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

Sunday, April 9, 2017

INTERNATIONAL PARTICIPATION IN SRI LANKAN JUSTICE MECHANISM: SARAVANAMUTTHU, NIMALKA AND HARSHA


Image: Sitti, a Sri Lanka mother of a disappered son taking a rest during a demostration in front of UNHRC HQ in Geneva, March 2015. (c)s.deshapriya.

Sri Lanka Brief09/04/2017

Two prominnat human rights defenders of Sri Lanka and Deputy Foreign Minister speeks on the  contested issue of participation of foreign judges in Sri Lankan judicial Mechanism, that is to be set up as one of the four fillers of Transitinal Justice process in Sri Lanka.While the Deputy Minster reject the notion of hibrid court out right two HRDs says that international participation in the Judicial Mechanism is not the main issue.

Challenges to media freedom in Sri Lanka; the ‘New’ Government’s performance

Journalists being briefed on the Right to Information Act
PrageethEkneligodaProtest
The Sunday Times Sri LankaBy Kishali Pinto-Jayawardena-Sunday, April 09, 2017

A common view held by many across the Commonwealth that Sri Lanka holds out a beacon of hope to the world in reversing the tide of authoritarianism underscores darker and more complex realities.
Even in those early days when elation prevailed after the surprise election defeat of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa in 2015, many of us instinctively knew that this was just the beginning of a long, hard road towards reversing systemic Rule of Law failures, much of which had predated Rajapaksa rule (2005-end 2014).
Yet the stage for this departure from the democratic path had been set quite a while ago. Prolonged ethnic conflict and more sporadic but equally violent clashes between the majority Sinhalese government and rebellious Sinhalese youth in the South had paved the way for emergency law to become the norm. Checks and balances once holding arbitrary executive discretion in check became weaker. Under the Kumaratunga Presidency, a Supreme Court headed by her handpicked Chief Justice in 1999 became politicised with severe adverse impact on a once revered institution. Attacks on critical journalists waxed and waned with criminal defamation law being used to stifle dissenters until a vigorous media-led campaign resulted in its repeal.Two years later, the formidable challenges before us are very clear. During the previous decade, the abuse of power had been unprecedented, even when assessed against the country’s turbulent post-independence history after British colonial fetters were shaken off in 1948. Ordinary law and order had deteriorated to abysmal depths. State, economic and military powers were concentrated in the office of the Executive President. Corruption on the part of a ruling family cabal was rampant and ugly. Shaky at its best, the scales of the State tilted dangerously towards raw, naked authoritarianism. Editors and journalists were assassinated, beaten up and threatened. A decades-long secessionist war fought by the LTTE in the Northern peninsula was brought to a bloody end in 2009 but even after, terror continued to stalk the land.
So to many, the excesses of the Rajapaksa Presidency was a natural – and logical – culmination of what had preceded. Regardless, a restive if not angry populace was ripe for change when, following a surprise announcement of a premature Presidential election, Rajapaksa’s onetime Health Minister Maithripala Sirisena deserted his party leader and contested the elections with the support of Ranil Wickremesinghe, leader of the (then) opposition United National Party (UNP) after months of covert planning. It was an explosive electoral challenge in the best traditions of excitable party politics, catching the imagination and hope of Sri Lankan citizens who voted for the imprudent challenger. But the 2015 reformist agenda of the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe coalition is now facing grave internal subversion by forces that were very much part of the earlier anti-democratic establishment.
Great expectations; the Government’s reform agenda
One major thrust of reform concerned the restoration of the Rule of Law including the independence of the judiciary, the enactment of a Right to Information law and a Contempt of Court Act, the broad-basing of state-owned media among a host of other pending media law reforms. The other equally imperative focus was on state accountability for war time abuses premised on a consensus resolution on Sri Lanka adopted at the United Nations Human Rights Council.
However, progress has been faltering. Indeed, in some respects, there is regression. For example, the Government promised to repeal or reform the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) under which journalists and activists had been routinely imprisoned. But now, a draft Counter-Terror Act (CTA), conceived in secret and running to more than fifty pages, has far more terrifying potential to restrict civil liberties than the PTA.
Where accountability is concerned, little of significance has happened apart from an Office of Missing Persons which remains yet inactivated. Similar dysfunction affects a Victim and Witness Protection Authority. In addition, hawkish elements within the Government are denying the right of immediate legal counsel to a suspect upon being arrested. Cases relating to the killings and beatings of journalists are yet pending.
Emblematic cases of gross human rights abuses against Tamil civilians under the previous regime suffer a similar fate. Absent sufficient pressure from civil society, the members of which have now been co-opted in great part into ad hoc task forces, punishing perpetrators through a radically reformed criminal justice system has been replaced by a spluttering Colombo-centered transitional justice process. This has been an early victim of the huge gap between what the Government promised and what it can actually deliver. Ambitious constitutional reform plans are similarly bedevilled. Corruption investigations into the near-bankrupting of the state coffers by the Rajapaksas have also stalled. Emboldened, the former President’s supporters have become increasingly more vociferous.
Encouraging use of RTI across the country
The one exception to this sad litany of non-performance is that on June 23, 2016, Parliament unanimously passed the Right to Information (RTI) Act. This was a result of persistent advocacy for over one and a half decades by editors, lawyers, media activists and civil society activists. A key pivot thereto was the 1998 Colombo Declaration on Media Freedom and Social Responsibility, which focused on RTI as a legislative imperative. Earlier, a Prime Ministerial committee had drafted the 2004 Freedom of Information (FOI) Bill which was approved by the Cabinet. However the premature dissolution of Parliament resulted in the 2004 Bill being discarded. Some unsuccessful revivals were attempted in later years, one such effort being notably by the present Speaker of Parliament Karu Jayasuriya then an opposition parliamentarian. But the Bill was re-activated as a template only in 2015 with the change of regime. Following sleepless days of hectic drafting and after public consultations, the revised version now named the Right to Information (RTI) Bill was approved by the Cabinet.
The Bill passed the test of legal challenge before the Supreme Court subject to certain modifications. To the surprise of those anticipating vigorous opposition on the floor of the House, it was passed with nary an opposing vote. As a member of both drafting committees in 2004 and 2015/2016, this was a rare day of rejoicing for me. Some months ago, a constitutional amendment had also enshrined the right of access to information. RTI was therefore backed by two supports; one, constitutional and the other statutory. That said, the fact that the constitutional restrictions (drafted differently to the statutory process) were somewhat broader in scope did give rise to unease. Nonetheless, there was much to be pleased about.
Since the Act and its Regulations with the Rules of the Commission on Fees and Appeals were operationalised on February 3, Sri Lanka has been ranked globally as having the third best RTI regime. No state agency is exempted from its reach unlike other information laws in the region. For the past two months, the use of RTI has been quite diverse and vigorous. This is a positive factor even though I cannot comment on specific cases.
Will RTI be an exception to a discouraging pattern of practically ineffectual good laws in Sri Lanka? Will it radically transform the culture of secrecy that holds the political and public service establishment in an iron grip? Answering these questions require prophetic ability. But unlike other laws which depend on dysfunctional state institutions, RTI can be directly used by citizens to provoke, needle and demand accountability from government and non-government entities. Early signs of its enthusiastic use are encouraging.
Conclusion
Ambitious reform plans of Sri Lanka’s coalition leadership have been slowly collapsing into disarray. True, citizens now live free from the threat of enforced disappearances and blatant misuse of power. Moreover, there is freedom of public debate which was once a luxury. Nonetheless, as has been repeatedly emphasised in my weekly column to the Sunday Times, Colombo, the coalition Government’s incessant refrain that ‘things are not bad as they once were’, is no answer. Setting the bar of comparison based on the previous regime is akin to no standard at all.
And freedom of expression is of limited use when structures of state power remain impervious. In addition, increased criticism appears to be having a bitter impact. The Government has vowed to bring in a regulatory framework for print, electronic and online media. While media professionalism has deteriorated badly, mostly due to journalists being bludgeoned literally and metaphorically in the past, government regulation is unquestionably not the solution to that problem. Cloaked in the deceptively misleading language of ‘independent regulation’ such innocuous experiments are often twisted to political advantage.
Some in the Government have asserted that RTI is a quid pro quo; in other words, as RTI has been ‘given’ to the media, it should ‘submit’ to the proposed regulatory scheme. This argument suffers from a fundamental misconception. RTI is not a privilege to be bestowed at the magnanimity of politicians. Rather it is a people’s right (not limited to the media). Any suggestion of a quid pro quo is unfortunate.
In 2015, democratic change-makers were ordinary citizens from far flung corners of the land who reacted with powerful anger against state-sponsored racism, chauvinism and corruption. But this critical constituency of reform is being eroded day by day. That is regrettable for Sri Lanka’s people, for the Government which once promised much and most profoundly, for those working for genuine systemic change.
(The writer serves as a Commissioner on Sri Lanka’s RTI Commission as the nominee of the organisations of editors and publishers. The views expressed are strictly in her personal capacity. This is an edited excerpt of a paper discussed at conference sessions on ‘The Commonwealth and Challenges to Media Freedom’ hosted by the Institute of Commonwealth Studies (ICwS), April 4th 2017.)

Navy Commander and his secretary Udaya have smuggled the ‘mastermind’ in the mass murder of students

-Wife spills the beans !

LEN logo
(Lanka-e-News -09.April.2017, 5.45AM)  Following the Lanka  e news report on the 4 th which raised serious questions in relation to  the activities of the Navy Commander , answers to those questions have been found according to  reports supported by evidence reaching Lanka e news inside information division . The answer is , the Navy Commander is indeed smuggling  Navy criminals out of the country after providing them with cash from  Navy funds. 
Evidence have surfaced that the Navy Lieutenant Commander Hettiarachi whose name was lately revealed  during the CID investigations was  involved in the criminal white van murder squad operations of the Navy during the most nefarious corrupt ,crooked,  criminal decade and the gruesome mass murder of innocent children after committing extortion .   However there is now testimony which bears out this criminal Hettiarachi is being kept hidden without being  handed over to the CID  . Moreover , after telling  all the lies in a cover up operation  , he is to be smuggled out of the country.
Hettiarachi is being kept hidden in room 30 , 3 rd floor of the navy headquarters . All instructions in this connection have been issued by present Navy Commander Ravindra Wjegunarathne  and it is his secretary Rear admiral Udaya Hettiarachi alias ‘Hettiarachige Udaya Deshapriyam Hettiarachchi’ who had carried out the instructions . This Rear admiral is the director of budget and finance , in the navy. According to reports this rear admiral Hettiarachi has given Rs. 500,000.00 to lieutenant commander Hettiarachi and made him flee. (We request our viewers not to get confused because both names are unfortunately Hettiarachi).
This came to light first based on a voice tape of Gothami the wife of  Rear admiral Udaya when she was bragging  to a friend  of hers. When Lanka e news inside information division probed into it , all the hidden information seeped  out…

The sum of Rs. 500,000.00 that was given to the criminal was from  Navy funds meaning those are public funds. 
The CID requested the Navy commander to produce Lieutenant Commander who is identified as the latest ‘mastermind’ responsible for the crimes , the Navy commander on the other hand had been profusely lying saying ‘ he has gone on leave’ and ‘he has gone on retirement’, when the factual position is , throughout that period the suspect had been kept hidden in the Navy headquarters itself. The beans were spilled by the wife herself of the Lieutenant Commander the suspect , and by now this truth has been confirmed. 
No matter what , the search is on whether the criminal is being kept hidden elsewhere  while the rumor is he had been smuggled out of the country .
Harboring , hiding or giving protection to a criminal is tantamount to committing the offence itself under the law. 
(In the photograph are Navy secretary cum Director finance Rear admiral Udaya Hettiarachi who gave Rs. 500,000.00 and helped to smuggle the criminal out of the country , and the Navy Commander )
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by     (2017-04-09 00:20:02)

The Struggles of the Muslims of Musali




Featured image courtesy Tamil Guardian

HILMY AHAMED on 04/09/2017

The Gazette Notification issued on the 24th of March 2017 declared four forest areas North of the Wilpattu sanctuary as reserves, preventing Muslim Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) from returning to their homes in Musali after languishing in makeshift camps for over 25 years. President Maithripala Sirisena’s hurriedly signed controversial gazette on Wilpattu, inked at the Sri Lankan Embassy in cold Moscow while on an official tour, has generated so much heat that the President is claiming a conspiracy against him. He also claims that it is intended to mislead the Muslims. What was the urgency  to sign such a gazette while on a brief tour overseas?

Environmentalists continue to protest the caging of animals in zoos, but now they want to cage Muslim IDPs. Do not fail to understand that all these returning IDPs are paddy farmers or Chena cultivators who had legitimate rights to use these lands before the controversial political declaration of forest reserves in the Northern Province in 2012. This declaration was done by the Mahinda Rajapaksa administration to prevent the jurisdiction over these lands by the Northern Provincial Council. All forest, wildlife and Mahaweli lands come under the jurisdiction of the central Government. The people of Musali have used these lands for generations and none of this is within the Wilpattu National park. The Environmentalists have now been completely brainwashed that Rishad Bathiudeen was settling alien Muslims in the Wilpattu National Park. They now sing a different song as it has now been proved that the declaration as a forest reserve was done when the Muslims were living as IDPs outside the Northern province. Now they say the declaration of forests should not be revoked as there is a small forest cover growth during their 25-year eviction of the Muslims by the LTTE. There are Sinhala settlers right inside the Wilpattu National Park who have been living there for hundreds of years and have legitimate rights to stay there. No one protests about them, and I too fully support their right to live there as they have claims to those lands. There are new settlements that have been established by Mahinda Rajapaksa, bringing his people from Hambantota and Suriyawewa. Thousands of acres of virgin forests were cleared for this alien settlement programmes and not a word has been spoken by the Environmentalists, Buddhists and the media.

These Muslims of the Northern Province were forced out from the entire province for being loyal to the concept of a united Sri Lankan nation. The price they have had to pay is heavy with over 25 years of their lives lived as Internally Displaced Persons, having to more or less beg for their survival, and a whole generation labelled as a displaced community. The Northern Muslims have always been a hard working lot, thriving in fisheries and agriculture. The multi pronged strategies adopted to prevent their return to their village and their former lands probably is also due to the economic threat they pose.

The Government of Mahinda Rajapaksa after winning the Eelam war and killing the top leaders of the LTTE had a golden opportunity to reconcile all communities in Sri Lanka. There was plenty of pressure from India and the International Community to settle the Tamil IDPs immediately after the war. Hats off to Basil Rajapaksa for undertaking this task in record time. 300,000 Tamil IDPs were resettled, but the Government failed to resettle a single person of the forgotten Muslim IDPs. Was this a deliberate act of racism or was it just an oversight, because the Muslims did not make a noise about it? The Muslim politicians were considered a commodity that can be bought over at a price and silenced. But now, the Muslims will not suffer injustice in silence any longer.

Minister Anura Priyadharshana Yapa, as Minister of Environment signed a gazette notification declaring certain areas in the Northern and North-Western Provinces as forest reserves. His coordinates done using GPS technology are flawed. One point is in Marricikatti, another one goes to the Anuradhapura district, while another goes in to the sea off Galle. This gazette notification was not presented to the Cabinet or Parliament. It surfaced only towards the end of 2014 when the Bodu Bala Sena produced it in Court claiming that the Muslim settlements are in a forest reserve. It is beyond any doubt that this has been done hurriedly to deprive land rights to the Northern Provincial Council just before the 2012 NPC Elections.

Map below shows GPS coordinate (Extraordinary Gazette: 1759/25 of 20.05.2012: Schedule-By West : From the last point mentioned above under southern boundary up to the straight line that join two points denotes by coordinates 113676E and 91414 Nfalls in the sea, 25 Km away from Galle.
The Following maps show encroachment in to Wilpattu National Park by non Muslims.
Maps courtesy Dr. Nawfel Samad
No environmentalist is concerned about the destruction caused to this part of the Wilpattu Reserve. Their racism is directed only towards the Muslims in Musali South, which is over a kilometre from the Wilpattu border.
The United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) last month without a vote adopted the consensus resolution on Sri Lanka that proposes to grant two more years from 2017 to fulfill its commitment to reconciliation and transitional justice.
The Muslims in Sri Lanka have restrained themselves from publicising the discrimination of the Muslim community in the country on an international level. It is time that they exercised their right to justice by demanding their reasonable solution to their urgent problems.
Readers who enjoyed this article might find “Sirisena’s double standard: the heavy cost to Muslim IDPs” and “Muttur siege: Reflecting ten years on” enlightening.

Mahinda’s attempt over Wilpattu gazette fail 

Mahinda’s attempt over Wilpattu gazette fail

Apr 09, 2017

An attempt by MP Mahinda Rajapaksa to rally Muslim leaders against the gazette notification with regard to the Wilpattu forest reserves has failed. Meeting Muslim leaders at his Wijerama, Colombo home, Mahinda told them that he would appear for the rights of Muslims and that he would join hands with the people against the gazette notification.

However, they pointed out to him that it was during his regime that the naming of the reserves by including their villages, had begun. The 6,042 hectare Karakkuly/Marichchakatti reserve was gazetted on 10 October 2012, and the 2,108 hectare Vilattikulam reserve on 21 May 2012 and the 7,525 hectare Periyamurippu reserve on 21 May 2012.
Also, they quoted official statistics by the Wildlife Conservation Department that show that most of the 11 forest reserves north of Wilpattu and in the Mannar district had been gazetted after the war. Furthermore, Muslim leaders recalled how their community was repressed during the previous government and what groups loyal to Mahinda are doing right now. They said they could not trust the Rajapaksas again.
Meanwhile, what the gazette extraordinary signed by president Sirisena on March 24 during his Russia visit had done was only to bring together the Mavillu, Veppal, Karakkuli, Marichchakatti, Vilaththikulam and Periyamuppu reserves as a single forest reserve named Mavillu from March 21, environmentalists note. It was several years earlier that the 14,574.5 Mavillu and 10,494 Veppal reserves had been gazetted. Environmentalists see nothing special in the gazette, which they say has only announced a forest reserve, and that nothing has changed legally. They had been calling for the inclusion of these reserves to the Wilpattu national park which was declared in 05 February 1938. It was followed 20 days later with the announcement of the Wilpattu north national park.
Manjula D. Kumara - Sathhanda

Parliamentary oversight committees cannot replace public scrutiny

The Sunday Times Sri LankaSunday, April 09, 2017

Should Sri Lanka have to continually contend with two extremes of rule?

Must her unfortunate citizenry always be driven to either an elitist and mostly incompetent clique or, (on the other hand), a crowd of corrupt and communalistic villains peddling a poisonous cocktail of hatred?

A ruinous pattern of law reform

I may be blamed for painting this grim picture with far too extravagant brushstrokes. But let us not forget that these realities recently underpinned the near-collapse of the State as a democratic socialist republic. A fresh-faced President emerged in 2015 precisely due to these terrible convulsions. Eager to believe as always, Sri Lankans voted for change. But nonetheless, this dysfunction continues. If that pattern extends to the future, it can only bring about ruin.
Let us take as just one example. This relates to the manner in which laws are drafted. With one or two exceptions due to uncompromising persistence by relevant stakeholders, the order of the day is haphazard law reform. As editorially pointed out in this newspaper last week, the Government is apparently intending to enact a brand new Inland Revenue law that is a carbon copy of the International Monetary Fund’s (IMF) tax legislation for Ghana. If this astounding proposal does not lead to public agitation, one wonders what will. Professional organisations have opposed this proposal. But is the Government willing to listen?
And yet another revised version of the Counter-Terror Act (CTA) has been hurriedly ‘leaked’ this week apparently due to a looming deadline of the European Union (EU) with which the Government is negotiating on the preferential trade facility. More egregious offences previously subjected to hard scrutiny in these columns are now removed in this latest draft. Thankfully, the offence of ‘espionage’ has been deleted. The offence of ‘terrorism’ has been pruned.

Revisions due to frantic arm-twisting

In addition, a long list of some thirty six terrorism related offences had earlier prescribed inter alia, causing or intending to cause the commission of violent acts between different communities or racial or religious groups through the use of words intended to be spoken or read or signs. This had to be with intent to cause harm to the ‘unity, territorial integrity or sovereignty of Sri Lanka or the peaceful coexistence of the people.’ Now the reference to ‘unity’ is no longer there.

As the explanatory note to the draft itself concedes, the earlier offence of terrorism and reference to ‘unity’ were vague in law and had been deleted. But did it need such frantic arm twisting for this to happen on the part of a Government which once defined itself by promising to depart from the past? Could not simple commonsense and a desire to have a well conceptualized CTA have sufficed in the first instance to draft offences with a tad more precision? This is, of course, a rhetorical question.

But even despite these revisions, concerns persist. What is offensively vague regarding the term ‘unity’ also applies to ‘peaceful coexistence of the people.’ What does this even mean in law? Moreover a new offence punishes ‘any person who intentionally and unlawfully distributes or otherwise makes available a message to the public with the intent to incite the commission of a terrorist offence.’ This is regardless of whether or not that conduct expressly advocates terrorist offences. On the contrary, the legal test stipulated therein is if it causes ‘danger.’

Also a suspect’s immediate right of access to a lawyer remains ambivalent. Extensive police powers in compelling bank statements, calling for information from service providers and senior public officials etc without applying magisterial warrant have been retained. Other intrusive measures are specified to be on magisterial warrant. Therefore the exclusion of a similar safeguard in these instances implies that the omission was deliberate. Is the risk thereto of abuse against a well documented background of police corruption extending across the police command structure, not recognized?

Where are the law reform bodies?

But going beyond specific details of the draft CTA and the draft Inland Revenue Act, the country’s law reform process invites broader critical interest. What is the role of the Law Commission of Sri Lanka in this context? We know that a crisply drawn up counter-terror draft formulated by the Commission was cast aside for the present CTA, which emerged through a secretive process and numbers more than 65 pages of grave potential for abuse. Is the Law Commission now redundant in the larger scheme of things?

And what pray, is the function of the Bar Association of Sri Lanka? It is now known more for embroiling itself in unpleasant controversies regarding (personal) recommendations of legal practitioners to High Courts sans knowledge of the executive body than anything else. Predictably, those responsible have, like the proverbial ostrich, refused to admit that mistakes were made even whilst the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) and the office of the Chief Justice have been cast into acute embarrassment. A noted lack of interest of registered lawyers in voting in the recently concluded election of the Bar indicates that course correction should be a priority. However, there is little expectation of this taking place.

Meanwhile the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka (HRCSL) has also been requesting that it be sent the revised CTA to no avail. It is a first principle of the electoral compact that a Government elected by the people must be responsible to the people. Is that principle not violated by the IMF, the EU and foreign embassies appearing to know more about Sri Lanka’s proposed laws than Sri Lankans themselves? The Government needs to put these law drafts before the public and invite responses within a reasonable time period.

Beware of patchwork legislation

A hasty tabling of this Bill in the House as a result of EU deadlines cannot be countenanced by any means. That is akin to a person falling from a tree who is then gored by an angry bull. Once that process is in motion, other legislative imperatives follow. For example, legal challenge must then be within a prescribed time period. Absent time for measured scrutiny, the public may well end up with patchwork legislation, incorporating various bits and pieces brought in from various sources.

Overall, there needs to be a radical re-thinking of Sri Lanka’s law reform process. Oversight committees by parliamentarians dominated by political agendas cannot replace the primary duty of the Government to place its draft legislation before the people for independent scrutiny.

This is undoubtedly of the first importance.

Mano: If Wimal can, so can Tamil political prisoners
2017-04-09
The Tamil youth held under detention as political prisoners, could be given bail in the same way Opposition MP Wimal Weerawansa was granted bail, Minister of National Co-Existence Mano Ganesan had urged President Maithripala Sirisena in a letter.
According to the letter that had been sent to Tamil media by the Ministry, Minister Ganesan had requested the President to make arrangements to grant bail to Tamil political prisoners and to rehabilitate them and release them into society.
“The Attorney General did not object bailing out of MP Weerawansa. Therefore, I urge to consider about granting bail to Tamil political prisoners as well. There cannot be two separate laws in the country, one for Mr. Weerawansa and another for Tamil political prisoners,” he said in the letter.
“Everyone is equal before the law,” he said.
He also questioned as to how the Government could bring about reconciliation and ethnic harmony, if these prisoners were continually kept in prison.
“Approach the issue on humanitarian grounds,” the Minister said in the letter, while highlighting that he would take up the issue at the next Cabinet meeting. (Yohan Perera)

LeN exposure proved absolutely true..! High court decides magistrate Lochana is wrong -suspends bail granted to army suspects in Noyahr’s case


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -09.April.2017, 5.45AM)  Lanka e news most  reputed as the website which  always champions the cause of truth and justice come what may , recently reported  the decision of Mt.  Lavinia  additional magistrate Lochana Pradeepa Abeywickrema to release the six suspects including army major Prabath Seevali Bandaranaike Dissanayake Bulathwatte on 30 th March was absolutely illegal , and that a magistrate has no powers to grant bail in that case in which these suspects were  charged with committing abduction and  cruel criminal torture on former  deputy editor Keith Noyahr of Nation newspapers.  The high court by reversing the decision of Lochana delivered on 7 th and repealing the bail granted  confirmed the veracity of our news report .
As Lanka e news earlier mentioned , the Attorney General (A.G.) made a revised application to the high court against the granting of bail.

The chief high court judge Manilal Waidyatileke who examined the application suspended  the bail granted by Lochana , and ordered  the suspects to be present in court on 9 th of May.

The suspects are :
Prabath Seevali Bandaranaike Dissanayake Bulathwatte
Prabath Duminda Weeraratne
Lasantha Wimalaweera
Gihintha Jayatileke
Nishantha Kumara
This was the white Van  group of criminals who  while being in the army were carrying ut the illegal orders of brutal despotic Rajapakses including attacking  media personnel , abducting journalists and so forth .
Lanka e news in its preliminary news report revealed , a magistrate is not empowered to grant bail to these suspects who were charged under the Criminal torture Act and the Firearms Act . The High court via its decision confirmed our report .
The High court judge ordered that a copy of the decision shall be immediately sent to the Mt. Lavinia magistrate Lochana. Since these suspects were in remand in connection with  the case which related to the attack launched on Rivira newspaper editor Upali Tennekoon too, despite Lochana granting them bail , they continued in remand custody.

In the Upali assault and battery case , three of the suspects were produced for the identification parade on the 7 th but   the suspects were not identified. However on  the earlier occasion the suspects were identified by the victims Upali and his wife. 
The identification parade on the 7 th was conducted before Gampaha chief magistrate D.A. Ruwanpathirane . Because the witnesses could not identify the suspects , the latter were granted bail .  Nevertheless , because of the aforementioned  high court order , the suspects had to continue in remand custody.
Lanka e news previously exposed , Lochana the Mt. Lavinia magistrate was just a ‘so so’ who was made a magistrate sans any eligibility requirement fulfillment by  corrupt  Chandra Jayatileke the Judicial Service Commission secretary during the period when Sarath N Silva best known as the worst ever chief justice (CJ)  the world has ever known was the CJ.
It was revealed  she was most skilled only in ‘raising’ and best enjoyed playing the role of a  mistress, although she was unskilled in her legal profession . On the 7 th the AG himself through his directive  confirmed LeN has indeed revealed the truth.  
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by     (2017-04-09 00:35:44)

Why China? Not India – Economic & Geo Political Commentary


Colombo Telegraph
By Abdul Samad –April 9, 2017
Abdul Samad
This article is with reference to Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka’s write-up published on Colombo Telegraph dated 07th April 2017. It was titled, “The aurudu sale of Sri Lanka-Who will stop it?” The writer makes a very valid point arguing the case for Sri Lanka to be with China as opposed to India. He also criticizes the prime ministers vision of the ECTA agreement with India and rightly so. It simply does not make any economic and geo-political sense.
This article is an attempt to compare both India and China in economic/geo-political terms, keeping Sri Lanka in the context.
The Economic Context
It is a well established fact that China enjoys far greater economic supremacy as opposed to India. The below table provides some information on key economic indicators comparing the two countries.
It is clear beyond any doubt that China reigns above India in all major economic indicators. The Chinese economy is at least 3 times bigger. The biggest advantage China has its workforce, which is double the size of India. It is also worth mentioning, China is the world’s largest exporter valued at 2.21 trillion as of 2013 versus India’s 313 billion. China is also the second largest provider of foreign direct investment in the world, providing $115 billion in the year of 2016.
Henceforth, it makes perfect economic sense for Sri Lanka to peruse its diplomatic efforts more inclined towards China. During the post-war era China has made unprecedented investment in infrastructure development of Sri Lanka. More importantly, China has shown a more result oriented approach to investment. India on the other hand has decreased its financial assistance to Srilanka as revealed by their finance minister Arun Jetly in his last budget.
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe’s inclination to the ECTA agreement does not make any sense for Sri Lankans as India’s commitment to the development of Srilanka is questionable. I conclude, China has a far more important and greater role to play if Sri Lanka is to realize its economic potential.
Geo Politics of India and China

Failure of government caused immense of tension over the SAITM issue - Chameera Perera

Failure of government caused immense of tension over the SAITM issue - Chameera Perera

Apr 09, 2017

Addressing Citizen’s Organization Collective (COC) weekly press conference held at CSR on April 6, Left Centre Co-convener Chameera Perera said that failure of government caused immense of tension over the SAITM issue.

“Certain political opportunist groups are interfering this issue in order to gain political advantage.” He added, “There are many ways the government to solve this problem.”
“As citizens’ group we urge the government to follow “not for profit concept about private education”.
Akalanka Hettiarachchi, convener of “Aluth Parapura” said that the government has been taken long period to solve the SAITM issue. “We urge government to publish the presidential committee report on SAITM as soon as possible”.
Hettiarachchi pointed out the January 8th people’s mandate demands and said that SAITM is against the people’s mandate due to the government has been given a chance to one person to earn money from the private education.
COC leaders criticized the government doctors’ strike to be held on April 7th. 
Meanwhile Ant-SAITM groups including GMOA and Joint Opposition have taken a decision to hold a protest march for pressure the government to abolish SAITM. 
During the press conference Perera criticized the former Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapkashe’s behavior at the recent press conference with the foreign media journalists.
“Kindly go through the Gotabhaya Rajapakshe’s response to journalist who raised questions about the Gotabhaya’s way of speak to the wife of slain journalist Lasantha Wickramathunga. Gotabhaya justified that whatever he told to the wife of Lasantha he said that such things are happening to even in the America. Those who follow the lumpan culture in America follow the that style of speech. But respectable American politician never addressing the people like people who follow the lumpan culture. Wife of Lasantha has been given a wonderful response to Gotabhaya after that press conference. We heard that Gotabhaya Rajapakshe study about the American president Donald Trump. Trump doesn’t have good political background such as political roots. If the Sri Lankan select the person who follow the Donald Trump what will happen to this country?
COC leaders also spoke out issues of Wilpattu, misuse of 9.5 billion money of EPF and Arjun Mahendran’s family’s investments.
(Photos and reported by Lawrence Ferdinando)