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 23, 2017

It’s Time for Erdogan to Admit He’s Not a Democrat

Coming out as an authoritarian might be the best thing for Turkey's relationship with the United States — and his own legacy.
It’s Time for Erdogan to Admit He’s Not a Democrat

No automatic alt text available.BY NICK DANFORTH-APRIL 20, 2017

One day after Turkey’s presidential referendum, with allegations of fraud mounting and the opposition still contesting the results, U.S. President Donald Trump called to congratulate Recep Tayyip Erdogan on his victory and discuss the campaign against the Islamic State. In one sense, this was nothing new. Washington has often put strategic interests ahead of democratic ideals and cultivated plenty of authoritarian allies; indeed, at various points over the past half-century, Turkey has been one of them. But Washington’s relationship with post-referendum Turkey promises something new and potentially trickier: an undemocratic ally completely committed to its own democratic rhetoric.

It’s not that Erdogan and his party never had grounds to call themselves democrats. In past years, they consistently won free and fair elections while confronting a number of undemocratic opponents: the military, the secular bureaucracy, and most recently, it seems, the Gulen movement. But Erdogan has built this history into a much more grandiose narrative, one in which his success finally marks modern Turkey’s revolutionary transformation into a full democracy. Now, after the world watched a sustained and systematic crackdown on dissent in the lead-up to Sunday’s vote, Erdogan insists that Turkey just held the “most democratic election … ever seen in any Western country.” Why, Turkey’s prime minister asked, did the world see Turkey’s referendum as any less legitimate than the Brexit vote?

This sort of delusional rhetoric will make smooth U.S.-Turkish relations impossible. Ironically, by insisting so fervently that he’s a democrat, Erdogan precludes the conventional hypocrisy that has worked so well for Washington in the past.

When it comes to many of the considerably worse authoritarian regimes the United States works with, there is, for all the hypocrisy and euphemism, a general sense that everyone is on the same page. Some, like Jordan and Saudi Arabia, are proudly monarchical. Others, like Abdel Fattah al-Sisi’s Egypt, hold elections and pay some limited lip service to democratic norms but do not rely heavily on this rhetoric for their domestic or international legitimacy. And in countries that, unlike Turkey, have no sustained democratic history to speak of, expectations are correspondingly lower. The result is that bilateral relations can be carried out with a degree of cynical candor, couched in a shared vocabulary of order, stability, and mutual interests.

Meanwhile, the regimes most committed to defending their democratic credentials in the face of all evidence have historically been revolutionary or left-wing ones rather than U.S. allies. When it came to Venezuela under Hugo Chávez or the not-so-democratic German Democratic Republic, Washington was contesting their ideological claims rather than accommodating them.

So why will this matter for the United States and Turkey, especially if Trump and Erdogan seem eager to get along? The problem is that when the United States and Turkey inevitably butt heads over policy differences, as they often have in the past, a fundamental disagreement over the legitimacy of Turkey’s democracy, and divergent perceptions of basic political realities, will make these disputes that much more explosive and harder to resolve.
The more Turkish leaders talk about their democracy, the more Western observers will, too.
The more Turkish leaders talk about their democracy, the more Western observers will, too. And this focus on democracy, rather than security or stability, will ensure a steady stream of criticism from the U.S. media and Congress. That will oblige Erdogan, fragile as his own domestic legitimacy is, to maintain his own steady criticism of the West. Such mutually escalating rhetoric could eventually provoke a breakdown in relations that neither side fully intends.

This dynamic already began to take a toll well before the referendum. With the Western media increasingly vocal in criticizing Erdogan’s democratic credentials, Erdogan, by necessity, has become increasingly vocal in his own efforts to discredit the West. Explaining to supporters why the world’s established democracies refuse to accept Turkey among their ranks requires a consistent diet of anti-Western rhetoric. Thus Erdogan and his propagandists have regularly charged the West with hypocrisy and promoted a host of conspiracy theories in which Western powers are trying to bring Turkey down through sinister means. Explaining why European observers condemned the referendum, for example, Erdogan said on CNN that “the Western world played certain games with Turkey, and the games failed. Now they’re having difficulty digesting it.”
When protestors came out on the streets to contest the referendum results, the Turkish government again saw foreign provocation.
When protestors came out on the streets to contest the referendum results, the Turkish government again saw foreign provocation. Western leaders can certainly tolerate a degree of inflammatory rhetoric between friends. But when you call enough Europeans Nazis, or accuse enough prominent Americans of trying to kill you, bilateral relations reach a level of awkwardness that has strategic implications.

In particular, Turkey’s July 2016 coup attempt created a rift in perceptions that continues to poison U.S.-Turkish relations. While Turks saw the widespread post-coup purges as necessary to preserve the country’s democratic government, many foreign observers saw it instead as a dangerous step toward dictatorship. On top of this, the West’s refusal to accept Erdogan’s claims that the coup had been single-handedly organized and carried out by the movement loyal to the cleric Fethullah Gulen, currently residing in the United States, created deep anger and suspicion in Ankara. The Turkish government’s fervent commitment to its own narrative has proved an added obstacle to effective public relations:
Several months ago, a group of U.S. journalists invited to Ankara on a government-organized press trip ended up writing a series of articles that focused not on telling Turkey’s story but instead on the surreal experience and bizarre propaganda they encountered there. Now, the issue of Gulen’s extradition has escalated from a legal matter that could be resolved through established channels into a serious source of bilateral tension. With Turkey promoting its own version of summary justice against Gulenists as a necessary defense of democracy, Ankara will see Washington’s ongoing inability to extradite Gulen as proof of U.S. hostility rather than the inevitable result of due process and an independent judiciary.

Frustration over issues like these may also make the United States more dismissive even when Ankara raises legitimate concerns. Turkish public opinion has been understandably furious over U.S. cooperation with Syrian Kurdish fighters whose partners are setting off car bombs in Istanbul and Ankara. But Turkish efforts to convey this anger to Washington have been lost and discredited amid increasingly implausible explanations for why arresting Kurdish politicians and pro-peace academics is all perfectly legitimate. When Turkey’s diplomatic and media spokespeople are forced to peddle falsehoods about the state of their democracy, they can’t effectively call out America’s callous disregard for Turkey’s own terrorism threat.

Making this disconnect worse, though, is Washington’s willingness to humor Erdogan’s democratic rhetoric to avoid addressing Turkish concerns in Syria. Trump’s congratulatory call to Erdogan might buy a little more Turkish acquiescence on this front as Washington pushes ahead toward the Syrian city of Raqqa with the Kurds. But now that the U.S. government has cynically endorsed Erdogan’s democratic credentials in the hope of foreign-policy cooperation, any subsequent criticism, from the government or even the U.S. press, will be seen as a bargaining tactic rather than potentially sincere. And if Washington does in fact choose to use this criticism instrumentally, suddenly remembering the importance of democracy following a future political spat, Ankara’s narrative about the West will be reaffirmed.

Ankara’s narrative is also bolstered by Western criticism that conflates Islam with authoritarianism and secularism with democracy. The fact that, for example, Trump’s CIA director, Mike Pompeo, seemed to cheer last summer’s attempted coup as a U.S. congressman when he thought it was a purely anti-Islamist affair does not bode well for the administration’s ability to offer convincing criticism of Erdogan’s undemocratic behavior. Just as, during the Cold War, left-wing dictators sought self-justification in Washington’s hypocritical support for their right-wing counterparts, Turkey will make similar use of U.S. support for secular dictators like Sisi.

The Turkish government may indeed find other sources of legitimacy in Washington and at home. It’s far from certain that Erdogan, facing a long-predicted economic crisis and an ongoing Kurdish insurgency, will actually be able to bring Turkey stability. If he fails to achieve even the autocratic stability of which dictators love to boast, all bets are off. If he succeeds though, perhaps in time the United States and Turkey can revert to the established authoritarian-allies script. Turkey has also been trying to present itself, not unsuccessfully, as a potential ally if the United States moves toward a regional confrontation with Iran. And, paradoxically, if Turkey becomes more authoritarian and Erdogan, as a result, has even less to worry about from domestic political opinion, he may become less invested in his own democratic rhetoric as well.

Until then, though, U.S.-Turkish relations will be beset by their own particular source of stress. Erdogan, as should be abundantly clear by now, is not inclined to be anyone’s “son of a bitch,” and most certainly not Washington’s.

Photo credit: ELIF SOGUT/Getty Images

International Collaboration to End Violence

by Robert J. Burrowes-





( April 21, 2017, Victoria, Sri Lanka Guardian) While much of the world is engulfed in violence of one sort or another (whether violence in the home or on the street, exploitation, ecological destruction or war), a global network of individuals and organizations is committed to ending this violence in all of its manifestations.
With individual signatories in 100 countries and organizational endorsements in 35 countries, each of these individuals and organizations works on one or more manifestations of violence in their locality and some of the organizations and networks have considerable national or even international reach.
However, as you might understand, there is a great deal to be done and the Charter network continues to expand as more people and organizations are motivated to join this shared effort.
Here is an outline of what some of these individual signatories of ‘The People’s Charter to Create a Nonviolent World’ https://thepeoplesnonviolencecharter.wordpress.com/ are doing. You are welcome to join them.
A native of Iran, Professor Manijeh Navidnia was born in Tehran where she attended school and university. She married in 1982 and had her first child in 1985. Her original research interests were in social science and sociology but after collaborating with the Islamic Azad University, she became interested in strategic studies and most of her research work and publications since then have focused on security. Her first book in 2009 was particularly focused on ‘societal security’ and her political engagements are designed to enhance international cooperation across cultures.
Mahad Wasuge is a key figure at the Heritage Institute for Policy Studies in Somalia. The Institute has recently published a shocking report on ‘Somalia’s Drought Induced Crises: Immediate Action and Change of Strategy Needed’ www.heritageinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/Somalia%E2%80%99s-Drought-Induced-Crises-Immediate-Action-and-Change-of-Strategy-Needed.pdf in response to the ongoing drought in Somalia which threatens millions of people. ‘The ongoing drought in Somalia – referred to in the Somali language as Sima, which means the leveler, ubiquitous or pervasive – has enveloped the entire country. If rain does not arrive by mid April, and if a massive humanitarian campaign is not mounted swiftly, the drought could morph into an insidious famine that could devastate the country’: hundreds of thousands of vulnerable men, women and children could starve to death. Sadly, while awareness of the ongoing suffering and the potential famine has been high, ‘the response of the international community and the mitigation strategy by Somalia has been wholly inadequate.’ Despite UN agencies raising over US$300 million, the majority of the population across the country is not receiving basic necessities. ‘Many pastoral communities have also lost 80 percent of their livestock, escalating their vulnerability to an alarming and perilous level.’
Ruth Phillips is the central figure in the initiative to create ‘an ecological, co-housing village here on a fully restored, 17th century chateau estate in rural France. The property lies in the heart of 30 acres of parklands and forests in the midst of quiet, deep-green nature, surrounded by hills and mountains, forests and lakes. It is set in the eastern Dordogne, one of most unspoilt regions of France’. They have permission to create a permaculture village around the chateau for residential and/or holiday use, with 23 houses blended into the natural and historic landscape. Plans include the chateau ‘hub’ offering education, leisure and cultural activities for residents and visitors; a small restaurant; a multi-functional workshop space; the swimming pool; a sauna and communal space, as well as large individual garden plots and access to acres of forest and fields on the property. The site aims to be a showcase for permaculture and sustainable living. Too good to be true? Check out the Ecochateau http://www.eco-chateau.com/eco-house.htm website and email Ruth if you want to go there to stay for a while and help make their vision a more complete reality.
Burmese scholar and activist, Dr Maung Zarni has been indefatigable in his efforts to raise awareness of the Burmese government’s genocidal assault on the Rohingya Muslim population in Burma. He has also not shied away from drawing attention to democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi’s complicity in this genocidal assault. While he has written many articles on the subject, this two-minute video will give you a clearer sense of Zarni, the compassionate scholar/activist: ‘Multiple Denials of Myanmar’s Atrocity Crimes against Rohingyas prevent a peaceful resolution’. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zwmNpmszN9w&feature=youtu.be For more, check out Zarni’s website. http://www.maungzarni.net/
In one of her public talks, https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nO20TBCU51c Kathleen Macferran posed the question ‘Are we really safer when we put those who harm others behind bars and forget about them?’ She explores the idea of ‘turning our prisons into houses of healing and creating connections that lead to greater safety’ by having incarcerated men and women return to our communities as peacemakers.
Greg Kleven is a 68 year-old American living and teaching English in Viet Nam. He was 18 years old when he went to Viet Nam as a soldier in 1967 ‘and thought that what I was doing was right. But after a few months in country I realized that I had made a huge mistake. The war was wrong and I should never have participated.’ After going home he had a hard time adjusting back into society. ‘I couldn’t get the war out of my mind.’ In 1988 he went back to Viet Nam as a tourist and realized he had a chance ‘to make up for what I had done’. For the next two years he helped organize ‘return trips for veterans who wanted to go back and see Viet Nam as a country, not a war’. In 1990 he started teaching English in Ho Chi Minh City and he has been doing it ever since. Greg shares the passion to ‘some day put an end to all wars and violence in the world’.
Professor of Mathematical Analysis, Tarcisio Praciano-Pereira, reports from Brazil that he is personally well but that living in Brazil is ‘very bad! I am 73 years old and I have suffered the dictatorship of 1964 when I was forced into exile. So I have a very clear picture of what is going on here and this doesn’t make
me well because I know clearly the dangers we are facing. My life has changed entirely, my intellectual production has dropped down because I am all the time in the fight. I am seriously afraid! And I am not a young boy anymore as I was in 1964.’ He advised the death of a judge of the Supreme Court, who was overseeing a massive corruption investigation into the state oil company, Petrobras, against the will of the ‘putsch owners’ and conservative media outlet ‘Globo’. It is clear that the possibility of crime in this death cannot be dismissed. Now they are trying to replace the dead judge with the Justice Secretary ‘who is nothing but a criminal. Please take a stand against this if you can. Afraid is the right picture, friend! Yes, Fora Temer! Fora Temer, o traira!’
Ending human violence requires courage, not to mention toughness and determination, often in extraordinarily difficult circumstances.
For that reason, you might be sceptical about the prospects of achieving it.
But if you wish to join the people above in working to create a world in which peace, justice and ecological sustainability ultimately prevail for all life on Earth, you can do so by signing the online pledge of ‘The People’s Charter to Create a Nonviolent World’ https://thepeoplesnonviolencecharter.wordpress.com/ and participating in ‘The Flame Tree Project to Save Life on Earth’. http://tinyurl.com/flametree
Can we do it? If we do not try, we will never know. And one day, fairly soon now according to some climate scientists (and assuming we can avert nuclear war in the meantime), homo sapiens sapiens will enter Earth’s fossil record without even making a concerted effort to prevent it.
Biodata: Robert J. Burrowes has a lifetime commitment to understanding and ending human violence. He has done extensive research since 1966 in an effort to understand why human beings are violent and has been a nonviolent activist since 1981. He is the author of ‘Why Violence?’ http://tinyurl.com/whyviolence His email address is flametree@riseup.net and his website is here. http://robertjburrowes.wordpress.com
Man-made objects designed to explore the universe are now challenges for modern spaceflight. (European Space Agency)

 

Halfway through the European Space Agency's new film, we're at the part where — if this were some happy space documentary from yesteryear — Carl Sagan might be giving us a tour of a distant galaxy.

Cycling to work can cut cancer and heart disease, says study


'It's faster than the bus' and other reasons why people cycle to work
BBCBy James Gallagher-20 April 2017

Want to live longer? Reduce your risk of cancer? And heart disease? Then cycle to work, say scientists.
The biggest study into the issue linked using two wheels with a halving of the risk of cancer and heart disease.
The five-year study of 250,000 UK commuters also showed walking had some benefits over sitting on public transport or taking the car.
The team in Glasgow said cycling took no willpower once it became part of the work routine - unlike going to the gym.
The five-year study compared people who had an "active" commute with those who were mostly stationary.

'Active commuters'

Overall, 2,430 of those studied died, 3,748 were diagnosed with cancer and 1,110 had heart problems.
But, during the course of the study, regular cycling cut the risk of death from any cause by 41%, the incidence of cancer by 45% and heart disease by 46%.
The cyclists clocked an average of 30 miles per week, but the further they cycled the greater the health boon.
Walking cut the odds of developing heart disease but the benefit was mostly for people walking more than six miles per week.
"This is really clear evidence that people who commute in an active way, particularly by cycling, were at lower risk," Dr Jason Gill, from the University of Glasgow, told the BBC News website.
"You need to get to work every day so if you built cycling into the day it essentially takes willpower out of the equation.
"What we really need to do is change our infrastructure to make it easier to cycle - we need bike lanes, to make it easier to put bikes on trains, showers at work."
People who combined cycling and public transport in their commute also showed health benefits.

Out of breath

The way the study, published in the British Medical Journal, was carried out means it is not possible to determine a clear cause and effect.
However, the effect was still there even after adjusting the statistics to remove the effects of other potential explanations like smoking, diet or how heavy people are.
It means the reason cycling cuts cancer risk cannot be down to weight loss in the study.
Other explanations include cyclists being leaner (even if they are not weighing any less) and lower levels of inflammation in the body.
Cycling is thought to be better than walking as the exercise is both longer and more intense.
Clare Hyde from Cancer Research UK said: "This study helps to highlight the potential benefits of building activity into your everyday life.
"You don't need to join a gym or run the marathon.
"Anything that gets you a bit hot and out of breath - whether it's cycling all or part way to work or doing some housework - can help make a difference."
Follow James on Twitter.

Saturday, April 22, 2017

Even north’s preschools are militarized!

Even north’s preschools are militarized!

Kilinochchi, considered by the LTTE as its capital city in the past, is today a heavily militarized area. The security forces carry out various activities there, including conducting preschools.
Have you ever heard of preschool teachers who earn Rs. 32,000 a month? For that you have to go to Kilinochchi town. Everybody knows that an average Sri Lankan preschool teacher draws a salary of between Rs. 4,000 and Rs. 6,000 a month. One who has followed the required professional courses will rarely get more than Rs. 15,000. But, nowhere else, one is paid Rs. 32,000. When an average preschool teacher in Kilinochchi gets around Rs. 6,000 as the monthly salary, why do those who teach at the military-run preschools get such a big salary? We believe that to be part of militarization. That is, these preschool teachers are considered a lot that enjoy privileges of the military.
The Army provides them training courses, trips and educational tours. As the Army’s official website reports, the security forces headquarters in Kilinochchi had arranged a two-day educational tour for them covering the north and the east. Read the related article at http://www.army.lk/news/kilinochchi-troops-organize-annual-tour-pre-school-students.
The most interesting part is very dangerous. Children who study at these military-run preschools have to wear a uniform with a badge with certain letters that say they are of the Army. Doesn’t that indicate that even the small children are victims of militarization? After strong objections by civil and human rights organizations of the area, the children were ordered to wear a jacket over the uniform. These children cannot wear a dress of their choice and this uniform is compulsory.
By a special correspondent

Should We Have Socio-Economic Rights In The Constitution? 


Colombo TelegraphApril 22, 2017
Thank you very much for that welcome,  It’s great to be here in Colombo. I’ve always liked the quality of intellectual dialog here very good.
I was briefed that I should speak on incorporating socio economic rights in the constitution. What I’m going to do is try and develop a conversation.
I realize this is a subject of live and passionate debate in Sri Lanka. I’m not going to directly talk about the Sri Lankan constitution for two reasons. First, because I’m not equipped to do so. It requires an intricacy that I do not possess. Second, when thinking about constitutions in general the most important thing to realize is that a constitution is a social contract within a particular group of people. Because it is a social contract it has to reflect the historical specificity of that people’s values, goals, aspirations and identities. There isn’t as it a thing like a cookie-cutter template for constitution making.
I often joke that one thing that saved India is the fact that it didn’t have an army of constitutional consultants, in 1948 suggesting best case solutions from everything from federalism to separation of powers and human rights. Constitutions are social contracts, and part of what that means is that it needs to be legitimate in the eyes of the people who are going to be governed by that constitution. In that sense, the constitution and the choices you make about a constitution is fundamentally a political negotiation.
*Prof. Pratap Bhanu Mehta
Always be very suspicious of anyone who tells you that there is such a thing called a “first-best” constitution; a conception of constitutional validity that’s independent of the legitimacy that the constitution exercises over its people. It’s up to your elected representatives and the people of Sri Lanka to, in a sense, negotiate their way into a settlement.
The test of an enduring constitution is simple: Ask the question “do all those governed by a constitution feel that it’s one that they have chosen?” And “are they exercising their rights as free and equal citizens?” It shouldn’t be up to experts or people with constitutional authority to prescribe an ideal form of a constitution.
What we could do is share what different experiences will look like, and what those experiences might mean when you think about a new constitution in Sri Lanka.
What I will speak on in the next 20 minutes or so is on the following:
  • How should we frame the debates over economic and social rights in the constitution?
  • About the Indian case and possible lessons from that for Sri Lanka or any other constitution making progress.
  • End with a couple of suggestions regarding things to think about in the Sri Lankan debate.

Key suspect in Lasantha killing given diplomatic post by Gotabhaya


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ECONOMYNEXT - The chief suspect in Lasantha Wickrematunga’s assassination was given a diplomatic post by the then defence secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa but it was withdrawn soon after Mahinda Rajapaksa won the January 2010 election, fresh evidence has revealed.

Rajapaksa has denied any involvement in the January 2009 assassination of Sunday Leader editor Wickrematunga and a string of other attacks against dissident journalists, but new evidence shows he nominated the main suspect as an intelligence officer at the Sri Lanka embassy in Thailand.

The then powerful defence secretary has denied allegations by his army commander and erstwhile friend Sarath Fonseka that he led a killer squad comprising handpicked army commandos attached to a secret killer gang.

Rajapaksa has countered the allegation saying that if there were any secret killer squads involving army personnel,Fonseka as the then commander should take responsibility.

Fonseka in his testimony to the police has said security and intelligence operations in Colombo were carried out by Rajapaksa and national Intelligence Chief Kapila Hendawithrana, who is also accused of leading a killer squad, according to a report filed in the Mount Lavinia courts last month.

However, the latest evidence showed that Gotabhaya Rajapaksa nominated army intelligence operative Major Bandara Bulathwatte as an "intelligence officer" with the rank of second secretary at the Sri Lankan embassy in Bangkok, just a week before the January 2010 presidential elections.

President Rajapaksa was challenged at the polls by his army chief Fonseka who  ended up in jail after a controversial court martial and high court proceedings against him.

In a hastily prepared letter, Rajapaksa asked the Foreign Secretary to appoint Bulathwatte as an intelligence officer after recalling another officer holding the rank of second secretary in Bangkok.  It was done in such haste, even a bio-data of Bulathwatte was not attached, although it was requirement for him to get his visa and have the appointment regularised by the foreign ministry.

This letter dated January 18, 2010 was issued in Rajapaksa’s name and it was authenticated as genuine by the then additional secretary to the defence ministry, Ravi Arunthavanathan.

The appointment of major Bulathwatte was made in the heat of a bruising presidential election campaign. Bulathwatte’s bio data was obtained from army commander Jagath Jayasuriya.

Transfer of public servants cannot be carried out when an election has been called unless with the concurrence of the Elections Commissioner or under urgent national security considerations, but such a requirement was not mentioned in appointing Bulathwatte to Thailand a week before the polls.

However, after President Mahinda Rajapaksa was re-elected and Fonseka was arrested, defence secretary Rajapaksa changes his mind and tells the Foreign Secretary to defer Bulathwatte’s posting due to national security considerations.

"Request please to make necessary arrangements to postpone the scheduled departure of the above officer (Major B.W.D.M.R.P.S.S.B.D Bulathwatte) until further notice as his presence in Colombo is of importance with regard to matters pertaining to national security," said the then chief of National Intelligence Kapila Hendawitharana in a letter to the foreign secretary. This letter is sent on February 25, almost a month after the election is won by President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Exactly two weeks after asking the foreign secretary to hold Bulathwatte’s appointment, Hendawitharana gives the go ahead to send Bulathwatte to Thailand. Hendawitharana then makes a U-turn five days later asking the foreign secretary to further postpone the appointment.

This time, the reason for the postponement is: "The presence of the officer is urgently required for a very important matter pertaining to the national security."

Technical evidence and telephone records have placed Bulathwatte at the location where Lasantha was killed as well as in the places where other journalists were attacked. His six-member gang is now in remand custody and several of them have been identified by those who survived attacks.

The vehicle used in some of the attacks as well as Lasantha’s killing has been recovered from the home of a woman linked to Bulathwatte, who is now in remand custody.

Soon after the former defence secretary’s name was mentioned in a court document last month, he denied any involvement and left the island and is said to be in Singapore following a study course.

The former military intelligence chief, Hendawitharana, has already been questioned by police in connection with Lasantha’s killing, but investigators said several other officers are due to be questioned and high profile arrests are imminent.

Two other suspects in the attacks against Lasantha and several others, Warrant Officers R. L. Rajapaksha and I. P. A. Udalagama, had been given clerical jobs at the Sri Lankan embassy in Germany.

More evidence in proof of murder committed by Nandikadal Kamal Gunaratne when he was Dep. Ambassador !

- Victim was abandoned on the road after the attack



LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -22.April.2017, 11.55PM)  Copious evidence including photographs  in connection with the cold blooded murder of I.D. Nimal Rupasinghe committed by retired major general Kamal Gunaratne when he was the deputy ambassador in the Sri Lankan Embassy in Brazil are now in the possession of Lanka a news . Rupasinghe who was employed at the Sri Lankan Embassy in Brazil was killed by launching a fierce  attack to  his head with  a blunt weapon .
For the first time Lanka e news revealed this gruesome murder on April  3 rd under the caption ‘Damning Expose`: SL Dep. Ambassador Kamal Gunaratne brutally murdered his worker in Brazil..! Murder suppressed jointly with Gota the dark minister of the graveyard..!
Based on the latest evidence , the murder took place on 3 rd November 2013 night .Two others , namely Anjula Ruwanpathirane and Sarath Ediriweera Liyanage have assisted in the crime. Subsequently in order to suppress the murder the two accomplices were dispatched to America by Kamal and Raja Edirisuriya , SL ambassador to Brazil at that time  who is also an American citizen, based on reports .

The SL embassy was located in a building bearing the address : QI 13 . CONJUNTO  13 , CASA 1 , LOGO SUL , BRASILA , BRAZIL . The residence of  Kamal Gunaratne was about half a meter away from the Embassy. On the night of the murder , Kamal has arrived at the Embassy from his home , that is at about 10.00 in the night (2013-11-03). Anjula and Sarath  were also there . When Nimal Rupasinghe too arrived , an altercation has erupted between  the latter and Kamal.

The victim’s head was attacked with a part of a gold  mining machine

The owner of the  building where the embassy was located owned a gold pit. This gold mining pit was  abandoned about five years ago , and its equipments and machines were kept in a  garage beside the building , and the quarrel took place near the garage. Kamal who took  a part of the machine in the garage has  attacked Nimal ‘ s head  fiercely with that equipment , whereupon Nimal has fallen down. 
Kamal who thought Nimal has died , along with Anjula and Sarath have dragged Nimal to the road away from the embassy , and dressed the scene to look an accident; and that Nimal had died due to a road accident , while pretending none of them  knew anything about it.  It is a group of  Brazilian nationals who had taken Nimal to a hospital . 
These bestial heartless rascals Kamal , Anjula and Sarath  have not taken any action to admit Nimal whom they presumed dead, even  to a hospital. That is they have not shown any concern or sympathy towards  him as a citizen of their own country ,  a colleague  or a relative.

The victim was admitted to St. Maria hospital which is about 120 kilometers away from the embassy. Why was the victim admitted to a hospital that far away is an issue. Anyway Nimal was admitted to No. 2 Intensive Care unit of the hospital and his bed No. was 7. Based on hospital records he was admitted on 2013-11-04 at 4.15, in the early hours of the morning.  After his Embassy identity card was found from the pocket of Nimal by the hospital  , the Embassy was informed.

(If anybody wishes to garner more information in this regard , he /she can contact St. Maria hospital at phone No.  00556133926714 )    

Maria who transformed into Dr. Loria …

From that point of time , the SL embassy in Brazil had been profusely lying to the only daughter I.D. Thejika Sandamalie Rupasinghe who was in Sri Lanka 
In our earlier report in this connection , we revealed details of the information  passed to us by Thejika. It was Anjula Ruwanpathirane  also involved in the murder of Nimal who told lies toThejika that Nimal was attacked by a horse on 2013-11-04 , that he was critical and was  being treated in the ICU . 
‘Dr. Loria’ who was introduced as a hospital doctor  to Thejika in SL by Ruwanpathirane was none other than the latter’s mistress , Maria Do Carmo Magalhaes a Brazilin national girl with whom Ruwanpathirane was having an illicit sexual relationship. ( Herein are several photographs) . Maria in fact  is not a doctor and her living place is Brasília, Brazil. 
Nimal Rupasinghe passed away on 2014-03-10  in the hospital without regaining consciousness from his coma  commencing   2013-11-04 until his time of  death. 

Anjula-Sarath -Ajith    - witnesses in Nimal’s death. 

The ambassador Raja Edirisooriya and deputy ambassador Kamal Gunaratne moved heaven and earth to suppress this most ghastly ruthless murder . Even before the  official terms of service  of  Anjula Ruwanpathirane and Sarath Ediriweera Liyanage (both  directly involved in the murder) were  over in the embassy , they were dispatched to the US.
Raja Edirisooriya ‘s American citizenship  facilitated this maneuver.  Anjula is now residing in California , and is working in Medtronic Co. (Herein is a photograph of Sarath and Anjula together taken in America).
There is  another witness to this murder . He is Ajith Weerasinghe. Though all of them were sent from SL to the foreign service by the foreign ministry , it is significant to note none of them have returned to the Island. Ajith now works in Brazil embassy as a driver. A photograph of his is herein. 

Kamal Gunaratne the uncouth uncivilized slave driver…

It is an unequivocal fact that retired major general Kamal Gunaratne , a lackey and lickspittle of ex defense secretary Gotabaya Rajapakse ( by now  a byword for murder and mayhem )  exploiting  his ‘war hero’ label brutally murdered I.D. Nimal Rupasinghe , a citizen of his own country .On 2013-11-02 Nimal  speaking to his only daughter in SL , has told over the phone that Kamal is treating him like a slave ,and he is therefore taking a ticket , and returning to SL. Nimal in order  to purchase the air ticket has collected money from various individuals promising to return the money. If the reader of this article learns what was the menial  jobs of a slave  Nimal was forced to do by Kamal , he / she would be so rudely shocked that he/she will conclude  even  skinning that murderous rascal Kamal alive is not enough as a punishment ! 
Following a complaint recently  made by Nimal’s daughter  several years after this most ruthless cold blooded murder ,to the CID , the latter has launched an investigation .

By Wimal Dheerasekera

Translated by Jeff 
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by     (2017-04-22 22:06:19)