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, April 28, 2019

Diet capsules that swell in stomach could help weight loss

Plenity contains hydrogel made from cellulose, which is found in fruit and vegetables

Participants in the study were overweight or moderately obese and trying to lose weight. Photograph: Alamy



Gel capsules that part-fill the stomach before a meal may help people lose weight and keep it off, the European Congress on Obesity was told on Sunday.

The hydrogel capsule first made news in 2010, when it was called Attiva. Now, as Plenity, it has been trialled on more than 400 people. It worked on only 59% of people, but in those, it doubled their chances of losing 5%-10% of their bodyweight.

Diet pills have had a chequered history and only one is approved for NHS use in the UK – Xenical – which is not hugely popular because of its mode of operation. It stops fat being absorbed, so that it passes straight through the body, and can give rise to stomach or bowel issues.

Plenity, made by the US company Gelesis, is technically a medical device rather than a medicine, so does not need such extensive trials. The capsules contain hydrogel made from cellulose, which is found in fruit and vegetables, and citric acid. Three capsules are taken with two glasses of water 20 minutes before a meal. They absorb water and swell in the stomach.

“What happens is these little particles are released in your stomach and they turn into a gel. This gel occupies about 250ml of your stomach – about a quarter of its volume,” said Dr Harry Leider, chief medical officer of Gelesis.

“This gel – it’s like chewed vegetable – mixes with the food. This makes you feel fuller when you eat so you don’t eat as much. That’s the main mechanism.”

The gel is not absorbed. It goes through the small intestine, then gets to the colon where it is broken down, the water reabsorbed and what is left passes out in the faeces.

“Because there is no chemical interaction with the body, it is not absorbed, it is mostly mechanical. It has a really good safety and tolerability profile,” he said. “That’s why it is regulated as a device and not a drug.

“It is recommended that it is an aid in weight management in conjunction with diet and exercise. We encourage patients to contribute to diet prudently and focus on exercise because we know it is going to help people be successful. Nothing is the silver bullet. This is a new tool in our armoury.”

The study involved 436 people, half of whom took the capsules while the other half had a placebo.

All were overweight or moderately obese and trying to lose weight through diet and exercise. The average weight at the start was about 100kg 15st 10lb). Those in the placebo group lost 4.4% of body weight and those taking the active capsules lost 6.4%. But adjusting for differences including starting weight, age and gender, said Leider, there was a 2% weight loss over placebo.

Obesity experts said the capsules, which could potentially be available in pharmacies from next year, could be useful.

“I would warn against magic bullets, but for a certain group of consumers who are doing all the right things in terms of diet and exercise, this may help keep them on track,” said Prof Jason Halford from Liverpool University, at the Glasgow meeting where the trial results were presented.

“This could be a huge help to millions of people. It is well tolerated, and increases satiety so that people eat less. You don’t need a surgeon to do it, you just buy it in a box and swallow a pill. It seems to be easy and effective, so millions could benefit,” said Dr Nathalie Farpour-Lambert, president of the European Association for the Study of Obesity.

But Prof Helen Stokes-Lampard, chair of the Royal College of GPs, sounded a note of caution. “This certainly sounds like an interesting development and the non-invasive nature of a pill would be attractive to many patients and healthcare professionals,” she said.

“But we must advise caution about thinking of this as a new miracle cure for weight loss, as non-medical approaches to a healthy lifestyle should always be explored in the first instance, so that as a society we don’t become dependent on medical interventions.”

Opioid painkillers to carry prominent warnings about the risk of addiction

Opioid painkillers are to carry warnings on their labels about the risk of addiction.Opioid painkillers are to carry warnings on their labels about the risk of addiction. ( AP )

BONNIE CHRISTIAN -27 Apr 2019

Opioid painkillers are to carry prominent warnings on their labels about the risk of addiction, the health secretary has announced.

Prescriptions for opioid-based medication have increased 60% in the last 10 years to 23 million annually, according to Department of Health data.
 
Matt Hancock announced on Sunday that packaging on common medications such as morphine or fentanyl will now have to carry a warning informing patients about the risk of addiction.
 
Dependence on the drug can have devastating consequences for the user.
Mr Hancock said: "I have been incredibly concerned by the recent increase in people addicted to opioid drugs.
Childrenvaccineban2604.jpg
Health and Social Care Secretary Matt Hancock announced the new label warnings on Sunday. (PA)

"Painkillers were a major breakthrough in modern medicine and are hugely important to help people manage pain alongside their busy lives - but they must be treated with caution.

"Things are not as bad here as in America, but we must act now to protect people from the darker side to painkillers.
 
"We need to place a greater focus on making sure that these medicines are used appropriately and for pain management alone, and make sure people are fully aware of the risks."

The drugs, derived from opium, have a sedative effect and can cause feelings of pleasure.

A long-term dependency on prescription drugs can have life-changing consequences and similar side effects to illegal drugs.
 
Users can build up a tolerance and require stronger doses to have the same effect, and suffer withdrawal symptoms when they try to quit.

antmcpartlin2001.jpgAnthony McPartlin admitted to having a dependency on prescription painkillers. (PA Wire/PA Images)

Although considerably lower risk than illegal street opioids like heroin, an overdose of prescription painkillers can still kill the user.
 
A number of high-profile figures have admitted a dependency on prescription drugs, notably Ant McPartlin of showbiz duo Ant and Dec.
 
The presenter has been open about his stints in rehab trying to tackle his addiction to painkillers, which began following a knee operation in 2015.

The prescription opioid crisis in the US is now so severe that in 2017 the country's Department of Health declared a national emergency.

It estimated that by 2017, 11.4 million people in the country were misusing prescription painkillers.

sallydavies0812a.jpgChief Medical Officer Professor Dame Sally Davies (PA)

The wording of the new warning must be based on guidance from the Commission on Human Medicines' opioid expert working group and will be enforced by the UK's Medicines and Healthcare products Regulatory Agency (MHRA).

Professor Dame Sally Davies, chief medical officer for England, said: "We know that long-term use of painkillers can lead to life-altering and sometimes fatal addictions - so I am delighted to see measures put in place to raise awareness of the risks of codeine and prescribed drugs.

"It is vital that anyone who is prescribed strong painkillers takes them only as long as they are suffering from serious pain.
 
"As soon as the pain starts to alleviate, the drugs have done their job, and it is important to switch to over-the-counter medication like paracetamol which do not carry the same risk of addiction that comes with long-term use."

A specific deadline for the introduction of the warning has not yet been set but the regulator thinks a review could be concluded within the year.

A spokesman for the MHRA said: "We are working as quickly as possible to introduce regulatory changes once all the evidence has been assessed.
 
"These labelling changes are a first step in a number of regulatory measures being developed.
"It will take a certain amount of time for the new packaging to reach patients.

"While we have not given the Expert Working Group a specific deadline, we have asked them to work promptly and, given the progress already made, we anticipate the review will be completed in 2019."

Batticaloa mourns children killed in Zion church bombing

Fourteen children killed during the bombing of Zion church on Easter Sunday were mourned by grief striken families this week.
 27 April 2019
Two and half year old Ahimsa Surenthirakumar 
Families and loved ones wept as bodies were identified and funerals took place, many having lost more than one member of their family. 
Mother and daughter, Sinthu and Anjalina Jegathas
Brother and sister killed in Easter Sunday blast 
Mother and daughter, Rebecca and Aliyahan Suraithasan
9 year old Kevin Kuventhirarasa 
The Director of Batticaloa General Hospital confirmed on Wednesday that 14 local children had been killed. 
Jehonika, student at Cecilia Girls School
13 year old John Jeshuran
10 year old Jepinath Mahenthran
13 year old Jekshan Jet
The attacks, carried out by an Islamist group supportive of Islamic State, also included the bombing of three luxury hotels and a church in Colombo as well as another church in Negombo. Over 250 people were killed including foreign citizens. 
Aftermath of bombing at Zion church in Batticaloa
Eye witnesses at the Zion church in Batticaloa described the suspected bomber travelling towards children who had gathered to celebrate Easter Sunday. 
At least 26 people were killed at the church with over 100 wounded. 
Funeral of Batticaloa Zion church bombing victim  

Terrorist Motivations And Security Lapses Behind The Easter Carnage (21/4)

The IS ideology has from the beginning been based on Salafi beliefs of ‘one god, one religion, one leader and one state.’

by Laksiri Fernando-April 26 at 2:00 AM
 
Two major sets of issues have merged in interpreting and finding reasons behind the Easter Carnage in Sri Lanka that has led to over 250 dead and nearly 500 injured. First relates to the questions of who were behind and what were their motives. Second mainly in respect of why this carnage could not be avoided, as the Security Alerts were available, and who is responsible administratively and/or politically for this utter dereliction. Regarding the exact death toll, there had been difficulties in counting.
 
Most unfortunate in finding solutions to these and related questions is the political and/or religious biases expressed in the interpretations given by many authors nationally and internationally.
 
Who were behind?
 
Now it is clear that the so far identified 8 suicide bombers out of 9 are Sri Lankan nationals. The main outfit behind the attack is also a Sri Lankan organization called the National Thowheed Jamath (NTJ). However, almost from the beginning of the NTJ, they have had allegiance to the Islamic State (IS) and its leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
 
When the IS claimed responsibility for the attack, they identified the ‘assailants’ or martyrs in their nicknames as Abu Ubaida, Abul Mukhtar, Abul Khalil, Abul Mukhtar, Abu Hamza, Abul Baraa, Abu Muhammad, and Abu Abdillah. 
 
NTJ’s local leader is identified in Sri Lanka as Moulvi Zaharan Hashim, extremist religious preacher, coming from Kattankudy in Batticaloa. According to the IS statement, he is the person as Abu Ubaida who has attacked the Shangri-La hotel and now dead. However, it is unlikely that the IS would allow its local leader to sacrifice himself. The possibility is that ether he is on the run or new leaders have taken over the operations.
 
The NTJ was apparently founded in 2014, Zaharan Hashim playing a major or the leading role. This was after the attacks on Muslims in Aluthgama in June 2014, apparently led by the Bodu Bala Sena (BBS). Therefore as an extremist preacher, Hashim had found many follows to his cause, preaching through the social media. Kattankudy is also the place where nearly 150 Muslims were massacred in a Mosque by the LTTE in August 1990.
 
The above are pointers to some of the reasons for the local radicalization of Muslim youth in recent decades, although not at all a justification for the inflicted carnage. It is possible that more educated and more resourceful youth became part of an underground organization with allegiance to the IS in recent times. The government did not heed to the previous warnings. Some went to Syria and died. Some returned and went underground.
 
What were the motives?
 
It is difficult to find rational motives for terrorism, whether it is left-wing (past JVP), ethnonationalist (LTTE), or religious (NTJ). However the religious terrorism appears to be the most extreme of the above three. The BBS also borders on the last category. Terrorism or the Easter Carnage cannot be explained through the ‘frustration-aggression theory’ or the ‘relative deprivation principles,’ because causes or the motives are not mainly objective, but subjective. The motives or justifications are largely within the minds of the terrorists.
 
After the carnage, the IS announced “O Crusaders, this bloody day (21/4) is our reward to you.”
 
This shows an international motive going beyond the shores of Sri Lanka. This is why many writers at the beginning were finding it difficult to understand the circumstances of attacking the Catholic congregations, apart from tourists in hotels. It is significant the use of the word ‘Crusaders.’ It is also significant the day symbolized as 21/4 reminiscent of 9/11.
 
The ideology of the NTJ or the particular terrorists had primarily come from the Islamic State and not specifically within Sri Lanka. There are several organizations in the name of ‘Thowheed Jamath’ even internationally and there is an organization even in Australia. These are diverse organizations, the name roughly translated as ‘monotheist organization.’ Many of them are radical or agitational organizations and the Australian Thowheed Jamath recently organized a protest rally in Melbourne against what they called ‘Muslim genocide’ in China. The main slogan was to demand an independent state for what they called ‘East Turkestan’ in Xinjiang.
 
The ideology of the NTJ could be traced in general to Salafi beliefs what the Zaharan Hashim has been advocating now for a long period. He apparently conducted these Quran classes as M.T.M. Zahran. Many of the attendees were young boys and teenagers.
 
Salafi is a Sunni revivalist movement with political overtones from the beginning in Egypt in the 19th century. Major hallmarks are of Anti-Western or Anti-imperialist characteristics. As a revivalist movement, it is religious and sober, but in its political expressions, it has always been militant and Jihadist.
 
The IS ideology has from the beginning been based on Salafi beliefs of ‘one god, one religion, one leader and one state.’
 
Security Lapses
 
If the security intelligence had carefully followed the NTJ, its social media, the movements of the leader/s and the ideology behind, it would not have been difficult to identify the dangers of the movement well before irrupting it into the present carnage. Admittedly, it is also easy to said than done.
 
Even otherwise, if the discovery of a huge amount of explosives and apparently a training camp in January 2019 was followed up properly, many relevant discoveries which are being discovered today, could have been uncovered. Before that in December 2018, there were incidents of defamation and vandalization of Buddha statues and Christian images by the followers of the NTJ in some areas.
 
Protecting the Muslim community, their places of worship and their rights in Sri Lanka is one thing. The prevention of terrorism and the eradication of extremism including hate speech and action are completely different matters, even necessary for the protection of the Muslim community in general.
The failure of the national security intelligence has compounded by the lackadicicle attitude taken by the Ministry of Defence and the Department of Police when clear intelligence warnings with details were conveyed from India in early April. Even before, when moderate Muslim community leaders (not political ones!) alerted the police about extremist advocacy, no action had been taken with all knowledge about the people involved.
 
The information that came from India during the first week of April had very clearly warned about the planned ‘suicide attacks’ by the NTJ and its leader Mohamod Zaharan ( alias Zaharan Hashim). The Indian intelligence had obtained the information from an arrested IS member in Tamil Nadu who had apparently trained some suicide cadres in Sri Lanka. Therefore, the link between the IS and the NTJ was very clear not just in ideology but in operational terms. This was not a simple matter or a joke to ignore.
 
The National Intelligence Service had given other names and their details apparently from their own files and information (detailed/different names, telephone numbers, addresses and even in some cases, ID numbers). However, the Ministry of Defence and the Department of Police had taken them lightly.
 
Why the suspects were not arrested? Why didn’t their places of residence were not searched? Was it because these hierarchies were planning to celebrate the Sinhala New Year in grand style in coming weeks? Thus, were they busy with their families and friends not attending to official duties?
Who was (ir)responsible?
 
Apparently on the advice of the IGP, the DIG Special Security Range has sent a Memo to the Security Divisions of the Ministers, Diplomats, Judiciary and the Retired Presidents alerting the possible attacks. The purpose apparently had been to protect those hierarchies. To that extent the Police and the Ministry of Defence had been responsible and duty minded!
 
The Secretary of Defence must have given the information to the President’s Security Division by himself. However, the President has denied the knowledge of such information although he is the Minister of Defence and of the Police. President was away in India and Singapore on a private visit from 16 April, and returned back only at midnight from Singapore after the carnage in the morning of 21 April, the Easter Sunday.
 
The Prime Minister has also claimed that he was not given the Memo or information. However his Security Division apparently knew the Security Alert to protect him. Doesn’t he and other Ministers communicate with the personal security personnel on a day to day basis on security matters? If not, it is strange in a terribly insecure country like Sri Lanka, although the civil war ended ten years back in May 2009.
 
At least two Ministers have boastfully revealed that they knew about the Security Alert and one even Tweeted the Security Memo to the whole world. Strangely, it was not marked ‘Confidential.’ The latter Minister even boasted that he first came to know about the possible Church attack in Colombo from his hospitalized father in a private hospital.
 
Being a faithful Catholic, he prevented himself going to the targeted Church. But he didn’t try to prevent the ordinary churchgoers getting killed by passing the information to the Church-leaders, or getting the security to protect the Church. He is not an ordinary Minister, but a Cabinet one. He is also the one who first initiated the partisan political interpretations, Prime Minister vs the President, about security lapses, now vociferously taken up by the opposition members in Parliament.
 
The other Minister is the one who is in charge of National Reconciliation. It is not clear how many other Cabinet Ministers and past Presidents knew about the possible attacks, but didn’t do anything to prevent the situation.
 
There were clear information in the Security Alert from India that Catholic Churches would be the main targets. The Catholic community apparently wonders whether the security to them was neglected because they are Catholics in this divided society?
 
Conclusion
 
It appears that the Government was ‘Sleep Walking’ on security matters that led to the Easter Carnage at least of that magnitude.
 
Many of the root causes are not national, but within the religiously polarized ‘international community.’ The possible link between the Christchurch Massacre (15 March) in New Zealand and the Easter Carnage (21 April) in Sri Lanka is not a figment of imagination, but within the intelligence information received from India through the IS operative in custody. Obviously, preparations for many suicide attacks were in the offing before the Christchurch Massacre. But the targets possibly have changed after that incident.
 
Therefore objectively speaking, there are many sides to the Easter Carnage in Sri Lanka that the Western or the Christian countries also should take into account. The pacification of extremism on the Islamic side might not be easy through religious/ethnic reconciliation in Sri Lanka alone, unless similar or more fundamental efforts are taken internationally.
 
Inside the country, affected Catholic communities should be compensated and given counselling as necessary. The Muslim community should be protected from all possible backlashes. There are already unfortunate pressures for the ordinary Muslims, women and their children. Security can be an immediate priority without going into the extremes. There can be suicide bombers still on the run.

‘Terror’ beyond ‘blame game’ and the ‘Burqa’

  • "Neglect of responsibility with ministers privy to info of a ‘terror threat’ "
  • "Possibly the worst ‘terror attack’ after 9/11 in NY"
26 April 2019
A fear psychosis in society was the immediate fallout from the brutal and shocking attacks on Easter Sunday morning that was driven deep into the social psyche with more frightening news in the days that followed; a suspicious vehicle exploded, cache of explosives found in Pettah bus stand, news of suspicious vehicles entering the city possibly with explosives, another cache of explosives found in Nochchiyagama and so forth.
Second day after the Easter Sunday massacres, the amateurish National Tawheed Jamaat (NTJ) got itself promoted to the arena of international terrorists with ISIS entering the picture. Their news source ‘Amaq’ claimed eight ‘suicide bombers’ were trained by them and it was they who carried out the ‘blessed attack.’ For ISIS wiped out of Northern Iraq and their ‘Caliphate’ defeated, to claim responsibility for massacres in Sri Lanka may add some colour to their tarnished profile and hope for their defeated ‘Jihadi fighters.
’Sri Lankan intelligence meanwhile confirmed ‘NTJ’ as responsible for the Easter Sunday attacks. Deputy Minister of Defence Ruwan Wijewardene told Parliament “it was now learnt this NTJ had links to another group Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen India (JMI), a one-year-old branch unit established by Jamaat-ul-Mujahideen Bangladesh, a proscribed extremist group in Bangladesh. But ‘suicide bombers’ were all local Muslims and perhaps from the same family connected to a wealthy local spice dealer in Colombo.   
Narratives on this unimaginable massacre are many and diverse with different interpretations, depending on who wants who blamed and slandered. There is a blame game that was pitifully evident during the parliamentary debate on Tuesday. Starting from the media briefing held by government ministers on Monday at Temple Trees, there was a very concerted effort to wash their hands off the(ir) responsibility of a serious security lapse.
There was every effort to pin the blame on President Sirisena who is the Defence Minister and also has the Police Department under him. At the media briefing, it was said the PM and the Deputy Minister were not included in Security Council (SC) meetings after last year’s October debacle. The PM’s efforts to meet with the Security Council in the absence of the President in the country were also rejected by SC members, he said. PM also said he and his ministers were not briefed on the security situation, despite India providing information of an impending terror attack in Colombo. 
A sequence of events leading to the very sophisticated, well-planned and logistically well-supported execution of attacking churches and super-luxury hotels that targeted ‘people’ in large numbers, raises more questions than answers after this massive tragedy that could have been easily averted. This begins, not with the April 4 warning and information provided by Indian authorities on impending ‘terror attacks,’ but with vandalising Buddha statues in Mawanella last December. 
A confidential report by the DIG of the Special Security Division dated April 11, that was tweeted by Minister Harin Fernando and thereafter produced as an English translation in the DM of April 23 by colleague Ranga Jayasuriya in his column said, “Zahran Hashim and Shahid: the two individuals have fled Mawanella after attacks on Buddhist statues there on December 26 and are believed to be hiding in Oluvil, Akkaraipattu.”  
The document then says, “Rilwan, the younger brother of Zahran has acted to mobilise followers to Zahran… The suspect had fled Kattankudy after a clash with a rival religious group and is in hiding. He and Zahran are believed to have travelled to Akkaraipattu, Kuliyapitiya, Puttalam, Mawanella and Thihariya and are reportedly taking refuge in a house of a follower in Oluvil at the moment.” 
They were not the only information the CID had gathered about the NTJ. Investigations into vandalising of Buddha statues led the CID to an NTJ hideout in a coconut estate in Wanathawilluwa. Four suspects were arrested with a large cache of explosives that had good media coverage then. Even before that, there had been protests by Muslim communities in the East and complaints lodged with the police against Zahran Hashim considered the ideologue and leader of NTJ for hate-mongering and violent extremism. In short, there was more than enough evidence at hand with the CID against NTJ activists including Zahran Hashim to arrest and interrogate them. If that were done, we would not be mourning the deaths of over 300 innocent Catholic devotees and weeping over 500 and more injured. 
Thus, the question; are there intelligence agencies only to collect information and document them to be copied to VIP security divisions as pre-warnings? Is that their only duty? They don’t need the President, the PM or a subject minister to direct and instruct them to arrest a ‘terror suspect’ on information collected. There is enough legal provision for arrest on suspicion and to produce before a magistrate. Close to four months, all what had been done is information gathering, monitoring the movements of the ‘suspects’ and documenting them. We therefore have to seriously focus on this lapse in the Police Department first. On the lack of commitment and responsibility at the top of the Police Department that had failed to follow on the ‘leads’ they had, before we take on the President, the PM and the government. 
The Indian warning on April 4 that led to the issue of the circular by the DIG of the Special Security Division on April 11 should have been a serious topic in a Security Council meeting presided by the President between April 4 and the Sinhala Hindu New Year, or in the week after the New Year. When the President tells the nation, even he as the President was not informed of these impending ‘terrorist’ attacks, does it mean these warnings and information on security threats by neighbouring countries are not tabled at Security Council meetings as important issues? ‘IF’ what the President told the nation about him not being briefed about the ‘terror threat’ is not doubted, also adding what the PM said about his request to convene the Security Council as the President was not in the country being rejected, then there is serious breach in responsibility on the side of State security agencies. The democratically-elected President and the government by the ‘people’ have to be respected. Their political colour and positions don’t matter once elected by the people. 
"Narratives on this unimaginable massacre are many and diverse with  different interpretations, depending on who wants who blamed and  slandered. There is a blame game that was pitifully evident during the  parliamentary debate on Tuesday. Starting from the media briefing held by government ministers on Monday at Temple Trees, there was a very concerted effort to wash their hands off the(ir) responsibility of a serious security lapse"
There was also neglect of responsibility with ministers who were privy to the information of a ‘terror threat’ in Colombo. Minister Harin Fernando, the first minister to ‘tweet’ parts of the confidential document by the DIG of the Special Security Division, thereby contradicted his claim he was warned by his father over the phone. I presume he has had access to that confidential document before his father’s phone call. So did Minister Mano Ganesan who tweeted his security personnel had told him of ‘suicide bombers’ in Colombo to target ministers. 
He does not say whether he asked for details from his security personnel as to how they came to know of such a ‘threat.’ Irresponsibility and callous disregard for people’s safety, both Harin Fernando and Ganesan did not even think they should brief their own PM immediately on information they received about ‘terror attacks’ in Colombo. 
They are not alone in disregarding the seriousness of information regarding ‘terror attacks’ on people. Ministers and MPs who joined the parliamentary debate on Tuesday were not interested in serious debate over multiple terror attacks, possibly the worst ‘terror attack’ after 9/11 in NY. Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe who posted himself on city walls during elections as the ‘scholar of our time’ certainly changed the meaning of that word with his racist, nonsensical arguments in Parliament. 
His one main argument was that this ‘terror’ attack was inevitable with all arms of intelligence weakened and demotivated, locking up intelligence personnel behind bars. He claimed over 100 men have been so punished and therefore this government is totally responsible for the carnage left from these ‘terror’ attacks. It is total hypocrisy to say the intelligence agencies are now weak, demotivated and inefficient due to interrogations and arrests of some personnel for alleged crimes committed.
There was no lethargy, no inefficiency in collecting details and information on NTJ and its activists. Intelligence officers had kept track of all their movements and were up to date on NTJ as the once confidential report discloses. Lack of information was not the question. The major question was about not acting on available information. Rajapakshe’s ‘scholarly’ reading perhaps lack intellect in deconstructing and understanding these complex issues. It is no surprise either with academics like Prof. Ashu Marasinghe, a national list MP tabling a private member motion calling for a ban on wearing the ‘Burqa.’
His intellect makes him believe the Burqa and ‘terrorism’ live together. He is thus convinced, when women are denied the Burqa, men don’t turn ‘terrorists.’‘Extremism’ leading to ‘violence’ and ‘terrorism’ has nothing to do with the dress. If ‘dress’ is anything that decides violence and terror, then there cannot be monks in Lord Buddha’s saffron robe leading unruly violent mobs against the Muslim community. 
Inability and reluctance to have decent and intellectual debates and discussions in resolving these very sensitive and complex issues, the linear intellect in tossing up cheap racist candy for mass consumption create space for more extremist arrogance that can make very serious racist dents in all elections to come. One, all politicians seems to be playing for.   

“Liar, Liar! Sarong On Fire”: Sri Lankan President & Prime Minister Caught Lying To Cover Their Inaction 

Thishya Weragoda
logoThe buck must ALWAYS passed FROM here” must be the sign on top of President Maithripala Sirisena’s table. It must also be on the tables of several Ministers of the Government including the Prime Minister. In fact it must have been there on the tables when they got to the respective offices. Their predecessors too must have had it when they got there too. It is a hallmark of Sri Lankan politics to pass the buck. 
However passing the buck in the magnitude we have seen in the last 5 days is unprecedented. The President, Prime Minister and the State Minister of Defense all have dodged their responsibilities. The blame has conveniently been shifted to the Inspector General of Police and the Defense Secretary who are being forced to resign in the aftermath. 
The President, during a discussion with religious leaders on 26th April 2019 said, inter alia  that there are no laws that allow for the banning of the NTJ. The Prime Minister in an interview with SkyNews (UK) said that there are no laws in place to arrest returning ex-ISIS fighters as joining a foreign terrorist group is not a crime. 
Both these comments by the President and the Prime Minister are highly irresponsible and erroneous and makes Sri Lanka look like a primitive nation whose laws have not caught up with the 21st century. In fact both statements are outright lies. Although it is true to an extent, that our Parliament has not legislated to catch up with the advancements of the world, we do have the necessary legal framework to cover both situations which were referred to by the President and the Prime Minister. 
National Defense and Maintenance of Public Security 
It is a basic concept that we, the sovereign citizens, waive “our natural rights in favor of the State, which by its protection, reconcile equality and freedom”.[1] This is considered as the social contract of a  functioning democracy. Therefore in exchange for protection, equality and freedom, we abdicate our sovereign rights in favour of the State. 
Article 4(b) of the Constitution of the Republic enacts that “the executive power of the People, including the defence of Sri Lanka, shall be exercised by the President of the Republic elected by the People”. Thus there is a direct obligation on the incumbent President to ensure the defence of the Republic both from internal and external aggressions. Further, the President has the sole discretion to declare war and peace, and that discretion is the only discretion exercised by the President which is not subject to judicial review by the Supreme Court[2] in any Fundamental Rights application.[3] 
For the maintenance of good order and peace of any democratic Republic, laws that provide for exigencies and emergencies are essential. Although in ordinary course, the Legislature must make laws that applies for situations, in emergency situation where ordinary public life is in danger, the executive must have the power to make laws that takes back control of the situation. In Sri Lanka this aspect is covered by the Public Security Ordinance.
Article 155 of the Constitution gives legal validity to the Public Security Ordinance. It enacts inter alia  that any regulations, made under the Public Security Ordinance has the legal effect to override, amend or suspend the operation of any law or Statue of the Provincial Councils, except the provisions of the Constitution. – This is an important safeguard in the Constitution. It ensures that an eccentric President cannot suspend the operation of the Constitution and declare himself king, by proclaiming that there is an emergency. There are further safeguards that are placed in the Constitution to ensure that an overzealous President does not arrogate unimaginable powers unto himself. Any proclamation of emergency must be forthwith be communicated with the Parliament, and approved by Parliament within 14 days of being issued. Emergency declared by  Proclamation is valid for a period of 30 days only, and must be extended by the President every 30 days and all such extensions must be approved by Parliament and if Parliament does not approve such proclamation, the proclamation of emergency shall immediately cease to be valid. These important constitutional safeguards and prominence is given to the Public Security because the President is expected to react swiftly and diligently to emergencies only and not to abuse the powers entrusted with him. 
State of Emergency and Emergency Regulations 
It is in this background the Public Security Ordinance must be assessed. In terms of Section 2 of the Public Security Ordinance, the President in his absolute discretion may declare that an emergency situation has arisen and bring Part II of the Ordinance into operation. Until such Order is issued, Part II of the Public Security Ordinance remains inoperative. Although the calamitous events took place on Sunday 22nd April 2019, since the President was overseas, Emergency could not be declared until a day later.[4] 
By the aforesaid Order, Part II of the Public Security Ordinance was brought into force, no regulations in terms of Section 5 were issued immediately thereafter. Originally the Government Printer’s website indicated that the Emergency Regulations were to be published under Gazette Extraordinary No. 2120/04. However, it was only available on 24rd April 2019 at 7AM under Gazette Extraordinary No. 2020/05 giving a strong indication that the Emergency Regulations were in fact not actually published on 22nd April 2019 as indicated in the Order. Adding further to the mystery the Gazette Extraordinary No. 2120/04 was published on 23rd April 2019 calling the Tri-Forces to maintain public Order. In fact it was only on 23rd April 2019, a whole 2 days later that the tri-forces were deployed to maintain public security. Although the changes and delays in publishing the Gazettes seems so trivial in the larger scheme of things, it clearly demonstrates that the President nor his public officials had any preparedness to respond to any form of emergency. 

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SRI LANKA: ALLOW THE MEDIA TO PERFORM THEIR DUTY, DO NOT MAKE OBSTACLES – FREE MEDIA MOVEMENT



Sri Lanka Brief27/04/2019

We at the Free Media Movement, first and foremost, wish to convey our deepest condolences to all the victims of the horrendous terror attack on religious places and hotels happened on April 21st, 2019 – the Easter Sunday. All communities are still encountering the trauma and the shock. And simultaneously, we are much concerned about many factors that would intense the current threatening situation. We are highly concerned of the fall of the country’s democratic space parallel to the tragic events of the last few days.

It is essential for us to understand at this juncture, that a heavy social, economic and political turmoil emerged aftermath the terror attack, apart from the hundreds of lost lives and large materialistic destruction. Finding a solution to this is definitely a key necessity and in it, ensuring public safety, is a priority.

This planned crime that happened on Easter Sunday, has destructed the peace and harmony that should have been among various ethnical and religious groups in the country. In addition, actions such as blocking social media and imposing emergency regulations that operates beyond the common law cannot be considered as a correct step considering long term impacts.

Justifying the social media block, authorities stated it was to avoid circulation of fake news that could cause public panic. Yet the block also did obstruct the public their right to accurate and responsible information that were posted on social media. Hence, we, the Free Media Movement, emphasize that this social media block that has been imposed as a temporary solution, should not be active over a long period. In the current situation, the Free Media Movement wishes to emphasize that the media also has a responsibility in shouldering a reasonable share of the ardent task of rebuilding the society and to strengthen the fractured democratic atmosphere of the country. At this critical moment, engaging in accurate reporting is the key responsibility of the media, leaving zero space for hateful and enraging ideas. At the same time, we highly value the efforts taken by media to maintain a relatively better improved reporting during this horrendous situation.

Exploiting the current conflicting situation, professional journalists have encountered threatening situations. Free Media Movement vehemently condemns such threats targeting professional journalists. Mr. Azzam Ameen, BBC journalist reported to have experienced similar threatening situations as a result of his reporting. If there is a problem with reporting in media there exist a standard method and a system for the readers or the receivers to respond. We vehemently condemn such attacks on professional journalists without giving the journalist a chance to respond.

Therefore we request all authorities to understand the role of media that needs to be necessarily played to rebuild the society in order to overcome this crisis and ensure a conducive environment for the media to act accordingly.

April 26, 2019 Press Release

C.Dodawatte

Convener

Children killed after explosions and gun battle in Amparai

Photograph: The aftermath of a gunbattle that left several people dead in Amparai last night.
 26 April 2019
At least 15 people, including 6 children, are confirmed to be amongst those killed as the Sri Lankan military engaged in a firefight with suspects linked to the Easter Sunday attacks in Amparai yesterday.
The Sri Lankan army confirmed the casualties, as well as a raid on a nearby building, which found stocks of explosives, ball bearings, a drone and a flag bearing the Islamic State logo. 
The military said the gun battle took place in the Nintavur - Kalmunai area, as they attempted to raid a house suspected of harbouring “Islamic extremists “. Speaking to the Tamil Guardian, an Amparai local confirmed that at least one explosion was heard followed by several rounds of gunfire. A firefight then raged on for several hours. "Three other men, also believed to one suicide bombers, were found dead outside the house,” said Sri Lankan police.
At least three women and six children are amongst the dead.
Military search operations in the area are continuing this morning, according to a local resident.
Sri Lankan troops also said they had seized a “a brand new unregistered van, suspected to be belonging to the National Towheed Jamat’s leader, Saharan’s brother-in-law, named Niyas".
Meanwhile in nearby Sainthamarathu, just 9 miles away, the Sri Lankan army said it raided a building and found  ISIS flags and other bomb-making equipment. This included 150 sticks of dynamite, 100,000 ball bearings.
See more from the military here.

A resignation of an Olympian


The All Party meet the President summoned on Thursday demonstrated that they have no idea about this new game

logoSaturday, 27 April 2019

Evil originates not in the absence of guilt. Evil originates in our effort to escape it. I cannot recall who said it. But it addresses our current predicament.

Yes. I am punning on the fact that Hemasiri Fernando was a colossus in the local Olympic movement. An Olympian is also a person who in adversity displays graceful detachment. Hemasiri qualifies. His sin is that he was honest. Our Defence establishment had no idea of the magnitude of the threat. Why?

Is it because our Security establishment had doubts on the information and the credentials of the Indian agency? Although later retracted, Sirisena in the weeks before the ‘Oktoberfest’ publicly claimed that threats on his life emanated from unidentified sources in that geographical region.


The exiting Secretary of Defence has explicitly and unequivocally stated that he “systematically disseminated” intelligence information received on recent attacks.

The carnage has plunged the nation in to hitherto unknown horror and corrosive chaos. Combined it has eaten deep into our collective confidence to breathe free.

He categorically states: “Information was disseminated to relevant officials and departments and I have done my duty. But some officials and relevant departments have not acted accordingly and as a result we have had to face this situation.” This carefully considered final statement of the outgoing Defence Secretary has to be considered in the context of the honest, unvarnished, forthright statement he made to reporters from the front seat of his car while on inspection of bombsites.

“The government did not expect an attack of such magnitude to occur.” He said much more in that spontaneous response.

What is pertinent to this discussion herein is the unambiguous admission that Sri Lanka received the warning of the threat and its source was Indian intelligence and also that it had reached the highest levels of our Defence establishment.

The Sri Lankan Defence experts arrived at their own estimate of the size and scope of the threat.

The Indian intelligence with exhaustive details of who, when and where reached us on 4 April. SLFP Secretary Dayasiri Jayasekera says it was 9 April. Leader of the House Kiriella says it was on 4 April.

As the good Field Marshal observed in Parliament, does it matter? Was it acted on? And on what degree of gravitas, sobriety and determination?

President Sirisena is also the Minister of Defence. He takes its purpose so seriously that he does not delegate his ministerial authority and responsibility to any one, not even when he travels abroad.

The President left the island on 16 April to take part in the ‘Suprabhatha’ ritual and offer prayers to Lord Venkateswara at Thrupathi in India. After appeasing the deities in heaven he proceeded to Singapore for the heavenly pursuit of shopping, presumably in preparation for the pending nuptials of his son that was planned in the merry month of May at the Shangri-La, the symbol of post-war progress made under the man he beat in 2015 with the help of 6.2 million knuckleheads including this writer. Hemasiri Fernando in his letter of resignation has assured that he will assist the committee of inquiry appointed to find out how the horse bolted and who fiddled with the stable door. That is all well and good. Surely Mr. Fernando should know that those who hobnob with gods and lesser gods on Mount Olympus have a duty to shed light and wisdom on simple people like us curious to ascertain the truth. Did he apprise President Sirisena of the contents of the Indian Intelligence warning before the President left the island on his pilgrimage and shopping expedition abroad? Was he in contact with the President in Singapore after the events?

The second question is vital. Sirisena could have called for personal assistance from Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong of Singapore to get back pronto to his ‘Mathru Bhoomi’ to appease the living, to grieve for the dead and to punish the perpetrators and fault the negligent. After all he has made personal requests to the Singapore Premier before, as in the case of Arjun Mahendran. As the Field Marshal who is being studiously kept out of the field by a vengeful President and a duplicitous Prime Minister noted in Parliament, Sirisena could have taken an earlier flight instead of returning past midnight. There was a flight that arrived at 3 p.m., then another at 9 p.m., before his midnight flight from Singapore.

The Emergency regulations could have come in to force earlier and faster. We have a President who does not own up to his mistakes. When the Supreme Court held that he violated the Constitution by dissolving Parliament, he delivered a 40-minute homily to the reinstalled Prime Minister that he did it with absolute moral conviction – “sathbhavayen” – and on the advice of good and learned President’s Counsel.

In the post mortem of the catastrophe, Mr. Hemasiri Fernando must tell the nation what the President knew and when he knew it. That is only part of the story.

The Prime Minister says he did not know, and he was not told. The Defence Secretary who is known for his affability as much as his administrative ability is not the kind of man to keep the Prime Minister out of the loop. If he did that that, it would have been for good reason.

Hemasiri Fernando became Defence Secretary following the constitutional coup of October 2018. If newspapers are correct, it was the result of a political accommodation. The Sunday Times of 28 October reported that Gotabaya Rajapaksa was to be appointed as the new Defence Secretary and was expected to assume duties the next week replacing Kapila Waidyaratne. Times also reported that the former Defence Secretary liaised with senior Police officers about security arrangements for Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa.The story earned a picturesque plausibility when newspapers carried a photograph of Pujitha, the IGP, saluting the anointed Prime Minister and the Defence Secretary in waiting.

The Monk Uduwe Dhammaloka Thera was handpicked by the then Army Commander General Daya Rathnayake to deliver ‘dharmadesana’ in Army camps just prior to the last presidential elections. This priest with the pleasing appeal of an Apollo propounded the theory that the Buddha was a Sri Lankan and was born in our land like no other.

Our chauvinist reading of history is decidedly at variance with Indians scholars such as Romila Thapar recognised for their grasp of the Ashokan era.

Is it possible that the President who torpedoed the Prime Minister’s Colombo Port deal with India just before the October political blow-up had serious misgivings on India’s intentions in furnishing this dire warning? Is it possible that this scepticism prompted the withholding of this information from the Prime Minister? To India IS terrorism is an existential threat. President Sirisena prior to his pilgrimage and shopping expedition had a different existential dilemma – his re-election. How will he proceed from here on?

For how long will Prime Minister Wickremesinghe cling to the notion that he is the super strategist? That he alone is the patrician whose competence in the foxtrot can beat Mahinda’s charisma and Sirisena’s inflated ego?For 30 years we confronted the idea of justice in a plural democracy. The idea of the unitary state was our obsession. From the Arabised heartland of Muslim ethnoreligious identity in the Eastern Province, there has emerged a warped idea of an unforgiving god. They are not demanding devolution or sharing power. They are in hurried pursuit of heaven. It is a different ball game. The All Party meet the President summoned on Thursday demonstrated that they have no idea about this new game. It is very unlikely that Sirisena has read the writings of Lee Kuan Yew who carved out an oasis of political stability while maintaining excellent relations with the largest Islamic nation state Indonesia and the most economically developed Asian Islamic nation state Malaysia. He described how to fight Salafist Jihadism. Fighting this menace needs a strategy. It is not killing the worker bees that matters. Get at the queen bee.