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

Sunday, February 4, 2018

Handheld device sequences human genome


The MinION DNA sequencer
BBC
29 January 2018
Scientists have used a device that fits in the palm of the hand to sequence the human genome.
They say the feat, detailed in the journal Nature Biotechnology, opens up exciting possibilities for using genetics in routine medicine.
It is a far cry from the effort to sequence the first human genome which started in 1990.
The Human Genome Project took 13 years, laboratories around the world and hundreds of millions of dollars.
Since then there has been a revolution in cracking the code of life.
Prof Nicholas Loman, one of the researchers and from the University of Birmingham, UK, told the BBC: "We've gone from a situation where you can only do genome sequencing for a huge amount of money in well equipped labs to one where we can have genome sequencing literally in your pocket just like a mobile phone.
"That gives us a really exciting opportunity to start having genome sequencing as a routine tool, perhaps something people can do in their own home."
Sequencing technology has the potential to change the way we do medicine.
Analysing the mutated DNA of cancers could be used to pick the best treatment. Or inspecting the genetic code of bacteria could spot antibiotic resistance early.
Prof Loman used the handheld device to track the spread of Ebola during the outbreak in West Africa.
MinIONImage copyright
Many companies are racing to sequence DNA faster and cheaper.
The handheld device used in the study was developed by the company Oxford Nanopore.
The technology works by passing long strands of DNA through a tiny hole (the eponymous nanopore).
The building blocks of DNA are four bases known by their letters A, C, G and T. As each passes through the pore it creates a unique electrical signal that allows researchers to determine the DNA sequence.
The research group say the approach was around 99.5% accurate, but also allowed them to look at parts of human DNA that had been poorly studied.
The commonly used "short read" method of sequencing DNA involved breaking it up into short fragments, sequencing those and piecing it all back together like a jigsaw.
But the challenge is that some fragments of the genetic code look incredibly similar, so it becomes a near impossible puzzle made of identical pieces.
Prof Matthew Loose, from the University of Nottingham, UK, said the nanopore tech analysed longer strands of DNA so "we can read parts of the genome not seen before".
This includes the tips of chromosomes - called telomeres.
Prof Loose told the BBC: "Telomere length can be quite important in cancer and ageing, it's difficult in short reads because of the repeats, but we can see and start to map those things."
But while the cost of the sequencing is tumbling, there remains a big barrier - being able to rapidly read the genetic code is not the same as understanding what it says.
Dr Sobia Raza, the head of science at the PHG Foundation genomics think tank, told the BBC: "Our ability to sequence whole genomes quickly and cheaply continues to improve.
"But short-term patient benefits also depend on how well and how fast we can analyse and make sense of the genomic data, and that is still quite a challenge."
Follow James on Twitter.

Saturday, February 3, 2018

SRI LANKA: SETTING UP THE OMP; DELAYS, DILUTION AND DEAL-MAKING – FRIDAY FORUM


Sri Lanka Brief03/02/2018

The Office on Missing Persons (OMP) is one of the four mechanisms that the government promised in its ‘comprehensive approach to dealing with the past’. While the OMP is the only mechanism on which any formal progress has been made in the 28 months that have passed since the government announced its plan; even this has not yet been formally constituted and operationalised. Each step of the process thus far to establish the OMP has been marked by slow progress, a regrettable lack of transparency, poor engagement with victims and troubling political actions to undermine the independence of the institution.

A Deficit of Consultation

In mid-2016, a Bill to establish the OMP was drafted by a small government-appointed committee that was not publicly announced, working in parallel and disconnected from the ongoing ‘victim-centric’ process to consult the Sri Lankan public on the proposed reconciliation mechanisms that had been initiated by the government in January 2016. When civil society actors challenged the government on why it was preempting the Consultation Task Force (CTF) process and report, the government’s Secretariat for Coordinating the Reconciliation Mechanisms (SCRM) responded that the government’s rush to establish the OMP was to expedite support to families of the missing and disappeared. Over one and half years later, in the absence of even minimally constituting the OMP, these claims ring very hollow.

Responding to criticisms about the lack of consultation of victims, prior to finalizing the OMP Bill to be presented in Parliament, the SCRM arranged a brief consultation in Colombo for the drafting committee with a few family members of disappeared persons. The CTF was also requested to provide early submissions on the OMP to the drafting committee. In response, the CTF provided an oral submission, and also produced an Interim Report in August 2016 which compiled OMP-related submissions that it had received from the public.

Since most of the CTF’s public consultation work had not taken place at the time of writing, the CTF’s Interim Report was based solely on written submissions that it had received as of 17th July 2016 and a few consultation meetings conducted before 8th August 2016.

Questionable Passage of the OMP Act

A Bill to legally establish the OMP was submitted to Parliament and was passed on 11th August 2016 following unorthodox procedures after a disruptive debate. The brief, truncated debate, and passage of the Bill without a vote, seriously undermined the sense of the OMP as an institution established following a considered due democratic process.

Lack of Consideration of Victims Voices and Concerns

It was unclear whether the 8th August 2016 Interim Report of the CTF was reviewed by the government prior to the hurried passage of the Bill on the 11th August, or even if its content was considered later when subsequent amendments were made to the Act, before it was formally signed into law on 23rd August 2016. When the CTF’s Final Report was released on 3rd January 2017, it was apparent from Annex 15 of that document that the government had not incorporated a single one of the CTFs Interim Report recommendations reflecting the content of public submissions and victims views into either the draft Bill or the final OMP Act.

Given the government’s declared haste in enacting legislation to institute the OMP, it is ironic that it was only at the 3rd January 2017 launch of the CTF Final Report that the Foreign Minister announced that the Gazette on the OMP Act had finally been signed by President Maithripala Sirisena – giving effect to the law after several months of inaction.

The OMP Act was further amended on 22nd June 2017 by a unanimous vote in Parliament which removed a key paragraph that explicitly had allowed the OMP to enter into independent financing arrangements with external sources. Many victims groups and analysts saw this as seriously compromising the independence of the OMP because it would now be entirely dependent on the government for finances.

Laying the Foundation for the OMP on Uncertain Ground

The next step taken towards establishing and operationalising the OMP was on 19 July 2017, when President Sirisena signed a Gazette that assigned the OMP to the Ministry of National Integration & Reconciliation, of which he is also the relevant Minister. There remain questions about whether it is constitutional or not for him to hold this portfolio, in light of the provisions of the 19th Amendment which specifies which portfolios may be held concurrently by a sitting President. The fact that financial and institutional support for OMP would be channelled through a Ministry headed by President Sirisena was also viewed by many as establishing a means by which political influence may be exercised over the functioning of the OMP.

On 10th October 2017, the Constitutional Council of Sri Lanka (CC), which is assigned with the responsibility in the OMP Act for selecting its members, advertised publicly for candidates to submit their details for consideration for the seven available posts. The deadline for submission of details was 6th November 2017 and shortlisted candidates were asked to provide further details by 17th November. Recent concerns relate to possible irregularities in the ongoing selection process of the members of the OMP, which involves the Constitutional Council and President Sirisena. The integrity, experience and competence of OMP members will provide the foundation for the effectiveness and credibility of the institution. A flawed selection process will deeply damage the integrity and legitimacy of the OMP.

Allegations of Political Deal-Making and Subversion of Due Process

It was reported that on 8th December 2017 the Constitutional Council submitted to President Sirisena the names of its seven nominees to constitute the OMP. Following this submission, there were media reports of dissenting views of a couple of CC members about the selection of the OMP Chairperson. There were also media accounts of a concurrent public comment by the President about his difference of opinion with the Constitutional Council. There has been no evidence of the President appointing the OMP members since the 8th of December. The OMP Act provides that in the absence of the President’s appointment of members within 14 days of the Constitutional Council’s nominations, the nominees will be automatically appointed by operation of law.

However, in January 2018, there were some reports that the CC convened again to revisit their list of nominees and has resubmitted a list to President Sirisena. It has been alleged that this revised list includes at least two new nominees who were not on the original list, including a proposed Chairperson. It is also alleged that these two new nominees had not submitted applications following instructions in the Constitutional Council’s public advertisement before the 6th of December 2017 deadline, but were only included in the process in January 2018. The lack of transparency about the Constitutional Council’s selection process leaves it wide open to the allegation that due process has been subverted as a result of political bargaining, which may have profound consequences for the future of the OMP.

The Friday Forum calls on the members of the CC to be transparent about the manner in which members of OMP have been selected and nominated for appointment by the President, to prevent further erosion of the confidence in the OMP among the families of the disappeared and missing – a significant number of whom have in recent months expressed grave reservations about the government’s commitment to ensuring that the mechanism when eventually operationalised would genuinely address their needs.

CC is a Poor Check on Power of Executive President

The OMP process to date also highlights tensions between the stated policies of the coalition government and the will of Parliament (as evidenced by the passage of laws and the nominations of the CC) that are symptomatic of the fundamental weaknesses in current constitutional arrangements for governance in Sri Lanka. The latest controversy about the selection of the OMP members in particular raises serious concerns about the independence of the Constitutional Council and its ability, even within its limited mandate, to act as a check on arbitrary decisions made by an Executive President.

Citizens Rights and State Responsibility

We welcome the allocation of 1.4 billion rupees to the OMP in the Budget passed on 9th December 2017 as a concrete step towards its functioning. The delays and lack of transparency, undermining of due process and allegations of back-room deal-making in every step taken towards establishing the OMP and making this office operational, is very disturbing. It certainly does little for confidence that the OMP will be able to work effectively and independently without political interference. We call on President Sirisena and the government to allow the OMP to be constituted and functional without constraint or influence so that the fates of the tens of thousands of cases of disappeared and missing persons may be determined, and that appropriate relief may be finally granted to their families who have suffered too much and for too long.

We remind the government of its duty to citizens from all communities who have suffered profoundly due to the war and political violence, as well as to future generations of Sri Lankans, to constructively and honestly address the need for truth, justice and reparations — as an integral part of ensuring non-recurrence of conflict. This is the state’s obligation to the people of Sri Lanka, and must not be viewed as a response to external pressures. The failure to fulfil this responsibility may have grave consequences for citizens.

Mr. Ananda Galappatti, 
Prof. Savitri Goonesekere

On behalf of the Friday Forum:
Mr. Pulasthi Hewamanna, Prof. Arjuna Aluwihare, Mr. S.C.C. Elankovan, Prof. Camena Guneratne, Ms. Shanthi Dias, Dr. A.C.Visvalingam, Mr. Chandra Jayaratne, Mr. Prashan de Visser, Mr. Faiz Ur-Rahman, Prof. Gameela Samarasinghe, Mr. Dhammapala Wijayanandana, Mr. Priyantha Gamage and Bishop Duleep de Chickera 
The Friday Forum is an informal group of concerned citizens pledged to uphold norms of democracy, good governance, rule of law, human rights, media freedom and tolerance in our pluralist society.

Sri Lanka: Mass graves everywhere, but where are the killers? — Part 01


Mass graves in Sri Lanka, no doubt, one of the most controversial issues. In this exclusive series the writer narrated by arguing that the lack of interest on the part of government and State to learn from past mistakes points to the absence of political will and commitment to establishing the truth for the sake of national unity and reconciliation. The writer is an editorial adviser of Sri Lanka Guardian ~ Edts 

by Lionel Bopage  -                                                                                        
Introduction

( February 4, 2018, Melbourne, Sri Lanka Guardian) Sri Lanka’s armed conflicts have touched the whole Island, affecting all its ethnicities and faiths. By 2013, Sri Lanka recorded the second highest number of unresolved disappearances in the world.[1] Despite the rhetoric of successive regimes, the people had disappeared not because they had gone abroad or been displaced, rather they had been killed and or executed in order to generate fear and anguish among the population. Their bodies are said to be piled up and buried in mass graves somewhere in the island. Several such mass graves have been discovered in recent years that warrant genuine investigations.

Serious human rights abuses and crimes against humanity have occurred in Sri Lanka in the seventies and eighties during the uprisings by the Sinhala youth in the South. Many thousands of Tamils also disappeared during the 30-year war between the LTTE and the state, during the IPKF occupation in the late eighties and during the push to retake the Jaffna peninsula in the nineties, many thousands of Tamils also disappeared. In their attempt to establish a Tamil homeland, the LTTE evicted Muslims from the North and massacred many hundreds of Muslims in the east. A UN investigation in 2015 documented serious human rights abuses allegedly committed by the security forces and the LTTE.[2]
Credible investigations into all mass graves dotted across the country are necessary, if reconciliation based on social justice is to be achieved for all Sri Lankans. The urgency is underlined by the fact that the Presidential Commission of Inquiry on Missing Persons had received over 24,000 complaints.[3] Except for the well-known mass grave of school children in Sooriyakanda, Embilipitiya in the South, several attempts to investigate mass graves found accidentally have exposed macro and micro level systemic flaws of serious concern in the judicial, constitutional and political architecture of the country. The killers utilized such flaws to avoid or escape justice.

In 2009, Amnesty International (AI) came to certain conclusions, which remain the same even today. AI found that new violations of human rights persist and the political will to stop or prevent such violations – by investigating them properly, prosecuting suspected perpetrators of such criminal offences in proceedings that meet international standards of fairness, and ensuring reparations for the victims according to Sri Lanka’s obligations under international human rights and humanitarian laws – is almost non-existent. They cited, for example, the case of the brutal killing of the 17 Action Contre la Faim (ACF) workers in Muttur in August 2006 as “another case of a long list of cases where the Sri Lankan State has been manipulating evidence to exculpate the security forces personnel from blame.”[4] They also cite in support of their conclusions, earlier cases such as the Bindunuwewa Massacre (2000), Chemmani (1998), and the 20-odd bodies of abducted Tamils found in Bolgoda Lake (1995).[5]

Even the “Good Governance” regime displays the same reluctance to investigate, marking time to avoid international scrutiny, and do everything possible to dissuade the international pressure. This situation informs us of the need for “international technical assistance in the forensic field, particularly forensic anthropology and archaeology”[6], as the UNHRC has emphasized. The current regime, despite its commitment in 2015 to implement the recommendations of the UNHRC resolution and establish a broad transitional justice framework, has so far only made slim progress.[7]
In spite of the slow progress, the current regime to its credit has established and incorporated into law the Right to Information Act and the Office on Missing Persons Act. Sri Lanka needs to find local and/or foreign professionals skilled in DNA testing, forensic anthropology and archaeology for them to be able to carry out this mammoth task of identifying new graves. Sri Lanka also needs to provide professional judges and adequate resources to properly oversee the consequent investigations.
This paper will discuss in general the context and nature of mass atrocities committed, first under colonialism and then under post-independent regimes, with special focus on mass graves that have already been found and investigated, or avoided from being investigated. Such a discussion, it is hoped, would assist in achieving justice for the thousands of missing persons and their families, both in the South and the North East[8].

[1] Second only to post-war Iraq: See U.N. Human Rights Council 28 January 2013, Report of the Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances, Doc No. A/HRC/22/45, 17-18.

[2] In 2015, the U.N. OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka (OISL) concluded that government security forces and associated paramilitary groups committed unlawful killings, enforced disappearances, arbitrary detentions, sexual violence, and torture on a systematic and widespread scale. See Report of the OHCHR Investigation on Sri Lanka (OISL), U.N. Doc. No. A_HRC_30_CRP_2 (Sept. 16, 2015) ^ 1116, 1117, 1119, 1120-1123,1127, 1128, 1129-1130, 1131-1135, 1172-1174. The OISL also concluded that the LTTE was involved in unlawful killings of civilians, abductions and forced recruitment, child conscription, and interference with civilians’ freedom of movement. Id. ^ 1118, 1136, 1139, 1140, 1141, 1161.
[3] See Presidential Commission of Inquiry on Missing Persons, at: http://www.pcicmp.lk/

[4] Amnesty International June 2009, Twenty Years of Make-Believe: Sri Lanka’s Commissions of Inquiry, Index ASA 37/005/2009, at:http://www.observatori.org/paises/pais_75/documentos/srilanka.pdf

[5] Ibid, 60

[6] UNHC for Human Rights 16 September 2015, Report on Promoting Reconciliation, Accountability and Human Rights in Sri Lanka, U.N. Doc. No. A/HRC/30/61, 72-73

[7] UNHR: Office of the High Commissioner 15 September 2017, Darker and more dangerous: High Commissioner updates the Human Rights Council on human rights issues in 40 countries, at: http://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/Media.aspx?IsMediaPage=true

[8] Amnesty International 3 April 2017, Sri Lanka – Victims of disappearance cannot wait any longer for justice, at:https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/news/2017/04/sri-lanka-victims-of-disappearance-cannot-wait-any-longer-for-justice/; and Groundviews 30 August 2017, “We vehemently refuse to be deceived again”: Protests by families of disappeared, continuing abductions and empty promises, and at:http://groundviews.org/2017/08/30/we-vehemently-refuse-to-be-deceived-again-protests-by-families-of-disappeared-continuing-abductions-and-empty-promises/  

To Be Continued 

Lionel Bopage is a passionate and independent activist, who has advocated and struggled for social justice, a fair-go and equity of opportunity for the oppressed in the world, where absolute uniformism, consumerism and maximisation of profit have become the predominant social values of humanity. Lionel was formerly a General Secretary of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP – Peoples’ Liberation Front) in Sri Lanka, and he now lives in exile in Australia.


Bond Saga Aftermath Of The Presidential Commission Report


By Rusiripala Tennakoon –February 3, 2018


imageOngoing public debate after the publication of the Presidential Commission Report centers around several conjectures and concerns regarding the future follow up steps. There are serious attempts to shelve the process recommended by the CoI by interested parties. However the Presidential directives appear to be relevant and effective for the implementation of the recommendations of the Commission and other corrective measures.

Proposed Parliamentary Debate 

It is interesting to note why so much of importance is given to a debate rather than insisting on the speedy implementation of the findings and recommendations. When the second COPE report was tabled in parliament by its Chairman Sunil Handunneththi, the country witnessed what the parliament did. After protracted exchanges of insinuations, innuendos and allegations against each other it became evident that it was going to be the end of the chapter. Those who were responsible to initiate meaningful action have already taken calculated steps to send the issue to hibernation. Before the Parliamentary debate the second COPE report had been sent to the Attorney General by the Prime Minister. It was reported that the AG’s department had not concluded the decision whether action on the Bond issue should be taken as a civil matter or a criminal matter. It is in this context that the President decided to appoint a Presidential Commission of Inquiry. The gazette notification was issued on 27th Jan 2017, a few days after the Parliament debate appointing the CoI. The COI, after a lengthy inquiry assisted by the AG’s department has issued its report based on the evidence placed before them giving their conclusions, and determinations along with observations.

 
Recommendations And Observations 

Chapter 33 of the report contains the recommendations made by the CoI. It is pointed out that relevant Law such as the Monetary Law, Local Treasury Bills Ordinance and Registered Stock and Securities Ordinance need to be replaced in consultation with the CBSL.

Appointment Of The Governor 

CoI has recommended that due consideration should be given to develop criteria and specified procedures to govern the selection of the person to be appointed as the Governor of the CBSL. The recommendation goes to explain the importance of the position of the Governor and asserted this view stating, it is hardly necessary to emphasize that, Governor of the CBSL is a key official who hold enormous responsibilities and that, he must be a person of highest integrity and ability and also have the required knowledge and experience to effectively perform his duties in the best interest of the Nation and its people. They have suggested that it is best for such a selection be made at a level such as the Constitutional council. CoI is of the opinion that even the appointment of the members to the Monetary Board should be done in this manner. Arjuna Mahendran was appointed the Governor of the CBSL on 23rd January 2015. The Commission report states that as this is before the period of the mandate commenced they have no jurisdiction to determine the merits or demerits of the appointment. But they have stated the fact that they cannot be insensible to the concerns expressed in the public domain with regard to the propriety of Mahendran’s appointment following his alleged interventions in the Treasury Bond Auction held on 27th February 2015 and his relationship with Arjun Aloysius of Perpetual Treasuries Ltd.which obtained the lion’s share of the bids accepted at that auction.

Among the concerns expressed about this matter in the public domain was whether it was unlawful or unsuitable to appoint him as he was a non-citizen. It was the PM who had telephoned him and invited him to serve as the Governor of the CBSL. It was a requirement for the appointment to be recommended by the Finance Minister but as the CBSL was then placed under the Minister of National Policies and Economic affairs, Mr.Ranil Wickremesinghe, he said in evidence that the Finance Minister made the recommendation with his concurrence. Regarding this the CoI has opined that the issue was not “a question of law” but it was a ‘value judgement’ which had to be made by those who considered the wisdom of appointing Mahendran, who was not a citizen of SL, as the Governor of the CBSL.
 
The wisdom of bringing the CBSL under the Minister of National Policies and Economic affairs too was a matter focused on by the CoI. While observing that the CBSL was under the Finance Ministry before 2015, CoI has pointed out that it is a decision taken by the executive which is entirely outside the scope of their Mandate.

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A litmus-test and two referenda

Voters must give all three - Mahinda, Maithri and Ranil - bloody noses


article_imagei
Parliamentarians confer on seat-allocation rules to better serve the people
(https://thairuhyena.deviantart.com/art/Pack-vs-Clan-120086697)

by Kumar David- 

Local government (LG) elections should focus on neighbourhood issues and choose robust local candidates. But in over politicised Sri Lanka a national political tsunami has taken over; I have no choice but to follow. To be honest it’s turning out to be a fascinating tournament. The three gladiators in do-or-die battle are Sirisena, Mahinda and Ranil. MR seems hell bent on turning the LG polls into a litmus-test on himself, his fame, and his urge to make a magical comeback. Poroppaya is an enigma; if it fails to come on top in the Sinhala-Budddhist heartland and score big in the South and Ratnapura, Kalutara, Gampaha and Kurunegala districts, the come-back kid is doomed. MR must be amazingly confident of a sweeping victory outside Colombo, Upcountry and Western Seaboard to take this all or nothing risk. His portrait is on every poroppaya billboard, he beams like a benevolent deity behind every candidate’s mugshot, and he shoots for the moon from every platform.

For the yahapalana duo it’s a referendum; or rather two referenda as the two are put to test against different charge sheets. The charge against Ranil is that on his watch the economy buckled and that he is tarnished by the Arjuna Mahendran episode, alias bond scam. It is also said that he surrounds himself with clueless elitist advisors. Friend and foe alike say he has blundered; true or false, that impression has gotten around. When yahapalana boobs, Ranil gets the blame; the one triumph on its scorecard – restoration of democracy – Maithri scoops up the lion’s share of the kudos.

Both have been eviscerated, skinned alive, in the court of public opinion for shielding crooks, corrupt politicos and murders of the old regime and the Rajapaksa family. Muslims and middle-classes are livid at the cover-up of Thajudeen’s murder. Wikipedia [wikipedia.org/wiki/Wasim_Thajudeen] read worldwide is distressing. The complicity of apex leaders in coverups is taken as given even by lay UNPers and SLFPers. The Rabapaksas were slick at sleaze, this lot is sloppy. Furthermore, they were reputed to be resolute doers, the yahapalana leaders are written-off as inept underachievers.

It is said that folks outside cities are less bothered about the whitewash of criminals. The Rajapaksas don’t want the whitewash mentioned for obvious reasons; the UNP and Sirisena try to pass the buck to each other. Neither wants attention drawn to their leader’s impotence. What then are the issues which will influence rural and suburban votes?


a) Mahinda Rajapaksa’s image as a redoubtable champion of the race still has an effect. Lightly concealed racial animosity is present all the time in Sri Lanka; shameful but true.

b) MR and JO are enjoying a field day blasting scams and blunders attributed to yahapalana.

c) Ranil is making belated claims that the economy is picking up; can he sell it? Positive data is very recent (GDP growth 5% and exports up by 11% in 2017, likely primary budget surplus in 2018; but debt keeps climbing).

d) Sirisena claims to have awoken to the cancer of corruption and says he is sharpening his much-rusted scalpel to excise the malignancy. In desperation he gambles this way and that.

My guess of which stories are selling is: Story (a) is selling to people already prone to that way of thinking; indirectly it affects people fed up with yahapalana’s cover-up of pre-2015 criminals. My grassroots contacts reckon a swing to MR is visible for reason (b). There is a trend to abstain among disillusioned UNP voters. Story (c) per se is not selling yet, but see my next point, it’s significant. People find (d) funny; when did this joker wake up? Aren’t many of his SLFP Ministers corrupt? The latest throw of the dice is that 96 rejuvenated, reunited, reborn SLFPers will rally round the President and form a government. Seriously, this guy is hallucinating!

I have a different perspective on how the economy is likely to influence the UNP vote. The standard gaatha that all chant is: "The cost of living is skyrocketing"; "The economy is down in the dumps". This obligatory political catechism is not 100% accurate. There is some money in people’s pockets and in circulation, even the lower-middle and working classes. Be observant and you will see that except for the poorest, there is spending. Data from banks and card companies bear this out.

Interest rates are down, signifying liquidity in the market and confidence in exchange rate stability. Fly-by-night interest rates for the aged are down from 15% to 12%. The analytical faculties and pocket-books of retirees are hard-wired together! My wallet says that prices did not rise by a large amount last year. Inflation stats confirm that the point-to-point 12-month inflation rate has declined slightly. Employment is stable; the common complaint is shortage of labour, not lack of jobs – 500,000 unfillable vacancies in 2017 the Statistics Department reckons. The simple voter does not follow statistics, but he does notice the size of the crumbs that drop on to his platter.

For these reasons my sneaky hunch is that voters won’t punish the UNP as badly as expected on cost of living concerns. The UNP is more likely to suffer setbacks on item (b). Rajapaksa is blasting away at the bond scam, incompetence, bungling and infighting, not economic issues.

Next consider if the UNP suffers a big defeat. Will Ranil have to go as PM and UNP leader even if the yapahalanaya government continues? LG polls change nothing in Parliament, but realpolitik is another matter. If, for speculations sake, Ranil goes, who will take over? Three names will be in the hat – Karu, Sajith and Mangala. Mangala is modern and forward thinking and it will be in the interests of the UNP, as well as others, if the country’s main bourgeois party chooses a bold and progressive liberal as its leader.

It is taken for granted that Maithri’s SLFP, bulath kolaya and atha together, will be third; not a calamity if it holds Anuradhapura and Polonnaruwa Districts and poroppaya can’t push it to deposit-forfeiting third elsewhere. Come mid-February what Prez will do cannot be predicted; another enigma that depends on the precise fallout. Though nothing changes in Parliament the LG test foretells the future. Maithri cannot quickly form a government with Mahinda’s bunch; it is not easy to entice 20+ UNPers, uncouth unconscionable creeps though they be, into a JO-Maithri line up. Even if LG results are bad for the UNP and SLFP, I don’t expect a big change; yahapalana will chug on till 2020.

I will conclude with a wish list. I hope voters give the three main parties and their leaders bloody noses. I wish the Sinhalese grow up and reject the chauvinism of JO and Mahinda. The bogus anti-corruption crusader, Sirisena, recently awoken from deep sleep deserves a kick in his NCP butt. Thirdly, I wish an electorate, infuriated with UNP bungling will open the door for the ULF, JVP and CP to win seats. It will, of course, be exhilarating if Bahu is elected in Colombo.

Compensatory Proportional Representation (CPR): An example

This table is hypothetical. It illustrates, to the best of my understanding, the CPR system to be used for the first time on 10 February. (If I have got anything wrong, shame on the Authorities for not publicising a full and better explanation). I use a big city of 100 seats; 60% First Past the Post (FPP) and 40% Proportional Representation (PR).

The first two data-columns hypothesise electoral outcomes. Now please follow along the first row. Assume Jumbo wins 49 FPP seats and obtains 60% of the total votes. A Non-CPR system will allocate Jumbo 60% of the 40 PR seats (that is 24). It would then have 73 (49+24) in the Council. You can work out the other rows similarly.

CPR calculation is simpler, you start the other way around; the total seats allocated to a party is in direct proportion to its total poll. Hence the second and fifth number-columns are the same (except rounding). FPP seats are, of course, guaranteed to each winner. After that Jumbo, for example, is allocated 60% of the total of 100 seats; that is 60 seats and therefore gets only 11 PR seats.

Observe the substantial difference between the fourth and fifth number-columns - Total seats. The beneficiaries under CPR are list-candidates of parties that don’t get many FPP seats but rustle up a decent total poll (Blossom, Beetle and one for Bell). Such seats are filled strictly in the order in which they were declared on the party list. Sometimes due to rounding, in either system, the total in the Council may exceed the nominal number (100 in this example). This can be more pronounced in CPR. The excess is approved and called an "overhang".

Former Mt. Lavinia Crimes OIC detained over Lasantha’s murder

The CID had taken into custody the former Crimes OIC of the Mount Lavinia Police on a 48 hour detention order over the killing of Sunday Leader Editor Lasantha Wickrematunge which took place nine years ago.
CID sources told the Daily News that the then Crimes OIC of the Mt. Lavinia Police, Sub Inspector Tissa Sugathapala was taken into custody on Wednesday by the CID and had obtained a court order to detain him for 48 hours for questioning.
According to CID sources, many details that had hitherto not been revealed, had come to light during the interrogation of Sugathapala.
He is accused of concealing and destroying information pertaining to the killing of Lasantha Wickrematunge.
The CID said he had failed to respond to orders of the CID to record a statement with regard to Wickrematunge’s killing at Attidiya on January 8, 2009.
The CID official said Sugathapala was scheduled to be arrested and remanded yesterday.
It is also learnt that the CID intends to arrest a former IG, DIG, SP and several others on charges of trying to sweep under the carpet all evidence with regard to Lasantha’s killing and trying to pin it on the LTTE.
Further, the CID is also expected to obtain a statement from a former high ranking government official who is believed to have been the main advisor in this crime.
Information had also been revealed that Lasantha’s diary which had been found in his car at the time of his assassination, containing all his details, his mobile phone and several other items had been given by SI Sugathapala to an SP who had then given it to the DIG and then to the IG and eventually to the high ranking government official.
This information had also come to light during the interrogation of SI Sugathapala. 

Sri Lanka: Caged Independence

The victory of the Sri Lankan army over the ferocious Tamil Tigers in 2009, bringing an end to the civil war of over 26 years was a catharsis moment for the Sinhala majority: the invocation of Duthugemmenu’s victory and, perhaps, the reclaiming of the desired land.

by Thamil Ananthavinayagan- 

Introduction

( February 4, 2018, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) The cherished Maya Angelou wrote once in her famous poem ‘Caged Bird’:
[T]he caged bird sings
with a fearful trill
of things unknown
but longed for still
and his tune is heard
on the distant hill
for the caged bird  
sings of freedom.
Freedom. That is what one associates with independence. Freedom from alien subjugation, domination and exploitation. Christian List and Laura Valentini write in a recent paper that freedom must be understood as ‘[i]ndependence. Like republican freedom, it demands the robust absence of relevant constraints on action. Unlike republican, and like liberal freedom, it is not moralized’.
My beloved father remembered very well that he, born in 1943, had to observe the flag ceremony in his early childhood when he went to nursery. He had to sing ‘God Bless the King’ and salute the Union Jack. Sri Lankans sang the British national anthem even after ‘independence’, until it was replaced by a Sinhala text in the 1950s. My father, however, never understood the concept of paying respect to a foreign flag and an old white man who warmed the throne in a distant palace – only then being replaced by a flag that shows a lion holding the sword towards the green and orange stripes (which represent the Tamil and Muslim) minorities and a Sinhala national anthem. Early moments in his childhood and youth determined his fate to become Vannai Ananthan.
I, as his son, gaze at this island now. As Sri Lanka celebrates its 70th Independence Day today, on the 4th of February 2018, I wonder: did the country and its people, however, really attain independence on that day and ever after? Did all the people living in Sri Lanka become truly independent, empowered and sovereign citizens? I will explore and explain here that Sri Lanka gained formalised independence in 1948, only to be the eventual springboard for the elaboration of a Sinhala nation state. The Soulbury Constitution, the country’s first post-colonial constitution with poor human rights protection, was a document drafted by the British to suit the country’s elite.  Dr. Harshan Kumarasingham ascertains:
[I]n contrast to the fissiparous tensions that characterised the colonial experience in India, the small island of Sri Lanka seemed to gently and courteously accomplish its own independence with the minimum of fuss on 4 February 1948. (…) In fact many ‘dignified’ elements of British culture remained. ‘God Save the King’ was retained as the National Anthem, the Union Jack flew next to the Lion flag on public buildings, Imperial Honours were still bestowed, Sri Lankan debutantes were still presented at Buckingham Palace – and there were also key personnel who stayed in their posts and thus ensured a smooth and reassuring transition.

The 4th of February is the enabling moment of Sinhala majoritaranism

D.B.S. Jeyaraj writes that ‘[T]he modern Ceylonese nation itself was a colonial construct. It was the British who integrated different territories under their control into a single entity and set up a unified administration for the country.’ This is indeed true. The Kandyan Convention 1815 laid the groundwork for the country as we know it today. The 4th of February 1948 and the transition of power to the privileged few, however, was an early chapter in the Sinhala nation state creation. D.S. Senanayake became the chosen one to lead the country. He, I argue, is unfairly attributed by Sir Charles Jeffries to be the incomparable statesman and navigator. He wrote in his book ‘Ceylon – the Path to Independence’ that it was the trust the British put in Senanayake to craft a common nation, home to all. This was a naïve, if not a reckless assumption. It was the same the D.S. Senanayake who oversaw the Gal Oya Scheme that initiated the colonization of Tamil lands and it was the same D.S. Senayake who was part of the country’s first inter-ethnic riots between the Sinhala and Muslims in 1915. Dr. Harshan Kumarasingham explains further that:
[S]ri Lanka’s elite operated British institutions in an anachronistic eighteenth-century manner such as in having a patronage based Cabinet dominated by its prime ministerial leader/patron rather than by collegial attitudes or values. The weakness of party institutionalisation and the ambiguity in the constitutional arrangements laid the foundations for future political conflict and marginalisation of segments of society.
However, I argue that the 4th of February was only the springboard to build a Sinhala-Buddhist ethnocratic nation state order. Sri Lanka’s process of becoming a Sinhala nation state was a process in the making, starting with the Citzenship Act 1948, rendering Indian Tamils stateless. The previous constitutions of the country, in particular the Colebrooke-Cameron Commission and the Donoughmore Constitution (despite all their progressive facets) formalised identities and entrenched suspicion among communal lines. Sinhala-Buddhism ideology was exploited for the furtherance and entrenchment of political power. As Kumari Jayawardena asserts:
[T]he differing ethnic and religious groups, composed of persons who had made their pile and were in search of ‘identity’ emerged to assert their superiority, exclusiveness and a right to a place in the sun. The most assertive was the majority Sinhala community, which developed a consciousness of beings ‘sons of the soil’, positioning itself against minorities (regarded as ‘aliens’) and more importantly, making claims to represent the ‘nation,’ while critically commenting on foreign rule.
The election victory of SWRD Bandaranaike on the 10th of April 1956, who had readily understood and exploited the growing Sinhala-Buddhist revivalism in the country, provided the groundwork for the adoption of the First Republican Constitution in 1972 (and later the Second Republican Constitution in 1978). To this end, the 10th of April 1956 was the harbinger of the 22nd of May 1972, the true independence of Sinhala nation state with its first autochthonous prime document that crowned the Sinhala-Buddhist as -self-perceived- heirs and sons-of soil of Sri Lanka. Meanwhile it was the day of continued marginalization of the minority communities, being doomed to be second-class citizens.

Colonial domination was replaced by majoritarian hegemony

The minorities in the country, never attained true freedom – their subjugation to an external ruler was only replaced by an internal ruler who validated his legitimacy by an ancient myth, the Mahavamsa. The election victory in 1956 that I had referred to in the previous section resumed a train events, which had started with the Citizenship Act: the ‘Pro Sinhala Act’, the 1956 inter-ethnic riots, the 1958 inter-ethnic riots. The list can be continued to elucidate the growing display of Michel Foucault’s ‘biopower’: he held the view that -in biopolitics- the social body must ensure the maintenance of its survival and for this reason was entitled to kill others and wars were carried out to ensure the existence of the social body as such.
Sinhala-Buddhism as a state ideology is a continuous force that underpins rule – the First and Second Republican Constitutions were, as the late Dr. Neelan Thiruchelvam formulated, ‘[instrumental] constitutions’, entrenching a majoritarian hegemony. Both constitutions stipulated and gave validity to the overarching narrative of the Sinhala-Buddhists, with the minorities being the inferior citizens in a virtual dominance of the majority. The events from Black July 1983 are a constant reminder of our darkest past. Sriskanda Rajah accurately sums up:
[T]o sum up, the use of the terror of ‘lawlessness’ in July 1983 paved the way for the state to not only assert the Mahavamsa based all-island sovereignty claim of the Sinhala Buddhist people and the power of death that they had over the Tamils, but also produced three effects of battle: the elimination of a section of the ‘enemy’ race; destruction and possession of parts of their properties; and the expulsion of a section of them from the Sinhala areas, and to an extent from the island’s shores.
The victory of the Sri Lankan army over the ferocious Tamil Tigers in 2009, bringing an end to the civil war of over 26 years was a catharsis moment for the Sinhala majority: the invocation of Duthugemmenu’s victory and, perhaps, the reclaiming of the desired land. Perhaps, the 18th of May 2009 was the renewal of the Sinhala independence of the 22nd of May 1972.  Telling enough are the scenes of triumphant celebrations in Colombo in the aftermath of the victory. It was not only the celebration of war victory, it was the renaissance of the Sinhala-Buddhist nation state.

A home for many, but one nation to none

The current Sri Lankan President, Mr. Maithripala Sirisena is correct in one of his early presidential speeches that post-colonial constitutions have never unified the different ethnic communities. The Sri Lanka state is a violent Leviathan, using the powers vested in him to spread fear. In fear, there is no freedom. The existing emergency regulations permeate a continuing status quo, where suspicion towards any non-Sinhala-Buddhist is paramount (one may also think of the continued military presence in the public). Fear deprives us of freedom. If one visits the northern and eastern part of the country, the ethnic dominance through war memorials celebrates military victory in 2009 against the Tamil Tigers. This memorialising manner offers a particular perspective on the civil war. As Thyagi Ruwanpathirana writes for paper of the Centre for Policy Alternatives:
[A]side from serving as spaces for photo opportunities for war tourists, they (i.e. the government) have had limited success beyond sidelining, isolating, discriminating, victimising, creating unease and further marginalizing stakeholders in the communities in which they are located (and others geographically far removed), where the mourning of their own loved ones has been faced with sustained military obstruction. The enduring divisiveness and tensions between ethnic communities have been cemented through such monuments and they have the capacity to fuel further cycles of hate and revenge.

Conclusion

Sri Lanka is a divided country. During my youth I met and worked with Sri Lankan youth from all communities to engage in multicultural understanding of all communities who were from the island. I will, however, never forget an incident I came across in my fruitless endeavour: I was asked if I speak “Sri Lankan” by a Sinhala youth. I was confused and soon understood what this person’s thinking was; Sinhala equals being Sri Lankan. It was a pattern that I have seen and heard very often in Sri Lanka and abroad. Sri Lanka and its people never attained real freedom. The departure of the British was only replaced by the elitist domination of a Sinhala power group, whose ‘Machtgier’, i.e. thirst for power was hijacked by a Sinhala-Buddhist nationalism. Sri Lanka, in its current state, evolved from an aristocratic democracy to a militarised ethnocracy, leaving limited space for minority rights to prosper, let alone integrating all communities to be part of one nation.
There is the first stanza of a beautiful Irish song by Michael McConnell, which my father taught me in early childhood. It captures the thirst for genuine freedom:
[W]hen apples still grow in September when blossoms still bloom on each tree
When leaves are still green in November it’s then that our land will be free
wander her hills and her valleys and still through my sorrow I see
A land that has never known freedom, only her rivers run free
Sri Lanka’s may have gained today, 70 years ago, its first step towards its own independence after more than two hundred years of British rule. But the ‘independence’ never translated into true freedom for all people who consider the island as their home. Instead, the caged birds sing of freedom, gazing at the rivers that run free.
(Dr. Thamil Venthan Ananthavinayagan, LL.M.  (Maastricht University) is a Lecturer in International Law at Griffith College)