The Core Problem is not the Muslim nor the Sinhalese Racist but the Power Hungry Sinhalese Politician

by

Izeth Hussain

There is of course a Sri Lankan Muslim problem in the sense that there has been a prolonged hate campaign against our Muslims and anti-Muslim action in various forms. My argument is that that problem cannot be given a rationale in terms of the acts of commission and omission on the part of the Muslims. It can only be given a rationale in terms of an anterior racism among some Sinhalese who want to kick the Muslims down. My further argument is that the anti-Muslim Sinhalese racists are in a minority among the Sinhalese but they have power far beyond their numbers because the Sinhalese politicians, both in the Government and in the Opposition, are supportive of or are complicit with them. The core problem therefore is not the Muslim, not the Sinhalese racist, but the Sinhalese politician.

I will now set out some details to show that the “Muslim problem” is something that should be written within inverted commas to signify that it is not really a problem. The SL Muslims have always supported the Sinhalese against the Tamils – on “Fifty-fifty”, on Sinhala Only, on standardization for University admissions, and so on. Their disagreements with the Sinhalese have been of a minor order, not on anything that adversely affects the vital interests of the Sinhalese. Furthermore, although their grievances are many they have refused to speak out on them, their political and other representatives preferring for the most part to behave like clams rather than say anything that might displease the Sinhalese. I have dubbed them “an invisible minority” in the past, and I have also written about their fear psychosis towards the Sinhalese. It is difficult to imagine a more submissive minority, indeed a more abjectly submissive minority, than the SL Muslims.

Continue reading ‘The Core Problem is not the Muslim nor the Sinhalese Racist but the Power Hungry Sinhalese Politician’ »

Kachchatheevu Issue is Part of the Problem;It Cannot be Part of the Solution

By

N Sathiya Moorthy

Independent of the Tamil Nadu Assembly’s repeated resolutions and Chief Minister Jayalalithaa’s repeated missives to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh, there is an urgent need for the State and its polity to look futuristically at the problems faced by their fishers in the Palk Bay, and delink one from the others, if any practical solution has to be found. Given that the first Provincial Council election in the Tamil-majority North in Sri Lanka has been promised by September, there is an equal, if not greater, urgency for the Tamil Nadu polity to delink it too from the fishing issue.

The ethnic issue is strictly an internal problem of Sri Lanka, with popular sentiments in Tamil Nadu influencing the polity and the Government. The reverse is also equally true. The fishing issue is a bilateral problem involving the fishing communities of the two countries and the two national Governments. On the Indian side, Tamil Nadu has stakes and has made it clear to the Centre, whoever has ruled from Fort St George over the past four decades. A new element in the form of the Northern administration can add a new and more complicating element as and when polls are held to the Provincial Council.

Continue reading ‘Kachchatheevu Issue is Part of the Problem;It Cannot be Part of the Solution’ »

If the Northern Provincial Council elections are held then the TNA is sure to win, provided it contests as an anti government united front.

By

Dr. Vickramabahu Karunaratne

The cry for devolution is not a new phenomenon to Lanka. In ancient times too, Lanka was divided into three provinces though it was united under one umbrella. With the rise of Lankan bourgeoisie the federal idea was originated among the Sinhalese. In 1925 S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike was prepared to come out with that suggestion. The young Bandaranaike was a brilliant student of Oxford; he returned to the island in 1925 with a firm resolution to serve his motherland as a national liberal politician. In the same year he founded a political party known as ‘Progressive National Party’ to achieve national emancipation. He was the leader of that Party while the Secretary was C. Ponnambalam.

At that time, most of the Tamil leaders preferred a unitary system of government to that of a federal form. While the Sinhala leaders propagated the concept of a federal formula the Tamils strongly opposed it. The latter wanted a balanced representation on the basis of communal interests within a unitary state. In that manner they expected to counter the Sinhala majoritist tendency in the state assembly.

Continue reading ‘If the Northern Provincial Council elections are held then the TNA is sure to win, provided it contests as an anti government united front.’ »

UNP Needs to be Treated as Part of the Current Rajapaksa Regime and not as an Alternative Force or Govt

By

Kalana Senaratne

When regimes are dictatorial and dangerous, alternative forces which promise a better society and future do tend to be taken seriously by the people. This, quite simply, is because the future promised by such alternative forces tends to be better than the present. But one thing many people can’t do about the present UNP is to take it seriously. The UNP’s new constitutional principles – which it claims will shape and form the new constitution it hopes to place before the people once elected to power – tell us why this is the case Just a few thoughts on these principles would suffice, since apart from a few grand promises, the UNP’s guiding principles are generally known to the people and can be easily found stated in different words in the 1978 Constitution.

The new set of constitutional principles needs to be viewed in the context of the grand promise of radical transformation of party and polity which the UNP started making sometime ago. Grand pronouncements were made to the effect that the UNP has begun to tread a path of radical politics. But this, unfortunately for the country, turned out to be a farce. What transpired on further inspection was that the UNP’s promise of radicalism was firstly to keep Mr. Ranil Wickremasinghe as its leader. This ‘radicalism’ was followed by Mr. Sajith Premadasa’s own brand of radicalism when he recently admitted that his attempt to oust Mr. Wickremasinghe may have a bit premature.

So it is this ‘radical’ UNP that now comes up with a document promising a more democratic country. But even before you proceed to the end of the Preamble of the document, it begins to appear why the grand promise of the UNP amounts to yet another grand farce.

Continue reading ‘UNP Needs to be Treated as Part of the Current Rajapaksa Regime and not as an Alternative Force or Govt’ »

Bowatte Indrarathana Thero Turning Himself Into a Human Inferno Shatters the Peace of the Holy Vesak Season

By

Dharisha Bastians

When Bowatte Indrarathana Thero poured petrol on his body and set himself ablaze outside the sacred Temple of the Tooth in Kandy last Friday, he set in motion a series of unfortunate events that shattered the peace of Vesak season. The holiday weekend to commemorate the birth, passing and enlightenment of Siddhartha Gautama is usually a time of reflection and meditation for Buddhist devotees and a festival of light for other denizens of the ‘land of the Buddha’, who take to the streets of Colombo and suburbs in their hundreds to view the spectacle of lanterns and pandols that illuminate the streets.

This year, the holy season was marred by terrifying images of a human inferno, saffron robed and dancing in flames before Sri Lanka’s most sacred Buddhist shrine. Indrarathana Thero succumbed to his injuries 24 hours later, after being airlifted from the Kandy General Hospital to Colombo National Hospital for treatment. He had chosen this gruesome death apparently to protest against the slaughter of cattle and alleged unethical conversions taking place in the country.

Continue reading ‘Bowatte Indrarathana Thero Turning Himself Into a Human Inferno Shatters the Peace of the Holy Vesak Season’ »

Douglas Devananda Writes to John Kerry Protesting Against Inaccurate References to him and the EPDP in US State Dept Country Report on Sri Lanka

Mr. John F. Kerry
Secretary of State,
U. S. Department of State,
USA
25.05.2013

Dear Sir,

Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2012 – Sri Lanka

I, Douglas Devananda, Member of Parliament and the Cabinet Minister of Traditional Industries and Small Enterprise Development in Sri Lanka wish to bring the following with regard to the contents in the Country Reports on Human Rights Practices for 2012 under the caption Sri Lanka, which was transmitted by the Department of State to the United States Congress in April this year.

I am also the Secretary General of the Eelam Peoples’ Democratic Party, popularly known as EPDP, which is a recognized political party by the Commissioner of Elections of Sri Lanka. In the 1970s and 1980s I have been in the forefront of the struggle to win over the rights of the Tamils in the country. After the Indo-Lanka Accord of 1987, which paved the way for the 13th amendment to the constitution and provided for the devolution of powers to the provinces, I fully endorsed it and along with several other Tamil Groups joined the Democratic Mainstream of politics in Sri Lanka.

Continue reading ‘Douglas Devananda Writes to John Kerry Protesting Against Inaccurate References to him and the EPDP in US State Dept Country Report on Sri Lanka’ »

Appeal Court Issues Notice On Respondents In Cases By 2176 Jaffna Tamils Seeking Relief Against Land Grab By The State

(Text of Press Release Issued by the Tamil National Alliance Media office)

The writ applications filed by 2176 Jaffna Tamils in a desparate bid to prevent their lands and homes being grabbed by the Rajapaksa regime were taken up for support in the Appeal Court today (30.05.2013), before Justice S. Sriskandaraja, President of the Court of Appeal.

The Appeal Court heard counsel and issued notice on the respondents to show cause if any through filing of objections, as to why the court should not grant the reliefs asked for. The date given for the purpose was10.07.2013.

Counsel for the petitioners were permitted by the Appeal Court to reserve and retain the right to press for interim relief.

Continue reading ‘Appeal Court Issues Notice On Respondents In Cases By 2176 Jaffna Tamils Seeking Relief Against Land Grab By The State’ »

Rajapaksas Can be Ejected Democratically But Curing Lankan Society of Ruthless Indifference Will be Far More Difficult


By

Tisaranee Gunasekara


“That girls are raped, that two boys knife a third,
Were axioms to him, who’d never heard
Of any world where promises were kept,
Or one could weep because another wept”

Auden (The Shield of Achilles)

The Lankan crisis is a multi-dimensional one. There is the political crisis which encompasses the crisis of democracy and the crisis of peace-and-nation-building. There is the economic crisis.

There is also a psychological crisis, a moral-ethical crisis, a crisis of values. This societal affliction was cast into sharp relief by two incidents which happened during the Wesak season.

The callous manner in which several doctors and nurses in the General Hospital treated a seriously injured patient has received a fair degree of publicity thanks to the efforts of Seylina D Peiris, the Good Samaritan who took the young woman to the hospital and witnessed the pageant of indifference first hand. This incident cannot be pigeon-holed as typical of the state sector, because similar horror stories have emerged from private hospitals as well, the most recent being the death of a young child at Nawaloka . Nor is this problem limited to hospitals. It is present in every possible space, public and private, political and non-political.

Continue reading ‘Rajapaksas Can be Ejected Democratically But Curing Lankan Society of Ruthless Indifference Will be Far More Difficult’ »

Defeating the Jathika Hela Urumaya Bill on Abolishing 13th Amendment is only Opportunity for SLFP MP’s to Defeat Lunatic Extremists in Govt

JHU050613n

by

DR DAYAN JAYATILLEKA

Yugoslavia was a sister country of Sri Lanka; a fellow founder of the Non Aligned Movement in that country’s capital Belgrade in 1961. Yugoslavia no longer exists. The breakup of that country resulted from a chain reaction that commenced with the dramatic change of the Yugoslav Constitution promulgated by the sagacious socialist Marshal Tito and the drastic reduction of the powers of the autonomous province of Kosovo followed by the dissolution of the Kosovo assembly in 1990. Sri Lanka must not proceed down the same path which leads over a precipice.

The country stands at a crossroads. A parliamentary victory for the JHU bill will complete the negative process which commenced with Sinhala Only in 1956 and the distortion in 1972 of the laudable shift to a Republic with mono-linguistic and mono-religious hegemony. If ’56 and ’72 were paving stones for the Tamil Eelam project, the passage of the JHU bill to abolish the 13th amendment will complete the process of the legitimisation of secessionism.

Continue reading ‘Defeating the Jathika Hela Urumaya Bill on Abolishing 13th Amendment is only Opportunity for SLFP MP’s to Defeat Lunatic Extremists in Govt’ »

“And Then They Came For Me”: Biography of Slain “Sunday Leader”Editor Lasantha Wickrematunge Written By Raine Wickrematunge Launched

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A book on the life and work of slain Sri Lankan Editor and journalist Lasantha Wickrematunge was launched today.

The biography, titled “And Then They Came For Me’ is the story a man who lived, breathed and finally died in the pursuit of the truth in a land where contemporary media history is written in the blood and tears of those who dare to tell it as it is.

Continue reading ‘“And Then They Came For Me”: Biography of Slain “Sunday Leader”Editor Lasantha Wickrematunge Written By Raine Wickrematunge Launched’ »

Spot Fixing Sri Lanka Style: Revisiting the Enumeration of Vital Events

by Social Architects

In November 2011, Sri Lanka’s Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, said that discovering how many civilians “died or went missing during the last few months of the conflict” would be “a first step towards reconciliation.”[1]

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The government’s Enumeration of Vital Events (EVE) attempted to answer that question by collecting information about people who have died, disappeared and emigrated from Sri Lanka since 1982. The survey was overseen by the Ministry of Defence, but was conducted by the Department of Census and Statistics (DCS).[2]
Continue reading ‘Spot Fixing Sri Lanka Style: Revisiting the Enumeration of Vital Events’ »

UNP Formulates New Draft Constitution to Abolish Executive Presidency After Endorsement by People at Referendum

Full Text of New Constitutional Principles Formulated by United National Party. This Draft constitution will be submitted for the approval of the people from tomorrow for Relevant Suggestions and Appropriate Amendments.

PREAMBLE
———–

The Second Republican Constitution was adopted in 1978 to provide for the economic, political and social development of the country. It achieved the expected objectives including the socio-economic transformation of the country, to a great extent.

During the last several years under Mahinda Rajapaksa’s regime, the office of Executive President has been completely desecrated, by destroying all the checks and balances that were built into the system. The dignity and the integrity of that office has been reduced to a despicable state as a result of the blatant abuse of power and the creation of an authoritarian regime marked with extreme nepotism and corruption, with gross disregard for democratic values and fundamental human rights.

Continue reading ‘UNP Formulates New Draft Constitution to Abolish Executive Presidency After Endorsement by People at Referendum’ »

Doctors, Nurses and Attendants at Hospital Accident Ward Watch TV Instead of Treating Emergency Patient in Urgent Need

The following is the text of an email sent by a concerned citizen about a shocking incident of callous neglect displayed by staff at the Colombo National Hospital. It is published here in deference to the wishes of the sender who wants it to be widely publicised – DBS Jeyaraj

AW053013

Dear Sirs/Madams,

Forgive me for sending out an impersonal email. I wish to draw your attention to the following.

Last night (28.05.2013), a young trainee nurse from Nawalapitiya was tossed out of a moving bus unto the bustling street in Kirulapone and fell right in front of my moving car.

Continue reading ‘Doctors, Nurses and Attendants at Hospital Accident Ward Watch TV Instead of Treating Emergency Patient in Urgent Need’ »

Prevention of Terrorism Act in Sri Lanka is a True Example of Draconian Legislation


By

Sachin Parathalingam

The Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) has once again been thrust into the limelight. Like the Patriot Act, introduced in the US post 9/11, the PTA lengthens the detention period of terror suspects, detained under Emergency Regulations promulgated under the Public Security Ordinance. The police can detain these so-called ‘terrorists’ for as long as 18 months without filing charges against them.

Yet the irony of this is, despite separatist terrorism being long eradicated, the government still finds a necessity in continuing with the present state of the PTA and does not appear to be calling for ‘amendments’ either. Is the threat of terrorism in Sri Lankan still so tangible, a stringent piece of legislation as the PTA is essential? Or has the PTA become the smokescreen by which the government attempts to stifle political opposition and suppress dissenting voices?

Continue reading ‘Prevention of Terrorism Act in Sri Lanka is a True Example of Draconian Legislation’ »

Groundwater Balance in Jaffna Peninsula Facing Crisis Due to Depletion of Limestone Through Overuse


By

Dilrukshi Handunnetti

COLOMBO] The single limestone aquifer, which is the main source of freshwater in Sri Lanka’s northern Jaffna peninsula, is gradually depleting through overuse, researchers say.

“The area suffers from severe groundwater imbalance which might reach crisis proportions in the future,” Shanti de Silva, one of two scientists who carried out the research for the agricultural department of the University of Jaffna, told SciDev.Net.

Continue reading ‘Groundwater Balance in Jaffna Peninsula Facing Crisis Due to Depletion of Limestone Through Overuse’ »

Assent and Blessing of Gotabhaya Rajapaksa for Holding Northern Provincial Election is Even More Vital Than That of the President

By

Upul Joseph Fernando

It is becoming increasingly apparent that Gotabhaya Rajapaksa’s assent and blessing is even more vital than that of the President’s in holding the Northern Provincial Council elections and implementing a process of reconciliation with the Northern Tamils. He is the government’s point man in so far as the Northern Province’s political strategy is concerned.

At a time when the government is acting expeditiously to conduct the much hyped elections for the Northern Provincial Council, Gotabhaya sounded a dissenting note when he openly declared he was opposed to giving police powers to the Northern Council. In an objective scrutiny of the dissent expressed by Gotabhaya, one is easily reminded of Lalith Athulathmudali, the former National Security Minister in the
J.R. Jayewardene Government.

Continue reading ‘Assent and Blessing of Gotabhaya Rajapaksa for Holding Northern Provincial Election is Even More Vital Than That of the President’ »

Five Students Murder Incident:Police to Initiate Non-Summary Proceedings Before Trincomalee Magistrate in First Week of June

By

Ravinatha Aryasinha

(Text of Address by the Permanent Representative of Sri Lanka in Geneva and the Leader of the Sri Lanka Delegation Ravinatha Aryasinha at the Human Rights Council -23rd Regular Session in Geneva)

At the outset, Sri Lanka wishes to associate itself with the statement made on behalf of the Non-Aligned Movement.

My delegation takes note of the High Commissioner’s statement and is firmly committed to supporting the High Commissioner in the discharge of her mandate as contained in GA Resolution 48/141.

Sri Lanka urges the OHCHR to redouble its efforts in mainstreaming economic, social and cultural rights, which remain disproportionately marginalized, by allocating more financial and human resources to the promotion and protection of these rights.

Continue reading ‘Five Students Murder Incident:Police to Initiate Non-Summary Proceedings Before Trincomalee Magistrate in First Week of June’ »

Bodu Bala Sena Has Filled a Vacuum with the Blessings of the Jathika Hela Urumaya Says Udaya Gammanpila

By

Chamitha Kuruppu

The Sinhalese have been too tolerant and the minorities have abused that tolerance in an undue manner, stresses Udaya Gammanpila, Senior Member of the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) and Minister of Agriculture, Agrarian Development, Irrigation, Trade and Environment in the Western Provincial Council.“We are the champions of minority rights. We have no international obligation to devolve power. There is no minority right called devolution of power,” Gammanpila points out.
The JHU announced that a bill would be brought to Parliament to repeal the 13th Amendment to the Constitution. “This is not a mere dream. This is something realisable. We are quite confident and hopeful that both these leaders will allow their members to have free vote,” he added.

Following are excerpts from the interview:

Q: What is the JHU’s position on the provincial council system?

A: From the inception we were of the view that provincial councils are totally unnecessary. It was forced on us by India. It has no legitimate right to be in existence. So we believe that it should be abolished in toto.

Continue reading ‘Bodu Bala Sena Has Filled a Vacuum with the Blessings of the Jathika Hela Urumaya Says Udaya Gammanpila’ »

Militarisation as Panacea: Development and Reconciliation in Post-War Sri Lanka

by

Ambika Satkunanathan

Mullaithivu area road contraction & development work-pic  courtesy of: Northern Provincial Council.lk

Mullaithivu area road contraction & development work-pic courtesy of: Northern Provincial Council.lk

Is it possible to secure the dignity, rights and well-being of a conflict-affected population by incorporating them into a military juggernaut that has quickly grown to dominate all spheres of life?

The creeping militarization of Sri Lanka which followed the end of armed conflict in 2009 has now, four years later, become normalised and entrenched. During the years of the war the impact of militarization was felt mainly in the North and East. However, following the end of the war, systematic militarization has been taking place throughout the country. Its impact on the lives of those in conflict-affected areas is visible and severe. Driving through Kilinochchi, Mullaitivu and Vavuniya gives the lie to repeated denials by the government there is a heavy military presence in the North, particularly in comparison to other parts of the country. For instance, the camps of the 22nd Battalion, Gajaba Regiment, 574 Brigade, 682 Brigade, 681 Brigade, 591 Brigade, 59 Division, 14th Battalion, 68 Division, HQ 571 Brigade, 573 Brigade, 561 Brigade and 682 Brigade are just a few that are visible to any visitor to the area.

Continue reading ‘Militarisation as Panacea: Development and Reconciliation in Post-War Sri Lanka’ »

Four years on genocide continues off the battlefield

By

Sivakami Rajamanoharan and Kumaravadivel Guruparan

Sri Lanka Army marking 'victory' in Kilinochchi-May 2013-pic courtesy of:  Northern Provincial Council.lk

Sri Lanka Army marking ‘victory’ in Kilinochchi-May 2013-pic courtesy of: Northern Provincial Council.lk

On the anniversary of the 26-year civil war, the Sri Lankan state celebrates its 2009 victory while Tamils mark the bloody nadir of the campaign to systematically dismantle the Tamil nation – one which continues today.

In May 2009 as the armed conflict between the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and the government of Sri Lanka came to a harrowing end, Sri Lanka’s genocidal offensive against the Tamil population of the North-East reached a peak. Four years on, as the Tamil nation – scattered worldwide through decades of oppression and armed conflict – remembers the massacre that took place, the prospect of a stable and secure future remains bleak. Sri Lanka has long proven itself both incapable and unwilling to deliver accountability and justice to the Tamil people, yet the international community too has failed to instigate a credible process towards it. But most of all, the systematic destruction of the Tamil identity continues, unchecked.

Continue reading ‘Four years on genocide continues off the battlefield’ »

US Aid to Countries Supporting UN Resolution on Sri Lanka was Less than US aid to Countries Voting Against or Abstaining

Rajavarothayam Sampanthan M.P

Rajavarothayam Sampanthan M.P

by

Rajavarothayam Sampanthan M.P.

(Full text of Speech made in Parliament on May 21st 2013 by Tamil National Alliance Parliamentary group leader and Trincomalee district MP Rajavarothayam Sampanthan)

21st May, 2013

උතුරු නැ‍tඟෙනහිර ඉඩම් සම්බන්ධ ක්රිlයා මාර්ග සහ මානව හිමිකම් සභාවේ යෝජනා ක්රිුයාත්මක කිරීම

வடக்கு, கிழக்கில் காணி தொடர்பான நடவடிக்கைகள் மற்றும் மனித உரிமைகள் பேரவைத் தீர்மானத்தை அமுலாக்குதல்

ACTION RELATING TO LAND IN NORTH AND EAST AND IMPLEMENTATION OF RESOLUTION OF HRC

[1.50 p.m.]

ගරු ආර්. සම්පන්දන් මහතා
(மாண்புமிகு ஆர். சம்பந்தன்)
(The Hon. R. Sampanthan)

Mr. Deputy Speaker, I move:

“Whereas two statements were made on the Floor of the House on 09th April, 2013, by the Hon. Leader of the Opposition and by the Hon. Minister of External Affairs, pertaining to the Resolution No. A/HRC/22/L.1 on ‘Promoting Reconciliation and Accountability in Sri Lanka’ adopted by the Human Rights Council.
Continue reading ‘US Aid to Countries Supporting UN Resolution on Sri Lanka was Less than US aid to Countries Voting Against or Abstaining’ »

How TNA Parliamentarian Appathurai Vinayagamoorthy Fell At The Feet of President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Appathuray Vinayagamoorthy MP

Appathuray Vinayagamoorthy MP

by

Maneckshaw

The New Kathiresan Hall in Bambalapitiya came under an extensive security blanket on Saturday, 25 May, with a large number of police personnel making their presence felt rather conspicuously. The grand event that drew the security contingent to the Hall was the wedding of the eldest son of President of the Court of Appeal, Justice S. Sriskandarajah.

The hall was packed mostly with the members of the legal fraternity from the bench and that bar. The judges of the superior courts who were in the front row were seen enjoying the Nathaswaram music by veteran artiste, P. Sithamparanathan.

Continue reading ‘How TNA Parliamentarian Appathurai Vinayagamoorthy Fell At The Feet of President Mahinda Rajapaksa.’ »

Douglas Devananda Will Survive Politically Even If He Loses In Northern Provincial Elections

Minister Douglas Devananda with outgoing High Commissioner of India, Ashok K. Kantha in Jaffna, may 6, 2013-Pic: EPDP news

Minister Douglas Devananda with outgoing High Commissioner of India, Ashok Kantha in Jaffna, may 6, 2013-Pic: EPDP news

By

Sathya Liyanasuriya

The run up to the Northern Provincial Council election is on and the latest personality to enter the fray is Minister Douglas Devananda who appears to be positioning himself as chief ministerial candidate of the ruling United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA).

This week the Minister of Traditional Industries and Small Enterprise Development declared that he believed it would be counterproductive to devolve controversial land and police powers to the NPC and hinted that he would entertain the idea of running for chief minister.

Devananda’s comments calling for land and police powers to be withheld from the provinces echo sentiments of hardliners in the majority community such as Wimal Weerawansa and Champika Ranawaka. It will no doubt anger his fellow Tamil politicians but will come as no surprise to them.

Continue reading ‘Douglas Devananda Will Survive Politically Even If He Loses In Northern Provincial Elections’ »

People Who Protest Against Massacre of Tamil Civilians in 2009 Should Not Do So Under the LTTE Flag

pic courtesy of: tamilsforum.co.uk/

pic courtesy of: tamilsforum.co.uk/


by

Elilini Hoole

It really bothers me that the protests depicted by photograph titles like “Tamils… gathered around photographs of those killed during the Sri Lankan civil war” is being orchestrated by people carrying the LTTE flag.

Pain of death

Anyone who protests against the massacres of Tamils in 2009 should by no means do so under the flag adopted by the Tigers. In 2009, the Tigers forced innocent Tamil civilians to remain in the Vanni – under pain of death – as a shield. This is evident from the same reports that accuse the government of genocide. When I was working in the Vanni, I sincerely sympathized with the Tamils who stayed behind in Sri Lanka. They lost everything under the Tigers and the successive governments of Sri Lanka. After the riots and massacres of Tamils in the 1970s, a Tamil struggle was obviously imminent. There were peaceful Tamils who, moved by their common humanity with the victims, came forward to speak up. And then there were monsters like Prabhakaran who started out assassinating the Mayor of Jaffna. Until he died, he had nothing but blood on his hands.
Continue reading ‘People Who Protest Against Massacre of Tamil Civilians in 2009 Should Not Do So Under the LTTE Flag’ »

Those Raised on the Ideological Foundation of SJV Chelvanayagam Would not Accept the Derogation of the Muslim Community

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By

Rauff Hakeem, Minister of Justice

(Text of the 36th S.J.V. Chelvanayakam memorial oration delivered by Leader of Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) and Minister of Justice, Rauff Hakeem, at the Chelva Square, in Jaffna, on 26 April 2013)

In the past 15 years, we have all pursued our own politics and played our respective roles. However, in that process, our efforts are strengthened by the contribution of men of eminence and calibre of S.J.V. Chelvanayakam. Recalling our memories of Chelvanayakam renews and invigorates our resolve to stand on our feet and discharge our responsibilities. The Chief Priest of the Nallur Temple, who spoke before me, said the Minster of Justice is here, but we are tired of pleading for justice. Brother Ayub who spoke before me said we should have supported the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) after the Provincial Council Elections in the East.

He also said as Muslims, we are deeply anguished by speeches made by former and present Tamil parliamentarians.

I wish to impress on him the essence of the adage that one solitary tree does not make either a forest or an orchard. Those who were raised on the ideological foundation of Chelvanayakam, would not be disposed to accept the derogation of the Muslim community.

Continue reading ‘Those Raised on the Ideological Foundation of SJV Chelvanayagam Would not Accept the Derogation of the Muslim Community’ »

What is the Humanitarian Victory that Restrains a Community from Singing the “National Anthem” in its Own Constitutionally Protected National Language?

MA Sumanthiran MP-pic: YoungAsiaTV

MA Sumanthiran MP-pic: YoungAsiaTV

By

M.A.Sumanthiran M.P.

“Truth must be told. After all, it is the truth that will set everyone free. But, for truth to be told, there needs to be a change in attitude,” are words from my first speech in Parliament. Three years later we have yet to see a change in attitude. We have seen instead, a vigorous effort to garner and concentrate power in the Executive, to eliminate dissent and make blanket denials to any call for justice, regardless of who makes the call, be it citizen, political opponent or the international community. Instead of engaging in truth-seeking, justice and reconciliation, this country is persistently dealing with crises of rule-of-law and encroachment on the independence of democratic institutions.

Continue reading ‘What is the Humanitarian Victory that Restrains a Community from Singing the “National Anthem” in its Own Constitutionally Protected National Language?’ »

Inconsistencies in relations with India, America and the World

By

Prof.Rajiva Wijesinha M.P.

In discussing, as suggested, recent American moves on Sri Lanka and the Sri Lankan reaction, I am struck most of all by the failure of those in theory responsible for foreign policy to understand those moves. After the recent visit by Bob Blake, who had been ambassador here during the conflict period, and had a relatively positive if patronizing approach, I was assured by a senior External Affairs official that relations between Sri Lanka and America were excellent. He claimed that the negative reports in the papers were exaggerated.

Similarly, I was assured by those who claimed to have the ear of both the President and the Americans that there would be no American resolution against us in Geneva this year. Now it is conceivable that the Americans deliberately misled us, but I do not think that was the case. Not only from the pronouncements Blake made, but also from the comments made by both his successors, it was evident that criticism was the order of the day.

Continue reading ‘Inconsistencies in relations with India, America and the World’ »

Jathika Hela Urumaya,Bodu Bala Sena and Sinhala Ravaya Combine do not Represent the Mainstream Majority Sinhala Community

By Latheef Farook

It appears that the island’s Muslim community seems to have forgotten the threats to their very existence from the extremely dangerous small minority of Sinhala racist elements who do not in any way represent the mainstream majority Sinhalese community.

As we know that the Jahtika Hela Urumaya, Bodu Bala Sena and Sinhala Ravaya combine’s recent short sighted and destructive provocations struck at the very survival of the Muslim community.

From the destruction of a Muslim shrine in Anuradhapura under the watchful eyes of police and the attack on Dambulla Mosque by a mob led by a monk to last week’s demolition of structures around the mosque at Dafter Jailani (Kuragala) vandalism against places of importance to Muslims continue unabated.

Continue reading ‘Jathika Hela Urumaya,Bodu Bala Sena and Sinhala Ravaya Combine do not Represent the Mainstream Majority Sinhala Community’ »

Had LTTE Accepted the Indo-Lanka Accord it Could have Easily Achived Eelam says Gotabhaya Rajapaksa

By

Shamindra Ferdinando

Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa yesterday warned the government of dire consequences in case the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) won the first northern provincial council election.

The Defence Secretary was responding to a statement attributed to Petroleum Minister Anura Priyadarshana Yapa, at Wednesday’s post-cabinet media briefing, that the election would be held in accordance with the 13th Amendment to the Constitution. Minister Yapa ruled out the possibility of diluting the 13th Amendment before the election.

Continue reading ‘Had LTTE Accepted the Indo-Lanka Accord it Could have Easily Achived Eelam says Gotabhaya Rajapaksa’ »

May the Dhamma of the Compassionate One Emancipate our Beloved Sri Lanka from Greed and Violence

by Bishop Duleep de Chickera

My good friend, the Ven. Bellanwila Wimalarathana wrote a letter to Christians on his understanding of Christ at Christmas last year. This has prompted me to reciprocate with this letter to you at Vesak.

Continue reading ‘May the Dhamma of the Compassionate One Emancipate our Beloved Sri Lanka from Greed and Violence’ »

Current Govt is Incompetent, Insensitive and Immoral but the Opposition Seems to be Even Worse

By

Vishnuguptha

“True patriotism hates injustice in its own land more than anywhere else.”
~Clarence Darrow

The political culture has taken a turn towards a nasty culmination. Ever since the opening of the economy in 1977, the ‘good’ that came with it may have outnumbered the ‘bad’, yet the socially-unsavory facets of that system that essentially exudes a negative aroma would invariably have a lasting and pungent effect on a growing democracy. A society that was not used to the modern-day amenities, a society that was badly grappling with putting some decent food on the table and a society that was totally enmeshed in an utterly politicized environment needed a shock-treatment to wake it from its long slumber and get it adjusted to the ever-so-demanding pressures of the Twentieth Century gadgetry revolution and its attendant challenges.

A society that was subjugated by three successive colonial powers despite the legendary glorious past illustrated in the pages of the Great Chronicle (Mahawansa) which placed the Sinhala Kings as ‘world-beaters’, could not find itself standing long lines at three o’clock in the morning for a loaf of bread!

Continue reading ‘Current Govt is Incompetent, Insensitive and Immoral but the Opposition Seems to be Even Worse’ »

Rajapaksa Siblings Want to Atomise Lankans Along Ethnic, Religious and Class Lines to Prevent a United Opposition

By

Tisaranee Gunasekara

“….developing a whole series of techniques which will enable the controlling oligarchy……to get people to love their servitude. This is the, it seems to me, the ultimate in malevolent revolutions”.

Aldous Huxley (The Ultimate Revolution)

During his recent Uganda tour, President Mahinda Rajapaksa was reportedly enchanted by the servile conduct of the Ugandans he came into contact with. According to the political column of last Sunday’s Rivira, the Lankan President asked his Ugandan counterpart, “When we look at them (Ugandans) it is clear that they have a very obedient nature. How did you manage to make them so obedient?” President Musevini’s response was that this servility was a relic of the Colonial ethos, when White Masters kept their Black and Brown Subjects in total subjugation.

In a democracy uncritical obedience is a dangerous vice. Despotic rule cannot survive without uncritical obedience. Colonial rulers treated colonised peoples as political infants incapable of handling independence. Tyrants too regard their subjects as eternal political-minors, incapable of dealing with freedom.

Continue reading ‘Rajapaksa Siblings Want to Atomise Lankans Along Ethnic, Religious and Class Lines to Prevent a United Opposition’ »

Govt Lacking Courage to do it Directly is Behind the JHU Move to Repeal 13th Amendment– M. A. Sumanthiran

By

Mandana Ismail Abeywickrema

TNA parliamentarian, Attorney at Law, M. A. Sumanthiran says that the JHU’s move to propose the abolition of the provincial council system under the 13th Amendment to the Constitution is backed by the government since the JHU is a constituent member of the governing party with a member in the Cabinet.

“There must be a power-sharing arrangement agreed upon that enables the Tamil People of this country to live as equal citizens with dignity and self-respect, handling their own affairs in their own areas,” he said. However, Sumanthiran observes that this government’s track record on finding a lasting solution to the ethnic issue will not infuse any degree of confidence. He added that India has a moral responsibility to ensure that the 13th Amendment is fully implemented and also ensure that Sri Lanka goes beyond that.

Following is the interview:

Continue reading ‘Govt Lacking Courage to do it Directly is Behind the JHU Move to Repeal 13th Amendment– M. A. Sumanthiran’ »

If Provincial Polls to North are ever held the Tamil People must vote against Douglas Devananda

By S. Ratnajeevan H. Hoole

Many Tamils who have suffered at the hands of the LTTE have tended to see others on LTTE hit-list with some sympathy. For those on the list, with a dedicated sense of service to the Tamil people and unquenchable thirst for justice, the choice was simple when faced with assassination by the LTTE – run abroad into oblivion or seek protection from the army and do the best they could under the circumstances.

Continue reading ‘If Provincial Polls to North are ever held the Tamil People must vote against Douglas Devananda’ »

Jathika Hela Urumaya Motion to Abolish the 13th Constitutional Amendment Faces Certain Defeat in Parliament

by S. Selvakumar

A private member’s motion by Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU) leader Minister Champika Ranawaka calling for the abrogation of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution slated to come up before Parliament next week has all the trappings of being defeated judging by the stand taken by an overwhelming majority of UPFA coalition partners except the National Freedom Front headed by Minister Wimal Weerawansa, political sources said.

The present Parliament elected in 2010 consists of three JHU MPs and only one from the NFF in the ruling UPFA while the rest are from the SLFP, SLMC, CWC, EPDP, MEP, CP and LSSP.

Continue reading ‘Jathika Hela Urumaya Motion to Abolish the 13th Constitutional Amendment Faces Certain Defeat in Parliament’ »

Ethnic Nationalism Must Give way to Economic Nationalism and then to All-Embracing Sri Lankan Nationalism

By

N.Sathiya Moorthy

The parliamentary exchanges on the UNP joining the PSC should once again set off the thinking on the contours of a national discourse to the ‘national problem’. It should not end with the forum where the issues are to be debated and decided upon. Instead, it should address the ‘basic issues’, where ethnic perceptions differ wildly. It is more so if the ground realities are considered. They are different from the political perceptions projected for consumption for both the local constituencies and the international community.

The parliamentary exchanges were flawed for two reasons. One, the Government’s invitation to the UNP, revived by Chief Whip and Minister Dinesh Gunawardane, came when media reports were talking about the proposed abolition of the devolved powers on Police and Land, which anyway were non-operational under 13-A. For his part, UNP Leader of the Opposition Ranil Wickremesinghe once again linked the party’s joining the PSC process to extraneous issues such as the revival of ‘17th Amendment institutions’, nullified since by the 18-A. The last time the UNP did it, the ‘Chandrika Package’ with its personalised clauses, went down the line – and with that hopes of an ethnic solution.

Continue reading ‘Ethnic Nationalism Must Give way to Economic Nationalism and then to All-Embracing Sri Lankan Nationalism’ »

Buddhist Monk Kalyana Dhamma Thero Accuses Bodu Bala Sena of Abusing and Assaulting Him


By

Easwaran Rutnam

A Buddhist monk has accused the Bodu Bala Sena (BBS) of violating his right to freedom of expression just two days after the US State Department released a report accusing the government of failing to curb attacks on religious minorities.

The venerable Malawwe Kalyana Dhamma thero said that members of the Bodu Bala Sena verbally abused and then assaulted him when he attempted to stage a peaceful protest outside the Bodu Bala Sena headquarters at Thunmulla last Wednesday.

Continue reading ‘Buddhist Monk Kalyana Dhamma Thero Accuses Bodu Bala Sena of Abusing and Assaulting Him’ »

Sri Lankans Must Be Careful About Embarking on a “Grand Tour of Europe”Arranged by a Well Known Local Travel Company

by Anura Gunasekera

Recently, my wife and I participated in a “Grand Tour of Europe “, arranged by a well known local travel company. The programme commenced with a flight from Colombo to Paris, from where we travelled by coach to a series of destinations in Netherlands, Belgium, Germany, Czechoslovakia, Austria and Switzerland, ending in Rome a fortnight after commencement.

The tour fee, per person, was substantial and, on the basis of advertisements and connected brochures, covered “specific sites “at relevant destinations. Trustingly, we assumed that all major attractions in the sites that we visited would be included. A few days prior to commencement we were offered an ‘extra day’ in Rome, on payment of an additional fee, which many of us, including my wife and me, paid.

A close scrutiny of the final itinerary, provided at a pre-tour briefing, indicated that the “additional day” was, in fact, a clever deception, as the return flight on the final day was scheduled for 3.15 pm and we were required to be at the Rome Fiumicino airport by 12 noon, for our flight to Sri Lanka. The additional payment merely provided us with an extra night’s sleep in a hotel room in Rome. After leaving the hotel at 9.00am, we had just sufficient time to stop at a church, en route, before arriving at the airport.
Continue reading ‘Sri Lankans Must Be Careful About Embarking on a “Grand Tour of Europe”Arranged by a Well Known Local Travel Company’ »

Majority of People in the Country do not Oppose the Holding of a Northern Provincial Election

Dr. Nirmala Chandrahasan

The Island of May 20 carried the following in a news item:”Although the Provincial Council system had not yielded the intended results, it was not the time to criticize it in view of a Provincial Council election on the horizon”, observed Mahanayake Thera of Malwatte Most Venerable Tibbatuwawe Sri Siddhartha Sumangala when the Water Supply and Drainage Minister Dinesh Gunawardena called on him yesterday.”

Reading this news item I was struck by the statesmanlike comment of the Venerable Mahanayake Thera. It confirmed my view that the majority of the people of the country do not oppose the holding of an election in the Northern Province.

However as happens the democratic and civilized elements of society who are in the majority, do not express their views in a strident manner, whereas the small minority who are vociferously campaigning against the holding of elections do so, and are able to get news coverage, and may even attempt to pass off their views as that of the silent majority.

Continue reading ‘Majority of People in the Country do not Oppose the Holding of a Northern Provincial Election’ »

Vesak Poya Day Thoughts About The Future of Our Resplendent Island and Its People

pic via: facebook.com/PresidentRajapaksa

pic via: facebook.com/PresidentRajapaksa

By Tissa Jayatilaka

The Vesak Poya day has come and gone several times since May 2009 when the prolonged war with the LTTE ended. And we Sri Lankans are yet trapped in post-war rhetoric and caught up in punches and counter-punches arising from different visions of what post-war Sri Lanka ought to be.

Some think that we should continue to celebrate, as the current government does, and even forever celebrate the military victory over the LTTE. Some think that the purpose of this kind of extravaganza is justified for it gives the Government the means to keep the people of this country continuously reminded of one of its most significant success stories. Is that the case or is it, as some others think, that the government wants to exploit its military triumph and use it to keep on bamboozling a gullible public to continue to support it regardless of a failing economy, increased corruption and a disastrous governance record?

Continue reading ‘Vesak Poya Day Thoughts About The Future of Our Resplendent Island and Its People’ »

Land Expropriation and Deception in Keppapilavu

by The Social Architects

Introduction

During the civil war’s final phases, more than 300,000 people were displaced; the majority of those internally displaced persons (IDPs) were eventually relocated to IDP camps – with Menik[1] Farm[2] (Vavuniya) being the largest IDP camp. The conditions in Sri Lanka’s IDP camps were – to say the least – substandard. Attempting to deflect international pressure, the Government of Sri Lanka closed Menik Farm in September 2012. At that time the United Nations (UN) noted its “concern”[3] for the people of Keppapilavu (Mullaitivu) – since they were still unable to return home, as the military still occupied their land. (Community members had been told that they would be going “home,” but soon found out that, in this case, “home” in Sri Lankan military vernacular meant “Sooripuram.” Community members from Keppapilavu were relocated to Sooripuram so that the Government of Sri Lanka could announce the closure of Menik Farm; they were never allowed to go home).

Recently, a fifty-year-old woman told TSA that, since Sooripuram is located next to Keppapilavu, she sees her cattle from her makeshift Sooripuram home on a daily basis. This is a stark reminder of what she had more than four years ago, but what she may never regain again.

“Resettlement” in Sooripuram

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Continue reading ‘Land Expropriation and Deception in Keppapilavu’ »

Provincial Devolution Through 13th Amendment is a Political Solution Grudgingly Acceptable to both Sinhala and Tamil Communities


By

Dr DAYAN JAYATILLEKA

The commitment of President Kumaratunga to a political solution (however imprudently over-generous those packages were) and the promise to implement 13A repeatedly made by President Rajapaksa and his troika of top representatives (who included two of his siblings) to New Delhi, constituted an important factor– apart from the murder of Rajiv Gandhi by the LTTE—in keeping India ‘on side’, when the army under CBK liberated Jaffna and when President Rajapaksa finally crushed the LTTE despite Western moves for a ceasefire and Indian elections (including in Tamil Nadu). This last factor explains why President Rajapaksa saw fit to reiterate the commitment to implement fully the 13th amendment, in two summit level communiqués, issued just days AFTER the conclusion of the war, on May 21 and 23, 2009.

The specific form that provincial devolution took in ’87-’88, that of coercive Indian diplomacy and the 13th amendment, was due precisely to the decades-long delay in implementing such devolution domestically. Just as the blockage of a domestic process of devolution to the provinces resulted in or provided the opening for external intervention, an ethnically unilateral abolition or disembowelling of existing arrangements for devolution is likely to revive such external interference and intrusion, and do so in an external environment that is at least as unpropitious as that of the 1980s and arguably even more so.

Continue reading ‘Provincial Devolution Through 13th Amendment is a Political Solution Grudgingly Acceptable to both Sinhala and Tamil Communities’ »

Island Wide Mass Strike of May 21 Failed Mainly Due to Diabolical Conduct of Ranil Wickremasinghe

By

Vishnuguptha

“I have learned to hate all traitors, and there is no disease that I spit on more than treachery.”
~Aeschylus

Whatever, Ranil Wickremesinghe, Sri Lanka’s the Leader of the Opposition has not learnt about the intricate planning and strategizing involved in gaining political power with a view to establishing a government led by his Party, the United National Party, he surely has learnt how to sabotage a campaign launched by a so-called joint opposition. And he has learnt it well.

RWUNP052313

pic via facebook.com/UNPofficialpage

The Island-wide one-day strike organized by the joint-opposition for May 21, 2013, exactly four years after the end of the Northern War, fell flat on its face. The organizers must be schooled in political campaigning before they make their next attempt at organizing mass campaigns against a government that is losing its popularity by the day. The prime-mover of a campaign of this magnitude and scope should have been the leader of the opposition, the leader of the United National Party, which still enjoys more than thirty five percent of the popular voter base and certainly more than ninety percent of the total Opposition vote bloc.

Continue reading ‘Island Wide Mass Strike of May 21 Failed Mainly Due to Diabolical Conduct of Ranil Wickremasinghe’ »

Bodu Bala Sena to be Sri Lanka’s Sinhala-Buddhist Religious Police Like Basji in Iran and Mutaween in Saudi Arabia

BBS Rally in Kandy-Mar 2013

BBS Rally in Kandy-Mar 2013

By

Tisaranee Gunasekara


“The BBS will take immediate steps to form a ‘Cane Force’ against those who act in a manner insulting to Buddhism during the Wesak season”.

Rev. Galagoda-Atte Gnanasara Thero (Lankadeepa – 17.5.2013)

Pro-democracy demonstrators protesting against the flawed Iranian Presidential Election of 2009 feared one enemy above all other – the Basij, Iran’s religious police. As the ‘Protectors’ of the values deemed valuable by Iran’s ruling Ayatollahs, Basij is generally occupied with breaking-up parties, destroying satellite dishes, lashing bloggers and attacking women considered ‘improperly attired’. But Basij is far more than a bunch of zealots with a penchant for violence and sadism; it is also an indispensable weapon in the arsenal of Iran’s rulers, a cudgel to be used against political opponents (including dissident Ayatollahs). Basij played a brutally effective role in defeating the 2009 pro-democracy movement. The next Presidential election is scheduled for June 2013 and Basij is busy cracking down on Tehran’s coffee shops, the political-oases of Iranian intellectuals/dissidents.

Mutaween – the Commission for Promotion of Virtue and Protection of Vice – is Saudi Arabia’s Basij. Its members also roam the streets searching for offenders, ranging from women ‘violating’ the dress-code and fans of Western music/films/TV shows to non-related males and females who interact with each other. In two emblematic cases, Mutaween arrested a 70 year old woman for having two unrelated men in her house (they were delivering bread; she got 70 lashes) and prevented fire fighters from rescuing female students from a burning school (15 girls died). Mutaween is also indispensable in buttressing the power of the Saudi ruling family. It cracks down on critics/dissidents; its leader recently warned that twitter users – one of the very few platforms available to the regime’s opponents in this über-despotic land – are eternally damned.

Now the Bodu Bala Sena wants to give Sri Lanka and its ruling clan their very own Sinhala-Buddhist religious police.

Continue reading ‘Bodu Bala Sena to be Sri Lanka’s Sinhala-Buddhist Religious Police Like Basji in Iran and Mutaween in Saudi Arabia’ »

Jathika Hela Urumaya Presents Motion in Parliament to Repeal 13th Constitutional Amendment Enacted Due to India-Sri Lanka Accord

(This is the full text of the Private Members Motion Presented by the Jathika Hela Urumaya(JHU) in Parliament to Repeal 13th Constitutional Amendment that was Enacted Due to India-Sri Lanka Accord. The JHU describes its motion as the 19th Amendment to the Constitution and wants the Govt whip to allow MP’s a free vote on the issue. A group of 30-32 MP’s in the Govt including cabinet ministers have banded together to oppose this motion.)

Whereas the 13th Amendment to the Constitution was purportedly enacted, consequent to the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord being entered into between the President of Sri Lanka and the Prime Minister of India in 1987 under duress in defiance of the sovereignty of the people of Sri Lanka and ;

Continue reading ‘Jathika Hela Urumaya Presents Motion in Parliament to Repeal 13th Constitutional Amendment Enacted Due to India-Sri Lanka Accord’ »

US State Dept Expresses Concerns Over Religious Freedom in Sri Lanka

USS052013

US Department of State – BUREAU OF DEMOCRACY, HUMAN RIGHTS, AND LABOR 2012 Report on International Religious Freedom Report – May 20, 2013 – SRI LANKA

EXECUTIVE SUMMARY

The constitution and other laws and policies protect religious freedom and, in practice, the government generally respected religious freedom. The trend in the government’s respect for religious freedom did not change significantly during the year. In certain instances, local authorities failed to respond effectively to communal attacks, including attacks on members of minority religious groups.

There were reports of societal abuses and discrimination based on religious affiliation, belief, or practice. Sporadic violent attacks on Christian churches by Buddhists and some societal tension due to ongoing allegations of forced or “unethical” conversions (i.e., the use of bribes to persuade people to convert) continued, although the number and scale of attacks were reportedly fewer than in recent years. Intolerance of, and discrimination against, Muslims by some Buddhists increased during the year.

Continue reading ‘US State Dept Expresses Concerns Over Religious Freedom in Sri Lanka’ »

Vimukthi Weeratunga Gives Voice to Voiceless In Protecting Sri Lanka’s Wildlife

Vimukthi Weeratunga

Vimukthi Weeratunga

By

Marianne David

We are raping our own heritage due to human-centric thinking, asserts Environmental Foundation Ltd. Director – Operations Vimukthi Weeratunga, pointing out that land management is key to protecting the forests, trees and animals, which are Sri Lanka’s lifeline.

While EFL fights battles on behalf of the environment on the legal front, Weeratunga says there isn’t sufficient awareness among the citizens of this country, despite Sri Lanka being one of the few countries in the world that has given an environmental right to every single citizen in its Constitution.
Continue reading ‘Vimukthi Weeratunga Gives Voice to Voiceless In Protecting Sri Lanka’s Wildlife’ »

Shelagh Gunawardene 1935-2013: Rapturous Love of Life Even While Moving Through Troubles

A Personal Tribute by Ernest Macintyre

(Eulogy Delivered by Dramatist Ernest Mcintyre at Funeral of Thespian Shelagh Gunaardene)

SG052013B

Looking back, through personal experience, reading around and trying to understand Shelagh Goonewardene,daughter of Terence Richard Jansen and Noble Georgiana Frances OhlmusJoseph, I now recognize that the first blessing bestowed on her was the sense that life was meant to be finely enjoyed.
Continue reading ‘Shelagh Gunawardene 1935-2013: Rapturous Love of Life Even While Moving Through Troubles’ »

Tamara Kunanayakam re-elected as Chairperson-Rapporteur of the UN Working Group on the Right to Development

This is the third time that Ms. Kunanayakam has been nominated by the Non-Aligned Movement for the post, which is an honorary non-remunerated position, and has received the unanimous support of all members of the United Nations for her expertise on the right to development and her remarkable leadership.

Continue reading ‘Tamara Kunanayakam re-elected as Chairperson-Rapporteur of the UN Working Group on the Right to Development’ »

Day of Tamil Mourning Can be July 23rd or July 29th but not May 18th Which is Victory Day

BJ052013

BY

DR DAYAN JAYATILLEKA

The usual polarised debate is on again, on the issue of the Victory Day commemoration. This time there are three sides, not the usual pair of suspects.

One side denounces the commemorations as divisive, upholds the right of the Tamil people to commemorate their dead and calls for a national day of remembrance or mourning.

Another commemorates the Tamil side, uses the occasion to denounce as ‘genocidal’ the Sri Lankan state, government, leadership, armed forces and the climax of the war itself.

The third side commemorates the victory of May 18th and arrests or justify the arrests of those who celebrate it as a day of mourning.
Continue reading ‘Day of Tamil Mourning Can be July 23rd or July 29th but not May 18th Which is Victory Day’ »

President Must Hold referendum and Let People Decide on Whether to Amend 13th Amendment or not

By

Gomin Dayasri

An unscheduled mini battle is on in the junior league for“13A” that could change the face of Sri Lanka in 2013/2014.

Non-playing captains, Mahinda Rajapaksa and Ranil Wickremesinghe are watching the game from the pavilion cheering respectively the Weerawansa / Ranawaka crew and the Sumanthiran combine?

Continue reading ‘President Must Hold referendum and Let People Decide on Whether to Amend 13th Amendment or not’ »

Environment in North is not Conducive to hold Free and Fair Provincial Council Elections-Karu Jayasuriya

(Brief Notes of the Media Conference held by Hon. Karu Jayasuriya MP UNP for Gampaha District, on 17th May 2013)

· Repressive Policy of the government is on the increase. It is impossible to express dissenting views against the government. The government behaves in a manner as if the people have given a mandate to them to stay in power forever.

· It has been scheduled to hold an election in September for the Northern Provincial Council. The Environment there is not conducive to hold free and fair elections.

Continue reading ‘Environment in North is not Conducive to hold Free and Fair Provincial Council Elections-Karu Jayasuriya’ »

Governance in Sri Lanka by Virtually Every Standard has Become an Unmitgated, Incontrovertible Disaster

CHOGM052013

By

Gibson Bateman

Not surprisingly, late last month, the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG) failed to deal with Sri Lanka. As a result, it looks like the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) on the island nation will continue as planned this November. United Kingdom (UK) Prime Minister David Cameron has recently announced that he will attend CHOGM. A spokesperson also mentioned that Mr. Cameron would be delivering a “tough message” to Mahinda Rajapaksa this November. (Some may be left wondering if it wouldn’t be more effective for Mr. Cameron to deliver his “tough message” from London while one of his subordinates attends CHOGM and does the same).

By virtually every standard – including media freedom, disappearances, the rule of law and land rights – governance in Sri Lanka has become an unmitigated, incontrovertible disaster. In addition to recent reports by Amnesty International, International Crisis Group and Human Rights Watch, recent articles by other groups show that the situation in Sri Lanka just keeps getting worse.

Continue reading ‘Governance in Sri Lanka by Virtually Every Standard has Become an Unmitgated, Incontrovertible Disaster’ »

Tamil National Alliance May Break Up Soon Due to Intensifying Internal Conflict

By D.B.S. Jeyaraj

The Tamil National Alliance(TNA)regarded as the premier political formation of the Tamils of Sri Lanka has been very much in the news lately due to what could be termed as an internal crisis.

TNA052013

pic via: facebook.com/tamilnationalalliance.offical

The TNA that has in recent times been contesting elections under the house symbol of the Ilankai Thamil Arasu Katchi (ITAK)is afflicted by internal dissension among its constituent members.

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Does a Parent,Spouse,Child,Sibling or a Grandparent Become a Traitor Because he/she Weeps for a Loved One who Fought in LTTE Ranks?

MRAM052013

By

Tisaranee Gunasekara


“To change masters is not to be free”

Jose Marti (eddosrios.org )

The photograph is iconic; Alavi Moulana, 83 years old and an SLFP veteran of 52 years, bending down and kissing the hand of President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

That picture is revelatory of the current Lankan reality at multiple levels. It shows what citizens have to do if they are to prosper under Rajapaksa Rule. It shows what SLFPers have to do if they want are to get ahead in a Rajapaksa-party. It shows what minorities have to do if they are to survive in a Rajapaksa country.

The Rajapaksas believe that by defeating the LTTE they won the right to do to and with Sri Lanka what they please.

The nature of the war cannot but have a bearing on the nature of the peace that follows, especially if the peace-builders are the same ones who won the war.

Continue reading ‘Does a Parent,Spouse,Child,Sibling or a Grandparent Become a Traitor Because he/she Weeps for a Loved One who Fought in LTTE Ranks?’ »

Militarization of Civilian Institutions and Taking Over Private Property for “Security Purposes” is Matter of Great Concern

By

Gamini Weerakoon

The conventional belief was that the military at best should be confined to barracks or be on battlefields but after the much celebrated victory over terrorism the forces have not been demobilized as is usual in other countries or found civilian jobs but appear to move into civilian projects under the Ministry of Defence and Urban Development.

In Colombo they moved to take over a part of the Town Hall job of urban development. Parts of Colombo 7 have been ‘beautified’ with the assistance of civilian architects but the first few monsoons showers resulted in some of Colombo’s roads turn into rivers. In the suburbs too the Ministry has taken over urban development.

In the Jaffna peninsula there is a furor now on over the takeover of 7,000 acres of land by the military. With the Rajapaksa government doing its damnedest to prove to the outside world that it is doing its best for reconciliation of the Tamils, taking over 1,000 acres of privately owned land is not the most convincing thing to do. It is believed that the military wants to set up tourist hotels on their own, which is a function of the Tourist Board. Whether the intention is to develop a unique tourist complex, the first ever tourist hotel run by ladies and gentlemen in khaki, is anybody’s guess.

Continue reading ‘Militarization of Civilian Institutions and Taking Over Private Property for “Security Purposes” is Matter of Great Concern’ »

Gotabhaya Rajapaksa Says Indian Foreign Minister in Telephone Call to GL Peiris did NOT Raise Issue of Land Acquisition for Army in North

By Shamindra Ferdinando

Having consulted External Affairs Minister Prof. G. L. Peiris yesterday afternoon, Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa told The Sunday Island that contrary to media reports, acquiring land by the government for the expansion of Palaly-Kankesanthurai security zone hadn’t been raised by Indian Foreign Minister Salman Khurshid when he phoned his Sri Lankan counterpart on Friday morning.

Rajapaksa said that positioning of armed forces during the war as well as post-conflict situation would be the prerogative of the government. The deployment of troops and military assets would be done in accordance with overall post-war security plan hence it couldn’t be amended owing to domestic as well as external factors.

Continue reading ‘Gotabhaya Rajapaksa Says Indian Foreign Minister in Telephone Call to GL Peiris did NOT Raise Issue of Land Acquisition for Army in North’ »

We Appear to be Coming Uncannily Close to Uganda-like Madness in the Age of Idi Amin Minus the Cannibalism

By

Kishali Pinto Jayawardene

As lights are dimmed over Sri Lanka following prohibitively crushing electricity hikes, the enveloping darkness is menacingly symbolic of the crisis which our society is facing.

This is even as the politically privileged siphon off massive amounts of money for useless extravaganzas, including an airport in the deep South to which overseas airlines are reportedly suspending operations, not long after a grand ceremonial opening. Wastage on luxury cars and other expenses associated with the upcoming Commonwealth summit is all part of the same excruciatingly painful pattern.

Indeed, we appear to be coming uncannily close to Uganda-like madness in the age of Idi Amin, minus the famously hyped cannibalism. Dissent is crushed or petrified and the economy groans under the unbearable weight of increasing debts by government entities to state banks. Verily, it does not take a soothsayer to predict our dismal future.

Continue reading ‘We Appear to be Coming Uncannily Close to Uganda-like Madness in the Age of Idi Amin Minus the Cannibalism’ »

Northern Residents Happy to Have Homes of Their Own Through Indian Project to Build 50,000 Houses

BY

MEERA SRINIVASAN

In a quiet lane in Eluthumadduval, Jaffna, cement and concrete structures, in different stages of construction, show up on either side every few yards.

The Hindu-Vamadevan Nandakumari with her father near their house that is under construction as part of India's owner-driven housing scheme in Sri Lanka. Photo: Meera Srinivasan

The Hindu-Vamadevan Nandakumari with her father near their house that is under construction as part of India’s owner-driven housing scheme in Sri Lanka. Photo: Meera Srinivasan

Part of the second phase of Indian Housing Project launched, they will soon take the form of compact, new homes.

Continue reading ‘Northern Residents Happy to Have Homes of Their Own Through Indian Project to Build 50,000 Houses’ »

Muslim Organizations in Sri Lanka Join Hands to Form an ICC “Shoora”( Interim Consultative Council )

By

Latheef Farook

For the first time almost all Muslim religious, social and cultural and other organizations and groups, buried their differences, and met in one platform under one roof at Wellawatta Miami Reception Hall on Thursday 2 May 2013 to announce the formation of an Interim Consultative(Shoora) Council-ICC.

The main purpose of ICC is to meet the emerging challenges and deal with burning issues facing the community besides seeking to play a role in the overall development of the country.

Continue reading ‘Muslim Organizations in Sri Lanka Join Hands to Form an ICC “Shoora”( Interim Consultative Council )’ »

Arrest of Azath Salley Under Terrorism Act Signals a new Political Witch-hunt Against Opponents of Rajapaksa Govt

By K. Ratnayake

Sri Lankan police formally detained Azath Salley, the leader of the Muslim Tamil National Alliance (MTNA) on May 5 for three months under the country’s draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA). He had been taken into custody on May 2 and was held illegally for three days without producing him before a magistrate.

Salley was released yesterday afternoon following a widespread outcry in Sri Lanka and internationally. President Mahinda Rajapakse was forced to step in to revoke the three-month detention order.

The detention was the first time that a political leader has been held under the PTA since the defeat of separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) in May 2009. It signals a new political witch-hunt against opponents of the Rajapakse government. By taking Salley into custody, the government has boosted Sinhala-Buddhist chauvinist groups that have been carrying out provocations against Muslims.

Continue reading ‘Arrest of Azath Salley Under Terrorism Act Signals a new Political Witch-hunt Against Opponents of Rajapaksa Govt’ »

When Minorities within Particular Group go on Rampage their Own Majority Cannot be Silent Spectators-Sumanthiran

pic courtesy of: Knowledge Box

pic courtesy of: Knowledge Box

Video and Full Text of remarks by Tamil national Alliance Parliamentarian M.A. Sumanthiran at a recent Panel Discussion on “Religion, Reconciliation and Future”:

Members of the Panel, Hon. Karu Jayasuriya, your Excellency and my friends,

Five minutes is all I have, so I’m going to say a few things in a very disjointed way – Before that there was reference made a couple of times to – four great religions of the world being present in this country and whenever that fact is mentioned I always remember, something that Judge Weeramantry wrote about the laws of this country, you know that the laws in this country, we have many laws, we have the Roman – Dutch law, we have the English law, we have Thesavalamai, we have the Kandyan Law, we have the Muslim law, we have the Mukuwa law – and he said the “Sri Lankan law is embarrassed by the richness of its source, rather than the lack of it.”
Continue reading ‘When Minorities within Particular Group go on Rampage their Own Majority Cannot be Silent Spectators-Sumanthiran’ »

A United Opposition is the Terrifying Spectre Feared Most by the Rajapaksas

May day 2013

May day 2013


By

Tisaranee Gunasekara

“Never will tyrants freely consent to the extirpation of servitude….”
Thomas Raynal

Of all the spectres the Rajapaksas fear, Oppositional-unity would arguably be the most terrifying.

The Rajapaksas began getting jittery when it became evident that the May 15th demonstration against the electricity hike would be supported by both the UNP and the JVP. The usual bag of tricks was deployed: the shrill screams about undead-Tigers, incoherent rumblings about NGO-cum-international conspiracies; and a hastily organised counter-demonstration.

None of the ploys worked; the demonstration on the 15th was a success. If the UNP and the JVP continue their cooperation and the plantation workers join in, the token strike on May 21st too can become equally successful. And these twin successes might inject some much needed life into the Opposition and help inculcate the habit of cooperation in the oppositional ranks.

The Siblings would know that one demonstration and one token strike, however successful, is no threat to their power in the here and now. But the Rajapaksa project is an epochal one; therefore they regard even long term threats with a certain degree of immediacy and urgency.

Continue reading ‘A United Opposition is the Terrifying Spectre Feared Most by the Rajapaksas’ »

Only Way Govt can Show Spirit of Reconciliation is to Talk to TNA and Agree on What a Solution Can Be-Sumanthiran

Dinouk Colombage Interviews TNA MP M.A. Sumanthiran

In the lead up to the proposed Northern Provincial Council (NPC) election in September Tamil National Alliance (TNA) MP, Mathiaparanan Abraham Sumanthiran, has expressed the belief that the government is not genuinely committed to the process of reconciliation.

pic courtesy of: Knowledge Box

pic courtesy of: Knowledge Box

In a wide ranging interview with Ceylon Today, he explained why he is doubtful the election would be held as announced and why change has to happen from within. He also said hosting the CHOGM will undermine the values of the Commonwealth.

Q) With the promise of the Northern Provincial council elections in September, does the TNA feel the government is now genuine in taking steps towards reconciliation and answering the grievances of the Tamil people?

A) No, not really. Because the announcement of the election is a result of pressure from the international community. The President is said to have given a personal undertaking to Japan in March when Japan abstained from voting at the UNHRC. It is that kind of intense pressure that has caused the government to announce the election. Even now we are not certain it is going to be held, as the President has to make an order and it is thereafter that the elections commissioner can act. We know that they are not keen to hold it, which is why I said we do not think they are genuine about this reconciliation process.

There are various forces within the government that have been set off to say that the election should not be held, and even if it is held the powers must not be devolved. Our position is that holding the election is no major concession by the government, it has to be held. Implementing the 13th amendment is neither a concession because that is part of the constitution. The only way the government can show a spirit of reconciliation is to talk to us and agree on what a further solution can be.
Continue reading ‘Only Way Govt can Show Spirit of Reconciliation is to Talk to TNA and Agree on What a Solution Can Be-Sumanthiran’ »

Confluence of Blunders Bespeaking Arrogance,Mismanagement and Bad Judgement in Washington This Past week

BY
DAVID ROTHKOPF

It says all you need to know about the current state of the Obama administration that the region of the world in which its greatest opportunities may lie over the next several years is the Middle East.

This is not because there are any great opportunities in the Middle East. Quite the contrary, it’s perhaps more dangerous, complex, and immune to successful international intervention that at any time in memory.

The point is this: on pretty much every other front, a series of missteps, self-inflicted wounds, and worse have damaged President Obama in ways that are likely to limit his options and effectiveness for the rest of his term.

Continue reading ‘Confluence of Blunders Bespeaking Arrogance,Mismanagement and Bad Judgement in Washington This Past week’ »

If Sri Lanka Continues in This Way it May Wind Up With Its Control Shrunk to Its Ethno- Lingual and Ethno-Religious Heartland -Dayan Jayatilleka

Dr Dayan Jayatilleka interviewed by Sergei DeSilva-Ranasinghe

In Australia, Sri Lanka continues to dominate headlines about allegations of war crimes and the influx of asylum-seeking refugees, but comparatively little is known about Sri Lanka’s history and politics. Dr Dayan Jayatilleka is among Sri Lanka’s leading and most respective political commentators. A prolific writer, he has published several books, including The Travails of a Democracy: Unfinished War, Protracted Crisis (1995); Fidel’s Ethics of Violence: The Moral Dimension of the Political Thought of Fidel Castro (2007), and Long War, Cold Peace: Conflict and Crisis in Sri Lanka (2013). In addition, and until recently, he was Sri Lanka’s ambassador to the United Nations in Geneva (2007–09) and ambassador to France, Portugal and UNESCO (2011-13). In March, he spoke to defence analyst Sergei DeSilva-Ranasinghe about Sri Lanka’s political future; the defeat of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE); allegations of war crimes against the Sri Lankan state; the causal factors of Tamil secessionism; Sri Lanka’s evolving relations with the United States, India, Pakistan and China; and its future strategic options.


Sergei DeSilva-Ranasinghe: Now that the civil war is over, what are the challenges for Sri Lanka’s political future? Can Sri Lanka ‘win the peace’ and achieve enduring political stability?

Continue reading ‘If Sri Lanka Continues in This Way it May Wind Up With Its Control Shrunk to Its Ethno- Lingual and Ethno-Religious Heartland -Dayan Jayatilleka’ »

Legal Action at Appeal Court on Behalf of 1474 Land Owners in Valigamam North Against Land Grab by State

(Full list of Petitioners and full text of petition filed at Court of Appeal reproduced below)

IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE DEMOCRATIC SOCIALIST REPUBLIC OF SRI LANKA

In the matter of an application under Article 140 of the Constitution for Mandates in the nature of Writs of Certiorari and Prohibition CA (Writ) Application No: 125/2013

1. Arunasalm Kunabalasingham, Kathiripay, Atchuvely
2. Pushparani Vikneswararajah, 50/10, Kanthekaratta, Colombo
3. Nallammah Sivayoganathan, 107/2, Dehiwala
4. Balasundaram Balakumar, Navali East, Manippay
5. Kanagambikai Nallaiyah, 198/7, Ramasami Veethy, Vavuniya Continue reading ‘Legal Action at Appeal Court on Behalf of 1474 Land Owners in Valigamam North Against Land Grab by State’ »

TNA Mounts Legal Challenge for 1474 People of Valigamam North Against State Attempt to Acquire Their Lands Unlawfully

(Full Text of Press Statement Issued by the Tamil National Alliance media office)

15th May 2013: Around 1474 persons owning land in Jaffna filed a writ application today in the Court of Appeal challenging the attempts to illegally and unlawfully acquire their private land. A further 2000 petitioners are to file on the same issue in the near future.

Continue reading ‘TNA Mounts Legal Challenge for 1474 People of Valigamam North Against State Attempt to Acquire Their Lands Unlawfully’ »

British Deputy PM Nick Clegg Warns of Consequences Before Commonwealth Summit if Sri Lankan Authorities Do not Address International Concerns

LONDON (Reuters) – Britain said on Wednesday there would be “consequences” for Sri Lanka if its leaders did not address international concerns over human rights abuses, ahead of a Commonwealth summit scheduled to be held in Colombo in November.

Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg told parliament “despicable human rights violations” had taken place in Sri Lanka, but that Britain still planned to attend the Commonwealth meeting there, a stance that has drawn heavy criticism from rights groups.

Continue reading ‘British Deputy PM Nick Clegg Warns of Consequences Before Commonwealth Summit if Sri Lankan Authorities Do not Address International Concerns’ »

Anguish of Uncertainty Felt by Family Members of “Missing” LTTE Surrendees

Text and pix by Dushiyanthini Kanagasabapathipillai

Mothers, wives and sisters of several LTTE surrendees are demanding that they be reunited with their family members, four years after the war.

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Ananthy Sasitharan, wife of Sinnaththurai Sasitharan alias Ezhilan

War came to an end in May 2009, but that did not put an end to the suffering of the communities. Even today, numerous Tamil families await justice for their families and friends in Sri Lanka.
Continue reading ‘Anguish of Uncertainty Felt by Family Members of “Missing” LTTE Surrendees’ »

Free and Fair Northern Provincial Council Elections Will Make India and Many Other Countries Review Position on Sri Lanka at UN in Geneva

By N Sathiya Moorthy

More than a month after the DMK withdrew support to the Manmohan Singh Government over the Sri Lanka vote issue at the UNHRC session in Geneva, no one is talking about the ‘Tamil Nadu factor’ influencing India’s Sri Lanka policy. If anything, after a decade and more, a Government at the Centre has survived without parliamentary support from any of the ‘Dravidian parties’ in Tamil Nadu.

UNHRC Vote-Mar 2013-pic: by UN

UNHRC Vote-Mar 2013-pic: by UN

It is believed that the differences between the original draft and the final one at Geneva might have been influenced by New Delhi. And tactically, India could not have influenced the draft-changes without supporting the US. Even an abstention at UNHRC could not have helped. On substantial issues, India’s vote would have to be construed as making Sri Lanka ‘accountable’, not on ‘human rights issues’ but on a ‘political solution’. This also seems to be the view of many of the voting-members at UNHRC, given the practicalities of the issues and procedures that are involved.

Continue reading ‘Free and Fair Northern Provincial Council Elections Will Make India and Many Other Countries Review Position on Sri Lanka at UN in Geneva’ »

Britain Trying to Utilise Commonwealth Summit to Make Amends for Mistake of Soulbury Constitution

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By

Upul Joseph Fernando

‘Sunday Virakesari’
15 July 2006

The UK High Commissioner was asked to comment on accusations that ‘divide and rule’ policies of the British colonial administration precipitated the present ethnic crisis in Sri Lanka.

“When the British came to Ceylon in 1796, there were three distinct kingdoms. The British made it one country for purposes of administrative convenience. In over half the number of countries in the world, the British colonial rulers adopted a ‘divide and rule’ policy. In that regard this policy was not unique to the island alone. If one were to truly examine Britain’s role one important aspect deserves special mention. That is the constitutional arrangements that Britain left behind. It left behind the Soulbury Constitution. Britain considered the Soulbury Constitution as having the necessary arrangements to provide for safeguards for minorities.

“Britain thought that the rights of the Tamils in particular would be safeguarded by these arrangements. However, history has proved otherwise, that these safeguards were inadequate and not robust enough. I regret that Britain’s policies have to such an extent been the cause for the problems,” High Commissioner, Dominic Chilcott, said.

*****************

British High Commissioner in Sri Lanka, Dominic Chilcott, made the above confession nearly 22 months before the end of the war with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Four years after the end of war, Britain has now got a rare opportunity to correct a mistake they have admittedly made by depending too heavily on the Soulbury Constitution to ensure the rights of the Tamil people. This much-awaited opportunity by the British has come in the form of CHOGM – the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.

Continue reading ‘Britain Trying to Utilise Commonwealth Summit to Make Amends for Mistake of Soulbury Constitution’ »

Asghar Ali Engineer 1939 – 2013: Courageous Crusader Against the Pathology of Communalism

by Meena Menon

As a child in Wardha at the time of Partition, Asghar Ali heard “horrible stories of people being killed and trains full of dead bodies.” Those stories, he wrote in his autobiography, A Living Faith, disturbed him so much that he began thinking very early in his life about why people killed each other in the name of religion.

Then, as a student in 1961, he was deeply affected by the riots in Jabalpur, the worst till then in independent India. For Engineer, those riots were the beginning of his lifelong battle against the pathology of communalism and the engagement with creating interfaith harmony.

Continue reading ‘Asghar Ali Engineer 1939 – 2013: Courageous Crusader Against the Pathology of Communalism’ »

Actor Shah Rukh Khan Presented Chevalier Sivaji Ganesan Award for Excellence in Indian Cinema

BY UDHAV NAIG

Many film awards have been accused of ignoring the significant shifts in the film industry. For capturing these changes reasonably well, the jury of Vijay Awards need to be congratulated. Small-budget but popular films such as Pizza, Vazhakku En 18/9, Aarohanam, Naduvula Konjam Pakkatha Kaanom and Kumki were bestowed with many notable awards.
Continue reading ‘Actor Shah Rukh Khan Presented Chevalier Sivaji Ganesan Award for Excellence in Indian Cinema’ »

Creative Writing in English Contributes Significantly to the Contemporary Sri Lankan Ethos

By Dr.Jayantha Dhanapala

(Text of the address by Dr. Jayantha Dhanapala, chairman of the panel of judges, at the awarding of the Gratiaen Prize 2013 in Colombo on May 4, for what is adjudged as the finest creative work in English for the year, by a resident Lankan)

The Gratiaen Prize was established twenty years ago and in these two decades, not even its most caustic critics can deny that it has leavened our cultural scene. Creative writing in English contributes significantly to the contemporary Sri Lankan ethos far out of proportion to the minority that engages in it as practitioners and those who appreciate it as readers.

The far-sighted companion H.A.I. Goonetilleke Prize for the best translation ensures the cross-fertilization of the writing talent in our country in all three languages. The debt of gratitude to Michael Ondaatje for establishing this prize, unlike our foreign debt, will be borne for decades to come with pleasure. Ondaatje identified one of his aims in making this generous endowment as being, “to celebrate and test and trust ourselves. To select and argue about the literature around us. To take it seriously, not just to see it as a jewel or a decoration.”

Continue reading ‘Creative Writing in English Contributes Significantly to the Contemporary Sri Lankan Ethos’ »

Sri Lankan Govt Needs to Create a Lot More Demons if it is to Continue Distracting People

by

Kath Noble

Just when sanity seemed to be prevailing over the Bodu Bala Sena, following the various vigils, rallies and protests that have been organised in the last month, the government found yet another imaginative way to agitate people – it had Azath Salley arrested. Apparently, the Police are so busy scouring the pages of limited circulation magazines in other countries for potentially disturbing statements by Sri Lankan Muslim politicians that they don’t have time to listen to the bilge that some Buddhist monks are repeating at full volume on a daily basis on the streets of Colombo.

Fortunately, Mahinda Rajapaksa was in a good mood on Friday and Salley was released.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lankan Govt Needs to Create a Lot More Demons if it is to Continue Distracting People’ »

Male Chauvinism Could be as Hard as Racism or National Oppression

By

Dr.Vickramabahu Karunaratne

Kindness and care are replaced with power and command. People look for somebody who knowingly or unknowingly takes the reins into his hands. In this scenario Anoma Janadare, the famous actress and a committed feminist launched the English version of her book Punarukthi, a few weeks ago. At this occasion, chaired by the veteran film director Sumithra Peiris, interesting speeches were made by radical film maker Manohan Nanayakkara and feminist teacher Kanzul Sirdous.

Anoma says this book was written to tell her own story; but as I understand it is the story of a female rebel challenging the male chauvinist world and it could take place anywhere in the world. Names and sites could change but the basic human conflicts and contradictions are the same. Hence it is relevant to all. As a male I am also an accused, as the challenge exposed in her book is so general. It covers both the main and the marginal. What a male may consider as marginal and unimportant, in this male-dominated world, is generally removed from the agenda; but it may not be so.

Continue reading ‘Male Chauvinism Could be as Hard as Racism or National Oppression’ »

Ambassador Amza Intervenes at Screening of “No fire Zone”, Pinpoints Serious Flaws and Questions Credibility of Film

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(Intervention by the Ambassador P.M. Amza, Head of Mission to the European Union, at the Screening of the “No Fire Zone: The Killing Fields of Sri Lanka” at the Premises of the European Parliament on 14 May 2013)

1. The Government of Sri Lanka strongly protests the use of the premises of the European Parliament for screening of this film today. My presence here is to reject the contents of this film and to make a brief statement. I would like to stress that my presence is in no way meant to give credence to either the event or the documentary.

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2. I am a native Tamil Speaker. I personally have seen to my own eyes how the conflict began, how the innocent people from South to North and from West to East in Sri Lanka suffered during the last 30 years. I also witnessed how the LTTE led Diaspora manipulated matters, in this part of the world taking advantage of some of the generous national policies. Hence, I can speak with confidence and authority on what is happening in my country, especially to those who make empty slogans while having not done anything for the Tamils in the country.

Ambassador P.M. Amza

Ambassador P.M. Amza

Much of what is shown are part of a sinister effort to make Government of Sri Lanka look guilty. For that, the truth has been ignored or suppressed.

Continue reading ‘Ambassador Amza Intervenes at Screening of “No fire Zone”, Pinpoints Serious Flaws and Questions Credibility of Film’ »

5000 Families in North are About to Begin Legal Battle for Their Land Rights in Vali North Pradeshiya Sabha

by

Meera Srinivasan

The country’s 30-year ethnic conflict may have ended four years ago, but for Gunaratnam Selvi — who remained displaced for considerable part of the war — the daily battle for food is far from over.

Resettled Tamils like Selvi and Gunaratnam (Jaffna) are unhappy in government-sponsored dwellings-pic courtesy of-The Hindu

Resettled Tamils like Selvi and Gunaratnam (Jaffna) are unhappy in government-sponsored dwellings-pic courtesy of-The Hindu

“I pawned my earrings a few days ago because we had no money for food,” said Ms. Selvi, who has been residing in a thatched-roof home in an Internally Displaced Persons (IDP) camp in Konappulam, Jaffna, since her family’s return in 2002.

Continue reading ‘5000 Families in North are About to Begin Legal Battle for Their Land Rights in Vali North Pradeshiya Sabha’ »

Sri Lanka Born Canadian Author Shyam Selvadurai Returns to Literary Scene with Epic Novel “The Hungry Ghosts”

Shyam Selvadurai

Shyam Selvadurai

By Ian McGillis

It hasn’t been a century since Shyam Selvadurai was a star presence on the Canadian literary stage, but it was in a previous century that most of us last saw him — in 1998, to be precise, when his second novel Cinnamon Gardens solidified the profile established by his 1994 debut Funny Boy, a book that won what is now called the Amazon.ca First Novel Award and quickly became a foundation text both as gay literature and South Asian Canadian fiction.

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Now he returns with The Hungry Ghosts (Doubleday Canada, 371 pages, $29.95), an epic novel that incorporates elements of the earlier two in its story of the half-Tamil, half-Sinhalese Shivan Rassiah, a young gay man torn between the difficult adjustment to Canadian life and the unresolved dramas he and his family left behind when they fled the civil war in Sri Lanka. It also adds a new maturity of tone, scope, language and character.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lanka Born Canadian Author Shyam Selvadurai Returns to Literary Scene with Epic Novel “The Hungry Ghosts”’ »

Life Begins Anew for Keppapulavu Displaced People Relocated At Seeniyamottai

Text and pix by Dushiyanthini Kanagasabapathipillai

A board placed roadside announced,: “Keppapulavu Model Village”.

Houses here are those who belonged to the final batch of returnees from Menik Farm, onetime the world’s largest facility for the Internally Displaced Pesrons (IDPs).

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Young returnees

In September last year, public and media were denied access to this site.
Continue reading ‘Life Begins Anew for Keppapulavu Displaced People Relocated At Seeniyamottai’ »

Former LTTE Chief Arms Procurer “KP” Now has Faith in a New “Weapon”-Education!

LOOKING BACK: Kumaran Pathmanathan, popularly known as KP, at a home he runs for war-affected children in Kilinochchi, Sri Lanka on Friday, May 10. Photo: Meera Srinivasan-The Hindu

LOOKING BACK: Kumaran Pathmanathan, popularly known as KP, at a home he runs for war-affected children in Kilinochchi, Sri Lanka on Friday, May 10. Photo: Meera Srinivasan-The Hindu

By

Meera Srinivasan

If there is one weapon that Kumaran Pathmanathan now says he has faith in, it is education. “If only I had taken education more seriously, I would have acquired the ability to think and analyse issues independently,” he says, leaning back on his chair, at his office in Senchcholai Children Care Home –Kilinochchi.

Continue reading ‘Former LTTE Chief Arms Procurer “KP” Now has Faith in a New “Weapon”-Education!’ »

“Project Leopard”: Cinnamon Wild Yala Throws a Lifeline to Sri Lanka’s Endemic Leopard-Panthera pardus kotiya


By

Marianne David

The lord of the Lankan jungle, the leopard is one of the ‘Big Five’ in Sri Lanka and the Yala National Park is undoubtedly the best place in the island for leopard sightings.

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The apex predator here, the Lankan leopard has been stealing the spotlight from other wildlife destinations around the world, bringing in celebrity visitors and boosting Sri Lanka’s profile as a nature lover’s paradise, especially since the end of the war. It’s no surprise then that Cinnamon Wild Yala, John Keells Hotels’ world class game lodge located on the periphery of the Yala National Park, has gone to great lengths to protect the leopard and its habitat.

Continue reading ‘“Project Leopard”: Cinnamon Wild Yala Throws a Lifeline to Sri Lanka’s Endemic Leopard-Panthera pardus kotiya’ »

Kaarainagar Fishermen Suffer Rapacious Exploitation at Hands of Tamil Nadu Poachers

Text and pix by Dushiyanthini Kanagasabapathipillai

The Indian Ocean like other seas is bountiful and its resources benefit many. But for the Sri Lankan and Indian fishermen, fishing in the deep blue waters of the Palk Strait, from time to time, it also amounts to fishing in troubled waters.

Freshly caught crab in Karainagar~pic by Dushiyanthini Kanagasabapathipillai~ via: twitter.com/dushiyanthini

Freshly caught crab in Karainagar~pic by Dushiyanthini Kanagasabapathipillai~ via: twitter.com/dushiyanthini

While both countries handle the issue of fishermen and their livelihood” through diplomatic channels, for the fisher folk, it is far more direct and person to person.
Continue reading ‘Kaarainagar Fishermen Suffer Rapacious Exploitation at Hands of Tamil Nadu Poachers’ »

Azath Salley Denies Apologizing to President for his Release and Asks “Why Should I”?

Former Colombo deputy mayor and founder leader of the National Unity front Azath Salley who was released after 8 days of “arrest” under the Prevention of Terrorism Act has denied that he had apologized to President Rajapaksa to secure his freedom as alleged in some sections of the state media. Salley in an interview to the “Ceylon Today”newspaper queried as to why he should apologize to the President and stated that all what he conveyed to the president was included in the affidavit he had submitted.

pic via: facebook.com/mazathssalley

pic via: facebook.com/mazathssalley

Excerpts of the interview and affidavit published in “Ceylon Today” are reproduced below-

Continue reading ‘Azath Salley Denies Apologizing to President for his Release and Asks “Why Should I”?’ »

Rajapaksas are Bad for the Minorities, Worse for the Sinhalese and Worst for the Sinhala Buddhists

By

Tisaranee Gunasekara

“….instead of looking for necessary and sufficient conditions of change we must train ourselves to be on the lookout for unusual historical developments, rare constellations of favourable events, narrow paths, partial advances that may conceivably be followed by others…. We must think of the possible rather than the probable”. ~ Albert Hirschman (New York Review of Books – 10.4.1986)

Had Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga removed Presidential term-limits, Mahinda Rajapaksa would not have become the President. If the Rajapaksa dynasty takes root, every non-Rajapaksa SLFP leader will be condemned to a life of servitude.

Celebrating Birthday of Namal Rajapaksa at Torrington Squrae-April 2013: pic via: facebook.com/namalrajapaksa

Celebrating Birthday of Namal Rajapaksa at Torrington Square-April 10, 2013: pic via: facebook.com/NamalSL

The prospect of such a life-sentence of servility, not just to Mahinda Rajapaksa but to a host of other, major and minor, Rajapaksas, would dismay most SLFP leaders. Their dread of Rajapaksa vengeance would prevent them from voicing their discontent, but beneath this public show of quiescence, discontent will bubble. Nurturing and deploying this silent resentment is a sine-qua-non for any successful project of resisting Rajapaksa rule.
Continue reading ‘Rajapaksas are Bad for the Minorities, Worse for the Sinhalese and Worst for the Sinhala Buddhists’ »

Feeling of defeat Among the Tamils of Sri Lanka is a moral and Psychological Defeat

Aatish Taseer~pic courtesy of: mid-day.com

Aatish Taseer~pic courtesy of: mid-day.com

By
AATISH TASEER

FOUR years ago this week, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam announced that their struggle for an independent homeland in northern Sri Lanka had “reached its bitter end.” The group had been fighting on behalf of the Tamil people for more than a quarter-century, and its defeat was absolute.

Today, great sections of Tamil country are still a scene of devastation. The houses are either destroyed or brand-new; the land is uncultivated and overgrown; there are forests of decapitated Palmyra palms, damaged by heavy shelling. And then there are the relics of war — graveyards of L.T.T.E. vehicles rotting in the open air; the remains of a ship, its superstructure blown to pieces and in whose rusting starboard a gaping hole gives on to blue sea.

When I first arrived there last March, I saw the loss in primarily military terms. But the feeling of defeat among the Tamils of Sri Lanka goes far deeper than the material defeat of the rebels. It is a moral and psychological defeat.

Continue reading ‘Feeling of defeat Among the Tamils of Sri Lanka is a moral and Psychological Defeat’ »

It is Wrong for Sri Lankans to Assume that Provincial Council Polls in North Could be Stepping Stone for Separation

by

N.Sathiya Moorthy

Now that the south Indian State of Tamil Nadu is caught up once again after a long gap in the web of local issues like caste-clashes, and continual concerns, including drought, Cauvery water dispute and the Centre’s alleged neglect on both and more, it may be time for Sri Lanka and Sri Lankans to study and understand the dynamics of domestic politics in neighbouring India, for them not to give undue weightage to the ‘Tamil Nadu factor’ in bilateral relations, any more.

President Mahinda Rajapaksa in Bodygaya~Feb 2013

President Mahinda Rajapaksa in Bodygaya~Feb 2013

This does not amount to condoning the attacks on Sri Lankans visiting the State or those transit-pilgrims to Bodhgaya and other north Indian centres of religious importance to the Sinhala-Buddhists from the island-nation.
Continue reading ‘It is Wrong for Sri Lankans to Assume that Provincial Council Polls in North Could be Stepping Stone for Separation’ »

Duminda Silva Re-appointed SLFP organizer for Kolonnawa: Hirunika Quits Politics

Hirunika Premachandra

Hirunika Premachandra

By Indika Sri Aravinda

Parliamentarian Duminda Silva has been reappointed as the organizer for the Sri Lanka Freedom Party in the Kolonnawa electorate.

Minister Basil Rajapaksa was appointed as the SLFP organizer in the Kolonnawa electorate after the Mulleriyawa shooting incident in October 2011 in which Silva was seriously injured.

However now that Silva has recovered and is out on bail he has been given back the SLFP Kolonnawa organizer’s post.

Continue reading ‘Duminda Silva Re-appointed SLFP organizer for Kolonnawa: Hirunika Quits Politics’ »

Sri Lanka Navy and Special Task Force Grab 1220 Acres of Forest Land in Panama Chasing Sinhala Villagers Away

By Nirmala Kannangara

The Sri Lanka Navy and the Special Task Force (STF) are accused of grabbing 1,220 acres of forestlands in Shasthrawela, Ragamwela, Ulpassawela, Horowkanda and Ella in Panama chasing away the villagers whose forefathers too had been occupying these lands even during the Uva-Wellassa rebellion

However though sanctions have been imposed by the Forest Department, Archaeological Department, Coast Conservation Department and Central Environmental Authority on carrying out any development work on forestlands, the Sri Lanka Navy claims that such formalities are totally discarded when the Defence Ministry approves their projects.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lanka Navy and Special Task Force Grab 1220 Acres of Forest Land in Panama Chasing Sinhala Villagers Away’ »

Arrest of Azath Salley Shows Emergency Regulations have been Replaced by the Prevention of Terrorism Act

By

Kishali Pinto Jayawardene

So is humiliating or being antagonistic towards the Government the latest excuse that will be used to invoke the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA, 1979) against critics?

This question is unfortunately self-explanatory as we entered into the theatre of profound absurdity last week with the PTA detention order arresting dissenting Muslim politician Azath Salley inter alia stating that he had engaged in ‘humiliation of the Government’ and proclaimed ‘antipathetic statements against the Government which lead to public disturbance.’

Continue reading ‘Arrest of Azath Salley Shows Emergency Regulations have been Replaced by the Prevention of Terrorism Act’ »

Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake Harassed and Humiliated by the Bribery Commission -Bar Association of Sri Lanka

Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake

Dr. Shirani Bandaranayake

The Executive Committee of the Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) Friday unanimously adopted a resolution stating that former Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake had been “subjected to absolutely unnecessary harassment and humiliation” at the office of the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery and corruption.
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Decision to Repeal Powers of the Provincial Council not Finalised yet -Basil Rajapaksa


By Franklin R. Satyapalan

National Organizer of the SLFP, Minister Basil Rajapaksa said yesterday that the government has still not reached finality on the longstanding proposition to repeal certain sections of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution considered obstacles to government’s development initiative.

He said the effort envisaged the scrapping of land and police powers, an issue which has gathered momentum with the impending Northern PC polls.

Rajapaksa was of the opinion that whatever the UPFA government’s final decision on the matter was, it would be the moral obligation and responsibility of all constituent political parties to abide by the President’s decision to conduct the Northern PC polls in September this year.

Continue reading ‘Decision to Repeal Powers of the Provincial Council not Finalised yet -Basil Rajapaksa’ »

The Arrest, Release and Future of Azath Salley

by

C.A.Chandraprema

The main political drama over the past several days was the detention of Azath Salley and the hunger strike he had launched while in detention. During the few days that he was in CID custody Salley was being transported from the CID headquarters to hospital and back in the full glare of media attention. He was visited in the hospital by the Chairman of the Human Rights Council as well.

The present writer has known Salley from the time he was in the Sri Lanka Mahajana Party and later the Bahujana Nidahas Peramuna led by Chandrika Kumaratunga. In 1994, he joined the UNP with Dr Rajitha Senaratne. He was able to make some headway in the UNP even becoming the UNP Deputy Mayor in Colombo.

Salley’s arrest came as a surprise to those who knew him, including this writer. Salley is an excitable person, with a tendency to talk out of turn and a great love for publicity. The two are not connected. The talking out of turn comes naturally to him – it’s not that he talks out of turn deliberately in order to gain publicity – he does so without thinking.

Continue reading ‘The Arrest, Release and Future of Azath Salley’ »

Reading The Sri Lankan Republic at 40 (edited by Asanga Welikala)

By Kalana Senaratne

Reading a tome on constitutional history, theory and practice – like Asanga Welikala’s edited collection titled The Sri Lankan Republic at 40 – can be a daunting task. For a start, such books have too much to say about constitutions. The more you read about constitutional documents, the more they begin to appear God-like. For a constitutional-skeptic, this is a horrible prospect. Also, the broader discipline of constitutional law often comes across as an esoteric one. In examining the Table of Contents, one senses that much of what is contained in Asanga’s collection (which runs into two large volumes) is for the specialist. With 1166 pages divided into four parts – namely ‘constitutional history’, ‘constitutional theory’, ‘constitutional practice’ and ‘interviews and recollections’ – one feels (and the feeling comes slowly) that it might just not get read during this life-time.

Therefore, one is tempted to skip the academic and expert-analysis, and get to the ‘real’ and ‘interesting’ stuff: interviews and recollections, words from the heart (as they say). But on further inspection, skipping becomes difficult, unnecessary: the chapters on history and theory appear like reminiscences and recollections of the respective authors, while those who were interviewed seem to have engaged in historical and theoretical exegesis. Thankfully, the collection becomes interesting; and reading it, not too bad for your health after all.

Continue reading ‘Reading The Sri Lankan Republic at 40 (edited by Asanga Welikala)’ »

“We wish Azath Salley will soon Join the Struggle at the Point where he left”-NSSP

(Text of Statement Issued on behalf of the Nava Sama Samaja party by Dr. Vickramabahu Karunaratne)

Meeting in April 2013~pic via: facebook.com/mazathsalley

Meeting in April 2013~pic via: facebook.com/mazathsalley

Azath Sally was arrested under the draconian Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) and he has been now released due to the campaign for his release by national and international democratic forces.
Continue reading ‘“We wish Azath Salley will soon Join the Struggle at the Point where he left”-NSSP’ »

New “Jihadi” Magazine in English Called “Azan” Focussing on Muslims in south Asia Launched on the Web

by

B. Raman

SITE, an Internet monitoring group, has drawn attention to a new web-based jihadi magazine in English called Azan.

According to SITE, the magazine is believed to have been started by jihadis in Afghanistan and Pakistan and its first web issue appeared on May 5, 2013.

Continue reading ‘New “Jihadi” Magazine in English Called “Azan” Focussing on Muslims in south Asia Launched on the Web’ »

Canada May be Alone Among Commonwealth Leaders in Adopting a Decision to Boycott CHOGM Summit in Sri Lanka

By

Natalie Brender

It’s looking likely that Prime Minister Harper will boycott the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting to be held in Sri Lanka this November, due to that country’s deteriorating human rights and governance record. If so, Canada may be alone among the Commonwealth leaders in adopting a boycott. Other countries seem to be endorsing a policy of engagement and waiting for Sri Lanka to make good on its promises of democratic reform.

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Prime Minister Stephen Harper Raising a glass in honour of French PM Jean-Marc Ayrault-Mar 13, 2013-pic via: pm.gc.ca

Why would Canada stick its neck out on this issue? The answer to that question depends on whether you’re looking primarily at the particulars of the Sri Lankan case. If so, you’ll notice that despite many promises to enact democratic reforms, the government of Sri Lanka is continuing to persecute its minority Tamil population, and is becoming increasingly authoritarian. In January it removed the Chief Justice of its Supreme Court from power after she delivered a judgment against the government’s efforts to expand its control over the state.

Continue reading ‘Canada May be Alone Among Commonwealth Leaders in Adopting a Decision to Boycott CHOGM Summit in Sri Lanka’ »

President Rajapaksa Orders release of Azath Salley Before Departing on Official Visit to Uganda

By Shamindra Ferdinando and Lal Gunasekera

President Mahinda Rajapaksa ordered the immediate release of leader of the Muslim-Tamil National Alliance (MTNA), Azath Salley, after the latter denied a report in India’s Junior Vikatan magazine that he had asked the Muslims to take up arms against the Sri Lankan state. The directive was given before President Rajapaksa left on an official visit to Uganda.

Salley was detained by the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) on suspicion of having committed offences under the Penal code and the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA). Under the PTA he was to be detained for three months.

Continue reading ‘President Rajapaksa Orders release of Azath Salley Before Departing on Official Visit to Uganda’ »

President Rajapaksa Revokes Detention Order on Azath Salley After He Submits Affidavit Stating he Had Nothing to do With Terrorism

By Aisha Nazim

Former Deputy Mayor of the Colombo Municipal Council (CMC), Azath Salley, was released yesterday afternoon, ending his eight-day detention under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA).

President Mahinda Rajapaksa revoked the controversial detention order under which the Muslim politician was held after Salley submitted an affidavit to the President in which he denied having supported or advocated any group to take up arms against the country.

Continue reading ‘President Rajapaksa Revokes Detention Order on Azath Salley After He Submits Affidavit Stating he Had Nothing to do With Terrorism’ »

Arrest and Harassment of Azath Salley is Indicative of the Climate of Fear Critics of Govt Must Live Under

by

Dr.Vickramabahu Karunaratne

From Kotagala struggle now we have entered the battle to free Azath Sally. We got together as the Movement for Unity with Power Sharing some time back. Team consisted of Mano, Sumanthiran, Azath, Siri and I. We met regularly to discuss the implementation of the LLRC and relevant subjects. Press conferences, statements, meetings and such actions to increase awareness on power sharing were our activities.

In addition all of us worked with the UNP in the Protest of the Opposition. Our specific campaign for sharing of power has angered many chauvinist elements in the society. We could see this growth in attacks made against us in websites and e mails.
Continue reading ‘Arrest and Harassment of Azath Salley is Indicative of the Climate of Fear Critics of Govt Must Live Under’ »

Azath Salley,TNA Parliamentarian and a Tamil Professor Have Discussed Armed Struggle in Sri Lanka With Tamil Nadu Group reveals Gotabhaya Rajapaksa

By

Premalal Wijeratne

In a damning revelation, powerful Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa has stated Muslim politician Azath Salley was arrested as he conspired to mobilize Sri Lankan Muslims for an armed struggle along with a Tamil group in Tamil Nadu.

Speaking to our sister paper, Rajapaksa said intelligence agencies have uncovered evidence against Salley, who had been held in detention under a controversial detention order obtained by the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) under the Prevention of Terrorism Act.

Continue reading ‘Azath Salley,TNA Parliamentarian and a Tamil Professor Have Discussed Armed Struggle in Sri Lanka With Tamil Nadu Group reveals Gotabhaya Rajapaksa’ »

Why Should Duminda Silva meet the President and Get His Blessings? asks Hirunika Premachandra!

By Hasitha Kuruppu and Anuradha Samuel

Hirunika Premachandra, the daughter of slain politician, Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra, says if Duminda Silva can perform miracles, there is no God. “All I can say is, Duminda is not a good man, but a trickster. My father’s murder was well-planned. I know Duminda’s actual physical and mental status,” she alleges in an interview.

Following are excerpts:

Continue reading ‘Why Should Duminda Silva meet the President and Get His Blessings? asks Hirunika Premachandra!’ »

The Middle Path of Reconciliation seems quite Distant in Sri Lanka to any Objective Observer

Channel 4 Documentary “NO FIRE ZONE”:Screening and Discussion at Frontline Club

by

Dushy Ranetunge

The third instalment of Chanel 4’s documentary, titled NO FIRE ZONE, the killing fields of Sri Lanka is being preview screened at various locations in London. It is yet to be scheduled to be broadcast by Ch4 itself.

It was screened at the Frontline club in London a few weeks ago and on Tuesday at the LSE (London School of Economics and Political Science).

At the LSE, it was presented by a panel consisting of award winning journalist Callum Macrae (NoFireZone Director),
Shivani Jegarajah (a LSE trained barrister from Renaissance Chambers) and
Janani Jananayagam (Independent politician who secured over 50,000 votes at the European Elections and founding Director of Tamils Against Genocide). It was a free event and held in Tower 1 at the LSE.

It was chaired by
Dr. Devika Hovell, from the LSE Department of Law. Her areas of expertise are listed as international courts, international humanitarian law, United Nations, public law, use of force, international law, public international law, domestic law, international tribunals.

Continue reading ‘The Middle Path of Reconciliation seems quite Distant in Sri Lanka to any Objective Observer’ »

Militarization as a way of life: an ‘Orwellian’ note from Kilinochchi

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By The Social Architects

Even though the protracted internal armed conflict has ended, community members have been unable to return to their day-to-day lives. Under the administration of Mahinda Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka’s militarization has continued unabated.

The Sri Lanka Army (SLA) has established numerous checkpoints and camps near peoples’ homes. Military personnel frequently patrol these areas – day and night. Sadly, the military’s intrusion into practically all aspects of civilian affairs remains a way of life in the conflict-affected North and East.
Continue reading ‘Militarization as a way of life: an ‘Orwellian’ note from Kilinochchi’ »

Violation of Fundamental Rights Application by Azath Salley to be Heard by Supreme Court on Friday May 10th 2013

ASFR050913

By Chitra Weerarathne

The Supreme Court yesterday fixed for support Friday, May 10, 2013, the fundamental rights violation application filed by the former Deputy Mayor of Colombo Azarth Salley.

The petition has alleged illegal detention by the CID since May 2, 2013. The issue was in respect of an interview said to have been given by Salley to a Tamil Nadu based magazine. Salley says the article is incorrect and he has asked for a correction but not received a copy of that correction.
Continue reading ‘Violation of Fundamental Rights Application by Azath Salley to be Heard by Supreme Court on Friday May 10th 2013’ »

“Mahinda Chintana” Is In Danger of Being Overshadowed or Overtaken by “Gota Chintana” – Dayan Jayatilleka

Dr.Dayan Jayatilleka Interviewed by Chamitha Kuruppu

“The ‘Mahinda Chinthana’ is in danger; it is increasingly overshadowed by the ‘Gota Chinthana,’” stresses Sri Lankan Diplomat and Political Scientist Dr. Dayan Jayatilleka.He warns that President Rajapaksa has devolved far too much of his power to those close to him. “I am not sure really whose hand is consistently on the tiller.

At  the Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation-pic: defense.lk

At the Conference of Bay of Bengal Initiative for Multi-Sectoral Technical and Economic Cooperation-May, 2013-pic: defence.lk

I am not sure who is really driving policy.”Dr. Jayatilleka points out that the country is experiencing an intra-regime change.“The centre of gravity is shifting from the pragmatic populism of Mahinda Rajapaksa to a harder, harsher neo-conservatism, which is more visibly represented by Gotabaya Rajapaksa.”

Following are excerpts from the interview:

Continue reading ‘“Mahinda Chintana” Is In Danger of Being Overshadowed or Overtaken by “Gota Chintana” – Dayan Jayatilleka’ »

THE NEED TO REPEAL AND REPLACE THE PREVENTION OF TERRORISM ACT (PTA) -CENTRE FOR POLICY ALTERNATIVES

(Text of a Statement Issued by the Centre for Policy Alternatives)

9th May 2013, Colombo, Sri Lanka: With the recent arrest and detention of opposition politician Azath Salley, Sri Lanka’s Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) has once again come under critical scrutiny. The Centre for Policy Alternatives (CPA) and other civil society groups have condemned the use of the PTA to stifle dissent and reiterate this call yet again, urging for its repeal and replacement as set out below.

Continue reading ‘THE NEED TO REPEAL AND REPLACE THE PREVENTION OF TERRORISM ACT (PTA) -CENTRE FOR POLICY ALTERNATIVES’ »

From Being Indifferent to Suffering of Tamils We Have Become Indifferent to Suffering of Our Fellow Sinhala Buddhists

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By

Tisaranee Gunasekara

“Everything is going to end in violence….and who knows what limits of madness will be reached?”
Georg Forster (Works XVII)

A Presidential Offspring hammers a referee, in full view of hundreds of spectators.

An Appeal Court Judge has a temper tantrum in an international airport and throws a water bottle at another Judge.

Fellow referees do nothing either to protect their colleague during the incident or to protest against it afterwards.

The Appeal Court judges have reportedly complained to the President, but nothing is likely to come out of it. The alleged tantrum-cum-bottle-thrower had been the District Judge of Tangalle from 1987-1990 and was appointed to the Appeal Court by none other than President Rajapaksa, in violation of the 17th Amendment .

Continue reading ‘From Being Indifferent to Suffering of Tamils We Have Become Indifferent to Suffering of Our Fellow Sinhala Buddhists’ »