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, December 21, 2017

The Education Discourse & Its Ethnic Discontents

By Uditha Devapriya –December 21 2017


In his Among My Souvenirs Regi Siriwardena depicts the flaws and the contradictions that led to the fall from power of the pre-1956 elite. The plot teeters until the end between autobiographical fiction and historical actuality, particular with respect to the protagonist, David Gunawardene, and his friend, Wije. These two characters, moreover, represent a bifurcation of the author’s political beliefs, dangling between the privileged childhood of David and the more plebeian, less insular upbringing of Wije. The story ends with disillusionment for both of them over the murder of a remnant of the pre-1956 elite: Mark, a Westernised Tamil Christian whose education abroad, and whose repudiation of his own privileged upbringing, makes him idealise a society of chauvinists and rhetoricians, the same society that kills him in cold blood.

Mark represents the rebellion against a particular social segment that thrived on (as that old lady, musing on the world that existed before 1956 in their milieu, tells us in Ruwanthi de Chickera’s Dear Children Sincerely) dinner parties and unfinished puddings. What is curious to me about this social segment, largely upper class and English educated, is that they were the people and the leaders who failed to prepare the country for the perils that beset us after the election of S. W. R. D. Bandaranaike. They were not equipped with the proper mindset, the proper attitudes, to take us beyond the chauvinism which 1956 unearthed rather badly. As Siriwardena frequently noted in his essays, being largely a postcolonial elite comprising the descendants of the colonial bourgeoisie they were too complacent to contemplate productively on the transformation of the country to a nation state unhindered by racial discord.

The rift between class consciousness and racial-ethnic consciousness has not, historical texts confirm, always been that easy to sustain. As no less a figure than Professor Nalin de Silva has noted, the proponents of federalism and Tamil chauvinism were by products of the privileged, class bound status accorded to the Vellala caste who formed the bedrock of the Civil Service (before the granting of the suffrage in 1931, bitterly opposed by leaders of that caste-bound community). They were the elite, in other words, predicated on the economic and, by default, the political rather than any racial or religious considerations. Let’s not forget, after all, that one of the first private organisations set up to oppose the half-baked reforms paraded as democratic change by the colonialists was the Jaffna Youth Congress, in which the North and the South cohabited in ways which today seem inscrutably idealistic. Had this culture of idealism thrived, it is even possible to contemplate a peaceful transition to the federalist constitution that has got both Sinhalese and Tamil nationalists in a battle for power with, and against, each other today. The idealism, however, soured.
 
And that idealism today largely flourishes in a context where its greatest proponents and champions come, not from the grassroots, but from the policy elite: the leading members of the NGO intelligentsia, the alternate State sector set up to overlook reforms that delve into the Constitution and ethnic harmony. To me this is a tragedy because it has served to strengthen the (largely mistaken) belief that cosmopolitanism is the preserve of those who are against nationalism. There is much I disagree with Jehan Perera, but in one point I agree with him: that Sri Lanka is not a nation, rather a nation of nations, predicated on race and faith. To get those nations together is the difficult task of the government in power, difficult because the government itself, while championing overtly the eventual triumph of a national consciousness over a racial consciousness, covertly caves into the demands of irrational chauvinists.

The best way for such an idealism to flourish would be this: get the multitude to support it. How does one get the multitude to do this? By a cohesive campaign, conducted entirely in the vernacular, that is different in scope and strength to the anti-Dutugemunu anti-Buddhist ahistoricism of the campaigns that preceding governments affirmed in the name of championing interethnic harmony, by vilifying each and everyone who stood for the Sinhala Buddhist collective. The Sinhala Buddhists cannot be considered as sacred cows, by any stretch of the imagination, but nor should they be demonised for being who they are: as a global minority, they do not have the luxury of numerical strength which most other collectives do. It’s a tentative balance that must be struck, and if the strategy is to succeed, the place to start would not be the parliament, or the media, but the most important part of the public sphere: our schools.

Here I go back to the pre-1956 elite, which Mark and David Gunawardene were harbingers of in Siriwardena’s book, to point out an interesting contradiction at the heart of their milieu: educated in elite schools, they believed that the absence or rather absenting of a racial consciousness in their classrooms was synonymous with the ideal of interethnic harmony. In other words, cultural apathy was taken as the password to a racially unhindered world. Siriwardena, in an essay on the potential of our schools to do away with those rifts, argued cogently that this misconception belonged to and was sustained by a specific social strata which, at the time of the Kannangara Reforms in 1943, comprised about one-seventh of the total student population, a paltrier ONE-FIFTIETH if we were to consider only those who were completely educated in English (without those who received an education in both English and the vernacular).

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All political parties to sign resolution against US policy towards Jerusalem



 Thursday, December 21, 2017
All political parties will rally and sign a resolution against US President Donald Trump's declaration of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel, tomorrow at 3.30 pm at Colombo New Town Hall under the them, "Respect World Opinion! Accept East Jerusalem as the Capital of Palestine", the Health Ministry spokesman said.
According to the spokesman, United National Party, the Sri Lanka Freedom Party, the People's Liberation Front, the Tamil National Alliance, Sri Lanka Muslim Congress, JHU, All Ceylon People's Congress, Communist Party, Lanka Sama Samaja Party, parliamentary parties representing the opposition and other organizations will take part in the rally. 
The decision was made to hold the protest rally during a meeting held in Colombo recently with the participation of Health Minister Rajitha Senaratne, MP Bimal Ratnayake, Chairman of the National Media Center, Imtiaz Bakeer Markar, the Muslim Congress of Sri Lanka and many other representatives of several organizations, business community etc, he said.

Paving the way for a digital economy


Friday, 22 December 2017

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The new economy has greatly changed our economic environment in relation to how the Government and businesses operate and provide goods and services, and the structure of the labour force. Prosperity in the new economy involves more than capitalising on knowledge assets. Prosperity involves increasing employment in those industries that are growing.

Digital payments, digital data, digital customer service, payments through new platform, along with real-time analytics are becoming entrenched in the world economy. These elements will forever change consumption from because of the effects of many governments’ push towards a cashless economy.

Little over a year ago India in an effort to move to combat corruption, tax evasion and counterfeiting, withdrew all 500 and 1,000 rupee banknotes from circulation. Many international bankers argue that India failed miserably in its demonetisation effort. The Modi Government’s publicly-declared demonetisation objective was that the Government wanted to transform the economy into a digital economy.

We know we can’t completely transform an economy to a digital economy over night, there are various social classes – for example, a waiter or steward who receive tips, a household worker gets some extra money for a job well-done, parliamentarians get political funds, even some professionals have foundations to earn their donations and sales from books, parliamentarians or politicians have their own foundations established to get donations and then politicians partly use those monies to uplift certain communities, even clergy use money they receive to uplift social standards of communities and to look into their welfare.

If you take an establishment such as the Roman Catholic Church it has over $ 60 billion real estate assets around the globe in the name of church lands, missionary schools, etc., purchased from the money that they got from devotees which went to the clergy and the Vatican.

Just imagine what happens if Citizen Fernando has to donate money via a mobile app that sometimes is not even properly working to transfer money to a temple, kovil, or church, or even a mosque, etc. There will be hell to pay all round.

Demonetisation

In the Indian demonetisation effort, if the real objective was to attack the “black money,” stored by the political and business elite, it has failed. Around 90% of the demonetised notes were returned to the banks, far more than the Government expected. This means, as the Guardian explained, with its sense of British understatement, that “either the Indians concealed less wealth from taxation than was thought, or that money has been preserved in the form of goods or gold rather than cash”.

In fact, according to economists, very probably less than 3% of “black money” is held in currency. In an Indian context it is still big money. Almost all of it is either converted into gold (it is said India has by far the largest private gold reserves in the world), or put into purchases of jewellery, real estate, or land, when it isn’t put into financial investments.

And then when all that money goes into their bank accounts or other establishments that money too comes to the so-called ‘white’ system... Gambling (casinos) is said to be one of the world’s biggest industries that create wealth among various social classes, and there are gambling moguls around the world who own banks, finance companies, real estate, even in USA there are poker players who become rich overnight and then their wealth is transferred into various other establishments when they start using that money. One such example is a spa owner; their extra earnings transform to various other business establishments when they purchase goods and services.

Drive away

A full digital economy can drive away lots of people and perhaps increase poverty if digital transformation is done by creating limitations and wealth limits; although India implemented practices of demonetisation, if you watched NDTV and other TV news or listened to Indian Radio last few months you will clearly understand that certain new grey economical activities started as a result of the moves; there were Indian banker families or officials, new brokers who started taking thousands of Indian rupees worth kickbacks from common people to deposit the money under various other names and newly-created accounts in India as there were new taxes for deposit limits. Many people faced identity theft as a result too, India being the world’s largest democracy has the most business-savvy politicians, but even they are people who transform wealth to various other business, religious and social establishments.

Mass adoption 

Several top economists have said globally that what India did was a failure, and it only hugely troubled poor families and especially older people’s savings. India is the largest gold consumer and India’s activity in impacting global gold prices took a different turn because of demonetisation, it enabled digital currencies such as bitcoin to overtake the gold price in international markets in the last three months. Even if you take bitcoin, people trade in those digital currencies and their capital gains are transformed to other asset classes in the real world, finally resulting in the real economy losing.

Banks and companies will need to work with each other dynamically along with using digital payments. They can help many small SMEs with digital payments and to crunch stock-keeping data over the cloud. This can enable SMEs to raise working capital loans from banks and the country who can benefit from going digital.

Every businessman has a smartphone and only needs technology to be proliferated through marketing. The problem is discovery today. The next three years will see a mass adoption of digital technologies. However, though digital technologies are spreading across the globe, many people in the country still do not have access to the internet.
(The writer is a thought leader.)

Suspicions mount against both Governments: Are Maithri and Putin bans a ploy ? Is there a warship camouflage ? (video)

Controversial Cabinet Media Briefing
(Lanka-e-News - 21.Dec.2017, 11.35PM)  Following the official announcement made regarding Sri Lanka’s (SL) Asbestos sheets ban and Russia’s tea ban  at the cabinet media briefing   on the 20 th , suspicions have arisen whether the two governments are seeking to conceal  vital  facts .
LEN logoAt the cabinet media meeting the following official announcement was made :
*On the 15 th of December , the Federal service of veterinary and  plant hygiene  service of the Russian government informed the consensual government ‘s  plant hygiene service of Sri Lanka that , because there  were live larvae of the ‘Capra’ insect in the containers of tea exported to Russia ,  the plantation products imported from SL is being proscribed from the 18 th .

*It is about 11 % of the total tea export of SL that is dispatched to  Russia .
*It is the standards laid down by the European union which SL follows when exporting Tea.

*According to the government , based on unofficial information received by it , this  ban imposed by  Russia is a sequel  to the decision taken by the SL  government on 2016-09-06  to  restrict the import of raw materials for use and the manufacture of asbestos sheets from 2018-01 -01,   because most of those raw materials are imported from Russia.
 
*Under these circumstances , the SL government suspended its decision to proscribe the import of asbestos materials(  from 2018-01-01) 
*In SL , it is asbestos which are used for 80 % of the roofing  .  Besides there are no other alternative products  so far .
*The ban on the asbestos that was to commence in January  2018 will not be implemented  all at once. That will be gradual. As a first step , the government will be halting the use of asbestos  and gradually it will  be completed  in 2024.
*The measures taken by the government hitherto to lift the tea ban … 
1.The ambassadors of the two countries have held discussions in this regard.
2.An official reply has been forwarded in response to the notification issued by  Russia.
3.By 18 th December (night) president Sirisena has sent a personal letter to the Russian president ( the ministers who attended the media briefing did not know the contents of the letter)
4.An official delegation  has not  been sent to Russia. The latter has given an appointment for discussion on the 27 th , and the SL delegation will  be leaving for Russia  on the 25 th or 26 th  .
5.The delegation led by the minister of science and technology Susil Premajayantha will be  leaving for Russia in January 2018 to discuss the situation pertaining to the asbestos imported from Russia.
The reasons to suspect that the government is concealing vital facts….
*This consignment of tea has been shipped to Russia by a private Co. If an issue crops up regarding the quality of the commodity of the  consignment received by a country  , what any country does is ,it halts the  cargo  from being unloaded , and the relevant Co.is warned. On the other hand if the lapse continues and the mistake is committed over and over again as though deliberately , then  that Co is blacklisted. Simply because there is an issue regarding the quality of the consignment of a Co.,  immediately action is not taken to halt the import of all related goods from the entire country that is exporting those. 
A case in point is : when the fuel imported by SL was below quality , what SL did was halting the unloading of the cargo . It did not ban the import of fuel from that country.
Based on that , the proscription imposed by Russia is not according to established norms. 
and  unreasonable, meaning that there must be other motives  behind this move.
Whether that motive is what the SL government is  trying to portray is the next pertinent question.
*Never before has Russia imposed such a ban officially on SL. Neither did SL take a decision any day that the import of asbestos from Russia shall be banned.  The decision taken was , the  government would  withdraw from the use of   asbestos , and that decision does not affect the private companies importing Russian asbestos products  because in SL where there is a 80 % use of asbestos , so far until an alternative is in sight  nobody has given thought to options.
For such a powerful large country like Russia , SL is just an infinitesimal entity.  Hence  for Russia’s asbestos export market SL is insignificant , and  is just a dispensable and disposable ‘appendix’ .
Therefore while the decision of SL to ban asbestos is a virtual failure , the statement that  Russia imposed the tea ban in that backdrop, is difficult to accept. This  Russian ban is something  strange and  new. 
*If the SL government is still saying Russia’s tea ban is a sequel to SL’s asbestos prohibition , then why wait until January to dispatch minister Susil Premajayantha to Russia? Is it because the SL government is aware the true reason for the tea ban is not the asbestos issue?
In this backdrop , the revelations made by Chandra Pradeep the Lanka e news reporter on 18 th merits a review.

It is because the Rosonborono export Co. with which Maithri -Maharaja mahajara team tried to transact the sordid warship deal is a blacklisted Co. , SL  cannot push through that deal?
 
If the SL government still transacts the sordid deal , SL will have to face economic sanctions imposed by other countries except Russia. 
In other words it is to surmount this obstacle both parties have devised this ‘Tea ban and asbestos ban’  ploy to somehow fix the deal. Hence, suspicions mounting in this direction against both countries is most reasonable and understandable. Whether in the bags of Maithri and Putin there is truly  a warship or not  is also therefore questionable. 
No matter what , the revelations made by the government pertaining to the tea ban and asbestos prohibition at the cabinet media briefing on the 20 th in response to the questions posed by  journalists are in the video footage hereunder 
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by     (2017-12-21 18:23:28)

Khapra beetle and Russian credit line!


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Sri Lanka's tea industry had been hit hard in recent times from several quarters. The drought brought trouble for tea and even more trouble for the paddy farmer. The knee-jerk ban of the herbicide glyphosate falsely claiming it to cause kidney miles away from the tea plantations, in the Rajarata, was another setback. Then the Russians discover a Khapra Beetle in the tea, an insect that feeds on grain and not on tea. It is a native Indian 'Kallathoni' which spread to other countries by hitching rides on exported grain.

Although the Khapra beetle is widely found in India, this is not the case for Sri Lanka. H. J. Banks, writing in 1977 in the Journal of Stored Products Research (volume 13, p183) includes references that suggest that the country was free of the insect, although reports of detection of the insect exist. However, Western countries have routinely (and unfairly) classified Sri Lanka with India, to Sri Lanka's detriment. H. J. Banks' review was in 1977, the year when the free market was launched in Sri Lanka. The relaxation of all controls in the name of the free market has led to many difficulties. To cap it all, a bridge to connect Sri Lanka with India has been proposed by a neo-con government without the slightest concern for the integrity of Sri Lanka's biosphere.

The key to Khapra-beetle control is ensuring its absence in grain. It is actually quite easy to keep grain free of the Khpara beetle. Simple and inexpensive irradiation of grain is all that is needed. Such irradiation will also remove all types of weevils and bugs, and save perhaps 40% of the grain crop in tropical countries from becoming unfit for use. Unfortunately, here again baseless public fear has been fanned against "radiation". Just as vaccination or fluoridation is feared and opposed by some, irradiation is rejected in many communities. Instead, Methoprene which is an insect growth regulator is used in North America and must be applied at the larvae stage.

However, although controls in Sri Lanka have been rapidly relaxed since 1977, that it has taken two decades to detect a Khapra beetle in a Sri Lankan export is remarkable. The detection is in tea, and not in an exported grain! It has not been established that the beetle was found in tea itself. There is the likelihood that the beetle joined the Cargo during the voyage and did not even originate in Sri Lanka.

An even more interesting suggestion is that the Russians are merely expressing their displeasure over Sri Lanka's continued neglect of the Russian market, as well as the recent ban on Asbestos imports from Russia. Neither this government, nor the previous government had been a regular client except for controversial MIG deals of the previous regime, or the bizarre purchase of an old Russian ship by the present government, going against the recommendations of naval experts. Using a Russian credit line is essentially a form of barter. The powerful wheeler dealers in governments cannot conveniently collect commissions from such barters. They prefer shady tenders passed through Singapore or Dubai.

However, if the President of Sri Lanka is serious, we can truly profit from the Russian credit line by importing much that Sri Lanka needs, instead of buying armaments, planes and ships which are ultimately an enormous drain on the country. A large percentage of the nitrogen in the bodies of everyone living today comes from synthetic urea, essential to all agricultural sectors. Even the organic farmer secretly adds it to his plot to avoid a deficit! Today Sri Lanka is facing a grave shortage of Urea. Russia is a leader in Urea production, and the Russian credit line can be used for Urea. Another essential item is phosphate mineral fertilizer. This too is produced by Russia, and furthermore, the Russian fertilizer is one of the cleanest mineral fertilizers in the world as it is virtually free of cadmium and other heavy-metal contaminants. Sri Lanka should regularly buy their mineral fertilizer for her tea!

The Russians are also world leaders in the production of liquified natural gas. The government is struggling over the coming energy crunch, and two ministers have once again proposed two new coal power plants. They surely know how the previous coal plants made many individuals extremely rich, by way of tenders, cancellation of tenders and relaunching of tenders, refitting of plants etc. The net effect is, we have two lame-duck coal power plants located in Sampur (Samapura) and Norochchollai (Horagolla). I have added the more meaningful old Sinhala place names as they make sense, not only to Sinhala speakers, but also to Tamil speakers, as I found out by asking a few individuals. The politics of coal power plants in these two places is shrouded in illegalities, just as the names of these places have never been properly gazetted when the old names were suppressed.

The justification for coal is based on the claim that there is a large cheap supply and that a modern "clean-coal" technology is available. These are false claims. Even in Canada we only have experimental operations, e.g., as in the Boundary Dam coal Power Station in Saskatchewan. Canada is trying, at great cost, to utilize its coal deposits. But Sri Lanka has no coal, and no track record of good pollution management given its neglect of even urban garbage directly visible to everyone. The coal-pollution is out of sight, out of mind, and will certainly be mismanaged

Furthermore, we are already under a cloud of toxic rain (containing cadmium, nitrous and sulphurous toxins and particulate dust) from many poorly run coal power stations along the coast of Tamil Nadu. When coal is said to costs "only" about Rs 18 per unit of electricity today, they have ignored the enormous health costs to the nation. The Indian tragedy is there for us to see.According to a report in the Scientific American in March 2013, as many as 115,000 people die in India each year from coal-fired power-plant pollution, costing India about $4.6 billion, even though coal is the fuel of choice and Indian energy demands are skyrocketing. But the actual costs are incalculable, since the air quality in Indian cities have been nose diving, making life in many cities a nightmare.

Since Sri Lanka is a signatory to the climate accord, it cannot turn to coal. This author was one of the first to hail the Rajapaksa government's increase in energy Tariffs in 2013 (as it made Solar energy more competitive. See Island-http://www.island.lk/index.php?page_cat=article-details&page=article-details&code_title=78416). I strongly urged the government in 2009 to adopt solar, wind and dendro technologies aggressively, and circulated in Colombo a movie on Solar energy. Nuclear energy from thorium is a clean safe energy but Sri Lanka has no experience with it. They are all part of long-term strategies. If there is a need for a short-term energy strategy, then Sri Lanka may look at liquified gas from Russia, using its little used credit line, and at the same time kick start the stalled but important tea sales to Russia.

Chandre Dharmawardana

Canada

Inside Story: Did Sri Lankan Govt. allow one of most wanted Russian cybercriminals to escape?


New diplomatic row between three nations, Russia-Sri Lanka-USA is on the knife edge

Shocking revelations of Evgeniy Mikhailovich Bogachev

One of the ten most wanted cybercriminals escaped Sri Lanka on the private jet of the Rosoboronexport?

The man escaped the Island by boat?


by Our Defence and Diplomatic Correspondents- 
( December 21, 2017, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) This is a shocking and chilling development on national security and the art of diplomacy, where the negligence of order within the internal administrative system is causing strength of the serious political influence by the external parties to manifest outcomes that seriously damage the ethical values that the Nation as a whole has invested in. The incident is much bigger than we may think; the consequences of the entire episode carry the serious risk of creating a dangerous situation that most of us would not perceive. It is not good news. It will hit the heart of the nation when the country is vulnerable for any sophisticated cyberattacks.

SriLankan Airlines: Chairman Dias Is A Blatant Liar – Pilot Guild


December 21 2017 

President of the Airline Pilots Guild of Sri Lanka Capt. Ruwan Vithanage further endorsing the pilots no confidence in the national carrier’s Senor Management, went on to blame Chairman Ajith Dias for leaking falsified, unsubstantiated and conflicting information to the media.


In a letter dated 20th December 2017 and copied also to President Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, Capt. Vithanage went on to write “We wish to categorically state that the correspondence of the Alliance addressed to you and signed by the ALPGSL was not copied to any media as claimed by you. It was however noted that your correspondence to all unions dated 15th December 2015 was published in mass media on the 16th of December 2017, but sent to us in an official capacity only on the 18th of December 2017.

Blaming Chairman Dias further especially with regards to their awareness meeting with all Unions held on the 6th of December 2017 titled “Way Forward for the Airline”, Capt. Vithanage went on to say that no restructuring plan was presented or discussed with them at that time.

“All Unions present on this day, were merely briefed by you with regards to the dire situation faced by the Airline and told to expect change, if not possible closure of our airline itself. You were thereafter requested by the ALPGSL and other employee representatives to officially communicate your message, along with the three options in writing to all employees. Subsequently your communiqué in the English language was of the stark contrast to that of the Sinhala translation: on which there was no mention facing a possible closure of the Airline. This was only corrected on our query of the same.” The letter went on to state.
 
Writing further regarding the interview Chairman Dias gave a media institution, he stated “Having written to all employees of the possibility of closure of the company, you subsequently proceeded to contradict your own written statement by saying ‘we are not going to close the Airline’, in response to the Media attention that was attracted due to the content of your own communiqué.”

Concluding the President ALPGSL wrote “We would also like to an equivocally state at this point that the ALPGSL remains an independent body, with no political affiliations and that no point have we objected to any restructuring process of our Airline. However, the ALPGSL and the other unions of the airline as an “Alliance” have placed on record its first suggestion for the process; which is that we at Sri Lankan Airlines are of the firm belief that your management team have proven to be ineffective and unsuitable for the task at hand.”

Meanwhile at the concluded Cabinet Briefing held earlier yesterday, Government Media Spokesman and Minister of Health, Nutrition & Indigenous Medicine Rajitha Senaratne stated that the Chairman Ajith Dias and CEO Suren Ratwatte must be removed. This was after they had both sent in letters to the employees of the national carrier to brace themselves because some will be removed. They are pocketing nearly Rs 3 million a month despite plunging the airline into further crisis. They should be terminated for contributing to this colossal loss the national carrier has continued to make.
We publish below the letter sent by ALPGSL President Capt. Vithanage in full:

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SLPP supporters assault four doctors, over 30 election violations reported

  • 35 cases of election violations reported to PAFFREL
  • 6 cases of violence
logo By Skandha Gunasekara-Friday, 22 December 2017

Three supporters of the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) have assaulted four doctors in the Mahiyanganaya electorate, the People’s Action For Free and Fair Elections (PAFFREL) Director Rohana Hettiarachchi told the Daily FT.

Hettiarachchi disclosed that four doctors had been assaulted during the evening on Tuesday (19) by three individuals who were supporters of the SLPP, resulting in one victim being transferred to the Badulla hospital due to his critical condition.

The Police media unit also confirmed that three individuals had been apprehended for the assault by the Mahiyanganaya police and that the Mahiyanganaya magistrate’s court had remanded the suspects until 2 January.

PAFFREL Director Hettiarachchi further revealed that thus far 35 cases of election violations had been reported, including six cases of election violence.

“In a number of places there have been reports of senior politicians distributing goods to people in the area. Food, books, cement and coconut plants were among the items being distributed,” he said, adding that a host of complaints had been received regarding poster cut-outs.

He also noted that a candidate from the SLPP had organised a ‘Dansala’ in Kurunegala.

Noting that the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), the United National Party (UNP) and the SLPP were the main culprits of election violations, Hettiarachchi said that his organisation had lodged complaints with the Elections Commission.

“We try our best to give advanced notice of election violations so that authorities can take preventive action,” he pointed out while remarking that such an advance warning had allowed authorities to stop a politician from distributing books to schoolchildren in Matale.

Campaign for Free and Fair Elections (CaFFE) Director Rajith Keerthi Tennakoon told the Daily FT that the SLFP and SLPP had carried out vehicle parades in the Galle District.

“We have made complaints to the Elections Commission as well as to the IGP,” Tennakoon said.

Meanwhile, SLFP General Secretary Duminda Dissanayake, speaking to the Daily FT, said that although the party was unaware of SLFP vehicle parades in the Galle District, all party supporters had been advised to follow the rule of law and that errant supporters would be reprimanded.

Four more SLPP nomination lists rejected in Jaffna District

The nomination lists submitted by the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), which is contesting the upcoming Local Government election under the ‘flower bud’ symbol, for several institutions in the Jaffna District have been rejected.

According to the District Returning Officer, the party’s nomination lists for the Jaffna Municipal Council, Valikamam North Pradeshiya Sabha, Valikamam East Pradeshiya Sabha and Delft Pradeshiya Sabha have been rejected in this manner.

The SLPP’s nomination list for the Thirappane Pradeshiya Sabha in the Anuradhapura District was also rejected.

The accepting of nominations for 248 local government institutions ended at 12.00 p.m.

On 14 December, the last day of accepting nominations for 93 local government institutions, the Podujana Peramuna’s nomination lists for six Local Government bodies were rejected.

These included the Panadura Urban Council, Badulla Pradeshiya Sabha, Mahiyanganaya Pradeshiya Sabha, Agalawatta Pradeshiya Sabha and Weligama and Maharagama urban council.

Presidential Commission to investigate Rajapakse ‘patriot’ rats who sold valuable army headquarters for a song !


LEN logo(Lanka-e-News - 21.Dec.2017, 11.35PM)   The sale of the valuable land of the Amy headquarters for a paltry sum of Rs. 125 million dollars by the deposed most corrupt  Rajapakses based on their sudden decision has necessitated the army headquarters to be housed in 15 separate rented buildings . Owing to this a sum of Rs. 5 billion ! has to be spent annually as rent , president Maithripala Sirisena who is also the defense minister revealed to the cabinet.
This colossal payment annually for the buildings rented is a huge unnecessary burden on the treasury as a  result of improper planning . Besides , this has  compromised national security  the president lamented. 
The cabinet decided to appoint a special presidential commission to investigate the  reckless decision that was taken by the Rajapkases (whose name is now synonymous with monumental corruption)  without finding a proper permanent place to house the security division ; taking sudden steps to sell the land to a foreigner ; placing country’s security in jeopardy ;  and housing  the security divisions  in various separate buildings   thereby engendering huge  financial losses to the country.
In any case as  there are complaints received that there have been corrupt practices as regards the new  Army headquarters  building that is being constructed in Pelawatte and not yet completed , an investigation has to be conducted , the president asserted. 
It is an irony, it is the same president now  talking about appointing a commission to probe  into corruption ,who disallowed confirmed  culprit Gotabaya Rajapakse from being arrested despite orders issued by the Attorney General to arrest Gota involved in the misappropriation of public funds to builds a mausoleum for his parents.

New owners of the sold army headquarters …

Meanwhile the president and prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe on 16 th November afternoon by cutting a ribbon inaugurated the Shangri La hotel which was constructed on the land that was belonging to Army headquarters . Only cups of tea were served for the president and the P.M. on the occasion and none of the notorious corrupt Rajapakses were invited for the inauguration ceremony.
However in the night the actual inauguration celebration  was held for the Rajapakses. After reserving a whole floor of the hotel exclusively without anybody else being permitted to enter  , a grand party on the lines of a ceremonial inauguration celebration was thrown exclusively  for the Rajapakses in the night after breaking open  bottles of  champagne , cutting   cakes etc . All the crooked and corrupt Rajapakses ,their wives . mistresses and lovers congregated on the Hotel floor exclusively reserved for them , and left after enjoying a sumptuous party and the best of most expensive foreign liquor that night. Interestingly , the Shangrila hotel owner is now performing the tasks of an unofficial advisor of the present finance  minister.
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by     (2017-12-21 18:21:22)

Duo arrested for re-exporting intoxicating herbs

2017-12-21
A man and a woman were arrested this morning on the charges of allegedly operating a packaging center for imported intoxicating herbs under the guise of a printing shop, police media division said.
Police said the herb, imported from Zambia was packed as 1 Kg herbal green tea and exported to the USA and the United Kingdom.  
 
The 31-year-old man and the 18-year-old woman were arrested when they were caught red handed packing 542 Kg of the plant.
Police said the plant was imported from Zambia.
The suspects, residents of Kelaniya and Wellampitiya, were produced before the Maligakanda Magistrate today. (Chaturanga Pradeep)

Govt. in overdrive with US assistance

Search for ‘stolen funds’



Jayamanne


*Call to probe Lanka’s trade with Singapore and UAE for black money transactions
*Courts to hear 20 corruption cases a day to punish wrongdoers:PM

By Shamindra Ferdinando-December 22, 2017, 12:11 pm

A US official is in Colombo to coordinate high profile ongoing asset recovery operations undertaken by the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe administration.

Director General of the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC) President’s Counsel Sarath Jayamanne yesterday said the US official coordinated training programmes involving his outfit and related work. PC Jayamanne said so when The Island inquired from him about the recent US State Department announcement that Sri Lanka would receive US assistance in this regard.

PC Jayamanne succeeded Dilrukshi Dias Wickramasinghe in late Oct. 2016 following her sudden resignation after an incident where President Maithripala Sirisena took the CIABOC to task.

The State Department Spokesperson on Dec.5 declared that since 2016, the US government had assisted in Sri Lanka’s anti-corruption efforts to improve the functioning of the legal system and civil society and to enhance good governance. The spokesperson said programmes included the provision of a Resident Legal Advisor to provide anti-corruption and asset recovery training, and support to the CIABOC.

PC Jayamanne said that on the basis of the State Department statement Sri Lanka had been erroneously categorised as one of the four most corrupt countries by a section of the media. The DG, CIABOC said that the US had offered assistance consequent to Sri Lanka’s request last year. Ukraine, Tunisia and Nigeria had been named as other recipients of US assistance, he said.

The US official works with the Attorney General’s Department as well as Presidential Task Force engaged in anti-corruption work.

The Island sought an explanation from the Public Affairs Section of the US embassy in Colombo on Dec. 11 regarding State Department categorising Sri Lanka among a group of countries selected to receive US assistance to combat corruption. In spite of repeated reminders, the following questions went unanswered:

(a) Has the State Department examined treasury bond scams perpetrated in Feb 2015 and March 2016 before offering special assistance to Sri Lanka, including provision of Resident Legal Advisor, Colombo?

(b) As the State Department has revealed allocation of USD 115 mn annually for global anti-corruption activities, could the embassy reveal the allocation for Sri Lanka?

(c) What is the status of Rs 1.92 bn (USD 13 mn) USAID project meant to strengthen accountability and democratic governance in Sri Lanka against the backdrop of the country being named as one of the four countries which required US assistance to tackle corruption?

Although the proposal didn’t materialize, the UK, too, in mid-2016 offered to station some personnel in Colombo in support of CIABOC.

PC Jayamanne explained how Nigeria had benefited from US-led assistance to recover stolen funds. Nigeria and Sri Lanka had been at the recently concluded inaugural Global Forum on Asset recovery (GFAR) co-hosted by the US and the UK in Washington. Jayamanne said that initially Nigeria would receive USD 300 mn from Switzerland. PC Jayamanne was on Sri Lanka’s delegation along with other senior Attorney General’s Department officers.

Following GFAR, international news agencies quoted Nigerian Attorney General and Minister of Justice Abubakar Malami as having said at the Chatham House, London, that he had signed two agreements, on behalf of Nigeria, with Switzerland and the United States of America, respectively, for the return of USD 621 million in looted funds.

According to agencies, former head of state, late General Sani Abacha and the former Bayelsa State Governor, late Diepreye Alamieyeisegha were responsible for illegal transfers.

Jayamanne stressed that Sri Lanka’s desire to secure international assistance in asset recovery operations shouldn’t be construed as a failure of the domestic mechanisms. "Some investigations do require international assistance and expertise," he said.

The media has revealed that the stolen funds currently in the custody of the US were stashed away in the United Kingdom (USD 1.6m and 21.7m Pounds), France (USD 145m) and Jersey (USD 299m) respectively.

Jayamanne said the World Bank, too, had been involved in the initiative. Referring to an international conference in Austria he had participated several months ago, Jayamanne explained the stand taken by some that recovered money should be utilized subjected to strict international scrutiny.

A Clarke orbit not swung round in



logoFriday, 22 December 2017

In his 1930 poem W. H. Auden issued this challenge: “Let us honour if we can / the vertical man / though we value none / but the horizontal one/”. He meant that humanity worships powerful living fellow creatures and forgets the dull dead.

But we Sri Lankans are one better than Homo erectus superior of the Western civilisation our poet critiqued: for we honour our ancestors among other ghosts of the past. This is neither good nor bad; but thinking makes it so. If practised by mindless cretins who resurrect the shade of Dutugemunu rather than the spirit of (let us not say it) some more peaceable monarch intent on tranquillity and serenity for all his subjects, more so!



A few of us Easterners inverted Auden’s ask last week. It was the birth centenary of one of Sri Lanka’s brighter suns. Albeit one born in the West… at Minehead, in Somerset, on December 16, 1917. Of course it is Srilankabhimanya Arthur Clarke to whom I refer. And while beautiful Ceylon (as it was known when this mindful adventurer first looked on our fair shores) was less pusillanimous than the Crown of Great Britain in bestowing its accolades, it is not of Sir Arthur’s life or death that I sing. That is left to bards and beloveds. Since my theme is honouring the horizontal man, it is our own space-age prophet’s island-vision I wish to hymn today…

Not his scientific prophecies or technological predictions. But rather his personal wish-list for the land of his adoption. And perhaps the best way would be to hear our late great savant’s words for ourselves. At least as expressed to the people of his island-paradise over a decade ago. So here are Sir Arthur’s words.

Rebuilding

Sri Lanka 

When asked – in the aftermath of the tsunami – whether there was an opportunity to rebuild Sri Lanka along model-nation lines, he said: “Yes, every disaster and every calamity can be turned into an opportunity. As Sri Lankans struggle to come to terms with the shared grief and multiple impacts of this tragedy, they need to be aware of this potential. The first priority is to provide shelter and relief. But we must also address the long-term issues of better preparedness, effective warning systems, and disaster mitigation. The best tribute we can pay to all those who perished or suffered in this disaster is to heed the powerful lessons it offers us. Nature has spoken loud and clear, and we ignore it at our peril.”

After being told our nation was in crisis long before that tsunami hit (this month, four days from now, 13 years ago), Clarke rejoined: “I think not just Sri Lanka, but the whole world, is facing multiple crises – in terms of global security, safeguarding democracy, and meeting unlimited human aspirations with the limited energy and resources of our planet.” He added: “Here, in Sri Lanka, I have been unhappy witness to bitter armed conflict for over two decades, which has consumed twice as many lives as did the tsunami and blighted the future of millions more. Peace in Sri Lanka has been my number one wish for many years – I can only hope that the lashing from the seas will finally convince everyone of the complete futility of war and territorial disputes.”

We never heeded Mother Nature’s giving of notice to our nasty island-race. Nor did we hear Clarke and aspire to his tangential orbit in treating the tsunami as an opportunity for reconciliation. With that said, the honorary Sri Lankan expressed far more optimism about our prospects even then.

In a message broadcast over local television only a few days before the devastation of 26 December 2014, he said: “We should not allow the primitive forces of territoriality and aggression to rules our minds and shape our actions. If we do, all our material progress and economic growth will amount to nothing … I have always been an optimist, and I still remain optimistic that Sri Lanka will achieve a lasting peace.”

Well, we have peace now. Whether it will be durable and just is open to the winds of the future. But those volatile fumes of territoriality and aggression still seem to rule our minds and shape our actions.

Redeveloping Sri Lanka

Nor was Clarke caught short on ideas when he was challenged on what convinced him that Sri Lanka could redevelop itself (say along the lines of Singapore): “My vision in the next 50 years is inevitably shaped by what I have seen and experienced in the past five decades. We must exploit our comparative advantages – such as the high literacy and technical dexterity of our people; and the geographical location and medium size of our island. In a nutshell, Sri Lankans should not just work hard, but work smart in the global marketplace.”

He was keen that we evolve our own business and technical models. Clarke noted that during his half-century association with Sri Lanka, the island’s human population had almost doubled – and that managing this expansion would be one of the country’s “most formidable challenges”. In a nice turn on words he asserted that “the biggest challenge” would be – in terms of human health and welfare – “not so much to add years to life, but to add life to years”. But with the SAITM issue and other related striking issues in the medical and healthcare sectors clouding the horizon, the spectre of a moribund lifelessness looms large for our ageing demographic.

Politics was always on the table, even in a tête-à-tête ostensibly about science and technology. Indeed, the two enjoyed synchronous orbits in Clarke’s philosophical mandala: “Democracy needs to be customised and updated to suit modern-day realities as well as the new possibilities achieved by technological advancement. As the rapidly globalising world tries to eradicate poverty and improve living standards for all, the need for ensuring accountability in government – at local, provincial, and central levels – is an urgent priority.”

Perhaps, on the eve of Good Governance’s third anniversary, with transparency westering and promises slipping slowly over the horizon of island forgetfulness, even more urgent but increasingly less-prioritised?

A Fifth Estate

A decade before the Arab Spring, Arthur C. Clarke saw how technology could give social media the status of a Fifth Estate: “Around the world, people typically respond to bad governance by rejecting governments at elections, or occasionally by overthrowing corrupt or despotic regimes through mass agitation. But there is now a realisation that this is not sufficient. The solution must lie in not just participating in elections or revolutions, but in constantly engaging governments and keeping the pressure on them to govern well…”

Told you so, folks. Some of us heard him. With a prime example being manthri.lk – perhaps other visionaries will follow suit, and maybe other modes of keeping government accountable will be en vogue sooner than later in the new year.

Clarke continues to speak into our context from beyond the cosmos’ further shores: “This relatively new approach involves the careful gathering of data, its systematic analysis, and knowledge-based engagement and negotiation with elected and other public officials. Crucial to this process is accessing and using critical information – about budgets, expenditure, excesses, corruption, performance, etc.”

The incumbent administration’s accomplishments in this regard – at least in theory – have to be acknowledged, even lauded, especially in the context for the fear-driven and rumour-ridden approach of the previous regime. In practice, journalists and civil society have far to go in tapping into the potential of RTI among other salutary breakthroughs – lest the bureaucracy rest on laurels they never won.

Ever the global visionary, Clarke was a prophet with a savvy approach to even a people-oriented mode of government: “The new breed of ‘citizen voice’ is thus about using information in a way that leads to positive change. In the emerging knowledge-based society, citizens are increasingly using knowledge as a pivotal tool to improve governance, use common property resources and manage public funds collected through taxation or borrowed from international financial institutions. We in Sri Lanka need to be aware of these trends and adapt the relevant ones.”

Asked by LMD what his aspirations were for the land where he had lived more than half his adult life were, Clarke replied: “I have seen my adopted homeland advance in various ways, but sometimes it has taken wrong turns. If we have the humility to learn from past mistakes, the next half-century can be far better than the last. I can only hope that we learn these lessons quickly and apply them resolutely.”

Let us honour if we can this horizontal man – though we seem to value none but the vertical one.

Lasting

and tangible peace

Let Clarke have the penultimate word…

“Lasting and tangible peace will be crucial, and I say this advisedly. In my youth I lived through the worst and most devastating of all wars in history. That enables me to feel the anguish of this once-peaceful nation caught in a prolonged conflict from which it is still struggling to extricate itself. I am optimistic that the land which has shown tremendous resilience over the centuries, and practised a rare type of tolerance, could still return to normalcy – although we should ensure that the grounds for conflict are eliminated forever … Peace is not a condition granted or secured by agreements. It is a state of mind that we all need to cultivate.”

Indeed. Neither guaranteed by constitutional reform nor enforceable by government fiat, no matter how good… Perhaps the pity of the matter may still well be that our prophet is not honoured in his own country or his adoptive and obviously much-loved homeland.
(A senior journalist, the writer is a former Editor of LMD. In May 2005, he interviewed Sir Arthur C. Clarke in LMD in what was later known to be one of his last long-interviews.)

Jerusalem: Trump plays Harod for Christmas

A female Palestinian protester waves a Palestinian flag as she throws a stone during clashes with Israeli security forces near the Huwara checkpoint south of Nablus in the Israeli-occupied West Bank. AFP
2017-12-22
Pardon me for visiting you with another article on Jerusalem.  This is because I believe Jerusalem is more dangerous a flashpoint than the North Korean missile issue. 

More than 100 years ago, a series of events loaded with skullduggery and backstabbing laid the foundation for the violence that the Middle East has been witnessing ever since. Of great historic significance were British spy T.E. Lawrence’s (better known as Lawrence of Arabia) secret meetings with Arab tribal leaders and Britain’s pledge to offer the Arabs a kingdom extending from the Mediterranean coast to the borders of Iran – an area covering what is today Israel, Palestine, Jordan, Syria, Iraq and the large parts of the Arabian Gulf region, including what is today’s Saudi Arabia. In return, the Arabs were asked to rebel against their Ottoman caliph, a Turk and Muslim, during World War I.

The promise of a mega Arab kingdom was also made in a series of letters in 1915 between Britain’s Cairo envoy Henry McMahon and Makkah’s governor Sherif Hussein, a great-grandparent of the present day ruler of Jordan. 

But when the Arabs launched their revolt in June, 1916 and joined in their hordes the British army in what was condemned by Ottoman Islamic scholars as a breach of Quranic injunctions, the Brits had already stabbed the gullible Arabs in the back. A month before the Arab revolt, unknown to the dimwitted Arab tribal sheikhs, Britain and France signed the so-called Sykes-Picot agreement – named after British diplomat Mark Sykes and French diplomat Georges Picot. They threw Lawrence’s pledge and McMahon’s letters into the dustbin of history. In terms of this agreement, the two European powers carved up the Arab territory of the Ottoman regime which allied with Germany and faced defeat in World War 1.

In another knife-in-the-back move, in December 1917, Britain made the outrageous Balfour declaration that allowed European Jews to set up a state in Arab Palestine. A month after this declaration, General Edmund Allenby and his Egyptian Expeditionary Force entered Palestine to formally begin the British colonial rule.  But they encountered tough resistance from the Ottoman army in what is known as the Battle of Jerusalem.  When Jerusalem fell to Allenby’s forces, the then pro-Zionist British Prime Minister David Lloyd George called it “a Christmas present for the British people”.   Call it treachery, betrayal, rebellion, Arabism, or whatever derisive or dignified word, the Arabs are paying a bloody price – the Ottoman scholars would call it divine punishment -- for their support to the Brits. Instead of the ‘promised’ united Arabia including Palestine, the Arab world was divided into ‘dependent’ nation states incapable of standing on their own feet – incapable of defending themselves without the help of the Western powers.  

What an irony, 100 years after the British double crossing and 70 years after the Arabs lost East Jerusalem in the 1967 war with Israel, it took another Ottoman Sultan in Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan to come to the aid of the Arabs and Palestinians.  

To the Palestinians’ relief, the Organisation of Islamic Countries is headed by Turkey, instead of a pro-American Arab nation like Saudi Arabia or Egypt. Both Saudi Arabia and Egypt sent only third level representation to the emergency OIC summit in Istanbul last week.  Moreover, the Egyptian-sponsored United Nations Security Council resolution on Monday did not even mention the United States by name. Egypt may call it diplomacy, but some may see it as subjugation to the United States, the only sponsor of Israel’s oppression of Palestinian people in occupied territories.

For Saudi Arabia and its allies such as the United Arab Emirates, Egypt and Bahrain, the bigger worry than Jerusalem is Iran’s rise as a regional power. Instead of talking peace with Iran and working out a regional peace arrangement, Saudi Arabia and its allies have thrown their collective weight behind the enemies of the Palestinian cause – the United States and Israel, countries which seem to relish on the Arabs’ fear of Iran. 

In their sectarian-driven vengeful campaign against Iran, the Saudis would not even mind friendship with Israel. Israeli media reports point to regular contacts between Saudi Arabia and Israel.
It is also alleged that the United States’ President Donald Trump had obtained the nod of Saudi Arabia well ahead of his Jerusalem declaration and that there was a behind-the-scenes deal for Saudis to promote Trump’s new peace plan without East Jerusalem.  A December 3 New York Times report said the Saudis had summoned Palestinian Authority President Abbas to force him to accept Trump’s peace plan, where, instead of Jerusalem, the neighbouring town of Abu Dis that overlooks the Dome of the Rock mosque was offered as the Palestinian capital.  Independent Palestine would be a collection of small territories with no contiguity.

The Saudis have denied the New York Times reports.  On Wednesday, they reiterated their position asserting East Jerusalem as the capital of Palestine. Incidentally, the statement came after a meeting between King Salman and Abbas. It was Abbas’ second or third visit to the Saudi capital in two months and it came ahead of yesterday’s crucial United Nations General Assembly vote on a resolution supporting East Jerusalem as the capital of future Palestinian state.  Is Abbas, who has rejected the US as a peace broker, being browbeaten to accept the truncated peace plan of Trump or face a Saudi aid cut? 

For Palestinians, it is East Jerusalem or death. But Trump also has taken the Jerusalem issue personally and stepped up his offensive. 

The US, isolated on Monday at the UN Security Council where it used its veto power to kill yet another attempt aimed at resolving the Palestinian issue in a peaceful manner through the UN mechanism, took to political thuggery in a depraved bid to stop a UN General Assembly resolution that calls on the world body to denounce Trump’s recognition of Jerusalem as the capital of Israel. 

Ahead of the resolution which was expected to be passed with a huge majority last night, Nikki Haley, Trump’s hit woman at the UN, warned nations that she would report back to the US president with the names of those who support the resolution. 

Hailing her highhandedness and forgetting the Christmas spirit, Trump -- perhaps acting like a King Harod and his massacre of the innocents during Christmas -- threatened to cut funding to countries which opposed the US stand. “All these nations take our money and then vote against us at the Security Council and they vote against us potentially at the Assembly…  Well, we’re watching those votes,” he said at the White House.

Will the American people take notice of the voting pattern and ask why the United States is isolated? Why is the US hell bent on upholding injustice whereas the rest of the world cries for peace and justice?

It is not North Korea that befits the description ‘the most dangerous country’. Rather it is Trump’s United States.  If the eccentric president can ignore world opinion with regard to climate change and Jerusalem, what guarantees do we have that he would not use nuclear weapons?