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 17, 2018

A Qatar-Linked Company Is in 'Advanced Talks' with Kushner Family Business to Bail Them Out of 666 Fifth Ave: Report

Photo Credit: Everett Collection / Shutterstock.com


Malaysian opposition icon Anwar released from prison


By  | 

DE-FACTO leader of Malaysia’s newly victorious People’s Justice Party (PKR), Anwar Ibrahim, has been freed after gaining a royal pardon for a conviction of sodomy that has kept him in prison for the last three years.

In his first press conference since his release on Wednesday morning, Anwar said he had “forgiven” former prime minister Najib Razak for placing him in prison in 2015. While he held no personal grudge against Najib, he did say the “injustice towards the people, crimes committed against the people, and endemic corruption” still had to be answered for.

IMG_20180516_114526
Supporters of Anwar Ibrahim, with his lawyer R. Sivarasa (2nd left), following Anwar’s release at the Cheras Rehabilitation Hospital. Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. May 16, 2018. Source: Asian Correspondent

He also said he was in no rush to return to parliament, preferring to spend time with his family and carry out lectures at universities around the world to spread the voice of “reason and moderation” of Islam.

The ruling Pakatan Harapan coalition, for which PKR is the lead party, plans to make Anwar prime minister once he has successfully won a by-election for a parliamentary seat, making him eligible for the premiership. But it appears this will be delayed as Anwar readjusts and current-PM, Dr Mahathir Mohamad, makes the changes he needs to correct the course of the nation.
At a separate press conference, Dr Mahathir said there will be a meeting of the presidential council tomorrow to decide what role Anwar will play in the party going forward.

Anwar emerged from the Cheras Rehabilitation Hospital at 11.30am local time on Wednesday after Malaysia’s Pardon Board, which included the current King, decided to overturn his conviction, which is widely accepted to be politically motivated.


The royal pardon is crucial for the PKR leader if he wishes to return to politics. Without the pardon, Anwar would have been banned from politics for five years due to having a criminal record.

In a statement, the Comptroller of the Royal Household, Wan Ahmad Dahlan Ab. Aziz said the appeal for a full-fledged pardon for Anwar had been tabled by the Royal Pardon’s board of the federal territories, which included Kuala Lumpur, Putrajaya, and Labuan.

“In line with article 42 of the constitution, Sultan Muhammad V, on the advice of the pardon’s board of Kuala Lumpur, Labuan and Putrajaya has consented that the appeal for full pardon for Dato Seri Anwar Ibrahim be allowed along with his immediate release,” the statement read.

2018-05-11T043210Z_2106456099_RC1F1537E8C0_RTRMADP_3_MALAYSIA-ELECTION-CONFERENCE
Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamed (R) and Deputy Prime Minister and Finance Minister Anwar Ibrahim offer prayers at the Malaysian 1998 Budget report in Parliament in Kuala Lumpur, October 17, 1998. Source: Reuters/David Loh/File Photo

Dr Mahathir and Anwar make an unlikely alliance as the 92-year-old former-PM was also the man responsible for putting Anwar in jail the first time around back in 1999 during his first stint in the prime minister’s role between 1981 to 2003.

Anwar served as Dr Mahathir’s deputy and finance minister before being removed from his post and incarcerated on sodomy and corruption charges, which human rights groups and foreign governments criticised as being politically motivated.


After having the conviction overturned in 2004, Anwar became a leading figure in the opposition, a movement that ultimately toppled the 60-year rule of the United Malays National Organisation (Umno) led coalition on Wednesday.

It was a shared desire to remove scandal-ridden Najib that forged the rekindling of relations between Anwar and Dr Mahathir, who came out of retirement to bring down his former protege. Ironically, as Anwar emerges from prison, the prospect of Najib facing prosecution looks increasingly likely.

The former prime minister has been blocked from leaving the country and a complaint has been filed against him to the Malaysian Anti-Corruption Commission alleging he personally blocked an investigation into the US$3.2bn 1MDB scandal.

Despite having the odds stacked against the opposition led by Dr Mahathir, Anwar said he never lost hope.

“I always believed in the wisdom of the people and that if we fought hard enough we would eventually prevail,” he told Fairfax Media in an exclusive interview.

“At a time when democracy is in retreat around the world, I hope that the people of Malaysia have given some hope to people around the world clamouring for their own freedom.”
“The road ahead will challenge the best among us to deliver what we promised to the people,” he said.

Anwar will celebrate his release tonight at Padang Timur where people have been invited to join prayers, hear Pakatan leaders speak, and hear a speech from Anwar, who remains incredibly popular in Malaysia despite his conviction and absence from politics.

Additional reporting by A. Azim Idris

Medical Racism Feared Behind Diagnosis Negligence

Mr. Coleman was diagnosed with Diabetes and liver failure in 2010, but deprived of that information for four and a half years.
William Coleman
William Coleman, looking for justice.
Photo by Dexter Phoenix, Salem-News.com

May-17-2018 

(SALEM, Ore.) - It is a massive problem nationwide. Results from tests and lab work performed by doctors in medical facilities, often revealing dangerous, even deadly illness and disease, are not shared with the patient. 


William Coleman
Add to that, the established problems and patterns regarding medical racism in the US, and you find a serious issue that leads to premature death and unwarranted, preventable suffering, particularly for people of color.
African-Americans receive a lower degree of care in America, according to researchers at Johns Hopkins Medical Center School of Medicine.
http://www.salem-news.com/graphics/snheader.jpg
One Salem, Oregon man who won't disagree with that finding is William Coleman, a former prison guard and Whistleblower, who was diagnosed with both diabetes and liver failure in early 2010, only to spend the next four and a half years in the dark, totally unaware of the serious diagnosis which doctors at Salem Hospital neglected to share with him.

In July, 2014, a doctor at Salem Hospital's emergency room asked Mr. Coleman how he was treating his diabetes. Mr. Coleman says he told the doctor that he must have him mixed up with another patient, but the doctor assured him that he had been suffering with diabetes for several years, according to his medical charts.

In fact William Coleman had a blood glucose level of nearly 400, and other tests indicated that his blood sugar levels were three times the acceptable level. Along with this, he learned that he was suffering from liver failure. During the four and a half years he was untreated for this ailments, Mr. Coleman's health deteriorated.

Diagnosed only with heart failure in 2010, William Coleman, who is 51, had all sorts of additional health problems for the next four and a half years. He lived completely in the dark about his condition, having faith that any serious medical problems doctors at Salem Hospital had noted, would have been brought to his attention.

Spiraling downward health-wise, in intense pain and always short of breath, he questioned why his 80-year old neighbors, who also had heart failure, seemed spry in comparison. All along, during the four and a half year period, his condition worsened. Due to the untreated diabetes, he was retaining massive amounts of water.

40 pounds of water were drained from his body late in 2014 at Salem Hospital, and 64 pounds were drained during an emergency visit to Oregon Health Sciences University (OHSU) a few weeks later. The water retention caused Mr. Coleman to suffer edema, and at one point his legs were as hard as wood. He had to sit up on his couch to sleep and rarely got 20 uninterrupted minutes.
When Mr. Coleman discovered that he had not been informed of his diagnosis, he brought the matter to the attention of the Oregon Medical Board, which did not launch an adequate investigation or pursue the matter whatsoever.

The next thing that happened, was Mr. Coleman's healthcare provider, Salem Clinic P.C., sending a letter to Mr. Coleman asking him to "immediately" seek the care of other providers, banning him from visiting any of the Salem Clinic facilities.

After that, the head of a Diabetes support group sent Mr. Coleman a letter advising that after looking into his case, there was nothing they could do for him.

He tried to bring a legal case forward, but could not find an attorney willing to represent him, and the statute of limitations lapsed. The laws are all in place to protect the doctors, the medical board, highly controversial for numerous reasons, has targeted doctors in the past and even removed their right to practice over trivial matters, but for Mr. Coleman, they essentially said, we aren't going to help you, hit the road.

History of Poor Health Treatment for Blacks in America

According to a paper published by Research Gate, "Unconscious" Racial Bias Among Doctors Linked To Poor Communication With Patients, Dissatisfaction With Care, the problem is significant, "There is a well-documented legacy of racial discrimination toward African Americans in medical research and clinical settings.

"Perhaps most notably, the 1932 U.S. Public Health Service Tuskegee Syphilis Study on Untreated Syphilis in the Negro Male, in which federally funded investigators withheld available treatment from African American men with syphilis, serves as a striking example of this legacy."

It seems Mr. Coleman is one person on a long list who has been wronged by a system of healthcare that does not practice racial equity, and rarely, if ever, has systems in place to assure that racial and cultural equality is incorporated into treatment practices.

First, physicians kept their lips sealed about his diabetes and his kidney failure for four and a half years. This, even though it was noted in his medical records in 2010, that Mr. Coleman has diabetes and should be prescribed metformin as a treatment. First the silence game from Salem Hospital, and then every medical facility turned against him.

This is where the story gets very shady

William Coleman is a noted Salem, Oregon Whistleblower who filed a federal "Whistleblower" claim while trying to bring awareness to massive racism and hate crimes he noted and observed as a corrections officer at the Oregon State Penitentiary.


State officials retaliated against him by arresting Mr. Coleman on what turned out to be a trumped up case, on 40 counts of "contraband smuggling" --- one of the very problems he was trying to direct attention to with the federal Whistleblower claim.

After the District Attorney's office of Marion County, Oregon decided to spend large amounts of taxpayer dollars trying to convict him, William Coleman, with the help of a single witness, a Black inmate he oversaw as a prison guard named Terrence Kimble, Coleman was found not guilty by a jury and acquitted of all charges.

His acquittal proved that the case was a sham; a disingenuous attempt by state and county officials to discredit a man who put his life on the line and suffered heavily, trying to make Oregon prisons a better and more legal place, rather than the racist dens they are, where racist White cops and racist White inmates absolutely run the program.

Oregon prisons even play movies that satiate the racists' needs, such as the movie about Hitler, called Downfall, which portrays Nazi's as the good guys. The upper management at the prison has had a history of extremely corrupt and illegal behavior, dating back to the Murder of former Oregon Corrections Director, Michael Francke, in 1989.

Francke was killed just a day before he was going to release the results of a year-long investigation into official corruption involving high-level Oregon state and Marion County officials, many are the EXACT SAME PEOPLE who worked vigorously against William Coleman during his attempt to expose what was happening.

In the fabricated criminal case against Mr. Coleman, and in an effort to ensure no law suits filed by Mr. Coleman would go his way, agencies from Oregon Dept of Corrections, to the Oregon State Police, the Statesman Journal newspaper, The Oregonian, the Marion County Sheriff's Office, Salem Police, the Bureau of Labor and Industries, the state Attorney General's Office and the Marion County District Attorney all collaborated against him, and all of it was illegal or in the case of media, highly unethical, but then this is Oregon.

So why would anyone assume Salem Hospital and Mr. Coleman's physicians at Salem Clinic P.C. might not also possibly be involved in an official web of deceit?

It may take a village to raise a child, but a network is required for enforcing institutional racism, and one is firmly in place in Salem, Oregon and has been for a very long time.

Keeping Black people down and unable to find adequate representation, sending Salem Police to shadow the NAACP meetings that take place here, these are just the tip of the iceberg.

The fact that this practice was extended to the medical world is unfathomable, but then there are reasons that Salem, Oregon doesn't have Black doctors, or police officers, or city council members, and that African-American are almost entirely unrepresented in all law enforcement roles and city and county positions.

That's how the White people of Salem who run things, have arranged things, and while the problem may be more intense here, it is one that people of color face all over the nation.

In an article titled, Racism and discrimination in health care: Providers and patients, Monique Tello, M.D. M.P.H. of the Harvard Medical School, wrote, "It is well-established that blacks and other minority groups in the U.S. experience more illness, worse outcomes, and premature death compared with whites.

"These health disparities were first 'officially' noted back in the 1980s, and though a concerted effort by government agencies resulted in some improvement, the most recent report shows ongoing differences by race and ethnicity for all measures."

Unconscious Bias

Some in the medical community, believe that the racial disparity doled out by White practitioners is more subconscious than conscious. Few people are not exposed to at least some degree of racism in their lifetimes, in fact, in a study published in a March issue of the American Journal of Public Health, researchers learned that two-thirds of physicians had an “unconscious” racial bias toward patients.

"When those biases were present, researchers found that doctors tended to dominate conversations with African-American patients, pay less attention to their personal and psychosocial needs and make patients feel less involved in making decisions about their health."

“It’s been really extensively shown that minorities don’t receive the same quality of health care as whites in the United States,” said Lisa A. Cooper, M.D., M.P.H., a professor in the Division of General Internal Medicine at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and lead author of the study.

“I’ve been interested in the extent to which that is accounted for by the fact that a lot of minorities see physicians who are different from them culturally and racially, and that there might be some problems with cultural misunderstandings or miscommunication.”

The saga of William Coleman is a frustrating matter for those of us who have watched him battle the state of Oregon. It goes far beyond what is referenced here, Oregon is a problematic state that does not endeavor to make things better for minorities.

This article is not a written version of the video, please watch it in its entirety and call the numbers at the end of the video.

Ask the Oregon Medical Board if they really don't respond to individual cases, ask Salem Clinic P.C. if they have specific rules for dismissing Black people from health care, ask Peter Courtney's office if he was elected to only represent "some of the" people.

_________________________________________________________
Tim King, Writer

Tim King is a former U.S. Marine with thirty years of experience on the west coast as a television news producer, photojournalist, reporter and assignment editor. In addition to his role as a war correspondent. Tim spent the winter of 2006/07 covering the war in Afghanistan, and he was in Iraq over the summer of 2008, reporting from the war while embedded with both the U.S. Army and the Marines.
Tim holds awards for reporting, photography, writing and editing, including the Silver Spoke Award by the National Coalition of Motorcyclists (2011), Excellence in Journalism Award by the Oregon Confederation of Motorcycle Clubs (2010), Oregon AP Award for Spot News Photographer of the Year (2004), First-place Electronic Media Award in Spot News, Las Vegas, (1998), Oregon AP Cooperation Award (1991); and several others including the 2005 Red Cross Good Neighborhood Award for reporting. Tim has several years of experience in network affiliate news TV stations, having worked as a reporter and photographer at NBC, ABC and FOX stations in Arizona, Nevada and Oregon. Tim was a member of the National Press Photographer's Association for several years and is a current member of the Orange County Press Club.
You can contact Tim King at TimKinginSalem@gmail.com


Patient LigodiBenoit Nyemba-MAY 17, 2018

KINSHASA (Reuters) - Congolese and U.N. officials were racing on Thursday to prevent a runaway Ebola outbreak in Congo, working out the logistics of keeping newly arrived vaccines well below freezing in a steamy region on the equator with unreliable power.

World Health Organization (WHO) spokesman Christian Lindmeier said the U.N. body would convene an Emergency Committee meeting on Friday to consider the international risks.

This is Democratic Republic of Congo’s ninth epidemic since the disease was identified in the 1970s, but also its most alarming because of the risk of transmission via regular river transport to the capital Kinshasa, a city of 10 million.

There have already been 44 suspected, probable or confirmed cases of Ebola, and 23 people have died. Potentially most worrying is a confirmed case in Mbandaka, a city of about 1 million connected to Kinshasa by the Congo River.

“This does change the way we need to respond,” Peter Salama, WHO’s medical emergency program head told Reuters TV in Geneva. “Overnight, Mbandaka has become the number one priority for preventing this outbreak from getting out of control.”
The other Ebola cases were spread across sites in remote areas where the disease might not travel quickly.

An experimental but highly effective vaccine is being deployed, with health workers being vaccinated first, but it normally needs to be kept 80 degrees Celsius below freezing in a humid region where daytime temperatures hover around 30.

“For now, the cold chain is guaranteed at -80 degrees until Kinshasa,” Health Minister Oly Ilunga told Reuters. “There is a fridge that will be prepared (on Thursday) ... in Mbandaka and that will be at -80.”

“This vaccine is no longer experimental. The effectiveness has been proven and validated,” he added. “Now that we are facing the Ebola virus we must use all the resources we have.”

WHO spokesman Tarik Jasarevic told Reuters the vaccine can still be effective for up to two weeks if stored in a fridge at between 8 and 2 degrees above freezing.

“NO MAGIC BULLET”

Mindful of criticism it received for being too slow during the huge West African Ebola outbreak, which killed at least 11,300 people in Guinea, Sierra Leone and Liberia from 2014 to 2016, the WHO is moving fast on Congo’s latest outbreak.

The emergency committee will decide whether to declare a “public health emergency of international concern”, which would mean getting access to more resources, Lindmeier said.

Congolese Health Ministry officials help deliver the first batch of experimental Ebola vaccines in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo, May 16, 2018.

Congolese Health Ministry officials carry the first batch of experimental Ebola vaccines in Kinshasa, Democratic Republic of Congo May 16, 2018. REUTERS/Kenny Katombe

The Kinshasa government reported the outbreak on May 8, one day after two samples tested positive, and within days the WHO was sending experts, preparing a helicopter “air bridge” to the site, and planning a vaccination campaign.

The nightmare scenario is an outbreak in Kinshasa, a crowded city where millions live in unsanitary slums not connected to a sewer system.

Several public transport boats a day head from Mbandaka downstream over the river to the capital. They are so overloaded with people that they sometimes topple over, their toilets are usually filthy and water for washing absent.

“If this Ebola outbreak ever reaches Kinshasa, what we are going to see is death here,” Jean Marie Mukaya, a resident of the city, told Reuters TV. “Because it is very dirty here. The government and the population must ... get rid of all the dirt.”

Already the WHO has warned that there is a “moderate” regional risk because the disease could travel along the river to Central African Republic and Congo Republic. But it has said the global risk is low because of the remoteness of the area and the rapid response launched so far.
Slideshow (3 Images)

Even if the logistics of the ‘fridge bridge’ prove easy enough to overcome, “the vaccine is not a magic bullet,” Salama told Reuters this week, especially since health workers have been infected.
“Having healthcare workers infected is usually a ‘canary in the mine’ for potential amplification,” he said.

Additional reporting by Tom Miles and cecile Mantovani in Geneva, and Kate Kelland in London; Writing by Tim Cocks; Editing by Catherine Evans

Wednesday, May 16, 2018

Youths join mothers of the disappeared for rally in Kilinochchi

Home15May 2018

Marking Mother's Day on Sunday Tamil youths joined mothers of the disappeared, who have been holding a continous protest in Vavuniya, to hold a rally demanding justice. 
The rally began at the Kandasamy temple in Kilinochchi with a special pooja and the breaking of coconuts. 
Mothers of the disappeared in Vavuniya have been protesting continuously for over 444 days demanding answers over the whereabouts of their children.  
 

Abduction and forced disappearance: Sri Lanka's missing thousands

Can the Office of Missing Persons provide answers in a country with the world's second highest number of disappearances?



by & -14 May 2018




Correction May 15, 2018:This article originally stated that testimony was gathered from 80 Tamil asylum seekers who were abducted, tortured and raped over the past two years. The correct number is 76 asylum seekers over a period of three years.

Sasikumar Ranginithevi can't hide her tears as she looks at four faded photographs in her trembling hands.

Two brothers, a husband and her brother-in-law. They all fought for the Tamil Tigers. They all surrendered to the army. And they all disappeared.

Her hometown, Mullaitivu, is a city of the missing. Nestled on Sri Lanka's northeast tip, this town was the front line in some of the bloodiest final battles of a 26-year civil war between the armed group, the Tamil Tigers, and government forces.

Sasikumar and hundreds of other Tamil families claim they handed over their loved ones - former combatants - to the military on a causeway near Mullaitivu in May 2009, just after the war ended.
"Many buses were lined up. Hundreds of them. I was seven months pregnant at the time. When I asked to go in the bus with my husband, the army commander refused,'' she says.

Sasikumar was forced onto another bus and ended up at a refugee camp with her parents. She believed that her relatives would also be processed and brought to the camp.

But almost a decade later, she is still waiting, along with other relatives of former combatants who were herded onto buses and never came back.
I'm slowly telling him that his father is lost. Missing. It makes me cry inside ... I don't know whether he is dead or alive.
SASIKUMAR RANGINITHEVI
With most of the men of working age in her family gone, Sasikumar is struggling to survive as the sole breadwinner in her household.

"We have no peace in our lives. I have two children, I have parents and an older brother who was wounded in the war. My youngest son is nine years old. He keeps asking me where his father is. I keep telling him his father is in detention. Now I'm slowly telling him that his father is lost. Missing. It makes me cry inside. What can I tell my son? I don't know whether he's dead or alive," she says.

Former fighters, children and civilians who disappeared during the 26-year civil war are still missing. [Al Jazeera]

'The army officer took the child from my arms'

Former fighters are not the only ones who disappeared in the chaos of the conflict. Children and civilians are also among the missing.

Sivakanthan Manchula's eight-year-old son was wounded by a mortar shell in the final days of the war. Soldiers took him by helicopter to a hospital in another city for treatment.

"The army officer took the child from my arms," she recalls. "They said they would bring him back when he was cured. They kept repeating that to us, even when they locked us up in the camp. He was only eight. If he died of the wound, I would have been able to accept the fact that he is no more."
Like many whose loved ones went missing during the war, she reported her son's disappearance to the United Nations and the Red Cross. But she admits she has very little evidence to prove what happened.

"How do they expect us to remember the faces of officers responsible? We were facing shelling, we had no food and water … we had to follow the soldier’s instructions like cows."

Denial: 'An exaggerated story'

At the time of these disappearances, former General Sarath Fonseka was Sri Lanka's army chief. He says that all 215,000 Tamils who surrendered during the war were properly processed in the presence of international observers.

"During the last two weeks of the war, we had a good system where we had beautiful arrangements. I am 100 percent sure incidents of this nature never took place. People being taken in busloads and never returning - that is definitely an exaggerated story," he says.

Many Tamil families of the missing refute these denials.

For the past year they have held daily vigils in Mullaitivu and four other towns across Sri Lanka. In the tents where they sit in the wind and the dust, photos of missing loved ones hang on the walls.
They're furious with the authorities. When the government was elected in 2015, leaders promised to release the names of people held in custody, but have since refused to do so.

Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena has also been criticised for being slow to set up an Office of Missing Persons to trace the 60,000 Sri Lankans who disappeared in the last three decades. It took three years of deliberations before seven commissioners were appointed.

Lead commissioner, Saliya Pieris, a well-known human rights lawyer, says the Office of Missing Persons will have forensic experts, witness protection divisions and investigative powers. But he admits it will not have the power to prosecute guilty parties. The office can only refer suspects to the lawyer.

"I think the scepticism is natural," Pieris says. "The only way we can get rid of this is through actions and by establishing a credible mechanism. If we promise people results overnight and the results are not forthcoming, people will lose faith. But we have to be objective, independent and impartial."

People were herded onto buses and never came back. [Al Jazeera]

No public trust in the Office of Missing Persons

Critics remain doubtful that the new agency will help trace the missing. This is the 10th commission set up to investigate disappearances. None of the past efforts solved a single case.
READ MORE

Distrust as Sri Lanka sets up body to probe missing people

In this divided country, the Office of Missing Persons has attracted criticism from various parties because the commissioners include a former army general, a family member of a disappeared person and human rights activists.

Dharsha Jegatheeswaran, a lawyer who works with families of the disappeared, says there isn't a lot of public trust in the office.

"I think one of the reasons is that families weren't consulted in the process," says Jegatheeswaran, from the Adayaalam Centre for Policy Research.

"I think having a military representative was a huge blow to the families' confidence ... When military were often the perpetrators in disappearances that happened during the armed conflict, how can they feel confident going before somebody who is a military official and was part of the military during this period of the conflict?"

The military is also unhappy with the makeup of the commission.

While President Sirisena has said that war heroes would not be subject to scrutiny by the agency, Major General Uday Perera says many senior army officers are still not prepared to testify.

"When you have people who have been critical of the army as commissioners, I don't think personally I would not like to go there and get humiliated. So it's a matter of having credible, neutral people in the commission, rather than having activists and people who have been working for NGOs," Perera says.
I think having a military representative was a huge blow to the families' confidence ... When military were often the perpetrators in disappearances that happened during the armed conflict, how can they feel confident going before somebody who is a military official and was part of the military during this period of the conflict?
DHARSHA JEGATHEESWARAN, LAWYER

Using abduction to silence government critics

Sri Lanka's security forces aren't only accused of wartime mass disappearances. They've been accused of abducting government critics to silence dissent. Trade unionists, journalists and human rights campaigners say they were targeted during and after the civil war.

Major General Perera, who was a chief of operations in northern Sri Lanka, denies the security forces have ever been involved in enforced disappearances,

"This is not a banana state," he says. "If someone thinks that Sri Lanka can hide and keep a person in today's context, I think he should go and see a psychiatrist."

READ MORE

Q&A: Sri Lanka's civil war through a Tamil lens

But his former boss, General Sarath Fonseka disagrees. Now a minister in Sri Lanka's government, he says he is prepared to testify at the Missing Person's Office that former President Mahinda Rajapaksa's administration used abductions to silence their critics.

He alleges that former Defence Secretary, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, the former president's brother, was the mastermind behind these abductions.

"I have very good tight control of the military. But there are other people like some in the police, some in intelligence agencies who prefer to please this man and join hands with him. Abductions were taking place Whoever did that, they did not do it during the process of their legitimate duties, outside the duties."

In a statement, Gotabaya Rajapaksa denied these allegations.

"I very confidently take this opportunity to place on record that, during the war on terrorism mentioned, [the] government of Sri Lanka did not engage in any acts of alleged enforced disappearances and abductions as claimed by various scurrilous elements with vested political interest," Rajapaksa said in a statement to Al Jazeera.
This is not a banana state ... If someone thinks that Sri Lanka can hide and keep a person in today's context, I think he should go and see a psychiatrist.
UDAY PERERA, MAJOR GENERAL

Systematic and widespread torture to instill fear

Earlier this year, Sri Lanka passed a law criminalising abductions. General Sarath Fonseka says abductions or enforced disappearances are a thing of the past.

But the International Truth and Justice Project, an advocacy group administered by the Foundation for Human Rights, has gathered testimony from 76 Tamil asylum seekers across Europe who allege they were abducted in the past three years.

It's a claim backed up by London-based refugee lawyer, Kulasegaram Geetharhanan. He represents more than 100 clients who are claiming asylum in the UK because they fear their lives are in danger under Sri Lanka's current regime. Geetharhanan says four of his clients claim they were tortured earlier this year.

"The torture is systematic and widespread. The purpose we can see is to instill fear in the Tamils, not to revolt again and at the same time, not to give evidence against the war crimes in 2009," Geetharhanan says.
I think I could be abducted again if I went back ... I will commit suicide if I'm forced back to Sri Lanka.
MILTON THUSANATHAN
Many of the men had relatives who fought for the Tamil Tigers. Milton Thusanathan, 20, alleges he was abducted and tortured in Mullaitivu by the security forces in 2016 and then again in 2017.
"I think I could be abducted again if I went back ... I will commit suicide if I'm forced back to Sri Lanka," he said.

THE OFFICE ON MISSING PERSONS (OMP) IS TO LAUNCH A SERIES OF REGIONAL-LEVEL CONSULTATIONS


Sri Lanka Brief15/05/2018

The Office on Missing Persons (OMP) is launching a series of regional-level consultations,commencing in Mannar on Saturday, 12th May 2018. The consultations are a vital step in the process to operationalise the functions of the OMP in its search for missing and disappeared persons.

Consultations will be held with the families of missing and disapp6ared persons, activists, professionals and organisations working on the issue. In the coming weeks, the OMP will visit Matara, Trincomalee, Mulaitivu, Kandy, Kilinochchi, jaffna, Batticaloa and Ampara in a first phase of visits. The purpose of these meetings will be to share the OMP’s organisational plan and strategies , as they currently stand, in order to hear public views and incorporate suggestions on measures and processes. The plans thus far attempt to build on the lessons learned and recommendations from previous commissions and the Consultation Task Force or Reconciliation Mechanisms process.

The OMP understands the urgency and frustration of the families and individuals who have been searching for their loved ones over a number of years, but respectfully requests their patienee to ensure vital processes are put in place in order to ensure an effective response and to avoid, ad hoc measrtres. These consultations mark the start of the outreach process of the OMP and are a positive indication that the search for missing and disappeared persons is underway.

Sudarshana Gunawardana
Attorney at Law
Director General of Government Information

A Land Where Brigands & Bigots Are Bizarre Buddies

logoBy Udara Soysa –MAY 16, 2018
Udara Soysa
We have a very interesting position in Sri Lanka in respect of the country’s ethnic problem, a perpetual killer force that raged throughout the north and east and now trying to emerge in some parts outside of this region.
This ghastly position prevailed for thirty years because there were two main forces, a terrorist and a dodgy company of petty, prevaricating politicians. While the need of the hour is a resolution to this problem, the two main players did not want to resolve it with one seeking a mafia state and the other unwilling to recognize the just rights of the minority communities. The mafia state was fortunately defeated by 2009.
There was terrorist horror on one side with an entire region under threat and on the other side, blatant racial and religious chauvinism that ignores that all the people of Sri Lanka irrespective of their cultural diversities, have a common heritage rooted in India.
The right kind of solution based on the country’s historical governmental systems would have been an ideal solution but both extreme players did not want it and together they had turned the guns not so much on each other but on the people, all innocent, all helpless and all pawns in the hands of leaders who have no compassion, are utterly corrupt and employ weapons of destruction to assert their power by abusing the rights and will of the people; not even children are exempted.
More and more outside interests are sneaking in and certain powers that crave for global domination have already gained some foothold in Sri Lanka. It appears Sri Lankan politicians have been a breed without a sense of commitment, service and with a total lack of vision.
If only the country would free itself from its racial and religious chauvinism which Buddhist principles will never support, terrorism will scream its way out of the country like a horrendous ghost exorcised. But the politicians are far too small and mean for such an honourable undertaking. It is a country where terrorism and racism fuel each other and are interdependent.

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