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, May 26, 2019

Bathiudeen called Army Commander on the advice of State Defence Minister


Camelia Nathaniel and Sandasen Marasinghe-Saturday, May 25, 2019

Speaker Karu Jayasuriya yesterday announced that a Special Media Unit would be established in the Parliamentary Complex next month.

The Speaker also announced that he instructed Parliament Secretary General Dhammika Dassanayake to take measures to remove the existing obstacles enabling more proceedings to be opened to the media.

He also added that the Chairmen of any Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC) have been vested with powers to invite the media to report proceedings.

The Speaker made these observations in Parliament when Leader of the House and Public Enterprise, Kandyan Heritage and Kandy Development Minister Lakshman Kiriella requested the Speaker to open the proceedings of the Parliamentary Select Committee which was appointed to inquire into the Easter Sunday terrorist attacks on several churches and hotels,to the media.

Minister Kiriella further said the functions of the same Parliamentary Select Committee commenced on Thursday. It should be open to the public by way of the media since the government had nothing to hide.

“The Chair has the power in line with the Standing Orders. It is the media that creates news to support the Opposition. When the media is invited, the people will know the truth,” Minister Kiriella said.

Speaker Karu Jayasuriya said at this stage that the Chairman of any Parliamentary Select Committee have been vested with powers to invite the media to publish their proceedings.

Digital Infrastructure and Information Technology Non Cabinet Minister Ajith P. Perera said it was Speaker Jayasuriya who took measures to open the Parliament proceedings to the public. He requested that not only the proceedings of this Special Committee, but let the proceedings of all Parliamentary Select Committees be open to the media.

UNP Parliamentarian Prof. Ashu Marasinghe requested Speaker Jayasuriya to open proceedings of the Oversight Committee to the media as well.

He added the where the Standing Orders are concerned, the Chairmen of those Committees have restrictions with regard to inviting the media. For three years, we have been making a request to amend those Standing Orders to enable the Chairmen of the Oversight Committees and Sub Committees to invite the media.

He added that it was very important for the public to be aware of what is happening before the Oversight Committees. He added that people should be made aware of the workload done by the members of these committees. He added the public should know as to who works. Speaker Jayasuriya said that he would look into the matter.

Leader of the House Minister Kiriella said that Parliament Select Committees have a common set of rules by which the Oversight Committees too are covered.

Opposition Parliamentarian Vasudeva Nanayakkara said the Opposition has nothing to hide as Minister Kiriella noted. He added if both the Government and Opposition have nothing to hide then the proceedings will be transparent.

Minister Kiriella then invited MP Nanayakkara and members of the Opposition to join the process at the Parliamentary Select Committee.

SRI LANKA HRC PROVIDES EVIDENCE OF POLICE COMPLICITY IN RECENT ANTI-MUSLIM ATTACKS


Image: In Bandara Koswatte, the mob attacked the main mosque despite Police and Army presence, says HRCSL.

Sri Lanka Brief25/05/2019


In a letter to Acting Inspector General of Police, the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka  has provided evidence of police complicity in the recent anti-Muslim attacks in Sri Lanka and recommended urgent action to be taken .

Same quotes form the letter sent to Actg. IGP by HRCSL.:

“Upon examining the records of the Bingiriya police station, our Commission observed that, while the suspects had been taken in for engaging in communal riots (bailable only in exceptional circumstances by the High Court) they had been released on police bail for mischief, as stated above. Further, we noted that there was no record of transfer of suspects from Bingiriya to Hettipola and back. This very problematic situation is compounded by allegations of political interference.”

“in Bandara Koswatte, the mob attacked the main mosque despite Police and Army presence. In Kottampitiya, the villagers were asked by the police to

move off the main road because of possible attacks, but failed to prevent the mob from attacking the village. On the following day (14m May), we observed a lone police officer coming to Kottampitiya village to record statements.”

“Also, in Kuliyapitiya on 13 May, the police decided to accede to the demands of the mob and released 4 people who had been taken to the station for questioning regarding attacks on four shops in Karanthipola. As soon as they were released, the’y mob attacked all Muslim owned shops in Kuliyapitiya town during the curfew and went on to attack shops all the way to Rambawewa. ”

Recent Communal Violence in the North-Western Province. Chilaw District and Minuwangoda Town.

Mr. Chandana Wickrem aratne

Actg. Inspector General of Police

Police Headquarters

Colombo 01

Dear Sir,

Consequent to communal violence that broke out on 12 and 13 May, 2019 in the above areas, I, as Chairperson of Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka, and other Commissioners visited the affected areas with a view to ascertaining the human rights situation. During our visits we met with affected villagers, community leaders, police and military personnel.

We wish to bring the following observations to your attention with a view to requesting your  intervention to address problematic issues:

(i) There appeared to be no preventive measures taken although retaliatory violence against the Muslim communities was a distinct possibility after the terror attacks of 27 April. Towns with a Muslim presence and areas where Muslim villages are concentrated can be easily identified. Further, intelligence should have made it possible to identify areas prone to such attacks and in which preparations were afoot to carry out such attacks. There were no roadblocks at entry points to such areas, or a concentrated presence of the police/STF or any of the Tri Forces in the affected areas prior to the attacks. Particularly striking was the absence of preventive measures in Minuwangoda Town in close proximity to the Police Station and military posts. Many villagers reported they had phoned 119, 118 the DIG’s office and the Hettipola, Koswatte, Kuliyapitiya and Nikaweratiya police stations a few hours prior to the incident seeking protection, despite which no preventive measures were taken.

(ii) Attacks on certain villages had gone on for several hours, e.g., villages destroyed in Hettipola, and they had not had the benefit of police/STF or Tri Forces intervention to stop the attacks. The mobs appear to have had a free hand to engage in the destruction of the Mosques in Hettipola, Wattakali, Thummodara, Maikulam, Bandara Koswatte, Kotampitiya, Minuwangoda, Nikaweratiya and and also homes, vehicles and other property of villagers in the aforementioned villages as well as in Kottaramulla.

(iii) On the other hand, in Bandara Koswatte, the mob attacked the main mosque despite Police and Army presence. In Kottampitiya, the villagers were asked by the police to
move off the main road because of possible attacks, but failed to prevent the mob from attacking the village. On the following day (14m May), we observed a lone police officer coming to Kottampitiya village to record statements.

You will recognizethat that is a very unacceptable situation, to say the least, whereby vulnerable civilians had to fend for themselves.  We also observed that the violence in the areas we visited could not be handled only by the local police station. However, reinforcement by calling for extra police/STF or Tri Forces presence in the affected areas had taken place very late, paving the way for mobs to go on a rampage causing severe damage to property and livelihoods while the villagers had fled in fear to save their lives. Further, we have received many complaints to the effect that the police officers stood by as mobs congregated in certain areas even during curfew hours, such as on Kottaramulla main road,

Kuliyapitiya and Minuwangoda.

As we know, causing incitement to racial and religious violence is prohibited by the ICCPR Act No.56 af 2OO7 (Section 3) and bail to suspects can be granted only by the High Court, that also in exceptional circumstances (Section 3 (4) Howevet, we have learnt from eye witress accounts that when suspected persons were arrested, crowds gathered outside the police station demanding release of such persons. The police has the authority to disperse such crowds when they are obstructing its officers from performing their legal duties. On the contrary, what we observed at the Bingiriya Police Station was that the suspects had been moved to the Hettipola Police Station owing to a crowd demanding their release, and then retransferred back to the Bingiriya Police Station at which the suspects were released on police bail for mischief.

Upon examining the records of the Bingiriya police station, our Commission observed that, while the suspects had been taken in for engaging in communal riots (bailable only in exceptional circumstances by the High Court) they had been released on police bail for mischief, as stated above. Further, we noted that there was no record of transfer of suspects from Bingiriya to Hettipola and back. This very problematic situation is compounded by allegations of political interference.

Also, in Kuliyapitiya on 13 May, the police decided to accede to the demands of the mob and released 4 people who had been taken to the station for questioning regarding attacks on four shops in Karanthipola. As soon as they were released, the  mob attacked all Muslim owned shops in Kuliyapitiya town during the curfew and went on to attack shops all the way to Rambawewa. Also, the Koswatte Police had released four persons on 15 May who had been arrested in relation to the attack in Kottaramulla. The OIC Reported that he had done so due to orders from the Actg.IGP.

Given the above unsatisfactory situations we observed, which clearly prevented equal protection of the law to affected citizens and also to the public at large (by subverting the law taking its proper course), we recommend that you take immediate corrective action.

Our Commission is fully aware of the huge responsibility the Police Department shoulders at the moment in having to conduct investigations into the tenor attack on 2l April’ Now with communal violence breaking out in above areas, your responsibilities are so much greater.

Hence, our Commission, by way of recommendations, highlights the need to:
  • Take heed of early warning signs, including complaints and appeals by residents, and take preventive action when there is even the slightest hint of communal unrest. This includes providing reinforcement to those areas early,cnot after the event,
  • Urgently provide crowd control training and necessary equipment such as tear gas canisters, rubber bullets and water cannons in a manner that is easily
    accessible to provincial police stations;
  • Instruct OICs of the need to strictly enforce Section 3 of the ICCPR Act, No.56 of 2007, in relation to those who are inciting communal violence;
  • and Ensure that no undue political or other extemal interventions are tolerated, and that strict legal action be taken against those who obstruct police officers from performing
    their duties.
Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka
Dr. N. D. Udagama
Chairperson
Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka

Saturday, May 25, 2019

May quits, Modi wins big, and Sri Lanka’s turn

article_image
by Rajan Philips- 

Last week was a long time in politics, to paraphrase a famous quip by one of the more popular British Prime Ministers of the twentieth century, Harold Wilson of the Labour Party. It took a long time until last week for one of the more unpopular British Prime Ministers, Theresa May, to call it quits over her bungled leadership of the Brexit misadventure. Her resignation is not going to solve Britain’s agonizing indecision over Brexit. It is tough to make any decision by any British Prime Minister,or government, when the country and its parliament are deeply divided about either leaving Europe with or without a deal, or remaining in Europe with or without conditions. It may not be the end of the world for Britain, but it has been quite a stumble for what was once an empire with no apparent sunset. While Britain, the old imperial power has become a spectacle for indecisiveness, the empire’s once prized possession, India, last week decisively demonstrated its clarity of purpose in its elephantine national election.

A convincing majority of the 600 million voters, marking a high 67% turnout, who trekked to the polls in India, have elected Narendra Modi of the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) to a second term as India’s Prime Minister. Modi’s second election victory is even bigger and more substantial than the stunner he sprang in his first national election in 2014. What are the implications of the global and regional developments and tumults for Sri Lankan society and politics? That is the question facing Sri Lanka as it enters its election home stretch, the last South Asian country to have elections in the current election cycle. Every South Asian Country except Sri Lanka has had its periodical election over the last one and a half years. Sri Lanka has also earned a notoriety for monkeying with the timing of elections, with incumbent government opting to postpone some and advance others to suit its political whim and fortunes.

In the current round of elections in South Asia, pro-China communists have won power in Nepal. Imran Khan is Pakistan’s new Prime Minister not because of his cricketing prowess but because the Pakistani military allegedly favoured him and his Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf (PTI) party over Nawaz Sharif and his Pakistan Muslim League party. A new government has also been elected in Bhutan, while in Bangladesh Prime Minister Sheik Hasina has won another term for her Awami League government. Bangladesh has registered impressive economic growth over the last decade with Sheik Hasina as Prime Minister, although politically the country is being viewed as becoming increasingly authoritarian and intolerant of dissent.

Hasina’s main rival, leader of the opposition Bangladesh Nationalist Party, and former Prime Minister Khaleda Zia is serving a five-year jail term over charges of corruption, and the opposition forces had to contest the last two elections, leaderless and handicapped. In the Maldives, on the other hand, the voters were able to oust a wannabe dictator and restore constitutional democracy. In effect, the Maldivian voters made short work of an adventurous government that was dragging the islands into a state of dependency on China for cash and the Saudis for Wahabi theocracy.

Modi’s second win

Against this South Asian backdrop, Modi’s victory is resoundingly remarkable in every electoral metric. Modi and the BJP won 303 out of 542 Lok Sabha seats, 21 more than what they won in 2014. The second and third place finishers are miles behind, with the grand old Indian National Congress scraping the national barrel for 52 seats (eight seats more than last time), and the regional Tamil Nadu party, the DMK, winning 23 seats all in Tamil Nadu and decimating its Dravidian twin, arch rival and the currently governing party of the State, the ADMK. The BJP alliance, really the BJP and its minions, has won a total of 349 seats, while Congress alliance won 97 seats, virtually doubling the Congress tally of 52 seats. The remaining 96 seats are shared by score of political parties, a handful of them winning in the low twenties and the vast majority of them, including the once formidable Communist Parties (CPM and CPI) winning only in single digits.

While failing yet again to get a foothold in the southern states of Andhra Pradesh, Kerala, Tamil Nadu and Telangana, the BJP did well in Karnataka and held on to the northern and western states it swept in the last election. BJP also made impressive inroads in the eastern states of Odisha and West Bengal, that has for decades on end been the bastion of the Communist Party of India - Marxist (CPM) and lately of the Trinamool Congress, a regional Bengali Party and now the governing party in the state. The Congress Party was wiped out in 13 of India’s 29 states. The BJP’s victory is really a referendum win for Modi and his leadership, not to mention his not at all subtle promotion of a ‘muscular’ Indian nationalism to outmuscle all minorities, especially the Muslims. The Muslims are 14% of India’s population, but have only 26 Muslim MPs in the Lok Sabha, or less than 5% of the legislature. The BJP alliance has no Muslim MP within their large contingent of over 300 MPs.

Modi’s second win is perhaps the most substantial democratic victory for an unabashedly (economically) rightwing, (socially) regressive, (religiously) exclusionary and (politically) anti-minority party and government in today’s world politics. Political populism encompassing these attributes is a common phenomenon in many countries, but in no other country has such a movement or party been so electorally successful as Modi and the BJP were last week. The victory is all the more stunning after the BJP’s setbacks in recent state elections and the anticipations of pundits that Modi and the BJP will win but with a reduced majority and will face a strengthened Congress opposition. The people have sent a different message to the pundits.

After the elections, there is much handwringing among Indian commentators over the future of Indian secularism and the Nehruvian legacy itself. The truth of matter is that secularism in India has become the opium of the elites, and Modi has found a way to unleash the anger of the masses against the elites in two successive elections. He has more credibility as one of them than any of his rivals, and while his record as Prime Minister is not at all unblemished, his rapidly delivered concrete measures to alleviate the people from their misery – opening bank accounts in the villages, rural electrification, and the construction of 100 million toilets, have resonated well enough with the voters to give him a strong second term. The elites have only themselves to blame for resting on the abstract laurels of secularism for over sixty years, while letting the Congress bury itself in corruption and the progressives bury themselves in hopeless infighting and brinkmanship.

Sri Lanka’s turn

Which way the electoral winds will blow in Sri Lanka? The question is of interest not only to political watchers and voters in Sri Lanka, but also to outsiders who have made more than a habit of meddling in Sri Lankan politics ever since the island’s economic gates were famously opened to "let the robber barons come." More than the robber barons, it is the political meddlers who have gatecrashed. Even before Modi’s victory in India, China and the US seem to have been sending signals about their preferred presidential candidates for the upcoming presidential election. Last time Modi won, the Rajapaksas were in power and President Mahinda Rajapaksa, along with other South Asian leaders, was invited to Delhi for Modi’s inauguration. But within a year Mahinda Rajapaksa called an election, lost it and was out of office. This time, there is no love lost between Modi and Sirisena, and Sirisena is hell bent on staying as President as long as he can, and is in no rush to hold the next presidential election.

Will Modi invite Sirisena to his second inauguration, now that President Sirisena has rushed to China and returned, apparently on China’s invitation over concerns about the growing presence of western intelligence agencies in Sri Lanka following the Easter bombing tragedies? Few Sri Lankans were amused when President Sirisena, who was sojourning in Singapore when bombs went off on Easter Sunday in Sri Lanka, suddenly took off again to attend a conference on Asian Civilizations in Beijing. Now it is news, since no one has called it fake, that the President rushed to China in response to a sudden message from the Chinese President Xi Jinping asking Sirisena to come to Beijing. And he took off, just like that, with no apparent cabinet, or inner cabinet, consultations. There is no cabinet government anyway, so everything goes.

The President is again all over the map on national security and international diplomacy. On his watch, and he cannot claim that these things happened unbeknownst to him, Sri Lanka has strengthened its formal military ties with the US. These ties, including the Acquisition and Cross Servicing Agreement (ACSA) with the United States, did not begin after 2015, but are extensions from as far back as 2007, when the initial agreement was signed by Gotabaya Rajapaksa as Defence Secretary and Robert Blake Jr as the American Ambassador. A second agreement, the Status of Forces Agreement (SOFA) is apparently in the works now. We do not know what version of the ties with America that President Sirisena gave his hosts in Beijing, and no one, and not even the mighty Joint Opposition seems to have raised questions in parliament about the President’s visit to Beijing, its purpose and its outcomes. We know from news stories of the President’s request for 100 jeeps and rupee grants to beef up national security. I cannot think of a former Sri Lanka Head of State or Head of Government ever doing anything that the current President is doing.

It seems that Mr. Sirisena’s real motivation for the China trip may have been to find a powerful outside sponsor for his struggling presidential candidacy in Sri Lanka. Not that the President can take China, or anybody, for a ride, but it is the President’s way of reassuring himself of his own political potency at home. The trigger may have come when foreign leaders, including the American President, called Prime Minister Wickremesinghe and not President Sirisena to commiserate over the Easter tragedies. Then came a double blow to both the President and the Prime Minister, when the former American Ambassador Robert Blake delivering a lecture in Colombo on the 8th of May, struck quite a few notes of political import especially in an election year and in the wake of the Easter tragedies.

Blake’s main message was that Sri Lanka is well-placed and should take advantage of the competition between the US and China for "influence in the Asia-Pacific." Along with this neutral advice, he made a plea for his own country indicating his satisfaction that the "military to military relations" between Sri Lanka and the US are back in focus after they had been unfortunately sidelined by human rights concerns that arose during the last stages of the war. Then came the clincher. In a public advice to the current Sri Lankan government, the former Ambassador said that it should follow the example of what the former Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa did during the war to co-ordinate intelligence operations across multiple agencies. Mr. Blake’s advice may have gone unnoticed if Gotabhaya Rajapaksa is not a candidate for the next presidential election. In fact, he is the only self-announced candidate at this time. So, the Ambassadorial obiter went on to trigger much speculation whether the US is ditching Ranil Wickremesinghe for Gotabaya Rajapaksa. And not to be left out of reckoning altogether, President Sirisena took flight to China hoping for his own sponsors.

All hell would have broken loose if Mr. Blake has said something favouring Ranil Wickremesinghe or anyone else from Mr. Wickremesinghe’s alliance. Put shots were taken by patriots when Samantha Power, academically far more established than Blake, flew in to felicitate Mangala Samaraweera for completing thirty years in politics, but nothing disparaging has been said about Blake’s praise of Gotabaya Rajapaksa. The difference between Blake and Power, over human rights and military co-operation, are indicative of the shifts in American foreign policy under President Trump. Kiron Skinner, an African American and Republican academic, is now the new director of policy planning in the State Department. And she seems to be creating arguments for Trump the way Jean Kirkpatrick created them for President Reagan.

Ms. Skinner raised eyebrows in Washington with her characterization of America’s competition with China as "a fight with a really different civilization and a different ideology, and the United States hasn’t had that before." The competition with the Soviet Union, added Ms. Skinner, was "a fight within the Western family." In China, the West for the first time has "a great power competitor that is not Caucasian." Perhaps, the observation is objective because it comes from an African American!

Where does that leave India’s Modi and other purported Asian allies of America? Will Modi vie with China and America for his own proxy in Sri Lanka, or will he tag-team with either of the two competitors? The real question for Sri Lankans could be if the island should take sides at all in this great power bickering? "Imperialism and its running dogs," was a standard line in every Maoist political litany. Quite a few Sri Lankans would still be familiar with its usage by local Maoists in this country until the Gang of Four took over China and changed the direction of geopolitics. Not quite the change, the cynic would argue; only the labels have changed, and not the powers encircling Sri Lanka. Their games around Sri Lanka now seem to be changing, however, though not for better and for how much worse – it remains to be seen.

Until now, even Sri Lanka’s worst critic, local or foreign, would not have called Sri Lanka a running dog of anybody. Even the ‘Anglo Mania, India Phobia’ UNP governments after independence maintained due cordiality with India, and opened the rice-rubber bilateral trade swap with China, all the while boasting strong ‘Yankee Dick’ loyalties at the highest levels. An ethos of non-alignment pervaded all governments – it doesn’t matter if it was out of opportunism, enlightened selfishness, or simply the Buddhist Middle Path, or a healthy mix of all three ingredients. Now there are new path finders. Sri Lanka is still no dog, but there are poodles for picking by the encircling foreign powers.

Presidential Amnesty Rules The Day

Lucien Rajakarunanayake
logoWe are now at the peak of the Sinhala-Buddhist mood in politics and society.
President Maithripala Sirisena has proven he could rise to the altitude of greatness in this sweeping search for ethno-religious dominance.
He gained blessings from the Hindu deity at Thirupathi leading to a post-Sinhala New Year holiday in Singapore, when the blasts by Islamic terrorists brought the carnage of Easter Sunday.
He was doing important negotiations in China, including proposals for Chinese forces to guard the Colombo Port City, Hambantota Port and the Shangri-la Hotel in Colombo, when the religio-ethnic violence broke out in many districts.
The greatness in abiding by the Sinhala-Buddhist culture was seen in his pardoning of the leader of the Bodu Bala Sena – Galagoda Atte Gnanasara Thera, who was sentenced by the Court of Appeal, and confirmed by the Supreme Court for Contempt of Court, to 19 years in prison, to be served in six years.
President Sirisena is in great presidential heights in this performance of generosity. He has followed the record of President JR Jayewardene and President Mahinda Rajapaksa in this groovy pardon performance.
Some pardoning recollections are helpful. This brings us to Gonawela Sunil who was Kelaniya-based and was about the most powerful thug of his time and enjoyed UNP patronage at the highest level. He was sentenced to 10 years imprisonment for rape. He was then in Ranil Wickremesinghe’s political arena, was also known for involvement in prison killings, and many other situations of violence.
He was serving prison sentence when Sri Lanka celebrated the Golden Jubilee of Universal Franchise – on 7th July 1981. This great event brought his pardon and release from prison by President Jayewardene. There was one little legal escape for President JRJ. The conditions for amnesty was for persons convicted for the first time, with less than 10 more years to serve, and for offences NOT including murder, treason, unlawful assembly, bank robbery, highway robbery, default of income tax payment, bribery etc., with the singular exception of RAPE. It seemed a law perfectly planned to serve Gonawala Sunil.
The amnesty exercise was quickly named ’Sunil Samava’ or Sunil Amnesty. It did not take long for this master of criminal performance in various fields, including political and prison violence, to be made an All-Island Justice of Peace!
If President Sirisena is glad to have followed this amnesty tradition of JRJ, no doubt on the special request of Ranil W of Kelaniya and UNP politics of that day, he has another example of amnesty too. That is the Mahinda Rajapaksa performance.
The wife of then Minister Milroy Fernando, Mary Juliet Monica Fernando, was convicted for a double murder. President Rajapaksa initiatives saw her life sentence commuted, and the next year she was freed on a Presidential Pardon to mark International Women’s Day. This prisoner escaped the lengthy legal process involved in obtaining the recommendation for a presidential pardon, by her sentence being commuted on the earlier presidential decision. It was a DOUBLE MURDER amnesty. What a wonderful record to follow!
Aren’t we a truly great society, and how great President Sirisena must feel in having two such amnesty precedents before him!
The latest amnesty to Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara Thera is for the offence of Contempt of Court. What the rising politics of the Sinhala Buddhist phase in our modern society should consider is changing the laws of this land, to prevent the very concept of Contempt of Court. Why can’t the courts be disturbed, judges insulted, witnesses threatened in the Court premises. This is surely not in keeping with our traditions of Sinhala Buddhist culture, as we know it today.
It is this non-Sinhala Buddhist culture that led the Court of Appeal to pass any such sentence on this yellow robed member of the Buddha Saasana.
Amidst the continuing social crumbling in the post-Easter Carnage, it is necessary to look at how we can evade the whole process of Contempt of Court, and even worse, how a fiercely active member of the Yellow Robed body of Buddhist teachers could ever be accused of such an offence.
One way is to do away with the entire Court System. Let’s not forget that it all came from colonial power and imperialism. Why do we need to know or follow Roman Dutch Law – with its western and later Christian roots? Why do we need a democratic process – when we could do very well with our own monarchic rule and feudal traditions? If we don’t need Sharia Law, why do we need Roman-Dutch Law? We may have to think of ways to find our next king, but could it be any worse than finding our next President? Who will replace Sirisena?

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Tawheed is not a misdeed but dirtied by the extreme


The preponderant Muslim populace does not endorse terrorism; this is certainly not the teachings of the Messenger who taught a peaceful way of

life to his companions and all mankind to follow – Pic by Shehan Gunasekara


logo Saturday, 25 May 2019

A singular and specific victim of the whole macabre incident of the 21 April Easter Sunday bombings by terrorists in Sri Lanka from a standpoint of Muslims was the maligning, tarnishing and distorting of a term indispensable, necessitous and fundamental to the faith of Islam. It’s indeed extremely troubling to the faithfuls that this is the existential coalescing reality.

A term is essentially integral and intrinsic to Islam and all its prophets, namely Abraham, Noah, Moses, Jesus, Muhammad (peace be upon all of them). A term loved by Muslims and observed with endless devotion and invocation by billions. A term for which God Almighty created the seven heavens, the seven earths and everything within it.

A term which terrorists and extremists misuse, abuse and misquote sans proper knowledge, proper concern, proper insight, proper understanding or wisdom. A term with which extremists deceive, distort and debase and prey on the innocent and unsuspecting.

This term is Tawheed. A term that has become dirty, diabolical and discredited. But the irony of the matter from a mainstream standpoint is that without Tawheed there is no Islam and without Islam there is no Tawheed. This is the ultimate symbiosis in the world. There is nothing, absolutely nothing beyond this.

Tawheed is the indivisible oneness concept of monotheistic Islam. Wahid, ahad and waheed, all of it connote the same idea of one. Allah is Wahid, hence its adherents observe Tawheed – single out all worship to him exclusively. This is Tawheed. He, Allah, has no rivals or peers in any way or form. Knowing Him to be one, with none like unto Him. Whoever does not acknowledge Allah in these terms and does not describe Him as being one with no partner or associate does not believe in Tawheed. So one gets the idea.

Tawheed is the religion’s central and single-most important concept, upon which a Muslim’s entire faith rests. The rest is built on this foundation. It unequivocally holds that Allah is one and Single; therefore, the Islamic belief in Allah is considered absolutely Unitarian, this is Tawheed.

The concept of Tawheed is divine but attaching a jamaath to it (congregation) is a religious innovation and separating the Muslim nation and possibly not conveying the message as intended “O Messenger! Convey what has been sent down to you from your Lord” (Al Quran 5:67) for good reason the congregation and the principle tenet has to be separated. This is critical. Groups call themselves many things oblivious to real consequences to the people at large.

When a group calls itself the Lord’s Army, the two have to be separated. When another group calls itself the Buddhist Force, the two have to be separated. The same way Tawheed and Jamaath have to be separated, analysed and facts elicited. If this just process is not implemented, great harm can definitely ensue and faithfuls get caught up in the crossfire. Only those with sinister motives, whether in the administration or media, would mix the two and blow it out of proportion.

The ignorant electronic media in Sri Lanka in particular has been doing just that, causing a lot of harm to the people. It’s extremely important for the non-Muslim world and the intelligence communities to exercise caution, discretion and foresight especially in the light of the kinds of names and branding these terrorists organisations extend to their outfits. This is a very serious issue and be treated as such.

Will a sincere, practising Buddhist, Hindu, Christian or Jew be able to invalidate core teachings and still consider to be a true and sincere follower? That would be impossible. As for Tawheed there is no comparison, no comparison whatsoever. Without Tawheed there will no sun, no moon, no water, no rain, no air, no trees, no mountains, etc. Without Tawheed there will be no Donald Trump, without Tawheed there will be no Vladimir Putin, without Tawheed there will be no Xi Jingping, without Tawheed there will be no Maithripala Sirisena or no Narendra Modi. Why? Because all of this is Allah’s creation. And He says in the final revelation, “And I did not create Jinn and Mankind except for my worship” Al Quran (51:56); this is Tawheed. This is no exaggeration or spiritual condescending but the true and exact reality. This can be accepted or rejected but it wouldn’t remove the entrenched and all-embracing reality.

Indeed Tawheed is not a misdeed. It’s a creed that transforms man with speed. The terrorists and extremists who mislead and impede will certainly not succeed. Name a country where they have done good deeds and shown eligibility to succeed? As for those who misread the message are kindly exhorted to properly read. Allah Himself decreed His Message would bleed but in the long run it will succeed. The whole universe and what it contains is one unified event which in itself has no lasting reality. Allah is the only reality, Al-Haqq. “He is God, the one, on whom all depend, He does not beget, nor is He begotten, and (there is) none like Him” AlQuran (112:1-4) this is Tawheed.

“Your Lord has decreed that you shall serve none but Him, and show kindness to your parents” AlQuran (17:23) this is Tawheed. “And to every people we sent a prophet to convey to them that they ought to serve Allah and avoid at-Taghoot” Al Quran (16:36) this is Tawheed. “Serve Allah and do not associate aught with Him” AlQuran (4:36) this is Tawheed.

Prophet Muhammad (may Allah exalt his mention) said: “What is due to Allah from His creatures is to serve Him alone and never to associate any other being with Him. What is due them is not to punish any person who does not associate aught with Him”; this is Tawheed.

Regardless of the disgusting, despicable, detestable acts of violence Muslim terrorists perpetrate in the name of Islam, not just what happened in Sri Lanka but globally and the Muslim world. Anyway the purity and sanctity of Islam can never be taken away. When they enact violence we also see soon after its replication, a more forceful replication for which these ignoramuses would extend an “allahuakbar” Who opened the door for all of this? It was the Muslim terrorists no doubt. No matter who does what the essence of Islam and its true meaning is deeply etched in the hearts of Muslims and they reject this totally.

The operation in Sri Lanka was too professional for a raw, callow and rookie terrorist organisation. It’s supposed elaborate planning, keeping the political hierarchy and intelligence at bay pose many questions. One specific issue that continues to bewilder Muslims of Sri Lanka and those outside is how such colossal amounts of superior explosives were freely moved or material freely purchased. From where did they get these military grade explosives? Who actually helped them? Were foreign hands complicit in the operation? These questions have to be answered as what’s at stake is the faith of near two billion people.

In this regard kudos to the courageous and bold Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith, the Archbishop of Colombo and leader of the country’s Catholic Church. He is an intelligent man, a wise man, a man well-endowed with the geopolitical realities of the world. He emphatically and courageously rebuffed the official version. He spoke about a “jathianthara hasthiyak” – an international hand. His staunch defense of Islam was a standalone testimony for the peaceful nature of the religion of Islam.

The preponderant Muslim populace does not endorse this kind of violent methodology. This is certainly not the teachings of the Messenger who taught a peaceful way of life to his companions and all mankind to follow. Terrorists from whatever religion, group or cult have always behaved the same way and never failed to leave their landmark and destructive trail and their accredited and distinct genre of interacting with the civilised world.

[The writer holds MBA (India). Dip M (UK). Dip BA (Can), Dip CSW (Can) and can be reached via email at nishthar.idroos.isme@gmail.com.]

On the Presidential Pardon: Reactions to Gnanasara’s Release


Featured image by Sri Lanka Brief
GROUNDVIEWS-05/24/2019
The photos, depicting a saffron-robed Gnanasara Thero, received thousands of reactions on Facebook. “He has been freed” they read. “Budu saranai” and “Theruwan saranai”commenters posted on the Facebook Pages of mainstream media like Neth FM and Hiru News.
On May 23, the General Secretary of the Bodu Bala Sena Galagodaththe Gnanasara Thero received a Presidential pardon, and was released from Welikada prison.
Gnanasara was arrested on contempt of court charges in August 2018. At the time, he received a 6 year term, served concurrently.
Although arrested on contempt of court charges, Gnanasara was also known for his provocative rhetoric. The video of a speech he made in Aluthgama in 2014 at a BBS rally, shortly after which at least four were killed in riots targeting the Muslim community remains online.
Groundviews spoke to lawyers and members of civil society on the implications of the Presidential pardon.
“Gnanasara was imprisoned for contempt of court, for threatening me at the Homagama Magistrate. It is the Executive’s responsibility to protect the independence of the judiciary. This is a disrespect to the judiciary and to the rule of law,” Sandhya Eknaligoda said. “The President is setting an example that any individual can do anything they want in court, and get away with it through a pardon. This sets a bad example for future cases.”
Speaking on the legal implications of the pardon, Lecturer in Public Law at the University of Edinburgh, Dr. Asanga Welikala noted that Gnanasara Thero was convicted and given a custodial sentence for contempt of court after displaying behaviour “so egregious within the court premises, and well beyond the respectful behaviour expected of ordinary citizens before the courts, that it would have been a threat to the Rule of Law itself to let him go unpunished.” In this context, he said, the presidential pardon raised a number of very serious questions.
Pertinent also as Dr Welikala noted, is the appeal in place against the conviction that the courts are yet to conclude. “In this context, would a pardon serve to interfere in the due process of law? It is not only the President, but also the relevant Minister who has endorsed the requests by third parties to pardon the Thera. The government as a whole therefore will need to justify, with stated reasons, why the grant of a pardon in this case will not be inconsistent with the Constitution, the Rule of Law, and the administration of justice. Anything less will directly undermine the legitimacy of Sri Lanka’s constitutional democracy.”
Attorney-At-Law J C Weliamuna added that under the Witness Protection Act, a pardon usually isn’t given without consultation with the witness or affected party. “I am not sure if the Magistrate was given notice. I know Mrs Eknaligoda has written to the President objecting to Gnanasara’s release 2 months ago,” he said, speaking to Groundviews shortly after the monk’s release. “We still don’t know if the views of the Attorney General’s Department, the Ministry of Justice and the judges who convicted him were obtained. Strictly speaking, there is no constitutional requirement to do so, but this is the pardoning of a suspect who has a history of conviction.”
Weliamuna also noted the wider implications of the Presidential pardon, given the Thero’s influential position.
Human rights law researcher at the University of Oxford, Gehan Gunatilleke said that the pardon was reflective of a new and disturbing nexus between mainstream politics and “militant nationalism”.
Human rights activist and founder member of the Mannar Women’s Development Federation (MWDF) Shreen Saroor termed the pardon an insult to Sandhya’s long fight for justice.
Legal and Advocacy Coordinator of the National Christian Evangelical Alliance of Sri Lanka (NCEASL) Yamini Ravindran added that given Gnanasara’s past record of hateful speech, the Presidential pardon amounted to disrespect to all those who had suffered religious freedom violations in Sri Lanka.
Doctoral student at the University of Oxford Shamara Wettimuny had similar sentiments, noting that it appeared that the Government was not serious about addressing ethno-religious violence.
Despite criticism from the legal fraternity and civil society, there was undeniable support for Gnanasara Thero’s release, as evidenced from the positive reactions on Facebook. Although the President met with Gnanasara and his mother on the day of his release, the UNP has maintained a stoic silence on the issue, which has been met with criticism from TNA MP M A Sumanthiran. This points to continued fractures within the coalition government – fractures which have had devastating and fatal consequences.
The official Presidential pardon document has not yet been made public.

Reflecting on the refugee crisis in Sri Lanka Refugees plead to expedite their cases and resettle them in third countries



23 May 2019 

Following the Easter Sunday massacre more than 1000 refugees and asylum seekers were evicted from their rented houses in Negombo and they had to seek refuge in two mosques and the police station in Negombo. With barely minimal possessions and minimum facilities, the once persecuted group of people live in much uncertainty and fear. They plead for their cases to be expedited, so they can be resettled in a third country soon, which was their aim in coming to Sri Lanka in the first place.

According to a Human Rights Lawyer who did not want to be named, the asylum seekers and refugees from Pakistan and Afghanistan are fleeing persecution, including systemic violence by extremist groups, due to their identity as Ahmadi, Shia or Christians. They are also fleeing legal persecution under a legal system which targets minorities as apostates or under anti-blasphemy legislation. “They live in fear. They have come here in families because they have faced violent mobs, killings, and any member of the family left behind is likely to be targeted. They have come here out of absolute desperation. They have zero ability to go back,” the HR lawyer said.

“There is much uncertainty in their lives. They are in limbo and lack effective protection in a situation such as this.  They fear facing the same violence they fled from. Their fear of terrorism and extremism is real and visceral. They are pawns in a much larger game, where they are being blamed for state failure and for the actions of a few, for which they cannot be held accountable,” she said.

Though doctors visit them, finding the medication for them is difficult - Ruki Fernando


Speaking to the Daily Mirror, 26-year - old Asefa Aziz*, a displaced refugee from Afganistan, who belongs to the Shi’a Hazara minority community, said that her family moved to Sri Lanka fleeing persecution in Afghanistan. “Afghanistan is the most dangerous country in the world. Hazara people are treated like slaves and are tortured. They call us kafir (non-believer),” she said.

Conditions they live under 

When the refugees and asylum seekers were evicted from their houses, the Negombo Police Station and two mosques housed them. However, the refugees and asylum seekers at the garage of the police station in Negombo live in cramped up deplorable conditions. Asefa told the Daily Mirror that there was a lack of proper food and water, and children were losing weight. 

According to Human Rights Activist Ruki Fernando, people have fallen sick due to the cramped up conditions at the garage where almost 160 people live. “Though doctors visit them, finding the medication for them is difficult,” he said.

Fernando said the police were sympathetic towards the plight of the asylum seekers and refugees. “But they are greatly inconvenienced by the presence of these refugees and asylum seekers for an extended period of time,” he said.
4/21 Displaced a Persecuted Community 

Sri Lanka’s obligations 

Sri Lanka is not a signatory to the 1951 Convention relating to the Status of Refugees nor to its 1967 Protocol. However, the Government of Sri Lanka and the UN Refugee Agency, UNHCR signed a Memorandum of Understanding(MOU) in 2005 which allows UNHCR to fulfill its protection and solutions mandate for asylum-seekers and refugees within the Sri Lankan territory. Accordingly, under the MOU and its terms and references which were agreed upon in 2006, the UNHCR is responsible for conducting registration, documentation and refugee status determination (RSD) procedures for asylum seekers.

The MOU enables asylum seekers to live in Sri Lanka. However, the pre-condition is that they should be registered with the UNHCR. Attorney-at-Law Menaka Lecamwasam, who has conducted research on refugee related matters, pointed out that if an asylum seeker is not registered with the UNHCR, they are often classified as ‘illegal immigrants’, and can be deported. “This is largely because of an unawareness about the UNHCR and that you should get registered as an asylum seeker,” she said.

Process 

Asefa is recognised as a refugee by the UNHCR. Her family arrived in Sri Lanka three and a half years ago. An interview with a representative from the United States for her resettlement had been scheduled for last month. But her glimmer of hope waned when the interview was cancelled following the Easter Sunday Bombings. “Before the attacks we were happy because our Sri Lankan neighbours were happy with us. But now we can’t go out. We don’t want to stay here anymore. Sri Lankans don’t want us. We have no complaints against them. We are so afraid” she said.

“Being a refugee is not a crime. We are here because we have no choice. This is like a bad dream,” she added.

According to lawyers, on average it takes one and a half years for the application of an asylum seeker to be processed. Once a person is recognised as a refugee resulting from the RSD, the UNHRC facilitates his or her resettlement to a third country which in some cases takes several years. Sri Lanka does not permit resettlement of refugees in Sri Lanka. Sri Lanka is merely a temporary ‘transit point’.

The UNHCR issues certificates for asylum seekers and refugees respectively which allows them to stay in Sri Lanka. According to the UNHCR Submission on Sri Lanka at the Universal Periodic Review in March, 2017 refugees and asylum seekers registered with UNHCR are afforded free health care in State hospitals in Sri Lanka. However, children do not have access to free education, and adults are not allowed to work. Asefa’s family of three received Rs. 16 000 per month from the UNHCR prior to their displacement.

“We don’t need food. We don’t need clothes. Please proceed with our case and resettle us so we can work and earn,” pleaded Asefa.

Another lawyer, who spoke on terms of anonymity, said that for the past 13 years, around ten thousand refugees who arrived in Sri Lanka, fleeing persecution from their countries of origin, were resettled in the USA, Canada, Sweden, Norway, Netherlands, etc. He added that each host country had an annual allocations for refugees.

Deportation  

Meanwhile, Lecamwasam said that the State has an obligation to protect the asylum seekers. “Certain fundamental rights are enjoyed by non-citizens as well. So if such a right is violated the State has an obligation to remedy the situation,” she said. According to Section 18 (1) and (2) of the Enforced Disappearance Act No 5 of 2018 no person can be extradited where there is a possibility of such a person being subjected to an enforced disappearance.

“Gross violations of human rights are very much a reality in almost all the countries of origin of persons seeking asylum in Sri Lanka, which should be adequate justification to not refoule asylum seekers,” said Lecamwasam.

She also said that the principle of non-refoulement under International law prevents States from repatriating persons to situations of persecution. However, she pointed out that since Sri Lanka is a dualist country, enabling legislation is required to give effect to international obligations such as those under the CAT Convention. “We have an Act which has enabled certain provisions of the CAT within the domestic sphere (Convention Against Torture and other Cruel Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment Act, No. 22 of 1994). But the problem is that this particular Act does not recognise the principle of non-refoulement” she said.


Relocation 

Last week 35 refugees were relocated to a Government run rehabilitation centre in Vavuniya. Previously, the suggestion to relocate the refugees and asylum seekers to the Ridiyagama State detention centre was rejected by the UNHCR.

Lecamwasam said that the State should ensure that the refugees are relocated under humane conditions and that subsequent accommodation should conform to adequate and accepted standards of living.

She further urged the Government to bring to book the perpetrators who led to the eviction of asylum-seekers and refugees from their accommodation in Negombo.
*Name has been changed to protect the identity
pix by Damith Wickramasinghe

CPA Statement on the Presidential Pardon of Gnanasara Thero


Centre for Policy Alternatives24 May, 2019

24th May 2019, Colombo, Sri Lanka – The Centre for Policy Alternatives (CPA) expresses its deep shock and concern over the Presidential pardon of Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara Thero, who was released from prison on 23rd May 2019. The pardon raises a number of pressing questions which the President and the government are obliged to answer.
Gnanasara Thero was convicted of four contempt of court charges by the Court of Appeal on 8th August 2018 and sentenced to 19 years of rigorous imprisonment to be completed within 6 years. The conviction and sentencing was premised on the Thero’s behaviour within court premises which was judged to have been beyond the respectful behaviour expected of ordinary citizens before the courts.
CPA stresses that presidential pardons exist to correct miscarriages of justice and are to be exercised with extreme caution and gravity. The pardon of Gnanasara Thero cannot be called a fit and proper exercise of that power by any metric. The trial, conviction and sentencing of the Thero raised no legitimate questions of any miscarriage of justice and there was ample opportunity for the Thero to fully exercise his right to a fair trial by appealing his conviction. Indeed this option was pursued by him at both the Court of Appeal and the Supreme Court which both duly dismissed the appeals. As such, the pardon itself amounts to an undue interference with the legal process.
The pardon raises a number of very serious concerns. First, it legitimises the view that it is possible to act with contempt for the judiciary, be punished through a legitimate judicial process, and then enjoy impunity through a pardon granted on political considerations. The pardon specifically signals that some categories of citizens, such as the Buddhist clergy, can expect to enjoy preferential treatment when it comes to obeying the law. It also sets a dangerous precedent whereby properly tried, convicted and sentenced persons can be released on the whims of the President and government.
Second, the pardon comes amidst the ongoing and extremely tense situation in the country. It has been a mere week since extremist Sinhala Buddhist mobs instigated anti-Muslim riots across North Western Sri Lanka, resulting in the death of one Muslim man and the damage to a large number of Muslim residences, businesses and places of worship. Gnanasara Thero has played a documented role in the past as Secretary of the Bodu Bala Sena in expressing hate speech and inciting violence towards minority communities, particularly Muslim Sri Lankans. The pardon, however indirectly, represents a worrying endorsement of such anti-minority sentiment, and can only heighten the anxiety and fear being felt by Muslim Sri Lankans today.
The responsibility for interfering with the rule of law and endorsing anti-minority sentiment in this manner lies not only with the President but the wider government as well. The Minister of Buddha Sasana Gamini Jayawickrama earlier endorsed requests by religious and political third parties to issue the pardon, and numerous members of the government have spoken out and acted in support of it. Accordingly, the government as a whole must justify, with stated reasons, why the grant of a pardon in this case will not be inconsistent with the Constitution, the rule of law, and the administration of justice in Sri Lanka and will not exacerbate inter-communal tensions. Anything less will directly undermine the legitimacy of Sri Lanka’s democracy.

Download this statement in English.
Sinhala and Tamil versions will be available soon.

Prosecute Prez and PM before minions


article_image
IGP Pujith Jayasundera and former Defence Secretary Hemasiri Fernando

by Rajeewa Jayaweera-

The Attorney General (AG) has reportedly instructed the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) to commence a criminal investigation against Hemasiri Fernando, the former Defense Secretary (DefSec) and Pujitha Jayasundera, the former Police Chief (IGP). The primary objective is to ascertain reasons for ignoring advance intelligence warnings of the Easter Sunday bombings by ISIS backed Sri Lankan jihadist group National Thowheeth Jama'ath.

Two interim reports by the three-member committee headed by a sitting Supreme Court judge is believed to contain strong strictures against the two bureaucrats.

The cost in human life resulting from the six suicide bombings and two secondary explosions amounted to over 250 dead and more than 500 injured. The anti-Muslim riots which erupted nearly three weeks later took the life of one innocent Muslim trader. The material cost of the bombings and riots amount to millions of dollars. The impact on the economy of explosions and riots run into billions of dollars.

There is no argument against investigating the former Defence Secy. and IGP for failing to act on advance intelligence reports and keeping their political masters (if that is true) in the dark.

But there are more significant issues involved.

The political and administrative leadership provided by former President Mahinda Rajapaksa and former Defence Secy. Gotabaya Rajapaksa to the armed forces to defeat LTTE terrorism is a given. A significant contributing factor was the appointment of Sarath Fonseka, Wasantha Karannagoda and Roshan Goonatileke as commanders of the Army, Navy and Air Force, officers eminently suited for their roles.

However, the same cannot be said of many other appointees of the Rajapaksa administration.

Commencing January 9, 2015, the country's governance underwent a paradigm shift. The nation moved from a stable structure of executive power flowing from the Executive President to a disjointed structure of power sharing between the President and Prime Minister, two individuals as diverse as chalk and cheese in their thinking.

The position of Defence Secy. along with Secretaries to the Treasury, Foreign Affairs, the Economy and Foreign Investments are critical in any country. Such posts should be preferably handled by professional careerists (there can be merit-based exceptions) with a proven track record rather than political lackeys. Even in the case of career administrative officers, experience gained as provincial administrators does not necessarily equip them with the knowledge base and expertise required for appointment as Secretaries to Defense, Treasury, Foreign Affairs, etc.

By no means can the President escape responsibility for his handpicked Defence Secy. The appointment of ministry Secretaries is, no doubt, the President’s prerogative. That said, that prerogative needs to be used wisely with the nation’s best interest at heart.

In the past, officers of the caliber of N Q Dias have held the post of Permanent Secretary for Defense and External Affairs (the combination of Defense and Foreign Affairs). A member of the old Ceylon Civil Service, he in 1963 foresaw Tamil militants taking up arms against the state with Indian assistance. A chain of garrisons in the North was his counter strategy (refer 'Exorcising the past and holding the vision’ by Neville Jayaweera - page 79). Visionaries of the likes of NQ Dias were giants who walked tall compared to some of the pigmies who have occupied the Defence Secy. position since 1977, some military men included.

In January 2019, the former Defence Secy, after his appointment claimed he had, at last, got his dream job. During a public gathering, he stated, "Minimaruvo’ (murderers) cannot become 'Ranaviruvo’ (war heroes)." He continued, "Everyone who joins the Army does not become a war hero. To become a war hero, a soldier has to earn a medal, and their accomplishments should be announced by way of a gazette. As of now, there are only 39,000 war heroes in Sri Lanka."

It was an insensitive remark unworthy of the administrative head of the armed forces. Seasoned bureaucrats do not speak in that manner. Only political hacks do so. The Head of State would have been placed in an awkward position in case our men in uniform and the kith and kin of soldiers who gave life and limb without the benefit of a medal taken exception to this statement. It could also have had unwanted political ramifications.

The President’s failure to realize his appointee’s unsuitability to the position and dismiss him forthwith amounts to criminal negligence and incompetence. Nature course corrected the President’s shortcoming in April, albeit at a substantial human and material cost.

The Prime Minister cannot escape his share of responsibility on the pretext of not being invited to the National Security Council (NSC) since December 16. In June 2016, he required no invitation before storming into President Sirisena's office. He demanded the appointment of a new Governor for the Central Bank be left to him as the institution came under his purview.

For his own devious reasons, the Prime Minister failed to inform the country and parliament of his exclusion from NSC meetings.

Constitutionally, the Prime Minister is the second most powerful person in the country after the President and should be an integral member of the NSC. However, the problem is when the Prime Minister is Ranil Wickremesinghe. He disqualified himself many years ago.

The UNP won the December 2001 Parliamentary Election paving the way for Ranil Wickremesinghe to form a new government. On January 2, 2002, an over-enthusiastic Superintendent of Police raided a house in Millennium City in Athurugiriya. Among the five arrested were five soldiers including Captain Shahul Hameed Nilam, Commanding Officer of the Long-Range Reconnaissance Patrol (LRRP). Also taken into custody was a host of military equipment and LTTE uniforms.

UNP Chairman Charitha Ratwatte (currently Finance Advisor to PM Wickremesinghe) and Deputy Chairman Daya Pelpola (now Ambassador to Italy) announced it was a hideout for assassins planning to assassinate high-level government leaders including Wickremesinghe. It was subsequently proved to be erroneous.

In reality, it was a secret hideout of the LRRP unit of the Army tasked with the assassination of senior LTTE operatives. Despite a personal assurance from the then Army Commander Lionel Balagalla of the true nature of the LRRP and scope of its duties, those arrested were kept in custody for days, photographed and fingerprinted. Their identities, along with mission objectives, were leaked and published in the local papers. Tilak Marapana, the Defence Minister at the time and then Interior Minister John Amaratunga did nothing to prevent the debacle. As a result, 24 intelligence operatives and civilian informants were either assassinated or abducted and killed by LTTE. Captain Nilam was posted to the Sri Lankan embassy in Indonesia after which he and his family disappeared. In 2004, Lieutenant Colonel Tuan Nizam Muthaliff, Captain Nilam’s deputy in 2001 was shot dead in Polhengoda by LTTE operatives while on his way to work.

LTTE Supremo Prabhakaran undertook a coordinated campaign to eliminate members of LRRP and informants.

Ranil Wickremesinghe and his government did nothing on the basis it would jeopardize the ceasefire. Some reports termed the government's inaction a 'total betrayal and absolute treachery to the nation.' Can a person responsible for such a betrayal and treachery be permitted to sit in the NSC ever again?

Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka, in the aftermath of the Easter Sunday carnage, stated he did not become a Field Marshal selling gram at the Gall Face. Similarly, Sri Lankan born Dr. Rohan Gunaratna (RG), eminent expert on terrorism and Professor of Security Studies at the S. Rajaratnam Center for International Studies in Singapore did not attain his reputation selling noodle soup in Singaporean food courts.

Addressing a mixed gathering of educators and religious personalities at 'Sri Lanka at Crossroads' program sponsored by Gateway College, Gunaratna did not mince his words. He stated, the present leadership, once in power, sent the military back to barracks resulting in the loss of the interaction between the military and ordinary people of the nation. Calling it a "fatal mistake," he attributed it to the leadership's desire to please the international community and minority political parties such as TNA. He also referred to the transfer overseas of a very senior Muslim military officer with the "deepest expertise" of chief Easter Sunday bomber Zaharan’s group besides the arrest or fingerprinting and photographing of 500 military intelligence officers. RG further claimed, the 5,000 strong military intelligence corps was rendered impotent and demobilized. He opined, "It is a crime to have intelligence and not act on it. Easter Sunday attacks were not a failure of intelligence, it’s an operation failure. A failure to act because politicians played with national security and the security was compromised."

RG’s verdict is the most damning yet on the traitorous conduct, criminal negligence and sheer incompetence of the Sirisena, Wickremasinghe, and Samaraweera triumvirate.

Against such a backdrop, the prosecution of former Defence Secy. and IGP is a secondary priority.

The greater need is to hold the trio of politicians accountable and prosecute them using the full force of the law.