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

Modi’s visit: Indian helicopters damage 5 houses during practise runs


2017-05-10
Two MI 17-type helicopters belonging to the Indian Army deployed to provide security to Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi during his upcoming visit to the hill country had during practice runs damaged the roofs of five houses, house owners said in a complaint to the Hatton Police.
They said the wind stirred by the whirling helicopter blades of the helicopters had blown away the asbestos roofing sheets.
When inquired from the Hatton Police the pilots had requested the police to inform the house owners to place sand bags on the roofs of their houses.
The Indian government had built a hospital complex for the Hatton-Dikoya Base Hospital at an estimated cost of Rs.5 billion. The building is to be inaugurated by the the Indian Premier before addressing the upcountry estate sector employees at the Norwood grounds. (Ranjith Rajapakse)
- See more at: http://www.dailymirror.lk/article/Modi-s-visit-Indian-helicopters-damage-houses-during-practise-runs-128678.html#sthash.CJIBaNoa.dpuf

FCID Accuses Attorney General Of Being Sluggish In Rajapaksa Investigations


Colombo TelegraphMay 10, 2017
Financial Crimes Investigations Division (FCID) has accused the Attorney General of adopting a sluggish attitude in directing the division on how to proceed with certain vital cases concerning former President Mahinda Rajapaksa and his associates.
Jayantha Jayasuriya – AG
According to highly placed sources closely connected to the FCID, apart from coming under pressure from powerful quarters, the FCID is also compelled to ‘sit and wait’ because despite referring certain cases to the AG, they are yet to receive instructions on how to proceed. Chief among these cases is the investigation into the purchase of the Mariott Hotel in Dubai by Nandana Lokuwithana, a very close associate of Rajapaksa’s.
“Due to the Attorney General’s delay, even the FCID is unable to take any action,” sources said.
In recent months, Lokuwithana has become a close associate of a top minister in the Maithripala Sirisena – Ranil Wickremesinghe government. “This association can also be one reason why no action is being taken against him,” a source said.
Incidentally this development also comes amidst reports that the FCID has become virtually defunct. However, the Sri Lanka Police has denied these reports and have claimed that investigations by the FCID is being carried out successfully and that an additional team of police officers including several ASPs were assigned to strengthen the Division.
Lokuwithana, is a Dubai based Sri Lankan businessman, and an alleged front man of Rajapaksa’s.
While in power, it is reported that Rajapaksa had invested heavily on properties in Dubai through Lokuwithana, who reportedly hails from Nattandiya, and was introduced to Rajapaksa by his one-time loyalist, Sajin Vass Gunawardena. Lokuwithana bought the Ceylon Heavy Industries and Construction company (CHICO) (former Ceylon Steel Corporation) for US$ 77 million at the invitation of the Rajapaksa regime. In the Panama Papers, Lokuwithana was identified with connection to an entity by the name of ‘Nilona Fashions’ which was incorporated in December 2000 and is within the jurisdiction of Seychelles, incidentally another hotspot where the Rajapaksa’s are alleged to have hidden their assets.

IGP ‘ s meditation show invites attacks on his anti narcotics police team at Piliyandala . One officer dead !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News - 10.May.2017, 7.05PM)  Two officers of the police  team of the Anti Narcotics Bureau were injured and another was shot dead on Moratuwa road ,  Piliyandala on the 9 th night , based on reports .
Newmal Rangajeewa  IP, a notorious officer of the Bureau and his assistant Chaminda who received gunshot injuries were  admitted to hospital where they are being treated. Rangajeewa had sustained injuries on  the forehead .

While the anti narcotics team was traveling in a jeep , a group that arrived on a motor bike had fired at them , and fled. The officer who drove  the jeep died on the spot. An 8 years old girl and a 15 years old boy who were in a neighboring shop had also been caught in the gun fire  , it is learnt.
It is a pity the police force under  IGP Poojitha Jayasundara ( who is meditating instead of investigating),  in relation to  another shooting incident too  had still not been able to arrest the murderers of Samayan who died when the prisoners were being transported in a bus . The killers in that incident  fled after shooting at the bus. 
How can the IGP  discharge his duties duly or make arrests when he is wasting  all his time only on self publicity gimmicks ,and   on ensuring ,  his subordinates abide by the  orders issued by him to  meditate every  morning to boost his image  (which is by now well known as moth eaten ), while neglecting his own onerous official duties ? 
Since Rangajeewa of the anti Narcotics Bureau is well known for his wheeler dealer activities in association with drug dealers , it is difficult to believe this shooting was done by the drug dealers based on informed sources within the police. 
---------------------------
by     (2017-05-10 13:38:35)

Sepala strikes deal through Dudley, arrives in Sri Lanka!

Sepala strikes deal through Dudley, arrives in Sri Lanka!

- May 10, 2017

Lawyer Sepala Ratnayake, an assistant secretary of Mahinda Rajapaksa, who is one of the others, including Sudarman Radaliyagoda, who had done a documentary during the last presidential election to insult president Maithripala Sirisena, reportedly returned to the country recently. 

During the final period of the Rajapaksa regime, Sepala had been serving at the Sri Lankan high commission in Britain. After Mahinda was defeated, he fled to England. In the meantime, the CID filed a court case against the lot. As Sepala did not appear in court, warrant was issued for his arrest. In the end, Sepala left his high commission job and disappeared. High commission people said he was in hiding in Scotland. Recently, the ex-ambassador to Russia Prof. Udayanga Weeratunga went to see him and had a drink of the locally-made brew with him at a barn house. The deal was struck through another present there.
 
The deal was to settle the court case by speaking to the president through his younger brother Dudley. The broker was Dudley’s best friend Asoka, who works at the Fisheries. He had met Dudley and did the needful.
 
For that, Asoka had obtained a sizeable amount from Asoka, but nobody knows if Dudley was given anything out of it. In the end, the president and Dudley were sold. The same thing happened during the Rajapaksa regime. Asoka is reportedly going to strike another deal, this time on behalf of Prof. Udayanga. Mr. president, we know you are not corrupt. But, beware of those who are close to you.
Chinese national nabbed with illicit liquor



2017-05-10

A Chinese national was taken into custody by the Bambalapitiya Police today when he was found brewing illicit liquor (Kasippu) in a room on the third floor of an apartment in Bambalapitiya.

 At the time of the arrest, the suspect was in possession of 650 litres of Goda, 160 litres of illicit liquor, 168 sticks of foreign cigarettes and other equipment used to brew arrack, police said. 

  Investigations revealed that the suspect had been living in Puttalam for two years, and had shifted to Bambalapitiya about an year ago. 

Police said the suspect had distributed liquor (in cans) to hotels and construction sites islandwide for the consumption of Chinese nationals working in Sri Lanka. (Ajith Siriwardana)

FIFA capitulates to Israel again

FIFA boss Gianni Infantino “is bent on following his predecessor’s corrupt path” after again caving in to Israeli pressure, Palestinians say. (Doha Stadium Plus/Vinod Divakaran)

Ali Abunimah-10 May 2017

FIFA has capitulated to intense pressure from the Israeli government and removed from the agenda of its upcoming congress the issue of Israeli settlement teams playing in Israel’s national league.

This came after the Israel Football Association presented a document to FIFA officials, seen by The Electronic Intifada, denying that an occupation even exists.

The Palestinian Football Association and more than 170 Palestinian teams have demanded that Israel be suspended due to its inclusion of settlement teams, its systematic violence against Palestinian athletes and its destruction of Palestinian sporting facilities.

But the council of world football’s governing body announced on Tuesday that there would be no vote on suspending Israel’s membership when national delegates gather for the FIFA Congress in Bahrain later this week.

“Following the report by chairman of the Monitoring Committee Israel-Palestine Tokyo Sexwale, the FIFA Council considered that at this stage it is premature for the FIFA Congress to take any decision,” FIFA stated.

Israel denies occupation

The FIFA monitoring committee, headed by Sexwale, a former political prisoner and veteran in South Africa’s struggle against apartheid, has been looking into the settlement issue for two years.

The Sexwale committee’s report has been repeatedly delayed. As this year’s FIFA Congress loomed, Israel intensified its diplomatic effort to undermine Sexwale and to reject his committee’s draft report.

A 24-page memo from the Israel Football Association to FIFA officials, seen by The Electronic Intifada, attacks Sexwale’s draft report as “politicized and fundamentally flawed.”

It claims that the report “is rife with false assertions, with no legal or factual basis” and accuses the Sexwale committee of the “adoption of the Palestinian narrative.”

One of these alleged false assertions, according to the Israel Football Association, is that the “term ‘occupied Palestinian territories’ is a politically motivated term and does not reflect a binding legal determination of the status of this territory or the factual situation on the ground.”

“This territory is best understood as territory over which both the Israeli and Palestinian side [sic] maintain competing claims,” the Israel Football Association adds.

False claims

But this position flies in the face of long-established international law. In December, the UN Security Council adopted a resolution reaffirming that Israel is the “occupying power” in the West Bank.

The resolution condemns all of Israel’s measures “aimed at altering the demographic composition, character and status of the Palestinian Territory occupied since 1967, including East Jerusalem,” by among other things building settlements, demolishing Palestinian homes and forcibly displacing civilians.

The clear language of the Security Council resolution gives the lie to Israel’s accusation that the Sexwale committee is making “one-sided political assertions” by factually stating that Palestinian territory is occupied.

FIFA rules bar national associations from holding matches on the territory of another member without permission – as Israel does in the West Bank without Palestinian permission.

Many governments and international bodies, including the International Criminal Court, consider the West Bank and Gaza Strip to be part of the territory of an occupied state of Palestine.

Moreover, a new legal analysis by the head of the Human Rights Centre at Germany’s University of Potsdam, concludes that Israeli settlement clubs playing in the occupied West Bank violate FIFA statutes.

Last month, more than 100 sports associations, trade unions, human rights organizations and faith groups from 28 countries joined world footballers, scholars, cultural figures and politicians in demanding the Israel Football Association be suspended if it didn’t exclude the settler teams.

FIFA caves in

The Israeli memo also proves beyond doubt that rather than being a body only interested in sports, the Israel Football Association is an integral part of Israel’s official propaganda and occupation apparatus whose goal is to complete the colonization and annexation of the West Bank.

The Israel Football Association memo recommends that “the draft report should not be circulated” and the matter should be the “subject of further discussion.”

Despite the clarity of the facts, the FIFA Council appears to have acquiesced to the false Israeli narrative and capitulated to demands for more delay and inaction.

The Palestinian Campaign for the Academic and Cultural Boycott of Israel strongly condemned the decision.

“For two years, FIFA has ducked its responsibilities and allowed the Israel Football Association to violate FIFA’s own statutes by including football teams based in illegal Israeli settlements built on occupied Palestinian land,” PACBI’s Hind Awwad said. “After bowing time and again to Israeli intimidation, FIFA had a chance to correct its disgraceful record. But it seems FIFA President Gianni Infantino is bent on following his predecessor’s corrupt path.”

Human Rights Watch detailed in a recent report how FIFA and the Israel Football Association jointly profit from Israel’s illegal colonization of the West Bank and the settlement teams that play there.

Palestine still on agenda

Despite Israel’s apparent success in pressuring FIFA officials to again give it a pass, Israel’s efforts to whitewash its violations of Palestinian rights still face a challenge at the upcoming congress.

The agenda includes a motion calling for “official recognition of the Palestinian Football Association’s entitlements to all of its rights as described in the FIFA Statutes.”

The Electronic Intifada understands there is intense pressure on the Palestinian Football Association to withdraw the motion.

While the PFA has caved in to such pressure in the past, it has vowed this time not to do so.

PACBI’s Awwad urged FIFA delegates to “stand on the right side of history” by backing the motion.

10 Ways to Tell if Your President Is a Dictator


Why Trump’s efforts to shake his Russia problem only make it worse

The Debrief: An occasional series offering a reporter’s insights

The turmoil surrounding former FBI Director James Comey and President Trump started long before Comey was fired on May 9. Here are the pivotal moments in Comey's time as head of the agency. (Jenny Starrs, Julio Negron/The Washington Post)



Once again, Donald Trump has tried to lift Moscow’s shadow off his presidency — and once again, he has done the opposite.

New questions are arising in the wake of his sudden decision to can FBI Director James B. Comey, along with revived calls for the appointment of a special prosecutor to investigate the question of Russian influence in last year’s election and the Kremlin’s connections to Trump’s presidential campaign.

“The only thing that is guaranteed right now is that the sense of chaos will continue, not only in law enforcement but also in Congress,” said GOP strategist Kevin Madden, a veteran of Capitol Hill and the Justice Department. “Every single lawmaker in the House and Senate is going to be pressured to take a stance.”

Of course, the surest way to end the controversy would be through a credible investigation that comes to a definite conclusion about the methods and extent of Russian meddling in the 2016 election and whether it involved improper dealings with people close to Trump.

“There will be no normalcy to his presidency if there is no independent investigation,” said Ron Klain, who was chief of staff in the Justice Department during the Clinton administration. “There is something absolutely essential about it but nothing inevitable about it.”
James B. Comey, Sally Yates and Preet Bharara were all law enforcement officials until President Trump fired them — and they were all investigating Trump or his administration at the time of their firing. (Peter Stevenson/The Washington Post)

When Trump fired an FBI director who was investigating his presidential campaign, “I was shocked last night, and I thought I couldn’t be shocked by anything anymore,” Madden said Wednesday. “Absent some sense of finality, members of Congress and law enforcement will have this hanging over them.”

But every out-of-the-ordinary turn seems to weaken confidence that the existing inquiries — both within the Justice Department and by the two intelligence committees on Capitol Hill — will actually be capable of producing a result widely accepted as untainted and convincing.

White House officials maintain that Comey’s firing had nothing to do with his agency’s Russia investigation but, rather, with his handling of the probe into Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton’s emails.

Yet Trump’s letter terminating Comey alluded to the questions surrounding his own administration (“While I greatly appreciate you informing me, on three separate occasions, that I am not under investigation …”) and made no mention of the FBI director’s much-criticized decisions involving Clinton.

White House deputy press secretary Sarah Huckabee Sanders declined to say when and under what circumstances Comey gave assurances to the president that he was not under investigation.

Nor were the day-after optics conducive to tamping down the controversy. The only event on Trump’s publicly announced schedule was a meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. The session was closed to the media — with the apparent exception of a photographer from Russia’s state-run news agency Tass, which lit up the Internet with its photos.

Then came another surreal turn: When reporters were summoned to the Oval Office for a brief opportunity to ask Trump questions, they found the president sitting not with Lavrov but with another visitor, former secretary of state Henry Kissinger.

With Comey's dismissal, the Russia investigation will soon be run by Trump allies

The inopportune presence of a Watergate-era figure punctuated comparisons of Trump’s actions with Richard Nixon’s “Saturday Night Massacre” of the special prosecutor looking into the scandal that ultimately forced Nixon’s resignation.

For Republicans, the frustration and perplexity surrounding Trump’s decision to fire Comey is compounded by the fact that it comes just days after his biggest legislative victory so far: the House passage last week of legislation to begin making good on the GOP’s promise to repeal and replace the Affordable Care Act.

Reviving the Russia controversy is likely to distract not only from the Senate’s efforts to pass its own health-care legislation but also from other ambitious items on the GOP agenda, including overhauling the tax code.

“Comprehensive tax reform just got an awful lot harder, as did nearly every other challenge facing the nation, both foreign and domestic: infrastructure, health care, immigration, trade and others,” former New York mayor Michael R. Bloomberg wrote Wednesday in a column published by Bloomberg News.
In that sense, the timing is reminiscent of another episode earlier in the Trump presidency.

Four days after giving a widely praised address to Congress on Feb. 28, the president tweeted a false claim that President Barack Obama had tapped Trump’s phones “during the very sacred election process. This is Nixon/Watergate. Bad (or sick) guy!”

That, too, was a reference to the investigation into links between Trump associates and the Russian government, and it exasperated Republicans who had been hopeful that the speech to Congress marked a new, more presidential turn on Trump’s part.

The debate over whether there is a need for a special prosecutor reflects doubts that the Justice Department is capable of doing its work in this highly charged political environment.

Deputy Attorney General Rod J. Rosenstein, who wrote the memo recommending Comey’s dismissal, is highly respected by both parties on Capitol Hill, though some now say he cannot continue to oversee the probe, given his role in removing the lead investigator.

“Deputy Attorney General Rosenstein now has no choice but to appoint a special counsel,” Sen. Patrick J. Leahy (D-Vt.), a senior Democrat on the Senate Judiciary Committee, said in a statement. “His integrity, and the integrity of the entire Justice Department, are at stake.”
Others disagree.

“I look at Rod J. Rosenstein, and I think who better than Rod J. Rosenstein to conduct an investigation,” said Mark Corallo, who directed public affairs at the Justice Department during the George W. Bush administration. “There are enough people at the department who can do a credible investigation. The politics of this are going to be the usual Sturm und Drang of Washington.”

It remains to be seen how the furor in Washington over Comey’s firing resonates with voters across the country.

“There aren’t a lot of great options, but making noise is the only thing that is going to bring about change,” said Richard Ben-Veniste, who was a special prosecutor during Watergate and later served on the independent commission investigating the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks. “The ‘Saturday Night Massacre’ really woke up the American public to the fact that something was going on, though the extent was not understood.”

But most Americans probably had barely heard of the FBI chief before recent months, when news reports have been filled with criticism of his decisions during the presidential campaign and since. Comey’s reputation has been so badly battered that many Americans may agree with Trump that his firing was amply justified, even amid his investigation of the Russia matter.

So it appears far from certain — or even likely — that lawmakers and administration officials will open new avenues of ­investigation.

And Trump’s unpopularity may actually reinforce his administration’s resistance to additional measures, such as appointing a special prosecutor. The polls, which give Trump a record-low approval rating for a president this early in his first term, indicate that his supporters will stick with him, while the majority in the country seems hardened against him.


“In some weird ways, having a 40 percent approval rating means never having to say you’re sorry,” Klain said. “No one’s going to walk into the Oval Office and say, ‘Your approval ratings are down,’ because his approval ratings are already down. When you’re in the basement, the fear of falling is very, very limited.”

Pakistan's army assures commitment to democracy after row with government

Maj. Gen. Asif Ghafoor, director general of Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR), speaks during a news conference in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, April 17, 2017. REUTERS/Faisal Mahmood
Maj. Gen. Asif Ghafoor, director general of Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR), speaks during a news conference in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, April 17, 2017.  REUTERS/Faisal MahmoodMaj. Gen. Asif Ghafoor, director general of Inter Services Public Relations (ISPR), speaks during a news conference in Rawalpindi, Pakistan, April 17, 2017.  REUTERS/Faisal Mahmood

By Saad Sayeed | ISLAMABAD- Wed May 10, 2017

Pakistan's powerful military on Wednesday sought to calm worries of a rift with the civilian government, emphasising its commitment to democracy in a country where the army has often seized power.

The reassurance came after the military last month took the unusual step of publicly criticising the government's actions following investigations into a leaked newspaper story about a national security meeting.

On Wednesday, the military's spokesman Major General Asif Ghafoor told a news briefing there was no cause for concern.

"We will continue to work with all government institutions to do what is best for the country," Ghafoor said.

"There's been a lot of talk about democracy in the past two weeks, but nowhere was there any mention that any actions should be taken against democracy."

Relations between the civilian government and military have often been strained in Pakistan, where several prime ministers, including Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif himself during a previous administration in 1999, have been ousted in coups.

The military has ruled Pakistan for 33 of the 70 years since the country gained independence from Britain in 1947.

The country has had a democratically elected government since 2008, but the army retains sweeping influence and any hint of discord raises worries among advocates of a strong civilian government.
The row came after an article in the English-language Dawn newspaper in October, detailing high-level security talks, angered the army.

Sharif fired a close ally at the time of the leak and last month sacked one of his senior advisers after an inquiry report was completed.

But a tweet from Ghafoor rejected Sharif's actions as "incomplete".

At the news conference on Wednesday, Ghafoor said the April 29 tweet was "not against any government official or institution", adding that the investigation into the leaks had come to a satisfactory conclusion.

(Reporting by Saad Sayeed; Editing by Alison Williams)

No charges for Tories over Battlebus 2015 election expenses investigation

Conservative MPs and agents will face no charges over election expenses allegations relating to the party’s 2015 Battlebus campaign, the Crown Prosecution Service has said.

10 MAY 2017

The CPS said: “We reviewed the files in accordance with the Code for Crown Prosecutors and have concluded the tests in the Code are not met and no criminal charges have been authorised.”
Prosecutors are still considering whether they will pursue charges relating to one file from Kent Police, understood to relate to Craig Mackinlay who was elected as MP for South Thanet in 2015.

Fleet of coaches

The allegations were highlighted by a year-long Channel 4 News investigation into the accuracy of election expenses returns, including the Conservative Party’s ‘Battlebus’ campaign, which used a fleet of coaches to parachute volunteer activists into 29 key marginal constituencies in the final ten days of the election campaign.

Nick Vamos, CPS Head of Special Crime, said: “We have considered files of evidence from 14 police forces in respect of allegations relating to Conservative Party candidates’ expenditure during the 2015 General Election campaign.

“We considered whether candidates and election agents working in constituencies that were visited by the Party’s ‘Battle Bus’ may have committed a criminal offence by not declaring related expenditure on their local returns.

“Instead, as the Electoral Commission found in its report, these costs were recorded as national expenditure by the Party.

‘Unfounded complaints’

Conservative Party Chairman Patrick McLoughlin said in a statement: “These were the politically motivated and unfounded complaints that have wasted police time.”

“After a very thorough investigation, we are pleased that the legal authorities have confirmed what we believed was the case all along: that these Conservative candidates did nothing wrong,” he said.

He also said that the party has sought to “strengthen election rules to safeguard electoral integrity – in light of the real and proven cases of electoral fraud exposed in Tower Hamlets in 2015”.

The CPS said: “Although there is evidence to suggest the returns may have been inaccurate, there is insufficient evidence to prove to the criminal standard that any candidate or agent was dishonest”

“The Act also makes it a technical offence for an election agent to fail to deliver a true return. By omitting any ‘Battle Bus’ costs, the returns may have been inaccurate. However, it is clear agents were told by Conservative Party headquarters that the costs were part of the national campaign and it would not be possible to prove any agent acted knowingly or dishonestly.”

Labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn said that he was “interested and surprised” by the CPS decision, and would examine the detail of it.

“Our election laws must be enforced and must be adhered to, there are strict spending limits for a reason, so that money can’t buy power, only votes in the ballet box should be able to get power.”

Kent Police

The CPS are still considering whether to pursue charges regarding one file received from Kent Police, understood to relate to Craig Mackinlay, who was elected MP for South Thanet in 2015.

The Conservative Party has said that all local spending was filed in accordance with the law.

These allegations still under consideration were revealed by Channel 4 News and investigated over the past year.

“One file, from Kent Police, was only recently received by the CPS, and remains under consideration,” said Nick Vamos, CPS Head of Special Crime.

“No inference as to whether any criminal charge may or may not be authorised in relation to this file should be drawn from this fact and we will announce our decision as soon as possible once we have considered the evidence in this matter.”

Electoral Commission report

In March, the Conservative Party was fined a record £70,000 and its former treasurer reported to the police following a report by the Electoral Commission into its national election expenses.

Today, Karl McCartney, on behalf of Conservative MPs concerned, called on the bosses of the Electoral Commission to resign.

He said it was “politically motivated and biased” and that “no doubt my colleagues who have been victims of the Electoral Commission’s witch-hunt, will take every opportunity after the General Election to persuade the newly-elected government to abolish this incompetent organisation”.

The Electoral Commission’s investigation and report into the Conservative party’s national spending – launched after a series of reports by Channel 4 News over the past year – found “significant failures by the party” to report spending in the 2015 General Election and in three by-elections in 2014.

The Electoral Commission today said that the CPS decision is “consistent with that of the Commission, which concluded that the Conservative Party’s spending return was incomplete and inaccurate, as it contained spending that should have been included in the candidates’ return”.
Emmanuel Macron: Why Sri Lanka and South Asia can’t do a France



2017-05-09
The French say they love revolutions. Yesterday they usurped one, electing 39-year-old Emmanuel Macron as the new President of the Fifth republic. Mr Macron’s victory – he won two-thirds of the popular votes in the second round against his far-right rival Marine Le Pen -- represents the most formidable response to xenophobic populist nationalism that led to Brexit and propelled those like Donald Trump to power.   
 There are signs however, earlier in the Netherlands, and now in France that far right nationalism in Europe is finally receding, before it reaches the developing world. That may be a blessing since the ideological battles could easily degenerate into outright violence in this part of the world. Mr Macron’s victory is consequent for regenerative properties of democracy that it manifested after the old order of politics was de-legitimized. Mr Macron, the former economic minister of the socialist government of president Hollande ran as an outsider, having built his own movement, En Marche, barely a year ago. The candidates of two mainstream parties, Francois Fillion of the Republican Party and Benoit Hamon, a former back-bencher of the Socialist Party were wiped out in the first round. Mr. Hamon came in a dismal fifth, polling only six per cent of the votes.   

After a divisive campaign that pitted Mr. Marcon’s centrist, pro-EU, globalist credentials against Ms Le Pen’s economic protectionism and anti-immigrant xenophobia, Macron, who was virtually unheard three years back, romped home; his win hailed as a victory of liberal democracy against xenophobic nationalism.   
Dysfunction in political institutions is not a problem unique to countries like ours. France was mired in its political paralysis and domestic discontent in recent times just like Britain had been in the 70s. The general tendency in the face of those crippling domestic paralysis is to seek simple solutions, thereby dragging the political discourse to the further extreme. Which is what is happening in Donald Trump’s America, Erdogan’s Turkey and Jeremy Corbyn’s Labour Party, the latter was vaporized in the British local government elections held last week. Practical and effective solutions to intricate solutions need greater soul-searching and a more dispassionate approach and above all political institutions that are inclusive and a political culture that favour common sense over rabble rousing.   
France may have pulled off the miracle by virtue of certain inherent attributes of its political culture. For instance, Mr. Macron now says his new party will field 50 per cent of its candidates for the forthcoming parliamentary election from political outsiders; from the civil society, student activists, professionals, etc. If that is ever tried in Sri Lanka, most of them are likely to lose their deposit, let alone winning. That tells a lot about the different level of maturities of political cultures.   
 Our political system suffers from a far worse level of political dysfunction, however its ability to evolve solutions to those defects are seriously compromised by the nature of our political institutions and political culture.  
Our politics is to a greater degree distorted by dynasticism, which erodes the promise of electoral democracy. (This is not limited to Sri Lanka; take for instance, India’s Congress Party and myriads of ruling parties at the State level where politics is a family affair). Residual effects of an earlier feudal culture which had not been fully evaporated by the time when the universal suffrage was introduced continue to influence the voting patterns of the Sri Lankan electorate. Thus the passing of mantle from father to son or husband to wife is all too common. Though appearing innocuous in the eyes of the naïve, such practices compromise the diversity of political representatives and shut the door on qualified contenders. In the absence of competitive selection criteria or primaries, a majority of those who would run for elections, carry very little useful talents to elected office. Politics in rural Sri Lanka has more resemblance to the Wel Vidange system in the past, than any competitive democratic system.  
The effects of this deformity is multiplied by a second defect; the absence of inner-party democracy. Sri Lankan political parties are personal fiefs of their leaders. The worst of this aberration was seen during the Rajapaksa era when the SLFP was reduced to a rubber stamp of the Medamulane Carlton House. This level of unchallenged authority trickles down from the top to the provincial leadership. Thus every leader at each level is a demigod to his sycophant followers.   

"Though appearing innocuous in the eyes of the naïve, such practices compromise the diversity of political representatives and shut the door on qualified contenders"


The third factor is that Sri Lanka does not have institutions that mold young and promising leaders. Sri Lankan university politics is one that perpetuates demagoguery and insulates its participants in a political thought that had long lost its relevance. Sri Lanka needs to evolve a system to address that lacuna. Otherwise liberal democratic values would remain Greek to its political representatives and a wider section of public for a unforeseeable future.  
Finally the social economic and cultural factors of a wider electorate contribute to regressive political undertones. Again, that is not unique to Sri Lanka. In France, thriving cities which had turned its old warehouses to tech startups voted in enmasse to Macron while Ms Le Pen polled most of her votes from the suburbs and abandoned factory towns. Those with degrees voted for Mr. Macron with a large margin while Ms Le Pen had a higher voter share from those without degrees. Sri Lanka’s electoral dynamics are no different. Those couple of hundreds of thousand souls that the joint opposition herded to the Galle Face may juxtapose the political divide in this country. Liberal democracy, sometimes need to be defended from its own people, like those who trekked to Colombo for a bottle of arrack and a thousand rupees. However, to that end, Sri Lanka should first reform its dynastic, exclusivist and sycophant political institutions. Without that there is little difference between Mr Rajapaksa and the rest.  

Follow RangaJayasuriya @RangaJayasuriya on Twitter


Tunisian president deploys army to stop poverty protests


Essebsi warned that the army needed to 'protect the resources of the Tunisian people' after sit-ins halted production at gas plants
Tunisians wave national flags during general strike on April 11, 2017, in Tataouine (AFP)

Wednesday 10 May 2017
Tunisia's president said on Wednesday he will deploy the to protect industrial sites suffering disruption from general strikes and protests over poverty.
"We know this is a serious decision but it must be taken," Beji Caid Essebsi said in a speech in Tunis. "Our democratic path has become threatened and law must be applied but we will respect freedoms."
It is the first time troops in Tunisia will be deployed to protect industrial installations that are key to Tunisia's economy. Protests, sit-ins and strikes in recent years have cost the state billions of dollars.
The Tunisian government has faced growing social discontent over the economy, especially in inland regions, with protesters often staging sit-ins that block access to production sites.
"When they (demonstrators) get angry, they cut off roads. The roads belong to everyone and the state must face this," the president said. "I warn you from now," dealing with the military will become "difficult", he said.
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He singled out the phosphate industry in the central mining region of Gafsa that had "come to a halt for five years".
"What do we have? We have phosphate, petrol and tourism, we have agriculture," including olive oil, he said. "The state must also protect the resources of the Tunisian people."
Six years since a revolution that toppled longtime dictator Zine El Abidine Ben Ali, Tunisia has not been able to resolve issues of poverty, unemployment and corruption that sparked the uprising.
A Tunisian man pushes his biclycle in Laataya on April 15, 2016, after clashes (AFP).jpg
On Monday, Tunisia's energy minister, Hela Chikhrouhou, said that sit-ins had halted production at energy company Perenco's Baguel and Tarfa fields, which the company website says are joint ventures for gas and condensate output.
Perenco operates the El Franig, Baguel, and Tarfa gas condensate fields with a production of 17 million standard cubic feet of gas per day, 2 mmscfd of LPG equivalent and 750 bopd of condensates, according to the company website.
A spokesman for Canada-based Serinus Energy said by email that its Chouech Essaida field in southern Tunisia had been shut since 28 February due to labour and social unrest.
Protests have centred on the southern Tataouine province where Italy's ENI and Austrian firm OMV have mainly gas operations, but have also begun in the central Kebili region.
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Successive governments have struggled with social unrest in the south and central provinces where unemployed youth feel they have been left out of the economic benefits of the revolution.
In Tatouine region, a group of demonstrators has camped out for several weeks in the Sahara desert and threatened to blockade roads used by oil and gas companies unless they see more jobs and a share in the region's energy riches.
OMV said last week it had moved around 700 non-essential staff and contractors from its southern Tunisia operations as a precaution. It said production had not been affected.
ENI said protests had had no impact on its Tunisian production but it was monitoring the situation.
Chikhrouhou told a conference that total oil production had fallen to 44,000 barrels per day (bpd) from 100,000 bpd in 2010 because of social unrest, protests and low investment due to a lack of energy legislation.
Oil revenues fell from 3 billion Tunisian dinars ($1.24 billion) in 2010 to 1 billion Tunisian dinars in 2016, he said.
In the past, Tunisian protesters targeted the state-run phosphate business, where production falls since 2011 caused about $2 billion in losses. Output in phosphate - a key source of foreign income - has risen this year after agreements were reached with protesters.
The revival of the state-run phosphate production will help the North African country's economic growth, which also suffered from a decline in revenues from the tourism sector after major militant attacks in 2015.