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

Tuesday, July 25, 2017

Ahead of EU Meeting, Turkey Begins Trial of 17 Journalists

Ahead of EU Meeting, Turkey Begins Trial of 17 Journalists


No automatic alt text available.BY EMILY TAMKIN-JULY 25, 2017 

As senior government officials from Ankara prepare to meet with their European Union counterparts, Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan is making clear that he will not bow to pressure over human rights concerns.

“The West wants Turkey to bring about their demands no questions asked,” Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Tuesday in Ankara. “I am sorry to say that Turkey no longer exists.”

Erdogan’s provocative comments were to his party’s legislators, shortly before his foreign minister, Mevlut Cavusoglu, and EU affairs minister, Omer Celik, were to meet with the EU high representative for foreign affairs, Federica Mogherini, in Brussels. The parties are expected to discuss, among other things, Turkey’s bid for EU membership and visa-free travel, as well as immigration and the fight against terrorism.

But human rights activists are also urging the EU to use the opportunity to raise the issue of the mass detention of opposition and civil society figures who are among the over 50,000 people detained in Turkey since the failed July 2016 coup.

Seventeen journalists charged with membership in a terror group from the independent
paper Cumhuriyet are among those detained. Their trial beganon Monday. They maintain that they were simply doing their jobs as journalists. Turkey detained more journalists than any other country in 2016, according to the Committee to Protect Journalists

A provisional verdict is expected Friday. Some see that court proceedings as a test for the independence of the judiciary in Turkey.

At least in the past, however, Erdogan has resisted outside attempts to pressure Turkey on human rights. After a German human rights activist was detained three weeks ago, Germany threatened to withhold backing investments in Turkey.

“Those who carried out history’s most merciless, bloody, vicious massacres during the first and second world wars should not lecture us on humanity,” Erdogan responded.

Photo credit: Sean Gallup/Getty Images

Labour corrected themselves on childcare costs. But even the correction is wrong.


Jeremy Corbyn issued the following tweet today: “As school holidays start today, many will struggle to meet childcare costs, which have doubled under @conservatives.”


By -25 JUL 2017

But data released from his own party this morning contradicted that. According to their press office, “Labour analysis shows that, across Britain as a whole, the average weekly cost of childcare has risen by over 50 per cent from 2010 to 2017.”

Obviously, Corbyn’s use of the word “doubled” implies a rise of 100 per cent, not the “over 50 per cent” claimed by Labour’s press team.

FactCheck contacted the party to ask why there was a discrepancy between the two figures, and whether Mr Corbyn was basing his claim on a separate data source.

We later spoke to a representative from Mr Corbyn’s team, who admitted that the original tweet was a mistake and had been deleted after our initial enquiry.

Mr Corbyn has since tweeted: “The @conservatives are failing to support working parents, whose holiday childcare costs have shot up by 50% as their wages have fallen.”

But we don’t think even that claim passes the FactCheck test.

Has the cost of holiday childcare gone up by 50 per cent under the Tories?

Labour’s claim relates to the cost of holiday childcare, which is typically more expensive than term time care. Labour points to two Family and Childcare Trust (FCT) Surveys on holiday childcare: one from 2010 and one from 2017.

The party says that childcare costs rose from £82.40 in 2010 to £124.23 per week in 2017 (i.e., by 51 per cent).

But the two figures are not directly comparable.
The 2010 figure represents the average cost of childcare provided by local authorities, whereas the 2017 figure is a “weighted average” that takes into account the cost of private sector childcare as well.

In other words, Labour’s claim that childcare costs have gone up by 50 per cent since 2010 is not based on like-for-like comparison.

So what happens when we do compare like-for-like figures?

The gross cost of local authority child care is up 28 per cent.

FCT figures show that in 2010, the average cost of local authority-provided childcare was £82.80 per week. By 2017, that rose to £105.45. In cash terms, that’s an extra £23.05 a week. In percentage terms, that’s a 28 per cent rise (that’s a gross figure – i.e. not accounting for inflation).
The gross cost of private child care is up 24 per cent.

FCT data shows that the average cost of private childcare was £103.55 a week in 2010. That rose to £128.70 in 2017. A cash rise of £25.15 a week, and a 24 per cent rise (again, not adjusted for inflation).

What about the weighted average?

Labour cited the weighted average that the FCT use in their 2017 report on holiday childcare costs in order to demonstrate a 50 per cent rise in costs. However, the FCT didn’t calculate a weighted average in 2010, so we can’t compare figures for this over time.

What about  inflation?

And there’s another problem: Labour haven’t accounted for inflation.

We get a more accurate picture of how prices really change when we adjust for inflation. In fact, that’s what Labour do elsewhere in their press release, when they talk about how wages have only risen slightly in real terms since 2010.

There are various ways to adjust for inflation over time. We used the Bank of England’s calculator and compared prices between 2010 and 2016 to reach our estimates, which are set out in the table below.

Accounting for inflation, we estimate that the cost of local authority childcare has gone up by 8.8 per cent since 2010, and the cost of private childcare has gone up by 5.6 per cent.

These figures are significantly lower than those put forward by Labour today.

FactCheck verdict

Jeremy Corbyn had a minor mistweet this morning. He said that holiday childcare costs had doubled under the Tories, but his own party said that they had gone up by 50 per cent. Labour retracted the tweet when they realised their mistake.

However, we’ve found that the 50 per cent figure doesn’t stack up either, because it’s not comparing like-for-like data.

When we look at directly-comparable statistics, and account for inflation, we can see that holiday childcare costs have actually risen by between 5.6 per cent and 8.8 per cent in real terms since 2010.

Venezuelan agents seize two more court appointees - opposition

Opposition supporters attend a rally to pay tribute to victims of violence during protests against Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro's government in Caracas, Venezuela, July 24, 2017.

Anggy Polanco and Andrew Cawthorne-JULY 25, 2017

CARACAS (Reuters) - Two more people named to an alternative Supreme Court in defiance of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro's government were arrested on Tuesday by intelligence agents during a fast-escalating political showdown, the opposition said.

Jesus Rojas and Zuleima Gonzalez were seized in central Anzoategui state after another appointee, Angel Zerpa, was arrested at the weekend, the opposition-led National Assembly said.

Venezuela's majority-backed opposition is demanding Maduro abandon a Sunday election to create a controversial congress with powers to rewrite the country's constitution and override all other institutions.

The opposition has called for a two-day strike from Wednesday at 6 a.m. (1000 GMT) to try to force Maduro to abandon the vote. Millions took part in a one-day strike last week, during which five people died in clashes.

Critics say the congress would institutionalize dictatorship by the ruling Socialist Party. But Maduro insists it is the only way to empower the people and bring peace after four months of anti-government unrest that has killed more than 100 people.

The main business guild Fedecamaras also backed the opposition, issuing a statement on Tuesday that called the coming weekend vote "unconstitutional and unnecessary."

"We demand the executive branch abandon its intention to impose a new constitution," said the group, which is scorned by government supporters for its central role in a short-lived 2002 coup against Maduro's predecessor Hugo Chavez.

The office of the vice presidency, which oversees state intelligence service Sebin, did not answer telephone calls seeking comment on the latest reported arrests in Anzoategui.

Indonesia: Forest fire threat to escalate as dry season looms – agency

2017-07-25T070655Z_1491117579_RC1683890740_RTRMADP_3_INDONESIA-ENVIRONMENT-940x580
An Aceh Barat goverment official gives mask to motorcyclists as haze from peatland fires hits the city in Meulaboh, Indonesia July 24, 2017 in this photo taken by Antara Foto. Source: Reuters

25th July 2017

INDONESIA’S disaster mitigation agency (BNPB) has warned of an escalating threat of forest fires with the dry season expected to peak in coming months, while hot spots detected in the province of Aceh have already been causing choking smoke.

Fires had spread to around 64 hectares (158 acres) of fields and forests in Aceh, a northern province on the island of Sumatra, producing haze and some residents had been taken to hospital due to breathing problem, the agency said on Tuesday.

“The peak of the dry season is predicted to be in August and September, so the threat of forest and field fires, and drought will escalate,” Sutopo Purwo Nugroho, a spokesman for BNPB said in a statement.


The fires in Aceh started on Tuesday last week and authorities are still trying to extinguish them in some areas.

Meanwhile, a satellite image showed 170 hot spots across Indonesia as of Monday evening, Nugroho said.

Indonesia is regularly hit by forest fires, which can result in choking smoke blowing across to neighbouring countries like Singapore and Malaysia.

Indonesia suffered some its worst forest fires in 2015, hitting mainly the island of Sumatra and in Kalimantan, the Indonesian portion of Borneo island.

The World Bank, citing government data, said that 2.6 million hectares (6.4 million acres) of land in Indonesia burned between June and October 2015, causing $16 billion of estimated economic damage.


Draining and conversion of peatland, often driven by palm oil plantations, contributed to the intensity of haze from the fires, the World Bank said.

The head of Indonesia’s Peatland Restoration Agency told a conference in May there would be “no more haze going to the neighbours”, as authorities implemented new measure to combat fires, the Thomson Reuters Foundation reported.

Indonesia’s Environment and Forestry Ministry said on Monday she wanted to make permanent a current moratorium on issuing new licences to use land designated as primary forest and peatland.

By November last year, the government has put more than 66 million hectares under the coverage of the moratorium. – Reuters

Britain to ban sale of all diesel and petrol cars and vans from 2040

Plans follow French commitment to take polluting vehicles off the road owing to effect of poor air quality on people’s health
The decision was hailed as the beginning of the end for the internal combustion engine’s dominance of motor transport after more than a century. Photograph: Peter Macdiarmid/Getty Images


  There have been calls for vehicles to be charged for entering ‘clean air zones’. Photograph: Alicia Canter for the Guardian- Michael Gove will publish the document on Wednesday. Photograph: Stefan Rousseau/PA

 Political editor and Tuesday 25 July 2017 

As part of a government strategy to improve air quality, Britain is to ban all new petrol and diesel cars and vans from 2040 amid fears that rising levels of nitrogen oxide pose a major risk to public health.

The commitment, which follows a similar pledge in France, is part of the government’s much-anticipated clean air plan, which has been at the heart of a protracted high court legal battle.


The government warned that the move, which will also take in hybrid vehicles, was needed because of the unnecessary and avoidable impact that poor air quality was having on people’s health.
Ministers believe it poses the largest environment risk to public health in the UK, costing up to £2.7bn in lost productivity in one recent year.

Ministers have been urged to introduce charges for vehicles to enter a series of “clean air zones” (CAZ). However, the government only wants taxes to be considered as a final resort amid a backlash against any move that punishes motorists.

“Poor air quality is the biggest environmental risk to public health in the UK and this government is determined to take strong action in the shortest time possible,” a government spokesman said.

“That is why we are providing councils with new funding to accelerate development of local plans, as part of an ambitious £3bn programme to clean up dirty air around our roads.”

The final plan, which was due by the end of July, comes after a draft report that environmental lawyers described as “much weaker than hoped for”.

The environment secretary, Michael Gove, will be hoping for a better reception when he publishes the final document on Wednesday following months of legal wrangling.

A briefing on parts of the plan, seen by the Guardian, repeats the heavy focus on the steps that can be taken to help councils improve air quality in specific areas where emissions have breached EU thresholds.

Measures to be urgently brought in by local authorities that have repeatedly breached EU rules include retrofitting buses and other public transport, changing road layouts and altering features such as roundabouts and speed humps.

Reprogramming traffic lights will also be included in local plans, with councils being given £255m to help accelerate their efforts. Local emissions hotspots will be required to layout their plans by March 2018 and finalise them by the end of the year. A targeted scrappage scheme is also expected to be included.

Some want the country-wide initiative to follow in the footsteps of London, which is introducing a £10 toxic “T-charge” that will be levied on up to 10,000 of the oldest, most polluting vehicles every weekday.


Sources insisted that while the idea of charges were on the table, there was no plan to force councils to introduce them, and that other measures would be exhausted first.

They hope the centrepiece of Wednesday’s strategy to be put forward by Gove will be the plan to ban diesel and petrol sales completely by 2040, in line with Emmanuel Macron’s efforts across the Channel.

The French president took the steps to help his country meet its targets under the Paris climate accord, in an announcement that came a day after Volvo said it would only make fully electric or hybrid cars from 2019 onwards.

That decision was hailed as the beginning of the end for the internal combustion engine’s dominance of motor transport after more than a century.

Prof David Bailey, an automotive industry expert at Aston University, said: “The timescale involved here is sufficiently long term to be taken seriously. If enacted it would send a very clear signal to manufacturers and consumers of the direction of travel and may accelerate a transition to electric cars.”

Britain’s air quality package also includes £1bn in ultra-low emissions vehicles including investing nearly £100m in the UK’s charging infrastructure and funding the Plug in Car and Plug in Grant schemes.

There will also be £290m for the national productivity investment fund, which will go towards the retrofitting, and money towards low emission taxis.

The report will also include an air quality grant for councils, a green bus fund for low carbon vehicles, £1.2bn for cycling and walking and £100m to help air quality on the roads.

The strategy comes amid warnings that the UK’s high level of air pollution could be be responsible for 40,000 premature deaths a year.

A judge had said the government’s original plans on tackling the issue, which included five clean air zones, were so poor as to be unlawful. The government had been asked to present a new draft policy to tackle air pollution from diesel traffic before the election.

The government was then called to court to explain why it had made a last-minute application late last Friday to delay publication of a draft policy to tackle air pollution until after the election.

James Eadie QC, representing the government, said the policy was ready to be published but it would be controversial and should therefore be withheld until after the election.

“If you publish a draft plan, it drops all the issues of controversy into the election … like dropping a controversial bomb,” he said, adding that it could risk breaching rules about civil service neutrality and lead to the policy being labelled a Tory plan.

However, judges said the government did have to publish a draft plan with the final version needed by the end of July.

May’s draft contained few concrete proposals and did not specify the cities and towns where polluting vehicles might face charges, the level of any charges or the scope or value of any scrappage scheme.

Instead, the plan puts the onus for action on local authorities: “Local authorities are already responsible for improving air quality in their area, but will now be expected to develop new and creative solutions to reduce emissions as quickly as possible, while avoiding undue impact on the motorist.”

Analysis in the documents showed increasing the number of CAZs from the current six planned to 27 would make by far the greatest impact in cutting pollution and provide cost benefits of over £1bn. The CAZ policy would cut more than 1,000 times more NO2 than a scrappage scheme, even if that scheme required old diesels to be replaced by electric cars.

But it required local authorities to exhaust all other options before introducing CAZ charging for diesel vehicles such as removing speed bumps and retrofitting buses.

At the time Thornton said: “The plan looks much weaker than we had hoped for. The court ordered the government to take this public health issue seriously and while the government says that pollution is the largest environmental risk to public health, we will still be faced with illegal air quality for years to come under these proposals.”

The coalition government had already set out a vision for almost every car and van to be ultra-low emission by 2050 – a move which the government acknowledged would require “almost all new cars and vans sold to be near-zero emission at the tailpipe by 2040”. So it is unclear to what extent the new pledge will further boost Britain’s ability to achieve air quality requirements.

ClientEarth, the campaign group that has successfully pursued the government through the courts over the UK’s air pollution crisis, gave a cautious welcome to the announcement but said ministers must take action now to tackle the UK’s air pollution crisis.

“The government has trumpeted some promising measures with its air quality plans, but we need to see the detail,” said CEO James Thornton. “A clear policy to move people towards cleaner vehicles by banning the sale of petrol and diesel cars and vans after 2040 is welcome, as is more funding for local authorities.

“However, the law says ministers must bring down illegal levels of air pollution as soon as possible, so any measures announced in this plan must be focused on doing that.”

London mayor Sadiq Khan has been calling for tougher measures to tackle air pollution which kills 9,000 people a year in the capital.

A City Hall source was sceptical about the government’s announcement.”We need to look at the full details but what Londoners suffering from the terrible health impacts of air pollution desperately need is a fully-funded diesel scrappage fund – and they need it right now.”

Areeba Hamid, clean air campaigner at Greenpeace, said: “The high court was clear that the government must bring down toxic air pollution in the UK in the shortest possible time. This plan is still miles away from that.

The government cannot shy away any longer from the issue of diesel cars clogging up and polluting our cities, and must now provide real solutions, not just gimmicks. That means proper clean air zones and funding to support local authorities to tackle illegal and unsafe pollution.”

HIV-prevention ring trial a success among US teens

vaginal ring
BBCBy James Gallagher-25 July 2017
A vaginal ring to prevent HIV infection is popular with teenage girls, US scientists say.
Women and girls aged 15-24 account for a fifth of all new HIV infections globally. Nearly 1,000 are infected every day in sub-Saharan Africa.
Infused with microbicides, the ring, which sits on the cervix, has been shown to cut infections by 56%.
Experts say it frees women from relying on men to wear condoms and allows them to protect themselves confidentially.
Dr Anthony Fauci, the director of the US National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, told the BBC: "If you can give women the opportunity to protect themselves in a way that is completely confidential - that's a long and big step to helping them.
"In societies where women are, unfortunately but true, somewhat second-class citizens, that makes women extremely vulnerable to getting infected with HIV."
The flexible ring, similar in size to the contraceptive diaphragm, releases an antiretroviral drug called dapivirine for a month.
But scientists were unsure it would work in teenagers, who can be notoriously difficult when it comes to health advice.
The six-month US trial gave the ring to 96 sexually active girls aged 15 to 17, who had not used it before.
Data presented at the IAS Conference on HIV Science, showed:
  • 87% of the girls had detectable levels of the drug in their vagina
  • 95% said the ring was easy to use
  • 74% said they did not notice the ring in day-to-day life
There were some concerns before the trial that the girls' partners would not like the feel of the ring, but it reportedly enhanced pleasure.
Prof Sharon Hillier, one of the researchers at the University of Pittsburgh School of Medicine, said: "HIV doesn't distinguish between a 16-year-old and an 18-year-old.
"Access to safe and effective HIV prevention shouldn't either, young women of all ages deserve to be protected."
There are now plans to test the ring with teenagers in Africa.
If the ring gets regulatory approval, it would be the first method of prevention exclusively for women.

Reconciliation process is taken up by national champions


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By Jehan Perera- 

By signing into law the Office of Missing Persons (OMP) and by placing it with the Ministry of National Integration and Reconciliation of which he is also minister, President Maithripala Sirisena has sent a strong message that he is committed to the national reconciliation process. The UN Secretary-General commended the government for establishing the OMP as "a significant milestone for all Sri Lankans still searching for the truth about their missing loved ones" adding that "The United Nations stands ready to support this process and the Secretary-General looks forward to the OMP becoming operational as soon as possible, starting with the appointment of independent commissioners."

The OMP has the best potential among the other institutions that feel called upon to take a leading role in restoring to victims families a sense of the battle of good and evil in this world. At least 20,000 complaints have been lodged have so far been lodged with the different institutions that the government established on different occasions, the last being the Paranagama Commission on missing persons. However, dealing with this problem has been difficult. The manner in which the law was originally passed in August 2016 was an indication of the controversial nature of the problem of missing persons. The bill that introduced the OMP to parliament was hotly debated. Those who opposed the legislation saw consequences that would be detrimental to the security forces and political leaders who were responsible for ending the war.

There were and remain allegations that many who went missing surrendered, or were surrendered by their families and others, to the security forces. The original bill was approved by parliament whilst opposition members were protesting on the floor of parliament and their dissent was not recorded. In the rush to pass the law, an amendment that had been proposed by the JVP, which was agreeable in principle to the establishment of the OMP, failed to be incorporated into the law. This amendment sought to take away the power of the OMP to enter into agreements with outside agencies. It took ten months before this amendment was finally brought before parliament and approved. It took another month for the president to place his signature to operationalise the law.

SIGNIFICANT DEVELOPMENTS

The president’s signing of the OMP law has coincided with several other significant developments. There were a confluence of factors that suggest that the government is getting itself positioned to engage in constructive reconciliation and peacebuilding activities. The cabinet reshuffle that saw the ministries of finance and foreign affairs being exchanged between Ministers Ravi Karunanayake and Mangala Samaraweera has worked well in terms of pushing forward the reconciliation process. Even though the reshuffle may have taken place for other political reasons, it has served to strengthen the reconciliation process in the country.

Whether in power or out of power, Minister Samaraweera has had a long track record of commitment to the national reconciliation process. As Minister of Foreign Affairs, he was instrumental in bringing Sri Lanka back into the international community as a country that accepts international standards of human rights. He defended and explained the co-signing of the UNHRC resolution of 201 as being in the country’s national interests. Now as Minister of Finance and also of Media, he has been empowered to take forward his reconciliation mission through both the financial incentives at his disposal and also through the power of mass communication. At the same time, the shift of Minister Karunanayake to Foreign Affairs has brought to this position an efficient and businesslike ethos whereby commitments made by the government and timeframes that have been agreed to will be kept.

The manner in which the new Foreign Minister handled the criticism made by the opposition with regard to the meetings held with detained former LTTE cadre by the visiting UN Special Rapporteur on human rights Ben Emmerson demonstrated a firm and effective approach. He pointed out that the precedent of UN special rapporteurs meeting with detained former LTTE combatants had been set by the previous government. Bolstering the credibility of Minister Karunanayake’s observation has also been the fact that during the war he was not known as soft on the LTTE was indeed seen more as a hardliner in dealing with them. But as times have changed, in the post-war period he has emerged as a champion of the national reconciliation process.

ENDING IMPUNITY

Minister Karunayake has also announced that the Reparation Bill, which is part of the Transitional Justice process aimed at compensating the war affected, would be presented to Parliament soon. The purpose of the Bill under formulation is to restore displaced persons to their original positions where ever possible and also provide compensation to the injured and dependents of the persons killed in the war. The Transitional Justice process the government had undertaken comprises four mechanisms, namely the Office on Missing Persons (OMP) which was signed into law by President Maithripala Sirisena, a Truth and Reconciliation commission, an Office of Reparations and a special court for accountability purposes. The special court is the most contentious of these four mechanisms.

The recent arrest and investigation of the former navy spokesperson on the charge of being responsible for the disappearance of 11 Tamil persons in 2008-09 during the end phase of the war is an indication that existing laws can also be used to bring those who committed crimes during the war period to justice. However, a special feature of war crimes which are not in the Sri Lankan legal system is that they include the concept of command responsibility. This enables the indictment of those who were in effective control of armed personnel on the ground if they knew about the human rights violations taking place and did not intervene to stop them. The International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, which the government has ratified, is a means to achieve this end. Unfortunately, the government decided to postpone the debate on the bill to incorporate this into national law earlier this month following opposition protests that it will expose Sri Lankan security forces personnel to international tribunals.

However, the implementation of the convention against enforced disappearances will be prospective, for future offences, and not for past ones. Its incorporation into national law will protect citizens from future violations. These are laws that are in the interests of all people, whether they be Sinhala, Tamil or Muslim or students. While there can be lawful arrests, persons must be held in lawful detention centres and their arrest documented. This is to prevent torture, abuse and extra judicial killings. It is to ensure that the "white van culture" or a culture of illegal abductions and killings does not come again. It is necessary that like the Office of Missing Persons, these new laws are followed through. They give hope that Sri Lankan will move faster in reaching national reconciliation and a level of human rights protection that will reach international standards which will facilitate the economic take-off that the country awaits.

Renewal of Sri Lanka’s torture chief shows ‘utter disdain’ for UN system – ITJP

Home
25 Jul  2017


The Sri Lankan government has renewed the employment of the man who ran the island’s “most notorious torture site” in a move that shows “utter disdain for victims of torture and the UN system,” said the International Truth and Justice Project.
Sisira Mendis, the former Deputy Inspector General (DIG) in charge of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) and Terrorism Investigation Division (TID) in Sri Lanka, has had his term as the Director of Sri Lanka’s Centre for National Intelligence extended until June 2018.
“Sri Lanka is constantly rewarding and protecting alleged perpetrators – with top army positions, diplomatic postings, and even appointments to the body designed to protect witnesses,” said the ITJP’s Executive Director, Yasmin Sooka. “Where is the respect for the victims? I am stunned by this provocative action without any investigation being initiated”.
Mr Mendis has been named by a UN report as having “exercised supervisory authority” over the TID and CID, who carried out “widespread torture”. In a surprisingly bold move, the Sri Lankan government sent Mr Mendis as part of a delegation  to the United Nations Committee Against Torture (UNCAT) in Geneva last year. The UNCAT said his presence had “alarmed” the committee and called for “detailed information” on his roles and responsibilities.
He was brought out of retirement by the current Sri Lankan government to be appointed the chief of national intelligence and has reportedly had his role extended for another year.
“This is tantamount to entrenching impunity in the country and sends a message that torture is acceptable in Sri Lanka,” said Ms Sooka.
“The refusal to take seriously the allegations against Mr Mendis is also an affront to the UN Committee Against Torture and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights which named him in their 2015 investigation. The international community must make it clear this sort of undermining of the Convention Against Torture will not be tolerated.”
See the full text of the ITJP statement here.

Canadian PM on the events of Black July in Sri Lanka


( July 25, 2017, Toronto, Sri Lanka Guardian) Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau yesterday stated that Sri Lanka should establish a process of accountability that will gain the trust and the confidence of the victims of the war.
In a statement on the anniversary of Black July, Prime Minister Trudeau said Canadians join Canadians of Tamil descent and members of the Tamil community to commemorate the 34th anniversary of the events of Black July.
Prime Minister Trudeau,’s statement said: “Between July 24 and 29, 1983, anti-Tamil pogroms were carried out in Colombo and other parts of Sri Lanka resulting in thousands of deaths and the displacement of countless victims.
“Today, we join Canadians of Tamil descent and members of the Tamil community to commemorate the 34th anniversary of the events of Black July.
“As we pause to reflect on the dark days of the Sri Lankan Civil War, we must continue to work to heal the wounds of all those who suffered. Canada welcomes international efforts underway to achieve long-term reconciliation and peace for all Sri Lankans, but we reiterate the need to establish a process of accountability that will have the trust and the confidence of the victims of this war.
“Canada’s cultural diversity is one of our greatest strengths and sources of pride. As we mark the 150th anniversary of Confederation, let us take the time to recognize the contributions of all who have made Canada their home regardless of their cultural, religious or linguistic background.
“On behalf of the Government of Canada, I extend my deepest sympathy and support to all those who have suffered immeasurable loss during the Sri Lankan Civil War.”

Jaffna judge, policeman, 1983 & humanity

Jaffna judge, policeman, 1983 & humanity

Jul 24, 2017

A heartrending video is circulating in social media of a crying Jaffna high court judge M. Ilancheliyan worshipping and apologizing to the widow of the police sergeant who died protecting him from a shooting. Judges are mostly a segment who distances themselves from society. Professionally, there is big gap between a high court judge and a police sergeant. Also, the dead sergeant was a Sinhalese and the judge is a Tamil. Taking everything else aside, this poignant incident shows humanity, which is the essence here.

Yesterday was July 23, which was the 34th anniversary since the Black July of 1983, which saw the Sinhalese cutting down, setting fire to thousands of Tamils. That ignited racist fire claimed hundreds of thousands of lives for three full decades. We still live amidst the remnants of that crime.
The judge tendered an apology to a wrong he did not commit intentionally. He apologized as a man with an honest conscience for the policeman who laid down his life to protect him. However, 34 years later, leaving alone apologizing for the crime committed against the Tamils, the Sinhala society’s majority is not prepared at least to admit it as a crime. That is the bitter truth.
The axis that drives our Sri Lankan society is racism. As long as we do not learn to accept people irrespective of their race, every passing day will be darkened by the smoke of that Black July. How many of you are prepared to understand the humanity of judge Ilancheliyan in a Sinhala society that treats anyone who is sensitive to the Tamils’ problems as the enemy? That percentage could be minimal. But, in that we have the only hope for the future.
Video credit to newsalertsrilanka facebook page
https://web.facebook.com/newsalertsrilanka/videos/344525589321053/

SRI LANKA: The death of Sub-Inspector Sarath Premachandra a Kafkaesque episode

AHRC Logo
By Basil Fernando-July 25, 2017

Justice M. Ilancheliyan is one of the greatest judges to be produced in Sri Lanka for the last many decades. He is still a High Court Judge, but he deserves to be raised to the Supreme Court. If that were to happen, he would be a great asset not only to the Supreme Court, but also assist in the efforts dreamt of by a few, for a radical transformation of the rather bleak situation of law and order in Sri Lanka.

Justice Ilancheliyan has struggled through most difficult areas over a long period of time without ever giving up the idea of upholding the rule of law and dispensation of justice.

The recent incident which resulted in the death of his most trusted and faithful guardian Sub-Inspector Sarath Premachandra should be a sad day for the entire country. The manner in which Judge Ilancheliyan reacted to the incident is most appropriate and telling. He knelt at the feet of the wife of his fallen guardian and virtually worshiped her in the most humble manner. He cried at the tragedy. Television channels showed for the first time, a weeping judge. It was the great Indian judge, Justice V. R. Krishna Iyer who said “a judge, who cannot weep, is not fit to be a judge”.

What was appalling is the manner in which the incident of the shooting was treated by the police spokesman in the most casual manner. In a very short time after the incident, he dared to declare that it was just an act of some drunken persons and thus tried to dismiss the significance of the shooting.
No thorough inquiry has yet been conducted and one of the suspects has managed to escape unharmed but the declaration trivialising the incident has already been made.

The said police statements are aimed at confusing the public and to mislead the investigations. As the shooting had taken place just a few days after a DIG was arrested for harbouring a criminal, an attempt at a deliberate cover up cannot be ruled out.

The incident must be inquired into by a special unit of inquiry of the Criminal Investigations Department. It should not be left in the hands of the local police.

It was completely inappropriate for the police spokesman to make such declarations so early, without there being a thorough criminal inquiry by a competent and an impartial group of investigators. The incident deserves a thorough-most inquiry by the best investigators, we have.

The entire incident unfolded, almost like a Kafkaesque episode. The sheer absurdity into which the entirety of the justice process has fallen is being symbolised by this incident. The casualness with which it is treated is also a part of the tragic drama that the Sri Lankan people have experienced over a long period of time.

The loud cry of Justice M. Ilanchelian is a cry not only for a fallen hero, but a cry regarding the extreme crisis (a crisis is rather a lame word to be used) of what the entire system of justice is faced with, in Sri Lanka. It is a cry, calling for change. It is a cry reflecting the despair of a people.

That the fallen Sub-Inspector Sarath Premachandra had stood by his judge for over 15 years faithfully and loyally is a heartening example, demonstrating that there are still great people, who can transcend racial barriers and work as comrades in arms to serve their people.

உயிரிழந்த மெய்ப் பாதுகாவலருக்கு யாழ் பல்கலையில் அஞ்சலி

உயிரிழந்த மெய்ப் பாதுகாவலருக்கு யாழ் பல்கலையில் அஞ்சலி

Jul 24, 2017
யாழ். மேல் நீதிமன்ற நீதிபதி இளஞ்செழியன் மீது நடாத்தப்பட்ட துப்பாக்கிச் சூட்டின் போது உயிரிழந்த மெய்ப்பாதுகாவலருக்கு இன்று யாழ் பல்கலைக்கழக மாணவர்களால் அஞ்சலி நிகழ்வு இடம்பெற்றது.
நேற்று முன்தினம் நல்லூரில் நீதிபதி மா. இளஞ்செழியனை இலக்கு வைத்து மேற்கொள்ளப்பட்ட தாக்குதல் சம்பவத்தில் உயிரிழந்த அவரது மெய்ப்பாதுகாவலர் ஹேமச்சந்திரவிற்கு பல்கலைக்கழக மாணவர்கள் இணைந்து அஞ்சலி செலுத்தினார்கள்.
அன்னாரின் உருவப்படம் வைக்கப்பட்டு மலரஞ்சலி செலுத்தப்பட்டதுடன், மெழுகுவர்த்திகளும் ஏற்றி அஞ்சலி செலுத்தினார்கள்.

Tamil youth drowns after altercation with Special Task Forces in Batticaloa

Sathakaran Kishanthan-----Sathakaran Mathushan

25 Jul  2017
HomeA Tamil youth has died on Monday and another seriously injured in Batticaloa after running from Special Task Forces firing shots in the air.
Brothers, 17-year-old Sathakaran Mathushan and 18-year-old Sathakaran Kishanthan were reportedly loading sand into a tractor on the banks of the Munthankumaraveli River when approached by Special Task Force troops, who immediately started firing shots in the air to scare and disperse the youngsters.
The brothers dived in the river in an attempt to escape the troops but were overcome by the strong currents.
Although the boys were pulled out and taken to the Chenkalady Divisional Hospital, the younger brother Mathushan succumbed to the effects of asphyxiation and died around 30 minutes before reaching the hospital.
Kishanthan was reported to have been suffering from shock and receiving ongoing care.