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, December 9, 2018

Let’s Boycott President


LEN logo(Lanka e News - 08.Dec.2018, 10.00PM) Sri Lanka have been suffering its worst days ever in its long history (of over 3500 years) since the Organized Coup on 26th October 2018 where the Executive President Violated the Constitution (on which he took oath that he would protect its dignity and will not violate it). He has been continuing to violate the constitution and have been engaging beyond his limits of power entitled to him by the constitution. To cover his first mistake, he has been violating over and over.
Since then, we have been witnessing twisting of tongues by the President which eventually proved that he no longer deemed fit to rule this country. We have been seeing on a daily basis that his speeches are in total contradiction to his previous speeches/promises. He himself symbolically admitted that his speeches are nothing but mere words to appease the Gallery and to seek attention. 
As public, we have an obligation to display our dissatisfaction towards his actions over the period since 26th October. We already witnessed Many People are showing their displeasure at the President and his Men. A State Recognition Award for a Highly Appreciable Gentlemen was already returned , Tourism Industry Leader’s Decision to Boycott Awards Ceremony, The refusal of Receiving Awards from those MP’s who support the illegal move by president are good examples.
Therefore, it is high time we, the Citizens of Sri Lanka who honour the Country’s Dignity and respect the Constitution, should also set an example by BOYCOTTING ANY EVENTS OR PROGRAMMES FOR WHICH THE PRESIDENT IS SCHEDULED TO ATTEND” and show our silent displeasure towards his actions thereby teaching a lesson to anyone in the future who may have a motive of violating the Constitution or going against the country’s sovereignty. If a lesson is not taught, then it would pave way for others to follow the same footpath of the president and do things to his own whims and fancy. 
THIS ACTION WAS FORCED UPON THE PUBLIC TO TAKE WHICH IS NOT TO TARGET ONE INDIVIDUAL OVER HIS MADNESS, RATHER IT IS TO MAKE A LESSON TO WHOEVER MAY COME TO THAT SEAT IN THE FUTURE. 
WE MAY LOSE LITTLE BY DOING THIS BUT WE MUST REMEMBER THAT THERE IS NO GAIN WITHOUT PAIN.
Kindly share this among your circles if you agree that the president’s actions are unbecoming. 
Thanks


A Citizen Who Loves His Country beyond Politics.

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by     (2018-12-08 18:11:41)

Have The Actions Of Sirisena On October 26 Strengthened The Democratic Forces In Sri Lanka?

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At this stage, all the opposition parties, including a member of the Elections Commission, took this matter to the highest court of the land: the Supreme Court. The Supreme Court granted an interim stay order to prevent the holding of elections until the case is heard on December 10 signaling that the dissolution was illegal. With little option, the President recommenced Parliament, which paved the way for a no-confidence motion to be passed against the fake government. In countering this humiliation and a desperate attempt to avoid parliamentary proceedings, the Rajapaksa-Sirisena faction of MP’s resorted to indecent and shameful actions in the Parliament. As the nation watched in horror the disgraceful behavior of our public-funded MP’s in Parliament, this gained further media coverage locally and internationally bringing further disrepute to our nation. Despite all the odds, video footage showcased the brave and courageous Speaker of the House conducting the vote of a no-confidence motion on four accounts against the fake regime.  Despite the many losses, the President still continues to reject all votes taken on passing the no-confidence motion and proceeds to govern the country, strewn into disarray, as if nothing has happened. 
On the meeting held with the President on November 27, 2018 the Tamil National Alliance Leader R Sampanthan reminded the President that his game bore serious legal consequences. An adverse ruling from the Supreme Court on December 10, 2018 could be the basis to institute criminal proceedings against the members of the fake government. Any person executing illegal orders could be criminally prosecuted where the President too would not be immune against prosecution. 
It is in this backdrop, the ousted premier Ranil Wickremesinghe has ferociously insisted that the status quo prior to October 26, 2018 be maintained. As such, there will be no compromises made with an illegitimate group that instigated this ploy to plunge the country into deep crisis. Despite position and power, any concessions offered at this stage would be compromises to democratic values and signal an acceptance of the illegitimate acts carried out. All of these actions, and our political reactions to them, will have dire consequences in the long-term interest of the country.   
Democratic Values
It is widely believed that the man who is in the forefront of fighting against the authoritarian rule to uphold democracy today was once part of a regime construed to aiding and abetting severely inhumane acts. History tells us that under the leadership of former presidents JR Jayawardene and Ranasinghe Premadasa, there were many immoral, undemocratic and illegal acts inflicted on the country. With the best of intentions, perhaps it was Ranil Wickremesinghe’s personal belief of loyalty and obedience to the party leader that he did not oppose these acts. So it is the personal view of the writer that Ranil Wickremasinghe’s achilles heel lies in his lack of publicly condemning some of the inhumane doings committed under the previous leadership that he was part of. 
In contrast, Mahinda Rajapaksa, a man who commenced his political career championing democratic values and human right abuses, is today in the forefront of establishing a fake government deploying the most undemocratic and unconstitutional acts of recent Parliament democracy. His regime boasts of the significant development and infrastructure progress carried out during their tenure in government. One needs to ask the question whether development is considered obtaining foreign debts in order to build an airport where no planes land and a port which was not financially viable, or rashly evicting slums without adequate planning and destroying their livelihoods in the name of urban development, or if the death of 28 people when the mounted rubbish collapsed at Meethotamulla in the haste of beautifying Colombo, or the lives lost of innocent youth to abductors without fair justice granted to their families, or the sporadic killing of prisoners under the label of cleaning up gangsters, or innocent civilians who were unjustly arrested in the name of eradicating terrorism. 
Meanwhile the UNP has received much criticism for exactly the opposite – slow pace of development, not showing adequate development and projects at the grass-root level, lack of addressing the rising cost of living, the negative publicity of the Central Bank bond scam and perceived not to have acted to bring the corrupt and criminals to justice.
There will always be mounting pressure for any government to fast-track economic development and it will be very tempting to flirt with adopting undemocratic means to achieve this goal.  There is a school of thought, particularly the business community, that believe most of the social problems would be resolved if a country progresses economically. Whilst this bears true in some instances where economic prosperity eases some of the problems society face, it is the mandated role of the government and public institutions to understand that a society built on the foundations of strong, individual democratic values will be the means to achieve long-term sustainable development. 
Whilst there may never exist a perfect democratic model other than in theory, one needs to be reminded that democratic values are for one’s own self-interest. We condemn tortures, human right abuses and injustices in the hope that at some juncture, this fate does not befall upon our own loved ones. It is this short-sightedness of people in power who fail to comprehend the long-term benefits of such democratic values being ingrained in every citizen.

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The delights of a rural existence – Waiting for…..Godot?


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Emil van der Poorten- 

While the media – electronic and print – is saturated with predictions and prognostications ranging from the attempted-erudite (read Dayan Jayatilleke) to the pompously ghost written (Mahinda Rajapaksa in the words of G. L Pieris), those of us in the hinterland of this now-turbulent land have, seemingly, to "grin and bear."

Yes, there seems to be a singular and deliberate neglect of what the people of this country, outside the self-appointed elites, think about all of this and, more important, the practical implications, on a day-to-day basis for them.

The prices of food, if not soaring is increasing in a manner that puts essential nutrition in very serious jeopardy for every man, woman and child in this country. The Rajapaksa "government" has, with much fanfare, reduced the price of petrol by five rupees. View that in the context of what a Sri Lankan rupee is worth in relation to a US$ and my calculator comes up with 0.005 US! This is a simple mathematical fact! Place this great boon to the Sri Lankan travelling public in the context of the fact that petroleum-producing jurisdictions are curtailing production in significant fashion in order to shore up prices of crude going through the floor, the largest city in the second-biggest country in the world is experiencing its lowest gasoline (prices) in its history and this insult to the intelligence of any sane person is evident.

While that is plain insult to the Sri Lankan citizenry’s intelligence, the marshaling of the youth from the deep south of this country in order to take extra-Parliamentary action to negate the rulings of the highest court in the land is sinister in the extreme.

The sixty-four million rupee question now is: will a country that has as many personnel under arms as the largest country in the world – Russia – choose a Sri Lankan version of Duterte-ism in the name of "stability" or are the roots of parliamentary democracy deep enough to resist that impulse?

A most disturbing, photographically-documented, recent event in that respect is the formal obeisance paid by the head of the Sri Lanka Police, the Inspector General of Police (IGP), no less, to a man who has never, now or during the previous Rajapaksa Regime, been the head of the Police Service. I refer here to the ex-Secretary of Defence. Obeisance paid to the eminence grise of the Sri Lankan political firmament speaks particularly loudly of a particular mindset. The simple term that describes conduct of this kind is "political toadyism" and to the ego of someone who might well end up as the Duterte of Sri Lanka, to boot.

The armed forces of this country, numbering half a million personnel, and the police in particular who have responsibility for the application of the law on a day to day basis to every citizen of this country will soon, if they have not already, be faced with a very tough question: are they going to uphold the letter and the spirit of the law or are they going to bend the vassal knee to orders that are patently illegal? The excuse of "My boss gave me the order," is totally indefensible. There is an international body of statute and practice that conclusively states that an illegal order from a superior officer cannot and must not be followed. This is not some airy fairy concept concocted by some ivory-tower philosopher. It is an absolute international law, reinforced by the Nuremburg trials and, more recently, the My Lai massacre in Vietnam.

The way things have gone in this country recently and given our predilection for using uniformed authority to deal with civil issues, particularly during such conflicts as that at Rathupaswala where unarmed demonstrators were chased down and killed by uniformed members of the security officers, some even in places of worship, we certainly have some horrific precedents in our recent past. The fact that the polluters of people’s drinking water not only got off scot-free but are now lauded as the captains of industry capable of delivering an economic miracle to this country says it all in practice, much louder than those who espouse a line claiming that Chambers of Commerce are the last best hope for Sri Lanka and its people!

Is this a very desperate challenge for our land that can only be met by firm and unequivocal steps? Yes. One that can and must move every man, woman and child to resist the forces of repression: the thugs without any other gainful employment who are being fuelled by free buth packets and arrakku baageys, not to mention joy rides to the locations at which they can create mayhem for the residents.

If force must be met with force and there is no other choice, so be it.

A parallel initiative MUST be a cleansing of the ranks of the Yahapalanaya regime. People like the one-time Minister of Law and Order, who, in the broad daylight of public view deliberately soft-pedalled some of the worst racketeering of the Rajapaksa Regime and now has the audacity to say he did so on the President’s direction, needs not only to be turfed but action to punish him for dereliction of duty leading to public loss must be pursued. As for a one-time Minister of all things Buddhist (and Advanced Education?) who has jumped a non-existent fence to join those he has always toadied to, causing huge losses to the national treasury by blocking appropriate investigation of the Avante Garde/floating armoury case, every legal avenue must be explored to ensure that he pays the price that the law decrees in such circumstances.

One would need more than a single volume to list those pretending to be on "the side of the angels" while , in fact, selling out this nation and all of us, lock, stock and barrel for their personal gain. Those ranks would include those who had (recorded) chats with multiple-passport holders - "nangi"s to them - while playing at being on the side of those exercising the rule of law!

No nation deserves the kinds of politicians and their hangers-on that have been visited upon us. Going on the belief that, "While there’s life there’s hope," every single Sri Lankan needs to revert to that much-quoted expostulation of a movie actor of years gone by and say, "I’m mad as hell and I’m not going to take it anymore!"

LawAsia observers visit Sri Lanka: SL judiciary praised for conduct, independence and tolerance

2018-12-10
s Sri Lanka awaits another historic judgement to be given by the Supreme Court on President Sirisena’s move to dissolve Parliament, the Sri Lankan judiciary is being praised for its independence. While respecting its initial interim order withdrawing duties of the purported Prime Minister and his cabinet of Ministers, Sri Lankan citizens have once again vested hopes on this pillar of the Constitution. In order to observe the Supreme Court proceedings on the hearing of petitions against dissolution of Parliament, a high profile delegation representing LawAsia visited Sri Lanka recently. Speaking to the Daily Mirror, Christopher Leong, President of LawAsia and Prashant Kumar, Immediate Past President of LawAsia expressed their observations on conduct, tolerance and patience displayed during the hearings.   

The commendations

The visit of the delegation was coordinated by former President of the Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) Upul Jayasuriya. He said that the delegation is carrying out a neutral observation and their remit is to see how the rule of law is being upheld here. “The judicial process here is transparent and all parties are allowed to have their say before the court. This is our primary remit and how the court decides on an issue and the sole power is on the Court in a sovereign country,” Upul said giving a background to the purpose of their visit.   

“In coming for this observation team, I have had the opportunity to read through the relevant parts of the Constitution of Sri Lanka,” Christopher said referring to the Constitution. “From what we have observed the relevant provisions involve Articles 43, 62 and 70. One of the things we are very confident in saying is that having read through articles and in terms of language, I think Sri Lanka is very fortunate in that the language used in the Constitution is very crisp and clear. It is unambiguous and that would lend an easy and natural interpretation. Having attended hearings, we have also observed that the SC bench that is hearing this matter is very engaged with the issues involved as well as the arguments. They have exhibited judicial temperance and patience hearing this matter.”   
“The observations that we have is that the SC Judges are very careful to give the counsel sufficient time to develop and make their submissions,” he continued.“I suppose that is because of the gravity of issues that are involved. The SC judges have endurance and most importantly the members of the SC bench asked questions and clarifications. I think the SC acted expeditiously and they have given priority to these proceedings.”   

In his comments, Kumar said that these are tricky Constitutional issues and that the courts have to go in depth. “They have to involve all stakeholders and parties who are present before it. It is not uncommon that the hearing gets prolonged and it takes many days. In India, we challenged the Judicial Appointments Commission and the hearing went on for 45 days. Therefore the determination has to be thorough and all aspects of the Constitution need to be argued before the Judges.”   
Jayasuriya further said that in this situation there were ten intervening parties which is a healthy sign where the SC has allowed every one of those parties to be heard.   

Maintaining integrity of the Constitution

“The Constitution established in Sri Lanka is a republic and in all republican Constitutions, every power vested in any authority is solely exercisable for furthering the objectives of the Constitution,” Kumar added. “The judiciary is made the final arbiter and the custodian of the Constitution. That is what is before the SC and the SC has this dispute which is to be analysed from the structure of the Constitution and the effort has to be to maintain the integrity of the Constitutional design of the government which has been established. So judiciaries across the region have been very robust especially in India in exercising their powers as custodians of the Constitution. Primarily this is the issue before the SC which is to see how the Constitutional scheme is to be given its meaning in the light of surrounding circumstances; which action will destroy the spirit or undermine the Constitution or which action will further the Constitutional design and objective. This is the trend in modern Constitutions and judiciaries.”   

Jayasuriya also added that everyone including the President, Judges of SC, Presidents Counsel and attorneys-at-law have all taken an oath to defend the Constitution. “So when we are supposed to defend the Constitution that doesn’t mean we have a right to violate the Constitution. When in doubt the only authority that can interpret the Constitution best is the SC.”   

When asked whether such attempts to dissolve Parliament have been made in other Asian countries or anywhere in the world, Kumar said that there have been similar instances in India at the Provincial level. “There has been an instance where the governor of the state dissolved the assembly and the SC of India went to the extent of restoring the assembly, setting aside the dissolution. This has happened in Arunachal Pradesh and several other states. In India it has been consistently interpreted that the final arbiter of the majority, who form the government is neither the President nor the governor but it is the floor of the house and a test held on the floor of the house.”   

Justifying confidence 

“The other observation was on the vote of No-Confidence that was taken in Parliament,” Leong added. “As a general rule and a Constitutional provision, the Parliament is always the master of its own house. In this instance, a vote was taken by Parliament to make a determination within the aghast house as to who is reposed with the confidence of the majority of members. That vote was taken twice. As to the manner that vote has to be taken, the Parliament, as the master of its own house could determine the way it could take the vote. It could be taken by a show of hands, a voice vote or by electronic means. But it is the Parliament that determines how it will be taken and the results will be announced by the Speaker. Once the speaker announces the result it is final. Apparently the vote of No-Confidence was taken twice and it was carried by a majority. On both occasions over 120 voted in favour of the vote and matter has been taken to courts by 122 members of parliament.”   

"One of the things we are very confident in saying is that having read through articles and in terms of language, I think Sri Lanka is very fortunate in that the language used in the Constitution is very crisp and clear"

Leong also referred to an example in Malaysia. “There’s an interesting precedence in Malaysia where the King, who is the head of state decided that in order to ascertain who would get majority confidence you are not merely confined to having a vote of Confidence or No-Confidence in Parliament. “You can ascertain that from other means if available. In Malaysia, the head of state gathered the members of the state assembly and asked them to affirm their support for which candidate the majority confidence was reposed. That went to courts, was challenged in court and our apex court decided that it was a valid ascertainment to get the majority view as to whom the Parliament reposed confidence in. Hence, it will be interesting how Sri Lankan judiciary would view this action.”   

What would be the answer?

“If an answer is not found to the dissolution then the President can continue this process,” Kumar added. “In fact he will continue until he finds the voter party and majority which he thinks should form the government. So let the new government come and the majority is not to be tested on the floor of the house so that you can dissolve it. Therefore, does the Constitutional scheme suggest that the President has an absolute power and if the election is the solution that he can filter the democracy in a way until he gets the juice he wants? With the series of events that had taken place, one question that needs to be asked is what way to go. If you take one view that the courts cannot intervene and the President has the absolute power to dissolve Parliament then this opens up a possibility which would bring down the entire foundation of a republican Constitution. Then there’s no use of an election. It substitutes democracy with a presidential fiat. This is a question before the courts; not just what happens today but it is the entire future of the republic. That is in the hands of the lordships. Whether the country is going to go ahead with what it has preserved for 70 years is the question that is before Courts.”   

Pics by Pradeep Dilrukshana

Bystander effect in Sri Lankan society: perils and pitfalls


The most frequently cited example of the bystander effect is the brutal murder of a young woman named Catherine “Kitty” Genovese. On 13 March 1964, Genovese was returning home from work; as she approached her apartment entrance, she was attacked and stabbed by a man later identified as Winston Moseley. Despite Genovese’s repeated calls for help, none of the dozen or so people in the nearby apartment building who heard her cries called police to report the incident.

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It was indeed shocking to hear the inactivity of the observers in preventing a murder committed by a group of school students in Matara recently. It was equally shocking to see a video circulated in social media, showing how a person strangled his fiancée to death while his friends were video-recording it. At a time when many are focusing on mega political issues, I thought of reflecting on a relatively neglected area of public consciousness.

Overview 

There is a Sinhala proverb which goes as “Thaman hisata thama athamaya sevanala” (It is only one’s hand is the shelter / shadow for one’s head). In the spate of a wide range of human fatalities reported by local media, Genovese Effect offer rich insights of human behaviour, particularly that of bystanders of an event. It essentially refers to the phenomenon in which the greater the number of people present, the less likely people are to help a person in distress. When an emergency situation occurs, observers are more likely to take action if there are few or no other witnesses.

The bystander effect essentially refers to the phenomenon in which the greater the number of people present, the less likely people are to help a person in distress. When an emergency situation occurs, observers are more likely to take action if there are few or no other witnesses.
In a series of classic studies, researchers Bibb Latane and John Darley found that the amount of time it takes the participant to take action and seek help varies depending on how many other observers are in the room. In one experiment, subjects were placed in one of three treatment conditions: alone in a room, with two other participants or with two confederates who pretended to be normal participants.

As the participants sat filling out questionnaires, smoke began to fill the room. When participants were alone, 75% reported the smoke to the experimenters. In contrast, just 38% of participants in a room with two other people reported the smoke. In the final group, the two confederates in the experiment noted the smoke and then ignored it, which resulted in only 10% of the participants reporting the smoke.
 
Mind of a bystander

According to Psychology Today, “the social paralysis described by the bystander effect has implications for how we behave not only on city streets filled with strangers, but any place where we work or socialise.” When individuals relinquish responsibility for addressing a problem, the potential negative outcomes are wide-ranging—from minor household issues that housemates collectively avoid dealing with to violence and abuse that go unchecked. Some efforts have been made, including on college campuses, to encourage people to be “active bystanders” and fight the urge to step aside when someone is in trouble.
According to Kendra Cherry, there are two major factors that contribute to the bystander effect. First, the presence of other people creates a diffusion of responsibility. The second reason is the need to behave in correct and socially acceptable ways.
Catherine Genovese

The most frequently cited example of the bystander effect in introductory psychology textbooks is the brutal murder of a young woman named Catherine “Kitty” Genovese. On Friday, March 13, 1964, 28-year-old Genovese was returning home from work. As she approached her apartment entrance, she was attacked and stabbed by a man later identified as Winston Moseley.

Despite Genovese’s repeated calls for help, none of the dozen or so people in the nearby apartment building who heard her cries called police to report the incident. The attack first began at 3:20 am, but it was not until 3:50 am that someone first contacted police.

Initially reported in a 1964 New York Times article, the story sensationalised the case and reported a number of factual inaccuracies. While frequently cited in psychology textbooks, an article in the September 2007 issue of American Psychologist concluded that the story is largely misrepresented mostly due to the inaccuracies repeatedly published in newspaper articles and psychology textbooks.



“Bus 44” and bystander effect 

“Bus 44” is an award-winning short film written and directed by Chinese-American filmmaker Dayyan Eng in 2001, prominently highlighting the bystander effect.  Based on a true story, “Bus 44” takes place on the outskirts of a small town and tells the story of a bus driver (Gong) and her passengers’ encounter with highway robbers.

The driver (Beibi Gong) of Bus with the number 44 stops the bus to pick up a young man (Chao Wu) on a deserted country road. The young man is grateful that the bus has arrived, and tries to flirt with the driver, but she soon tells him to sit down. After a while, the bus stops for two men (Qiang Li and Kui Zhou) in the road, one of whom appears unwell, but upon boarding it is revealed that they are actually robbers, and demand that the driver and passengers hand over all their money and valuables. When one passenger refuses despite the driver telling him just to hand the money over, the robbers beat him until he complies.

The robbers leave the bus with everyone’s money and valuables, but on the way out one of them stares at the driver, then drags her out of the bus and starts raping her in a bush. The young man then asks the passengers why they are all just sitting. One man starts getting up, but his wife grabs his arm and he sits back down. Eventually, the young man leaves the bus on his own to help the driver. The passengers all jump to the window to watch, but do not help. The young man gets into a fight with the other robber and is stabbed in the leg.

However, the robbers then flee, and the driver gets up and returns to the bus, blood on her face, the other passengers looking away when she gives them all a look of anger and disgust. She sits back down and takes a few moments to pull herself together. Shortly afterwards, the young man manages to return to the bus. She tells him to get off the bus. He protests that he was the only one who tried to save her, but she just shuts the door in his face and throws his bag out of the window before driving off.

Confused and dejected, the young man sits in the road, then later, we see him walking along the road towards where the bus went. He hitches a lift in a passing car, and is driven onwards. A police car overtakes, and soon they catch up with the police car by a bridge with smoke coming from down the embankment. An officer is shown on his radio, confirming that the driver and all passengers are dead. The young man looks dumbfounded for a while, then when he realises what has happened, the film ends as a slight smile appears on his face.
Having a concern for one’s neighbour is fundamental for human relations. Is it rapidly eroding in Sri Lankan society? Are we becoming frozen with regard to human sufferings? With the advancements of technology and upliftment of living, are we emerging as more self-centred and looking at my own interests? 
Why it happens

According to Kendra Cherry, there are two major factors that contribute to the bystander effect. First, the presence of other people creates a diffusion of responsibility. Because there are other observers, individuals do not feel as much pressure to take action, since the responsibility to take action is thought to be shared among all of those present.

The second reason is the need to behave in correct and socially acceptable ways. When other observers fail to react, individuals often take this as a signal that a response is not needed or not appropriate. Other researchers have found that onlookers are less likely to intervene if the situation is ambiguous.

In the case of Kitty Genovese, many of the 38 witnesses reported that they believed that they were witnessing a “lover’s quarrel,” and did not realise that the young woman was actually being murdered.

Lessons for us

Sri Lanka is supposed to be more collectivistic compared to some western countries where the individualistic approach is the more dominant. There could also be a Sri Lankan twist to the whole issue, where the bystanders are aware of the consequents of harassment, waste of time, and even threats to their lives if they come forward.

There were encouraging responses in the recent past in this context. Police managed to arrest a couple of culprits based on timely tips by the “bystanders”, in stark contrast to the bystander effect. The challenge is to sustain such practices where a gradual decline of concern for others, fuelled by over–emphasis on materialistic gains is evident.

The practice of socio-cultural and religious values with regards to being concerned about ones’ neighbour is the vital need. It is for managers and others alike, a wakeup call to be more conscious about the fellow human beings.

Way forward 

Having a concern for one’s neighbour is fundamental for human relations. Is it rapidly eroding in Sri Lankan society? Are we becoming frozen with regard to human sufferings? With the advancements of technology and upliftment of living, are we emerging as more self-centred and looking at my own interests? These could be some questions that are pertinent and demanding answers to be found collectively.

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

Saturday, December 8, 2018

Nelson Mandela: A revered statesman and global icon

He negotiated with the apartheid White regime and without bloodshed shared the ruling powers with the White minority, abiding with principles of equal opportunity to all citizens
He adhered to the Constitution of the country to the letter which was adopted in May 1996 by the Parliament of South  Africa and never transgressed any of its clauses to be in power for life
2018-12-08
During this critical juncture when our country is going through a constitutional crisis, reading about the life of a statesman like Nelson Mandela seems to be an interesting learning experience to us all. 
Five years ago, Nelson Mandela, world renowned African leader, Nobel Peace Prize winner and the first Black President of South  Africa, passed away. Many leaders and representatives from 90 countries attended his funeral. The Blacks who had an overwhelming majority did not have any political right in the apartheid South Africa. Mandela fought for one person one vote and the rights of his brothers and sisters. He was tried unjustly as a terrorist and a political agitator and was imprisoned for 26 years from 1964 to 1990. 
Once released from prison, he negotiated with the White Prime Minster W.F. De Klerk for a democratic Constitution where all citizens would have voting rights. In 1994, Nelson Mandela was elected as the President of South  Africa with an overwhelming majority. He negotiated with the apartheid White regime and without bloodshed shared the ruling powers with the White minority, abiding with principles of equal opportunity to all citizens. Former White Prime Minister W.F. De Clerk became one of the members of his Cabinet. 
Mandela was admired throughout the whole world for the way he negotiated an amicable political settlement with the White supremacists. He was called the Gandhi of modern times and besides the Nobel Peace Prize, he was awarded multiple honours from all around the world including the US Presidential Medal for Peace, Lenin Peace Prize from Russia and Bharat Ratna from India. 
Refused Second Term 
The 1996 Constitution allowed him to run a second term. But in 1997 he resigned from the party leadership and refused to run for a second term. At the time of retirement, the Gallop polls showed 80% support for President Mandela. After retirement, he was active in initiating social activities to uplift the ordinary Black African people. He also raised funds to find a solution to the AIDS epidemic among the Blacks in Africa.
 
He overcame a bout of prostate cancer after retirement, but got respiratory infections at the end of his life and was hospitalised on several occasions. On December 8, 2013 he succumbed to a severe lung infection. 
In 1994 he divulged his political ideology: 
“A friend once asked me how I could reconcile my creed of African nationalism with a belief in dialectical materialism. For me, there was no contradiction. I was first and foremost an African nationalist fighting for our emancipation from minority rule and the right to control our own destiny. But at the same time, South African and African continents are part of the larger world. Our problems, while distinctive and special were not unique, and a philosophy that placed those problems in an international and historical context of the greater world and the course of history were valuable. I was prepared to use whatever means necessary to expedite the erasure of human prejudice and the end of chauvinistic and violent nationalism.” 
Lessons we can learn 
The world’s politicians can learn an enormous number of lessons from the life of Nelson Mandela. He was strongly urged by his party supporters not to resign from the party leadership. But he trained two or three younger people in the African National Congress and gave up his leadership to them. He fought and won the democratic rights for his people with patience and sacrifice. He spent 26 years of his life in prison facing harsh conditions because he was convinced about his mission to his people. 
The whole nation and leaders of the other African countries urged him to contest the presidential election at least for one more term. He gracefully rejected to run for a second term. According to opinion polls, 80% of South African people wanted him to contest. He never thought that the survival of the South African democracy depended on him being at the helm of the government. He once said, “I am not a messiah, but an ordinary man who had become a leader because of extraordinary circumstances.” 
He adhered to the Constitution of the country to the letter which was adopted in May 1996 by the Parliament of South  Africa and never transgressed any of its clauses to be in power for life. He respected the Constitution which enshrined a series of institutions to place checks on political and administrative authority within the constitutional democracy. He respected the will of the people both Blacks and Whites in the country. 
He worked hard even after retirement from politics to eradicate the AIDS virus, poverty and hunger from the African continent. From the international monetary awards he received, he created the Mandela Foundation in 1999 based in Johannesburg to focus on rural development of Africans, school construction and combatting HIV/AIDS. He created the Mandela Rhodes Foundation to provide postgraduate scholarships to bright African students. 
He publicly criticized some of the African leaders such as Robert Mugabe of Zimbabwe who were holding on to their power. 
He strongly opposed the NATO intervention in Kosovo and the US-UK intervention in Iraq, labelling the Iraqi invasion as a “tragedy.” A strong follower of Mahatma Gandhi of India and Martin Luther King of America, he gained universal franchise and political freedom for his Black South Africans. His biographers called him, “one of the most revered persons of our time.” Another called him a “global icon.”     

Marc Lamont Hill must be reinstated

#BlackPalestinianSolidarity is the strongest threat to Israel’s attempts to maintain its hegemony over Palestine liberation discourse in the US.
 Tess ScheflanActiveStills

Hatem Abudayyeh- 7 December 2018

Academics and scholars, from Lucy Peterson, University of Michigan, and Steven Salaita to Thomas Abowd, Tufts University, and Rabab Abdulhadi, San Francisco State University, have faced numerous attacks from Zionists in the US.
But the recent firing of CNN analyst Marc Lamont Hill is clear recognition that #BlackPalestinianSolidarity is the strongest threat to Israel’s attempts to maintain its hegemony over Palestine liberation discourse in this country.
All those who watched Hill’s speech at the United Nations – which was delivered on 28 November, the eve of the UN-recognized International Day of Solidarity with the Palestinian People – understood clearly what the Temple University professor meant with his conclusion.
“We have an opportunity to not just offer solidarity in words but to commit to political action, grassroots action, local action and international action that will give us what justice requires,” he said. “And that is a free Palestine from the river to the sea.”
We understood because he prefaced that section with a description of real Black-Palestinian solidarity “that is bound up not just in ideology but in action.”
This is the type of solidarity reflected in Palestinian support for the Ferguson, Missouri, protests of the killing of Michael Brown in 2014; and in Palestinian support for grassroots actions led by the Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression this year to ensure that Chicago police officer Jason Van Dyke stood trial for the killing of Black teenager Laquan McDonald (Van Dyke was ultimately convicted of second degree murder – the first white on-duty police officer in Chicago ever convicted for killing a Black person, as far as anyone can tell).
It is reflected in historical Black support across the US for the national rights of Palestinians, including its unequivocal defense of Rasmea Odeh in her three-and-a-half year legal battle (which she ultimately lost, forcing her deportation to Jordan in 2017) against the federal government’s politically charged prosecution of her alleged immigration violations.
Hill believes, like many millions across the world, that justice requires “a free Palestine from the river to the sea.” This clause in his speech is what drew the ire of the Anti-Defamation League and other extreme anti-Palestinian voices in the US, some who disingenuously even accused him of calling for the genocide of Israeli Jews.

“From the river to the sea”

But “Palestine will be free, from the river to the sea” has been a slogan of the Palestine national movement for decades and it has never meant the eradication of anyone.
It signifies the political sentiment that a white settler-colony state built on the Zionist premise that those who identify as Jews anywhere in the world have more of a right to the land of historic Palestine than the Palestinians who have lived there for generations is a racist concept that has led to inequality, apartheid, the illegal Israeli military occupation of Palestinian lands, and vicious crimes against the Palestinian people.
It also represents the political reality that a two-state solution has never been viable.
Israeli-only settlements have been built on expropriated Palestinian land in Jerusalem and elsewhere in the West Bank since 1967 in violation of international law. Palestinians make up 20 percent of the population of Israel, and the Gaza Strip and the West Bank are not contiguous territories. Freedom from the river to the sea simply means that the only real solution to the Palestine question is a single democratic state in historic Palestine, where all the people who live there enjoy equal rights.
So Hill’s political “crime” is that he upholds equal rights for Palestinians, but he is also even more “guilty” of being a representative of the Black liberation movement in this country, a large and constantly growing section of which believes, as he does, that Palestinian rights are directly bound to the rights of Black people in the US.
Two weeks ago, I had the honor of being one of the keynote speakers at the National Students for Justice in Palestine conference at the University of California, Los Angeles.
Students for Justice in Palestine chapters and other Palestinian and Palestine support organizations have built strong and sustaining relationships with Black students on campuses across the US. So I was asked – as a representative of the US Palestinian Community Network – an organization I helped co-found and still volunteer for – to address the issue of building coalitions and alliances with other oppressed communities, especially those in the Black liberation movement.
The US Palestinian Community Network recognizes that the oppressors of Palestinians are not only the Israelis, but also reactionary Arab regimes and especially US imperialism. As a consequence, our people in different parts of the world have different responsibilities.
The resistance in Palestine is organized one way, and the resistance in the Palestinian diaspora, another. Here in the US, the belly of the beast, we organize the grassroots to weaken the empire. The struggle today that most weakens the empire is the struggle for Black liberation.
The main demand in the Black community is for law enforcement to stop killing Black people. So we join organizations like the Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression and others fighting for community control of the police, a demand which was first articulated by the Black Panthers way back in 1970.

Liberation for all

We agree that “Black liberation will lead to liberation for all,” because the material reality is that Black liberation in the US, along with the victories of other progressive struggles here, will lead to the social transformation in this country that is needed to free people all over the world, including those in Palestine, from US domination.
It is why COINTELPRO (a series of FBI-led counterintelligence operations in the 1950s, ‘60s, and ‘70s targeting domestic US political movements), McCarthyism, Hoover’s FBI and law enforcement in general infiltrated, harassed, assassinated and devastated Black people and their organizations in this country for so many years, and why, like Marc Lamont Hill, they are still targets of repression today.
The flip side is that anti-imperialist victories in other countries, like Palestine, will support Black liberation here. Both liberation movements always saw themselves as partners in the struggle against racism and US imperialism. Palestinians and Black people have worked together in community-based struggles since the early ’70s, and partnered in the Rainbow Coalition, supporting Jesse Jackson’s run for the White House. We also supported Chicago’s first Black mayor, Harold Washington, and even worked in his administration.
The US Palestinian Community Network is a steering committee member of the Chicago Alliance Against Racist and Political Repression. We work closely with Blacks Lives Matter chapters in a number of cities and partner with Black4Palestine in Detroit and Dream Defenders nationally. We are allies with the Malcolm X Grassroots Movement in New York and we strongly support Black prisoners’ rights organizations in the San Francisco Bay area. Many other Palestinian and Arab organizations in the US also have great relationships with Black communities.
It is in the context of these alliances that we recall how Zionist organizations attacked the Movement for Black Lives in 2016 when it expressed solidarity with our people in Palestine and beyond, incorporating into its powerful and revolutionary A Vision for Black Lives policy platform an Invest-Divest section, which calls for support of boycott, divestment and sanctions measures in support of Palestinian rights, and suggests that Israel is an apartheid state.
And it is in this context that Marc Lamont Hill is being demonized today.
Zionists have always been terrified of #BlackPalestinianSolidarity, and have regularly attacked the Black liberation movement – whether the Black Panthers or the Malcolm X-era Nation of Islam or the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee – because of its solidarity and support for Palestinian liberation and self-determination and our right of return.
Marc Lamont Hill is a principled friend and comrade to Palestinians across the world, and must be immediately reinstated as a commentator at CNN. Palestinians and Black people in the US demand nothing less.
Hatem Abudayyeh lives in Chicago and is a National Coordinating Committee member of the US Palestinian Community Network (USPCN).

Israel locates third 'Hezbollah' tunnel crossing from Lebanon

Netanyahu calls Russian president about tunnels; Putin stresses 'need to ensure stability' along line separating Israel and Lebanon


Israeli machinery next to concrete border wall with southern Lebanon earlier this week after tunnel found (AFP)

Saturday 8 December 2018 
Israel's army said on Saturday it had located another tunnel crossing into its territory from Lebanon, the third such find since launching an operation to expose and destroy alleged Hezbollah "attack tunnels".
"The IDF has located an additional Hezbollah cross-border attack tunnel," spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Jonathan Conricus said, declining to give details on its precise location or dimensions.
"The tunnel crosses into Israel; like the first tunnel it is not yet operational and does not pose an imminent threat to Israeli communities," he said in a briefing with journalists, according to AFP.
On Tuesday, the army launched an operation dubbed "Northern Shield" to destroy tunnels it said were dug under the border by the Shia militant group Hezbollah, sharing images of one found near the Israeli town of Metula.
The United Nations peacekeeping Interim Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) confirmed the existence of a tunnel near the "blue line" frontier between Israel and Lebanon on Thursday, describing it as a "serious occurrence", Reuters reported.
On Thursday, the military announced that it had uncovered a second Hezbollah tunnel crossing into Israeli territory, Haaretz reported.
Conricus said on Saturday that the army had placed explosives in the newly exposed tunnel to prevent its use as a means to infiltrate Israel, but had not yet destroyed it.
He said the Israeli military had issued warnings in Arabic to residents of southern Lebanon to stay away.
Following the army's announcement, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that the operation to track the tunnels "is in its beginning".
"We'll continue to act till its completion," he said in a statement.
Conricus said the military was aware of a third tunnel leading from south Lebanon into Israel.
Despite not having its exact location, he said Israel asked UNIFIL, the UN mission monitoring the border region, to "take action and block the tunnel on the Lebanese side".
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The announcement of the new find came after Israeli soldiers on Saturday opened fire at what they perceived to be three "Hezbollah activists" approaching the border near Yiftah, south of Metula, where the army was carrying out engineering work.
Conricus said the army believed the three individuals intended to take sensors the Israeli soldiers had placed in the ground as part of their efforts to uncover tunnels.
Lebanon's official NNA news agency said Israeli forces fired shots in the air east of the village of Mays Al-Jabal after they had been surprised because of heavy fog by a routine Lebanese army patrol.
Also on Saturday, the Kremlin said Netanyahu called Russian President Vladimir Putin, whose forces are fighting on the same side as Hezbollah in Syria, to tell him about the tunnel operation. 
Putin "stressed the need to ensure stability along the line separating Israel and Lebanon", the Russian embassy in Israel said.
Netanyahu's office said he reiterated in the call "Israel's policy to prevent the establishment of an Iranian presence in Syria and to act against Iranian and Hezbollah aggression".
Israel has carried out hundreds of air strikes in Syria against what it says are Iranian military targets and deliveries of advanced arms to Hezbollah.
Still, a friendly fire incident in Syria in September that led to the downing of a Russian plane by Syrian air defences during an Israeli strike has complicated Israeli operations.
Iran-backed Hezbollah is the only group in Lebanon not to have disarmed after the country's 1975-1990 civil war.

Israel also fought a war against Hezbollah in 2006 that was halted by a UN-brokered truce.