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

Thursday, July 20, 2017

Two of six African teens who went missing from robotics competition are in Canada, D.C. police say

 This is what's known about six teens from Burundi who came to D.C. to participate in an international robotics competition and disappeared on the last day of the event. (Claritza Jimenez/The Washington Post)


Two of the six teenage members of the Burundi robotics team who went missing from Washington this week have crossed into Canada and are safe, D.C. police said on Thursday.

The four others also are believed to be in safe hands, but authorities declined to provide further details. It is the first indication that the teenagers may have left on their own accord.

A D.C. police spokeswoman identified the teens in Canada as Don Charu Ingabire, 16, and Audrey Mwamikazi, 17. Authorities would not describe how the teenagers planned to leave Washington or how the two made it to Canada.

The teens had come to the District to compete in an international FIRST Global Challenge robotics competition, which drew young people from 157 nations to Constitution Hall in Northwest Washington.

Police said the teens from the small East African country were reported missing Wednesday. They were last seen about 5 p.m. Tuesday, shortly before the event closed around 6:30 p.m. In addition to Ingabire and Mwamikazi, Richard Irakoze, 18, Kevin Sabumukiza, 17, Nice Munezero, 17 and Aristide Irambona, 18, also were reported missing.

Police posted fliers of the missing teens on the department’s Twitter account. FIRST Global issued a statement on Wednesday saying an adult mentor could not find the team members.

A spokesman for the group, Jose P. Escotto, said on Thursday that he could not confirm that authorities had located the teens. “We haven’t been informed of anything,” he said at 10:30 a.m.
FIRST Global is run by Joe Sestak, a former Navy admiral and congressman, who called police after receiving word the team had gone missing.

Officials from the Burundi Embassy in Washington said Thursday they are aware of the situation but had no other information. A State Department spokesman referred all questions to local authorities.

Burundi has been roiled by civil war and complaints of human rights abuses. In 2015, Burundi’s president, the former Hutu rebel leader Pierre Nkurunziza, successfully sought reelection to a third term. Mass protests organized by the opposition were put down, and the climate grew more repressive after an attempted coup in May 2015.

The State Department issued a travel warning in late June, advising Americans of “political tensions, political and criminal violence, and the potential for civil unrest.”

That warning stated that rebel forces, ex-combatants and youth gangs from Congo had reportedly attacked and kidnapped civilians, while armed groups have ambushed vehicles.

Hundreds of people have been killed, and hundreds more have disappeared, allegedly the work of Burundi’s security forces. In the past two years, more than 400,000 people have fled the country, according to human rights activists.

Escotto said he believed the Burundi team members had attended closing ceremonies, which began at 5:30 p.m. Tuesday.

The organization’s statement said that students were housed in dormitories at Trinity Washington University and were “always to be under close supervision of their adult mentor and are advised not to leave the premises unaccompanied by the mentor.”

Ann Pauley, a spokeswoman for the university, referred all questions to FIRST Global. She confirmed that the organization rented residence hall space for some of the visiting teams.

“First Local was fully responsible for supervision of the students,” Pauley said Thursday. “Trinity was notified of the missing Burundi team and is fully cooperating with the investigation.”
Pauley declined to say whether the team had packed or left behind personal items and clothes.

This week’s competition had already garnered global headlines after a group of teenage girls from Afghanistan was initially barred from getting visas to the United States. Organizers had previously hosted domestic competitions, but this was the first international event.


Carol Morello contributed to this report.

The Passion of Liu Xiaobo


Liu Xiaobo, mid-2000s
Liu Xiaobo, from the last video that was taken of him, December, 2008



In the late 1960s Mao Zedong, China’s Great Helmsman, encouraged children and adolescents to confront their teachers and parents, root out “cow ghosts and snake spirits,” and otherwise “make revolution.” In practice, this meant closing China’s schools. In the decades since, many have decried a generation’s loss of education. 
Liu Xiaobo, the 2010 Nobel Peace Prize laureate who was sentenced to eleven years for “inciting subversion” of China’s government, and who died of liver cancer on Thursday, illustrates a different pattern. Liu, born in 1955, was eleven when the schools closed, but he read books anyway, wherever he could find them. With no teachers to tell him what the government wanted him to think about what he read, he began to think for himself—and he loved it. Mao had inadvertently taught him a lesson that ran directly counter to Mao’s own goal of converting children into “little red soldiers.”
But this experience only partly explains Liu’s stout independence. It also seems to have been an inborn trait. If there is a gene for bluntness, Liu likely had it. In the 1980s, while still a graduate student in Chinese literature, he was already known as a “black horse” for denouncing nearly every contemporary Chinese writer: the literary star Wang Meng was politically slippery; “roots-seeking” writers like Han Shaogong were excessively romantic about the value of China’s traditions; even speak-for-the-people heroes like Liu Binyan were too ready to pin hopes on “liberal” Communist leaders like Hu Yaobang. No one was independent enough. “I can sum up what’s wrong with Chinese writers in one sentence,” Liu Xiaobo wrote in 1986. “They can’t write creatively themselves—they simply don’t have the ability—because their very lives don’t belong to them.”
He carried his candor with him when he went abroad. At a conference on Chinese film at the University of Oslo in 1988, he was surprised to learn that European Sinologists couldn’t speak Chinese (they only read it) and were far too naïve in accepting Chinese government statements at face value. “Ninety-eight percent are useless,” he observed (and the conference itself was “agonizingly boring”). From Oslo he went to New York, to Columbia University, where he found it irritating that postcolonial theorists were telling him how it felt to be the subaltern Other. Shouldn’t he be telling them that?
In the spring of 1989, two experiences, the first in New York and the second in Beijing, profoundly altered the course of his thinking and his life. He was just finishing a book, Chinese Politics and China’s Modern Intellectuals, which explored several ways in which Western civilization can be “a tool to critique China.” Now, though, visiting the West, he found that the model was not so clear. Issues like the energy crisis, environmental protection, nuclear weapons, and what he called “the addiction to pleasure and to commercialization” were human problems, not particularly Eastern or Western. Moreover, a visit to New York’s Metropolitan Museum of Art had brought him an epiphany: no one had solved the spiritual question of “the incompleteness of the individual person.” Even China’s great modern writer Lu Xun, whose fiction was so good at revealing moral callousness, hypocrisy, superstition, and cruelty, could not, in Liu Xiaobo’s view, take the next step and “struggle with the dark.” Lu Xun tried this, in his prose poems, but in the end backed off; he “could not cope with the solitary terror of the grave” and “failed to find any transcendental values to help him continue.”
Chinese Politics had already been sent to its publisher, but Liu decided to add an “Epilogue” anyway, and, with characteristic honesty, used it to undermine the book’s main theme. To be “an authentic person,” he wrote, he would now have to “carry out two critiques simultaneously”: one of China, still using the West as a measuring rod, and another of the West itself, for which he would have to start over, from scratch, and rethink everything. He finished the essay in March 1989, ending it with the words “this epilogue has exhausted me.” 
The next month he boarded an airplane in New York bound for Beijing, not from exhaustion but because he had read about the student demonstrations for democracy in Tiananmen Square and felt a duty to support them. “I hope,” he wrote, “that I’m not the type of person who, standing at the doorway to hell, strikes a heroic pose and then starts frowning with indecision.”
In Beijing, the students’ idealism moved him. He helped them to plan a hunger strike and joined it himself. His approach was non-confrontational, almost Gandhian. In his “June 2nd Hunger Strike Declaration” he wrote that “a democratic society is not built on hatred and enmity; it is built on consultation, debate, and voting…[and on] mutual respect, tolerance, and willingness to compromise.” Less than two days later Liu had an opportunity to put his words into practice. As tanks began rolling toward Tiananmen Square and it was already clear that people in their way were being killed, Liu and his friends Zhou Duo and Hou Dejian negotiated with the attacking military to allow students in Tiananmen Square to exit safely. It is impossible to say how many lives they saved by this compromise, but it was certainly dozens and maybe hundreds.
Afterward, though, Liu made what he later regarded as a “mistake” that he rued for the rest of his life. He sought temporary safety in the home of a foreign diplomat. He later heard that others—mostly ordinary citizens—had stayed in the streets to help people who were wounded or were still being shot at. They risked their own lives to offer help, and when the government set punishments for participants in the “counterrevolutionary riot,” these ordinary people were treated more harshly than the student demonstrators. Many received prison sentences of eighteen to twenty years, and some were executed. Liu himself was sent to Qincheng Prison, an elite facility where the political opponents of top leaders are held, and stayed only nineteen months—“deathly bored, but that’s about it.” 
Liu felt haunted by the “lost souls” of Tiananmen, the aggrieved ghosts of students and workers alike whose ages would forever be the same as on the night they died. He wrote that he could hear their plaintive cries—“weak, helpless, heart-rending”—rising from beneath the earth. Each year on the anniversary of the massacre he wrote a poem to honor them. His “final statement” at his trial in December 2009 opens: “June 1989 has been the major turning point in my life.” In October 2010, when his wife Liu Xia brought him the news of his Nobel Peace Prize, she reports that he commented, “This is for the aggrieved ghosts.”
After his release from Qincheng Prison in 1991, Liu was banned from publishing in China and fired from his teaching post at Beijing Normal University—even though students there had always loved his lectures. He began to support himself by writing for magazines in Hong Kong, Taiwan, and overseas. The rise of the Internet in China in the early 2000s gave a huge boost to circulation of his essays, not only outside China but inside, too, as overseas friends found ways to skirt the government’s Great Firewall and send them back into China. Before 1989, his essays had been mostly on contemporary Chinese literature, but now he addressed topics in history, politics, and society, revealing a rich erudition. He also began to write poetry. The breadth of topics in his poems and essays can be startling: Confucius, Kant, St. Augustine, farmers in Jiangsu, Olympic athletes, humor in China and Czechoslovakia, pornography and politics, the Internet revolution, Obama’s election, a murdered puppy, international relations, the Dalai Lama, China’s “economic miracle,” and much more. 
Consistent with his adoption of a “no enemies” philosophy after 1989, the fiery tone of his earlier writings now cooled. But his utter candor—his seeming inability not to be candid—did not change. By the middle of the 2000s, Liu Xiaobo was commonly viewed as China’s leading dissident. In the spring of 2008, some of his friends conceived the idea of writing a citizens’ manifesto calling for free elections and constitutional government in China. They called it “Charter 08,” in conscious admiration of Václav Havel and Czechoslovakia’s “Charter 77.” Liu Xiaobo did not join at first, but in the fall, when the drafting was well underway and momentum was building, he threw his energy into the project. He edited drafts and tried to remove needlessly provocative language that might prevent some people from signing. He then worked hard to solicit signatures—not only from known dissidents but from workers, farmers, state officials, and others willing to gather under the broad tent of asking for a more open and liberal society. The language of the Charter is moderate. Much of it already appears in Chinese and United Nations documents. But a few lines, like “we must abolish the special privilege of one party to monopolize power,” clearly did go beyond what China’s rulers could stomach.
It is clear that Liu’s work on Charter 08 led to his eleven-year prison sentence a year later, and to his Nobel Peace Prize a year after that. At the Nobel banquet in December 2010, a member of the selection committee told me that her group had for years been wanting to find a Chinese winner for their prize and that the previous year’s events “made this finally seem the right time.” Chinese President Hu Jintao and his Politburo were likely annoyed to realize (if ever they did) that their imprisonment of Liu helped pave the way to his award.
It might seem puzzling that an advocate of “no enemies” who actually worked to soften the language of the Charter should have been singled out for punishment during the government’s crackdown. Several of Liu’s colleagues were detained and interrogated, and had their computers confiscated, but only Liu was sent to prison. While it is a standard device in Communist Chinese political engineering to “kill a chicken for the monkeys to see,” the question remains why a pacifist chicken would be their choice. 
The answer seems to be that the Charter movement was viewed as an unauthorized “organization” of which Liu was the leader. The men who rule China have shown in recent times that they can tolerate tongue-lashings from the populace so long as it comes from isolated individuals. An unauthorized organization, even if moderate, must be crushed. In 2005 Hu Jintao issued a classified report called “Fight a Smokeless Battle: Keep ‘Color Revolutions’ Out of China.” It said people like Nelson Mandela, Lech Wałęsa, and Aung San Suu Kyi are dangerous. If similar movements appear in China, Hu instructed, “the big ones” should be arrested and “the little ones” left alone. In November 2008, when Chinese police learned that people were signing Charter 08, it was officially labeled an attempt to start a “color revolution.” That made Liu Xiaobo a “big one” who needed to be brought down. There are signs that Liu himself understood the mechanism. When he joined the Charter effort he told his friends that, in addition to editing and gathering signatures, he would “take responsibility” for the Charter—in effect, risk being a “big one.”
Why Hu Jintao and his people decided on a sentence of eleven years—not ten, twelve, or some other number—was a mystery at the time and remains so now. Of the many guesses that have been offered, one was that eleven years is 4,018 days and there are 4,024 Chinese characters in Charter 08. Thus: one day for every character you wrote, Mr. Liu, and we’ll waive the final six. (This was a guess, but not a joke. That petty-minded and highly personal kind of thinking is common in elite Chinese politics.)
The combination of Charter 08 and a consequent Nobel Prize seemed, for a time, to open a new alternative for China. Chinese citizens had long been accustomed to the periodic alternations between “more liberal” and “more conservative” tendencies in Communist rule, and had often pinned hopes on one or another high official, but Charter 08 seemed to say that there can be another way to be modern Chinese. 
It was hard to find people who disagreed with the Charter once they read it, and it was precisely this potential for contagion that most worried regime leaders. That was their reason (not their stated reason but their real one) for suppressing the Charter, for imprisoning Liu Xiaobo, and for denouncing his Nobel Peace Prize. Their efforts have been effective: most young Chinese today do not know who Liu Xiaobo is, and older ones who do are well aware of the costs of saying anything about him in public. 
The controls on Chinese society have been tightened during the last few years, under the rule of Xi Jinping—the opposite direction of what Charter 08 called for. This raises the question, “Is the Charter dead? Was the effort in vain?” It is difficult, but my answer would be no. The organization has been crushed but its ideas have not been. The government’s continuing efforts—assiduous, inveterate, nationwide, and very costly—to repress anything that resembles the ideas of Charter 08 is evidence enough that the men who rule are quite aware of its continuing power.
It would have been wonderful to hear Liu Xiaobo himself answer the question. The world was not been allowed to hear one sentence from him since his “Final Statement” at trial in 2009. In June of this year, he was moved to a prison ward in a Shenyang hospital with late-stage liver cancer. He asked for safe passage for himself, his wife, and his brother-in-law to go to Germany or the US so he could receive treatment. The Chinese government refused, saying Liu had already received the best possible medical care and was too weak to travel. He died on July 13.
It is unclear why, in the final weeks of his life, Liu agreed to drop his desire to remain in China despite his consistent rejection of the marginalization that exile inevitably brings; he may have wanted to use his last energies to help his long-suffering wife Liu Xia and her brother Liu Hui get out of China. But his captors’ thinking could not have been clearer: it had nothing to do with medical care and everything to do with preventing Liu Xiaobo from speaking his mind one last time. What were his thoughts during his eight years in prison? What did he foresee for a world in which China’s Communist dictatorship continues to grow? 
Liu Xiaobo has been compared to Nelson Mandela, Václav Havel, and Aung San Suu Kyi, each of whom accepted prison as the price for pursuing more humane governance in their homelands. But Mandela, Havel, and Suu Kyi all lived to see release from the beastly regimes that repressed them, and Liu Xiaobo did not. Does this mean his place in history will fall short of theirs? Is success of a movement necessary in order for its leader to be viewed as heroic?
Perhaps. It may be useful, though, to compare Liu Xiaobo and Xi Jinping. The two were separated in age by only two years. During Mao’s Cultural Revolution both missed school and were banished to remote places. Xi used the time to begin building a resume that would allow him, riding the coattails of his elite-Communist father, to one day vie for supreme power; Liu used the time to read on his own and learn to think for himself. One mastered the skullduggery and sycophancy that a person needs to rise within a closed bureaucracy; the other learned to challenge received wisdom of every kind, keeping for himself only the ideas that could pass the test of rigorous independent examination. For one of them, value was measured by power and position; for the other, by moral worth. In their final standoff, one “won,” the other “lost.” But two hundred years from now, who will recall the names of the tyrants who sent Mandela, Havel, and Suu Kyi to jail? Will the glint of Liu Xiaobo’s incisive intellect be remembered, or the cardboard mediocrity of Xi’s?

Philip Morris takes aim at young people in India, and health officials are fuming

LIGHTING UP: A young man lights a cigarette along a road in New Delhi. Philip Morris says in internal documents it wants to win the "hearts and minds" of smokers aged 18 to 24 in India. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi--TOBACCO INSPECTOR: S. K. Arora, the chief tobacco control officer in Delhi, has spent the past three years pulling down cigarette advertisements at local kiosks. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
TOBACCO TOLL: A man lights a cigarette at a roadside stall in the old quarters of Delhi. Close to one million people a year in India die from tobacco use, according to government data. REUTERS/Adnan Abidi--1. A slide from a Philip Morris training manual shows the kinds of people the company aims to target for Marlboro sales in India. LAS = legal age smokers.

The tobacco giant is pushing Marlboros in colorful ads at kiosks and handing out free smokes at parties frequented by young adults - tactics that break India’s anti-smoking laws, government officials say. Internal documents uncovered by Reuters illuminate the strategy.

NEW DELHI – S. K. Arora spent more than three years trudging through the Indian summer heat and monsoon rains to inspect tobacco kiosks across this sprawling megacity, tearing down cigarette advertisements and handing out fines to store owners for putting them up.

Wednesday, July 19, 2017


Constitution, equality and Beethoven’s ninth symphony




Featured image courtesy the Sunday Leader




DEVANESAN NESIAH on 07/18/2017
I’m responding to one aspect of the article by Dr Rohan Wickramasinghe published in The Island of 17 July, 2017. He poses the question as to what the aristocratic framers of the Indian and Sri Lankan Constitutions would have to say about the wish expressed in “Lyrics to Ludwig van Beethoven’s ninth symphony ‘Ode to Joy’ ” to have “beggars become brothers of Lords”. I don’t feel equal to answer the question but I wish to comment on his statement that Indian and Sri Lankan Constitution were framed by aristocrats.
Few would wish to challenge his classification of those who framed the three Sri Lankan Constitutions, viz Sir Ivor Jennings; Prime Minister Sirimavo Bandaranaike and Dr Colvin R de Silva; and President J.R Jayawardene as aristocrats. In the case of India, those who framed their Constitution were Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru and Dr B.R AmbedkarMahathma Gandhi had very little impact. I hold all three in very high regard,but Gandhi and Ambedkar never gelled. It was Gandhi and Nehru who decided that Ambedkar should chair and direct the drafting of the Indian Constitution. Early on, Gandhi proposed that India should be comprised of a very large number of semi-autonomous Village Panchayats. This was summarily rejected by Nehru and Ambedkar and, thereafter, Gandhi had virtually no say in the drafting of the Constitution. The vision shared by Nehru and Ambedkar was of an economically centralised Social Democratic State.
Ambedkar’s reaction to Gandhi’s proposal was very blunt: “What is a village but a sink of localism, a den of ignorance, narrow-mindedness and communalism….?”. (Constituent Assembly VII CAD 38-9, 4 Nov. Government of India Manager of Publications, of 1948). On this issue Nehru backed Ambedkar.
Both Nehru and Ambedkar were intellectual aristocrats and, in the case of Nehru, socially too. Sadly, in the case of Ambedkar he was born an “untouchable” and was repeatedly treated as one (though not, of course, by Gandhi and Nehru). Ambedkar began schooling seated on the ground in class while all the other children had desks and chairs. He had no friends and his fellow students would not interact with him. At meal times he would either sit under a tree and eat the lunch he had brought from home, or run home and back to class after a quick lunch.
Despite such cruel humiliation he outshone them all. A wealthy aristocrat heard of his plight and funded his education at the Ivy League Colombia University where he secured his Masters and Doctoral Degrees in Economics. He went on to London and secured the qualification of Barrister of Law. Later, with funding from another wealthy aristocrat he secured Masters and Doctoral degrees in economics from the London School of Economics and Political Science.
Back in India, he gave leadership to the Untouchables and planned to take them out of Hinduism, but his vision was very different to that of the Gandhi who was working to eradicate untouchability but ensuring that they remained within the Hindu fold. Gandhi had initially favored gradually eliminating the hierarchical aspect of caste, though towards the end of his life he encouraged inter – caste marriage with a view to eventually eradicate the caste system. Gandhi and Ambedkar differed bitterly on the system of caste reservations which had been introduced to the political system in the early twentieth century. While accepting caste quotas in political representation, Gandhi wanted the electorates to be purely territorial, whereas Ambedkar wanted the electorates to be segregated on the basis of caste, i.e each caste group would be required to elect its own representatives. Under the system favored by the Gandhi, even in the electorates reserved for Untouchable candidates the majority of voters would be high caste or middle caste. Ambedkar had good reason to fear this would ensure that the Untouchable candidates would avoid radical platforms that would alienate the non-Untouchable majority in every seat reserved for untouchable candidates.
The British Government halted progress towards independence until this issue was satisfactorily resolved. Gandhi began a fast to death, which Ambedkar saw as blackmail. If Gandhi died on this issue, there would surely be an India wide pogrom against Untouchables. Ambedkar was very bitter but relented and agreed to mixed (i.e totally territorial electorates) in exchange for an increased number of reservations. It is in this background that we need to understand the mind of Ambedkar when he published “What Congress and Gandhi have done to the Untouchables. Lashore: Classics of 1977”
It is to the credit of Gandhi that despite all this, he went along with Nehru in what surely would have been a difficult and unpopular decision to entrust the drafting of the Indian Constitution to Ambedkar. Not only India but other countries too benefited enormously from that pioneering Constitution. Sri Lanka has had three Constitutions and now it is going for its fourth, whereas the Ambedkar Constitution, with amendments from time to time, has survived and seems like it will endure for decades to come.
Readers who enjoyed this article might find “Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar” and “On framing our constitution” enlightening. 

UNITY GOVT MUST CONTINUE TO LEAD THE CONSTITUTION MAKING PROCESS TO A SUCCESS – TNA



Image: Meeting between visiting Singapore Minister of Foreign Affairs Hon. Vivian Balakrishnan and Leader of the Opposition and the Leader of the Tamil National Alliance Hon. R. Sampanthan.

Sri Lanka Brief19/07/2017

TNA leader R.Samapathan has told the visiting Singapore Minister of Foreign Affairs Hon. Vivian Balakrishnan that both the UNP and SLFP must put their petty political agendas aside and come together to lead this process to a success. and make decisions collectively in this regard so that that the country will have a Constitution based on national consensus. This is an urgent need for the whole country and all its people.

A meeting was held between the visiting Singapore Minister of Foreign Affairs Hon. Vivian Balakrishnan and Leader of the Opposition and the Leader of the Tamil National Alliance Hon. R. Sampanthan  at the Office of the Leader of the opposition in Colombo  on 18 July 2017.

Addressing the issues faced by the Tamil People of the North and East, the TNA leader pointed out the slow progress in relation to repealing the Prevention of Terrorism Act, Resolution to Missing Persons Families and release of lands belonging to people. Affected people are asking for a process that will ascertain the truth and that this appeal cannot be delayed any longer he further added.

Hon. Sampanthan welcomed the efforts of the Singapore Government on possible investments in Sri Lanka and he requested the Foreign Minister to give priorities to programmes that will provide skills development and employment opportunities to the much-affected young people in the North and East provinces.

The Foreign Minister appreciated all the efforts made by the Leader of the Opposition and noted that his role as the leader of the Tamil National Alliance is a difficult and a much-needed one at this particular time, “I salute you for your courage and perseverance” he has added.

Judiciary should not succumb to political skulduggery




BY FAIZER SHAHEID-2017-07-19

The current regime came to power promising to restore democracy, human rights, and rule of law while eradicating corruption, nepotism, and impunity. Thirty months later, the government appears to be struggling to escape after ensnaring itself. Rule of law was one of its foremost slogans it carried forth, and for this the Courts required to have an independent judiciary and a brilliant enforcement mechanism.

Sinhala Only Police Summons: An Open Appeal To The Governor, Northern Province


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Dr. Laksiri Fernando
Hon Reginald Cooray
Governor
Northern Province
17 July 2017
Dear Governor,
Summons Issued in Sinhala Only and the Full Implementation of the Official Language Policy
Although belatedly, let me extend my sincere appreciation of your appointment as the Governor of the Northern Province, as I have known you for a long period, since your undergraduate days. It is also because of my confidence in you, that I make this appeal for your intervention on this matter.
As the Colombo Telegraph has revealed yesterday (16 July 2017), police summons has been issued to a Tamil Journalist based in Jaffna in Sinhala on the 12th July by the Achchuveli police. As reliably reported, this journalist has no knowledge of Sinhala language. Even otherwise, this summons appears a breach of the official language policy, the publicly announced reconciliation policy of the President and the government and even common sense of issuing such summons to a person.
I wish to bring to your notice the whole format of the summons. The Seal of the Achchuveli OIC is in Sinhala only. The Message Form used for the summons is in Sinhala and English, and no Tamil. I consider this is only a tip of an iceberg, where the official language rights of the Tamil speaking people particularly in the Northern Province are being breached. There are also reported incidents of parking tickets being issued only in Sinhala, among other matters. Prof. S. R. H. Hoole has brought this matter to the notice of the LLRC before.
I have some experience in visiting Jaffna during 2004 (or even before) as the Director of the Peace Building Project under the Ministry of Constitutional Affairs. I have noticed many instances of public notices and notice boards not being available properly in Tamil language. I had discussions with different ranking police officers on the initiatives of the Jaffna office of the National Human Rights Commission. One of the police grievances or claims was the lack of competent staff and facilities to properly implement the official language policy. I believe these should have been sorted out by now, or if not, I wish to draw your attention to that matter as well.
On particularly the summons issued to that journalist in Sinhala, I believe that there should be a police apology. Equally important is to make sure that such breaches of the official language policy would not be made in the future.
The most important is the full implementation of the official language policy in respect of the Tamil language in the Northern Province. While this principle is equally applied to the Eastern Province as well as some other provinces, I trust that you are better placed to take the leadership on this matter.
I also trust that your possible actions on this matter would be taken in full consultation with the Chief Minister of the Northern Province as a measure of cooperative devolution.
The full and sensible implementation of the official language policy in respect of the Tamil language is a primary necessity for national reconciliation.
Yours sincerely,
Laksiri Fernando

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CHANGING POLITICAL VISIONS IN SRI LANKA – SUNIL BASTIAN



Image (c)s.deshapriya: A fisherman looking at sea anxiously in the eastern city of Batticoloa.  It difficult to ignore the question of justice in the area of control and distribution of resources in the new face of capitalism  argues Sunil Bastian.

Sri Lanka Brief18/07/2017

Observing what is going on in Sri Lanka these days from a distance, my mind went back to the beginning of my involvement with non-party political actors. What I mean by the latter are groups now known as civil society. This is a recent term, which has come into prominence with the neoliberal political project. It was not a term used at the time I am referring to – immediately after the UNP came into power with a massive five-sixths majority in the July 1977 general election. TULF contested that election on a separatist platform. The election was followed with anti-Tamil violence in August 1977, the most significant such event after 1958. In the aftermath of the August 1977 violence, I volunteered to work at the Centre for Society and Religion, led by the late Fr. Tissa Balasuriya. Thus, began my involvement with this political activism.

Wijeyadasa’s criticism on UN Rapporteur: Ministers harbour different views

 
  • SL continue to use torture against detainees - UN Rapporteur
  • Ministers express divided opinion over Rajapakshe’s confrontation with UN official
  • Mangala asserts Ravi K’s views; being harsh on UN officials could tarnish SL’s image
  • Permission for UN official’s detainee-visit granted by Foreign Ministry
  • 80% of the detainees arrested in 2016 reported torture, physical ill-treatment
2017-07-20

The government, which received many a laurel in for the mode of its engagement with the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC), got a brickbat for the first time after the fact- finding mission of Special UN Rapporteur on Human Rights and Counter-terrorism Ben Emmerson.  
Mr. Emmerson charged that Sri Lanka continued to use torture against people detained on national security grounds, and its progress on human rights, reforms and justice remained woefully slow.
During his stay in the country, Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe confronted the UN Rapporteur on this. It was the first time a minister of the government took on a visiting UN dignitary though it was quite common during the former rule.   
Minister Rajapakshe remained singled out as a result. Against this backdrop, it was taken up at Tuesday’s Cabinet meeting with the Ministers expressing divided opinion on his confrontation with Ben Emmerson.  
Foreign Affairs Minister Ravi Karunanayake is reported to have rebutted Minister Rajapakshe being hard and harsh on the UN official who came here as part of Sri Lanka’s engagement with the UNHRC. The Foreign Affairs Minister’s views were widely asserted by Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweera. Minister Samaraweera, as the then Foreign Affairs Minister, committed Sri Lanka to the implementations of the provisions of the UNHRC resolution. He reportedly told the Cabinet that harsh criticism and ill-treatment of UN officials would not bode well for the country. He said the present govt needed a departure from the manner in which its predecessor dealt with the UNHRC process.   
More than two years on, progress seems to have ground to a virtual halt. Sri Lanka must honour its international commitments to ensure lasting peace, establish a meaningful system of transitional justice
However, there were many other Ministers who defended the position taken by Minister Rajapakshe. Those included Ministers Patali Champika Ranawaka, Navin Dissanayake and Nimal Siripala de Silva. They all opined that the UN officials should not be allowed to make unfounded allegations bringing the country to disrepute in the eyes of the international community. When making their remarks on the matter at hand, some of them even questioned the double standard of the western world regarding human rights issues.   
President Maithripala Sirisena also intervened and asked as to who had permitted the Special Rapporteur to visit the LTTE suspects held under the Prevention of Terrorism Act. The President did not rebuke anyone in this case. It was finally found that the Foreign Affairs Ministry had given permission in this regard.  
In its regular news briefs, the UNHRC put out a media statement on Tuesday based on the fact-finding mission concluded by Mr. Emmerson in Sri Lanka. It quotes Rapporteur Emmerson, as having said the torture continued in Sri Lanka unabated.   
He said, “These included beatings with sticks, stress positions, asphyxiation using plastic bags drenched in kerosene, pulling out of fingernails, insertion of needles beneath the fingernails, various forms of water torture, suspension for several hours by the thumbs, and mutilation of the genitals.”
Mr. Emmerson said 80% of suspects arrested under the anti-terror legislation in late 2016 had reported torture and other physical ill-treatment. “Despite the shocking prevalence of torture, I note the lack of effective investigation,” he added.  
He said a dozen prisoners had been detained without trial for more than 10 years under the Anti-terror Act, and 70 others for more than five years. “These staggering figures are a stain on Sri Lanka’s reputation,” he said, urging immediate release of the 81 suspects and announcing a dialogue with the govt on the shape of proposed Draft Legislation which is due to replace the Act.  
Mr. Emerson said he recognized that Sri Lanka had faced “tremendous security challenges” in recent years, but said progress towards reform, justice and human rights was at a virtual standstill despite govt’s promises.  
“The Govt has committed itself to ending the culture of impunity, ensuring accountability, peace and justice, achieving lasting reconciliation and preventing further human rights abuses. These steps were set out in a Human Rights Council resolution.  
“But more than two years on, progress seems to have ground to a virtual halt. Sri Lanka must honour its international commitments to ensure lasting peace, establish a meaningful system of transitional justice and urgently reform the security sector,” said the UN Rapporteur on Human Rights and Counter-terrorism.  
He welcomed small signs of progress but said failing to deliver justice and reform risked prolonging grievances and even reigniting the conflict.  
“It seems some small steps are now being taken in the right direction. The Govt and people must not allow the process to be diverted by retrograde elements in the security establishment and their allies in Govt, Mr. Emmerson concluded.  
Parties brace for
PC polls
There is still ambiguity whether the government will conduct the local authorities’ election. Be that as it may, the President announced that the local bodies would have new elected representatives by February next. However, there is some certainty regarding the elections to the Eastern, North Central and Sabaragamuwa Provincial Council as the law is clear. Their terms will expire on October 1, giving powers for the Election Commission to proceed with the elections.   
In anticipation of these elections, the main political parties have already started preparing for the polls. Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), the new political party formed with the blessings of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, has completed the formation of its different wings. Recently, it established its woman and youth wings. Also, it created its teachers ‘union.  
As the next step, the party is heading for another membership drive next month.
Likewise, the United National Party (UNP) is positioning itself to face any election. The party’s Working Committee discussed this matter and decided to reach out to the electorates in gearing up ground political mechanisms in view of elections.   
Alongside, Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) headed by the President has undertaken some work to contest the polls separately. It is learnt that the UNP and the SLFP will contest separately though they are together in the government. After the elections, they are planning to explore the possibility of forming joint administrations even at provincial levels.   
The Joint Opposition finds it difficult to reach common position regarding its participation in the constitution making process. Currently, its MPs Dinesh Gunawardane and Prasanna Ranatunga attend the meetings of the Steering Committee.  
Nonetheless, the National Freedom Front (NFF) led by MP Wimal Weerawansa, as an ally of the JO, insists that that it should disengage from the process forthwith. After some public utterances by MP Weerawansa, the JO leaders discussed the pros and cons of this matter at length at a meeting this week, chaired by MR. The NFF viewed that the govt proceeded with constitution making regardless of proposals by the JO and as such its further presence in the process would serve no purpose. Also, it said the JO should listen to the call by Mahanayake Theras. Another section of the JO believes that continuous participation is needed at least to know what the government is up to.  Besides, the leftist allies of the JO argue that it should never forget the constituencies in the north and the east demanding constitutional reforms. Therefore, they stress the need for the JO to be with the Constitution making process.  
In the overall context, each point carries a degree of validity making it impossible for the JO to work out a common stand. Finally, it was left for the individual parties to decide on its own rather than criticizing others in public. Accordingly, the NFF announced in writing to Speaker Karu Jayasuriya that it would not be party to the Constitution making process.     

Participation in constitution making process:JO Divided-Wimal’s team pulls out


by Maheesha Mudugamuwa-July 19, 2017, 10:53 pm


The Joint Opposition (JO) consisting of SLFP and UPFA dissidents loyal to former President Mahinda Rajapaksa broke into two factions yesterday after one of its main partners, the National Freedom Front (NFF) opted to pull out of the new constitution making process.


NFF leader Wimal Weerawansa has informed Speaker Karu Jayasuriya in writing that he and four other NFF MPs namely Weerakumara Dissanayake, Jayantha Samaraweera, Udayashantha Gunasekera and Niroshan Premaratne, would leave the Constituent Assembly (CA).


All NFF MPs, except Gunasekera, were present when party leader Weerawansa handed over the letter to the Speaker, according to sources.


The letter signed by all five NFF members said the party had decided to leave the CA for ten reasons.


Their letter reads: "We as representatives of the public accept the call by Mahanayakes of all three chapters that the present situation is not suitable for a new constitution or amending the constitution. The Mahanayakes conveyed that message to the government, all MPs and general public in a statement dated July 04.


In response to that call and other reasons we decided to leave the constitutional assembly. The government has not received a mandate to set up a constitutional assembly. The incumbent president in his electoral manifesto seeking power stated that he would only approve constitutional amendments which would not require referendums. Setting up a constitutional assembly to recommend constitutional reforms that need to be approved in a referendum is thus exceeding the mandate he received. The 95 MPs of the UPFA too have not received any mandate for constitutional reforms."


The five MPs have asked the Speaker to inform Parliament that they have left the CA. "As per the motion passed in Parliament for the setting up of the CA, it is mandatory that all MPs in parliament to become its members. When we leave the assembly, that condition is violated and the legitimacy of the CA is now in question. We hope the Speaker would inform parliament that the legality of the CA now in question with our exit," said the letter copied to President Maithripala Sirisena, Chairman of the Steering Committee of the CA Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and all media institutions.


Meanwhile, the Joint Opposition reiterated yesterday that it would continue to take part in the constitution making process. Questioned at a JO press conference, MP Bandula Gunawardena said the JO would remain in UNP-led constitutional making process.


Gunawardena said that the decision had been taken at a meeting chaired by former President Mahinda Rajapaksa.


Tamil journalists in fear after police visit office in Colombo

Tamil journalists in fear after police visit office in Colombo
Jul 19, 2017
Police in Sri Lanka has visited a Tamil media office in Colombo twice within four days in a threatening manner which indicates renewed efforts by state intelligence to suppress journalists who expose ongoing violations.
On the 13th of July two police officers in uniform claiming to be from the community division of the Wellawatte (Colombo 5) police station visited the IBC TAMIL TV office in Wellawatte requesting personal details of its staff.
The visit was on the same day a news item published in a Sinhala ultra-nationalist daily carrying accusations against an unnamed "Tamil Tiger diaspora TV" that provides information to London on  "protests against government, security forces activities in the north and allegations against the government by visiting UN officials".
The story by the defence columnist of 'Divaina', Keerthi Warnakulasuriya,  had also been reproduced by several Sinhala websites.
Two visits
On Monday (17 July) two men in civvies claiming to be from police headquarters (who showed ID) visited the IBC office again asking for personal details of staff.
Upon inquiries from staff, the two said they are looking for a Tamil journalist called 'Mano'. They were informed that IBC doesn't have a staff member with that name.
The two men were requested to obtain any information regarding IBC TV and its staff from the government information department where all media institutions and journalists are registered.
The second visit came following an article by Mr Warnakulasuriya accusing IBC TAMIL TV as an "Eelam Diaspora" media organisation "that disseminates false information regarding Sri Lanka". It went further to question Sinhala organisations for inviting  IBC and Tamil journalists to a press briefing.
"Isn't these parties coming to a press briefing a dangerous situation?" he asks in his regular weekly column.
Fear rises
The Journalists for Democracy in Sri Lanka (JDS) see a concerted effort by Security forces aided by the Sinhala nationalist press to instill fear in Tamil journalists and media institutions who highlight ongoing violations in Sri Lanka particularly against Tamils.
Tamil media workers  in the IBC office in Sinhala majority Colombo fear harassment and attacks by Sinhala extremists given the recent resurgence of Sinhala Buddhist violence against minorities. A vast majority of the staff are from the war torn north.
IBC TAMIL TV with its main office in London  was launched by London Tamil Media in 2015.
It has bureaus in Colombo, Jaffna, Paris and Chennai.