selected by the president as the Vice chancellor of Kelaniya University. He secured his  Ph. D. from Queensland University , Australia . Besides he has written many  research messages to magazines , and submitted about 17 research papers at various international conferences .
In the circumstances , Sunanda the so called intellectual gathering together  some  idlers and vagabonds of his  around him and trying to  devil dance while refusing to step down is most repugnant and abhorrent. The worst part ? Sunanda is being supported by underworld criminals. Are  students behaving like criminals a matter for surprise when a University Vice Chancellor conducts himself  in this hooligan manner?
   
This is clearly a methodology that is being adopted by Rajapakse lackeys  and henchmen not only to hold the good governance government to ransom but also to strangulate  it.

Hence, it will be in his own best interest if Sunanda understands the circumstances in right perspective,  his own handicaps and peacefully steps down as an intellectual  decently and silently retaining at least that bit of honor remaining in him before the public are provoked to the point of revolt.
Meanwhile ten non partisan University Dons are to hold a media briefing on the 1 st of March and explain the situation  to the public. 
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by     (2017-02-28 19:53:12)

Sri Lanka's RTI puts the corrupt in its crosshairs!

Sri Lanka's RTI puts the corrupt in its crosshairs!

Feb 28, 2017

Since November 2012, the students of St. Joseph's College, an all-male secondary school in Colombo, have watched a landmark tower rising over their backyard. The construction work rattled some of the classrooms closest to the Lotus Tower, as the 350 meter freestanding structure is called, and put paid to the students' former habits of scampering across the grounds behind the school to fish in a nearby lake with improvised rods.

Some of the school's alumni scoffed at the $104 million tower, funded largely by the Export-Import Bank of China and commissioned by the autocratic former Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa. They dismissed it as "another Rajapaksa vanity project," adding to widespread skepticism that the communications tower, once complete, with lotus petals and antenna, will be the tallest building in South Asia.
A stronger voice has delivered a harsher rebuke on this "prestige project", as officials describe it. In early February, Sunil Handunnetti, chairman of the Committee on Public Enterprises, an influential parliamentary body that investigates financial losses in state institutions, said the tower was a waste of money and a drain on the economy. It is among 15 state-sponsored projects that have depleted government coffers by 110 billion rupees ($733 million), through excess spending and financial irregularities, the committee's latest report revealed.
'Game changer'
But now, Sri Lanka's Right to Information Act (RTI), a new law that came into effect on Feb. 3, holds out a promise that the public can intervene and query investments in state-backed projects while they are still on the drawing board. It is an unprecedented weapon that analysts describe as a "game changer" for transparency and accountability in Sri Lanka's political life.
This law, approved unanimously in the 225-member parliament, spares no government leader, senior bureaucrat or public institution from public scrutiny. The strength of its 43 clauses means that private companies, if they have dealings with a state body, and even non-governmental organisations can be targeted.
An independent RTI Commission, formed in the wake of the law's passage, has the teeth to go after recalcitrant public officials who stonewall information queries from the public, journalists or anti-corruption activists. The law compels officials to respond within a month, or face a two-year jail term or a fine of 50,000 rupees. "That is the stick," remarked one anti-corruption campaigner.
“The public can petition the commission to inquire if the information they wanted is not forthcoming, and the commission can take the matter to court if necessary,” Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena, a member of the RTI Commission, told the Nikkei Asian Review. “The RTI in Sri Lanka has now become a right that prevails over other rights and also prevails over every other law to the extent it is inconsistent with the RTI law.”
The law made it to parliament after a nearly 20-year struggle, led by the Editors' Guild of Sri Lanka, the leading body of the country's newspaper editors. It was first conceived in 1998 as a Freedom of Information Act, and drafts were presented to government in 2003. But political turmoil and subsequent opposition from the Rajapaksa regime stymied its progress until Rajapaksa's shock defeat by Maithripala Sirisena, now president, at the January 2015 presidential polls.
Sirisena's election campaign had included a promise to pass the RTI law, which was on his government's to-do list for its first 100 days in office. "We got 90% of what we wanted in this law," said Sinha Ratnatunga, former president of the Editors' Guild. “Now we need to raise awareness and encourage the media and the public to use it.” Responses have been prompt in urban pockets across the country. A flurry of RTI requests were filed within less than a month after the law came in to force. These ranged from requests for information about missing victims of Sri Lanka's nearly 30-year civil war, which ended in 2009, to enquiries about state-backed projects -- a fertile ground for scrutiny, since any dollar-denominated project above $100,000 and local currency project above 500,000 rupees are open to an RTI petition.
Bureaucracy shake-up
The law also opens the way for the public to finally learn about the assets of the president, prime minister, cabinet ministers and parliamentarians -- which hitherto were known to select officials but could not be made public due to secrecy provisions. This has already ruffled the feathers of some government leaders.
The Sri Lanka branch of Transparency International, the global anti-corruption watchdog, expects a shake-up of the bureaucracy in a country where officials have become infamous for asking: “Who are you?” when confronted with public requests for information.
“The bureaucracy functioned in a system that encouraged opacity and [in which] you had to establish your authority to request information," said Asoka Obeyesekere, executive director of Transparency International Sri Lanka. “The barriers to information have been very high, but people now have the right to get through them.”
Information offices in government departments are getting an early taste of an emboldened public. “It has hit us on the head,” admitted one information officer at a leading government agency, speaking on condition of anonymity. "I got a telephone call out of the blue with a request for information, and the caller said he was exerting his RTI rights."
The enforcement of this law in Sri Lanka, now among 110 countries globally with RTI statutes, brings into sharp relief the challenge of battling rampant corruption. The country continues on a downward slide in global corruption rankings, with Transparency International's annual Corruption Perception Index placing Sri Lanka 95th out of 176 countries surveyed in 2016, down from 83rd in 2015 -- a setback for the first two years of a coalition government under Sirisena, who defeated Rajapaksa by campaigning for "good governance".
But the scale of corruption under the almost 10-year Rajapaksa regime has been good political fodder for Sirisena. The Financial Crimes Investigation Division, a new arm of the police set up by the current president's administration, targeted Rajapksa's family and his cronies in their corruption investigations. In its crosshairs have been a former central bank governor, senior civil servants, Rajapaksa's brothers and sons, owners of a sports television network and a former ambassador. Wimal Weerawansa, a firebrand minister of the Rajapaksa regime, is languishing in Colombo's remand prison following an FCID investigation of misusing 40 state vehicles under his authority.
However, the RTI law is set to face an early trial of the extent of its reach: Will the incumbent administration open itself to embarrassing information queries? That will be a tough test, warned parliamentarian Handunnetti at an RTI seminar in Colombo. He fears political interference.
At the seminar, however, attendees were resolute, sniffing a rare opportunity for democratic accountability between election cycles. One participant pronounced confidently, “Now we won't have to wait until after the elections to learn who got rich with black money.”
- Nikkei Asian Review -

MR can’t be implicated in bond scam by issuing gazette in his name-top lawyer-DEW showers praise on two female public officials for exemplary conduct

 
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by Shamindra Ferdinando-February 28, 2017, 10:50 pm

Senior lawyer Chrishmal Warnasuriya, on Monday (Feb 27), said that former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who had been the minister of finance and policy planning of the previous administration, couldn’t be implicated in the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL) bond scam currently under investigation.

The issue in question is the CBSL decision to accept Rs. 10 bn worth of bonds as against the advertised amount of Rs.1 bn.

Warnasuriya was referring to the inclusion of the former President’s name in the controversial gazette No 1859/19 pertaining to the Feb 27, 2015 transaction.

Warnasuriya said that those who had perpetrated the massive fraud were obviously acting on wrong advice and foolishly believed that the Rajapaksas could be implicated. Whatever was in that gazette, those who had carried out the Feb 27, 2015 transaction were responsible for the situation, Warnasuriya stressed.

Warnasuriya was among the guest speakers at the launch of Rusiripala Tennekone’s Bedumkara Andaraya (The tale of the bond scam) at Mihikatha Medura, BMICH. Former Chairman of the Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE) and The General Secretary of the Communist Party D.E.W. Gunasekera, former Senior Deputy Governor of the CBSL Dr. W.A. Wijewardena and National Coordinator Sri Lanka Human Rights Foundation Dr. Chandima Wijegunawardane addressed the gathering.

Dr Wijewardena explained how the CBSL had offered Rs. 1 bn worth of 30-year treasury bonds carrying a fixed interest rate of 12.5% to the market but ended up selling bonds to a value of Rs. 10 billion. This was 10 times the original offer.

Warnasuriya said that the guilty party could have even issued the gazette even under the name of Donald Trump. They couldn’t absolve themselves of the blame for the fraud by issuing a gazette under the name of former President Rajapaksa or some other person, Warnasuriya stressed.

Former Minister D.E.W. Gunasekera pointed out that Acting Government Printer Gangani Kalpana Liyanage had put the record straight before the ongoing Commission of Inquiry (CoI) earlier in the day. The veteran politician paid a glowing tribute to the Acting Government Printer for her courageous stance before the CoI. The lady had thwarted a diabolical bid to mislead the CoI, he said.

The CoI comprises serving Supreme Court judges K.T. Chithrasiri and P.S. Jayawardena and Rtd. Deputy Auditor General K. Velupillai.

The Acting Government Printer told the CoI that the institution had received the controversial gazette from the CBSL on Nov. 17, 2016 over 20 months after the original transaction. At the time, the gazette had been sent to the Government Printer, Finance Minister of the country was Ravi Karunanayke, she said.

Gunasekera pointed out that the then Superintendent of the Public Debt Department Deepa Seneviratne had had the courage to oppose Governor Arjuna Mahendran’s move to issue treasury bonds in contravention of a decision taken by the Monetary Board. The Monetary Board had decided on the basis of a paper submitted by the Public Debt Department to issue Treasury bonds in a combination of both auctions and direct sales.

Gunasekera said that the lady official had fearlessly written a note regarding the controversial directive given by Mahendran. "There are such ladies in our public service."

Although, Gunasekera didn’t make any reference to Dr. M.Z.M. Aazim, additional Superintendent of the Public Debt Department, it was he who had solidly stood by the lady officer. The CBSL moved both out of the section where they had faithfully served the institution.

At a recent event at the Colombo Municipal Council, Auditor General Gamini Wijesinghe asserted that the lady official’s note had facilitated the investigations.

Gunasekera stressed that the government could have easily cancelled the transaction immediately afterwards as within hours after the issuance of treasury bonds the relevant people knew what had actually taken place. Having turned a blind eye to an unprecedented fraud, the yahapalana administration paved the way for even bigger CBSL fraud on March 29, 2016. After declaring that treasury bonds would be issued to the tune of Rs. 40 bn, the CBSL had issued treasury bonds to the tune of Rs. 77 bn, he said.

Former Minister Gunasekera later told The Island that the CBSL had sent the gazette in respect of the Feb 27, 2015 to the Government’s Printer months after the second fraudulent issuance of treasury bonds.

The gathering was told how primary dealer Perpetual Treasuries had immensely benefited due to Mahendran contravening Monetary Board directive.

Recalling the special investigation undertaken by a 13-member team of 31-member COPE during the 100-day government, Gunasekera said that Mahendran had been questioned on his taking the Singaporean oath of renunciation, allegiance and loyalty by which he had renounced loyalty to any foreign state or country. "How could a foreigner who has no allegiance to Sri Lanka, hold the governorship of the Central Bank?" former COPE Chairman Gunasekera asked.

Planning For Less Hospitals


Colombo Telegraph
By Ranil Senanayake –March 1, 2017 
Dr Ranil Senanayake
“I would like to see less hospitals, as a consequence of public health being less compromised.” What an enlightened statement! The President suggested these goals in his speech the other day in a marked contrast to those seeking to sell our well-being and our children’s well being for their greed and profit.
At a time when the very basis for life, our land and water is being negotiated away by corrupt and uncaring politicians, there must come a point when the public has to stand up and say enough! The president has stated some goals. We need less hospitals and a more healthy population. Will some of these so called ‘development projects’ help in achieving these goals? The construction of massive buildings on the reclaimed land in front of Colombo will certainly increase the air pollution being felt today. A practical experiment is to leave a mirror face up at anyplace in the house, leave it clean and check the amount of dust that settles from the air, this is what you will be breathing every day. If you place the mirror in the same place regularly and see the dust deposit increase, it means that your health and the health of your children are being compromised. If the new constructions are allowed without any limits being set on air quality , the dust settling on the mirrors will be intense ! The worse the air quality becomes the more hospitals we will need. In all the rush about EIA’s and SEIA for the Port City, there is yet no EIA on the quality of air and the impact on the population of the greater Colombo area if heavy construction is to be permitted. The population living in Colombo will be exposed to dust, PM 2.5 and atmospheric pollutants from such constructions if allowed without strict limits. Even today there is a problem with pulmonary and cardiac problems in the urban population. Unchecked seaward construction could see an exponential rise in lung and heart disease and require the construction of even more hospitals to attend to the sick. Perhaps, the ‘developers’ rushing in to profit from the construction might also build hospitals to treat the sick of Colombo to make further profit. Such a cynical approach in business is alive and well in Si Lanka, where the importers of poisons and carcinogens, pesticides and weedicides, make huge profits from investing in hospitals to further profit from the misery that they themselves have created. The ‘developers’, who seek make huge profits by compromising the health of Colombo, might also be the developers of the hospitals to further profit from the victims of their actions.
The land that we have been born in has become a land scarred by uncaring commercial enterprise that, over a few centuries, reduced the resplendent ecosystems of this country to degraded hillsides and soils. During this time of economic plunder we reduced the forest cover by over 90 % and polluted over 95% of our 103 river basins. The tragedy is that we still continue on the same path. The current move to try and invite the polluting industries of the world to come and lay waste our unpolluted lands, will compromise the future citizens of this nation. When those with political power seek to sell a future far beyond their own lifetimes, should they not consult with the youth?
In the rush to hand over our lands to ‘investors’ to construct industrial areas, there has not been one word of caution about the effects on our population. The smokestack operators pushing coal have not mentioned one word nor paid a cent of their profits to alleviate the suffering of the people that living around that power plant. A visit to the area around Norocholai and a discussion with the farmers who are loosing their livelihood and health due to the dust and fumes from the so-called ‘clean’ power plant will indicate if any of those who made a fortune buying this white elephant and supplying it with the coal, has even spent a rupee on attending to the well being of those whom they affect. This is the way with unclean businesses. They operate for their personal profit only; there is no declaration of commissions or any CSR program amongst that lot.
Given such a history of political and bureaucratic apathy and corporate greed; The public must examine why we are offering the clean lands in the south of our nation, so far unpolluted by persistent pollutants to any ‘investor’ as long as they come with some money. Does this invitation for industrialization extend to those emitting persistent pollutants that will affect our children and their children? Persistent radioactive pollutants can stay poisonous for thousands of years, persistent heavy metallic compounds for hundreds of years and persistent organic pollutants for centuries too. The use of these dangerous chemicals, although banned or the severely restricted by the international community, is still produced and used in places with loose environmental laws. The case of Persistent organic pollutants (POPs) illustrates the danger. Persistent organic pollutants are organic compounds that are resistant to environmental degradation through chemical, biological, and photolytic processes. Because of their persistence, POPs bioaccumulate with potential significant impacts on human health and the environment. The international community at the Stockholm Convention on Persistent Organic Pollutants in 2001 discussed the effect of POPs on human and environmental health, with the intention of eliminating or severely restricting their production.

Fishing boats line the beach in downtown Hambantota, Sri Lanka. (Jessica Meyers / For The Times)-A car transporter docks at Hambantota port in Sri Lanka. (Jessica Meyers / For The Times)
A car transporter docks at Hambantota port in Sri Lanka.The international airport in Hambantota, Sri Lanka, sees three outbound flights on its busiest days.
The international airport in Hambantota, Sri Lanka, sees three outbound flights on its busiest days. (Jessica Meyers / For The Times)

By Jessica Meyers-February 27, 2017

A highway built by China threads almost all the way from Colombo, the capital of Sri Lanka, to this 
scruffy fishing town on the country’s southern tip, where Buddhist chants mark the time of day and wild elephants occasionally lumber through.

On the way, drivers pass a quiet international airport, a cricket stadium that holds wedding receptions more often than sporting matches, and a foundering deep-sea port  — all produced with Chinese loans or construction.

The thoroughfare has yet to reach Hambantota, whose dusty main road hugs the sparkling expanse of the Indian Ocean. But it’s here where Chinese ambitions to develop a maritime Silk Road have run up against Sri Lanka’s tangled politics and identity, stirring distrust and creating an unlikely symbol of Beijing’s global leverage. 

Violent protests broke out in January after the government announced a deal with China to develop the port and build a massive industrial zone. Officials agreed to lease 80% of Hambantota harbor to state-controlled China Merchants Port Holdings for 99 years. Officials also plan to set up a 15,000-acre zone for factories.

Sri Lanka’s government marketed the $1.1-billion framework deal as a bailout that would help pay the multibillion-dollar debts it owes China and transform the struggling port in this impoverished region of brush and jungle.
“No negative force can stop the cooperation between China and Sri Lanka,” Chinese Ambassador Yi Xianliang said at the zone’s opening ceremony, as government supporters threw rocks at villagers and Buddhist monks protested nearby. They fought back until police unleashed tear gas and water cannons to disperse the crowd.

“If everything goes well,” Yi said, China would invest $5 billion in three to five years and create 100,000 jobs.

Yet details are murky and suspicions run deep. Environmentalists worry about elephant habitats; locals fear losing their homes to development. And the political party that once embraced Chinese money is now fighting the deal as too expansive for the former British colony.
“It’s been 69 years since we got our freedom, we don’t want to be under any other country,” said D.V. Chanaka, a Parliament member for the district who helped organize the protests. “People here fear it will lead to Chinese colonization.” 

This marked the first time the country’s dependence on China clashed so openly with its sense of sovereignty. But like much in Sri Lanka — a picturesque island nation ruled by three European countries and then ruptured by nearly three decades of civil war — tensions built over time.

The Colombo skyline is a testament to China’s role in Sri Lanka, whose 21 million people total less than the population of Beijing. Chinese companies are building luxury apartments with views of the water and constructing an entire business district on land reclaimed from the sea.  

Sri Lanka owes China, its largest lender and trading partner, more than $8 billion.

Hambantota port is particularly significant because it lies along one of the world’s busiest trade routes, connecting Asia with Europe. This spot, about 100 miles southeast of Colombo, plays a key part in China’s “One Belt, One Road” initiative that seeks to revive ancient trade routes and spread influence.

“The Indian Ocean is going to be one of the most strategically contested in the future, with a rising India and a rising China making inroads into Africa and the Middle East,” said Kadira Pethiyagoda, visiting fellow in Asia-Middle East relations at the Brookings Institution’s Doha Center. “Sri Lanka is right in the center of that.”

The tear-shaped island lies off the southern edge of India, but it was China that offered the military and diplomatic support the previous government desired.

Chinese money poured in after Mahinda Rajapaksa became president in 2005, while the civil war against the Tamil Tigers guerrilla organization still raged. He welcomed Chinese jet fighters and ammunition when concerns about civilian casualties kept many Western countries from offering assistance.

Rajapaksa sought Chinese loans even after the war ended in 2009, as he tried to transform his poor hometown district of Hambantota into an international destination. He created a convention center in his name and a cricket stadium that rose out of the jungle. China spent nearly $2 billion building Hambantota port and the nearby airport.
It didn’t work.

The port has hemorrhaged more than $200 million, and the country’s second international airport rarely handles more than three outbound flights a day.

President Maithripala Sirisena beat Rajapaksa two years ago on a platform to loosen ties with China. It didn’t take long to change that view. Administrators estimate Sri Lanka owes China and other debtors $65 billion, with 90% of government revenue going toward repayment.

Essentially, officials said, they had no choice.

“Hambantota port can contribute immensely in the journey towards making Sri Lanka one of Asia’s modern, economic success stories,” the Development Strategies and International Trade Ministry said in a full-page note last month in local papers.

“Given the weaknesses in the government budget and the entire fiscal system in the country, the government … will not be able to finance the required investments to achieve this objective.”

Leaders see the deal as an opportunity to establish a thriving maritime hub for an economy driven largely by tea and tourism.

The government’s tone toward China has shifted from indignation to appreciation. Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe plans to visit Beijing in May, where he will participate in a Silk Road summit. Officials also aim to complete a free trade agreement with China this year.

His visit could provide an opportunity to finalize the port deal, which faces more delay with domestic pushback and a court challenge.

The trade minister was unavailable for comment. China Merchants Port Holdings did not respond to an interview request. 

Residents around Hambantota, which has yet to rebuild seaside houses swept away in a 2004 tsunami, are caught between a desire for development and an uncertainty about the cost.

“I don’t know why we need 15,000 acres for industry,” said Prithiviraj Fernando, chairman of the Center for Conservation and Research in Hambantota district. “It would rank among the world’s largest” industrial zones, he said.

Wildlife roams the region; peacocks strut on orange-tiled roofs and trucks stop for iguanas in the road. Fernando worries the industrial zone will disrupt habitats of about 400 elephants that live outside the region’s national parks.

This isn’t the first time China’s Silk Road hopes have fueled backlash. In Bangladesh, one person died this month protesting a Chinese-backed power plant. Beijing has run into tensions in Laos and Thailand, where it wants to build a rail line.

China has tried to allay fears of displacement. Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told reporters that discussions with Sri Lanka occur “in the spirit of equality and mutual benefit, and following market rules.”

The Chinese Embassy in Sri Lanka recently helped open a vocational training center near the airport, where workers can develop construction skills. They also learn Chinese.

“We just want to let local people know Chinese regulations because they will be working for Chinese companies,” said Andrew Gao, who runs the center.

India also is eyeing the port deal. Some fear China’s Silk Road plan resembles a “string of pearls” meant to choke its neighbor. India fumed in 2014 when a Chinese submarine docked twice in Colombo. The Sri Lankan ambassador to China this month promised the country would not allow Chinese military into the port.

With China, “there’s no question there’s a strategic angle,” said Sasha Riser-Kositsky, Asia analyst at Eurasia Group, a political risk consultancy in New York. The problem is “untangling how much.”
Residents are just as confused.

Aruna Shantha Sayakkara spent one morning chatting with auto-rickshaw drivers outside the small, neat home he might lose.

“Seventy percent of people like this area getting developed,” said the Hambantota municipal council board member. “The deal will bring more.”

Down the road, S. Rushaun Dean slumped in a plastic chair.

“Twenty-five percent like the deal,” said the 37-year-old laborer, whose concrete walls held posters of Mecca and roses. “I’m worried we’ll have to leave. I was born here.”

Armed guards patrolled the port entrances nearby, where a lonely cargo ship docked. Another Chinese company is building the final stretch of highway that will connect the capital to Hambantota  — and, quite possibly, its future.  

“Sri Lanka can’t not take the deal,” Eurasia’s Riser-Kositsky said. “The Chinese are the only game in town.”

Give this scoundrel a rascally name – ‘b…tard’ is not enough..! (video)


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -28.Feb.2017, 11.30PM)  It is a well and widely known fact that  villainous S Lon sewage  pipe line business media owner Kili Maharaja the notorious self seeking opportunistic businessman is exploiting his media channels to promote his personal fell foul objectives , pandering to the interests of all confirmed crooks and the corrupt , and giving priority to his selfish business ambitions and agendas to the detriment of the country.
 An infernal stooge of this villainous and opportunistic businessman was taught  an unforgettable  lesson of his life time when  that self degrading stooge  tried to sabotage the salutary maiden media conference held on the 26 th concerning the new constitution. 
This rascally   two penny half penny worth media stooge is in the stupid habit of asking only one stock question at every media briefing these days– that is about  ‘ the treasury bond’  to hit out at Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe . At yesterday ‘s (27 ) media discussion too, while there is a clear mandate given on 2015-01-08 to abolish the executive presidency , this shameless  silly stooge of Kili  said while questioning   ,  the presidential commission to probe into the alleged bond scam cannot be appointed if the presidential system is not there.
Though it  is  very unfortunate , it is unsurprising  Kili the sewage pipeline businessman who knows only about cesspits and sewage lines had only   a silly scoundrel  to select do his sordid and clandestine biddings.  This worthless  imbecile despite his bald head ( usually a bald head implies intelligence , whereas in this case it is serving as an index of abysmal idiocy) was  fiercely questioning about the constitution , when he hadn’t the capacity to ask himself, whether there was a president  when the Criminal Justice Commission  was appointed to investigate and punish the criminals of the 1971 insurrection ? 
Those present whose time was being wasted by this lackey and lickspittle of  Kili Maharaja were so provoked  ,one of them  addressing  Kili’s silly stooge  said , Kili Maharaja is engaged not in the media vocation rather in the Maharaja media prostitution  occupation. Janaranjana the editor of ‘Ravaya’ who explained the importance of asking pertinent questions to this silly stooge of Kili the scrooge ,  roundly blamed him for attending media conferences and asking the same bond scam question all the time  . He told this media coolie of sewage pipeline businessman Kili Maharaja in plain language this is a conspiratorial machination. Kili’s media  coolie Ariya Gamage by name who began to petrify and ‘putrefy’   amidst the fierce criticisms leveled by all against him,  finally did the vanishing trick unable to stand the monumental humiliation.
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Kili Maharaja who made his lackeys , lickspittles and stooges to creep into the inner circle of Maithripala Sirisena after he became the president with ulterior motives , through clever manipulations annexed a plot of most valuable land at Fort . Nine plots were taken by him for  his media chain. Now , Kili after ingratiating himself into Maithri’s favor is hurling brickbats at the Prime Minister and government members  within the cabinet  against whom he has a grudge.   The latest ploy of this asinine sewage pipeline stinking  ‘King’ is aimed at making  Maithri to dance to his tune  in order to make villainous murderous dejected Gota reduced to zero presently ,and rejected by the entire country a hero , employing his entire  media chain most unethically, unscrupulously  and unprofessionally without any sense of shame.
 
In the circumstances , it will do immense good to Maithri and his political career  if he tries to understand that no politico who was closely associated by Kili the sewage pipeline S Lon ‘King’ had prospered for long. They have all got drowned finally in the cesspits into which Kili’s sewage pipelines lead . We hope Maithri has the sanity and sensibility to think wisely . 
The video footage is hereunder 
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by     (2017-02-28 20:04:25)

Parliamentarians, Permits and Perfidy


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By Dr. U. Pethiyagoda- 

There must be many like me, rejoicing at the RTI Act, which established its serious intent by disclosure of the perfidy surrounding the matter of Duty Free vehicle Permits issued to Parliamentarians. Much yet clearly remains to be exposed – as it is astonishingly stated that many more transfers have been effected, informally and avoiding scrutiny by the registering authority. Detailed information must be secured. Some may have simply flogged their permits. We await them all being exposed.

Not only are our politicians bereft of a sense of shame, but they also have the effrontery to suggest that these sales are permissible in order to defray election expenses and also that the practice is sanctified by its dating back to when the facility was first introduce. Such arguments are ridiculous and bordering on crass stupidity. Bandula Gunawardana (the economist) should be called upon to explain his remarkable reasoning .Is a thief excused because he robbed to buy milk for his child, or murderers be let off because it is a long existing practice? Good try, Mr. G!

The loss to the Exchequer has been astronomical – amounting to up to 35 Million Rupees per permit. Who should pay back this loss of State income? Clearlyit shouldnot the be Taxpayer public. The recovery should be from seller, the buyer or best, from both. This will have the salutary effect of deterring in future, both the players in this game.

In this disgraceful exercise, some names, however reluctantly, have to be named. How does Rathana Hamuduruwo square his conscience in respect of Vinaya Rules and his voluntarily subscribing to a pledge of poverty when donning the sacred robe.Udaya Gammanpila, Buddhika Pathirana, Vasantha Senanayake, Sujeewa Senasinghe,Palitha Thearapperuma and others, who try to project themselves as upholders of rectitude, have some explaining to do. Chamal Rajapaksa (Ex Speaker) and Ministers, Deputies and Juniors like Mohanla Grero, Nishantha Muttuhettige, Lakshman Kiriella, P.S (Sudarshinie?) Fernandopulle, Janaka. B. Tennakoon and Wasantha Aluvihare, should be ashamed of themselves. They are probably persons of great wealth who need not have rummaged the dustbins of privilege. Young and upcoming men like Dilum Amunugama and Lohan Ratwatte have done nothing to their future.

We remember with pride, Dudley Senanayake who drove his Triumph Herald, Premadasa who drove a Morris Minor and others like Dahanayake who was content to ride the train and probably several other worthy examples. Pandit Nehru is said to have self- driven a Morris Minor and no doubt even today, Indian Cabinet Members use the Hindustan. Is it intellectual dwarfs that need Land Cruisers and Monteros at state expense?

It is necessary, even belatedly to re-visit why MP’s were given vehicle permits. If they were a bribe,(as is deviously suggested) then doling cash with their ample endowments would have been simpler. If on the other hand, they were intended just as a conveyance to help them to conveniently discharge their duties as Parliamentarians,it is tolerable. How then do the PM and the Speaker lament poor attendance and the voters who rightly complain about not even seeing their representatives in the electorates except at election time?

If the objective was honestly addressed, the State could have purchased sufficient numbers of an acceptable model, and then issued them to members to use and return at the end of their term. This after all, is the condition when Government servants are entitled to official vehicles.At the moment there is gross and reckless abuse. Heaven knows what fiddles go on in the matter of fuel issues, driver’s wages etc. One particular Minister who returned lakhs worth of unused fuel vouchers, was hailed for his sacrifice, with no one being asked how he came by such a treasure trove! The whole business of vehicle permits has turned ugly and cries out for urgent review and reform.

The RTI Act is of only limited value if it ends with mere disclosure. In my view, the matter amounts to dishonesty and fraud and should attract judicial attention and punishment. Meanwhile, there are things the public could and should do.Here are some:-

(i) Refrain from inviting any of them for family functions. Exceptions are close relations and personal friends

(ii) Act to prevent their invitation to School events where they could be considered as role models by young minds.

(iii) While they are at liberty to address each other as "honourable", refrain from doing so yourself.

(iv) Make them aware that you will not vote for them and that they need not come canvassing

To compound matters further, a respected former Deputy Governor of the Central Bank makes the starting revelation that he estimates the cost of maintaining a Cabinet Minister at Rs 8.5 million a month. With a number of 47, this amounts to nearly Rs 5,000 Million (5 billion) per year. Such accomplishments at such cost! Anyone watching the daily news broadcasts on TV may be excused for believing that endless functions (Ussawato some), school Prize Givings, stone-layings, tree plantings, ribbon cuttings and sundry other irrelevancies, must take up an awful lot of their "valuable time". Surely, many of these chores can be left to lesser mortals, while the huge backlog of matters of State are attended to. Quite a few urgent tasks are deprived of the urgent attention that they need. Very often we hear of actions held up "until the Minister returns from abroad"! Unimportant travel abroad is another Can of Worms waiting to be opened. Another idea for the RTI?

When persons are as richly rewarded as Parliamentarians are, the public have a right to expect the highest standards of duty andconduct. Misconduct of any type, however slight, cannot be tolerated. In this instance the betrayal is extreme.

We are too small and too poor a country to support such unconscionable extravagance and officially ignored fraud. There is no other name possible for what is going on.
SAITM CEO temporarily relieved of duties

SAITM CEO temporarily relieved of dutiesSAITM CEO temporarily relieved of duties

logoFebruary 28, 2017

Dr Sameera Senaratne has been temporarily relieved of duties as Chief Executive Officer (CEO) of SAITM and Neville Fernando Teaching Hospital with immediate effect. 

 “We refer to the recent media reports concerning a police investigation into the purported incidents that had allegedly taken place on February 6, 2017.” 

 “In order to ensure absolute transparency and facilitate the police investigations, the Management of the South Asian Institute of Technology and Medicine (SAITM) announces that Dr. Sameera Senaratne has been temporarily relieved of duties as Chief Executive Officer of SAITM and The Neville Fernando Teaching Hospital (NFTH) with immediate effect,” the SAITM chairman said.

 Dr. Senaratne too notified the management in writing that he has stepped down from his post effective today, Dr Neville Fernando said in a statement.  

The Management categorically stated that neither SAITM nor NFTH is associated with the reported incident and have no nexus to any private incidents/issues of any of their employees.  

The Management of SAITM will commence internal inquiries and will be taking appropriate and necessary action to ascertain the truth of this alleged incident, he said. 

Earlier today, a police statement said that investigations uncovered that the recent shooting carried out targeting the CEO of South Asian Institute of Technology and Medicine (SAITM) was staged in order to falsely portray a threat to his life. 

 It was reported that a certain individual had fired several shots at the vehicle of the SAITM CEO in the Mulleriyawa area on February 02, 2017. 

  The Colombo Organised Crimes Division had launched an investigation into the incident and arrested a suspect from Embilipitiya in connection to the incident along with a 9mm Browning handgun and two bullets, a 3.8mm revolver with three bullets and a motorcycle believed to have been used to carry out the shooting.  

   Following interrogations, the suspect was produced at the Kaduwela Magistrate’s Court on February 27 while he has been remanded till March 13, the Police Headquarters said today.  Police officers have also questioned a former STF soldier, who is suspected to be connected to the incident and is currently in remand custody for a different crime.

   Investigations carried out so far have uncovered that the shooting incident was staged with the intention of falsely portraying a threat to the life of Dr Sameera Senaratne, the statement said. 

  Meanwhile police have commenced investigations to apprehend a former Pradeshiya Sabha member, who is suspected of orchestrating the shooting, as well as a driver of a local government institution.

  According to police, both individuals have fled the area and are currently in hiding.  
I never wanted to become a thug: Samayan



2017-02-28

Aruna Udayashantha alias ‘Ranale Samayan’, the prominent underworld figure who was murdered yesterday, told our sister paper Lankadeepa in 2015 that he never wanted to become a thug.

He expressed this following a telephone interview with Lankadeepa in October, 2015, weeks after he was injured when a gunman opened fire at him inside the Kaduwela Court premises.

Q; Can I call you Aruna or Samayan? 
A; No issues. Just call me Aruna   

Q: But why do everyone call you Samayan? 
That is a nickname coined by my friends, for my mischievous ways. 

  Q; You wanted to become a thug, didn't you?
 I never wanted to become a thug or an underworld figure? I need to lead a peaceful life, but no one is letting me to do so  

 Q; What is your home town? 
My birth place is in Polonnaruwa. I came to know about it only recently.  

 Q; Is it true that your father and mother were teachers?
 Yes that is true. They adopted me.  

 Q; Have you got any brothers or sisters?
No, I am the only child   Q; Where did you study? Bomiriya  

 Q; What was your childhood like? 
When I was five, I lost my father. My family had enough properties. Everyone tried to grab our properties because I and my mother were the only inheritors to them. They created problems for us. When I tried to speak against them, they cornered me labelling me as an adopted child.   

Q; Did any relatives help you? 
No, never, they all cornered me and my mother.   

Q; What happened to your studies?
 I managed to pass the GCE O/L, but I had to face problems when I was doing my A/L  

 Q: Any favourite subjects? 
Yes, Sinhala and Maths were my favourite subjects in school.   

Q; What happened then? 
I had to face more problems during that period. Everyone tried to chase me and mother from the village. I was assaulted on several occasions. One day my mother got a letter asking Rs. 300,000 as ransom. They threatened to kill me if my mother failed to give the money. My mother got upset about it and lodged a complaint with the Nawagamuwa Police station when I was seven. If you check the police complaints book during that period, you can find it.  

 Q; Haven’t you told these things to a teacher in your school?
 At that time, I had so many friends. My mother tried to separate me from them.  

 Q; Did you think of earning some money at that time?
 No..No.., because my mother treated me well, we owned shops.   

Q; Did you have any love affairs?
 I had several, but those were not serious, because the mindset I had those days due to the problems I had to face. I did my O/L in 2004. After that I was always away from the house.   

Q; When were you arrested for the first time?
 In 2007  

 Q; What was the reason? 
I was taken into police custody for being near a group, which possessed a weapon. Then police charged me for possessing a bomb, which I never did. That was the turning point in my life. 

  Q; What thoughts welled up in your mind when you were arrested?
 I was beaten by the Police for three months. I felt scared, I remembered my mother. She used to visit me regularly to the Police station and because of that she suffered a leg problem. She is still suffering from that. The Police should take the responsibility, for my position today.  

 Q; When was you released? 2009   Q; Are you married?
 Yes, in 2014, I got married and now I have one child.  

 Q; How do you see your child’s future?
 I will never allow my child to fall into my society. I only have my mother, wife and the child, and no one else.  

 Q; Is it true that your rival gang is getting political support?
 Yes, I think so. 

  Q; Did you help any politicians? 
Not me. May be my friends helped some politicians.  

 Q; Have you thought about reforming yourself?
 I wanted to change my life, but I can’t. Problems were coming after me. I wanted to have a peaceful life overseas with my wife and child. I was seriously thinking about changing my life, at that time I was shot near the Kaduwela Court. I was shot because I asked everyone to stop selling drugs. My supporters were murdered.  

 Q; You are only 36. Have you felt you reached this position too fast in your life?
 I was made to come so far too fast by this society. I never did such things that were being rumoured. I retaliated to those who attacked me. 

  Q; If something happens to your life? 
I still have my home environment. I did attack only those who attacked me. I am a respectable boy hailing from a respectable family. I want to guide my child and show him the right path. I will not allow my child to become a person like me.