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, May 10, 2018

The Danger of Leadership Cults

One of the most important aspects of organizing is grass-roots educational programs that teach people, by engaging them in dialogue, about the structures of corporate power and the nature of oppression. One cannot fight what one does not understand.

by Chris Hedges- 
( May 8, 2018, Boston, Sri Lanka Guardian)  No leader, no matter how talented and visionary, effectively defies power without a disciplined organizational foundation. The civil rights movement was no more embodied in Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. than the socialist movement was embodied in Eugene V. Debs. As the civil rights leader Ella Baker understood, the civil rights movement made King; King did not make the civil rights movement. We must focus on building new, radical movements that do not depend on foundation grants, a media platform or the Democratic Party or revolve around the cult of leadership. Otherwise, we will remain powerless. No leader, no matter how charismatic or courageous, will save us. We must save ourselves.
“You didn’t see me on television, you didn’t see news stories about me,” said Baker, who died in 1986. “The kind of role that I tried to play was to pick up pieces or put together pieces out of which I hoped organization might come. My theory is, strong people don’t need strong leaders.”
All of our radical and populist organizations, including unions and the press, are decimated or destroyed. If we are to successfully pit power against power we must reject the cult of the self, the deadly I-consciousness that seduces many, including those on the left, to construct little monuments to themselves. We must understand that it is not about us. It is about our neighbor. We must not be crippled by despair. Our job is to name and confront evil. All great crusades for justice outlast us. We are measured not by what we achieve but by how passionately and honestly we fight. Only then do we have a chance to thwart corporate power and protect a rapidly degrading ecosystem.
What does this mean?
It means receding into the landscape to build community organizations and relationships that for months, maybe years, will be unseen by mass culture. It means beginning where people are. It means listening. It means establishing credentials as a member of a community willing to make personal sacrifices for the well-being of others. It means being unassuming, humble and often unnamed and unrecognized. It means, as Cornel West said, not becoming “ontologically addicted to the camera.” It means, West went on, rejecting the “obsession with self as some kind of grand messianic gift to the world.”
One of the most important aspects of organizing is grass-roots educational programs that teach people, by engaging them in dialogue, about the structures of corporate power and the nature of oppression. One cannot fight what one does not understand. Effective political change, as Baker knew, is not primarily politically motivated. It is grounded in human solidarity, mutual trust and consciousness. As Harriet Tubman said: “I rescued many slaves, but I could have saved a thousand more if the slaves knew they were slaves.” The corporate state’s assault on education, and on journalism, is part of a concerted effort to keep us from examining corporate power and the ideologies, such as globalization and neoliberalism, that promote it. We are entranced by the tawdry, the salacious and the trivial.
The building of consciousness and mass organizations will not be quick. But these mass movements cannot become public until they are strong enough to carry out sustained actions, including civil disobedience and campaigns of noncooperation. The response by the state will be vicious. Without a dedicated and organized base we will not succeed.
Bob Moses was the director of the Mississippi Project of the SNCC (Student Non-Violent Coordinating Committee) in the early 1960s when that group organized to register black voters. Most blacks had been effectively barred from voting in Mississippi through poll taxes, literacy tests, residency requirements and other barriers. Moses, like many organizers, was beaten and arrested. Blacks who attempted to register to vote were threatened, harassed, fired from their jobs, physically attacked and even murdered.
“In essence, it was low-grade guerrilla warfare,” Moses said recently at an event at Princeton University, in New Jersey. “In guerrilla warfare, you have a community you can disappear into and emerge from. That’s what we had. We had a group of local activists who had been a part of the NAACP local organizations and who had a different sense after World War II. They were our base. I can go any place, any time of the night, knock on a door. Somebody was going to open it up, give me a bed to sleep in, feed me. They were going to watch my back.”
“We had a guerrilla community that we could disappear into and then emerge to take some people down to the battleground, the courthouse in some local town with people trying to register to vote,” he said. “At that point, you were exposed and possibly open to some danger. The danger came in different ways. There were the highway patrols, which the state organized. Then there were the local sheriffs. Then there’s the Klan citizens. Different levels of danger. The challenge is to understand that you are not always in danger. Those who couldn’t figure that out didn’t last. They didn’t join.”
“In guerrilla warfare, you have to have an end,” he said. “You learn that from people in the guerrilla base who had been fighting and figuring out how to survive and thrive in a guerrilla struggle. The only way to learn that is to immerse yourself. There’s no training. In Mississippi, most of the people who did that were young, 17, 18, 19. And they lived there.”
Organizing, Moses said, begins around a particular issue that is important to the community—raising the minimum wage, protecting undocumented workers, restoring voting rights to former prisoners, blocking a fracking site, halting evictions, ending police violence or stopping the dumping of toxic waste in neighborhoods. Movements rise organically. Dissidents are empowered and educated one person at a time. Any insurgency, he said, has to be earned.
“If you get knocked down enough times and stand up enough times then people think you’re serious,” he said. “It’s not you talking. They’ve heard everyone talk about this forever. We earned their trust. We earned the respect of young people across the country to get them to come down and risk their lives. This is your country. Look what’s going on in your country. What do you want to do about it? We established our authenticity.”
Moses warned movements, such as Black Lives Matter, about establishing a huge media profile without a strong organizational base. Too often protests are little more than spectacles, credentialing protesters as radicals or dissidents while doing little to confront the power of the state. The state, in fact, often collaborates with protesters, carrying out symbolic arrests choreographed in advance. This boutique activism is largely useless. Protests must take the state by surprise and, as with the water protectors at Standing Rock, cause serious disruption. When that happens, the state will drop all pretense of civility, as it did at Standing Rock, and react with excessive force.
“You can’t be a media person [the subject of media reports] and an organizer,” Moses said. “If you’re leading an organization, it’s what you do and who you are that impacts the people who you are trying to get to do the organizing work. If what they see is your media presence, then that’s what they also want to have. It’s overwhelming to be a media person in this country. To attend to the duties of being a media person, the obligations that follow a media person, really means that you can’t attend to the obligations of actually doing organizing work. Once SNCC decided it needed a media person, it lost its organizing base. It disintegrated and disappeared. You can’t do both.”
The mass mobilizations, such as the Women’s March, have little impact unless they are part of a campaign centered around a specific goal. The goal—in the case of SNCC, voter registration—becomes the organizing tool for greater political consciousness and eventually a broader challenge to established power. People need to be organized around issues they care about, Moses said. They need to formulate their own strategy. If strategy is dictated to them, then the movement will fail.
“People need to figure out for themselves what they want to do about a problem,” Moses said. They need “agency.” They do not get agency, he said, “by listening to somebody tell them things.”
“They can develop agency by going out and trying things,” he said. “It works, or it doesn’t work. They come back. They think about it. They reformulate it. Staff people are keeping track of what it is, who it is, what they’re working on. They are documenting it. This is the difference between a mobilizing effort, where you’re getting people to turn out for an event, and trying to get people self-engaged and thinking through a problem.”
“When you do civil disobedience, the question is not about the power structure but the people you’re trying to reach,” he said. “How do they view what you’re doing? Do you alienate them? It’s a balance between, in some sense, leading and organizing. When you do your civil disobedience, it may or may not help with expanding your organizing base.”
Moses, who believes that only nonviolent resistance will be effective, said the Vietnam anti-war movement hurt itself by not accepting, as the civil rights movement did, prison and jail time as part of its resistance. Many in the anti-war movement, he said, lacked the vital capacity for self-sacrifice. This willingness to engage in self-sacrifice, he said, is fundamental to success.
“The anti-war movement would have had a huge impact if it had been able to agree that what we’re going to do is go to prison,” he said. “We are going to pay a certain price. We’re going to earn our insurgency against the foreign policy establishment of the country. We’re going to say no and go to prison. That way, they could have emerged when the war was over as the insurgents who had paid, in their own way, the price of the war.”
Chris Hedges, spent nearly two decades as a foreign correspondent in Central America, the Middle East, Africa and the Balkans. He has reported from more than 50 countries and has worked for The Christian Science Monitor, National Public Radio, The Dallas Morning News and The New York Times, for which he was a foreign correspondent for 15 years. 

Facebook bans foreign advertisers during Ireland abortion vote

-9 May 2018Correspondent
Facebook has blocked foreign adverts that target voters in Ireland’s upcoming abortion referendum.
The referendum, being held on 25 May, could repeal the Republic’s Eighth Amendment, which currently upholds a near-total ban on abortions.
In a statement, Facebook said: “as part of our efforts to help protect the integrity of elections and referendums from undue influence, we will begin rejecting ads related to the referendum if they are being run by advertisers based outside of Ireland.
“Our company approach is to build tools to increase transparency around political advertising so that people know who is paying for the ads they are seeing, and to ensure any organisation running a political ad is located in that country.”
Separately, the role of political advertising on social media has come under intense scrutiny since Channel 4 News, the Observer and others revealed how a British data firm was behind a ‘data grab’ of more than 50 million Facebook profiles.
Cambridge Analytica, described as “pivotal” in Donald Trump’s presidential victory, announced last week that it would close its global operations.
In a statement, the company said: “Over the past several months, Cambridge Analytica has been the subject of numerous unfounded accusations and, despite the Company’s efforts to correct the record, has been vilified for activities that are not only legal, but also widely accepted as a standard component of online advertising in both the political and commercial arenas.”
Meanwhile, Facebook itself has been under the gaze of regulators and legislators on both sides of the Atlantic following the revelations.

Dozens killed after dam burst in Kenya's Nakuru County: Rescue service



A dam burst late on Wednesday in a Kenyan town after heavy rain, leaving dozens dead.
The incident happened following heavy rains near the town of Nakuru, around 180km north of Nairobi.
At least 47 bodies have so far been pulled from the mud, regional police chief Japheth Kioko told Reuters.
"The water has caused huge destruction of both life and property. The extent of the damage has yet to be ascertained," Lee Kinyajui, governor of Nakuru, said in a statement.
Floodwaters swept away powerlines, homes, and buildings, including a primary school, according to a Reuters photographer on the scene.
The Kenyan Red Cross tweeted that it had rescued 39 people.
39 people taken to hospital last night after Patel Dam in Subukia, Nakuru County, broke its banks affecting nearby villages. Search and rescue efforts by County Government, Kenya Society and @Ems_Kenya ongoing.

Yesterday the government announced that 132 people had died as a result of flooding since the rainy season began in March.
Hundreds of thousands of people across Kenya, Somalia, Ethiopia, and Uganda have been displaced by the torrential rain in the last two months.

Cinema fizzy drinks contain 'concerning' bacteria levels


Woman in cinema with a drink and popcorn

BBC9 May 2018
Drinks from three of the UK's largest cinema chains have been found to contain unacceptably high levels of bacteria, a BBC investigation has found.
Fizzy drinks from Cineworld, Odeon and Vue were tested in 30 cinemas, for BBC One's Watchdog programme.
Seven branches sold drinks with unacceptable bacteria levels.
Environmental health expert Tony Lewis said he was "concerned" it was "an indicator of hygiene failure".
Traces of the bacteria salmonella, which can cause food poisoning, were reportedly discovered in two drinks from branches of Odeon cinemas. Listeria had also been found, in a drinks holder, Watchdog said.

'10,000 times higher'

The investigation tested drinks at 10 branches of each company. It also looked for bacteria on the seat fabric, on the cup holder and in ice cubes.
The results were sent to London Metropolitan University's "superlab" to be tested.
According to Watchdog, out of the seven cinemas with drinks with high bacteria levels:
  • Four belonged to Cineworld, where one drink had 70 times the level considered acceptable
  • Vue had one of the high bacteria drinks, and this was 100 times the acceptable level
  • Odeon had two high bacteria drinks and one had 10,000 times the acceptable level
Mr Lewis, head of policy at the Chartered Institute of Environmental Health, said: "That's the highest I've seen. And that is an indicator of equipment not being kept clean. That's a worry."
Salmonella bacterium
SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY-Salmonella bacteria can cause vomiting, stomach cramps and fever
He said high bacteria levels in fizzy drinks were particularly concerning because they were ingested immediately.
Ice containing bacteria levels above an acceptable level - more than 1,000 units of bacteria per one millilitre of liquid - were found in nine cinemas, Watchdog said.
Four of those ice samples were from Cineworld branches, two were from Vue, and three from Odeon.
The highest bacteria count in ice was 10 million bacteria in one millilitre of liquid, and was found in the same Odeon branch as the highest bacteria-filled drink.
Mr Lewis said: "Ultimately, it's about people cutting corners And it's also about managers, owners of cinemas, managers of cinemas, not taking their responsibilities seriously and potentially keeping on top of the issues."
Watchdog reported mixed results on bacteria on the seats and in drinks holders. Since those bacteria are unlikely to reach your mouth, they are thought to be less of a concern.

'Thoroughly cleaned'

The cinema chains have all told the programme they take hygiene "incredibly seriously" and have robust cleaning procedures in place.
Odeon and Cineworld said seats, drinks holders and drink dispensers were thoroughly cleaned daily, with the ice machines emptied and fully cleaned weekly.
Odeon said it was therefore "surprised and disappointed at the Watchdog findings" and had immediately launched its own investigation, adding it had "taken immediate steps" and "further strengthened procedures" across the UK.
Cineworld said the branches tested "have all been awarded the maximum food hygiene rating of five by their local authority" and its cleaning procedures were compulsory for all branches.
Vue rejected the findings, saying it "follows strict hygiene procedures daily".
It also said it undertook its own independent tests regularly, "conducted by a qualified clinical microbiologist with nationally recognised accredited training", and worked with "third-party water experts, exceeding the requirements for water testing".
The full report can be seen on Watchdog Live at 20.00 on Wednesday, 9 May, on BBC One.

Wednesday, May 9, 2018

MOVES TO RESTRICT SRI LANNKA’ S RTI LAW CONDEMNED


Image: Sri Lanka RTI has no   full access to information/data gathered by the Office of Missing Persons (OMP).

Sri Lanka BriefBy Shamindra Ferdinando.-09/05/2018

Attorney-at-law Kishali Pinto Jayawardane, Commissioner, RTI (Right to Information) Commission yesterday censured the government for depriving the Commission full access to information/data gathered by the Office of Missing Persons (OMP).

Jayawardane was responding to a query from a participant at the first session that dealt with overview of key systemic strengths and weaknesses of RTI in national systems, on day 1 of the two-day conference ‘empowering citizens with RTI’ at the Institute of Policy Studies (IPS).

Norway funded the event to mark the first anniversary of the RTI implemented year ago.
Jayawardane said that she wanted to discuss the particular matter though she inadvertently missed it. Appreciating a member of the audience taking up the vital issue, Jayawardane criticized the move to ‘shut out’ RTI from the proposed National Audit Bill.

Jayawardane was flanked by attorney-at-law Javid Yusuf, former Bangladesh Information Commissioner Prof. Sadeka Halim and Director General for Legal Affairs, National Institute for Transparency, Mexico Pablo Francisco Munoz Diaz.

Jayawardane pointed out the absurdity in constitutionally shutting out RTI law in the implementation of new laws. The attorney-at-law called for an immediate stop to the trend.

At the onset of her presentation, Jayawardane explained how the RTI law had empowered the underprivileged and given them an opportunity to challenge the system. Acknowledging that some had found fault with her for describing RTI law as a weapon or tool in the hands of the underprivileged, Jayawardane called its a people friendly initiative.

Commenting on the ongoing process in respect of appeals received by the RTI Commission, Jayawardane said that so far their rulings in respect of ministries and state enterprises hadn’t been challenged in the Court of Appeal though there was provision for that. A smiling Jayawardane said that the RTI Commission and those subject to it were still in ‘honeymoon.’

Having compared the complaints received by the RTI Commission so far this year and the corresponding period previous year, Jayawardane categorized appeals received by the independent commission. According to her, those who had faced disciplinary measures and denied of promotions in the public sector had sought the intervention of the RTI Commission.

Jayawardane said that the RTI Commission had so far given 150 rulings and they were available in Sinhala, Tamil and English. In addition to public servants, parents of those who had been denied school admission and people unhappy about state procurement process, too, had sought their intervention.

The RTI Commissioner briefly discussed the Commission’s intervention after secret employment agreements between Sri Lanka and foreign governments were brought to its attention. Underscoring the importance of work undertaken by the RTI Commission, Jayawardane recalled how a search undertaken by them led to the recovery of the Presidential Commission report on a helicopter crash that caused the death of SLMC leader A.H.M. Ashraff. Jayawardane said they were able to locate the report at the CID headquarters though it wasn’t available at the Archives Department.

Jayawardane also discussed the case of the state banking sector trade union seeking their intervention to secure the receipts of payments made by a bank to a top lawyer in spite of having its own lawyers and the Attorney General’s Department.

Jayawardane stressed the importance of more journalists making use of the RTI law.

Panelists basically stressed the importance of facilitating anyone to seek information. The Mexican representative pointed out that an information seeker could identify himself as Indiana Jones or Micky Mouse. According to him non-citizens could seek information.

The Island sought an explanation from Jayawardane as regards the applicability of RTI law to civil society organizations and NGOs against the backdrop of many receiving massive amounts of money from foreign sources in addition to yahapalana government given funds amounting to Rs 1.92 bn and Rs 3.8 bn by the US and Australia, respectively, the attorney-at-law, RTI applied to all.

At the onset the session Javid Yusuf paid a glowing tribute to the civil society and the media for bringing the RTI project launched in 1994 to a successful conclusion in 2016. The former Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, Yusuf asserted that enactment of the RTI law was certainly a yahapalana achievement as progress in other projects was slow.
-The Island

Old Kachcheri-JAFFNA, SRI LANKA

These abandoned ruins in the middle of Jaffna have withstood centuries of tumultuous power struggles. 



Old Park is now a fancy modern park with playgrounds, fast food outlets, and well-curated jogging paths. But tucked away in a corner you’ll find the forgotten ruins of the Old Kachcheri. Vines and plants now look like integral parts of this beautiful example of Neo-Renaissance architecture, and moss adorns the Roman arches wrapping around the central yard. The crumbling roof now invites the elements to destroy the interior rooms.

kachcheri is a district secretariat that functions as a liaison between the central Sri Lanka government and its activities at district level. Within its own district, a kachcheri also implements government projects, collects revenues, and organizes elections. Expectedly, a bureaucratic branch of the government of this magnitude requires a large facility to accommodate it. Jaffna, being the capital city of the Northern Province of Sri Lanka, is also home of the local kachcheri.
Prior to delving into the Old Kachcheri buildings, it’s necessary to become familiar with Jaffna’s tumultuous colonial past. Portugal conquered the island in 1619, and the Dutch eventually took over in 1658. The final twist in the colonial saga occurred in 1796, when the British gained control of all the Dutch possessions in Sri Lanka.
It was the British Government Agent Percival Ackland Dyke that bought the 27-acre property and commissioned the building of an administrative center. The administrative center became Jaffna Kachcheri, now known as the Old Kachcheri.
History was not always kind to the Old Kachcheri, which went from being targeted by rival armies to being abandoned. The presence of a huge building tailor-made for administrative purposes didn’t escape the attention of the country’s armies. Starting in the late 1970s, the Sri Lanka Army was based at Old Park and made full use of the Old Kachcheri buildings. As the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, a militant Tamil organization, seized Jaffna in the late 1980s, they also used Old Park and Old Kachcheri as military and police headquarters.
When Sri Lanka regained control of Jaffna in 1995, an army camp was briefly stationed at the kachcheri, but after the end of the Sri Lankan Civil War the building was evacuated and abandoned. Disintegration that began through human agency is now carried out by nature. Vegetation is taking over buildings, and the weather is slowly but surely grinding the building to oblivion.
Know Before You Go
There are rumors that renovation works may begin, but to date nothing has started.Mines still represent a danger in and around the immediate area surrounding Old Kachcheri. De-mining was undertaken, but the property hasn’t been declared mine-free as yet. Caution recommended.

SRI LANKA: SECURITY FORCES COMMANDER JAFFNA SPEAKS ON RECONCILIATION IN THE NORTH


Sri Lanka BriefBy Shanika Sriyananda.-09/05/2018

Q: There is a serious allegation from the people who are languishing in IDP camps that the military is still occupying their land even after the war ended eight years ago. How do you respond to this claim?

A: During the last few years, we have expedited resettling IDPs as the Government has taken several measures to handover the Army-held land back to the rightful owners. Since 2009, over 75% of the land area in the Palaly Army cantonment has been released to the owners.

We have been able to resettle a significant number of displaced people of Jaffna by now and with the recently-released land, we have been able to reduce the total number of IDPs by 50%. The main issue with the remaining IDPs is that the majority of them in IDP centres are landless people, who belong to the second generation of the IDP families, who became displaced two decades ago. There are families whose children and grandchildren still live in these centres and they are landless people. The Government will soon launch a program to grant each of those families Rs. 400,000 to buy a land and Rs. 800,000 to build a house.
We know the plight of the displaced people who have never slept on a bed or sat on a chair in their life. They live in very small rooms and over 60-70 people share a single toilet. They undergo many hardships and have been living in these centres for close to three decades. The war was ended nine years ago and the military doesn’t want to hold their land forcefully and unnecessarily. If we are still holding their land, how can we claim that there is peace in this country? We are looking at this issue in a very positive manner. We are releasing the military-held land gradually.

Q: But some claim that the present system of releasing land would be a threat to national security and the peninsula in the future. Your views?

A: I refute that allegation. We have given a serious consideration to the security in Jaffna. Maintaining security is our topmost priority while engaging in the five Rs – resettlement, reconstruction, rehabilitation, reintegration and reconciliation. Yes, some people in the south who want to provoke the people allege that we release land without a proper plan to maintain security in Jaffna. We do not release land in an ad hoc manner as we are fully aware what we went through during the last 30 years.

If there is a requirement to get control of Jaffna in any situation which threatens its security, we can ensure security within 48 hours as we have deployed our soldiers in such a manner. To those who think that the LTTE would re-emerge and try to provoke people to destabilise peace in the peninsula, I would say that the military in Jaffna will not leave any chance for that as we are not ready to compromise security.

Q: How do you view civil-military coordination in Jaffna?

A: During the 30-year-long war, all Sri Lankans suffered a lot. While the people in the south were also affected due to war, people in the north and the east suffered immensely as the war physically took place on their doorstep. They faced a lot of problems and were sandwiched between both sides – the military and the LTTE. Those Jaffna people who could afford to spend fled the country while the poor people remained and suffered in the deadly war. Those who remained in Jaffna were mainly from low income families. Their lives were shattered with no education for their children, no income generation means and no security and they suffered a lot under the LTTE. Even in a no war situation, they still cannot have a good living standard due to poverty. They saw only destruction.

Having understood the ground reality, the military is always trying to help them even by using our private contacts to get some donations to assist these people to make a living. They always show us gratitude for what we do for them and the military in Jaffna has a good rapport with Jaffna people.
Although some politicians are making some damaging remarks about the military and also clamour against the Army for their political survival, the ordinary people of Jaffna are with us. When we vacate our camps, some villagers personally request us to stay back to maintain security in those areas. The feelings of the ordinary Jaffna people towards the military are always different to that of the politicians and some pro-LTTE elements in Jaffna. They have confidence in us.

Q: You have spelt out several projects and initiatives to win the hearts of the people of Jaffna. But how confident are you that it will change the image of the uniformed men?

A: What we have realised is that it is extremely difficult to change the mindsets of some of the adults, who still have different views and ideas. Therefore, we switched our target group from adults to young students. We think it is an investment and most of our activities under the five Rs target the youth, students and children. We want to invest in the next generation in Jaffna.

People see the soldiers from a new perspective now. It is much better than earlier. We couldn’t do it overnight but allowed them to understand the role of the soldier gradually. It is not an easy task in the aftermath of three decades of war. They had fears about the soldiers but now they want us to be with them in their day-to-day lives. Like in other parts of the country, crimes, including minor crimes, are taking place in Jaffna. Tamils in Jaffna collect gold and money and keep them at home without depositing them in banks. This practice has given rise to robberies in some parts of the peninsula. Although the Police is handling those cases and maintaining law and order,  most of the villagers want soldiers to remain in camps as they say that they feel safe when soldiers are around them. This is how they see soldiers, to whom they reach first when they need some help.

Q: Reconciliation is one of the top priorities on the Government agenda, how does it happen in Jaffna? 

A: We have several programs to promote reconciliation. It is one of our priority areas. As I said before, we target young children and students to promote reconciliation. We want them to learn to live with all communities and understand the cultures, traditions and religions of each other so they will have a better understanding of each other. This is why we have launched the scholarship program that creates a bridge between the students in Jaffna and the families in the south. We have selected students from poor families and they will be connected to a family in the south, which will sponsor the education of those students. Our intention is to create a lifelong bond between them. These students are mainly selected from the children of ex-LTTE cadres, women-headed families and very poor families.

The military in Jaffna has come forward to help the needy families when there is a requirement despite their ethnicity, caste or creed. The soldiers in Jaffna help them, from getting school books to artificial limbs and housing to starting their income generation.

Q: Religious harmony is vital in reconciliation. How do you view religious harmony in Jaffna, where Buddhist pilgrims come to worship some temples and kovils?

A: Hundreds of people from the south visit Nagadeepa Temple and other Hindu temples in Jaffna. I am happy to say that not even a single incident has taken place so far that fuels religious disharmony. Jaffna people are very sensitive to their religion and also respect all other religions. They are also very helpful people. The military has started a project to renovate 100 small kovils which were damaged during the war. Tamils in Jaffna have a strong affiliation to kovils. We supply material and soldiers do the renovation work.

Q: Jaffna was known for producing professionals decades ago. Can you spell out the programs launched to help the students in Jaffna?

A: The SFHJ always encourages students to do better in their education. Yes, 30 years back most of the professionals were produced by Jaffna as they are naturally very studious and hardworking. Now Jaffna students have again started shining in education. Three Advanced Level students from Jaffna have been able to secure island ranks last year. We gave scholarships and laptops for them to continue their higher studies. Each student receives Rs. 5,000 per month for five years. We have also offered a number of scholarships for students, including 204 students who got nine As at the Ordinary Level Examination in 2017.

Q: What is the progress of demining activities in the peninsula?

A: We have been able to clear 85% of mine-contaminated lands in Jaffna. Many international agencies including the UNDP, MAG, Sarvatra and a few others were involved in demining earlier but now with the Army demining units, two local and one foreign demining teams are engaged in clearing mines. Being the major agency in humanitarian demining, the Army is also carrying out mine risk education programs among villagers. The international community who visited Jaffna commended the progress made in humanitarian demining since 2009.

Here, I want to say that it is unfortunate that teams of foreign investors visit Jaffna to explore investment opportunities but there is no productive outcome of those visits. There are investment opportunities in Jaffna and new industries need to come up to create job opportunities for the youth as there is a high unemployment rate in Jaffna. I would like to invite foreign investors to Jaffna as there is a huge potential for new industries.

Q: The Government has invited the Tamil diaspora to engage in rebuilding efforts. What is your comment about their contribution?

A: They can play a big role in the post-conflict scenario to uplift the living standards of Jaffna people by helping in them in education, livelihood and social development programs. But it is very unfortunate to comment that their contribution is very minimal. Most of the Tamil diaspora motivated Tamil youth in Jaffna to take up arms and funded the LTTE. But there are very few who help the poor people. The majority while still raising funds for the LTTE try to create problems in Jaffna. They want some conflicts or issues in Jaffna for their survival abroad.

Q: Do you think that they can now fool Jaffna youth to refuel the LTTE’s cause as most of them are against violence?

A: The ex-LTTEers and the ordinary Jaffna people are very well aware that they got misled by the LTTE and the Tamil diaspora. We have empowered people by assisting them to stand on their own feet. They are leading normal and peaceful lives in Jaffna and I believe the Tamil diaspora, which still uses money to destabilise the peaceful environment in the northern parts of the country, will not be able to mislead Jaffna youth again.

Q: As the former Commissioner General of Rehabilitation, how do you support the ex-combatants in Jaffna?

A: We have several programs to help the ex-LTTEers. When they need help they contact me or meet me to get help. We have a good rapport with them and in our programs we give them priority. We have launched several programs, including distribution of 45 cows and giving scholarships to the children of ex-LTTE cadres to help them financially.

However, they face problems due to unemployment, caste and low acceptance from their own society. Over 50% of them are not employed. In Jaffna, there are rehabilitated and non-rehabilitated ex-LTTE cadres. The non-rehabilitated cadres have got married, are having children and lead peaceful lives now. It is not possible now to get them into the rehabilitation process as they have been rehabilitated within the society.

Most of the employers are scared to give them jobs due to their past. With no proper education, the majority of the ex-LTTE cadres lack skills as they had joined the LTTE as child soldiers. The unemployment rate is high among them.

The caste system still strongly exists in Jaffna and most of the employers do not give jobs to ex-LTTE cadres who belong to lower castes. They are not accepted by society even though they are leading peaceful lives. The ex-LTTEers had harassed, kidnapped and taken ransom from people when they were with the LTTE and now people reject them in society.

These reasons have made them helpless and isolated in society. Therefore, they come to us to get assistance to find jobs or financial assistance. For the last few years we have launched several programs for them. We have recruited 100 ex-LTTE cadres for non-military duties. Today they are working in our farm. We will recruit another batch of 50 for some construction sites. The military has enough manpower to do this work but as we want to give them employment to earn a living we are recruiting them. If they are further isolated and left behind, the forces with ulterior motives will use them to engage in activities against the Government.

Q: Why is the business community in Jaffa reluctant to employ them?

A: They hardly employ them as they are still look at them with suspicion and also the other workers in those places don’t want to work with them. Their past has become a curse for them although they have become peaceful citizens of this country. I have requested some of the businessmen in Jaffna to give them employment but the reply was, ‘Sir, please, we don’t want them.’ That is their attitude and it is very difficult to change it now.

Q: Can you tell us about the coconut plantation project that was started recently?
A: We have started planting coconut saplings with the help of the Coconut Cultivation Board and the Coconut Research Institute six months ago. Our target is to plant 100,000 coconut saplings by the end of this year.

The SFHJ has a large extend of unutilised land in the Army cantonment. They are just overgrown shrubs and some vegetation. Jaffna soil is known as the golden soil and anything can be planted in this soil. We have found that any vegetables that are planted in Nuwara Eliya can be planted in Jaffna. I think we should have started planting coconuts in 2010; if we had done so by now we could have reaped the harvest.

At the moment, we are clearing 500 acres of land for coconut cultivation. Under the first phase, we will first target the lands in the Palaly Army cantonment. This project is not just a tree planting project like what we do on each Tree Planting Day, where no one is responsible thereafter. There will be a database with numbers of all the trees, a soldier will be assigned to look after a group of trees and the soldier concerned will be responsible for the trees that he looks after.

If we had started this program in 2010 by now we would have got the harvest and country would have self-sufficient in coconuts. It will also help to reduce the coconut prices. We are going to start another project with the help of Brother Charles Thomas, who will distribute 10,000 coconut saplings among low income families. In his home garden project, each family will be given five coconut saplings, which will give a yield sufficient for the family consumption.
FT

SC requested to re-list MPs vehicle abuse case

New tax regime arbitrary, unfair-lawyer


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Kodituwakku

By Shamindra Ferdinando- 

Attorney-at-law Nagananda Kodituwakku, yesterday alleged, that legitimate recipients of duty free vehicle permits could cash in on an arbitrary taxation scheme recently imposed by the government.

Kodituwakku said that the value of duty free permits available tothe sitting members of parliament and various professionals had gone up sharply due to the imposition of the new system.

The former top Customs officer took up the issue with Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweera recently.

Kodituwakku pointed out that the tax scheme had been transformed from transaction value into a system based on engine capacity.

Kodituwakku said that he gave up plans to import Lexus hybrid car (2017 model) due to unprecedented increase in vehicle tax.

Kodituwakku said that he paid taxes amounting to Rs. 2,008,105.00 in 2014 when he imported 2013 model of the same car. Kodituwakku said that when he had inquired from Customs the levy for the identical car of 2017 model, he was told in accordance with the new tax the amount would be Rs.14,384,000.00.

Pointing out that the tax paid to a particular type of vehicle had been increased by more than seven times, Kodituwakku alleged that taxpayers were unduly charged.

Responding to another query, Kodituwakku said that the vehicle tax had been imposed under Section 10 of the Customs Ordinance. The parliament had empowered the Finance Minister to impose taxes on imported goods in line with Section 10 of the Customs Ordinance, the attorney-at-law said. The public litigation activist emphasized that the new vehicle tax regime was not based on the recently enacted Inland Revenue Act (IRA) No. 24 of 2017 that came into operation on April 1, 2018.

Alleging that the current tax policy violated GATT (General Agreement of Tariff and Trade), Kodituwakku said that members of political parties represented in parliament had been given massive tax exemptions over Rs. 30 mn each at the expense of the Treasury.

Kodituwakku said that he didn’t receive a response from Minister Samaraweera and General Secretariat, WTO, to his recent letter. Kodituwakku said that law-abiding citizens had been deprived of an opportunity to acquire a vehicle whereas politicians and selected categories of professionals were given privilege status. "The main problem is not the issuance of duty free permits but the recipients allowed transferring vehicles imported on them," Kodituwakku said.

Kodituwakku said that he moved the Supreme Court in the wake of the CIABOC (Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption) failure to inquire into his complaint in respect some members of parliament transferring their super luxury vehicles.

He has recently requested the Chief Justice to re-list the case (SC/Writs/7/2016) filed against members of parliament who had received unfair monetary gains at the expense of the General Treasury. Kodituwakku has estimated the losses suffered by the government as a result of duty free permits issued to those elected at August general election and also appointed on the National List at Rs 7 bn, according to submissions made to court.

According to the attorney-at-law the case was taken out of the list as Supreme Court judges weren’t willing to hear the case.

Kodituwakku has agreed, in writing to de-list two judicial corruption cases (SC/Writs/3/2016 and SC/Writs/3/2017) that were to be taken up on March 26, 2018 while requesting the listing of two cases, including the one on vehicle abuse.

Kodituwakku has sought an opportunity to support the case on June 11, 12 or 13 before a five member judge sans two judges made respondents in two judicial corruption cases.

Kodituwakku, in his submissions to the CJ pointed out that a matter that had been initiated in the public interest was yet to be listed for support.

He told The Island that in his letter to Minister Samaraweera he urged the government to introduce a reasonable tax structure. The lawyer said that those members of parliament battling the government over corruption and other issues were conveniently silent on the issue because they, too, benefited by the special scheme for politicians.