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

Saturday, March 16, 2019

Cholesterol-lowering pill 'new option for statin users'

illustration of man clutching chestImage copyright
  • 14 March 2019
  • A new type of drug - called bempedoic acid - could offer another weapon in the fight against bad cholesterol.
  • An international study suggests the pill lowers cholesterol in people who continue to have high levels despite taking other drugs such statins.
    And scientists suggest the new therapy may also work as an alternative for people who are unable to take statins because of side-effects.
    The research is published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
    Researchers say they have asked UK and US drug regulators to consider whether to approve the pill.
    Picture of fruit and veg and pillsImage copyright

    Why is cholesterol an issue?

    Cardiovascular disease kills about 150,000 people in the UK each year.
    Bad cholesterol is one of the main reasons - it leads to blood vessels furring up and becoming easy to block.
    Blockages can be fatal - starving the heart or brain of oxygen and causing heart attacks and strokes.
    Cutting saturated fat and having a healthy diet, along with regular exercise, can help lower bad cholesterol.
    But this doesn't work for everyone.
    And, for some, genetic conditions - rather than lifestyle - increase their levels.
    Millions of people worldwide are prescribed drugs, most commonly statins, to reduce the amount of bad cholesterol in the blood.
    But reported side-effects and how often these drugs are prescribed has attracted controversy.
    Generic statins and stethoscopeImage copyright

    What about the new pill?

    The new drug works by blocking a key enzyme in the body, used to make cholesterol.
    Prof Sir Nilesh Samani, of the British Heart Foundation charity, says: "On the whole, statins do a great job of lowering cholesterol. However, this new drug could provide real benefit for the few people who can't take them or require additional treatments to get it to the right level.
    "The research suggests that it has the potential to reduce risk of heart attacks and strokes without major side-effects."

    What does the study suggest?

    The study involved more than 1,000 people who had cardiovascular disease or a genetic cholesterol condition and who were already on cholesterol lowering drugs (mainly statins).
    They were given a pill of bempedoic acid every day for a year, on top of their usual medication.
    About 700 others were instead given a placebo or dummy pill.
    After three months, the group who had taken the new pill had cut their bad cholesterol by 17%, compared with the group given a dummy pill.
    Prof Kausik Ray, from Imperial College London, says: "Bempedoic acid could be another addition to the arsenal of cholesterol lowering treatments available to patients.
    "What we have is a new class of drug that could be given to patients who are already taking statins and could help them further reduce their cholesterol levels and thus potentially cut their risk of heart attacks and strokes."
    picture of pills on a ECGImage copyright

    Are there side-effects?

    Every drug has side-effects, so it will be up to the patient and doctor to balance the individual benefits and risks.
    Researchers say the rate of side-effects were similar between the group that took bempedoic acid and the group that didn't.
    One side-effect that people on bempedoic acid experienced more was gout.
    And more people stopped taking the new drug because of side-effects than people in the dummy pill group.
    But unlike statins, researchers say, it works in the liver only and cannot reach the muscles.
    So, some scientists predict, it will not have some of the side-effects that some people experience with statins.
    But others are unsure and more research is needed to see if this is true and understand how many people the new pill could help.

    Will it reduce heart attacks and strokes?

    Studies so far, of which this latest one is the largest, suggest bempedoic acid can lower bad cholesterol - but we don't yet know how long for or whether this will definitely translate into fewer heart attacks and strokes.
    Prof Jane Armitage, at the University of Oxford, described these latest results as promising.
    Another, genetic, study, published simultaneously in the New England Journal of Medicine, offers clues that the benefits of taking bempedoic acid - in terms of preventing heart disease and strokes - could be similar to that achieved by statins.
    But Prof Armitage added: "Genetic studies cannot tell us whether the drug will be safe for a wide range of people."
    A clearer picture of how safe and effective the drug is will emerge once a longer term trial looking at the number of heart attacks and strokes on the new drug is completed.
    The US regulator, the Food and Drug Administration, will examine this data once it is available, in a few years' time.

    Jaffna uni students demand justice for genocide

    Students at the University of Jaffna launched an awareness rally yesterday, demanding justice for the genocide of Tamils. 
    13 March 2019
    The rally, which is to include a procession of vehicles carrying banners and placards across the Northern province, is due to culminate in a mass protest on March 16. 
    The rally comes as the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights said in its report on Sri Lanka that there had been "virtually no progress" on war crimes investigations as laid out in resolution 30/1 which called for accountability and transitional justice through a hybrid mechanism. 

    COULD SRI LANKA HAVE IGNORED RESOLUTION 30/1? – SHIVANI DE ZYLVA



    Sri Lanka Brief15/03/2019

    The commitments made by the Government of Sri Lanka four years ago at the UNHRC session in Geneva have had lasting impressions on its citizens. While some perceive the commitments of Resolution 30/1 (Res 30/1) as an international obligation that threatens our sovereignty or a political tool and a box ticking process, others even view the resolution as an unpatriotic mechanism that will result in the prosecution of our war heroes due to international intervention in our domestic affairs.
    While such strong perceptions against its implementation even four years into Res 30/1 continue to come from within the country- it is important to look at this resolution from a different angle. In retrospect- Could Sri Lanka have ignored Resolution 30/1?

    To answer this, it is important to look at how important the UNHRC (where the resolution was passed) is in its global standing, what effects its implementation will have on victims, and the message Sri Lanka would send out by ignoring the resolution completely.

    How important is the UNHRC?

    The Human Rights Council is an inter-governmental body within the United Nations system made up of 47 member states (including Sri Lanka) responsible for the promotion and protection of human rights around the world. Through the submission of the Universal Periodic Review, every few years, every member of the council opens itself up to international scrutiny of its human rights record. The council can pass resolutions on a country against human rights violations and can appoint Special Rapporteurs to investigate human rights conditions in member countries.

    What was the resolution about?

    UNHRC Resolution 30/1 titled “Promoting reconciliation, accountability and human rights in Sri Lanka” was passed without a vote on the 23rd of March 2017. As the title indicates- Res 30/1 primarily prescribes measures to be taken by the Government of Sri Lanka to promote reconciliation between all citizens of the country, to hold perpetrators of violent crimes and human rights abuses accountable for their wrongdoings, and to promote and protect human rights of all Sri Lankans.

    How will the resolution affect victims?

    There are victims who faced violations decades ago who have still not found remedies to their suffering. Although the war ended in 2009, some victims still cannot enjoy their basic rights. Either they have lost their education during the war or the conflict has left some in poverty without access to healthcare or clean water and no means of earning a decent income. Long periods of waiting with no solutions have deepened their pain and intensified their plight. Many families with missing relatives still wake up each day with the hope of seeing their loved ones return home.

    It is to address these issues that Res 30/1 supported consultations with victims on the issues they face and the support they require. The establishment of key institutions for Transitional Justice and Reconciliation (such as the Office on Missing Persons (OMP) and the Office for Reparations (OR)) were also supported by Res 30/1. The resolution recognizes that accountability is essential to uphold the rule of law and build people’s confidence in the justice system. Fighting for our country also means fighting for justice and Res 30/1 requires us to agree that no one can get away with wrongs they commit.

    Is ignoring an option?

    Considering the nature of the resolution, to completely ignore it would have been a severely detrimental move on the part of Sri Lanka. It would give a direct message that the Government did not want to promote reconciliation, hold perpetrators accountable or protect human rights in Sri Lanka. The message sent out by the Government would have been that Sri Lanka was afraid of shedding light on its human rights track record, implicitly indicating that there were shortcomings that had to remain hidden.

    In 2015, the Government of Sri Lanka consented to co-sponsoring Res 30/1, instead of trying to battle continued and persistent international scrutiny that would have had grave negative impact on Sri Lanka’s foreign relations by not doing so.

    Our commitments in Geneva may be wrongly perceived as an initiation that comes from outside the country and therefore as unfavorable to us. However, the initiation is made by Sri Lanka itself and through co-sponsoring this resolution Sri Lanka has taken ownership of this commitment as well as over the human rights landscape of the country. The reconciliation, accountability and protection of human rights that the resolution prescribes can only be beneficial to our own citizens. The Government now has the power to implement the resolution in a manner that best suits our country. 

    Breaking it down and examining its consequences in detail helps to get a clearer view of what the resolution requires us to do. No matter where it is coming from, the crux of the matter is that the resolution truly is in favour of suffering communities from all ethnicities and all religions. Could we have ignored that?

    Above image (c)s.deshapriya.

    UNHRC Cannot Rely On Sri Lanka To Prosecute Its Armed Forces – Part IV: Canada & The ‘Core Group’ Must Stand With Victims 

    Usha S Sri-Skanda-Rajah
    logoWhat member states must not do is help Sri Lanka perpetuate a lie. Canada and the ‘Core Group on Sri Lanka’ must stand with victims and lead the call for an international judicial accountability mechanism.   
    To be read in conjunction with ‘UNHRC Cannot Rely On Sri Lanka To Prosecute Its Armed Forces’ Part I (here)Part II (here) and Part III (here)
    It’s ten years since the Mullivaikkaal genocide. For Tamils this is particularly a poignant and painful moment in time. The 40th session of the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) is in progress and another resolution on, “Promoting Reconciliation, Accountability and Human Rights in Sri Lanka,” is being drafted by the Core Group on Sri Lanka. 
    At the other front, as of writing, speculation is rife that President Sirisena’s five man delegation that includes the new Governor of the Northern Province, is going to the UNHRC to seek a withdrawal from its commitments under the two resolutions Sri Lanka co-sponsored. Sirisena is dead against, “foreign participation” and won’t have that. 
    Seems as though there may be more drama coming and there’s no telling how the Core Group and the UNHRC would respond; although there can’t be any doubt this unending saga that relies on a domestic mechanism has got to end. And end it must.        
    In spite of the confusion, there are still some days left to finalise the draft and the likelihood that Sri Lanka could be given another extension is still true. With this in mind, Tamil Canadians, writing to Prime Minister, Justin Trudeau and Foreign Affairs Minister, Chrystia Freeland, urging against any extensions, want Canada to, “stand firm on the side of victims massacred in the Mullivaikkaal Genocide and lead the call for international action, for the UNHRC to ask the UN General Assembly to request the Security Council to refer Sri Lanka to the ‘International Criminal Court’ or take the steps necessary for the creation of a ‘Special International Criminal Tribunal for Sri Lanka – to try senior military and political leaders for mass atrocity crimes including war crimes, crimes against humanity, rape and genocide.”
    The genocide in Sri Lanka is a question that needs to be litigated and any right thinking person would agree, allowing Sri Lanka to adjudicate the genocide it committed is not a rational proposition. Realistically speaking allowing Sri Lanka to investigate genocide is to allow the country under scrutiny to prosecute its own crimes and should be surely ruled out.
    Tamils missing, disappeared, raped, tortured and killed in Sri Lanka have not only got to be counted and accounted for, but it’s also imperative the perpetrators of these heinous crimes are called to account in an independent international tribunal that will look after the interests of victims and has the trust of the Tamil community. Like I wrote, the Report by Charles Petrie on, “UN failures in Sri Lanka must also be seen as a scathing indictment on the perpetrators – the Rajapaksa government.” I said it when the Report was released and say it now: “the time has come to arraign the accused.”
    While anticipating the usual shenanigans from Sri Lanka, Tamils are placing their faith wholly on the rule of law according to international standards and norms, and are looking to the UNHRC and Canada and the Core Group to deliver justice for the victims through an international judicial accountability mechanism and not through a domestic mechanism, hybrid or not. 
    Most Tamils and Tamil organisations in the diaspora and in the homeland are solidly against giving Sri Lanka any further extensions. While a massive protest and shut down by Tamils was taking place in the homeland as the UNHRC opened its sessions, numerous Tamil diaspora organisations were writing to the High Commissioner for Human Rights (High Commissioner) and to the 47 member states of the UNHRC; they are in unison, urging against giving Sri Lanka anymore additional time. Furthermore the students of the University of Jaffna are planning a Mass Protest Rally on March 16 in Jaffna and March 19th in Batticaloa, calling for an international investigation and having the blessings of Justice Wigneswaran who has called on the people to give their full support to the initiative. 
    The news thus far coming from the 40th session of the UNHRC doesn’t look good. All signs seem to indicate Sri Lanka will be aided in its sinister moves to obstruct justice yet again, by no less than the UNHRC an august body, one that everyone relies on to side with victims – the UNHRC which is supposed to expose and facilitate the prosecution of incalcitrant states that abuse human rights – in this case genocide. It would be unconscionable for Sri Lanka to be given a further reprieve but that is what will happen – Handing out extension after extension in which to fulfill its transitional justice obligations set out in resolutions 30/1 and 34/1, would amount to helping Sri Lanka perpetuate a lie – when everyone knows and should know by now the chances it would conform are nil.    
    As the Core Group on Sri Lanka – UK, Canada, Germany, North Macedonia, Montenegro and Northern Ireland finalizes the draft of another new resolution, it’s abundantly clear, wheels are being set in motion to sugar coat it beyond all reason and logic, with no consequences for non-compliance – all this only to seek Sri Lanka’s cooperation and co-sponsorship to facilitate its passage without a vote. This is wrong, any which way you look at it, when now more than ever before, there are many more compelling reasons why it is insane to take this path when Canada and the members of the Core Group must know that the, “UNHRC cannot rely on Sri Lanka to prosecute its armed forces.” 
    The granting of another extension would be devastating news for Tamils. The Minister of Foreign Affairs of the Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam (TGTE), Manicka Vasagar, currently in Geneva asks whether the delegates are, “listening to victims.” In addressing the UNHRC and members of the Core Group, the Minister makes the case why an ICC referral or an international mechanism, together with a country based Special Rappoteur in the Tamil Homeland in the North and East including immediate de-militarisation is critically important. 

    Read More

    WAR ON WANT TAKES UP THE ISSUE OF HUMAN RIGHTS ABUSES IN SRI LANKA FTZ



    Sri Lanka Brief15/03/2019

    Workers from workwear manufacturing company ATG Ceylon Pvt Ltd. in Sri Lanka have been subject to a range of human rights abuses breaching both Sri Lankan and international labour laws and conventions.

    Hundreds of women workers, part of the Free Trade Zone and General Services Employees’ Union (FTZ-GSEU) have been on strike for over two months, now the longest running strike in the Katunayake Investment Promotion Zone.

    War on Want and other campaigning groups will be at the Sri Lankan High Commission in London on Wednesday, 13 March to hand in the petition to the Sri Lankan government, calling on them to take urgent action. Partnering with global union IndustriALL, campaigners gathered over 6,000 petition signatures in five days.

    The strike was prompted when the company illegally dismissed five workers and union members in January 2019, and allegations around violent and sexual harassment against a woman worker who was pressurised to leave both the strike and the union.

    Liz McKean, War on Want’s Director of Campaigns and Policy, said:

    “Workers at ATG Ceylon are facing intimidation, harassment, refused overtime pay and even unlawful dismissals as they collectively demand better working conditions. Company bosses are lining their pockets while not paying workers what they are owed and refusing to recognise the union. We urge the Sri Lankan government to protect its workers against this continual abuse.”

    This is not the first time concerns have been raised about ATG Ceylon Pvt Ltd lack of respect for Sri Lankan law and workers’ rights, and we urge the Sri Lankan government to take immediate action.
    More information: waronwant.org/takeactionworkerssrilanka

    13 March 2019 / PRESS RELEASE.

    Alcoholic beverages and ganja

     The price of a bottle of arrack in Sri Lanka, compared to the average income level of the country is relatively high and is almost equal to that of a bottle of a good brand of whisky in Europe – Pic by Shehan Gunasekara
    logo Friday, 15 March 2019

    I hope to begin this article with arrack and end up with ganja. Since I have chosen to write about arrack, I think it is fair that I should clarify my relationship with it for the knowledge of the reader.

    Frankly speaking, I consume a moderate amount of 100-150 ml alcohol daily only in the night. I must also admit that this habit has no way affected my life or that of the members of my family adversely because it is being pursued with a high sense of discipline and self-control. So much so, my habit of drinking alcohol has not caused my children to become alcoholics themselves.

    The blue collar workers or tired and overworked manual labourers usually consume alcohol as a means of finding relief from physical fatigue. It is also likely that those who are engaged in intellectual pursuits to incline to do the same as a relief from intellectual fatigue. In my opinion, consumption of alcohol in moderation and in responsible, safe and sensible manner will not cause any harm to health of a person or the society. However, addiction to alcohol and neglect of one’s wife and children on account of alcohol consumption can be considered a grave offence.

    It is natural for people to disengage themselves from humdrum routine and mechanical way of life they lead, at least for a short while, and seek some relief in engaging in apparently useless but pleasant activities. I don’t think there is a big difference between the inspiration one derives from enjoying an exquisite piece of art, literature or music and the pleasure derived from having a meaningful discussion with selected companions while sipping a drink. The civilised world though does not encourage alcoholic drinks, nor does it not impose rigid taboos on it.


    Alcohol policy in Sri Lanka 
    But Sri Lanka has a very rigid policy on alcohol. The price of a bottle of arrack in Sri Lanka, compared to the average income level of the country is relatively high and is almost equal to that of a bottle of a good brand of whisky in Europe. The price of a bottle of all types of arrack except ‘Gal’ arrack (molasses based) is approximately Rs. 2,000 or more. The excise duty that the Government earns from a bottle of arrack can be nearly Rs. 1,500.

    Sri Lanka can be described as a lethargic and stupid country that depends on tax money derived from sale of arrack under the pretext of a vociferous Government’s campaign against the use of alcohol (‘Mathata Thitha’). Last year the tax on liquor earned by the Government had been Rs. 72.6 billion.

    Increase of price of liquor has not resulted in people reducing consumption. It only results in a change in alcohol consumption pattern and more and more consumers shifting to ‘kasippu’ or illicit liquor when the price is not affordable. The outcome of this trend is more dangerous and destructive. On the other hand, the increase in price might cause a corresponding reduction in the income the arrack drinkers share with their families. This is a situation equivalent to taking revenge from innocent family members.

    According to research done by Dr. Priyanga Dunusingha of Colombo University, the share of kassipu in the liquor market is 49%. As per a paper submitted by G.D. Dayaratne of the Institute of Policy Education, this share is as high as 65%; 30% of the remainder constitutes of hard liquor and the balance 5% of beer. The alcohol policy of the Government of Sri Lanka can be considered an extra thrust to increase the demand for kasippu.


    History of liquor consumption 
    Alcoholic beverages have been used by most cultures and its history can be traced back to old civilisations that prevailed in the world. Archaeological research has revealed that Persia or ancient Iran had consumed wine as far back as 5000 BC. By 3400 BC Egypt had a distillery which could produce 300 gallons of beer per day. The workers who built the Great Pyramids, for example, were allotted a daily beer ration.

    India, since the times of Indus valley civilisation (3000 BC-2000 BC) had a kind of alcoholic beverage called Sura manufactured from rice, corn, cane sugar and grapes. ‘Ramayana’ and ‘Mahabharata,’ the two great Indian epics, carry references to the use of Sura. In Greek civilisation too, wine had a great recognition. Socrates, who could be considered the first martyr who sacrificed his life in the name of the right to express truth, was not an alcoholic. But, according to Plato, Socrates drank wine on rare occasions and had proved to be a prolific drinker without ever faltering. An impressive feat, indeed.

    The Mayan civilisation had a popular kind of wine made of bees’ honey. In the ancient past Mexico had its alcoholic beverages made of pineapple. Spain and Brazil had manufactured their liquor with cassava. Ancient Africa had its liquor made of banana and thanahaal or foxtail millet.

    Though spirit-based liquor was introduced to Sri Lanka by the Europeans, the natives knew the art of distilling toddy from the sap of kithul palm, coconut and palmyra. But they did not know the art of distilling alcoholic beverages from rice or any other grains.

    According to the ‘Mahavamsa,’ the great chronicle, King Aggabodhi VIII who ruled Sri Lanka in the 9th century AD had prohibited carrying meat and alcoholic beverages to the city on Poya days. King Sena V had been addicted to alcohol and after taking drinks he had behaved like an animal and due to excessive consumption of alcohol had succumbed to death while he was still young. This illustrates that the consumption of meat and alcoholic beverages was common in Sri Lanka long before the country was captured by the Europeans. We must therefore accept the fact that the ancient and medieval Sinhalese were neither vegetarian nor teetotal.

    Chewing betel, too, has some intoxicating effect. Betel chewing had been an age-old practice associated with the cultural milieu of the country. Not only men, even women and bhikkhus were addicted to this practice.


    Sri Lanka and arrack 
    It was John D’Oyly who launched a subversive scheme to make Sri Wickrama Rajasinghe, the last King of Kandy, an alcohol addict. With the support of his secret agents, he managed to introduce European alcoholic drinks to the king. It constituted a part of the shrewd stratagem employed by him for the British to capture the Kandyan kingdom.

    It was the great grandfather of J.R. Jayewardene who had served as the main spy of John Doyley in this scheme while the great grandfathers of Ponnambalam Ramanathan and S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike had served as the language interpreters. The British Governor had donated to them a large extent of land in appreciation of the contribution made by them in facilitating the British to capture the king and the Kandyan kingdom. These can be considered the facts hidden by the historians who wrote the modern history of the country.  Arrack had played a unique role in shaping the modern history of Sri Lanka. It can be considered the main economic source of the rise of the Sinhala capitalist class during the 19th century. The Buddhist revival movement had been mostly financed by the arrack renters. Except for a few (Anagarika Dharmapala and D.B. Jayatilleke), most of the leaders of the temperance movement were the children of arrack renters. It is they who eventually become the pioneers and the leaders of the independence movement of Sri Lanka.

    A book written on Selestina Dias by Manel Thampoe which can be considered a unique biography of the former notwithstanding it being a small publication refers to an interesting incident involving a question of conscience arisen in an arrack renter who had performed a leading role in the temperance movement.

    Visakha Vidyalaya of Colombo can be considered a school founded by the generosity of Selestina Dias who was popularly known as ‘Renda Nona’. It was she who managed the plantation, liquor and property interests of Jeremias Dias, her husband, upon his death. Arthur Dias, the second son of Selestina Dias, was a prominent leader of the temperance movement. He served as the manager of his mother’s liquor business while being engaged in the temperance movement.

    The book says that Arthur Dias, having realised the moral contradiction between the two mutually-conflicting roles that he had been playing as an arrack renter and a leader of the temperance movement, managed to persuade his mother to abandon the arrack business. But the other leaders of the temperance movement lacked the conscience that Arthur Dias possessed. Even Anagarika Dharmapala does not seem to have been concerned about this issue in selecting leaders for the temperance movement.

    The arrack renters were rich business men and what they sought was recognition in national level. This will help us form an opinion of our own on the true character of the leaders of the independence movement of Sri Lanka and the independence itself that we gained eventually.


    About ganja 
    Now I wish to switch from arrack over to ganja. The terms kansa, cannabis, hashish, and hemp are also used to denote ganja. The term ‘kansa’ is used to refer to the plant as a whole, while ‘ganja’ is used to refer to the flowering head. The proposal I am going to put forward here might annoy some people. It is not a proposal by me but a proposal submitted to me by a learned youth. Though he agreed to write about it, he did not do it. He now lives in a foreign country, where he has been for some time. Here, I have chosen to defend his proposal, of which I am in very much in favour.

    Before presenting his proposal, it is important that some background information is produced as a prelude to it. Ganja, too, has a very long history going back to over more than 10,000 years. Ganja or cannabis is indigenous to Central Asia and the Indian subcontinent. Both India and China had recognised ganja as a plant species having psychoactive properties that had an impact on the mind of the people.

    Archaeological excavations in Oki island of Japan have revealed that the history of ganja in this island goes back to 8000 BC. Ganja had been used as a food item, medicine and alcohol as well as hemp for manufacturing strong copper. The Chinese had later used hemp to make clothes, shoes, ropes, and an early form of paper. Hemp is called ganja in Sanskrit and other modern languages. Some scholars suggest that the ancient drug known as soma, mentioned in the Vedas, was made of cannabis.  Ganja is referred to as ‘thrailokya vijayaa pathran’ in Ayurveda which means that it can conquest the three worlds. It was ancient Assyrians who had used ganja for smoking for the first time. During Napoleon’s invasion of Egypt in 1798, being an Islamic country, alcohol was not available in Egypt. In lieu of alcohol, Napoleon’s troops resorted to trying hashish, which they found to their liking.

    In Sri Lanka too, ganja appears to have been used as a kind of medicine. The people of the dry zone used ganja as an ingredient in cooking ‘dhada mas’ or the flesh of game. They used a kind of aggala or a sweet ball made of flour and sugar mixed with ganja as a worm treatment for children. They had also eaten a kind of kurakkan roti mixed with ganja.

    In the late 1800s, several countries in the Islamic world banned ganja for the first time. Thereafter, during the19th century, ganja was banned in the countries which came under colonial rule. At the start of the 20th century, more countries continued to ban ganja. Along with that, the cultivation, possession, use and sale of ganja had been outlawed and declared criminal offences.


    The new world trend 
    The international scenario about ganja began to change in the 21st century. The Government of Netherlands launched a research program in 1972 to distinguish between harmful and less harmful alcoholic products. It revealed that ganja was the least harmful (negligible) of all other narcotics and alcoholic products.

    Along with these findings, the law that prohibited consumption and possession of ganja was repealed and the right to keep 30 grams of ganja in possession was granted. This led many countries relooking their policies on ganja and revoking laws against possession and consumption of ganja and inflicting punishments.

    This trend did not stop at that. It gathered momentum in Uruguay. In 2013, the State of Uruguay legalised the consumption, possession, selling and cultivation of ganja. In 2017, Canada joined the bandwagon. Thereafter, 33 States of America followed suit. Belgium is the latest addition. New Zealand has already fixed a date for a plebiscite before it being legalised. India is also in an imminent stage of legalising ganja.

    This trend is spreading rapidly all over the world. It is an unavoidable trend that cannot be reversed. The day in which the laws against ganja will be removed from all over the world will not be very long. Along with that, it will be unavoidable for the demand for strong drugs like heroin and cocaine and alcoholic beverages of spirit type to go down, giving way to the increased demand for ganja.

    Sri Lanka is still in the dark as far as the rapid changes taking place in global level are concerned. It remains at a stupid level without having any idea about the global trends, still continuing to impose fines which include imprisoning for possession and consumption of ganja. The punishment that can be imposed by the Judiciary for possession of one kilogram of ganja is life imprisonment.

    More than this situation, what is really important is the point of view of the youth I mentioned above. What I am going to put forward here is a proposal which is a combination of his view as well as that of mine. The farmers of Sri Lanka are in a dire state of poverty and misery. The agricultural sector including paddy and tea cultivation is also in an equally unfortunate level.

    It is unavoidable that the demand for ganja will go up in the near future in an atmosphere in which other countries are engaged in a process of repealing laws against ganja. Shouldn’t Sri Lanka make plantation of ganja a lucrative commercial crop to generate income, capitalising on this new trend?

    Sri Lanka has an ideal climatic and soil conditions favouring cultivation of ganja. Removal of laws against ganja alone would be a thrust to make it a commercial crop. It will invariably become a good source of income and foreign exchange earner for the country, which at present is buried in a massive burden of debt. Further, it will become a cash crop that would help make a revolutionary change in the life of the farmers. Shouldn’t we make use of this opportunity?

    I must say that I am not the first person or the only person in Sri Lanka to write about the importance of ganja. I know very well that the late Professor Gunapala Dharmasiri, retired Chair of the Philosophy Department at the University at Peradeniya and one of Sri Lanka’s foremost Buddhist scholars who was passionately interested in Sri Lanka’s Ayurvedic tradition and was a strong advocate for preserving Sri Lanka’s medicinal plants, in his book titled ‘The Nature of Medicine’ has presented an interesting analysis of the mistaken views that prevail about ganja and the importance of preserving the Ayurvedic medical tradition.

    Unfortunately, the copy of the book I had in my collection had been either misplaced or lost and I came to know of it only when I looked for it to obtain some information to write this article. Manik Sandrasagra, a well-known cinematographer, was another person who had expressed his views on ganja boldly.

    ‘Our lives are in your hands’, families of the disappeared tell the UN


     13 March 2019
    Families of the disappeared appealed to members of the United Nations not to grant Sri Lanka any extension on implementing a resolution it had agreed to in 2015 and instead called for an international accountability mechanism, telling member states that “our lives are in your hands”.
    A 2015 UN resolution mandated an accountability mechanism with international judges to examine violations of international humanitarian law, but leaders in Colombo have repeatedly spoken out against it.
    Speaking to the Tamil Guardian, a protestor from Mullaitivu who has been searching for their disappeared relative said, “We have been informed that the Sri Lankan government will be given another two-year extension”.
    “We, the relatives of the forcibly disappeared, request that this extension should not be given.”
    Relatives of the disappeared have been protesting on the streets across the North-East for more than two years, demanding answers to the whereabouts of their loved ones. The protests, led largely by Tamil women, have been widespread and drawn support from across the globe. Yet, the Sri Lankan government has done little to provide these women with the information they demand.
    “We have been searching for our forcibly disappeared for the last two years but have not got any answers,” said the protestor. “The search now extends into the third year.”
    Several of the protestors have died during the course of the protests, which have seen women holding rallies and marches, as well as continuous roadside demonstrations. Just last month, the toll of protestors who have died continued to increase as Saraswathy Velu, from Mankulam in Mullaitivu, passed away. She last saw her daughter, Parvathi, in Mullivaikkal in 2009 before she was forcibly disappeared and had been searching for her since.
    “Our lives are in your hands,” said the protestor, in a direct appeal to member states at the United Nations.
    “The international community should not support this. We are expressing our voices with a belief in you. Instead of closing their eyes in support of the Sri Lankan government, the international community should work to bring back our relatives.”
    “The extension you are giving to the Sri Lankan government will bring the expectations of all Tamil people to an end,” she added.
    She also pointed out that presidential elections will be held by the time any new resolution will come up for renewal, if an extension is granted. “It will be dragged on for another ten years,” the protestor lamented.
    “Bring the offenders before justice and bring us a solution. We are asking for our children.”