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, June 7, 2017

Who’s this powerful ‘Yahapaalana’ figure having no regard for the law?

Who’s this powerful ‘Yahapaalana’ figure having no regard for the law?
Jun 07, 2017
The picture above was taken last morning (06) at Independence Square in Colombo.
A few years ago, such scenes were commonplace. The powerful figures of the regime at the time and their henchmen used luxury vehicles with the same numbers. But, had a picture of them been taken, the photographer would have gone on his last journey courtesy a white van without a number plate.
People of this country toppled such a despicable government on 08 January 2015. That regime’s wickedness was proven when president Maithripala Sirisena said that he had contested as the common candidate by endangering the lives of his family and that of his own. Had that regime change not taken place, he and thousands of others would have had to lose their lives.
However, doesn’t the picture above prove that the remnants of that despicable regime still remain?
An average person cannot park two luxury jeeps with the same number at the Independence Square frequented by thousands of people. Without a doubt, that was the work of a very powerful figure. The question is – who is that person who behaves so without giving any regard to the laws of the country? Despite its having many shortcomings, the people still appear on behalf of the ‘Yahapaalanya’ because they know how they had to suffer under the previous despicable regime. If its powerful figures disregard the law and behave in this manner, they too, will have to go home very soon.

Submerged with guilt and neglect!

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Sahana software (www.sahanafoundation.org), which was developed after the tsunami by a few Sri Lankans, is an open source disaster management software and is identified as the world’s most popular open-source information management system for disaster and humanitarian aid management

logoThursday, 8 June 2017

Untitled-1The deluge that caused so much havoc, loss of many lives and property and a huge number of environmental refugees (if I may use the term as it was an environmental response that led to so many displaced in one’s own area) has opened up many a discussion and debate.

To the theorist and climate evangelists, perhaps the frequency of extreme events will necessarily increase and we will unfortunately have to experience many more of such events in the coming years. That is certainly not good news, in the absence of any mechanism and an enlightened response; usually after an event CEB will be giving free electricity, Central Bank will not be collecting any loan repayments, TV channels will be delivering dry rations instead of programs, social media will be subjected to a deluge of who did what with choice adjectives and the country will never be the same again.

The assessment and the plan of the country’s economic performance with a high percentage of growth and for a continuous period of years that will get us into the rich boys’ club appears to be a distant dream under these conditions and potential circumstances. We can have these aspirations, and may actually realise the dream instead of the nightmare, but with an approach that learns, anticipates, plans, designs, innovates and delivers.

Late Bernard Shaw once said that all problems have solutions and they are technical in nature. May be that is not quite right but one thing is certain, the solutions we usually seek are the least technical and that is a fact which is hard to dispute and the net result of such a consistent approach is a future with a certainty of uncertainty!

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Connecting to nature

This year’s environmental message of connecting to nature may not be palatable to most of us with the battering that we have had to face. We may be excused for not quite looking forward to such an intimate reconnect to nature. Yet please do not forget that environmental problems can be usually defined post analysis really as a human behavioural problem and in that context the moment we begin to value and understand nature, which is what is expected through this message, much of the problems can be solved.

This is where we may actually modify Shaw’s statement, yet the technology that we speak of today is different from the technologies of Shaw’s era.

Another group of environmental refugees who were displaced due to the Meethotamulla dump collapse are worried that they will be forgotten amidst the new interest over the displaced due to rain and landslides. Yes the number at Meethotamulla compared to the new episode that faced the country is small and knowing how our minds work and actions take place perhaps they are justifiable in the way of thinking!

Let us not forget that we are paying multiple prices due to our neglect. However the column is to place some thoughts on record for consideration and calling for process changes.


Changes needed

Human beings dislike change and usually are reticent to change even when circumstances are quite compelling. What is brand value to marketers is cognitive inertia to neuroscientists!

Those who were at Meethotamulla had been told – but may not be in no uncertain terms! Those who were living in landslide prone areas too had been informed – especially those who have been unfortunate to be positioned in high risk zones.

Yes it is not feasible to pack and leave and occupy another place as soon an order is delivered. The request to move is not usually coupled with facilitation to ensure easier relocation either, so the people are somewhat left between the devil and the deep blue sea.

Of course one cannot forget there are a few who see an opportunity in such circumstances and opt to play their cards differently and some parts of the political system too aid and abet such scenarios. Until of course a sudden downpour of 500 mm plus rainfall occurs unknown to even those who are supposed to be on the watch out for such events.


Doing the wrong things with the right tools

Sri Lanka is known to have a more active SIMS than its population. We are usually ahead of the curve in mobile technology deployment – not as creators but as users. We speak of empowerment yet when it matters most the screens do not show any meaningful advice and one may go down with phones in their pants. We appear to do all the wrong things with the right tools.

We do have the connectivity but lack the means to feed the system with information and analysis to meet situations of this nature. The monitoring mechanism is not quite up to date. Certainly they are not connected and we have not prioritised such connectivity either.

While our own students do engage in research on predictive modelling of rain over locations via the monitoring of clouds, use satellite imagery, terrain topographies and artificial intelligence to develop war games to others, etc., the picture on prime time news of the water level gauge at Nagalagam Street indicates a frozen history of technology applications when it comes to managing ourselves – or are they using library photos?

It is the same situation when we as patients religiously carry our details to the doctor while some of us keep outselves awake with pots of coffee (certainly not tea!) and ensure medical transcriptions are done perfectly so as to assure the doctor elsewhere that their records are kept accurately with cloud access and enabling the patient to be treated to best of their ability.

We do indeed use the state-of-the-art vehicles to arrive at a site and then declare lack of money and then press on with the assessment of the need to use appropriate technologies for most of the situations. The technical tales from our isle with the exceptions of technologies deployed in test playing grounds, mobile telephony systems and some car sales outlets can be date stamped with dates from the middle of last century!


Sahana software 

I am intrigued when I hear of Sahana software (www.sahanafoundation.org), which was developed after the tsunami by few Sri Lankans. It is an open source disaster management software and is identified as the world’s most popular open-source information management system for disaster and humanitarian aid management. Since its development and emergence in Sri Lanka it has been deployed in over 30 countries.

Today the Sahana Foundation resides in Los Angeles and the software is deployed across many countries with Sri Lanka of course spared! The qualities of the product are quite enticing. It has been used in New York when Hurricane Sandra came in and in many more. Is it wishful thinking to think why we are not interested in deploying what we ourselves have developed?

I am also aware of SLINTEC’s development of the pressure sensor that was used to sense flash flood situations and then to communicate to warn those who are in the proximity with the knowledge based on mobile communication systems. The sensing was coupled to a warning for those who may be heading in the wrong direction. This was another product that did not go beyond the prototyping stage.

It is said that in the Ratnapura town it did not take long for the water level to drastically rise and many had been caught unaware. The use of such developments and certainly Sahana can be significant.

We also know that our network capability to sense and transmit rainfall data is not strong. We still run mostly with weather stations that were primarily set up to support agriculture. As per sensing and predicting landslides we are used to extrapolate from rainfall data rather than eliciting information from potential risk areas directly.



Scientific process and procurement process

It must be stated that scientists are aware of the shortcomings and there are those who commit themselves to do their best under quite trying circumstances and meagre resources. The scientific process is almost always trumped by the procurement process that treats the purchases under four broad headings and follows a procedure that the old British rulers may be quite proud of.

I have indicated many a time if the dismantling of one thing that could lead to a significant improvement to research and development is to use Schumpeter terminology – the enforcement of creative destruction of the existing procurement procedures. The frustration of waiting for six months to get one item without which nothing can happen is common to so many in our system and ignoring this by all so far is inexcusable!

The reason may be that as I view how we operate is strictly demarcating policies and science, quite similar to oil and water. There is no mixing and no interest in getting to know each other. When science is not influencing the decision-making process, where we on the other hand see emotion running rampant, the consequences are not something one can be proud of.

The pain of submergence has been one of our own creations. It is true that one who may have endured is not the one who did create, yet over the years we have to think that the guilt has to be shared by us all, at least as far as inaction goes.

“Take measures to avoid future disasters”

sunil-handuetti

June 7, 2017

“Many have contributed on behalf of those who were distressed due to the calamity. Also, Sri Lankans employed abroad, ‘Ethera Api’ organization have collected goods and money to contribute. We are thankful to them. The next stage would be to prevent such a calamity happening again. A firm step should be taken to avoid such a calamity,” said the Member of the Political Bureau of the JVP Parliamentarian Sunil Handunneththi.

He said this participating in a press conference held at the head office of the JVP at Pelawatta.

Speaking further Mr. Handuneththi said, “The ‘Red Star’ Relief Service Brigade of the JVP mediated during the floods in 2003 and after the tsunami debacle in 2004. It is with this practical experience we mediated in disaster relief work this time. There are about 3000 that can be mobilized for ‘Red Star’ relief services. If the state machinery had been strong in relief work the delay could have been avoided. As the state participation was minimum there were obstacles to the restoration work at the initial stages. The ‘Red Star’ Relief Service Brigade of the JVP mediated as a separate unit detached from the programmes of the government. However, we mediated initially to save those who were distressed. We gave them food. It should be mentioned that the three services did a massive service. They gave their full support to save people. We were able to go to very difficult areas due to the support of the three services. The ‘Red Star’ Relief Service Brigade was able to feed people who had been starving for two whole days. What District Secretariats and Divisional Secretariats did was to provide food for those who came to them. But it was necessary to feed people who were marooned.

The government also failed to carry out second stage restoration work once the water subsided. The main issue was providing drinking water and cleaning wells. There were no water pumps or generators in Divisional Secretariats. The government only distributed goods received from private media institutions and supporters. Certain politicians of the government distributed goods received from the people under their labels. One responsible minister came down to the low level of distribution packs of five plantains with a label carrying his name. Governemnt’s relief work was limited to distributing goods. However, ‘Red Star’ and other voluntary organizations are still cleaning wells, houses, business places and compounds. Those who were battered by the disaster are not in a position to do the restoration by themselves. As such, they should be assisted. Hiniduma, Mapalagama and certain places in Rathnapura were completely submerged in water. The business places in these towns cannot be opened until they are completely restored. Also, voluntary work is necessary to bring back pre-schools, schools, hospitals to normalcy. Books and equipments in certain schools in Kalutara, Galle, Matara have been completely destroyed. ‘Red Star’ Relief Services Brigade was able to restore 7 of the 16 schools that were harmed in Galle. However, they need the government to get involved in work that goes beyond voluntary work. Ayagama town in Rathnapura was completely destroyed. The hospital and the police do not exist anymore. Hence, a state machinery is necessary to restore them. However, we do not see such a plan.

The mediation of government politicians has terminated after distributing goods. Certain politicians distribute goods only to their party men. We could say with responsibility that the ‘Red Star’ Relief Services Brigade has not worked with partiality. Now a mediation to hold medical clinics is necessary.

Many have contributed on behalf of those who were distressed due to the calamity. Also, Sri Lankans employed abroad, ‘Ethera Api’ organization have collected goods and money to contribute. We are thankful to them. The next stage would be to prevent such a calamity happening again. A firm step should be taken to avoid such a calamity.

Also, tea industry has been broken down in districts harmed by floods and landslides. Paddy fields have been damaged. Water ways have been destroyed. There is no plan to compensate farmers who have lost their crops and other belongings. The government insurance scheme compensates only loss of life and damage to houses. How the damage is estimated is not clear. Plans should be drawn up to compensate those who lost their cultivations. If not a community of agitators would be crated like at Samasara, Moothotumulla and Salava. The government should stop people taking to the streets instead of saying agitations are wrong. We say people should be compensated without any difference. We ask the government not to underestimate the situation.


Also, religious leaders mediated in a big way to minimize the suffering of the people. Certain groups attempted to rouse communalism and religious extremism recently. However, temples, churches and mosques united to carry out relief work. There was religious consensus. As such, people have practically proved that they are willing to unite. They why can’t the government do so? Certain officials have told us that due to strict decisions of the government they are unable to mediate. Hence, the government should get the officials and people to participate in restoration work.
Flood Recovery: Govt. mulls donor conference

2017-06-08
As the floodwaters receded, the government encountered fresh challenges in the reconstruction of affected areas with measures for mitigation of damages from future natural disasters. All in all, the government did not face any major issue in feeding the displaced because donations out-poured from people’s largesse. Yet, the state machinery is riddled with shortcomings in the delivery of aid for people.   
At the Cabinet meeting conducted last Tuesday, the President assigned Foreign Affairs Minister Ravi Karunanayake, Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweera and Special Projects Minister Dr. Sarath Amunugama to take steps to call for a donor conference. That is to raise funds for rebuilding the flood-hit areas of the country.  
However, Minister Karunanayake, as Foreign Affairs Minister, suggested that the government should declare an emergency situation first for such a conference to be called. The government was not receptive to this idea at the Cabinet meeting as it would have serious ramifications on other sectors of the economy, mainly tourism.   
Then, the President asked the assigned ministers to study the situation and recommend how to proceed with this proposal. Finally, it ended up to be a tentative proposal, pending other requirements to be fulfilled. For it to be done, a need assessment of the five affected districts should be done. Alongside, the Foreign Minister was asked to engage with the head of diplomatic missions in Sri Lanka to do some preparatory work. Therefore, it is a time-consuming exercise to call for a donor conference.   

Rishad complains of his Cabinet paper leakage 

At Tuesday’s Cabinet meeting, Industry and Commerce Minister Rishad Bathiudeen made a cry that his Cabinet paper - seeking approval to privatize Lanka Mineral Sand Ltd - had been leaked out to some undesirable hands. As such, he sought to withdraw the paper. He said he would resubmit a fresh one to the Economic Management Committee headed by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe later.   
Initially, he had proposed to bring an Indian investor for this company.   

Not all Basmati rice varieties are of proper quality 

Rice trading was embroiled in a sort of crisis after a video footage went viral on the internet that imported ‘Basmati rice’ looked like it was made of plastic. In a video footage widely shared in the social media, a lady demonstrated how her Basmati rice turned pasty after it was cooked. She formed lumps of cooked rice and butted them on the floor to see them bouncing off a little. She even said her cooked rice remained fresh relatively for a long time. She tried to drive home the point that ‘freshness could not be retained for so long if it were natural.   
“This looks like a conspiracy of local mill owners to mislead consumers about imported rice varieties. If rice is made of plastic, it would cost at least Rs.1,000 a kg. Then, we cannot sell them”
This made a blow to Basmati rice trading in Sri Lanka. The Cooperative Wholesale Establishment (CWE), which sold Basmati rice in this case, denied these reports. Instead, it said this appeared to be a conspiracy hatched with vested interests to bring CWE or SATHOSA to disrepute.  
Basmati rice is imported mainly from India and Pakistan through the normal trading channel. Besides, a certain quota of Basmati rice is imported under duty-free conditions from Pakistan under the provisions of the Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with Sri Lanka. The private sector was involved in the import of this duty free quota of Basmati from Pakistan. However, the CWE took it over from the private sector.  
Under the FTA, Sri Lanka has given a tariff rate quota of 6,000 tonnes of Long Grain Basmati Rice from Pakistan. In fact in 2014, the government stopped issuing licence to import any variety of Basmati rice from Pakistan till the exhaustion of this quota under the FTA. The Certificate of Origin, issued by the Pakistani authorities was accepted on the first-come-first-served basis till this quota was exhausted.   
However, this practice has now been done away with. The Basmati variety, that is allowed, has grains with long slender   shape. The milled length of a grain should be more than 6.6 mm, and the milled breadth 2 mm.   
Outside the tariff rate quota, different other varieties of Basmati rice are being imported to the country, and some of them however, do not belong to the best quality category.   
Against this backdrop, let alone another online dialogue has been initiated by those advocating the international best practices of trading and consumer rights.   
These groups refer to the code of practice, adopted in the UK on Basmati rice. It has been done to provide improved protection for people who consume Basmati rice and assist local authorities in their enforcement work.  
According to sources, the code applies to pre-packed as well as non pre-packed rice, and where rice is used as an ingredient in other foods.  
Basmati rice is recognised for its unique cooking properties and distinctive aroma, and sells for two to three times the price of other long grain rice varieties.  
The UK code of practice on basmati rice is a result of work by the UK rice industry, British Retail Consortium (BRC), Local Authorities Coordinators of Regulatory Services (LACORS), and the Association of Public Analysts (APA). It lists the varieties that are currently approved by the Indian and Pakistani authorities that could use the description ‘Basmati’, and lays down the minimum specifications and labelling requirements for rice sold in the UK.  
The present crisis, involving basmati rice trading seems to have been triggered by the lack of knowledge on the quality of food items imported to the country and the measures adopted for quality assurance. Also, it is needed to have proper anti-dumping laws. Once that is done and information disseminated to consumers, such issues could be averted in the future.   
Meanwhile, the Association of Importers of Essential Commodities scoffed reports that ‘plastic rice’ had been imported under the pretext of basmati.  
A spokesman for the body said such plastic rice, as claimed, does not exist.  
“This looks like a conspiracy of local millers to mislead consumers about imported rice varieties. If rice is made of plastic, it would cost at least Rs.1,000 a kg. Then, we cannot sell them,” he said.   

JO not in favour of talks 

The Joint Opposition (JO) engaged in an intense debate on reports that President Maitripala Sirisena is contemplating talks with his predecessor Mahinda Rajapaksa on the measures for uniting the party.   
After the talks, the JO, led by MR decided forthwith that such talks were no longer necessary. It assigned MP Kumara Welgama, a close confidante of MR to announce it publicly for the people to know.   
The JO is sceptical that this would yet be another ploy by the President to dupe it. Instead, it is trying to hone strategies in its own in view of the future elections without any alignment with the President’s SLFP. It has come to realize that it is not feasible to work out any unity between the incumbent President and his predecessor as acrimony between them is so bad.   
MR is currently on a visit to Japan to attend some religious functions. Once he returns, the JO is planning some measures to mount a campaign urging the government to conduct the local authorities’ election as soon as possible. The election is overdue for more than two years as of now.   
Already, it has started engaging the diplomatic community in Colombo about the delay in conducting the polls. Earlier, the JO leaders such as Dinesh Gunawardane met with EU Ambassador Tung-Lai Margue. Alongside, he called on Canadian High Commissioner Shelley Whiting on the same matter.   
In this task, the JO has chosen to talk the embassies and High Commissions of the countries that espouse elections as the pillars of democracy.   

NP Ministers face corruption charges 

Northern Province Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran appointed a committee to investigate allegations of corruption and malpractices against the Provincial Board of Ministers.  
It is learnt that evidence has been given before this committee against these ministers mostly by those representing the TNA. It looks like an internal issue of the TNA as a result
The report was to be submitted to the Chief Minister yesterday. The TNA controls the Provincial Council. All the provincial ministers belong to the TNA. Nonetheless, it is learnt that evidence has been given before this committee against these ministers mostly by those representing the TNA. It looks like an internal issue of the TNA as a result.  

Flooded with generosity



Thursday, June 8, 2017

The recent floods and landslides are slowly subsiding but its aftermath and the massive rehabilitation effort that is now required to resurrect the lives of those affected is proving to be an enormous challenge for the government and all the agencies concerned.

The disaster left at least 212 persons dead including 44 children and a further 79 are reported missing. Over 21,000 people are still displaced, having lost their dwellings and possessions. Nearly 3,000 houses have been completely destroyed. It is certainly among the more devastating natural disasters to hit the country in recent years.

The Ratnapura District was the worst affected with 87 confirmed dead and 14 reported missing. More than 13,000 persons in the district are displaced. About 760 houses have been destroyed with over 5,000 homes partially damaged. The Kalutara District was the second worst affected in terms of deaths, with 66 confirmed deaths and 50 listed missing, according to statistics released from the Disaster Management Centre.

Life is now slowly returning to normal in the flood affected regions with schools re-opening and rehabilitation getting underway. However fresh threats of the outbreak of diarrheal and other diseases loom.

Natural disasters

Although the government cannot be blamed for natural disasters, there was a political fallout in the wake of the floods and landslides with the Opposition questioning the government’s preparedness to handle the crisis- as well as the absence of key personalities from the country.

While it could be argued that the authorities could have been better prepared to deal with floods and landslides, officials have responded saying that the scale of the disaster- with a vast extent of the country and a large number of people affected- was such that preparations fell short of what was required and what was predicted.

Sri Lanka’s worst natural disaster was the 2004 Tsunami where 35,000 people perished in a matter of minutes. However, that was a disaster where access to those affected was readily available soon after the disaster- and the relief effort could get underway straight away. The recent floods were different as roads remained impassable for days, hampering the relief effort and putting more lives at risk.

Another question that is being raised is why, in this day and age of advanced technology, the disaster could not be predicted. Had that been done, those in the flood and landslide prone areas could have been forewarned and evacuated, preventing deaths even if damage to property cannot be avoided. Indeed, it has been pointed out that other countries frequently encounter similar disasters of greater magnitude, yet escape fatalities because they are better prepared.

As the disaster unfolded, it was President Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe who took the lead in co-ordinating the rescue effort. They held regular, round the clock meetings with officials to ensure that relief was on the way as fast as circumstances allowed.
New vehicles for ministers

However, the government came in for some flak as the floods hit around the same time as Parliament debated the import of new vehicles for ministers. This appeared insensitive at best and attracted much criticism, especially on social media.

The government was to defer the decision to import these vehicles until funds had been allocated for those displaced by the floods but this decision didn’t get a fraction of the publicity that the news about the import of vehicles generated. As a result, the government was left with some explaining to do.

There was also much angst about the absence of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, days after the disaster unfolded. Prior to his departure for the United States, Wickremesinghe worked tirelessly, overseeing the rescue effort and ensuring that everything possible was being done to make life easier for the displaced.

However, when he left the country, it was conveyed that he was on a ‘private visit’ to the United States. This led to a backlash in the media, with cartoonists having a field day showing the Prime Minister flying away on an aircraft waving to those marooned by the floods. In hindsight, it appears that the Prime Minister’s office missed an opportunity to inform the public of the circumstances of his visit, because that would have allayed the criticism.

Prime Minister Wickremesinghe’s visit was for medical investigations and treatment. He had been advised to do so for many months now but had been postponing this due to official commitments. He had then been advised that to postpone his visit further would be detrimental to his health.

No one would grudge the Prime Minister receiving medical treatment but by the time his office made known the reasons for his overseas visit, some damage had been done. Prime Minister Wickremesinghe himself later took to social media to clarify the situation, tweeting “My sincere thanks for the numerous messages I received since I had to leave Sri Lanka for a long overdue medical check-up; I regret I was unable to continuously be on ground as I have in the past. Prior to leaving I put in place the overall disaster management mechanisms and have been receiving relevant reports on a six hourly basis”.

Also at the receiving end was Disaster Management Minister Anura Priyadarshana Yapa. Minister Yapa was away in Mexico attending -ironically- a conference on disaster management but did not return to the country immediately.

Now back in Sri Lanka, Minister Yapa defended his decision to remain in Mexico at the height of the disaster. “I went to Mexico to represent Sri Lanka and I was also holding the position of co-chairman. I knew that my deputy minister as well as the rest of the ministry officials along with other government departments and the military was responding well to the disaster situation. I made daily calls to stay updated on the developments and gave instructions from Mexico. I worked hard to wrap up as soon as possible and returned four days earlier than planned,” Yapa told the media on his return. While what the Minister says maybe accurate, it would have been prudent for him to return sooner because he is now being accused of being insensitive at best- and selfish at worst.
Cabinet reshuffle

Interestingly, former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who made some public comments about the government’s lack of preparedness for the floods, also left the country on a visit to Japan at the invitation of a Buddhist organisation there. This too has attracted much criticism- and Rajapaksa certainly cannot claim that he was visiting overseas for medical treatment or on official duties. What this also means is that the Joint Opposition (JO), of which he is the de fact leader, cannot criticise the government as much as it would like to do.

The government could also have done without the swearing in of four deputy ministers and four state ministers at the height of the floods crisis. This was a sequel to the Cabinet reshuffle days earlier but it led to the allegation that while hundreds have died and thousands have been displaced, all the government was concerned about was swearing in new ministers. Given the context of the unfolding crisis, it would have been better had the swearing in of these ministers been postponed. As it has been already pointed out, if the Cabinet reshuffle could be delayed for months on end, surely the swearing in of junior ministers could have been delayed for a few more days?

Nevertheless, the disaster has prompted the government to rethink its strategies vis-à-vis natural calamities. Minister Anura Priyadarshana Yapa revealed that the government was considering laws to enable forcible evacuation and also laws to ban cultivation of crops along the mountain slopes, in order to prevent landslides in the future.

The government has also come up with novel measures- such as providing electricity free of charge for six months- to assist the flood and landslide victims but the rehabilitation effort will need to be sustained with the same intensity over the next few months.

Parliament will debate the disaster tomorrow where there will always be bickering about who did what and what could have been done better, but if ever there was a redeeming feature in the calamity, it was the overwhelmingly generous response from the general public towards the relief effort that shone through as a silver lining amidst the darks clouds of disaster and despair.
UN assists storm victims, seeks to contain diseases ‘spiralling out of control’
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logoThursday, 8 June 2017

In the aftermath of a devastating tropical storm in Sri Lanka, United Nations agencies are working to provide shelters and other emergency kits while seeking to contain a mosquito-borne disease that is starting to “spiral out of control”.

Heavy flooding, landslides and flash floods caused by Tropical Cyclone Mora in Myanmar and Bangladesh, and torrential monsoon rains have affected some 684,000 people in south and central Sri Lanka. The flooding, which is believed to be the worst in over a decade, has left at least 212 people dead and 79 missing.

Sri Lanka’s Disaster Management Centre (DMC) estimates that over 2,500 houses were destroyed and nearly 15,900 damaged. These numbers could rise as data from damage assessments is compiled in the coming weeks.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) plans to provide 3,700 shelter repair kits, 5,000 non-food relief item kits and 250 temporary shelters, with funding sought from the UN Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF), said the UN migration agency in a press release. The intervention will help an estimated 74,750 people.

Nearly 22,000 people are still sheltering in over 200 overcrowded sites, including schools, temples and churches, the agency said.

In flood-affected areas people are expected to return to their homes as water levels recede. But in landslide-affected areas, people currently staying in evacuation centres or with relatives and friends are unlikely to be able to return to their homes in the short term.

“There will likely be a need to track displacement, return, and site closure. People will need shelter and other non-food relief items (when they leave the sites) and we will need to ensure that aid is distributed at the location most useful and appropriate for each affected family,” said IOM Sri Lanka Chief of Mission Giuseppe Crocetti.

On Friday, the UN Humanitarian Country Team launched an emergency response plan seeking $22.7 million to address the critical life-saving and protection needs of 374,000 people in seven districts, targeting four priority sectors, including shelter, food, health and water and sanitation.

IOM will co-lead the emergency shelter and non-food item sector, which is appealing for $6.5 million.

Meanwhile, the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF) is calling for $3.5 million to keep vulnerable children safe.

“So far we have delivered water and sanitation supplies, we are working on education supplies, strengthening health systems and rehabilitating basic health services and working on disease control for both diarrhoea and dengue which is starting to spiral out of control,” said UNICEF country representative Tim Sutton.

He said flood waters have not receded in the southern district of Matara, raising fears of mosquito-borne disease transmission. He noted that so far this year there have already been more than 53,000 cases of dengue, a mosquito-borne tropical disease, which causes severe flu-like symptoms. It is a leading cause of death among children and adults in Sri Lanka.

WHO Country Office in Sri Lanka issues update on floods in Sri Lanka


Since 25 May, heavy rainfall due to the South-West monsoon resulted in severe flooding and landslides affecting 15 out of 25 districts in Sri Lanka.

A total of 595,554 persons in 11 districts have been affected. As many as 16,872 people have been moved to 185 ‘safe locations’ in nine districts.

As of 3 June, the number of deaths are 213, with 79 people reported missing.

The rains have subsided, however, showers of lesser intensity across the South Western parts of the country are predicted to continue for the next 24 hours, according to the Meteorology Department.

A fresh ‘amber’ landslide warning was issued on 5 June by the National Building Research Organization. The warning cautions people living in 30 divisions across seen districts to be alert on the possibility of landslides and rock falls if rainfall continues for the next 24 hours.

An extensive recovery operation across all sectors is required.

Heavy rainfall, flooding and landslides since 25 May resulted in wide-spread displacement across 15 districts in Sri Lanka, with Ratnapura, Galle, Matara and Kalutara identified as the worst affected districts.

Health services, emergency shelter, sanitation and hygiene services have been identified as key emergency needs.

153 851 families have been affected, with around 2,788 houses completely damaged and 18,413 houses partially damaged.

With flood water receding, there has been a significant decline in the number of displaced people. As of 6 June, 16,000 people remain at safe locations, as compared to the over 80,000 who had to leave home last week to move to safer locations.

Security of India and Sri Lanka ‘indivisible’ ? — Part II

Even in relation to China isn’t India suffering with a misconception, at least as far as we see?

by Gamini Gunawardane-
( June 8, 2017, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Conduct of India from then onwards becomes consistent with its line of thinking. When the Sri Lankan Forces were about to strike the final blow on the LTTE in 1987, India again came up with their despicable and crude intervention by sending their planes to intervene dropping food ostensibly as ‘humanitarian aid’ from the air on the Jaffna Peninsula, to intimidate President J.R. Jayewardene. India ten followed it up with the infamous Indo-Sri Lanka Accord thrusting upon this country the humiliating 13 th Amendment which neither side wanted and the white elephant with which this country is inextricably involved since. The only expression of public protest against this humiliating insult was the irresponsible act of a Naval rating in the customary honour guard given to Rajiv Gandhi, by trying to assault him with his rifle butt.
Immediately on the failure of the Indo-Lanka accord was the induction of the IPKF who suffered ignominy in the hands of the LTTE and had to leave this country failing to accomplish their mission. Finally it was Rajiv Gandhi who had to pay with his life for folly of wrong Sri Lanka policy of the arrogant Indian defence policy advisors and the RAW by releasing the genie of
After this bitter lesson taught by their own creation, Tamil insurgency growing into Terrorism, India kept away from this mess they created. Making good use of this opportunity, Sri Lanka ultimately succeeded in wiping out Terrorism in this country finally by crushing it comprehensively, primarily of course by two countries who are not the friends of India, and also with assistance of American Intelligence. One lesson for India to learn from this expensive learning experience of foreign policy is that it should leave Sri Lanka to leave to manage their own affairs as done over two millennia. Although our two countries are neighbours, we will be most productive if we leave ourselves alone where Sri Lanka will enjoy its “splendid isolation.” Of course it is a given that she should be careful not to give her any irritants and do things that may be perceived as security threats.
Since the defeat of the LTTE by the Sri Lanka government, India appears to have resumed her interference. Firstly, she grabbed two consular offices in Jaffna and Hambantota, which are obviously ‘listening posts’. They then took the contract to re-construct the Northern Railway line which could have been done by Sri Lanka Railways. Now there is the talk about constructing a bridge to connect the two countries across the gulf of Mannar, for whose benefit? There is now a plan to take over more oil tanks in Trinco, to build a railway line connecting Mannar with Trinco, again for whose benefit? Then there is a talk of re-developing the road network connecting Mannar with Jaffna and Trinco Is all this for the benefit of the people of the Northern Province whose priorities are different? Sri Lanka is now gifted with ambulances, unasked, when the same facilities are scarce for the multitudes in India itself. Also now offered an EFTA the need for which is resented by is rejected by Sri Lanka professionals. Aren’t all these clear moves of uncalled for interferences with this country where the government has become weak?
Judging by the conduct of Mr. Modi on this Wesak visit, one begins to wonder whether India is looking to play that mutually destructive game again. It is rather transparent that his visit was not a benign one prompted by hat we call here as “Buddhaalambhana Peethi” the sentiments with which we are assailed when we are on our pilgrimage to that country. Judging by what he did and said here it was definitely political. Apart from the obnoxious statement on “indivisible security” what he said and did in did in Dickoya raises concern. It is rumoured that that the whole drama there was planned and orchestrated by the RAW. If the Plantation Tamils are citizens of this country, why should they be waving the Indian flag instead of the Sri Lankan flag? Incidentally who provided those Indian flags? The grapevine tells us that it was the RAW agents. Mr. Modi is stated to have told them that they are the ‘Indian Diaspora’ here. Would he say that if he visited the one time Indian immigrants now in Malaysia. Fiji or South Africa or for that matter in the US or UK? Isn’t that mischievous, looking to create fresh trouble now that last one was successfully thwarted after struggling for over 30 years? Is that good neighbourly conduct? Why does India do this to us? Isn’t it wrong advise which is not in the ultimate interest of India itself?
One possible excuse may be the perception or the misperception that it is to prevent ‘flirtation’ of Sri Lanka with China. This is a misconception for the reason that Sri Lanka has most of the time has first asked India whether she could meet Sri Lanka’s requirements. For instance, during the ‘war’ days, Sri Lanka placed a list of armaments that she required to be purchased. India turned it down for whatever reasons. Then Sri Lanka approached her other two friends, Pakistan and China. They readily obliged with good credit facilities and timely delivery, together with trainers on how to handle some of them. When the Terrorists developed the air strike capability, India gave some radar equipment that was ineffective. It was then that Sri Lanka turned to China who generously supplied the three dimensional monitoring equipment. Similarly, the Hambantota Port project was first offered to India who turned it down. It was then that China was approached, and now it is a done. A friend in need is a friend indeed. So is Sri Lanka at any fault? The only time she took a wrong step was when she permitted for the Chinese submarines to berth in Colombo. If this is a wrong step vis-à-vis India, how many wrongs have India done to Sri Lanka?
Even in relation to China isn’t India suffering with a misconception, at least as far as we see? Even the last war that India and China fought over 50 years ago was over a dispute on certain areas in the North East of India which china rightly or wrongly believed to be theirs after the British had left. Could one think today that China has any designs on India threatening its security? China is country very much larger than India both in land and population and struggling with related problems. Would such a country have any designs on India which is burdened with inextricable problems with an exploding population 90% of whom are illiterate?
If it is trade that they are in conflict, are they vying for the same markets or raw materials? Each has vast Human Resources. They have two huge armies with nuclear power. Can either of them afford go to war with each other when their primary target is growth? It is clear that China is trying to ensure an uninterrupted passage way for their oil supply and exports. Could they be faulted for this as an aggressive military push. In our view, India is only behaving so at the behest of the US who for whatever reason, is using them as a pawn in avain effort to keep China at bay. In any case, placed in these circumstances, why should India and Sri Lanka worry about each other instead of proceeding in their own independent ways?
(Concluded)

Israel’s occupation was a plan fulfilled


Palestinian refugees continued to cross into Jordan after the Allenby Bridge between Jordan and the West Bank had been bombed on 8 June, the fourth day of the 1967 war. (UNRWA)

Ilan Pappe-6 June 2017

In June 1967, I was 12 years old. I recall helping to fill sandbags to fortify the entrance to our home in Haifa in preparation for war. The army was already geared towards war and official Israel terrified its society and supporters around the world, as Zionist leaders did in 1948, with warnings of another Holocaust.

Just recently, I finished writing a book about this period, The Biggest Prison on Earth: A History of the Occupied Territories.

Through the work on this book, I realized that the Israeli manipulation of Jewish fear in 1967 was even more cynical than it was in 1948, when the Jewish leadership genuinely could not foresee the results of its decision to ethnically cleanse Palestine.

The cabinet meetings reveal a group of politicians and generals, who ever since 1948 looked for a way of rectifying what they deemed was the gravest mistake of the otherwise triumphant “war of independence”: the decision not to occupy the West Bank.

In 1948, the West Bank had been left in Jordanian hands due to a tacit understanding between the Zionist leadership and the Hashemite Kingdom so eloquently described by historian Avi Shlaim in his book Collusion Across the Jordan.

The occupation lobby

There was a proper lobby in Israel pushing the government at various historical junctures to find a pretext to occupy and annex the West Bank. It was made of ideologues who deemed the West Bank as the heart of the ancient homeland without which it could not survive, and of strategists who firmly believed the Jordan River was a natural bulwark in the way of invading armies from the east.

They nearly had their way twice before 1967. In 1958, the pretext was the possible “radicalization” of Jordan. The US vetoed such an act. In 1960, Israeli threats against Syria and constant frictions in the north created a chain of events that provided another opportunity.

The plot unfolded in 1960, as it would in 1967. The tension in the north led Egyptian president Gamal Abdel Nasser to react by dispatching forces to the Sinai and closing the maritime route to Eilat, which runs up the narrow Gulf of Aqaba.

In 1960, it was Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion who prevented that crisis from developing into a war or a pretext for occupying the West Bank; after masterminding the 1948 expulsion of more than 750,000 Palestinians, he had no desire to incorporate another million and a half into Israel.

A preventable war

Ben-Gurion was ousted from meaningful political life in 1963. In that year, the preparations for a possible occupation of both the West Bank and the Gaza Strip were stepped up. Over the next four years, the army prepared detailed plans for the eventual takeover of these territories.

We have no access to the military plans, but we do have access to the legal plans that were drafted from 1963 onwards detailing how to rule the lives of millions of Palestinians: military judges in waiting, legal advisors, military governors and rulers and a firm legal infrastructure to run life from the very moment of occupation. Intelligence on possible resistance and its leaders were properly gathered so that a swift takeover would evolve from the outset of the occupation.

And the moment was not long in coming. The Israeli rhetoric and actions against Syria intensified in 1966 and 1967.

The inevitable next crisis unfolded in May 1967. The Greater Israel lobby, which included most of the army generals and the young Labor Party ministers, was determined not to let that opportunity slip. As with any escalating conflict, there are multiple exit points. Nasser followed in 1967 the same policy he pursued in 1960. He, as well as the Soviet Union, with which he was allied, took seriously the Israeli threats to attack Syria and he wished to reopen the Palestine question.

Alas, as in 1948, Egypt’s war rhetoric did not match its military capacity or preparations. Worse was the situation of King Hussein of Jordan. When Israel assaulted the Egyptian air force on the morning of 5 June 1967, he still hoped that a symbolic retaliation (to which he was committed under his defense agreements with Egypt and Syria) would exonerate him from the allegation of treason and save the West Bank. He was wrong on both counts.

The war was preventable. However, the Israeli military and political elite made sure that every exit point would be blocked and no one would stand in the way of fulfilling the Zionist vision of Judaizing the whole of historic Palestine.

A plan fulfilled

The total collapse of the Arab armies that enabled Israel to get as far as the Suez Canal and nearly occupy Damascus was a bonus the Israelis did not predict. But the occupation of the West Bank and Gaza Strip was a plan fulfilled: it was not the freak outcome of a very successful war.

The takeover plans of previous years enabled Israel to install its military rule over the West Bank and Gaza immediately after the war. The system was already successfully imposed on the Palestinian minority in Israel – those Palestinians who had survived the ethnic cleansing two decades earlier and remained inside the “Jewish state.”

Now the system and the people operating it were transferred to rule a new Palestinian group. The new version was even worse: it was built on the sheer power of the army to control every aspect of life, violating in the process basic human and civil rights.

The means of maintaining this rule have changed, but it is still intact and there is no intention to end its existence.

This year, yet another generation of this evil bureaucracy begins its term in office in operating the system. It has been resisted by the Palestinians, including in the form of the uprisings, or intifadas, that began in 1987 and 2000, and will still be resisted. But the international system has not condemned the occupation sufficiently to bring it to an end.

Joining in the occupation

Immediately after the war, Moshe Dayan, the defense minister, opened the West Bank to Israelis.
We joined in as a family. Our guides were from the “Israel Exploration Society,” founded in 1913 in an attempt to substantiate the Zionist claim for Palestine with archaeological finds.

With such tour guides, you see what allegedly had been there thousands of years ago, but you do not see the present. You gaze at ancient ruins while ignoring the humanity around them. The early Zionists, pre-state, were taken on a similar tour upon their arrival to the “land without people.”

The year 1967 became the closure for 1882, the date of the first Zionist colony in Palestine. But now it was colonization de luxe done by a rich and powerful Jewish state.

The destruction of Qalqilya, the expulsion of the refugees from destroyed camps near Jericho and the ethnic cleansing in Jerusalem were events I only read about later on, although they were visible to us when we marched through the West Bank as an army of tourists “redeeming” our ancient homeland.

The military and political elite in Israel already in June 1967, whether on the left or the right,
regarded the West Bank – and some even the Gaza Strip – as an integral part of future Israel. The debate was how to achieve it without incurring international, and in particular American, rebuke, and without granting citizenship to the millions of Palestinians living there.

This is why colonization of the West Bank and the Gaza Strip began very early on, allowing Israel to annex de facto any part of the territories it desired. This annexation was carried out through the confiscation of Palestinian land and, where necessary, expulsions.

Israel’s charades

Two charades unfolded which helped to mesmerize the world and overlook the Israeli strategy on the ground. As a teenager, I partook in the first one and as a young student played an active role in the second.

The first was the charade of an internal debate in Israel between so-called “redeemers” and “custodians,” otherwise known as the divide between the right and the left in Israeli society. The right asserted that the West Bank and Gaza Strip were “redeemed” and should be annexed, the left that they should be in custody until peace is concluded.

Until then, both camps agreed on the “unification of Jerusalem” – a city whose boundaries Israel expanded deep into the West Bank as it settled more territory – as well as on the need to settle the Jordan Valley and to keep the Palestinians under military rule.

As a youngster, like so many in the world who should have known better, I believed genuinely this was an ideological debate on war and peace.

I also bought into the second charade that was manipulated from above: the “peace process.” The main message from Israel was that its actions were temporary, even when it was settling vast areas of the occupied territories, and that its violations of basic human rights were short-term necessities that would stop once peace came.

The process moved nowhere, and when it moved as we saw in 1993 – with the “breakthrough” of the Oslo accords between Israel and the Palestine Liberation Organization – it really moved backwards.
However, it provided time and immunity to solidify the strategy of deepening the colonization with irreversible facts on the ground.

Naïve “custodians” like myself were the ones sent abroad to sell the “process.” I was even ready to represent Peace Now, the main extra-parliamentary custodian movement of the left, while pursuing my doctoral studies in the UK (although I was dismissed from the group very early on for meeting openly with PLO representatives in London at a time when it was forbidden).

In fact, these meetings helped me to wake up to the wider historical and ideological contexts of Israel’s actions in 1967 and after.

From abroad, ironically, it was much easier to look directly at the inhumanity and suffering Zionism caused in its century in Palestine. It was a farewell from me to the Israeli Zionist left.

Gentle question

Fifty years on, the Zionist left is unfortunately the force the official international community relies on to bring peace. However, most Israelis have stopped playing the first charade of left and right – each with their own excuse or explanation.

Many of them also believe there is no need anymore to play the second charade. Official Israel is no longer worried about how to avoid international rebuke.

Implementing incremental genocide against the Palestinians in Gaza did not move the powers that be, and the ongoing colonization of the West Bank and the siege of Gaza remain Israel’s best means of fulfilling the vision of a Greater Israel. As long as Israeli leaders face no consequences, they will continue to pursue their vision of a Greater Israel.

If this vision can be implemented through a partition of the West Bank into bantustans – apartheid South Africa-style enclaves where Palestinians are given nominal autonomy but no real control – this is also fine in the eyes of most of the Jewish electorate. (This is why optimistic two-staters can quote again and again the high figure for those in Israel who say they believe in a two-state solution and yet vote mainly for parties that oppose it.)

So why is the world still playing the charade? For regular readers of this publication, the answers are clear and there is no need to repeat them.

But at this moment of commemoration, let us approach those who we deem decent and knowledgeable as friends of ours – those friends and comrades who still talk about the two-state solution, the Israeli “peace camp” and the “peace of the brave” – and gently ask them how long will they play a charade, while the reality of colonization and oppression becomes harsher by the day and can only be stopped when as many people as possible give power to the truth.

The author of numerous books, Ilan Pappe is professor of history and director of the European Centre for Palestine Studies at the University of Exeter.

Iranian Revolutionary Guard blames Saudi Arabia for Tehran attack


12 people were killed in the attacks which were the first Islamic State attack on Iran, which is fighting IS in Iraq and Syria

Members of Iranian forces run during an attack on the Iranian parliament in central Tehran (Reuters)

Wednesday 7 June 2017
Iran's Revolutionary Guard Corp (IRGC) pointed the finger at Saudi Arabia for twin attacks on Iran’s parliament and the Mausoleum of Ayatollah Khomeini on Wednesday morning which left 12 people dead.
The attacks, which took place a few kilometres south of the capital, were the first in the country to be claimed by the Islamic State group. 
"This terrorist attack happened only a week after the meeting between the US president (Donald Trump) and the (Saudi) backward leaders who support terrorists," said the IRGC in a statement, published by Iranian media.
"The fact that Islamic State has claimed responsibility proves that they were involved in the brutal attack."
A security guard was killed when four gunmen burst into Tehran's parliament complex, while a gardener was reported dead when several armed assailants entered the grounds of Khomeini's mausoleum in the south of the city, according to the ISNA news agency.
"Fighters from Islamic State attacked Khomeini's shrine and the Iranian parliament in Tehran," IS's news agency Amaq said.
An official at Khomeini's mausoleum in south Tehran said "three or four" people had entered via the western entrance and opened fire, killing the gardener and wounding several people, according to the Fars news agency. 
Iran's supreme leader, Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, dismissed the attacks as mere "fireworks" that would not weaken the country's fight against terrorism, state TV reported.
"These fireworks have no effect on Iran. They will soon be eliminated...they are too small to affect the will of the Iranian nation and its officials," he said.
Iran's emergency services said a total of 12 people were killed in the two attacks and 43 wounded. 
Fars said a female suicide attacker blew herself up outside the shrine and published photos showing the explosion. The Mizanonline news agency also said a female suicide bomber blew herself up outside the shrine, while another woman was arrested carrying six grenades.
Lawmaker Elias Hazrati told state television three assailants, one with a pistol and two with AK-47 assault rifles, raided parliament.
Parliament was in session as the attacks unfolded, with live footage showing members continuing with routine business even as gun battles were reported in surrounding office buildings.
Speaker Ali Larijani dismissed the attacks, saying they were a "trivial matter" and that security forces were dealing with them.
Intensified gunfire was heard from the neighbouring offices as Fars news agency reported police had launched an assault. 

Parliament in session as attacks unfold

Tasmin news agency said there were unconfirmed reports that the attackers had taken four hostages inside the parliament building, but the state news agency IRNA reported that the situation at parliament is under control and a session is going ahead.
Another lawmaker said one of the assailants was surrounded by security forces and all the doors to the building had been closed, ISNA news agency reported.
Members of Iranian forces run during an attack on the Iranian parliament in central Tehran (Reuters)
"I was inside the parliament when shooting happened. Everyone was shocked and scared. I saw two men shooting randomly," said one journalist at the scene, who asked not to be named.
Several Arab media outlets claimed that the Islamic State group carried out the attacks, but removed the news report from their websites after half an hour, according to the semi-offical Fars News Agency.
Around half an hour later and 19 kilometres away from the parliament building, an armed man opened fire at the Mausoleum of Ayatollah Khomeini and wounded a number of people, the semi-official Fars news agency reported.
Ayatollah Ruhollah Khomeini launched the Islamic revolution in 1979.