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

Wednesday, March 29, 2017

Modern Slavery

( March 28, 2017, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian) The legacy of slavery resounds down the ages, and the world has yet to overcome racism. The consequences of slavery had not ended with emancipation, but continued to this day. While some forms of slavery may have been abolished, others have emerged to blight the world, including human trafficking and forced and bonded labour. For over 400 years, more than 15 million men, women and children were the victims of the transatlantic slave trade, one of the darkest chapters in human history.
Slavery is, nevertheless, far from being just a chapter of the past—it still there, with estimated 21 million victims of forced labour and extreme exploitation around the world–nearly the equivalent to of the combined population of Scandinavian countries. Trafficking can have numerous other forms including: victims compelled to act as beggars, forced into sham marriages, benefit fraud, pornography production, organ removal, among others. According to the UN, victims of trafficking are found in 106 of 193 countries. Many of these are in conflict areas, where the crimes are not prosecuted. Women and children are among the main victims. 79 per cent of all detected trafficking victims are women and children. In fact, millions of women and girls are sold for sexual exploitation and slavery.
Human Rights First informs that human trafficking earns profits of roughly 150 billion dollars a year for traffickers. The following is a breakdown of profits, by sector:
– 99 billion dollars from commercial sexual exploitation
– 34 billion dollars in construction, manufacturing, mining and utilities
– 9 billion dollars in agriculture, including forestry and fishing
– 8 billion dollars is saved annually by private households that employ domestic workers under conditions of forced labour
While only 22 per cent of victims are trafficked for sex, sexual exploitation earns 66 per cent of the global profits of human trafficking, reminds Human Rights First. The average annual profits generated by each woman in forced sexual servitude ($100,000) is estimated to be six times more than the average profits generated by each trafficking victim worldwide ($21,800). Sexual exploitation can yield a return on investment ranging from 100 per cent to 1,000 per cent, while an enslaved labourer can produce more than 50 per cent profit even in less profitable markets (e.g., agricultural labour in India).
However, the Socialist Party highlights another form of slavery and strives for the emancipation of wage-slaves. Under chattel-slavery the slave was bought and sold and became the property of the buyer. Under the system of wage-slavery, to which workers of all races in all capitalist countries are subjected at present, the labour-power of the individual worker is bought, a wage is paid to the worker by the employer, and the employer only takes an interest in the welfare of his workers in so far as it helps him to make profits out of them. Under chattel-slavery the slave was oppressed and exploited by the slave master and slave rebellions took place time and again led by the instinctive surge to freedom. The wage-slaves — workers of today — are exploited and oppressed by the capitalist employers. Under the system of wage-slavery workers are constantly struggling for better conditions and for the abolishment of capitalist slavery in all countries.
Under the old chattel slavery system, overseers lashed the slaves to their tasks. When wage slavery came into existence the slave master was still there, in the shape of the management’s boss, but the lash had become an invisible one, the threat of the sack and the prospect of unemployment. We’re a new kind of slave. The bosses don’t own our bodies any more, they just own our jobs. The master class live off our sweat and toil.

10 Deadly Diseases Caused By Smoking

1. Emphysema

10 Deadly Diseases Caused By Smoking
by -Mar 6, 2017
Research today is conclusive that smoking is the cause of a host of diseases and ailments that are not only chronic but also the leading cause of death in the Unites States. Whether you’re a moderate smoker or a heavy smoker, in many cases, the risk of developing smoking-related diseases remains the same. This list will give you a picture of how dangerous smoking really is to your health.

List Of Diseases Caused By Smoking

Tuesday, March 28, 2017

VIDEO: GOVT HAS TO TAKE THE GENEVA MASSAGE TO THE PEOPLE – DR. NIMALKA FERNANDO



Sri Lanka Brief28/03/2017
Attending the 34th session of the UNHRC, which was concluded on last Friday the 24th March, was  a great excitement because of the participation of so many local and diaspora Sri Lankans, says Dr. Nimalka Fernando.  Fernando has been a regular visitor to to Geneva in order to attend the HRC sessions almost a decade.

She expresses the hope that Sri Lanka government will take the message of the HRC, which is explained in the  resolution 34/1 to the people in their own languages, so that the resolution will be owned by the people as well.

Listen to her in the video below.

Mullikulam villagers protest for sixth day amidst heavy surveillance

Home

28 Mar  2017

Residents of a Mannar village have been protesting for six days demanding the return of their navy-occupied land.

The villagers of Mullikulam, Mannar have been displaced for 11 years, with their lands currently being used as a Sri Lankan Navy training camp.

The protestors have been experiencing heavy surveillance and intimidation by Navy and intelligence personnel and police.


Judge Ms. Kusala by making court premises a ‘bana party venue’ had violated all the laws.!

⦁ JSC silent meaning court premises can be used for any mirth and merriment !

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News - 28.March.2017, 9.45AM)  While there exists a clear  circular No. 255 dated 2000-09-18 under the signature of the secretary of the Judicial Service Commission(JSC) which stipulates no religious functions or observances shall be conducted  on any  court premises , the so called bana ( religious sermon)  ‘party’ conducted  by Kandy high court judge Ms. Kusala Sarojini Weerawardena on the court premises , is in transgression of many other directives too issued by the JSC, based on reports reaching Lanka e news inside information division.
One such transgression is , she and  her henchmen have violated the directive of the JSC which explains how the judges of all courts should discharge their duties towards the public and the official time that shall be spent. Sadly , Ms. Sarojini had flagrantly flouted all those instructions despite being a most responsible judge who owes an honorable duty towards  the public. 

Dereliction of duties and wasting official duty time… 

The duty hours of every judge is from 8.30 a.m. to 4.30 p.m. The employees of the lower rungs of the judicial service must commence work at 8.15 a.m. and wind up at 4.45 p.m. (  employees who work overtime aside).
Ms. Sarojini has unfortunately commenced her bana preaching ‘party’ on 21 st March (Tuesday) at 4.00 p.m. In confirmation , we produce herein a photo of an invitation card relating to the ‘bana party’ printed and sent by Ms. Sarojini . Though the party was to commence at 4.00 p.m. , at least another one hour had to be spent for the preparations. That is ,more court time had been wasted. 
In other words , Ms. Sarojini and her henchmen have committed a grave unlawful act  which dishonorably  runs counter to  her honorable official duty;  wasted official duty time:  and was an  abuse of  the official premises . The evidence bearing  testimony to  these grave offences are herein (photos).  These photos clearly depict how during duty hours , the official court premises were misused by Ms. Sarojini , and how it was unlawfully allocated for the relatives of judges , and the employees of the lawyers for the ‘bana party .’
No matter what  , a number  of judges of the independence judiciary who respect  laws (unlike Ms.Sarojini who even does not know the legal traditions and norms) in a salutary move boycotted this’ bana party’. Unsurprisingly of course ,  Sumudhu Premachandra alias  ‘Honeymoon Veddah’ about whose topless bottomless nature  Lanka e news had already reported  made a beeline from   Kurunegala to attend Ms. Sarojini’s ‘bana party’ putting aside his judicial duties   as though to demonstrate he is another law disrespecting  judge of her same ilk.

Following the slogan ‘on the path of Kusala’

The JSC up to the time of writing this article having not taken any disciplinary action against the judges ( male and female)  who acted in violation of the hallowed  judicial traditions , judicial norms , judicial values , in  disrespect  of the courts, and  who took  part in this unlawful so called religious event is most reprehensible , repugnant and portentous from the standpoint of the law abiding citizens of the country. 

If the JSC is going to remain silent and  indifferent in this regard , the next move will be hiring  the sacrosanct court premises for merry making parties and party revelers  after 4.00 p.m.  In that event like halls  of government schools are hired out after school hours for any merriment  ,  the courts too can be hired out  for any nefarious purposes -  to make a fast buck  too  on the sly.  Much better if a portion of the premises is demarcated to run a bar for judges following  the slogan ‘on the path of Kusala’  to enjoy a drink in comfort whenever they feel  like. 

By a special correspondent of Lanka e news inside information division 

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by     (2017-03-28 04:38:37)

Child Brides & Female Genital Damage


Colombo Telegraph
By Christopher Rezel –March 28, 2017
Christopher Rezel
Child Marriage in various part of the world often result in obstetric fistula, a childbirth complication due to obstructed labour when tissues between a woman’s vagina and bladder or rectum are damaged from continuous pressure from the baby’s head stuck in the birth canal.
This results in a hole through which the woman continuously leaks urine or faeces, sometimes both.
Obstetric fistula is not the only problem a young girl having sex, getting pregnant, and going through childbirth when her body is not developed enough may encounter.
There have been records of child brides bleeding to death because of enforced penetrative sex.
Obstetric fistula is a condition that affects hundreds of thousands of women, the larger percentage in Africa.
Asian countries, including Sri Lanka, are not invulnerable to the condition.
In many instances in Asia and Africa, such child brides are far from medical facilities and may never receive the attention of medical professional.
However if patch-up medical attention is received, the single instance of marriage will be their last.
The husband though will go on to marry again, sometimes multiple times.
I wonder how many readers recall the local print-media discussion in years past of child brides and practises related to female genitalia.
As usually happens, the discussion was somewhat sensational and lacked the required seriousness.
Instead a certain Colombo hospital was smeared.
With obstetric fistula, the woman soon gets used to the constant drip of bodily wastes down her legs and the smells she emits. Her husband sends her home to her parents. In some cases, her smell is so unbearable, even her parents put her out, consigning her to a hut far from the house, sometimes having access to others only when food is passed to her.
The tragedy begins when a child bride goes into labour. Try as she might, the baby won’t budge.
Her suffering may continue for hours and days.
Finally her baby dies inside.
It will be extracted, sometimes piece by piece.
Obstetric fistula is a condition that affects hundreds of thousands of women, the larger percentage in Africa.
To meet demand, there are hospitals in some African countries dedicated to the problem and to repairing genital injury, particularly of child brides.
The Danja Fistula Center in Niger and the Addis Ababa’s Fistula Hospital are just two, if names are required.
In Sri Lanka where matters of sex, whether underage or otherwise, is rarely discussed, the business of repairing damage to female genitalia is treated in great secrecy.
However it is fortunate that certain Sri Lanka hospitals and doctors have been known to specialize in such matters.
In an effort to start a global conversation about the devastating effects of early marriages, which is currently practiced in more than 50 developing countries, the United Nations has designated October 11 as International Day of the Girl Child.
Although child marriage is against the law in many countries, and international treaties forbid the practice, it is estimates that about 51 million underage girls are currently given away in marriage, often under cover of religious or cultural considerations.
In Afghanistan alone, it is believed that over 50 per cent of girls wed before the legal age of 16. Many are children.

President Sirisena Simply Dismissed Muslims when he gazetted lands adjacent to Wilpattu.

Maithripala2manna muslim
wilpattu mosqewilpattu mosqe


Written by Latheef Farook-28/03/2017

President Maithripla Sirisena’s Friday 24 March 2017 gazette notification, declaring nearly 100,000 acre lands adjacent to Wilpattu National Park as “  forest reserve”   has not surprised anyone as he has been pampering the very Sinhala racists whom he pledged to contain.
In fact this has been racists wish and President Maithri has fulfilled it.
Foreign judges not the sole obsession: Mangala


2017-03-28

The inclusion of foreign judicial personnel in a domestic process as recommended by the 2015 UNHRC resolution that was recently extended by two years, was not the sole obsession of the government nor the international community, Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera said.

 The government’s main concern was establishing a fair, independent and credible judicial process that will address the needs of all stakeholders, the Minister said speaking at a press briefing in Colombo today. 

Reiterating several comments from a press briefing held last week, Samaraweera explained the recommendation for foreign judicial officers to be part of the domestic process was recommended as faith in the judiciary had declined under the previous regime.

 “We will establish a transparent mechanism that will be accepted by all and the international community knows this. The resolution is not something that is carved in stone and as the High Commissioner for Human Rights himself said in Sri Lanka, there are certain proposals they think is necessary to be followed but the final decision will be made by Sri Lanka. This was what was promoted under the system that we proposed in 2015.”

 Speaking of allegations of war crimes levelled against the Sri Lankan army, Samaraweera said that whether they indeed amounted to war crimes would have to be decided by a court. Sri Lanka had one of the most disciplined army in the world but there were miscreants in the system as expected in every system. If the allegations of crimes are proven the government would take legal action accordingly, he promised. 

Speaking of the recommendations of the resolution that would be implemented in the coming months, the Minister said the government was in the process of exploring the contours of a truth seeking mechanism, which they hoped would be passed by the Cabinet soon.

 Mr. Samaraweera was unable to divulge the exact nature of the mechanism, but assured the final product would be something that would be acceptable to all. (Nabeela Hussain)

Too Clever By Half: Has Sri Lanka Trapped Itself In Geneva?


Colombo Telegraph
By Sanja De Silva Jayatilleka –March 28, 2017
Sanja De Silva Jayatilleka
It’s been 8 years since the war, and Sri Lanka just signed off in Geneva on a resolution that said Zaid al Hussain, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights should play a strengthened role in Sri Lanka. He might as well sit in Cabinet! 
The new resolution, having praised Sri Lanka for its ‘positive engagement’ with the Office of the High Commissioner, which then should sit back with a sigh of relief and let this cooperative government do its obedient thing, actually adds a paragraph, specifically for the purpose of instructing Zaid to strengthen his advice and technical assistance.
Usually when a country is ‘in compliance’ as they say, no further strengthening is included in subsequent resolutions. All assistance is covered in a general statement of obtaining technical assistance from the Office of the High Commissioner. So what exactly does ‘strengthening’ imply?
The final paragraph offers a clue. It is a reiteration of the last fabulous resolution (30/1 of 2015) which “Requests the Office of the High Commissioner to continue to assess progress on the implementation of its recommendations”.
Notice that it says ‘its recommendations’. It’s not the operative clauses of the resolution that he is meant to monitor but the recommendations of the Office of the High Commissioner!
Just to update anyone who is confused about the difference between the UN Human Rights Council and the Office of the High Commissioner, the former is “an inter-governmental body within the United Nations system made up of 47 States responsible for the promotion and protection of all human rights around the globe.” We are bound by what it recommends as a member of the United Nations.
The High Commissioner, on the other hand is an official appointed by the UN Secretary General. He can make recommendations but we are only bound to be grateful for his efforts, and to consider them favorably.
In considering them however, countries like ours, developing countries, have to bear an important factor in mind. The Office of the High Commissioner is “funded from the United Nations regular budget and from voluntary contributions from Member States, intergovernmental organizations, foundations and individuals.”
Voluntary Contributions are additional funds given by rich countries, which pay for staffers and projects of their choosing. It is inevitable that this introduces a certain lack of impartiality to their work. There have been many suggestions that voluntary contributions should stop and the UN should only use the regular budget.
In making his recommendations, the High Commissioner is bound by the General Assembly Resolution 48/141 that appointed him to:
“…Function within the framework of the Charter of the United Nations, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, 1/ other international instruments of human rights and international law, including the obligations, within this framework, to respect the sovereignty, territorial integrity and domestic jurisdiction of States…”
The High Commissioner is bound by Resolution 48/141 to act:
“…under the direction and authority of the Secretary-General; within the framework of the overall competence, authority and decisions of the General Assembly, the Economic and Social Council and the Commission on Human Rights.”
The resolutions further state that his responsibility is:
“To carry out the tasks assigned to him/her by the competent bodies of the United Nations system in the field of human rights and to make recommendations to them with a view to improving the promotion and protection of all human rights.”
So, we are not bound by the High Commissioner’s recommendations unless we voluntarily co-sign a resolution of the Council, which includes the recommendations of the High Commissioner. Which is exactly what Sri Lanka, under this Government, has done, twice over—in 2015 and 2017!
The recommendations of this High Commissioner, at the latest session of the Council, includes the following:
  • Embrace the report of the Consultation Task Force on Reconciliation Mechanisms”. This, for the readers’ information, is the committee appointed by the Prime Minister, of which the Secretary and spokesperson is Dr. Paikiyasothi Saravanamuttu, and the report of which recommends Special courts with foreign judges.
  • “Invite OHCHR to establish a full-fledged country presence to monitor the situation of human rights, to advise on the implementation of the recommendations made by the High Commissioner and the Human Rights Council in its resolutions, and to provide technical assistance”
What ‘country presence’ means is to establish here, in this country, probably somewhere along Galle Road, a branch of Zaid’s Office, filled with his officials, to monitor human rights here. In an amusing episode, in 2007, when this was suggested by the then High Commissioner at an on-going session of the Council, after repeated rejections, she was famously asked by the Sri Lankan Ambassador/PR, “Madam High Commissioner, which part of ‘No’ don’t you get?”
What are they going to be doing here, when we have a Human Rights Commission already? Is this what the word ‘strengthening’ in the latest resolution means?
The Office of the UN High Commissioner has a habit of attempting to establish its offices in as many places as it can. In its annual reports, it reports with pride the number of its offices that has been established around the globe as a key performance indicator. Unless it is absolutely necessary, I never understood why the Office thought that this was the best way forward in promoting human rights. The majority of the Council was of the view that local mechanisms were the only sustainable guarantee of protecting human rights and technical assistance to establish those was preferable to the Office planting itself in their countries.
Another recommendation of the High Commissioner with regard to Sri Lanka was

OHCHR WILL SEND 6 MISSIONS TO SRI LANKA OF 14 DAYS EACH IN COMING TWO YEARS.


Image: Palais Wilson, OHCHR office in Geneva. ©s.deshapriya.

Sri Lanka Brief29/03/2017

Office of the High Commissioner of Human Rights (OHCHR) in the coming two years will send six missions to Colombo of 14 days each of OHCHR Geneva-based staff with expertise in various thematic areas, including transitional justice and rule of law issues, in order to support the assessment of progress on the implementation of OHCHR’s recommendations and other relevant processes related to reconciliation, accountability and human rights.

These missions will be made under the terms of operative paragraphs 3 and 4 of the resolution A/HRC/34/L.1 adopted by the  the Human Rights Council in its 34th session.

This has been revealed by the statement (dated 20 March 2017) sent to Mr. Goro Onojima, Secretary of the Human Rights Council by the Johannes Huisman, Director Programme Planning and Budget Division, OPPBA.

read the offcial text  of the adopted resolution as a pdf: HRC 34 -1
The relevant sections of the statement follows:

(a)    Request the Office of the High Commissioner and relevant special procedure mandate holders, in consultation with and with the concurrence of the Government of Sri Lanka, to strengthen their advice and technical assistance on the promotion and protection of human rights and truth, justice, reconciliation and accountability in Sri Lanka; and

(b)    Request the Office of the High Commissioner to continue to assess progress on the implementation of its recommendations and other relevant processes related to reconciliation, accountability and human rights in Sri Lanka, and to present a written update to the Human Rights Council at its thirty-seventh session, and a comprehensive report followed by discussion on the implementation of resolution 30/1 at its fortieth session.

3.    In order to implement the requests contained in the draft resolution, the following activities and one-time resources would be required in the biennium 2018-2019:

(a)    Six missions to Colombo of 14 days each of OHCHR Geneva-based staff with expertise in various thematic areas, including transitional justice and rule of law issues, in order to support the assessment of progress on the implementation of OHCHR’s recommendations and other relevant processes related to reconciliation, accountability and human rights;

(b)    Local transportation, security, communications and other miscellaneous expenses during field missions;

(c)    General temporary assistance at the P-4 level for 15 months, to support the assessment of progress on the implementation of OHCHR’s recommendations and other relevant processes related to reconciliation, accountability and human rights; and

(d)    Conference services for the translation and processing of the two reports to the Human Rights Council.

4.    The activities referred to above relate to section 2, General Assembly and Economic and Social Council affairs and conference management, and section 24, Human rights, of the proposed programme budget for the biennium 2018-2019.

5.    The adoption of the draft resolution would give rise to total requirements of $362,000 as follows:

Former Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa 

Ex-Defence Secretary also hints at an entry into politics

Meera Srinivasan
-MARCH 28, 2017
Return to frontpage

Denying the corruption and war-crime allegations against him, Sri Lanka’s former Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa on Monday hinted at a possible entry into active politics in future.

“I have not decided yet,” he told foreign correspondents here, without ruling out the option. A few of his supporters have been floating the idea of his presidential candidacy in 2020.

“If I can do something for the country, I will do that. I have that capability and I have proved it — whether during the war or in urban development. I did what nobody had done,” said the brother of ex-President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who led the armed forces against the LTTE.

He was willing to work with a leader whose policies were agreeable, he said.

The former Defence Secretary on Monday disagreed with the UN figures of one lakh civilian deaths during the war as “there is no clarity on the actual number of casualties”. And amid mounting protests by families of disappeared persons in the Tamil-majority north, many of whom accuse the military of abducting their relatives, he said that going back and “harping on” it would not help bring communities together.

Multiple charges

A controversial figure, Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa currently faces corruption charges of “causing a $75 million loss” to the country. In the past his name was also linked to Bodu Bala Sena, a group of hard-line Buddhist monks accused of hate speech and inciting violence against minority Muslims.

Recently, Sri Lanka’s Criminal Investigations Department (CID) told a magistrate court here about “top-secret death squads”, reportedly linked to the defence establishment under former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, but Mr. Gotabaya Rajapaksa said there were no such units. Claiming that “a lot of things happened without my knowledge,” he added that he was working more at the “policy and strategy level and not on things at the tactical level”.

Observing that he had never been a politician, unlike his family members who had been in politics since 1935, he said: “But Donald Trump has come from [business]. We have to see.” Asked if he considered the U.S. President a model, he said: “Yes, I am looking at him and studying him.”

Former Defenc
Gota refutes claims of special unit



2017-03-28

Asked specifically if he was aware of the existence of a ‘special unit’ established to attack journalists, as alleged by former Army Commander Sarath Fonseka, former Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa yesterday asked “whose unit? Under whom?” and held that the army commander was responsible for every single soldier. “My security was selected by Sarath Fonseka. Even my officers reported to his seniors." 

His job as defence secretary was at a strategic, higher level and he did not get involved at the tactical level, he said, responding to questions at a forum with the Foreign Correspondents Association in Colombo yesterday. 

Responding to questions regarding charges that army intelligence officers were involved in enforced disappearances, he said these were ‘baseless’ and ‘politically motivated’ allegations. Accusing Fonseka of saying things in anger, he asked how Fonseka could maintain that he did not know what intelligence personnel working under him were doing. 

Rajapaksa also said that foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera could have got a better outcome at the recent Human Rights council session in Geneva had he correctly understood the changes that have come about in the US administration.

 US President Donald Trump has said he wants to ‘look inward and not outward’ and our government should be able to use that opportunity, he said. 

Rajapaksa blamed US State Departments officials of the Obama administration like Samantha Power and Susan Rice for targeting Sri Lankan security forces in the 2015 Geneva resolution, to which Sri Lanka renewed its commitment in a follow-up resolution this year. He remarked that these officials were focused on human rights, R2P etc. and that Power would ‘probably write a book about how she succeeded in changing the government.’ “That’s where the resolution came from” he said.

 Analyzing the changing US attitude to Sri Lanka he said that when he was Defence Secretary, the US wanted to help and they assisted by giving the intelligence coordinates to locate the LTTE ships. Bob Blake who was US ambassador at the time asked the government to sign the Acquisition and Cross Service Agreement to show the world that the US was ‘behind Sri Lanka.’ With the change of government and with Obama coming to power there was a ‘definite change’ in the attitude to the war, he said. 

On the question of whether he would enter politics as a presidential candidate, the former president’s brother said he had not decided. However he recalled that he came from a ‘political family’ whose association with politics went back to 1935, and that he had the capability to “do something for the country.”

The New SAITM Story & ERPM Mafia


Colombo Telegraph
By Granville Perera –March 28, 2017
The ERPM Mafia run by some of the local doctors charge a minimum of Rs. 1200 per student for a two hour session and one such class in Wellawatte has 400 students. That’s a cool Rs. 480,000 in tax-free loot. This is just one of many classes in Colombo and there are many in the outstations too. Thousands of medical graduates who have been in the worst possible hellholes in China, Bangladesh, Russia, and the former Russian republics are forced in to this torture. The lecturing doctors admit to the students that only a small percentage of them would pass, as there is an agreed quota only to be passed so that they could maintain their status quo. Dr. Palitha Maheepala in a press statement in July last year claimed “Sri Lanka is facing a severe shortage of doctors and needs another 2,500 doctors at least. Currently there is one doctor for 1,350 people and the doctor shortage has been intensified due to the expansion of the health sector”, Dr. Mahipala said. Now they want the SAITM students to join this queue. These mercenary merchants of blood have been amply exposed by the brilliance of some of the students of SAITM.

It is the heart-breaking stories written by SAITM students #mySAITMStory that exposes the tragedy of some of the best brains in our country. A social media campaign to tarnish the image of SAITM by claiming that these stories are written by an advertising agency has hit the anti-SAITM lobby badly, as the stories are genuine expressions of hope and aspirations of our future leaders. Most of them have chosen to stay, study and serve the country as true patriots when they could have chosen reputed universities across the world and opportunities of green pastures upon completion as medical professionals in developed nations. The mySAITMStories are going viral in social media because it is for the first time that these students are challenging the misinformation campaign of the Government Medical Officer Association (GMOA), Sri Lanka Medical Council (SLMC) and the University Students Unions. SAITM is a well-invested commercial project financed by Dr Neville Fernando, and cannot be matched by any private investment that would provide the youth with such educational opportunities. This project is worth every cent that was spent to help realize the hopes, aspirations and dreams of our future generation of Sri Lankan doctors.
Today, the general public has been provided with counter information of the mudslinging campaign of the anti-government forces who are hell bent in destabilizing the country. The Joint Opposition (JO) is threatening to bring together all the trade unions to protest against SAITM. This exposes the Rajapaksa hypocrisy and the political agenda of all those involved.
The Joint Opposition
Mahinda Rajapaksa helped create the SAITM medical school and even gave 10 scholarships to those who could not make it to the state medical facilities. Proof that he fully approved the facility, but now in opposition. This is seen by his so called Joint Opposition as a golden opportunity to destabilize the country so that the FCID investigations, Thajudeen, Lasantha, Ekneligoda murders, etc. and numerous other corruption charges would be shelved. These accusations are hanging like the “the Sword of Democles” on the Rajapaksa family and there is a need to get back to power or threaten to come back to power just to keep themselves away from the gallows. When it is appropriate, President Sirisena may not hesitate to bring the hangman back. It’s time that the Government called the Rajapaksa bluff and listened to these innocent children of SAITM and provide a platform for constructive debate and dialogue on this vital development need of private education. Every year, 80,000 children who qualify their A/Ls are deprived of admission to state universities
Sri Lanka was once reputed to produce some of the best doctors in the world until the system was changed to enter substandard recruits from rural areas. This has destroyed the credibility of doctors as well as made university education a farce. Not all schools in the urban areas can boast of equal standards but the children are placed in the same district ranking, while children from lesser-developed districts get priority in admissions with far less averages.
The outcasts from the Sri Lanka Freedom Party, the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna and other political opportunists are attempting a regime change through destabilization. The mediocre medical practitioners who are members of the GMOA have come out to oppose private medical education, as it would challenge their comfort zones and private income. They are making good use of gullible university students to meet their ends by getting them on to the streets to protest.