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, August 8, 2017

Malik Samarawickrama before the bond commission

Malik Samarawickrama before the bond commission

Aug 08, 2017

Development strategy and international trade Malik Samarawickrama is due to be summoned before the presidential commission investigating the treasury bond issue next week. The evidence given before the commission by foreign affairs minister Ravi Karunanayake last week was controversial. Malik had hoped to see Ravi blamed for everything. It is also him who is aiding the joint opposition with its no-confidence motion against Ravi.

As the entire country knows, ex-president Mahinda Rajapaksa and most MPs in the JO are not much interested in this matter. But, Malik is very much interested, because he wants to see that Ravi is blamed for everything and to wash his hands off the matter. We do not say Ravi is a baby, or we do not want to whitewash him. If he has done anything wrong, he should be punished. However, he is not connected to this bond issue matter, and he has to take the blame for someone else’s sins.
It was more than a decade ago when frauds first happened in bond issues. It continued during the Ajith Nivard Cabraal period in the Central Bank too. The only difference is that Cabraal did it with millions, but Malik did it with billions. If an extensive investigation is conducted, a sizeable number in the JO too, should confess their sins.
UNP sources say Malik took PM Ranil Wickremesinghe for a ride over this bond sale issue. He laid the groundwork by telling him that there was no other way to pay back a Rs. two billion loan obtained for propaganda work of the presidential election. CCTV footage bears witness that Malik, the then UNP chairman and not even a minister, was there when the bond issue concluded. He had no reason to be there. We do not know to what extent the commission will proceed, but many more exposures are likely next week.

Public policy should be based on fact, not fiction 

2017-08-09 
Sir John Kotelawala Defence University (KDU) held its 10th International Research Conference at the university premises on August 3 and 4 on the theme “Changing Dynamics in the Global Environment: Challenges and Opportunities”. The symposium featured an interesting yet disquieting presentation by Col. L.C.R. Jayasuriya of the Sri Lanka Army on a topic entitled ‘The Influence of Global Islam Radicalisation to Sri Lanka’.   
The message in Col. Jayasuriya’s presentation is a rather dangerous one. It is one that has been regularly tossed out by “terrorism expert” Rohan Gunaratne, who has made numerous unsubstantiated and sensationalist claims on political violence. Gunaratne was even convicted for defamation and ordered to pay US$ 53,000 by a Canadian court in 2014 for linking a Toronto-based Tamil organisation to the LTTE. The message, in short, is that ‘Islamic radicalisation’ / ‘militant Islamism’ is on the rise in Sri Lanka, and it needs to be stemmed.  
 
Having listened to the entirety of Col. Jayasuriya’s presentation, I was not at all surprised when he quoted Gunaratne towards the latter part of his speech! The parallels in their proposition are hard to miss; essentially, the simplistic, reductionist and misguided notion that ‘Islamic terrorism’ is driven by radical theology and religious fervour.   

Whereas there is ample of evidence to show that the conflicts in the Middle-East and elsewhere allegedly driven by so-called ‘Islamic fundamentalism’ are actually not about religion but about political power. In talking incessantly about ‘Islamic fundamentalism’, ‘radicalism and ‘militant Islamism’, factors such as demands for foreign forces to leave the territories of others’ are deliberately overlooked or conveniently ignored.   
The message in Col. Jayasuriya’s presentation is a rather dangerous one. It is one that has been regularly tossed out by “terrorism expert” Rohan Gunaratne, who has made numerous unsubstantiated and sensationalist claims on political violence. Gunaratne was even convicted for defamation and ordered to pay US$ 53,000 by a Canadian court in 2014 for linking a Toronto-based Tamil organisation to the LTTE. 
I wonder if the KDU had given any opportunity for someone to make a presentation from a Muslim perspective at any of their events. Details of the programme such as the agenda are unfortunately not available on the KDU website and I did ask for a copy of the programme via email the very next day (05th August) to which I have not yet received a response. It would have certainly been appropriate for them to have given a platform for at least one from a Muslim perspective on what Col. Jayasuriya himself acknowledged is a sensitive subject.   
Recently, journalist Kusal Perera pointed out how it has become very fashionable to project an ISIS bogey and Islam as a “potentially dreadful” enemy of humanity. With the end of the war and the LTTE, attempts are now being made to create an ‘enemy’ locally to justify a greater role for the armed forces, in line with similar international attempts to justify the entry of foreign forces into otherwise peaceful countries. The new bogey is ‘Islamic fundamentalism’ though there is no consensus on what it means. 
A recent study for the UN Office of Counter-Terrorism revealed that foreign fighters in Syria lack even a basic understanding of Islam
A recent study for the UN Office of Counter-Terrorism revealed that foreign fighters in Syria lack even a basic understanding of Islam. The timely report which was based on interviews with 43 people from 12 countries found that the returned fighters were ‘novices’ in their religion and some did not even know how to pray.   
“Religious belief seems to have played a minimal role in the motivation of this sample,” the report found, pointing out that economic factors had become more important as terrorist groups promised wages, homes and even wives.
The UN report also warned of “significant policy implications arising from perceived injustice and discrimination”.   

Similarly, political scientist Prof. Robert A. Pape’s solid, myth-busting research on terrorism has convincingly shown that the causes of terrorism are secular, not religious and that terrorism is a reaction to military intervention and occupation.
Prof. Pape, as founder of the Chicago Project on Security and Terrorism at the University of Chicago, together with his colleagues put together a complete database on all suicide attacks from 1974 to June 2016 - a total of 5,430 attacks in over 40 countries. According to Prof. Pape’s research:
  
What 95% of all suicide attacks have in common, since 1980, is not religion, but a specific strategic motivation to respond to a military intervention, often specifically a military occupation, of territory that the terrorists view as their homeland or prize greatly. From Lebanon and the West Bank in the 80s and 90s, to Iraq and Afghanistan, and up through the Paris suicide attacks we’ve just experienced in the last days, military intervention—and specifically when the military intervention is occupying territory— that’s what prompts suicide and terrorism more than anything else.
The real beneficiaries of these conflicts are only the weapons manufacturers and their agents who work behind the scenes to put forward these grossly misleading ideas
Britain’s Labour Party Leader Jeremy Corbyn said as recently as May 2017, “UK’s involvement in military actions abroad has fuelled the risk of terrorism at home.” He said further “Many experts, including professionals in our intelligence and security services, have pointed to the connections between wars our govt has supported or fought in other countries such as Libya, and terrorism at home”. But they need an enemy to keep their arms factories busy!   

Back at home, Col. Jayasuriya makes the pitch that the growing influence of ‘Islamic radicalisation’ and the potential involvement of Sri Lankan Muslims in terrorist activity is a legitimate concern for Sri Lanka. He supports Gunaratne’s view that “If ideological extremism is neglected and ignored by any govt, it would lead to terrorism in the future”. Col. Jayasuriya’s presentation, replete with references to Sunni-Shia differences, glosses over the real issues recently highlighted by a UN expert; specifically that freedom of religious belief and practice has been endangered and that religious minorities have been heavily victimised by members of the majority community in post-war Sri Lanka. It only adds to the anti-Muslim sentiment that is widely prevalent, the Aluthgama mayhem of 2014 being the clearest example yet of violence predicated on prejudice.  
That a minority community with a history of over a 1000 years in this island and continues to remain at under 10% of the country’s population will precipitously overtake the majority of over 70% is a claim that is absurd. A 2014 report by Statistician Delano Uduman noted that the Buddhist lead of 1,500,300 in 1881 had grown to 12,255,617 in real terms by 2012  

The demographic issue


Col. Jayasuriya has tried to give credence to baseless fears of a ‘Muslim take-over’; that Sri Lanka will have a predominantly Muslim population in the future. He states that the Muslim population has increased from 1981 to 2012 more than that of the Buddhist population, while the Hindu and Christian populations have dwindled. This claim of a Muslim demographic take-over is one that has been flatly refuted by the Department of Census and Statistics.
  
While it is true that there has been a percentage increase for both the Sinhala and Muslim communities, this is mainly attributable to 2.8% of Tamils, comprising mainly Hindus and Tamil Christians migrating to other countries due to the war and other related factors. It does not take a rocket scientist or a statistician to figure out that the 2.8% drop in the country’s Tamil population would result in a population increase in percentage terms for the other communities respectively. Yet why do some people continue to raise this as an issue knowing well that is it absolutely baseless? Spreading such myths at an official level is a threat to national reconciliation and will serve to promote hatred, division and conflict between the Sinhalese and Muslims.
  
The real beneficiaries of these conflicts are only the weapons manufacturers and their agents who work behind the scenes to put forward these grossly misleading ideas which justify the wholly unnecessary purchase of security equipment, arms and ammunition. It is tremendously fascinating that in many narratives about ‘radicalisation’ such as Col. Jayasuriya’s, the role of the global arms industry and its interest in fuelling conflicts throughout the world hardly ever gets mentioned. If we are to earnestly examine the real roots of radicalisation, then we cannot turn a blind eye to its covert role in creating frictions within and between communities by giving oxygen to false propaganda.   
If we are to earnestly examine the real roots of radicalisation, then we cannot turn a blind eye to its covert role in creating frictions within and among communities by giving oxygen to false propaganda
That a minority community with a history of over a 1000 years in this island and continues to remain at under 10% of the country’s population will precipitously overtake the majority of over 70% is a claim that is absurd. A 2014 report by Statistician Delano Uduman noted that the Buddhist lead of 1,500,300 in 1881 had grown to 12,255,617 in real terms by 2012. Each successive census has shown that the lead-gap, in real terms, between the Buddhist and Muslim population has been widening with the Buddhist lead increasing.
  
So it is implausible to claim that the Muslims will come anywhere close to catching up with the Buddhists numerically! It would damage the high reputation of Sri Lanka’s armed forces and its intelligence services to allow persons within the forces to put out such absurd claims which will negatively impact on the credentials of our forces under critical examination in the UN Human Rights Council.   


Concept of ‘homeland security’


This was the other disturbing aspect of Col. Jayasuriya’s presentation, but I should perhaps not have been altogether surprised because the proposition was one being made by a military officer. Col. Jayasuriya waxes eloquent about the necessity for a ‘homeland security concept’ to deal with issues of ‘Islamic radicalisation’ and calls for new laws to enable Sri Lanka to face the challenge of ‘global Islamic radicalisation’.  
 
In the entirety of his presentation, there is no evidence to back this claim of ‘growing Islamic radicalisation’. He makes reference to some sectarian issues which are by no means exclusive to the Islamic faith, and doesn’t even remotely point to ‘militant Islamism’ in Sri Lanka! It is well known that the threat of terrorism is often used as a ploy to justify more repressive laws. The Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) has been used, according to UN experts, by successive governments to harass Tamils in this country and now the proposed Counter Terrorism Act (CTA), it is feared would be used to target the Muslims and Buddhist extremists.   

Sri Lanka is not in need of a bloated, black-hole type of concept such as ‘homeland security’. The existing criminal laws are more than sufficient to deal with terrorism-related issues. The challenge for Sri Lanka is not from so-called radicalisation but from religious intolerance. The problem has to be first identified correctly before solutions are prescribed. Endless allusions to Islamic terrorism / radicalisation / fundamentalism where it doesn’t exist, only adds to the prejudices that are already prevalent against the Muslim minority in Sri Lanka.  
 
Public policy responses to the question of terrorism should be driven by facts and not personal prejudices. It should be tempered by a genuine desire to promote and protect fundamental rights and the liberties of citizens. It is imperative to act responsibly and refrain from further inciting religious-based hatred. There are plenty of zealots, some of them tragically in saffron robes to champion bigotry here in our beloved island. We don’t need men in uniform openly following suit. 

Bringing greater efficiency to the financial industry through ‘Blockchains’

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logoWednesday, 9 August 2017

Ever since the earliest commercial transactions conducted by mankind, we have been striving to bring in more trust and transparency into the system. This is what led to the creation of the concept of money, to the practice of money being issued as a legal tender by Governments, to the financial services industry and the many innovations it brought with it.

With the rise of global trade, financial service providers, banks in particular, continue to seek to achieve the ultimate efficiency level of full interoperability which will allow them to facilitate swifter and more secure movement of money around the world with reduced dependency on intermediaries. A growing number of them are touting Blockchain as the technology that will finally enable them to achieve this in recent times. It is seen as a technology that will completely transform commercial activity by eliminating intermediaries, thereby enabling seamless flow of business processes across diverse systems.

Anyone involved with the financial services and the information technology services industries in any part of the world is bound to have come across the term Blockchain and it’s been a topic of interest among many tech companies, financial institutions and the government during the past few months in Sri Lanka. However, there seems to be a great deal of confusion about its implications which has led to the technology being viewed as an opportunity by some and a threat by others.

As a local bank that drives its business on a sustainable platform of innovation, we see several key benefits in Blockchains.

The possibilities
for Sri Lanka’s
financial industry

I believe that payment mechanisms built on Blockchain infrastructure will be the ideal choice for banks to embark on their Blockchain journey. This will allow them to get hands on experience on the technology before they can explore more complex use cases. A private Blockchain among Sri Lankan banks would be a practical implementation to start Blockchain as a financial tool within the Sri Lankan financial industry.

In addition to a payment infrastructure, ideally to facilitate cross border transactions, the Sri Lankan financial institutes could start experimenting on smart contracts as well. However, it is important to note that smart contract implementation has existing conditions that any other software could have since a smart contract is a program code running on the Blockchain.

Developing an application with robust data security which can be easily integrated into exciting systems will be critical to encouraging participants to get on board. The banking industry will also need to work closely with the Government on developing a well-defined regulatory framework that governs all Blockchain implementations.

Benefits and challenges

01The core attributes of Blockchain technology have caught the eye of the world. Being decentralised, it doesn’t have a single point of failure. Utilising cryptography to validate every transaction, it is highly secure. The write-once, spend-only attribute of the ledger ensures that transaction history is immutable (i.e. every transaction is recorded on the system and cannot be erased from it). This also adds to the transparency of the system. It brings in greater efficiency by facilitating faster and simpler exchange of information. Businesses see boundless potential in Blockchain technology and are exploring the ways in which it can be applied to different industries.

At the same time, we need to be cognisant of the challenges that come with the technology. Almost all current information security solutions are designed to protect centralised data while Blockchains are based on decentralised data architecture. Secondly, the entire Blockchain technology implementation depends on the associated key infrastructure.

Hence protecting keys is paramount to ensuring overall security of the Blockchain system. Thirdly, keys and assets are held together in all Blockchain applications. Any vulnerabilities in the system would leave the entire asset exposed. We also need to build the necessary infrastructure including connectivity and regulatory frameworks to help us reap the true benefits of this technology in Sri Lanka.

However, these aren’t insurmountable as the very invention of Blockchain technology was driven by the need for confidentiality, integrity and authentication for financial information.

How ‘Blockchain’ works?

Due to the novelty of the technology, different implementations might have slightly different variants for this explanation.

However, every Blockchain record goes with a unique key and is stamped by the trusted party who creates it. As an example; Amal has Rs. 1,000 and wants to send Rs. 300 to Bandu. Amal creates a record mentioning he sent Rs. 300 to Bandu. Then this record is entered into a distributed ledger saying now Amal has Rs. 700 and Bandu has Rs. 300. When Amal creates the record, he will use his signature (Encrypting using Private Key) in the record in order to validate the transaction. Other participants who have this ledger will confirm and approve this as a valid transaction by referring to their copy of the ledger. After approvals, Bandu’s account will increase by Rs. 300 and Amal’s account will reduce by Rs. 300.

These records are created by including information from the previous record(s) and a unique key forming a block and these blocks are inserted into a chain and will create a Blockchain. Since every record has a dependency coming from the previous record, alteration to a record will invalidate following records, hence it is virtually impossible to make unauthorised changes and will notify the other parties who are holding a copy of the ledger.

Disrupting the present
for a secure future


Blockchain technology can be used to change the way in which banks and other financial service providers offer certain services, boosting speed, efficiency, transparency and service quality.

Although Blockchains originate from crypto currency, there are several other uses of Blockchain technology which can benefit the financial industry. One important example of this is the implementation of a payment infrastructure. The technology will be able to facilitate speedier transactions with better cost efficiency. Another key usage is smart contracts. We can see several attempts of smart contract implementations in the other parts of the world, although whether reality meets with expectations is a question yet to be answered. Another use of Blockchain is in identity management where the technology will improve protection of vital data.

(Ajith Salgado is Chief Information Officer of Sampath Bank, Director SITS, past president of CSSL and former member of the Board of Governors of Arthur C. Clark Centre)

Mangala’s PR Officer Quits Amidst Drug Bust To ‘Save’ Minister From Mudslinging Campaign

Sameera Manahara, a very close associate of Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweera, who is also his Public Relations Officer announced his resignation today from his post to save the Minister from what he termed was ‘a well-planned conspiracy mooted by certain groups with vested interest to sling mud at the Minister and the Yahapalanaya government.’
In a letter addressed to Samaraweera today, August 8, 2017, Manahara who was arrested by police for allegedly possessing drugs said, “even though my innocence is clear and hence I was released on bail by the Mount Lavinia Magistrate, it is obvious there is an attempt to use this incident to tarnish your image. So, I will resign from my position as the Public Relations Officer until I am proven innocent in courts in this case.”
On August 5th, police arrested Manahara and several of his friends for the possession of cocaine, methamphetamine pills and hashish while they were travelling in a luxury jeep. One of Manahara’s friends had confessed to the police that the drugs belonged to him, and not the others, and subsequently, the friend who confessed was remanded, while Manahara and the rest of his other friends were released on bail. There were also reports in the media that the police was under immense pressure to release Manahara following his arrest.
Meanwhile, Samaraweera’s Media Secretary Asita Rajapakse in a statement said that various media websites were publishing baseless allegations against the minister to tarnish his image, when it was clear that the Minister’s Public Relations officer was not directly involved in the drug possession.
In 2015, allegations were thrown at Samaraweera due to his alleged ‘relationship’ with Manahara, where the finance minister, who was then the foreign minister, had taken Manahara to New York on an official trip to the US where he had spent time with him at the luxurious Four Seasons Hotel in New York. “Manahara was also my Public Relations Officer at the Ministry of Ports and Aviation between 2004 and 2007. During my seven years in the Opposition he was one of my principal coordinators and campaign managers.” Samaraweera’s office then Told Colombo Telegraph.
Read the resignation letter below:

Read More

Question AG on missing file


 

Faced with the prospect of some government members also backing the Joint Opposition’s motion of no confidence against him, Ravi Karunanayake is apparently left with no alternative but to step down as Foreign Minister of his own volition pending investigations into the questionable penthouse deal. However, those who are out for Karunanayake’s blood, trying to blame the bond scams solely on him are barking up the wrong tree. An attempt is obviously being made in some quarters to throw him to the wolves.

No probe into the bond scams is complete without an investigation into an Attorney General’s Department file which has been either shelved or made to disappear. On June 30, 2015, the CID handed over a file (No: C/187/161/2015) on the first bond scam to the AG’s Department. The Attorney General at that time was Yuwanjana Wijethilake. The senior official who accepted the file found a prima facie case of insider trading and market manipulation and duly opened a criminal file and handed it over to a senior counsel for further action. The government dissolved Parliament and held the August 2015 general election, thwarting an attempt by the COPE (Committee on Public Enterprises) headed by D. E. W. Gunasekera to place its report before Parliament.

Strangely, criminal action against the bond racketeers was terminated and the file turned into a confidential document (CF/08/2015) and passed on to another senior counsel. In June 2016, the counsel, acting within the parameters set by his superiors, recommended that civil action be taken against Perpetual Treasuries to recover funds. The file has not been sighted ever since. Wijethilake is now in retirement.

The incumbent Attorney General must be summoned before the bond probe and asked to explain why criminal action anent the bond scam was terminated in a dubious manner.

Similarly, President Maithripala Sirisena should explain why he dissolved Parliament without allowing the report prepared by the COPE headed by DEW on the first bond scam to be presented to the House. Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, who has been in charge of the Central Bank since 2015, should explain why he sought to make light of the bond scams in Parliament and strove to reappoint Arjuna Mahendran as the Central Bank Governor in spite of irrefutable evidence that there had been a bond racket.

It must also be found out who pressured the Central Bank to withdraw its report which effectively countered the UNP’s footnotes in the report put out by the COPE headed by Sunil Handunnetti. The ongoing bond probe commission has refused to accept the well-argued document on the grounds that it was withdrawn by the Central Bank.

Karunanayake may be removed from the Cabinet, prosecuted and even thrown behind bars if found guilty. But, there are several others who need to be questioned if the bond probe is to be considered complete. No one should be considered too powerful to be brought before the bond commission and questioned. After all, the present yahapalana government came to power, promising accountability, equality before the law, an immediate end to the culture of legal immunity and impunity among other things.

If President Sirisena had refrained from playing politics with the bond probe in 2015 and ensured that the AG’s Department took action, the bond racketeers would have been behind bars and the losses the state and the EPF suffered at their hands recovered by now and the second bond scam (2016) could have been avoided.

The only way President Sirisena can prevent his name from being sullied is to ensure that all those responsible for the bond scams including the masterminds in high positions are brought to justice and the staggering losses they have caused to the state coffers and workers’ superannuation fund recovered. Better late than never!

Shiranthi to get down Indian exorcists to cast a spell against CID

Shiranthi to get down Indian exorcists to cast a spell against CIDNew revelations made over death of  Wasim Thajudeen
 Aug 08, 2017

Shiranthi Rajapaksa did not appear before the CID on July 27 despite summons, to give a statement in connection with the Wasim Thajudeen murder. She informed the commission through her lawyers that she was unable to be present.

On the following day, Yoshitha Rajapaksa was summoned, but he asked for another date, saying doctors have advised him to take bed rest following a foot injury. However, according to reports reaching us, Yoshitha and Namal toured Ampara on that day.
Both Shiranthi and her second son Yoshitha are frightened that they would be arrested. Both have now been told to appear before the CID on August 14.
These days, Shiranthi is a familiar visitor at Kelaniya Raja Maha Vihara. It is said that paying homage once at the Vihara is enough to negate all the sins. But, Shiranthi knows the amount of sins she had committed and makes it a regular activity to pay homage there. Chief incumbent Mahinda Sangharakkhitha Thera takes her to the Uda Maluwa and she chants all the Gaathaa she knows to seek protection. It may be irreverent here, but Sangharakkhitha Thera should be commended for breaking the tradition and allowing women into the Uda Maluwa.
For Shiranthi, it has become a daily routine to visit Devales, and if someone tells her that there was such and such a place with powers, she would be there the next day. As the last resort she is due to bring down exorcists from India and cast a spell against the CID investigators who inquire into the Thajudeen murder.

German Tech sex pervert’s second video that strips him of all his clothes..! He has even ‘sold’ his wife to students (video)

-A center to receive complaints of his victims over the past 30 years !

LEN logo(Lanka-e-News -07.Aug.2017, 11.50PM)  Believe it or not ! the present principal of German Tech College, Moratuwa, Shantha Karunaratne the sex pervert pariah about whose sex abuse we reported recently has been engaged in his sexual molestation  activities (sodomy) over  the past 30 years , and from the time  he was a teacher in that Institution , according to Sherard Perera who was also a teacher 30 years ago in the same Institution .
In  our earlier report we revealed that this sex starved scoundrel Karunaratne had been soliciting sexual favors from the innocent immature students who fail in exams, if they are to be passed . 
The disclosure of Sherard Perera is most paramount and pertinent because he is the nephew of the then German Tech principal, and also a cousin brother  of Niroshan Perera who is a deputy minister in the  present prime minister’s ministry .More perturbing than all these lurid details is the information passed to LeN by Sherard Perera who is currently abroad that Shantha the two legged beast has ‘sold’ even his wife to the students of German Tech. A part of the lengthy revelation made by Sherard Perera is in the video footage herein. Because of the unbearable sufferings faced by students for the   last over three decades under the sex starved scoundrel Shantha , a group had emerged  under the name ‘Anti Corruption Organization –CGTTI Moratuwa to counter the pervert’s sexual exploits with a view to demand justice for the students who fell victims to him  , and  against this two legged beast. How to communicate with this  group  is detailed at the end of the video footage.
 As corrupt and squalid politics had always been the bane of this country , so this sex maniac with the patronage of politicos had been carrying on regardless over  a long period of time  with his evil perverted sexual  activities while making the innocent students his victims , despite the fact such crimes are considered as most heinous . (Some who enjoyed his sodomy  ,being picked by him  and pricked in their hindquarter  gave phone calls to us to oppose the exposure of his activities. Their contention was , he shall be ousted without bringing the Institution into disrepute. These are the shameless gays    who drooled over Shantha’s decaying drooping anterior and enjoyed it being  pushed  through their posterior while stooping.  These are the rascals who  remained silent and did not complain against Shantha or his disgraceful sex lust for the last 30 years, who are now showing concern  for  the reputation of the Institution. Their voice tape recording is hereunder.  
Sadly these  disgraceful activities are  not confined only to  German Tech , such activities are widely prevalent  among Universities too. The situation has deteriorated so much so that if she is a female student she has to sleep with the  dean of the faculty if she is to succeed in the exam  , based on reports. If she doesn’t , she must at least allow these rascals suffering from senile decay  to sexually molest her by squeezing her bums or boobs or both. These old scoundrels who wear spotless white attire and parade as paragons of virtue in  society have made this a right of theirs for decades while duping the society and deceiving their family at home.
 
It is a pity , among  the sordid media,  those who hold chief positions are such products who were  nursed and nurtured in a shameless  animal environment, and  who have indulged in those perverted or illicit sexual  activities getting their thrills from spills even in the open like shameless  animals . They being wolves in perfect human clothing the mass media in general  do not expose them. 
It may be difficult for the old generation to tear  this hypocritical curtain into shreds  in order to rescue their own self  respect , yet if they are still thinking a respectable society shall be created at least for their children’s sake  they must take measures right now to tear apart this  cruel hypocritical veil at any cost.  Lanka e news has commenced a new generation campaign to reveal the truth seated on the ground!

Let us start with the German Tech sex pervert scoundrel . Surely there cannot be darkness the whole day .

Anti corruption Organization - CGTTI Moratuwa
Inquiries: Convener -Sunil
Phone : 076 3587562
E mail: anticorr.gtech@gmail.com
Sherard Perera’s  exposure and “German Tech scoundrel’s second part’ can be viewed by clicking on the link below.


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by     (2017-08-08 00:17:08)

A city that befriends the ageing and disabled

Differently abled people have always been a marginalised section of the society, in most instances being sympathised with rather than given a hand. This is similar in the case of the ageing population as well. 
Programmes were carried out at schools 
2017-08-09
But these two groups of people also have their own rights and freedom of life, hence, neither their disabilities nor age should be considered as obstacles to keep them from moving forward. 

Sri Lanka too has a considerable percentage of people that fall in to both these categories. In order to break the stereotypical perspective revolving around these two sections, the ‘Disabled and Aged Friendly City’ concept was introduced in the Monaragala District.  
 
The initiative was taken by Senarath Attanayake - a role model to everybody else who thinks that physical challenges are barriers in life. Senarath has had many firsts, thus displaying his capabilities that make a positive change in society. He became the first wheel-chair bound individual to be called to the Bar as an Attorney-at-Law, the first wheel-chair bound individual to enter the political arena and to be elected to Provincial Council and the first differently abled person to hold a Ministerial portfolio. His efforts to transform Wellawaya and the entire Monaragala District in to a ‘Disabled and Age Friendly City’ have been tremendously successful and the project has come a long way from when it started.  
 
“Monaragala, despite being the second largest district in the country is also one of the poorest,” says Attanayake during a recent interview with the Daily Mirror. “Through this project I’m trying to address the children’s rights for education. Therefore I’m in the process of identifying schools having physically challenged children to improve accessibility facilities. Hence, the classroom, library and toilets are the main places which we are trying to implement facilities like ramps etc. In addition to that we will be giving wheelchairs and other devices. There are some parents who can’t afford to fund the education and other medical needs of their children. So we are going to give them a hand though self-employment projects as well. Another important aspect of this project is that we are going to highlight the voting rights of the ageing population as well as that of the differently abled. What we see is that during an election the politicians provide transport for the differently abled to go to the polling station and cast their votes. Otherwise they don’t have a way to cast their votes with dignity and nobody talks about it either. So we will be including ramps in every polling station in the district with tactile paving for the visually impaired. We are also in the process of implementing a tactile ballot paper for the visually impaired by 2019 or 2020 elections,”Attanayake said. 
Senarath Attanayake
  • We are in the process of implementing a tactile ballot paper for the visually impaired
  • Differently abled observers were placed at the monitoring process in the Monaragala District
  • We are also giving a wheelchair to every committee with elderly people
Speaking further about the initiative, he added that the International Foundation for Electoral Systems (IFES) - an initiative to improve election management in countries around the world- is partnering them in this programme along with the Elections Commission. “During the last elections we placed differently abled observers in the monitoring process in the Monaragala District. We have also conducted workshops and awareness programmes for these groups. I believe that if there are more physically challenged individuals in the political set-up it will be easier for us to meet our objectives. Therefore I’m also planning on encouraging such individuals to produce their nominations as well. We also have to speak about the religious rights of the ageing population and that of the differently abled.
His efforts to transform Wellawaya and the entire Monaragala District in to a ‘Disabled and Age Friendly City’ have been tremendously successful
Healthcare access is another issue that we need to address and highlight. Certain healthcare centres don’t have the facilities for differently abled people to visit them. Public places too should be constructed in such a manner, so that differently abled people too could have access to them. One community centre in every district will have access for differently abled individuals thereby promoting an inclusive environment for everybody. According to WHO reports, the differently abled population is at 15%. According to a survey done in 2012, the ageing population is at 12.5%. But they believe that by 2021 the numbers will increase up to 16.5%,”he said.  Stressing on the fact of inclusiveness, Attanayake further spoke about how rural areas need to be improved first. “There is a global programme called the Urban Inclusive Cities Network and I too work with them. We firstly have to improve rural cities and then move to urban areas especially in a country like ours. Sri Lanka is one of the countries with a minimum urbanization rate. Also the poorest of the poor are differently abled and they remain in the rural areas. So we have to introduce accessibility facilities to rural schools, community centres, places of worship and polling centres before coming to the city. Once they are implemented in the rural sector, the urban cities will naturally introduce these concepts. The Monaragala Dstrict has close to 11 divisions where we have established accessibility facilities in over 100 polling centres, eight schools, 18 temples and almost all public places. We also have to focus on their financial independence and we are in the process of identifying their skills. Recently we have started to encourage the aged and the differently abled individuals to be involved in the cultivation of bees’ honey. So far we have identified 50 families and have provided them with the necessary amenities and an educational programme is underway. We are also trying to join hands with the private sector and implement the bottling process and distribute the products at a better price. I’m trying to extend this project to another 1500 families,”he said. 
It’s quite evident that these projects will encourage parents to send their physically-challenged children to school or motivate the ageing population to be involved in a self-employment project. According to Senarath, it’s only through their provincial council that potential individuals in these two groups have been identified to be employed. Speaking further, Senarath said that they are glad that they have been able to address some important issues that have been highlighted in the UN Convention for the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (CRPD). “In addition to these projects we are also giving a wheelchair to every committee with elderly people. Through this, anybody who wants to use a wheelchair could use it. And during an election we will also be sending a wheelchair to every polling centre. The President himself has shown interest to implement this project at a national level. Another project is to educate a group of ten individuals on beauty culture. This group comprises of five differently abled individuals who will be working in a salon eventually. We will provide them with salon equipment to start their own business. By doing this we are promoting inclusiveness and other people will interact with the differently abled individuals and they will start to accept them,”he explained. 
Wheelchairs were givin to committees with elderly people
When asked about the challenges he faced while executing his plan, Senarath said that one of the main challenges that he has faced is dealing with the attitudes of people. “Although some people pretend to support me when I discuss these plans, in reality there are only a handful of people to support us. I believe that implementing accessibility facilities in a classroom is far more urgent than doing it elsewhere. Discrimination takes place in every form, but I see that it’s changing at a slow pace,” he said. 
So far we have identified 50 families and have provided them with the necessary amenities
In his concluding remarks Senarath said, “The message I like to give the general public is that I would like to request them to look at differentl abled people in a rights-based model. Don’t look at them in a charitable way. If you have a differently abled person in your family, do accept him or her. Anybody could have a physically impaired condition. But that’s not the end of their lives. Send them out in to society, educate them in a school and get them employed. I wonder where I would have been if my parents didn’t accept me. So make them a part of this society.   

Israel revokes citizenship of Palestinian for disloyalty

Alaa Zayoud
 (Adalah)

Charlotte Silver-7 August 2017

In an unprecedented step, an Israeli court has revoked the citizenship of 23-year-old Alaa Zayoud for “breach of loyalty.”

The human rights groups that will appeal the decision to Israel’s high court warn the move is a violation of international law.

In June 2016, Zayoud, a Palestinian citizen of Israel, was sentenced to 25 years in prison for four counts of attempted murder, for driving a car into a soldier and then stabbing three civilians in October 2015, causing them light to moderate injuries.

Following Zayoud’s sentencing, Israel’s interior minister Aryeh Deri asked a court in Haifa to revoke his citizenship.

In 2008, Israel amended its law to allow courts to approve such requests for “breach of loyalty.”
Zayoud’s case is the first time the 2008 law has been applied.

On 6 August, a judge in Haifa granted Deri’s request, describing the revocation of Zayoud’s citizenship as “suitable and proportional,” according to The Times of Israel.

“For every citizen, alongside his rights, there are commitments,” the judge stated. “One of them is the significant and important commitment to maintain loyalty to the state, which is given expression also in the commitment to not carry out terror acts to harm its residents and their security.”

Citizenship of Rabin’s assassin not revoked

Zayoud, from the Palestinian town of Umm al-Fahm in Israel, only holds Israeli citizenship, which means he will become stateless if the decision is upheld.

This is the first time that an Israeli court has revoked the citizenship of a Palestinian citizen of Israel for “breach of loyalty,” attorney Sawsan Zaher, from the Haifa-based human and civil rights group Adalahtold Ma’an News Agency.

“The court hasn’t even provided an in-depth argument to justify the revocation of Zayoud’s citizenship,” Zaher said. “They are just confirming that this is just about getting revenge. None of it is rational.”

Zaher and attorney Oded Feller, from the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, had argued against the revocation, saying the 2008 law was exclusively invoked against Arab citizens of Israel.
“There has never been a request to revoke the citizenship of a Jewish citizen, even when Jewish citizens were involved in serious and grave crimes,” the attorneys said in a statement.

Zaher and Feller note that in 1996 Israel’s high court refused to revoke the citizenship of Yigal Amir, the man who assassinated Israeli Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin.

“Second generation” threat

In fact, the ruling in Zayoud’s case explicitly states that it is meant to target a certain group of Palestinian citizens of Israel.

Zayoud’s mother is an Israeli citizen and his father, from the occupied West Bank, is a permanent resident of Israel.

According to the Israeli publication +972, the ruling describes Zayoud as a “second-generation child of family unification,” a category devised by the Shin Bet – Israel’s secret police.

“Intelligence gathered in interrogations of ‘second-generation children of family unification’ shows that despite being born and raised as Israeli citizens, they still retain a Palestinian identity and they see the State of Israel as an enemy state that is in conflict with their people,” the judge wrote, according to +972.

The judge claims that such citizens live with an “identity tension” that “leads to Palestinian loyalty and nationalist triggers which increase their willingness to carry out acts of terror.”

The ruling explicitly states that revoking Zayoud’s citizenship is “aimed exclusively at so-called ‘second-generation children of family unification’ – to be used exclusively against them and to deter others within that group.”

Against international law

Adalah and the Association for Civil Rights in Israel will appeal the decision.

As well arguing that the law is being applied in a discriminatory manner, they say that international law explicitly bars revoking the citizenship of a person if that will leave them stateless.

Meanwhile, Deri has also said that the interior ministry will not renew the residency permit of Zayoud’s father – an apparent act of collective punishment against his family.

In January 2016, Deri revoked the residency status of four Palestinians from Jerusalem for “breach of loyalty.”


Israel has also revoked the residencies of more than 14,000 Palestinian Jerusalemites over the decades on various technical pretexts never applied to Jewish residents of the city.

Turkey-based Iranian journalist granted asylum in Israel

Turkey-based blogger for Times of Israel's Persian-language website had been battling the deportation order in Turkish courts

Tuesday 8 August 2017
A Turkey-based Iranian blogger who was facing imminent deportation back to Iran has been granted asylum in Israel.
Neda Amin, a blogger for the Times of Israel’s Persian-language website, had been battling in the Turkish courts a deportation order from Iran and had appealed to human rights organisations to intervene on her behalf.
On Sunday Israeli Interior Minister Aryeh Deri confirmed that Israel had offered the 33-year-old Iranian asylum.
“This is a journalist whose life is in real danger simply for writing columns for an Israeli news site. In these clear humanitarian circumstances, I have authorised her entry without hesitation,” Deri said in a statement.
But reports began to emerge that Turkish authorities had arrested Amin when she failed to board a scheduled flight from Turkey to Israel on Monday.
Deputy Foreign Minister Tzipi Hotovely clarified on Monday that Amin’s plans to come to Israel had been delayed for “personal reasons” and that she would be arriving in Israel “in the coming days”.
Amin fled Iran for Turkey three years ago but was expected to be deported to Iran in the next few days.
Her cause was picked up by UN Watch, a Geneva-based lobby group with strong ties to Israel, which launched a petition that claimed Amin had been receiving threats from Iranian intelligence while in Turkey.
“They [the Turkish authorities] kept asking me why I wrote for an Israeli newspaper and with whom I have connections in Israel. Although I repeatedly said I am only a journalist, they accused me of being a spy for Israel,” she told UN Watch.
“My return to Iran would mean torture, rape, and, in the end, execution.”
Amin also appealed to the United Nations in Turkey to protect her on the grounds that the UN had previously designated her a refugee there in 2015.
Her cause was also championed by the Israeli Journalists Association, which submitted a request for asylum in her name to the interior ministry.
In the accompanying letter, members of the association argued that Amin was being persecuted for her job and that her life was in danger should she be sent back to Iran.
“Neda fled from Iran to Turkey three years ago and she is currently being investigated by Turkish authorities for baseless accusations of spying for Israel,” members of the Journalists Association wrote in its request.
“Amin is expected to be arrested immediately upon arrival in Iran and is in danger of execution because of her journalistic work,” her brother wrote in a separate letter sent to Aryeh Deri.
Granting Amin asylum is a rare move on the part of Israeli authorities as hostility between the two countries means that Iranians are generally not admitted to Israel.
She will be the second Iranian figure to be granted asylum in Israel in recent years following poet Payam Feili who took up refuge there in 2016.