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, May 10, 2017

The Universal Lesson of East Timor


by John Pilger-

( May 9, 2017, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) Filming undercover in East Timor in 1993 I followed a landscape of crosses: great black crosses etched against the sky, crosses on peaks, crosses marching down the hillsides, crosses beside the road. They littered the earth and crowded the eye.

The inscriptions on the crosses revealed the extinction of whole families, wiped out in the space of a year, a month, a day.  Village after village stood as memorials.

Kraras is one such village. Known as the “village of the widows”, the population of 287 people was murdered by Indonesian troops.

Using a typewriter with a faded ribbon, a local priest had recorded the name, age, cause of death and date of the killing of every victim. In the last column, he identified the Indonesian battalion responsible for each murder. It was evidence of genocide.

I still have this document, which I find difficult to put down, as if the blood of East Timor is fresh on its pages.

On the list is the dos Anjos family.

In 1987, I interviewed Arthur Stevenson, known as Steve, a former Australian commando who had fought the Japanese in the Portuguese colony of East Timor in 1942. He told me the story of Celestino dos Anjos, whose ingenuity and bravery had saved his life, and the lives of other Australian soldiers fighting behind Japanese lines.

Steve described the day leaflets fluttered down from a Royal Australian Air Force plane; “We shall never forget you,” the leaflets said. Soon afterwards, the Australians were ordered to abandon the island of Timor, leaving the people to their fate.

When I met Steve, he had just received a letter from Celestino’s son, Virgillo, who was the same age as his own son. Virgillo wrote that his father had survived the Indonesian invasion of East Timor in 1975, but he went on: “In August 1983, Indonesian forces entered our village, Kraras. They looted, burned and massacred, with fighter aircraft overhead. On 27 September 1983, they made my father and my wife dig their own graves and they machine-gunned them. My wife was pregnant.”

The Kraras list is an extraordinary political document that shames Indonesia’s Faustian partners in the West and teaches us how much of the world is run. The fighter aircraft that attacked Kraras came from the United States; the machine guns and surface-to-air missiles came from Britain; the silence and betrayal came from Australia.

The priest of Kraras wrote on the final page: “To the capitalist governors of the world, Timor’s petroleum smells better than Timorese blood and tears. Who will take this truth to the world? … It is evident that Indonesia would never have committed such a crime if it had not received favourable guarantees from [Western] governments.”

As the Indonesian dictator General Suharto was about to invade East Timor (the Portuguese had abandoned their colony), he tipped off the ambassadors of Australia, the United States and Britain. In secret cables subsequently leaked, the Australian ambassador, Richard Woolcott, urged his government to “act in a way which would be designed to minimise the public impact in Australia and show private understanding to Indonesia.” He alluded to the beckoning spoils of oil and gas in the Timor Sea that separated the island from northern Australia.

There was no word of concern for the Timorese.

In my experience as a reporter, East Timor was the greatest crime of the late 20th century. I had much to do with Cambodia, yet not even Pol Pot put to death as many people – proportionally – as Suharto killed and starved in East Timor.

In 1993, the Foreign Affairs Committee of the Australian Parliament estimated that “at least 200,000” East Timorese, a third of the population, had perished under Suharto.

Australia was the only western country formally to recognise Indonesia’s genocidal conquest. The murderous Indonesian special forces known as Kopassus were trained by Australian special forces at a base near Perth. The prize in resources, said Foreign Minister Gareth Evans, was worth “zillions” of dollars.

In my 1994 film, Death of a Nation: the Timor Conspiracy, a gloating Evans is filmed lifting a champagne glass as he and Ali Alatas, Suharto’s foreign minister, fly over the Timor Sea, having signed a piratical treaty that divided the oil and gas riches of the Timor Sea.

I also filmed witnesses such as Abel Gutteras, now the Ambassador of Timor-Leste (East Timor’s post independence name) to Australia. He told me, “We believe we can win and we can count on all those people in the world to listen – that nothing is impossible, and peace and freedom are always worth fighting for.”

Remarkably, they did win. Many people all over the world did hear them, and a tireless movement added to the pressure on Suharto’s backers in Washington, London and Canberra to abandon the dictator.

But there was also a silence. For years, the free press of the complicit countries all but ignored East Timor. There were honourable exceptions, such as the courageous Max Stahl, who filmed the 1991 massacre in the Santa Cruz cemetery. Leading journalists almost literally fell at the feet of Suharto. In a photograph of a group of Australian editors visiting Jakarta, led by the Murdoch editor Paul Kelly, one of them is bowing to Suharto, the genocidist.

From 1999 to 2002, the Australian Government took an estimated $1.2 billion in revenue from one oil and gas field in the Timor Sea. During the same period, Australia gave less than $200 million in so-called aid to East Timor.

In 2002, two months before East Timor won its independence, as Ben Doherty reported in January, “Australia secretly withdrew from the maritime boundary dispute resolution procedures of the UN convention the Law of the Sea, and the equivalent jurisdiction of the International Court of Justice, so that it could not be compelled into legally binding international arbitration”.

The former Prime Minister John Howard has described his government’s role in East Timor’s independence as “noble”. Howard’s foreign minister, Alexander Downer, once burst into the cabinet room in Dili, East Timor, and told Prime Minister Mari Alkatiri, “We are very tough … Let me give you a tutorial in politics …”

Today, it is Timor-Leste that is giving the tutorial in politics. After years of trickery and bullying by Canberra, the people of Timor-Leste have demanded and won the right to negotiate before the Permanent Court of Arbitration (PCA) a legal maritime boundary and a proper share of the oil and gas.

Australia owes Timor Leste a huge debt – some would say, billions of dollars in reparations. Australia should hand over, unconditionally, all royalties collected since Gareth Evans toasted Suharto’s dictatorship while flying over the graves of its victims.

The Economist lauds Timor-Leste as the most democratic country in southeast Asia today. Is that an accolade? Or does it mean approval of a small and vulnerable country joining the great game of globalisation?

For the weakest, globalisation is an insidious colonialism that enables transnational finance and its camp-followers to penetrate deeper, as Edward Said wrote, than the old imperialists in their gun boats.
It can mean a model of development that gave Indonesia, under Suharto, gross inequality and corruption; that drove people off their land and into slums, then boasted about a growth rate.

The people of Timor-Leste deserve better than faint praise from the “capitalist governors of the world”, as the priest of Kraras wrote. They did not fight and die and vote for entrenched poverty and a growth rate. They deserve the right to sustain themselves when the oil and gas run out as it will.  At the very least, their courage ought to be a beacon in our  memory: a universal political lesson.

Bravo, Timor-Leste. Bravo and beware.

On May 5, John Pilger was presented with the Order of Timor-Leste by East Timor’s Ambassador to Australia, Abel Gutteras, in recognition of his reporting on East Timor under Indonesia’s brutal occupation, especially his landmark documentary film, Death of a Nation: the Timor Conspiracy. 
NGO warns of ‘insular’ Australia as govt slashes $223m from foreign aid

Rohingya refugee children attend an open air Arabic school at Kutupalang Unregistered Refugee Camp, where they learn to read the Quran, in Cox's Bazar, Bangladesh, February 4, 2017. Source: Reuters/Mohammad Ponir Hossain
2017-04-25T110311Z_953446629_RC116D0D65E0_RTRMADP_3_MYANMAR-ROHINGYA-CRISIS-940x580  2017-05-04T011332Z_1150149872_RC14F0C06860_RTRMADP_3_AUSTRALIA-NEWZEALAND  AusAidworld  2017-05-04T011332Z_1150149872_RC14F0C06860_RTRMADP_3_AUSTRALIA-NEWZEALAND
Source: Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade-Australian Foreign Minister Julie Bishop speaks in Sydney, Australia, May 4, 2017. Source: Reuters/Jason Reed

By  |  

HANDING down its federal budget the Australian government announced it would cut overseas aid by AUD303.3 million (US$223 million), with international aid agency Caritas warning it meant the country was becoming more “insular.”

The ruling, conservative Liberal-National Coalition announced its fourth consecutive reduction in the country’s international contribution as part of the Budget 2017-18, adding to a total of AUD11 billion (US$8.1 billion) in cuts over only a few years. The cuts in this budget will cover boosted defence and security spending.

Australian aid organisations have responded with resounding disappointment, with many noting the UN’s announcement in March that the world was facing its largest humanitarian crisis since it was founded in 1945.


 “Given Australia remains one of the wealthiest nations in the OECD, this is especially disappointing. This trend damages our reputation and undermines our ability to be taken seriously as a global leader, it also goes against our values,” said Negaya Chorley the head of advocacy at Caritas Australia.


The 2017-18 budget allocates AUD1.9 billion (US$1.4 billion) to Pacific nations, AUD833 million (US$614 million) to Southeast and East Asia, and AUD283.9 million (US$209 million) to South and West Asia. Australia’s aid programs in Africa, the Middle East and the Americas have decimated in recent years.

“We are committed to improving the lives of the most vulnerable in the Indo-Pacific region where we will invest over 90 per cent of our bilateral and regional aid,” said Foreign Minister Julie Bishop in a budget summary released by the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade (DFAT).

Australia cut 40 percent of its aid to Indonesia in 2015 – previously the country’s largest aid program – shortly after a diplomatic row with its northern neighbour. The government denied this was politically motivated.

Papua New Guinea is now the biggest beneficiary of foreign aid funding from Australia.


Australia’s government has justified the cuts due to a supposed “budget crisis,” despite 26 years of continuous economic growth and one of the highest per capita incomes in the world.

The country’s treasurer Scott Morrison was quoted as saying on Tuesday that “I look forward to the day we can be more generous. We’re a prosperous, strong and generous country.”





But Tim Costello the head of Australia’s largest non-profit World Vision stated that “in the four years since the Coalition took power in 2013, they have systematically cut the aid budget.”


“Trump has made clear he wants to cut the US aid budget by close to 28 per cent. Congress is fighting this but in Australia, the Coalition have beaten him to it.”

As one of the world’s richest nations, Australia’s contribution “to assist the world’s most vulnerable people, is less than half what it should have been,” said Costello.

.: it's 'distressing' to think foreign aid will be cut to boost funding to security agencies

A media release from Campaign for Australian Aid stated that the cuts brought the country’s aid to “its lowest level ever.”

“It’s a budget that takes from the people living in the poorest parts of the world to help fund handouts for wealthy individuals and big corporates,” said director Tony Milne. “This is a budget to appease One Nation, not a budget that is about our common humanity.”


This is the fourth budget in a row the Coalition Govt has cut aid.

“Millions of people in South Sudan, Somalia, Yemen and Nigeria are facing starvation, while millions more are seeking asylum from war in Syria. Yet the government continues to raid Australia’s aid budget, which currently sits at an historic low,” added Milne.

World Vision said they had “been hoping for a visionary budget that recognised that the aid budget was more than a moral imperative, it helps further Australia’s interests.”

Universities must do more to tackle use of smart drugs, say experts

Academics call on institutions to consider measures such as drug testing to stem UK rise of drugs used to cope with exam stress
Adderall, one of the most common cognitive enhancement drugs. Photograph: Bloomberg/Getty Images
Students at Oxford. Photograph: Pete Lusabia/Alamy Stock Photo

-Wednesday 10 May 2017

Universities must do more to tackle the growing number of students turning to “smart drugs” to cope with exam stress, leading academics have said.

UK institutions are being called on to consider measures such as drug testing to stem the rise of cognitive enhancement drugs being used by young people to improve their academic performance.

As hundreds of thousands of students across the UK prepare to sit their summer exams in coming weeks, Thomas Lancaster, an associate dean at Staffordshire University, said we were entering a “dangerous world” where students have access to the “study drugs”. He called on universities to have “frank discussions” with students and to develop policies around their use.

“Universities need to seriously consider how to react to the influx of smart drugs on campus. Educating students about smart drugs and seeing if they view this as cheating is important here. If the trend continues, universities may need to think about drug testing to ensure the integrity of the examination process,” Lancaster said.

Smart drugs, also known as nootropics, are a group of prescription drugs used to improve concentration, memory and mental stamina during periods of study. The most commonly used ones are Modafinil, Ritalin and Adderall. These substances are normally used to treat disorders such as narcolepsy and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder.

Larissa Maier, a research associate at the University of Zurich, called for more education about the risks associated with the substances. Her concerns were echoed by Prof Tim Hales, the head of neuroscience at Dundee University. He said: “In the short term some of these drugs may not be harmful, but we don’t know about their potentially harmful cumulative effects. Different students will respond differently, particularly when taking other medications, alcohol or recreational drugs at the same time.”

The growth of smart drugs over the past five years has been well documented, especially in top institutions such as Oxford University. In May 2016 the Oxford student newspaper, the Cherwell, published a survey that showed 15.6% of students knowingly took Modafinil or another such drug without prescription.

Oxford has introduced workshops to educate young people about smart drugs.

A recent European study co-authored by Robert Dempsey, a lecturer in psychology at Staffordshire University, found that the majority of university students believe it is normal to use such drugs to enhance academic performance.

Maier said current estimates indicate about 10% to 15% of students have tried to enhance their cognitive performance with prescription drugs, alcohol or illegal drugs at least once. With a UK student population of 2.3 million, this works out at about 230,000 people.

Oxford University said it had not seen evidence of a widespread problem, but added that students were strongly advised not to take any unprescribed drugs. “Students who are struggling to cope personally or academically will find a range of support at Oxford. They should talk to their tutors, their college welfare officers, Oxford University Student Union, their GP, or the university counselling service.”

The health risks that the drugs could pose are still unclear, but using them without a prescription is illegal and can lead to unwanted side-effects, such as increased anxiety and heart rate.
Maier said the number of students using the drugs could increase due to increased availability both at universities and online.

Dr Dominique Thompson, the director of the students’ health service at Bristol University, said she sees a handful of students a year who come in suffering the side-effects of the medications, such as insomnia. She put the rise in use down to increased competition and pressure on young people.

Thompson said: “There is a huge pressure to do well and excel and be different to everyone else as well as financial pressure now. That may be another factor as to why students feel they need to use any means to do well.”

The Guardian heard from several students who claimed to have faked ADHD symptoms in order to be prescribed Ritalin or Adderall. One student, from UCL, said: “I obtained the drugs from a friend who wanted Ritalin to use as a smart drug. She memorised the symptoms of attention deficit hyperactivity disorder and convinced a GP to prescribe it.”

Non-prescription sale of Noopept, a fine white powder that its makers claim enhances cognitive ability, was banned in the UK last year under the Psychoactive Substances Act. However, several British websites appear to be actively selling this substance.

Modup, a website selling Modafinil, told the Guardian that during exam time the volume of Modafinil shipped to the UK doubles. It claimed the campuses it mainly sent stock to were Oxford and Cambridge, followed by the London institutions Imperial and the London School of Economics.

One second-year student from Cambridge University, who asked to remain anonymous, said: “I know quite a few people who have used study drugs, including several of my housemates and friends. They all tend to take Modafinil rather than either Ritalin or Adderall … given the sheer volume and quality of work expected of people here, I would be unsurprised if my college is representative of the university as a whole.”

Another student from Leeds said they had been taking Modafinil or some variant for essays and exams since the middle of second year. “My own work rate has always been fairly pathetic without it so it’s been vital for me in completing my dissertation and other big projects at uni. I do know people who work very hard anyway, but take it for the non-stop work they have to do for degrees like medicine.”

Universities do not appear to have a plan in place for tackling the problem. Dr Cathy Montgomery, a reader in psychopharmacology at Liverpool John Moores University, said: “Many universities don’t have specific policies regarding use of cognitive enhancers as this is a new area. Most universities do, however, have a drug policy, stating that the use of drugs is prohibited on campus, but this does not necessarily extend to medicines.”

But she said that before policies were put in place, more research should be done: “We need a large-scale epidemiological study looking at use of enhancers across the UK.”

Neal Patel, a spokesman for the Royal Pharmaceutical Society, said: “Unfortunately, prescription-only medicines are available to just about anyone with some spare cash willing to buy them from unscrupulous online providers. You may or may not get what you pay for.

“Unrealistic expectations of the benefits of these powerful medicines, coupled with peer pressure to use them, is an unhealthy mix for students. Our advice remains for people to steer clear of prescription medicines unless they are being prescribed under the supervision of a health professional.”

Tuesday, May 9, 2017

SRI LANKA/WORLD: Reconciliation in a country entrenched with multiple discriminations

Justice Denied: A Reality Check on Resettlement, Demilitarization, and Reconciliation in Sri Lanka
By Basil Fernando-May 8, 2017

IN spite of several years of discussions and talks the work towards reconciliation in Sri Lanka has not made much progress. In this paper we will try to look into the problem areas relating to reconciliation in the light of multiple discriminations that are entrenched in Sri Lanka. This is against the usual approach of treating the issue of reconciliation only from a racial point of view that is as a conflict defined by racial relationships between Sinhalese and the Tamils communities. This paper tries to present the larger picture which affects the conflicts in the post independent Sri Lanka and at the moment is causing enormous hardships to all sectors of the population.

Government approves historic National Recociliation Policy


















LEN logo(Lanka-e-News- 09.May.2017, 11.30PM) On 2 May 2017, in a historic move, the Cabinet of Ministers of the Government of Sri Lanka approved Sri Lanka’s first National Reconciliation Policy.
The process for developing the National Reconciliation Policy was initiated in September 2015 by the Office for National Unity & Reconciliation (ONUR) chaired by Former President Her Excellency Madam Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga.  
After a one-year comprehensive consultation process with multiple stakeholders including Government officials, ministries, departments, members of provincial councils, civil society, academia, and experts and grass-roots activists, the National Reconciliation Policy was submitted by His Excellency President Maithripala Sirisena in September 2016 to Cabinet of Ministers for discussion. In his accompanying note to the Cabinet, His Excellency stated that the Office for National Unity and Reconciliation (ONUR) had drafted the National Policy in a “manner that reflects that reconciliation is a whole-of-government effort and a multi-stakeholder endeavour.” 
At this Cabinet Meeting in September 2016, Hon Minister Mano Ganeshan, Minister of National Coexistence, Dialogue & Official Languages, requested a few amendments to the document. Hence, the Cabinet directed the Secretary to the President to discuss these concerns with ONUR, who had prepared and drafted the National Policy on Reconciliation, and with Ministers and Secretaries of relevant Ministries and present a final version of the National Policy on Reconciliation. The Ministry of National Coexistence, Dialogue & Official Languages sent in amendments comprising paragraphs regards two matters, namely, language policy and coexistence. The rest of the original document as was prepared and drafted by ONUR was agreed to by the Ministry National Coexistence, Dialogue & Official Languages and other relevant Ministries. 
Accordingly, ONUR prepared the final version of the National Policy on Reconciliation and it was this final version of the document prepared by ONUR that was adopted by the Government at the Cabinet of Ministers’ meeting held on 2 May 2016.
ONUR held further discussions and consultations with stakeholders and the revised final version of the National Reconciliation Policy & Coexistence was resubmitted as a joint Cabinet Memorandum by His Excellency President Maithripala Sirisena and Hon Mano Ganeshan, Minister of National Coexistence, Dialogue & Official Languages, to the Cabinet of Ministers on 2 May 2017 for adoption.
The National Reconciliation Policy declares that will “serve as the State policy on reconciliation” and “provide direction to the process of national reconciliation in Sri Lanka.” Further, it says that it will “provide a guiding framework to all stakeholders working on reconciliation in order to achieve coherence in reconciliation initiatives.”
The National Policy on Reconciliation is set to fill a long-standing vacuum due to the absence of a consolidated National Policy on Reconciliation. The National Policy on Reconciliation will aim to satisfy the need of the country for an over-arching vision on reconciliation and a broad, coherent framework to steer and direct the process of national reconciliation. In this regard, it declares that, “Acknowledging that while several reconciliation initiatives are underway, there does not exist an expressed declared policy by the Government of Sri Lanka on the subject; hence this National Policy on Reconciliation aims to bridge this gap.”
This National Reconciliation Policy has laid down a set of “Policy Principles” which it defines as “A set of actionable principles and long-term goals that will form the basis for making rules and guidelines, and to provide overall direction to planning and development for national reconciliation. These include Equality, Human Rights, Justice and the Rule of Law, Transitional Justice, Inclusivity and Diversity, Sustainable Development, Civic Consciousness and others. The National Reconciliation Policy also lays down guidelines for stakeholders and actors implementing reconciliation programs and has identified the following as critical to it, namely, Conflict Sensitivity, Cross-Cultural Awareness, Victim-Centredness, Gender Responsiveness, Foresight and Innovation, Leadership and Sustainability, Efficiency and Effectiveness, Coordination and Complementarity and Clear and Consistent Communication. 
The National Reconciliation Policy includes an Implementation Strategy which has stated as follows: “Mainstream the values defined in the National Policy on Reconciliation within government institutions and existing national initiatives through annual work plans; Develop a National Programme and Action Plan for Reconciliation; and Launch public awareness and education campaigns on the National Policy on Reconciliation and the National Programme and Action Plan on Reconciliation.”
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by     (2017-05-09 20:27:13)

Rights of citizens, social peace and trade unions


article_image
By Fr. Augustine Fernando- 

Diocese of Badulla

Hardly a day passes in this country when we do not hear of some trade union creating a rumpus somewhere and threatening to strike over claims that seemingly have to be solved immediately as demanded by it. And if such demands are not granted many problems and social disruptions may follow. The ultimatums are justified, clear and direct at least so far as the trade unions are concerned. Unions of trades, crafts and professions have functioned for a long time. They are concerned about the terms of employment, ‘commissions’ conditions of health and security provided for workers, retirement benefits, etc. Over the years trade unions have shifted their goal posts. They have become an infuriating annoyance to the people at large.

WELL-BEING OF ALL?

Trade unions presumably claim to be acting on behalf and for the protection of the well-being of the members of the trade union and wedded to justice and righteousness, presuming also to be basing themselves and upholding truth and value whether that presumption is explicit or implicit. Many trades and professions compel employees to subscribe and become members of their unions. And trade unions besides having the professional well-being of its members as its objective, have also ideological and political stances. Because these latter objectives get over-emphasized in the hands of union leaders, many are wary of being union members who feel that the process of decision making is not democratic and that their opposing views are disregarded.

PEOPLES’ RIGHTS

The time has come for the Government to clarify matters concerning the rights of the people in general to live their lives without hindrance from self-absorbed political and trade union groups who draw undue attention to themselves by causing great disruption to society.

The time has also come for the Government to do a thorough clean-up of the existing corrupt political apparatus, identify the rogues who have contemptuously abused sports, journalism, even the legal set-up and political system and swindled the people of this country, by engaging in crooked deals, not knowing the spirit of life, let alone sports, journalism, law or politics, and murdered innocent poor people, sportsmen, journalists, men of the law and politicians and gained all sorts of advantages by way of bribes, kickbacks, payoffs and ‘commissions’ of percentages and stashed such ill-gotten gains in secret bank accounts abroad for their own opportunistic personal selfish

use. There are prominet figures in Sri Lanka called 10%, 20% and 40% characters! The recent strikes of the Petroleum Corporation and the Medical Officers . Those who call the strike would surely keep their family members, relatives and friends well informed in advance to prevent them from being adversely affected by their strike. But the 12000 to say 20000 who strike hold more than 20 million people to ransom. This is more than bastardizing trade unionism. It is because they are somewhat like low-born devils that the sensitive ordinary people with common sense curse these senseless maddening striking doctors and say that seven thunderbolts should strike them. People are held to ransom by the fellows who have been employed in the name of the people and as their servants. If the trade unionists in the public service do not understand that basic fact, they should get their heads examined by psychiatrists. Unfortunately some psychiatrists who have not had a grounding in social morality and professional ethics are also going on strike, perhaps because they only know of children’s and minor’s psyche; and these psychotic trade unionists are instigating others to strike because they themselves are thoroughly ignorant of the healthy psyche of normal adults.

TWO DEMOCRATIC

ELECTIONS

The striking unions do not bother about the working hours wasted, work obstructed and the losses the country incurs due to the strike and the great suffering inflicted on the poor people by fellows who have hours to waste at pleasurable leisure. Are they trade unionists or political ideologists or are they mentally deranged idiots who think they are somewhat superior to others? If they are taking political leadership behind the mask of trade unionists, they are presenting themselves not as distinct politicians but as political meddlers who have misjudged and felt somewhat a political strength they do not possess. Political strength comes from the approval of the people. Crowds that gather around a bunch of megalomaniacs do not indicate political support.

A good many who come to political meetings are unfocussed and like to be politically distracted and somewhat entertained. People are discerning and keep themselves informed even without attending political meetings. For every one person who attends, there are a hundred who don’t. A more balanced, sane and well-thought out political view of the people as a whole is obtained at democratic elections at critical political junctures. And we have had two such successful and fair general elections, the Presidential and Parliamentary elections in January and August 2015 in the midst of bribes of various forms offered to the people to which the majority did not succumb.

HONEST WORK, NO FRENCH LEAVE

There is an even distribution of sanity among the people. Therefore, they should critically support the Government they have elected and the Government should be sensitive enough to ascertain correctly the temperament of the people, dialogue with them and adjust their policies to do justice to the numerous issues they face in a manner that benefits the people and raises them to a better level of life than before. That ministers themselves are hard at work, not hardly at work, should be evident to the people not by their talk but by their actual performance. It is up to the Central Bank statisticians to honestly measure the rising level of national production and the correct distribution of wellbeing of the people without yielding to the influence of overbearing political powers who would like to juggle the figures, as have happened in the past sometimes, most disgracefully. There are those who theorize about sustainable development of the Country. But for any development, beneficial progress, advancement of all to actually take place, all should do an eight-hours job of honest work, day-in and day-out throughout a year, without taking ‘french leave’ on the slightest excuse as many are wont to do in our land.

PREPARE FINAL KNOCKOUT

All of us should admit that most of the time, we do not always satisfactorily balance thinking with our heads with the emotional feelings of our hearts. And we are often deadened in our spirits. That is the reason why we as Sri Lankans have been muddling through maddeningly for nearly seventy years while those who were far behind us at the time of our Independence have forged ahead leaving us far behind.

Trade Union leaders and political ideologists who are like walking dead are responsible for that. It is time that the Government realized that and prioritized the people and offered them every assistance to be productive and to contribute in their various ways to a national resurgence.

The people have been for the most part working and suffering in silence, forbearance and patience. But if the Government acted justly and fairly there is every possibility that the people will so perform until they are able to do an improved repeat performance of January and August 2015 at the next elections in 2020 and give a resounding final knock-out to the defeated rogues and achieve a hat trick in the first three rounds itself in the national elections ball game of the twentyfirst century. Then we might have a period of peace and serenity and a climate of a truly reconciled country growing in fraternity.

Rajapaksa Should Be Arrested


Colombo Telegraph
By Shyamon Jayasinghe –May 9, 2017
Shyamon Jayasinghe
Politicians no longer ask the question if it is true; rather whether it will sell.
What is this government of President Sirisena doing? Waiting, watching, ruminating while the old dictator is mobilising crowds unleashing his money and the moneys of other former UPFA government’s Ministers including his rich brother Basil Rajapaksa. Maybe Yoshitha’s phantom grandma has also put in some of the riches she is said to have earned after selling the sapphires mysteriously gotten from a heavenly angel. Sri Lanka is fairy land-although broke.
My primary focus is on the recent political developments running up to Galle Face May Day. Here, from so far away, we in Australia with a bit of political intuition can see the conspiracy unfolding before our eyes. Vickramabahu, perhaps Sri Lanka’s sincerest politician, announced an imminent danger in an interview that is becoming viral in social media. The old clan led by Mahinda Rajapaksa are hell -bent on coming back to rule until Mahinda dies. This must happen before the court cases get through. They are a desperate political junta. Desperate because their lives are at stake. When people are desperate they will do anything to survive. That is the human behavioural law. Maitripala Sirisena and Ranil Wickremesinghe must know this.
The outlines of the conspiracy is getting clearer by the day. The junta gets round the once-respected GMOA to spearhead trade union activity when their primary responsibility is to heal the sick. This is one clear frontline of the Mahinda Rajapaksa strategy. More than any other trade union that of the doctors of medicine has the strongest blackmailing power. This is the first time in the world we have seen a noble elite of men and women, raised and trained by the money of taxpayers to look after the sick, the wounded and the dying, behaving in this outrageous manner. Trade unionism is a recognised right all right; but medical doctors and related health personnel are not expected to employ the right to strike unless after exploring every other avenue.
The GMOA, that never blinked an eyelid when Mahinda, while in power, set put the SAITM and gratuitously showering benefits on that private medical college. Only now does the GMOA see the immediate danger of SAITM. They are frantic about it and not willing to get into any creative solution by discussion with the government to solve the issue that was not the government’s creation anyway. GMOA is obtuse about viewing the problem from the point of view of the students already there. No, they want to organise islandwide trade union activity. Never heard of a GMOA attempting to get around workers in the petroleum industry and other critical industries to join them in a kind of hartal. A hartal is what this trade union is aiming at. Like the one in 1962 that drove away perhaps of Sri Lanka’s best Prime Minister, Dudley Senanayake. GMOA now wants to drive away the new government of yahapalanaya that was elected  by the people sans any controversy about  election manipulation.
Any out -of -the box proposal of the government, is meat for the GMOA mill in this collective effort. It is astonishing that its rank and file does not see through the manoeuvres of its leaders. Doctors are supposed to be educated, critical and enlightened. Aren’t they? The move to form a regional trade agreement with our neighbouring India (ECTA) is opposed. What have doctors got to do with such policy matters?The best part of this is that the agreement is not even finalised for public consumption. It is in the process of negotiation. Agreements for leasing land to China in Hambantota  partly as a way of solving the massive debt trap with that country that Mahinda Rajapaksa had created and partly as a sound concept of foreign direct investment with the potential of generating jobs for our youth, is opposed.
What more? It looks like the government will have to consult the GMOA in future before they moot any future projects. Why not  give such a modus operandi constitutional status in the proposed new constitution? Good idea. Doctors would also be able to make big bucks like other politicians.The country will then be saddled with a serious problem of trying to find doctors who can heal our sick.
While these background developments were on the burner, Mahinda and his men organised a May Day in Galle Face. Crowds of people were packed into buses and lorries and brought to fill Galle Face.
See! We have filled Galle Face,” the former dictator cried. Unlike in the other two rallies of the UNP, SLFP and JVP we hardly saw any party caps among the audience. With the black money in possession, the downtrodden from villages in Down South were persuaded to attend. Jocular artists like Wijeweera were made to perform.
The highlight to me was how Wimal Weerawansa was introduced as, “the man who went to jail due to his heart-pouring and overflowing love for the country.” Is that why Wimal was arrested? He is charged for embezzlement of some millions of rupees of public funds and diverting houses constructed out of taxpayer money to his kith and kin. What an overflowing patriotism that was! Poor Wimal tried his old antics of going on a non-dying fast- unto- death but none took him seriously. It was like calling,”Wolf! Wolf!.”
To cap it all, was the May Day speech of Mahinda Rajapaksa, where he became utterly jingoistic underlying the need to save the motherland! It was rabble rousing and insular intone-full of deception and what we now know as “alternative facts.” The term became famous and instantly entered the lexicon of politics after Donald Trump’s senior Adviser, Kellyanne Convey, fist used it.
Mahinda has quickly learnt from the Trump campaign of lies. From the Trump campaign the world began to realise that “politicians no longer ask if its true; rather whether it will sell.” Mahinda knows well to create alternative facts that will sell. Above all, he threatened to bring a similar crowd next time and take over the government! Can you beat that?