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

Wednesday, June 12, 2019

UK ‘first major economy’ to commit to zero emissions by 2050


Less meat to eat, no petrol-powered cars, fewer flights, and homes no longer heated with gas boilers.
That’s what will have to happen now that the Prime Minister has committed the UK to the toughest climate change target of any major economy.
Environmental groups have welcomed the tightening of existing legally-enshrined targets that will mean our greenhouse gas emissions will be cut to zero by 2050.

Britain to become first G7 country with net zero emissions target

FILE PHOTO: A commuter walks along Waterloo Bridge, which is being blocked by climate change activists, during the Extinction Rebellion protest in London, Britain April 17, 2019. REUTERS/Hannah McKay/File Photo

Susanna TwidaleMatthew Green-JUNE 11, 2019

LONDON (Reuters) - Britain has announced it will enshrine a new commitment to reach net zero greenhouse gas emissions by 2050 into law, marking a first among G7 nations facing increasingly severe impacts from the climate crisis.

With global carbon emissions at record highs despite decades of talks aimed at bringing them within safe limits, outgoing Prime Minister Theresa May said the goal was ambitious but essential for protecting Earth’s future.

“Now is the time to go further and faster to safeguard the environment for our children,” she said in a statement.

“Reaching net zero by 2050 is an ambitious target, but it is crucial that we achieve it to ensure we protect our planet for future generations.”

Britain’s existing target is to cut greenhouse gas emissions by 80 percent from 1990 levels by 2050. The new target is in line with the 2015 Paris climate agreement which calls on countries to reduce carbon emissions to net zero by mid-century to try to keep the global temperature rise as close to 1.5 degrees Celsius as possible.

Temperatures have already risen about one degree Celsius since pre-industrial times. Scientists warn further increases risk triggering tipping points that could render swathes of the globe uninhabitable, devastate farming and drown coastal cities.

May, who is due to step down this summer after her political career became a casualty of the turmoil over Brexit, said legislation would be put before parliament on Wednesday to incorporate the new target into an existing climate change act.

Although May had staked her legacy on delivering an orderly exit from the European Union to respect the result of a 2016 referendum, the new target earned her praise from climate specialists heartened by any sign of greater ambition from a major economy.

“It’s momentous,” said David Reay, professor of carbon management at the University of Edinburgh. “Achieving net zero by 2050 will change all our lives. It will transform the ways we travel, the homes we live in and the food we eat.”

However, campaigners criticized the government’s continued reliance on international carbon credits to help meet the target - a move some see as a loophole that will allow polluters to stay in business.

“Fiddling the figures would put a huge dent in our ability to avoid catastrophic climate change,” environmental group Friends of the Earth said in a statement.

ENERGY TRANSITION

Britain’s independent climate advisers, the Committee on Climate Change, recommended last month that the country move to the new target, which implies sweeping changes in energy, transport and agriculture.

For example, new petrol and diesel cars might need to be phased out by at least 2035, the committee said. Households would also need to be weaned off natural gas heating and switch to low-carbon alternatives.

Although the new target has cast Britain as a relative climate leader, the government’s decisions to back projects such as a third runway at London’s Heathrow airport and fracking have raised questions about the depth of its commitment.

Extinction Rebellion, a climate movement that paralyzed parts of London with a civil disobedience campaign in April, said Britain was still not acting quickly enough.

“Were we to put our minds to it and do what is required to mobilize society to address the threat with the seriousness it deserves, the UK could embrace transformative change and decarbonise in years, not decades,” the group said.

Nevertheless, many businesses see big opportunities in any low-carbon transition, hoping progress at home will help innovative British companies grow rapidly in emerging markets hungry for climate-friendly goods and services.

“The message from business is clear: the UK will strengthen the competitiveness of its economy by being the first major economy to legislate an ambitious net zero target – as long as this is supported by a comprehensive policy package,” said Nick Molho, executive director of the Aldersgate Group, a sustainability initiative whose members include insurer Legal and General, retailer Tesco and media group Sky.

Britain hopes its decision will encourage other governments to follow suit before 2020, when countries are due to ratchet up their goals under the Paris Agreement. The government said a further assessment would happen within five years to discern the extent to which other countries are adopting the 2050 target.

“It has crucial importance in terms of the timing,” said Laurence Tubiana, a former French diplomat who was among the architects of the Paris Agreement, told Reuters. “It is a very important signal within the G7 countries that a country decided to do this at the highest level.”

Nuclear Disarmament’s Lessons for Climate Change.

If we can ban nukes, we can ban carbon emissions. Here’s how.

A Medical Campaign Against Nuclear Weapons poster from the 1980s.
A Medical Campaign Against Nuclear Weapons poster from the 1980s. WELLCOME LIBRARY, LONDON

No photo description available.BY ,  
Throughout the Cold War, nuclear weapons were the main existential threat to the planet. But they were also considered vital to powerful nations. With no chance of getting those players to give them up, possession and use of the weapons was simply regulated at the margins. But thanks to the concerted work of a coalition of activists, nuclear weapons were banned outright in a 2017 treaty that has been signed by 70 countries and ratified by 23.

Although the treaty is not yet in force, if it ever becomes international law, it will represent a major step forward toward nuclear disarmament. And even states that have not signed the nuclear ban treaty can already feel its stigmatizing effects: British banks and U.S. cities are divesting from the nuclear weapons industry, and nuclear powers are increasingly forced to defend their nuclear stance against social and ethical demands for disarmament.
If nations can come together to ban something as precious to great powers as nuclear weapons, why can’t they at least try to do the same for carbon emissions? Unlike a nuclear war, which represents a terrible but highly unlikely future threat, carbon-induced climate change is a human catastrophe already in motion.

A 2012 report of experts published by the aid organization DARA International calculated that 400,000 people die every year as a direct result of carbon-induced climate change. According to the journalist David Wallace-Wells, writing in New York magazine, scientists project that catastrophic heat waves, food shortages, and warming-induced plagues will hit the earth in only a few decades. The latest—and inherently conservative—report from the United Nations’ Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change warns of extreme weather and the displacement of millions of people.

Like nuclear disarmament, the key problem in global climate governance is not our scientific understanding of the problem. Rather, it is creating the political will to solve it. Political incentives work against action. The states most responsible for the problem are the least likely to feel its immediate effects and are therefore the least willing to make drastic changes.

Meanwhile, because the rest of the global community is so desperate to get the veto players on board, they have reduced climate governance efforts to the lowest common denominator. This is why the Kyoto Protocol and Paris agreement didn’t ban the use of carbon or require switching to carbon-free energy sources (like nuclear power). Rather, such treaties have focused on incremental changes. Yet even if all states met their commitments, it would be too little, too late.

What has a chance of working is to shake the carbon villains out of their cost-benefit thinking by adopting a moral shaming approach. Climate change is an existential threat to vulnerable populations—and, eventually, we will all be vulnerable. Shaming people into sacrificing for the common good is what wins wars, fuels wartime economies, and generally helps populations accept and enforce austerity measures in times of conflict. The same approach will help the global community address climate change, but only if laggard nations are first shamed into cooperating with those who are already feeling the heat.

In this, climate change activists could take a page from nuclear disarmament activists’ playbook. They should stop treating climate change as an economic problem that can be solved through carbon trading, or an environmental issue that requires collective action by the worst offenders on behalf of the planet. Instead, eliminating carbon emissions must be seen as a moral and humanitarian imperative requiring decisive action regardless of whether the United States and China agree. To do so, they will need to build a strong set of global norms prohibiting carbon emissions.

This approach has worked well in solving other global problems, especially in the area of weapons regulation, where the worst offenders are also least interested in change. Research shows that to replace patchwork global governance approaches with solid global prohibition norms, activists must ask states to adopt ambitious goals rather than move in incremental steps. To avoid incrementalism, the activists marginalize the veto players by creating invite-only forums for like-minded powers to solve jointly understood problems. To encourage cooperation among the non-like-minded, they valorize norm leaders and shame (rather than appease) norm laggards. Perhaps most importantly, they articulate issues through a humanitarian and moral lens. This shift in rhetoric has the power to change the entire conversation around an issue—and it can lead to rapid policy innovation.

Consider the case of nuclear weapons. Like climate change, nuclear weapons represent an existential security threat to nations, human beings, and the planet. And like with climate change, in the nuclear arena, a majority coalition of weak states, middle powers, and nonstate actors favored strong action, while a few powerful veto players hobbled progress. The veto players pushed for incremental reforms: better safeguards, gradual reduction of nuclear stockpiles, and bans on testing and technology transfer but not on the weapons themselves.

After decades working unsuccessfully through the Non-Proliferation Treaty conference forum, ban advocates finally changed strategies in 2006. They began to talk about nuclear weapons not as a threat to state security but as a global humanitarian issue. They began calling on states to abandon the Non-Proliferation Treaty and ban the weapons altogether. They started organizing their own, separate conferences, inviting states to sign the “Humanitarian Pledge.” Ultimately, 122 nations did so, and the document has already started to influence how nuclear nations justify their arsenals. As political scientists know, this is the first step in global normative and political change.
The same approach can help end carbon dependency as well, but it requires upending how global climate governance is conducted. Currently, treaty negotiations include all countries and take place through a consensus-based U.N. forum. Instead, activists should create a global network, identify a state willing to take the lead (perhaps Sweden), and host a separate conference of like-minded nations. Only nations willing to commit to a Humanitarian Pledge for the environment should be allowed to attend the conference, which would focus on codifying a global understanding of the humanitarian and moral costs of carbon-induced climate change, an agreement that net zero carbon dioxide emissions has to be the end goal, and a consensus around the steps signatories will take to get there.

The event should be publicized and celebrated. Alongside experts, victims of climate change—including teenage activists standing in for future generations—should be given space on the floor. By excluding the veto players, and by focusing attention on the human costs of climate change, activists will change the discussion and establish a special club of those willing to literally save the human race. Instead of having leverage, China, the United States, and other laggards will have to earn their right to participate.

Most fundamentally, states at a Zero Carbon conference would have to decide what a Zero Carbon world looks like, but to give one option, switching to nuclear power has already been shown to be a cheap, simple, low-risk, and feasible way to meet Zero Carbon goals quickly in countries where other renewable resources are less than fully reliable. Unlike nuclear weapons, which are scary and dangerous, carbon-free nuclear power is reliable and safe, particularly compared to fossil fuels like coal, whose extraction and use is associated with many health problems. Whatever stakeholders agree to, the goal must be swift and decisive action as a moral imperative.

Even if the biggest polluters refuse to sign, a stronger treaty can still make a difference. Research from the disarmament sector shows that strong global norms can lead to policy change even among powerful states that were once veto players. To be sure, it is too soon to know whether the nuclear ban treaty will have that effect, but the treaty banning the use of land mines did. Even though the United States has not signed it, U.S. leaders have poured more resources than any other country into demining, and they have all but eliminated the weapon’s use. The United Kingdom, originally a staunch opponent of a cluster munitions ban, became one of the biggest champions of the cluster munitions ban treaty in the face of shaming from nongovernmental organizations. It is largely in compliance with the treaty.

The United States and United Kingdom would not have changed their behavior in the absence of norm-building and moral arguments by NGOs and smaller states. If actors willing to address climate change commit to and adopt Zero Carbon policies for moral and humanitarian reasons, even laggard governments may eventually be shamed into following suit.

If instead nations continue to fiddle around with baby steps, watered-down standards, and endless talk while the planet burns, very soon it won’t matter.

New Ebola outbreak in DRC is 'truly frightening', says Wellcome Trust director


A Red Cross Safe and Dignified Burial team (SDB) respond to an Ebola alert in the DRC
Nearly 1,400 people have died in a recent outbreak in DR Congo

12 Jun 2019
The head of a major medical research charity has called the latest outbreak of Ebola in central Africa "truly frightening".
Nearly 1,400 people have died in the Democratic Republic of Congo.
Dr Jeremy Farrar, the director of the Wellcome Trust, said the epidemic was the worst since that of 2013-16 and has showed "no sign of stopping".
A five-year-old boy has also died in neighbouring Uganda, the first case of Ebola reported in the country.
The Ugandan government is now reporting seven other suspected cases of the virus.
In a statement, Dr Farrar said the spread was "tragic but unfortunately not surprising". He warned that more cases were expected, and a "full" national and international response would be needed to protect lives.
"The DRC should not have to face this alone," he said.

Treating Ebola in the DR Congo warzone

What's the situation so far?

Since the first case of Ebola in the DRC last August, nearly 1,400 people have died - around 70% of all those infected.
The outbreak is the second-largest in the history of the disease, with a significant spike in new cases in recent weeks.
Only once before has an outbreak continued to grow more than eight months after it began - that was the epidemic in West Africa between 2013-16, which killed 11,310 people.
Efforts to contain the spread have been hindered by militia group violence and by suspicion towards foreign medical assistance.
Nearly 200 health facilities have been attacked in the DRC this year, forcing health workers to suspend or delay vaccinations and treatments. In February, medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) put its activities on hold in Butembo and Katwa - two eastern cities in the outbreak's epicentre.
In Uganda, a five-year-old boy died of the virus on Tuesday, according to the World Health Organisation (WHO).


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Officials said his grandmother and younger brother also had the disease. The boy is said to have travelled across the border with his family from the DRC on Sunday. He was then taken to a Ugandan hospital after exhibiting symptoms, including vomiting blood, officials said.
Seven other cases have been confirmed in the country, and Uganda's government said 50 people were suspected to have come into contact with those infected.

A health worker writes the name of an Ebola victim on a cross
The Ebola outbreak in the Democratic Republic of Congo is already the second deadliest in history

Emergency measures

Analysis by James Gallagher, Health and Science Correspondent, BBC News
Cases of Ebola appearing in another country are always a significant and worrying development. The key question now is how far has the virus spread in Uganda?
Has it been contained to just the family that crossed the border from the Democratic Republic of Congo or has it spread more widely? This is a moment that Uganda has long prepared for and, hopefully, measures such as pre-emptively vaccinating healthcare workers will lower the risk of Ebola spreading.
This outbreak is already the second largest in human history and some have predicted it could take up to two more years to bring to an end. The World Health Organization has twice ruled that this Ebola outbreak is not a yet global emergency. Its Emergency Committee will meet again on Friday.

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What is being done to prevent the spread?


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In Uganda, mass gatherings including market days and prayers have been cancelled. Market days in the town of Kasese attract an estimated 20,000 people at the border area.
The country has already vaccinated about 4,700 health workers against the disease, according to a joint statement by WHO and Ugandan health officials.
On Wednesday, WHO head Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said that he would hold an IHR Emergency Committee meeting on 14 June. The group will decide if the outbreak should now be deemed a public health emergency.

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What is Ebola?

  • Ebola is a virus that initially causes sudden fever, intense weakness, muscle pain and a sore throat.
  • It progresses to vomiting, diarrhoea and both internal and external bleeding.
  • People are infected when they have direct contact through broken skin, or the mouth and nose, with the blood, vomit, faeces or bodily fluids of someone with Ebola.
  • Patients tend to die from dehydration and multiple organ failure.

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ACTIONS OF THE SRI LANKA GOVT GO AGAINST ACHIEVING RECONCILIATION AND ENSURING NONRECURRENCE – TNA


Image: Sampanthan meeting Michele Coninsx .
Press Release/10.06.19.

Sri Lanka Brief10/06/2019

Assistant Secretary-General and Executive Director of the United Nations Security Council Counter-Terrorism Committee Executive Directorate(CTED) Ms Michele Coninsx met with the leader of the Tamil National Alliance Mr Sampanthan in Colombo Yesterday (8th June 2019).

Highlighting the importance of the implementation of the United Nations Human Rights Council resolution “the Government seems to have forgotten the fact that they cosponsored these resolutions, but their actions rarely focused on the implementation of the resolution said Mr Sampanthan. “we are unhappy with this situation this is not good for the country and certainly not good for the United Nations. If a government think that they can promise anything to the international community and completely ignore and do as per their own wish, such actions puts the very fundamental purposes of the existence of institutions such as the United Nations in question added Mr Sampanthan.

Further speaking Mr Sampanthan pointed out that the government has completely abandoned the unanimously approved resolution in Parliament to frame a new Constitution. He also pointed out that actions of the government go against achieving reconciliation and assurance of nonrecurrence becomes very difficult. “Non-commitment towards the implementation of the UNHRC resolution and the resolution passed in Sri Lankan Parliament to frame a new Constitution shows that this government is working on a different agenda,” said Mr Sampanthan.

Speaking further Jaffna District Parliamentarian and TNA Spokesman MA Sumanthiran highlighted the history of the existing draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA). “Repealing this Act is on one of the key matters that this Government promised to the international community, but that promise is yet to be fulfilled. There is a draft Counter-Terrorism Act we have certain concerns on that as well but that draft is also now not being discussed said Mr Sumanthiran.

Violence against the Tamils unleashed in the 1950s, 1960s, 1970s and in 1980s when we were asking for our rights we were assaulted arrested. These violence was staged against the Tamil people well before LTTE came into being, Sinhala leaders SWRD Bandaranayaka and Dudley Senanayaka signed agreements with Our leader SJV Chelvanayagam and they could not honour those agreements. These things happened well before LTTE came in to being had they honoured those agreements we wouldn’t have had a war in this country said Mr Sampanthan.

Consistency in continuous denial of our rights is against the United Nations Convention on Civil and Political Rights, today we are ruled without our consent in this country added Mr Sampanthan. Further “we don’t want another war in this country our people have suffered immensely due to the war, we don’t want any harm to happen to Sinhala people in this country, but sadly this country has been run by extreme elements and the Sinhala leaders are not willing to control these elements said Mr Sampanthan.

Adding Mr Sumanthiran brought to the notice of the Assistant Secretary General how the Law is being applied differently to ethnic groups in this country and how systematically the Sinhala Buddhist extremism has been allowed by the law enforcement authorities in this country to do as they wish.
Further Speaking Mr Sampanthan said, “ we want a political solution within the framework of a united undivided and indivisible country, if we do not get this then the Tamil people will be compelled to rethink their stance on their longstanding demands”.

Mr Sampanthan also urged the Assistant Secretary-General to urge the international community to play an effective and constructive role in holding the government accountable for their commitments.
Assistant Secretary-General assured that in her recommendation the concerns raised by the Tamil National Alliance Leaders would be included.

The Assistant Secretary General was Accompanied by the UN Resident Coordinator Ms Hanaa Singer, Legal Officer Ms Adria, and Special Assistant Ms Layla.

US Congressional Caucus discusses lack of progress on transitional justice and rise of radical Sinhala nationalism in Sri Lanka

10 June 2019
United States Representatives from both main parties discussed the threat of radical Sinhala nationalism in Sri Lanka and the country's lack of progress on transitional justice during a briefing of the 'Congressional Caucus on Ethnic and Religious Freedom in Sri Lanka' held in Washington DC last month. 
Caucus co-chair and Democratic Representative Danny K Davis warned “radical Sinhalese nationalism poses a serious threat to the stability of the country […] The Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) and other groups have violently challenged Christians, Muslims and Tamils”. 
Pointing also to the encroachment of Sinhalese from the south of the country onto traditional Tamil and Muslim land, Davis stated that this encroachment “has increased in the last two years” and “could lead to an increase in violence in the country”.
"There is also a continued need to address needs of North and East," Davis added.
Fellow co-chair and Republican Congressman Bill Johnson pointed to the Sri Lankan government's commitment to fulfill the UN Human Rights Council resolution 30/1 and stressed "continued progress on transitional justice and accountability is needed". 
The members of Congress were also joined by other experts and politicians, including the former UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, Juan Mendez,  Canadian MP, Gary Anandasangaree, Universal Rights Group's Danica Damplo, and Amnesty International USA's Asia Pacific Manager, Francisco Bencosme. 
Highlighting the lack of tangible progress in transitional justice, Bencosme stated that it has been a “decade since the end of war but culture of impunity persists; there is a glacial pace of transitional justice process which demonstrates a lack of genuine political will”.
He added that the government whilst committing to repealing the PTA in 2015 has failed to do so and “key government officials, including President Sirisena, have backtracked publicly on commitments” made in resolution 30/1. 
Damplo stated that the lack of progress in terms of transitional justice is due to a preoccupation with public opinion. She maintains that the government “needs to show that transitional justice is not a competition between groups of people, but is necessary for all”.
The Caucus briefing, which took place just a few weeks after the Easter Sunday suicide bombings in Sri Lanka by Islamist extremists, also discussed with concern Colombo's call for greater militarisation of the island.
Francisco Bencosme, stated that “Sri Lanka needs to find ways to respond to attacks that do not further infringe on human rights”. This includes “seizures of property, face veil ban, restrictions on freedom of assembly and expression”.
Anandasangaree further stated that “we can’t allow Sri Lanka to use recent events to take a hard line on dissent”.
In addition to issues surrounding the right to certain land, UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, Juan Mendez commented on the continued and systematic use of torture and sexual violence; arbitrary detention of former LTTE combatants; and the lack of right to a lawyer. Mendez noted his shock at the “lack of judicial safeguards on arbitrary detention or torture” and stated that “judges and prosecutors rely almost totally on police evidence and confessions”.
Mendez reported that during his 2016 visit as UN Special Rapporteur on Torture; that the “end of the war did not signify an end to restrictions on all citizens”.
Anandasangaree's statement stressed the important role of the international community maintaining close scrutiny on Sri Lanka.
"No pro-active measures have been taken towards investigating war crimes and crimes against humanity," Anandasangaree said, adding that the crime of genocide was outside the scopy of the UN investigation. 
“Just like Myanmar […] this matter should be taken to UN General Assembly and referred to ICC”. He further stated that “countries should exercise universal jurisdiction, utilize civil remedies, and travel bans” and the “US should also use the Magnitsky Act to seize property”.
Watch footage of the conference here and read Pearl's coverage here.

Constable reported missing in 2008 found murdered


11 June 2019 

23-year-old police constable who was reported missing in Kokkadicholai in 2008 was found murdered and buried, Police Spokesman Ruwan Gunasekara said today. 

He said three suspects had been arrested by the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) over the killing of the police constable.
The police constable Nagarasa Prashanthan who was attached to the Kokkadicholai Police was reported missing by his father on August 1, 2008.
The homicide was revealed by the CID based on the investigations conducted into the killing of two police personnel at the Vavunathivu Police checkpoint on November 30, 2018.
Investigations revealed that the missing constable had been shot dead on July 27 in 2008. 
Accordingly, the CID has so far arrested three suspects aged 32, 34 and 38 over the killing. 
Investigative officers had visited the location where the police constable had been buried by the suspects, to exhume the body based on a court order. 

Keith Noyahr abduction case

Maj. Gen Amal’s, another’s bail condition revoked:
Shavini Madhara-Wednesday, June 12, 2019

The Mount Lavinia Additional Magistrate C.H.G.Liyanage yesterday ordered the revoking of bail conditions imposed on former Army Chief of Staff Maj.Gen. (Rtd) Amal Karunasekara and on Chandraba Jayasinghe in connection with the abduction of former The Nation Deputy Editor Keith Noyahr.

Attorney Malka Deneththi, appearing on behalf of Karunasekara, pleaded for the revoking of a bail condition requiring the Maj. General to appear before the CID on every last Sunday of each month. Counsel maintained that his client’s life would be in danger, if he had to continuously appear before the CID. Taking into consideration the facts, the Additional Magistrate ordered that this bail condition be revoked.

Counsel appearing on behalf of suspect Chandraba Jayasinghe pleaded for the lifting of the travel ban imposed on his client.

Meanwhile, the Criminal Investigations Department (CID) yesterday informed the court that they have sent the extracts of the investigation to the Attorney General for further instructions. The CID further stated that it had not received the Attorney General’s instructions yet.

Major Prabath Dissanayake Bulathwatta (first suspect), Hemachandra Perera (second suspect), Prabath Weerarathna (third suspect), Lasantha Wimalaweera (fourth suspect), Nishantha Jayasinghe (fifth suspect), Nishantha Perera (sixth suspect) and Chandraba Jayasinghe (seventh suspect) who appeared before Court, have already been granted bailed.
The Magistrate fixed further inquiries for December 3.

Families of disappeared call on Sirisena to fulfil promises

Families of the disappeared in Vavuniya held a march calling on the Sri Lankan president to finally fulfil his promises to them.
11 June 2019
Starting with a vigil at a church in the town, the families marched to their usual protest location.
Protestors also called on the United States and European Union to demand justice for their disappeared relatives.