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, July 5, 2017

Quest to save millions of dogs from South Korean meat trade

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(File) A dog with ear injuries is shown locked in a cage at a dog meat farm in South Korea Nov 21, 2016. Pic: Woohae Cho/AP
 

ANIMAL rights group Humane Society International (HSI) on Wednesday called on the South Korean government to end the dog meat trade as more than 2.5 million dogs are bred and killed for human consumption every year in thousands farms across the country.

The group says there are some 17,000 dog meat farms in the country, most using brutal methods to kill the creatures, such as death by electrocution and death by hanging.
It says it takes an average five minutes to kill a dog by electrocution, although there have also been numerous cases of dogs taking up to 20 minutes to die.

“Dogs are killed in full view of the other dogs, and their final moments will be terrifying and extremely painful,” HSI said in a statement.


HSI said the dog meat industry is in legal limbo in South Korea as its status was neither legal nor illegal.

Many provisions of the Animal Protection Act, it said, are routinely breached – such as the ban on killing animals in a brutal way including hanging by the neck, killing in public areas or in front of other animals of the same species.

While most South Koreans people do not regularly eat dogs, HSI said the practice is increasingly falling out of favour with the younger generation as many now reject dog meat.

However during Boknal days, the three hottest days of the summer between July and August, 70-80 percent of dog meat is eaten in South Korea, mainly as a peppery soup called bosintang that is believed to improve stamina and virility.

“Most people in South Korea never visit a dog meat farm and are unaware of the suffering experienced by the dogs,” HSI said.

“HSI is keen to dispel the widespread misconception that farmed dogs are somehow different in nature to companion dogs.”

Public awareness campaign

To spread public awareness on the issue, HSI has teamed up with Korean-American actor Daniel Henney in a campaign to promote the protection of dogs from the dog meat trade.

HSI
Actor Daniel Henney poses with Clint, a dog rescued from a dog meat farm in South Korea in 2015 as part of a campaign to treat all dogs with compassion.
Source: HSI

The Criminal Minds actor said he took time off his filming schedule to join the initiative he described as “close to his heart.”

In a video interview with HSI, Henney talks about his dog Mango, a 14-year old golden retriever, originally from South Korea.

“Mango is from Korea and I only speak Korean with her and although she’s been very fortunate, she didn’t have to live a difficult life, she just as easily could have,” he said.

“So I think in my personal opinion every dog out there in Korea is my Mango and they deserve to live a life like she has, they all deserve to be a companion, to be loved because they all have that potential to be amazing like she is.”


Henney’s campaign co-star, Clint, is a Tosa rescued by the HSI team in 2015, the group said.

Humane Society International has rescued more than 800 dogs, including golden retrievers just like Mango, as part of its ongoing campaign to see an end to the industry.

Working in co-operation with dog farmers keen to get out of the trade, HSI said it has permanently closed down eight dog farms where dogs are confined their whole lives in barren metal cages with little food or protection from the harsh climate.

The charity plans its ninth dog farm closure in mid-July.

“Daniel and Clint are the perfect partnership for our efforts to end the cruel dog meat trade. Clint’s photo will be seen by millions of people across Seoul, representing the millions of dogs not as lucky as him to have escaped the cruelty.

HSI Campaign Manager Nara Kim said “every dog on a dog meat farm is as special as Clint, capable of being loving and loyal friends if only given the chance.”

She added “Daniel is helping us spread that message of compassion to change hearts and minds.”

Theresa May slips up on nurses

By -5 JUL 2017

The claim

“We have 13,000 more nurses working in the NHS today compared to 2010.” Theresa May, 5 July

The background

Theresa May tried to defend the government’s record on public sector workers at today’s Prime Minister’s Questions.

She was responding to the Labour leader, Jeremy Corbyn, who quoted several figures suggesting the number of nurses is falling.

Mr Corbyn’s numbers need some context too, but we think the Prime Minister slipped when she suggested that the total number of nurses working in the NHS had gone up by 13,000.

The analysis

Earlier this week the Nursing and Midwifery Council published a reportwhich showed that the number of nurses and midwives registered to work in the UK fell between March 2016 and March 2017.

The drop wasn’t massive – 1,783 people, or about 0.3 per cent – but it is apparently the first time the number has fallen since 2008.

To be clear, this register represents the total number of nurses and midwives – currently around 690,000 – who are allowed to work in the UK, not the number actually employed by the NHS. The register is the pool from which working nurses and midwives are drawn.

How many nurses work across the NHS?

The Prime Minister gets her “13,000 more” line from the official statisticspublished by NHS Digital.
It’s true that one category of nurse – described in the figures as working on “acute, elderly and general” care wards – has increased by just over 13,000.

That’s if we start counting in May 2010, when the Conservative-led coalition was elected, and counts full-time equivalent roles.

The Department of Health told us they want to focus on this figure because it captures most nurses who work on hospital wards specifically.

But there are lots of other nurses who don’t work on wards, and whose numbers have been cut since May 2010 – mental health and community health nurses would be two examples.

According to NHS Digital, there were a total of 285,893 nurses and health visitors working across the whole of the NHS in March this year, compared to 280,950 in May 2010.

That’s still an increase under Conservative chancellors, but a less impressive one of around 5,000, or just under 2 per cent.

And this comes at a time when workloads are likely to be increasing for many nurses.

Although there’s no one convenient number for measuring total NHS activity, several important measures we know about, like hospital admissionsaccident and emergency attendances, and operations, have gone up dramatically over the last decade.

The verdict

Mrs May and others have chosen their words more carefully on other occasions, referring to a rise in nurses “on our wards”. On this occasion, the Prime Minister wasn’t quite accurate.

It’s right to say that there are 13,000 more nurses working specifically in hospital wards than there were in May 2010, but this is a sub-group of all nurses.

Across the NHS, the total number of nurses has still risen, but only by around 5,000. And this is at a time of increasing pressure on many areas of the service.

The numbers Mr Corbyn quoted in parliament refer to all registered nurses, not just those currently employed by the NHS. This number fell in 2016/17 for the first time in recent years.

Sharp focus on Alzheimer's may help target drugs


 Elderly manA tangle of tauA tangle of tauElderly man
BBCBy James Gallagher-7 April 2017
The team at the MRC Laboratory of Molecular Biology says its findings "open up a whole new era" in neurodegenerative disease.Abnormal deposits that build up in the brain during Alzheimer's have been pictured in unprecedented detail by UK scientists.
Their work should make it easier to design drugs to stop brain cells dying.
The researchers used brain tissue from a 74-year-old woman who died after having Alzheimer's disease.
The form of dementia leads to tangles of a protein called tau spreading throughout the brain. The more tau tangles there are, the worse the symptoms tend to be.
Doctors have known this has happened for decades but what has been missing is a detailed understanding of what the tangles look like.
The team took advantage of the "resolution revolution" in microscopy to take thousands of highly detailed images of the tau inside the woman's brain tissues.
And using computer software, they figured out the tangles look like this:
It is pretty meaningless to an untrained eye, but to scientists this could be one of the most important recent discoveries in tackling dementia.
Attempts to develop a drug to slow the pace of dementia have been met by repeated failure. But it is hard to come up with a drug when you do not know the precise chemical structure of what you are targeting.
Dr Sjors Scheres, one of the researchers, told the BBC News website: "It's like shooting in the dark - you can still hit something but you are much more likely to hit if you know what the structure is.
"We are excited - it opens up a whole new era in this field, it really does."
Similar dysfunctional proteins are found in many brain diseases. Alzheimer's also has beta amyloid while Parkinson's has alpha synuclein.
The structure of tau, published in the journal Nature, is the first to be determined in such detail.
Fellow researcher Dr Michel Goedert told the BBC: "This is a big step forward as far as tau goes but it is bigger than that.
"This is the first time anybody has determined the high-resolution structure [from human brain samples] for any of these diseases.
"The next step is to use this information to study the mechanisms of neurodegeneration."
Dr Tara Spires-Jones, from the centre for cognitive and neural systems at the University of Edinburgh, said the findings "substantially advance what we know".
She added: "These results will be useful for developing molecules to detect tau tangles in patients and potentially for developing treatments."
Follow James on Twitter.

Disinformation in Sri Lanka: An overview





GROUNDVIEWS on 07/04/2017

Editor’s Note: This discussion note was prepared in the run up to the Digital Disinformation Forum, held on June 26 and 27. Excerpts of this were used in a moderated discussion on the media’s efforts to build resilience to disinformation. 

Fake news became a buzzword around the 2016 US Presidential election campaign. However, it’s something we have been grappling with in Sri Lanka for years. Fake news, is news created with the intent to deceive. However, the term has also been distorted over the years. Not only has it been used by people to dismiss news they don’t like, but it has also become confused with reporting that requires correction, as the Washington Post pointed out. In fact, saying something is ‘fake news’ doesn’t necessarily make it so – Trump himself often accuses entire publication houses as being fake.

AUDACITY OF HOPE IN A BROKEN CITY

THE NORTHERN PROVINCE IS IN A STATE OF ECONOMIC ISOLATION. WHILE THE STATE IS IN A POLITICAL DREADLOCK, ORDINARY PEOPLE HAVE TAKEN CHARGE 
For the last three months, Kamalnath*, 26, has been arriving to work in Chunnakam two hours late, leaving two hours early and spending his free time at a friend’s home in Nallur. He works at his family’s fancy goods store, retailing beauty accoutrements like bangles, hairpins and the latest fairness creams.

Chunnakam is second most populous town in the Jaffna district. Kamalnath’s father’s store averages revenue of Rs20,000 per day.

Myliddy harbour and lands released after 27 years of military occupation

Home03 Jul  2017
The Myliddy harbour, which at one time accommodated almost a third of Sri Lanka’s fishing trade, and 54 acres of surrounding land on Jaffna peninsula were released today after 27 years of military occupation.

This government stole our franchise

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By S. Ratnajeevan H. Hoole- 

[An edited version of a speech in Tamil delivered on 3 July 2017 at the Divisional Secretariat, Batticaloa]

Delayed Elections

This was meant to be a happy day for me. I am no stranger to Batticaloa. This is a place where my great grandfather, Richard Aiyathurai Hoole, served faithfully as Secretary of the District Court Batticaloa and was by proclamation of the Governor allowed to keep, upon retirement, his title Mudaliyar for life. A photograph on the occasion taken with the entire parish in front of St. Andrew’s Church across the field by our venue is a treasured family possession.

To my disappointment, however, this morning’s news said that Minister of Provincial Councils and Local Government, Faiszer Musthapha had postponed local government elections by three months. Batticaloa has not had the Local Government elections due in 2013. Maritimepattu and Puthukudiyiruppu have had no elections since 2011.

We have been battling with Musthapha for long. Finally, he gazetted the ward boundaries and number of representatives for wards in April. Without attributing reasons, he made the effective date of the gazette 1 July. So we waited.

He also had to correct mistakes in Act 12/2012 with several flaws without doing which we could not hold elections. Among the many flaws are 1). In the so called original Sinhalese version, for the term polling district (chandha kottasaya) with about 1500 voters, the term ward (kottasaya) with about 5000 voters had been used. (There being no mistakes in English exposes the pretended nationalism where the drafters work in English and claim to have worked in Sinhalese, which makes the flawed version the authentic one). 2) The counting place for postal votes was specified as a place where the chief counting officer would not have access to the result to declare a winner and 3) Candidate deposits were hugely increased to make it impossible for small parties and independent candidates to contest.

The corrections were drafted, after two years of our requests, as a bill on 02.06.2017, which is awaiting enactment in Parliament. We were elated. After 19 months, on the Commission mainly doing voter registration and education, transfers and permissions to retire, we looked forward to conducting a real election.

Then Mustapha pulled a fast one. On 1st July, he issued a new gazette postponing the effective date to 1 October. He is a fox indeed! Even after 1 Oct. there is no guarantee on enacting the Bill.

The Egg, the dog, the Thief and the Gold

A thief told the master of a house, "There is an egg thief going about. Leash your guard dog to the chicken coop." The Master did as advised. While the dog waited chained near the coop, the thief went to the house that night and cleared off with the gold.

We of the Election Commission are the guard dog. We are here to tell you of our democracy and guard the integrity of the voter register. But of what good is the voter register when you have no election to vote at? While we divert your attention to voter registration, the thief, our government, has walked off with our prized possession, our elections. The Election Commission has been suckered into diverting your attention, calling ours a democracy and justifying it with ceremonies like today’s, while you really are denied your right to choose who governs us.

Deterioration

How did these thieves take over? 1947 saw the time when rogue MPs had been bribed with Ministerial positions to disfranchise the hill country Tamils. Clean politics came with SJV Chelvanayagam, who eclipsed every politician. Many politicians of that period agreed with this assessment. In the 1956 elections, he had entrusted "Pottar" [later Senator] Nadarajah with filing his nomination papers. Upon reaching the GA’s office and realizing that SJV had forgotten to sign the papers, Nadarajah went out, forged SJV’s signature and filed them. The Federal Party swept the Tamil areas.

C. Suntharalingam, who was defeated in 1956, somehow got wind of this and filed a complaint. SJV was advised that saying it was indeed his signature would solve the problem. But, SJV insisted, "I will not tell a lie." The party panicked. At the inquiry he testified, "I sent Nadesan with my full authority to act for me. When he signed my name, it was my signature." His position was upheld and he served as MP.

And today? Pottar was murdered by the LTTE for participation in the District Council. Chief Minister C.V. Wigneswaran of the FP is being propped up by Suresh Premachandran’s EPRLF, PLOTE, Tamil Congress, EPDP and Sri-TELO. I need say no more. On 2 July Uthayan newspaper announced that CVW, in trying to fill the two ministerial vacancies, had asked for the CVs of those interested.

He was trying to show that he was on the side of probity while the rest of the FP was not. He wrote to a person showing interest that he could not be considered because he had played a role in the murder of Sivaram (nom de plume Taraki). Intrigued, I made enquiries. That letter of CVW’s is in the possession of E. Saravanapavan, MP, who is prepared to release it to the public if the story is challenged by CVW. The Provincial Council Member allegedly involved in Sivaram’s murder is a PLOTE representative from Nedunkerny.

The NPC has others of similar ilk. Such a man had looted a cooperative store. The LTTE had fined him Rs. 83 lakhs. It is thought that he did not pay the full fine because the LTTE’s demise intervened. The man then asked the FP for nomination and was turned down. He then went to the EPRLF and received the FP name tag under the EPRLF quota. He is now a member in CVW’s corner.

How does this happen?

This fiasco for democracy happens because good people will not stand as candidates and we ourselves vote for bad people.

Standing for election is expensive. We need to be known for people to vote for us. Once we spend our money, we are broke as an uncle of mine married to SJV’s niece was after he successfully contested for a seat at the Jaffna Municipal Council for the FP. Supporters had to go house to house, and be served tea and lunch. Notices and posters had to be printed; campaign platforms built. He ran the illegal post office. He went to prison for his participation in the Tar Brush campaign. After two MMC terms he was flat broke. He went abroad and settled his debts but his supporters felt let down, asking me: "Thamby, your uncle has left us in the lurch to make money." They did not know how expensive politics was.

What do politicians who spend themselves broke do after winning? The wife of a minister in this government told me that her husband had put her house as collateral for a loan for campaign finance and she would not know where to turn if he had lost. The poor woman was unwittingly telling me that by winning he had the chance to recover his investment.

Politicians who spend to win then make money through corrupt deals and favours. Only a fool would spend his personal wealth and not want to recover it. Corruption is intrinsic to our politics.

The only solution is through laws limiting spending on campaigns and paying credible candidates from government coffers. These are both successfully done in many democracies.

But why do we vote for the corrupt?

The study of elections is a degree level art. A standard textbook is W.W. North, Daron Shaw, Matt Grossmann and Keena Lipsitz, Campaigns and Elections, 2nd edn, W.W. Norton & Co., New York, NY, 2015. The authors list five factors influencing, in order, how voters choose:

1. Social identity. The class background, ethnicity, and religion of the voter affect whom voters choose in an election. Parties cater to social groups in order to garner loyalty, and during a campaign are likely to "remind" any aligned social groups of their identity – for example preferring the Sinhalese national costume to their usual shirt and trousers. For us, language, religion, caste and whether English-speaking or not, are determining.

2. Party Identity – Again Identity! Party identification is voters’ psychological attachment to a political party. Usually, citizens learn party affiliation early in life, from family or social ties, as well as the political context during which a citizen grows up. In Jaffna, a young boy running about in the 1960s shouting "A Cross for the Federal Party" would find it difficult to do otherwise even after the party has changed. Sivaram’s killer getting elected is because he had the House symbol.

3. The National Economy: It is seen as a reflection of incumbent performance. Voters respond rewarding incumbents when the country prospers, and punishing when not.

4. Policies: Certain voters vote based on specific policy. Candidates accordingly adjust their positions on these issues to ones which they believe will gain them the most votes. In most cases, however, issue voters still tend to vote on party lines, so policy issues are still secondary.

5. Candidate Traits: Conflicting evidence exists on whether candidate traits affect voter choice. Most campaigners assume that voters are swayed by physical attributes and personality. These, however, will matter significantly only after party affiliation. So light-skinned men effeminately dressed in white, and cinema actresses winning is more likely because of their party rather than appearance.

We need to move towards policy and economy rather than identity. But, when we ignore identity and rival groups do not, it would affect our community badly in our charged system. The Election Commission hopes to gazette a call for nominations on 2 Oct. for the Sabragamuwa, Eastern and North Central Provincial Councils. But, these elections will not be national in scope to be a referendum on the government's performance. Observer Groups that met the Election Commission said their cooperation for a postponement had been sounded out and there was talk of a constitutional amendment to postpone even these.

Sunday Leader And Colombo NGOs Confuse RTI Law

logoMore than half of the time of the understaffed, overworked and under-budgeted RTI Commission of Sri Lanka is taken in explaining matters to Colombo’s privileged English-speakers who do not read the gazette and the Act.
The arrogance of a few Colombo based media and NGOs in failing to follow Sri Lanka’s Right to Information Act and gazette in their information requests has become a major stumbling block to the effective implementation of the regime, the Colombo Telegraph (CT) understands.
In contrast, provincial journalists and civil society organsations (CSOs) with little access to the law given the lack of resources in rural areas have been enthusiastically and properly using the gazette and regulations/rules of the Ministry of Media and the RTI Commission, a source from the Ministry of Media said.
The Media Ministry is the nodal agency responsible for implementing RTI. CT asked him as to why he thought this was different and he said ‘the problem is that these people in Colombo think the rules do not apply to them. They go for the easiest and most convenient way without reading the RTIO1 form or the Rules of the Commission that have been gazetted. Ironically these are the very people who should read and understand as they are conversant in English. But that is not what we are seeing. Maybe this is a good study for a social scientist to spend time in!’     
This Sunday (2nd July) the Sunday Leader carried a correction of the RTI Commission of Sri Lanka in response to an article by a journalist (Nirmala Kannangara) who had claimed that she had emailed the Commission in an appeal on her right to information request against the Department of the Police being denied but had not obtained any response. The Commission’s correction had informed the Leader that this claim was factually incorrect. The Commission had responded to her, pointing to the appointment of an Information Officer by the Department. The head of the Department will be the DO. It had said that, if a proper appeal is filed against the refusal, the Commission will act to the fullest extent of the law.   
The journalist was told that she could not file appeals to the Commission by email as that was not permitted by the gazette. Appeals must be filed in person (or through any representative) or sent by registered post. The correction was carried by the Leader in an inside page and also in social media as online websites had also re-published the incorrect story. Commenting on this, accountant Yohes Yoheswaran said on twitter, ‘it is ‘sad that Sri Lankan journalists are not familiar with the Rules.’ He pointed out, ‘I followed the rules as per the RTI Act and got the information I asked for from the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka.’
Sri Lankan journalist Amantha Perera pointed out that there is a ‘serious lack’ of application/awareness by journalists of RTI in Sri Lanka right now. Perera was responding on social media to an article in the New Indian Express on a recent book in India ‘Journalism Through RTI; Information, Investigation, Impact’ by journalist Shyamlal Yadav, saying that this will be true in Sri Lanka only if journalists know how to use the RTI Act to gain information.
Ministry sources explained that more than half of the time of the understaffed, overworked and under-budgeted RTI Commission of Sri Lanka is taken in explaining matters to people who do not read the gazette and the Act. Last month, the Commission fixed for hearing, consideration of questions of law on the failure of Colombo based RTI trainer Transparency International Sri Lanka to specify the fact of citizenship in information requests filed by them on the assets declarations of the Prime Minister and the President.
This was not in compliance with Section 3(1) of the RTI Act which gives information under the Act only to a citizen and also RTI Form No 1 in the gazette which asks the requester specifically to declare citizenship. The gazette permits an information request even on a blank sheet of paper, provided that the essential requirements are met. In a similar way, appeals continue to be filed on email by journalists of the Colombo based Sinhala and English media which are not permitted by the gazette.
This resulted in the Commission issuing an Important Announcement last week on its website (http://www.rticommission.lkasking information requesters to remember to always declare the fact of citizenship in accordance with the gazette form RTI01. It was also pointed out that an Appeal to the office of the RTI Commission cannot be sent through electronic mail.

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Asgiriya Mahanayake and group who said debauched discarded Gnanassara is right trample people’s referendums ; say causing disappearances too are good


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News - 04.July.2017, 11.30PM) Asgiriya chapter mahanayake who said the (mis)conduct , modes and methods of a discarded debauched monk like Gnanassara are  correct , along with a group of monks summoned by him  issued a communique which stated that the new constitution abolishing  the executive presidency  and  which had been ratified by the people via not one but two  referendums is not necessary.

The present constitution shall be continued as it is , and if necessary the electoral system alone shall be abolished , they pointed out.  
What is most rudely shocking from a human angle  about the statement made by the mahanayake and his group is their inhumanly opposing the bill that is to be passed to punish those who cause disappearance of people, and to treat those as  crimes,  despite being Buddhist  monks who preach that harm should not be inflicted even on the smallest creature such as an ant. Unbelievably  these are the  Buddhist leaders – religious leaders of all leaders  who are saying causing disappearances of people should be permitted !
It is significant to note only a crowd as small as 75 individuals attended the sangha conference at Asgiriya trying  to change the referendum which had the support of as large a crowd as 6.2 million !  It is to be noted the sangha members themselves recently mounted grave charges against present Asgiriya mahanayake that he was appointed on vote rigging !
Recently  when Mahinda Rajapakse who was responsible for the disappearances  of people addressing  a rally in the East on the 3 rd , made statements that were antagonistic to the proposed bill which aims to make causing disappearance of people a crime and a punishable offence ; and today when Asgirya mahanayake and his group of nayakes issued a communique they are opposed to the new bill , it is very obvious whose obnoxious agendas they are serving , and acting as whose puppets. They are trying to misinterpret this bill citing a  mischievous reason that it is  an attempt to victimize the war heroes .
The reason that prompted the Asgiriya  mahanayake and his group to make this odious statement which is  clearly against human rights and is  anti national  was  owing to the decision taken by the government  to entrust the Archeological department with the  collection of payments  from  foreigners who visit the Dambullu Vihara , which  monies  prior to this decision were pocketed by Asgiriya nayakes  for the last 20 years.  
The custody of the Dalada Maligawa , Kandy changes every year , and on the 9 th of this month   ,the Asgiriya chapter is to entrust the custody to Malwatte chapter.  Therefore this communique simply and clearly reveals , the devil  that has to go  is getting ready to destroy and damage everything  along its path when leaving. 
It is a well and widely known fact  a new constitution is formulated not to serve one  party but with the participation of  all parties which represent the parliament . Main matters such as devolution of powers  and changing the electoral system   are with the participation  of all parties , though it is only an SLFP group led by Nimal Siripala  De Silva which says , the executive presidency shall be continued. 
President Maithripala Sirisena  has been  taking the stance that the executive Presidenc y shall be abolished and has not changed that stance. Hence , it is a crucial question  whose  ‘SLFP’ are the various other  shady characters of the SLFP representing ,who  are insisting on the continuation of the executive presidency ? 
They are opposing  president’s stance without clarifying this  because they are fully aware Maithripala who solemnly  promised to abolish the executive presidency within 100 days of his becoming the president surely  cannot field as a presidential candidate if  he has any sense of shame,  unless of course he wishes to do a strip tease to come  forward , and since their prospective presidential candidate is someone else. 
It is an incontrovertible fact , only the forces which  are seeking to enthrone murderers like Gotabaya the notorious blood thirsty modern Dracula that would say  the executive presidency shall be continued which has been rejected by not one but two people’s referendums . It is very unfortunate the Asgiriya nayakes despite wearing sacred robes have also fallen into that villainous  anti national category.  
A government elected duly  by the people, for the people and  of the people  is duty bound to abide by  the people’s referendum without capitulating to the aims and agendas of sinners and scoundrels. 
---------------------------
by     (2017-07-04 20:06:22)

Former FM who rejected UN reports of Sri Lanka war crimes appointed governor of Eastern Province

Mr Bogollagama rejects UN report on video showing Sri Lankan troops extrajudicial killing of LTTE cadre. January 8, 2010. Photograph HRW. 

04 Jul  2017
HomeSri Lanka's former foreign affairs minister, Rohitha Bogollagama has been appointed as the new governor of the Eastern Province today, after Austin Fernando was appointed as the permanent secretary to the president. 
Mr Bogollagama, who trained as a lawyer, was Minister of Foreign Affairs from 2007 till 2010 and spent much of his term denying increasingly substantiated reports that war crimes were committed by the Sri Lankan military in a systematic manner. 
In January 2010, Mr Bogollagama flatly rejected the UN human rights investigator, Philip Alston's calls for an international inquiry into war crimes, after a video emerged of Sri Lankan troops killing blindfolded Tamils. 
The government described the video as a fake, whilst its then foreign minister, Mr Bogollama accused Mr Alston of deliberately timing his comments to interfere with the then upcoming presidential elections.
A month after the conflict ended, Mr Bogollama was vocal in rejecting any reports of the military firing into the No-Fire Zone, claiming the military "never returned" LTTE fire in the area. 
"Within the no-fire zone we never returned fire because we would never have taken that degree of chance for inflicting harm on civilians," Foreign Minister Rohitha Bogollagama told The Times in June 2009, after the paper reported over 20,000 Tamils civilians died in the NFZ. 
That month he also met with the then shadow secretary for foreign and Commonwealth affairs, William Hague MP during a visit to the UK. 
Sri Lanka's Ministry of Foreign Affairs reported
"At the outset of the meeting the Foreign Minister provided a detailed account on the final days of the LTTE. Mr. Hague stated that the defeat of the LTTE by military means has now provided enormous opportunities to Sri Lanka to bring the communities together on a sound foundation. Foreign Minister Bogollagama said that successive governments had made efforts to engage the LTTE and to bring the organisation into the democratic process. He said that the defeat of the LTTE has provided opportunities to embark upon the political and economic empowerment of the people in the North and East.
Minister Bogollagama recalled that the fight against the LTTE terrorism goes back to the period of Mrs Thatcher's Conservative administration. He also outlined the road map designed for the IDPs and bringing the members of TNA and other Tamil parties to create inclusive political process."

Justice Minister strikes a discordant note

Accountability issues


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By Shamindra Ferdinando-

Justice and Buddha Sasana Minister Dr. Wijeyadasa Rajapakse, PC last week flayed the UN system for propagating lies in respect of the post-war situation in the country.

Rajapakse dealt with the report produced by the Office of the Special Rapporteur on the independence of judges and lawyers following a visit undertaken by Ms Monica Pinto in April-May 2016. Rajapakse didn’t mince his words when he declared Pinto’s report presented by her successor Diego Garcia-Sayan at the recently concluded 35 th session wasn’t acceptable.