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, July 29, 2018

Thalatha cracks the whip on prison management



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Thalatha

ECONOMYNEXT - 

Justice Minister Thalatha Athukorale yesterday vowed tough action against corrupt prison officials after disbanding an intelligence unit that had failed to deal with criminal activities orchestrated from behind bars.

Athukorale, who is also in charge of prisons, said inmates were able to contact people outside despite repeated attempts to remove cell phones from all prisons. She disbanded the prison intelligence unit last week after reports that convicted drug dealers continued their illegal trade from jail."What is the point in having a prisons intelligence unit if drugs are freely available within the prisons? Mobile phones are being used inside the jail," she told reporters at her home constituency of Ratnapura over the weekend.

She was yet to decide on reinstating the prison intelligence unit, but official sources said a major shake- up in the administration of prisons was on the cards.

A serving top law enforcement official is tipped to head a new structure that will be tasked with cleaning the huge corruption within the ranks of jailors, the sources said.

Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweera, an ardent opponent of capital punishment, has also faulted prison authorities for allowing convicts to organize crime from prisons. President Maithripala Sirisena has said he was adamant to press ahead with hangings for drug dealers.

However, Minister Athukorale made it clear that the country was still a long way from ending the moratorium on capital punishment which was last carried out in 1976.

Sri Lankan courts regularly hand down capital punishment to those trafficking or possessing more than two grams of heroin or similar narcotics as well as for grave crime such as rape and murder. However, the death sentences are not carried out and instead turned into a term of life imprisonment.

"There has to be a lot of work before we can bring back hangings. We need to have investigations into the cases of those condemned for drug related offences," Athukorale said. "We need reports from the Attorney General’s department.

It is only after all that we can take a final decision," she added.

War on Drugs in Sri Lanka: Science or fiction?

STF personnel are seen having seized one of the largest hauls of heroin in the country  in during a routine raid in the Colombo city suburbs.

 2018-07-30
“Some may think that the death penalty is too harsh a penalty. I do not think so. Many countries have come to the stage where they accept the death penalty” (Ranil Wickremesinghe, 1984).
Prime Minister Ranil Wickermesinghe stated the above during the parliamentary debate on the Poisons Opium and Dangerous Drugs Ordinance of 1929 Amendment Bill on March 22, 1984. At the time, he was the Minister of Education who endorsed President JR Jayewardene’s proposal to introduce the death sentence for drug related offences. Despite its inefficacy, the death sentence for drug-related offences is back on the policy agenda and political limelight. The evidence of the steady rise in drug seizures, arrests, drug-related prison admissions, drug use, drug related harm and relatively stable drug prices suggests that the nation’s policy on drugs that existed for over three decades needs re-thinking.   
There had been a number of articles written on the subject matter although none looked at the origins of the death sentence for drug related offences in Sri Lanka. Furthermore, there is little information on the socio-economic and political factors associated in adopting and implementing this policy choice. This article will focus on the above information gap, identifying and discussing some of the drivers for the ‘war on drugs’. I will apply a policy science approach to understand drug policy development that is situated in the history of Sri Lanka. 


The heroin epidemic in the 1980s

By the late 1970s’ there existed a growing cohort of aging opium and cannabis users. The novelty of a heroin epidemic, introduced by tourists in the late 1970s was largely confined to Colombo and some parts of southern Sri Lanka. Young people started using heroin, which concerned the politicians, clergy and the general public due to the uncertainties created on how to manage a ‘novel drug problem’. There also existed a belief among policy-makers and politicians that a drug-free society is absolutely required for the socio-economic development of the country, particularly as young people were considered as the wealth of the nation.   

Politicians, prominent Buddhist monks and Christian priests were questioning the meaning of moral values and good citizenship in society. The use of intoxicants was seen as immoral, and those who used drugs were seen as social outcasts. Consequently there was a moral underpinning to the policy-making and political concerns at the time. Their moral ideology regarded drugs as dangerous, threatening to cultural values and as evil substances that compromised the values in Sri Lankan culture. State intervention and tough law enforcement were seen as legitimate responses to foster moral and upright behaviour.   

By 1982, Interpol confirmed Sri Lanka’s status as a transit country for the movement of heroin from countries in the Golden Triangle into Europe, with organised international drug trafficking syndicates operating within Sri Lanka. During this period, evidence also emerged of a link between heroin trafficking carried out by the LTTE and financial proceeds being used to fund terrorism. With the escalation of violence between Sinhalese and Tamils, and the demand for a separate Tamil state in the North and East of Sri Lanka, drug trafficking was perceived as a major problem and a direct threat to national security and stability of government. Politicians and law enforcement personnel viewed the existing legislation at the time as being outdated to manage the emerging new trends of drug use and trafficking. The Poisons, Opium and Dangerous Drugs Ordinance of 1929 was amended within this national context. The amendments ensured the introduction of the death sentence for drug-related offences, stringent law enforcement on drug users and traffickers, and the creation of the National Dangerous Drug Control Board to coordinate all efforts related to drug control.   

Policies adopted since 1984 ensured that the response to the drug problem was firmly located within the criminal justice system leading to a large number of drug users being imprisoned. Out of the total prison population in the country, nearly 45% of men and women were admitted for narcotic-related offences in 2000, the largest single category according to the Handbook of Drug Abuse Information published by the National Dangerous Drug Control Board in 2002. The majority of drug-related prison admissions were for heroin related offences (88%) with the remaining (12%) for cannabis. These figures remain stable 17 years later and indicate that a large proportion of people who are in the prison system are drug users as opposed to large scale traffickers.   
The international environment had a significant influence in regard to the introduction of the death sentence and in shaping drug policy in Sri Lanka. I will now discuss this in some detail.   


International context and national political landscape

During the 1980s, within the Asia Pacific region, countries such as Malaysia, India, Bangladesh, Pakistan, Singapore, Taiwan, Thailand, and Indonesia introduced the death penalty for drug related offences. The rapid spread of this populist policy option across the Asia Pacific region may be the result of a process whereby government elites copied the social commitments made by other governments, considering them to be advanced, progressive and morally praiseworthy. It is learned that Sri Lanka copied the death sentence from Singapore and Malaysia at the time without any scientific knowledge about its efficacy as a policy option. These were both similar economically, capitalist countries with legislation to use the death sentence for people convicted of drug-related offences. Sri Lankan elite decision-makers at the time were inspired by these countries’ economic growth, indicating a desire to follow their path to development.   

Although there was limited consensus on the introduction of the death penalty between police officers and politicians, President JR Jayawardena who held executive power was able to obtain unilateral agreement from not only Cabinet colleagues to back the Amendment Bill, but also the support for the death sentence from Members of Parliament. However, its application has been symbolic as there have been no executions of drug users or traffickers.When a death sentence is issued, the presiding judge states that the person should be imprisoned and executed at a time nominated by the President. Over the last three decades, none of the Presidents in office has implemented the order, which in effect suspends the death sentence effectively to one of life imprisonment. So, why is it not implemented or abolished?   


Seen to be tough on crime?

Initially, policy-makers have been of the opinion that the death sentence would be a deterrent against drug use and trafficking. The introduction of the death sentence signalled a tough law enforcement and zero tolerance approach. However, research conducted worldwide on its efficacy states that it is a ‘costly failure’. A failure simply because it has not been able to reduce crime, drug use, drug related arrests and prison admissions. Some also argue that the death penalty violates international conventions on human rights as it denies the most basic and fundamental human right, the right to life. However, its existence has been of interest to Presidents, politicians and some senior civil servants who advised Presidents in Sri Lanka. 

All Presidents in Sri Lanka have been keen supporters of the death sentence and the prevailing policy on drug control that existed for over three decades. However, some Presidents may have appeared tough on crime, particularly in regard to stringent law enforcement against drug users and traffickers for time to time. The fact that the President, the most powerful politician in the country, had a keen interest in, and control over drug policy, is indicative of its importance to the core of economic, political and social decision-making.   

There had been unanimous support in Parliament for President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga to pass a resolution in 1995 to implement capital punishment. In 1999, President Kumaratunga did implement it by issuing a Presidential Proclamation, so it would become a deterrent to organised and serious criminals in the country. However, in the face of strong opposition from national and international human rights groups, the death sentences have been automatically commuted to life imprisonment. In January 2001, the government revoked this decision to automatically commute the capital punishment sentence to one of life imprisonment.   

Implementing the death penalty was raised again following the assassination of a prominent High Court Judge Sarath Ambepitiya and his bodyguard on November 19, 2004. The deaths were suspected of being an order given to the assassins from a major drug trafficker. Justice Ambepitiya had given a life sentence to a woman who had trafficked drugs on the day of his assassination. A Judge being assassinated for the first time in Sri Lanka and the link to a drug trafficker was a major political concern due to the implications for state security and the independence of the judiciary. Afterwards President Kumaratunga seized the opportunity to again try to implement the death penalty for the crimes of murder, rape and drug trafficking. Capital punishment for convicted drug traffickers had been a politically charged issue and appears to have been associated with politicians’ perceptions of the will of the electorate.   

From time to time, Buddhist monks, Christian priests and the public have lobbied for the implementation of the death sentence. Public attitudes towards the drug problem had been utilized by elected officials to legitimize government action on prohibition and tough law enforcement. While the legitimization of prohibition was inextricably linked to the need to maintain a more moral and secure society, prohibition also served the agenda of politically active groups and the electorate. ‘Seen to be tough on crime’ during periods of increased crime reports in the media appears common and popular among Presidents. It can be considered as populist policy, merely political rhetoric to attract votes and support.   

Some ministers in the present government do not personally believe that implementation of the death sentence is the ‘magic bullet’ for problems concerning drugs in contemporary Sri Lanka. Recently, Dr. Rajitha Senaratna, Mangala Samaraweera and some other Ministers publicly stated that they did not personally support the idea of capital punishment. Some sections of the Buddhist community and Christian priests also shared these views as they believed in ‘abstaining from taking life’. Although these dissenting views exist, collectively, President Maithripala Sirisena and his cabinet supports this populist policy, which seems to be their response to rising crime reports in Sri Lanka. 


Future directions

Existing legislation on drugs muddles ‘drug users’ and ‘traffickers’. It makes provision to either sentence a person to death or to life imprisonment, for a person who is in possession of three grams of morphine, or two grams of cocaine or two grams of heroin (for personal use). There is little demarcation among drug users, street-level dealers and large-scale traffickers when sentencing for drug related offences. Although this was raised by some law enforcement professionals for over a decade, it has received little attention and political support.   

Majority of those who are addicted to drugs are unfortunate individuals from disadvantaged backgrounds. Similarly, majority of drug users admitted to prison are from lower socio-economic backgrounds who may require treatment and rehabilitation. International evidence and the UNODC suggest that voluntary community-based treatment programmes produce better outcome when compared to coerced or compulsory treatment in prison. At present programmes are implemented in some prisons to rehabilitate drug users. A comprehensive evaluation on the outcomes of the Drug Dependent Persons’ Treatment and Rehabilitation Act No 54 of 2007 is also overdue.   

The National Dangerous Drug Control Board has conducted a significant amount of work in regards to the drug prevention, treatment and rehabilitation agenda. Building on these achievements, the drug problem needs to be seen and framed as a public health issue.At present, the country’s drug problem has been framed as a matter for the criminal justice system. International evidence clearly demonstrates that drug use disorders are best managed within a public health system.   
One of the primary reasons for maintaining a penal approach to managing drug problems is due to its increasing use as a political tool. While there exists consensus on a tough law enforcement approach to manage drug problems, a debate needs to begin to ensure a public health agenda is incorporated into policy-making. Stakeholders with divergent views, including the knowledge experts whose views on the drug problem had not been heard should be included in this debate so that consensual knowledge on the drug problem expands.   

Attention should be paid to successive shifts in drug policies of other countries, from which Sri Lanka has previously learned and from which the death sentence was copied. For example, Malaysia has moved from solely having harsh punitive measures to include a public health approach. The cessation of compulsory treatment and the establishment of voluntary drug treatment facilities indicate that Malaysia’s response is beginning to include a health-oriented approach as part of its overall drug policies. There are other policy lessons that can be learned from countries such as Switzerland, Portugal, U.K, Australia and the Netherlands. 

Finally, there is no scientific evidence to support the war on drugs.The war on drugs is primarily founded in moralized policy making arenas where political interests have overshadowed the real needs of drug users and their loved ones.   
The author has extensive experience working with the British National Health Service in clinical, managerial and commissioning roles. He is a subject matter expert on international drug control policies. He is also an associate member of the Drug and Alcohol Research Centre at the University of Middlesex, England in the UK.

CHINA’S LEGENDARY LOANS TO SRI LANKA A TALE OF 5 MYTHS


By Daniel Alphonsus-29 July, 2018

MYTH 1: Chinese lending is commercial.

FACT: Since 2012 most Chinese lending is concessionary.

HomeIn the last five years Sri Lanka’s loans from China EXIM Bank, amounting to 3.1 billion dollars, were all concessionary - fixed at 2%.Sri Lanka also borrowed 400 million dollars from China Development Bank in 2014 at near commercial rates (roughly between 3-5% ).

For context, Sri Lanka’s borrowings from international markets are more expensive, generally over 5%. On the other hand,China’s concessionary finance is still a fair bit dearer than World Bank, ADB or JICA loans. For example, interest payments on the one billion dollar Hambantota port cost about 25 million dollars per year while interest for the JICA funded 1.7 billion dollar LRT is expected to cost 17 million per year. This difference is not minor. Over the years small annual payments can add up. So far, Sri Lanka has paid 31 million dollars in interest alone for the 200 million dollar Mattala airport.

Note, also, that prior to 2013 many of China’s loans were at commercial rates - above 6 % - including the Katunayake Expressway and Hambantota Bunkering Facility.

MYTH 2: Only China builds white elephants

FACT: India also builds them. Instead of blaming others, we need to blame ourselves.

Sri Lanka’s China funded white elephants - the Hambantota port, Mattala airport and Lotus Tower - cost nearly 1.4 billion dollars, amounting to 17% of Chinese loans. Fortunately, it appears that these losses are now being contained through leases.

But India funded white elephants too. Only one train runs between Medawachchiya and Mannar. The railway line, built with Indian concessionary finance,cost 164 million dollars. The variable interest rate loan is currently priced at 3% per year. Locals report that fewer than 200 people use it a day. This is no surprise. Mannar town is a backwater of 72,000 souls. The line only makes sense as a link to India, which is why it was built in the first place. As argued elsewhere, this railway would be a perfect complement to a ferry or the long, long overdue Indo-Lanka bridge.

Ultimately, lenders –motivated by altruism, profit or influence – will lend. The responsibility to borrow prudently and invest wisely is our own. Even Japan, the most benevolent of our bilateral lenders, keeps trying to lock us into Japanese suppliers. Examples include the ISDB television standard and monorail. Whether Sri Lanka likes it or not, any white elephants are ultimately the country’s own responsibility. That is what it means to be sovereign.

MYTH 3: China’s loans only focus on Hambantota

FACT: Now they flow to Polonaruwa too.

Nearly a third of China’s lending to Sri Lanka was spent in Hambantota. Of China’s 8.2 billion dollar lending to Sri Lanka 2.6 billion went into the Hambantota area. However, now it is Polonnaruwa’s time to eat. In the External Resources Department’s borrowing plan for 2018, nearly half of China’s loans are allocated to agriculture and irrigation in Polonnaruwa. We need to focus on building infrastructure for export-oriented, knowledge-based growth – industrial parks, a second runway at Katunayake and electrifying our railways and not on borrowing that confines our people to low-productivity and precarious subsistence agriculture.

MYTH 4: China’s loans come with no strings attached.

FACT: China can play at puppeteer too.

China’s claim to fame in much of the backward world was its policy of non-interference in domestic politics and policy. We now know that this is humbug. Although it is unclear whether payments by Chinese SOEs into Rajapaksa foundations and campaign funds were for commercial or strategic influence, what is clear is that Chinese money was used to influence domestic politics and the integrity of our elections.

The clumsiness of Xi Jinping’s reported ‘gift’ of 295 million dollars for a project of the Head of State’s personal choice is another case in point. In a democracy, especially one with a Cabinet form of government, placing funds at the President’s personal disposal is odd enough. But this is to be expected.

All great powers use money to gain influence or have done it in the past. As Ian Paisley’s suspension shows, the Sri Lankan Government is no exception.

Moaning and groaning may be helpful. But we cannot depend on the goodwill of others. The only sustainable protection for our democracy is transparency, sound laws and vigorous enforcement.

A start is thorough investigation and action both by the police and Parliament’s Ethics and Privileges Committee. In addition, the immediate amendment of the Asset Declaration Act (to make the declarations public), complemented by a register of interests is a must.

MYTH 5: Sri Lanka is trapped by Chinese debt

FACT: Sri Lanka owes more to US investors than to China.

Loans from Chinese banks only account for 10 % of Sri Lanka’s overseas debt. But official statistics show that 39 % of Sri Lanka’s overseas debt is borrowed from international markets - largely US based institutional investors. That said, Chinese loans account for a very large proportion of debt maturing in the next few years – perhaps explaining some of the concern.

Our debt problems are not really about excessive borrowing. They are about borrowing and not investing wisely. It makes sense to borrow as long as the return we get is greater than the cost. Spending borrowed money on corruption and white elephants is one important reason why we have debtor woes.

Our fate is in our own hands

In conclusion, the fundamental problem with Chinese loans is not financing costs or debt traps. As extensively discussed by others, it is the lack of transparency, corruption, absence of competitive bidding and politically motivated project selection. True, if China were exceptionally benevolent all this would not occur.

But we need to remember that China is as plagued by these problems within China as we are. It is a tall order to expect Chinese companies to play by one set of rules at home and another abroad – unless we compel them to do so. So we need to stop pointing fingers and realise that our fate and the enforcement of our law is, above all, in our own hands.

Loan data, available at the author’s twitter @danielalphonsus, is from the External Resources Department. Other statistics are from Ministry of Transport Performance Report 2014 and the External Resources Department Performance Report 2017.

The writer wishes to acknowledge the External Resources Department’s exemplary service. They fulfilled his RTI request in its entirety within four days of emailing.

Are The Populations Of Bees & Butterflies Declining?

Dr. Chandre Dharmawardana
logoThere are always intermittent reports and circulation of petitions about the loss of bee populations, butterfly populations, fire-fly populations etc and evident environmental damage. These reports are never accompanied by entomological surveys of insect populations and other relevant data.
Instead, it will claim that the reader in his/her childhood days saw many butterflies, bees and fireflies, while today this is not the case. Of course, many people who had a rural childhood live today in crowded urban jungles enmeshed with roads choked with traffic. Why would they expect to see butterflies in a concrete jungle?
According to a comprehensive review article by Prof. David Goulson (Fellow of the Royal Society and Professor at the University of Cambridge), and his colleagues,  the honey bee populations in the world have INCREASED by 40% over the last decade.
See the research article in the famous journal “Science”, published by the American Association for the Advancement of Science: Science. 2015 Mar 27;347(6229):1255957.   
What has decreased is the population of WILD BEES. Some species of butterflies (e.g., Monarch butterfly) have also decreased due to the removal of specific flowering plants (Milkweed or “Varaa” in Sinhala,) due to urbanization and cutting down of forest.
1. This loss of wild bees is mostly due to LOSS of HABITAT due to people felling forests and building houses and roads. This reduces the amount of forest and bush available for wild bees, butterflies  and indeed all flora and fauna. Even the elephant population in the Sinharaja has now been reduced to just two elephants – this is NOT due to glyphosate or pesticide use.
Haphazard urbanization should be stopped, and the existing Forests must be preserved and forest cover MUST BE increased. Roads passing through forest reserves must NOT be build. Much of waste farmland should be returned to forest instead of dredging and building houses. But even the Wilpattu has been razed for building human habitations, ostensibly for “war-displaced Muslims”.
2. Furthermore, human populations and urbanization help the growth of parasites which harm bees. The noxious fumes from motor vehicules, diesel engines, farm tractors, electronic and mining industries, coal-power plants etc., burning of garbage, increased particulate dust are  vital factors producing extreme environmental stress on bees and butterflies.
3. The excessive use of pesticides has also been mentioned, but The chief entomologist of the primary agricultural Research institute in Britain (Rothamstead Research Inst.) has stated that there is no clear evidence that
no-necotinoids are a cause of wild-bee decline.
Glyphosate acts on  green plants, and have no direct impact on fauna, insects and other zoo-species. In fact it is known to encourage the growth of soil microbes, earthworms etc. Its impact is only on plant-species as the mode of action of glyphosate is to interfere with photosynthesis (i.e., living species having chlorophyll). Bees don’t have chlorophyll and are unaffected  by glyphosate.
Such herbicides are used to control weeds and this may lead to a reduction of some weeds useful to wild bees. But usual planted species (e.g., tomatoes, tea bushes) also provide flowers that are valuable to wild bees and so there is a compensating effect as long as flowering plants are used in farmlands which often tend to be mono-cultures (e.g., vast extensions of corn fields).

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People Perspectives: Diverse Discussions for Discovery



logoMonday, 30 July 2018

I am so happy to present my seventh book titled, “People Perspectives”. It is a display of diverse discussion for discovery, in fact, my third collection of articles based on the “Humane Results” column published in the Daily FT. Today’s column is about the nature and features of People Perspectives in the context of the socio-economic fabric of Sri Lanka.

Overview 

“I slept and dreamt that life was joy. I awoke and saw that life was service. I acted and behold, service was joy.” This is among the valued utterances of Rabindranath Tagore (1861 -1941). As I mentioned in my preamble to the book, People Perspectives is an assortment of diverse discussions leading to discovering people, the most precious resource in any organisation.   Practicing managers have been the centre of focus in such discussions. In the book, I proposed a “four R” approach in getting the best out of People Perspectives.
  • Recognise salient features of people at diverse workplaces 
  • Reflect on the main challenges associated with managing people in obtaining expected results  
  • Relate the basic concepts covered to the current issues faced by the reader’s workplace
  • Reinforce the way how one professionally deal with people
I intended the reading of People Perspectives to give pleasure in meaningful understanding the key concepts and pressure in appropriately applying them.

People Perspectives in a nutshell

The book contains 25 discussions, each presented as a chapter. Each discussion revolves around people, the most precious resource in any organisation. It is all about people: how they make a difference, not only in their lives but in other’s lives as well. The setting is primarily an organisation, public or private, with wider implications on national and international levels.

The term humane typically mean caring, kind, gentle, compassionate, civilised and kind. These definitions all revolve around people. Results, on the other hand is to do with achievement. It could be goals, objectives, targets and measures. When we combine the two terms, the emerging idea is the need to achieve results through people.

We have various resources in an organisation.  Physical, financial and informational resources will be in no avail, if we do not have the most precious resource. That is the Human Resource. It is the only resource that has life, with associated dynamism and vitality. In such a context, Humane Results (HR) can be the distinct dimension of human resource management (HRM).

HRM is constantly evolving. Having started as personnel management, it has come a long way to occupy a prominent place in organisational top levels with strategic human resource management. Among numerous ways of describing HRM, Garry Dessler offers perhaps the simplest. HRM is all about policies, practices and processes of performing the people aspect of a management position. It does not confine to a particular department, division, section or a unit. Every manager has a people role to play. Let’s take the case of an acclaimed accountant. He/she must be very good in the accounting related technical matters. But without managing the people reporting to him/her, the results cannot be achieved. It is a case of knowing the art and science of getting things done through the people, with the people and from the people. That leads to the golden rule in HRM: Every manager is a people manager.

Managing people has its promises and pitfalls. Humans have potential and unleashing it has to happen in the organisational setting in order to obtain the desired results. That is the promise. The other side of the coin is the fact that humans are neither rational nor irrational; they are natural, or “a-rational”, if I am to coin a term. There is a high degree of unpredictability in human behaviour. There can be swinging between emotional extremes, be it glad, sad or mad.  Managing people is an art and science in that respect. It needs an appeal to head, with structure, direction and control. That is being scientific. It also needs an appeal to the heart, with purpose, passion and positivity. That is being artistic. Hence, a carefully planned set of “head” and “heart” strategies should be on offer.

It reminds me of what Lao Tzu said a long time ago: If you want to plan for one year, plant corn. If you want to plan for three years, plant a tree. If you want to plan for ten years, plant people. People development is a long term affair. You cannot rush sunshine.  There was a European CEO whom I knew, who used to yell at his senior colleagues, “Where is my EBITDA?” EBITDA stands for Earnings before interests, taxes, depreciation and amortisation.  Surely, he should have been interested in that, but the issue was that he was ONLY interested in that. People development went down the drain.


The book covers multiple facets of humane results including leadership. As Jim Collins puts it, in his bestselling book, “Good to Great”, we need great leaders with “professional will” and “personal humility” not only at top but at all levels of an organisation. They will inspire, influence and instruct with results in mind. 

People challenges for the nation 

I see a Human Resource issue at the macro level baffling the national leaders. How to pick the right person to the right position, especially with regards to the key ones from a national perspective is essential. We have already seen some displeasure expressed by a section of the public through social media about certain appointments.

It is pertinent to mention what David Ogilvy, the advertising tycoon, had to say with respect to hiring: “If each of us hires people who are smaller than we are, we shall become a company of dwarfs, but if each of us hires people who are bigger than we are, we will become a company of giants.” In order to hire people with potential, the hiring process has to be professionally designed and executed.

Selection decisions can have far-reaching implications. Hiring is one of the critical people functions of any organisation. In the traditional jargon, it is known as recruitment and selection. Recruitment deals with getting enough applicants as a potential pool. Selection deals with picking the best from the pool. That’s where the matchmaking becomes significant.

Leaders should be performers. They practice what they preach. They inspire, influence and instruct in such a manner to initiate result-oriented action. In contrast, laggards are passengers. They hamper the progress by being lazy and lethargic. Indecisiveness resulting in inaction is often common in their approach.

Do we see more leaders or laggards? The answer lies in the results they achieve. It is better to light a candle than curse the darkness. Living with leaders and laggards leave us less number of choices for achievement. Leaders have to be far more effective to overcome the ineffectiveness of laggards.

Another associated key people aspect is performance. Performance has always been a buzz word in business circles. It matters for both private and public sectors alike. What is performance? The dictionary meaning is that it is the execution or accomplishment of work. Moving beyond, it can also be regarded as achieving a planned set of objectives utilising the available resources in an efficient and effective manner.

Performance can happen at three levels in a typical organisation. I would call them triple Is.
  • Individual Level: This is the core where a person should deliver what he/she is expected. 
  • Interactive Team Level: This is the spillover from the core. When performing individuals collaborate, the interactive team becomes a performing team. 
  • Institutional Level: When such collaborative teams perform, that impacts the organisation. Hence, the institution becomes a performing one. 
There is one solid “I” needed in order to link the above three Is. That is integration. I have seen individuals getting rewarded for their performance, while the institution is not performing well. Also, the institution may do extremely well, yet depriving the rewards for individual performance. Both these cases highlight the lack of integration. The solution is to have a properly designed performance management system, with the needed inputs from all involved.

It is often noted that the status of performance management in Sri Lankan organisations can be further improved and enhanced. From the current state of being a routine custom with less impact on organisational success, it should rapidly evolve to be a critical contributor for organisational progress. The time demands us to act. Knowing clearly should lead s to doing cleverly. It is up to individuals, interactive teams and institutions to make a difference for them as well as for others. This can be seen as the essence with regard to the price and prize of performance.

Way forward 

It reminds me of what Seneca, a Roman philosopher (4 BC to 65 AD) said:  “Dum inter homines sumus, colamus humanitatem. “(As long as we are among humans, let us be humane.) I earnestly hope that that People Perspectives will assist you towards meaningfully engaging the precious human resources with care and clarity.  It is a matter of envisioning the future and endeavouring to make it a reality. The twin challenges of employee wellbeing and enterprise progress can be balanced by ensuring Humane Results.

People Perspectives became a reality because of some special people who inspired me to produce it, including my colleagues at the Postgraduate Institute of Management (PIM) and the Institute of Personnel Management (IPM). Being the common “I” of PIM and IPM, it gave me a sense of satisfaction to share my perspectives on people in a broader context. My humble invitation to all the readers is to embark on that journey of excellence.

(Prof. Ajantha S. Dharmasiri can be reached through director@pim.sjp.ac.lk , president@ipmlk.org, ajantha@ou.edu  or www.ajanthadharmasiri.info)

Saturday, July 28, 2018

The Looming War Against Iran

We are by now used to blood and thunder rhetoric between Washington and Tehran. But this time White House policy is clearly being directed by pro-Israel American neocons who want the US military to crush Iran as it did Iraq.

by Eric S. Margolis-
( July 28, 2018, Toronto, Sri Lanka Guardian) President Donald Trump and his neocon advisors have been trying to provoke a war with Iran and Syria for many months.
The neocons are echoing Cato the Elder’s cry, ‘delenda est Carthago!’. Iran must be destroyed.
So far, Tehran and its ally Damascus have refused to respond to US naval and air incursions or Israel’s growing air attacks in Syria. But the war of words between the US and Iran has now reached a critical phase.
Last week, Trump, who evaded military service during the Vietnam War, made his loudest threats yet against Iran, bringing the danger of war to the boiling point. On 21 May, the hard-line US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo delivered a thunderous ultimatum to Iran during an address to the US Heritage Foundation, a rich, influential arm of America’s Israel lobby.
Pompeo made 12 totally unacceptable demands on Iran that were clearly designed to be rejected by Tehran. Not since Austria-Hungary’s ultimatum against Serbia in 1914 have we seen such a clear effort to bring about war. Tehran quickly dismissed Pompeo as ‘a gangster.’
We are by now used to blood and thunder rhetoric between Washington and Tehran. But this time White House policy is clearly being directed by pro-Israel American neocons who want the US military to crush Iran as it did Iraq.
Crushing Iran will leave Israel with unfettered control of the Mideast and its oil – unless Russia or Turkey intervene against Israel, which is most unlikely. Some think Russia and Israel – and the US – have already made a deal to divvy up the central Mideast.
‘Let the Americans come,’ one Iranian militant told me, ‘they will break their teeth on Iran.’ Very colorful but hardly accurate. The US and Israel will surely avoid a massive, costly land campaign again Iran, a vast, mountainous nation that was willing to suffer a million battle casualties in its eight-year war with Iraq that started in 1980 . This gruesome war was instigated by the US, Britain, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia to overthrow Iran’s new popular Islamic government.
The Pentagon has planned a high-intensity air war against Iran that Israel and the Saudis might very well join. The plan calls for over 2,300 air strikes against Iranian strategic targets: airfields and naval bases, arms and petroleum, oil and lubricant depots, telecommunication nodes, radar, factories, military headquarters, ports, water works, airports, missile bases and units of the Revolutionary Guards.
Iran’s air defenses range from feeble to non-existent. Decades of US-led military and commercial embargos against Iran have left it as decrepit and enfeebled as was Iraq when the US invaded in 2003. The gun barrels of Iran’s 70’s vintage tanks are warped and can’t shoot straight, its old British and Soviet AA missiles are mostly unusable, and its ancient MiG and Chinese fighters ready for the museum, notably its antique US-built F-14 Tomcats, Chinese copies of obsolete MiG-21’s, and a handful of barely working F-4 Phantoms of Vietnam War vintage.
Air combat command is no better. Everything electronic that Iran has will be fried or blown up in the first hours of a US attack. Iran’s little navy will be sunk in the opening attacks. Its oil industry may be destroyed or partially preserved depending on US post-war plans for Iran.
The only way Tehran can riposte is by staging isolated commando attacks on US installations in the Mideast of no decisive value, and, of course, blocking the narrow Strait of Hormuz that carries two thirds of Mideast oil exports. The US Navy, based nearby in Bahrain, has been practicing for decades to combat this threat.
China vows to keep buying Iranian oil in spite of the US blockade to be imposed this fall. This could put the US and China on a collision course.
While Iran may be able to interdict some oil exports from the Arab states, and cause maritime insurance rates to skyrocket, it’s unlikely to be able to block the bulk of oil exports unless it attacks the main oil terminals in Saudi Arabia and the Gulf with ground troops. During the Iran-Iraq war, neither side was able to fully interdict the other’s oil exports.
Direct western intervention in a major ground campaign seems unlikely. But the US and Israeli war plan would aim to totally destroy Iran’s infrastructure, communications and transport (including oil) crippling this important nation of 80 million and taking it back to the pre-revolutionary era. That was the plan for Iraq, the Arab world’s most industrialized nation. Today Iraq still lies in ruins.
One recalls the words of the great Roman historian, Tacitus: ‘they make a desert and call it peace.’
Copyright Eric S. Margolis 2018

Israel kills children in Gaza protests

A Palestinian wounded by Israeli soldiers during a protest along the Gaza-Israel boundary is taken to a hospital in Jabaliya, northern Gaza Strip, on 27July.
 Ramez HabboubAPA images
Maureen Clare Murphy- 28 July 2018
Three Palestinians, including two children, were fatally shot during the 18th consecutive Friday of protests held under the banner of the Great March of Return in the occupied Gaza Strip.
An 11-year-old boy, identified as Majdi Ramzi Kamal al-Satari, died after being shot in the head east of Rafah in southernmost Gaza.
Israeli forces shot dead 11-year-old Majdi Ramzi Kamal al-Satri near the perimeter fence in Rafah, Gaza on July 27. He sustained a gunshot wound to the head around 5:30 pm local time and was pronounced dead at the European Gaza Hospital.
Ghazi Muhammad Abu Mustafa, 43, died after he was shot in the head by Israeli soldiers east of Khan Younis in southern Gaza.
Abu Mustafa’s wife, Lamia, a nurse and paramedic, treated her husband for an injury during a protest more than a month ago, according to Dr. Ashraf al-Qedra, the health ministry spokesperson in Gaza.
Lamia Abu Mustafa was working again this Friday when her husband was brought in with a fatal gunshot wound to the head, al-Qedra said, giving his praise to Gaza’s medical workers for their endurance amid great personal pain and suffering.
On Saturday, Mumin Fathi al-Hams had died from gunshot injuries he sustained on Friday during protests east of Rafah.
Defense for Children International Palestine said that the slain youth, shot in the back, was 16 years old:
Israeli forces shot 16-year-old Moemen Fathi Yousef al-Hams with live ammunition in the back near the perimeter fence in Rafah, Gaza on July 27. He was transferred to the European Gaza Hospital in critical condition and succumbed to his injuries on July 28.
Some 150 others were injured during Friday’s protests, most of them by live fire, including children, women, paramedics and journalists. Six were reported to be in serious condition.

Journalists under attack

Israeli forces shot a freelance journalist covering the protests in Rafah last Friday.
The bullet went through Zaki Yahya Awadallah’s “right leg below the knee, severing the artery, and pierced his left leg,” the Committee to Protect Journalists stated.
Awadallah was not wearing any protective gear that identified him as a journalist at the time, according to the international press freedom watchdog.
“Awadallah said on Facebook on 21 July that the artery in his right leg was ligated and he is in stable condition,” the Committee to Protect Journalists stated.
The group added that Awadallah has been covering the protests since they began on 30 March, posting photos to his Facebook page.
The same day that Awadallah was shot, the Committee to Protect Journalists added, freelance photojournalist Hiba Awad was hit in an arm with a tear gas canister.
Two Palestinian journalists have been killed while covering the protests.
Last Friday a journalist learned that her brother had been killed in an Israeli attack when she rushed to the scene of heavy artillery shelling against a Hamas monitoring post in eastern Khan Younis.
“My brother’s remains were lying in pieces in front of me, and I didn’t know,” Maryam Abu Daqqa stated.
More than 150 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since the launch of the Great March of Return.
Nearly 200 Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank have been slain by Israeli occupation forces and armed civilians since the beginning of the year.
Eight Israelis were killed by Palestinians during the same period.

Settler and Palestinian assailant killed

On Thursday night, a Palestinian stabbed three Israelis in the West Bank settlement of Adam, killing one.
The slain Israeli was identified as Yotam Ovadia, 31.
The suspected assailant, Muhammad Tareq Yusif Abu Ayyush, 17, was reportedly shot and killed by an armed civilian.
While Palestinian political factions praised Abu Ayyush’s attack, the mayor of his hometown, Kobar, reportedly condemned the slaying and urged the Israeli military to spare the home of the boy’s family.
“His parents and siblings had nothing to do with what he did. They do not deserve to pay the price for the actions of one of their family members,” mayor Izzat Badwan stated.
Israeli soldiers raided West Bank village overnight and took measurements of the Abu Ayyush home, as the army typically does in advance of revenge demolitions of the homes of suspected Palestinian assailants.
Another home in the village was razed in a punitive home demolition after a teen resident stabbed and killed three Israelis in a nearby settlement last year.
Such demolitions constitute collective punishment and are prohibited under international law.
The Israeli newspaper Haaretz reported that Abu Ayyush’s family members were interrogated and four were taken in “for further investigation.”
Early Friday, the military closed entrances to the village, razed roads and placed dirt mounds on its main street, a habitual form of collective punishment.
“Violent clashes erupted between Palestinian youths and Israeli forces on the road leading up to the Kobar village afterwards, during which Israeli forces fired stun grenades and tear gas bombs towards the youths,” the Ma’an News Agency reported.
Israeli defense minister Avigdor Lieberman approved the construction of 400 housing units in Adam settlement following the stabbing.
Meanwhile the Israeli army “is not ruling out the possibility of assassinating” the Palestinian fighter who shot and killed an Israeli soldier along the Gaza-Israel boundary last Friday, Haaretz reported.
Such an extrajudicial execution would constitute a war crime under international law
Three Palestinians were killed in a firefight last Friday after the soldier was killed, and Israel bombed dozens of sites across Gaza, as the territory teetered on the brink of a full-out confrontation between Israel and Hamas.
Haaretz reported this week that the Israeli military wishes to complete construction of a “protective wall” along the already fenced off Gaza boundary before any new major confrontation with Hamas.
“Construction is slated to end by the end of 2019 and the army would prefer not to be dragged into an extensive round of fighting until then,” Haaretz stated.

UNRWA job cuts

The socio-economic situation in Gaza took another turn for the worse this week after UNRWA, the United Nations agency for Palestine refugees, announced the loss of 250 jobs in the occupied Palestinian territories.
More than 100 of those jobs are in Gaza, where half the population is unemployed.
An UNRWA employee reportedly attempted to set himself on fire after receiving notice of his termination.
The jobs were cut as a result of the Trump administration withholding $300 million in funding to the humanitarian agency in an effort to strongarm the Palestinian leadership into going along with US-brokered negotiations with Israel.
The commissioner-general of UNRWA described the cuts in funding from the US, the agency’s single largest donor, as an “existential threat” to its work providing assistance to millions of Palestinians in the West Bank, Gaza Strip, Syria, Lebanon and Jordan.

Jerusalem

Meanwhile in the Old City of Jerusalem on Friday, Israeli occupation forces stormed the al-Aqsa mosquecompound, attacking and injuring worshippers and temporarily shuttering the holy site.
Worshippers “of all ages [were] caught by surprise by the police onslaught, scrambling for safety,” the Palestinian news agency WAFA reported.

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