Will 2016 See the End of our History as a Nation with the Capability and Strength to Determine its Own Destiny?

By
Dayan Jayatilleka


“Daesh [ISIS] is a two faced monster”
French Defence Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian

“Sri Lanka to launch a special court to probe war crimes”, screamed an AFP story. Lead stories of the DailyFT and The Island of Dec. 1st quoted ex-President Kumaratunga as saying the Special Courts would start in January, armed with the option of foreign technical and forensic expertise.“Sri Lanka will launch a special war crimes court early next year to investigate major atrocities during the bloody finale to its decades-long ethnic war, a top official said Tuesday.

Former President Chandrika Kumaratunga, who heads the office of national unity and reconciliation, said…tens of thousands of victims of the Tamil separatist conflict would not accept reconciliation unless war criminals are brought to justice. “…The special court should start its work by the end of this month or by early January,” she said. “They (the court) will not be chasing behind every soldier, but the main line of command will be looked at,” she said…Kumaratunga said she personally believed that involving independent foreign judges was preferable as suggested in a UN Human Rights Council resolution adopted in October.” (AFP, Dec 3, 2015)

Historical realism is imperative. If there were excesses in the last stages of a thirty years war, it is in a manner of speaking, karma, as these most likely resulted from pent-up vengeful blood lust for which the Tigers’ evil deeds over decades were responsible. Command responsibility for any war crimes resides with Prabhakaran who started the war against a democracy, unilaterally returned to war after peace talks with successive elected governments including India’s, and steeped his army in atrocities (e.g. Arantalawa) and terrorism (including the use of suicide bombers disguised as surrendees) such that an element of the Sri Lankan soldiery regarded any member of Prabhakaran’s marauding horde with long-accumulated retaliatory hatred and sought to extirpate them in preventive self-defence.

Continue reading ‘Will 2016 See the End of our History as a Nation with the Capability and Strength to Determine its Own Destiny?’ »

Indian National Security Adviser Doval Tells Sri Lankan President and Prime Minister that New Delhi is Against Colombo Buying 10 “JF 17” Aircraft from Pakistan

By

Upul Joseph Fernando

The United National Party (UNP) Government that was installed in office in 2001 after toppling the Chandrika Kumaratunga Government was blessed by the Bharathiya Janatha Party (BJP) of India. It’s no secret how the UNP was brought to power. Similarly, it’s an open secret that Chandrika grabbed three ministries of the UNP Government to topple Ranil’s Government a few years later with the help of the Office of the Indian High Commissioner located in Colombo.

The base of that blessing was to hand over the reconstruction contract of the Palaly Air Base to India as requested by the Indian High Commission in Colombo. It is clearly embodied in the book ‘My Belly is White’ authored by then Defence Secretary Austin Fernando. The following passage clearly defines the backdrop to that position.

I kept the file with this order and before anything positive could happen with MilindaMoragoda’s intervention or not, Chandrika Kumaratunga grabbed the MOD on constitutional grounds and I was unemployed with immediate effect from 3rd November 2003. I do not say for a moment that this Indian Intervention had any influence on the grabbing of the MOD. That ended the Palaly Air Base rehabilitation with Indian assistance under RanilWickremesinghe Government.

Continue reading ‘Indian National Security Adviser Doval Tells Sri Lankan President and Prime Minister that New Delhi is Against Colombo Buying 10 “JF 17” Aircraft from Pakistan’ »

Diplomatic Triumph for Govt as Saudi Arabia Agrees to Re-open and Review case in Which a Sri Lankan Woman Was Sentenced to Death by Stoning

By P.K.Balachandran

In a major diplomatic triumph, the government of Sri Lanka has succeeded in persuading Saudi Arabia to reopen the case in which a 45 year old Lankan mother of three was to be “stoned to death” for adultery.
The Lankan Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs, Dr.Harsha de Silva, told parliament here on Tuesday, that the Saudi government has agreed to give the lady in question a fresh trial in what may well be a benchmark case.

“This can be considered a big victory. We will provide her with legal assistance,” Dr.de Silva said.
The Maithripala Sirisena-Ranil Wickremesinghe government has thus succeeded where the previous regime of Mahinda Rajapaksa had failed. In 2013, the Rajapaksa government was not able to save the life of 24 year old Rizana Nafeek sentenced to be beheaded for the alleged murder of an infant in the household where she was working as a maid.

Even Rajapaksa’s appeal to the Saudi King and the journey of several Muslim leaders to Saudi Arabia to persuade the powers-that-be there failed to have an impact.

Continue reading ‘Diplomatic Triumph for Govt as Saudi Arabia Agrees to Re-open and Review case in Which a Sri Lankan Woman Was Sentenced to Death by Stoning’ »

Are “War Heroes” Entitled to Immunity From the Consequences of Any Crime That They May Commit?

By Dr. Devanesan Nesiah

We daily read and often hear of “war heroes”, and of our duty from protect them from any charges of misconduct. This is one of the few issues on which there is virtual consensus among Sinhalese political leaders. Even non-Sinhalese political leaders seem to be reluctant to directly challenge this position. However, there is much debate on related issues such as terrorism, war crimes, human rights violation and transitional justice.

There are broad internationally accepted definitions of these terms, subject to much dispute on some of the finer points. But, I have not come across any clear definition of the term “war heroes”. In common usage, this term seems to cover everyone who fought on the winning side of the protracted war against the LTTE possibly excluding those who deserted or “turned traitor” before the war ended. Are “war heroes”, so defined, entitled to or deserving of immunity from charges and investigations of misconduct and, if the charges are proved, from punishment for such misconduct? Surely, that cannot be.

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Secret Survey Conducted by French Company Reveals 68% Sinhalese are for Devolution Says Chandrika Kumaratunga

by Zacki Jabbar

Former President and current Chairperson of the Office For National Unity and Reconciliation, Chandrika Kumaratunga says that a survey carried out by her has revealed that 68 percent of the Sinhalese are for a political solution to the ethnic issue.

Kumaratunga revealed, in Colombo last week, that except two others in her office, no one else knew that she had engaged the services of a French Company to ascertain the views of Sri Lankans on her government’s proposals to address the ethnic issue.

Continue reading ‘Secret Survey Conducted by French Company Reveals 68% Sinhalese are for Devolution Says Chandrika Kumaratunga’ »

Death Penalty is not in Consonance with the Spirit of Islam and is Contrary to Present day Notions of Justice


By

Reeza Hameed

Many Muslims I have spoken to are opposed to the death sentence imposed on the unnamed Sri Lankan housemaid in Saudi Arabia.

The death penalty, in my view, is not in consonance with the spirit of Islam. According to a Hadith in the compilation of Prophetic traditions known as the Mishkat al-Masabih, an adulteress was forgiven for quenching the thirst of a dog. The dog held out his tongue from thirst when she passed by a well. The woman drew off water using her boot, which she tied to the end of her garment, and gave the water she drew for him to drink. We are told that she was forgiven for that act of kindness.

Islam values the sanctity of life. Killing under the guise of punishment denigrates this cardinal principle. Islam does not condone either stoning to death or any other form of killing masquerading as punishment. The imposition of the death penalty in the name of Islam gives the religion of Islam a bad image. Islam was revealed to deliver mankind from ignorance and inhumane practises and as a mercy to mankind.

Compassion is an essential part of the message of the Quran. In the very first chapter of the Quran, God is described as the Compassionate and the Merciful. The Quran reminds mankind of creation in all its forms and declares it as an act of His mercy.

Continue reading ‘Death Penalty is not in Consonance with the Spirit of Islam and is Contrary to Present day Notions of Justice’ »

Unprecedented Rains and Chennai Floods: Has it Anything to do with Climate Change?

by

N Sathiya Moorthy

For a megapolis, Chennai is possibly among the few cities the world over to have evolved on its own and otherwise, without a substantive source of water. With the historicity of the city’s Madras/Chennai twin-names from less than 400 years borrowing from only folklore, the accidental evolution of ‘Madras’ factory on the one hand and Madras Presidency on the other, were both historic accidents.

With the result, when the city and suburbs, lying in a rain-shadow region, to say, gets flooded with an occasional heavy rains, explanations and excuses are sought from elsewhere, without anyone wanting to address the core issues that are at best political, not profitable.

It may thus be timely and fashionable to blame this year’s unprecedented rains and floods in Chennai to ‘climate change’, coinciding as it does with the Paris climate conference. Historically again, the north-east monsoon, that quenches the city’s thirst and also those of the outlying northern districts of Tamil Nadu, is possibly more irregular than the south-west monsoon, which covers much of the rest of the nation.

Worse still, this time, the Bay depressions that feed Chennai’s rain clouds, did not develop into a cyclonic storm, and with that take away death and destruction even more to Andhra Pradesh or Orissa, West Bengal or Bangladesh, as used to be the case mostly. Even the first course that hit coastal Cuddalore district of Tamil Nadu and the Union Territory of Puducherry was not a cyclonic storm in the traditional sense of the term, as the locals had experienced in the past – and may do so in the future, as well.

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GL Peiris Expresses Serious Concern Over Granting of Amnesty to LTTE Cadres Convicted for Terrorist Offences

By Shamindra Ferdinando

Former External Affairs Minister Prof. G. L. Peiris has expressed serious concern over the government considering a general amnesty for LTTE cadres in custody, particularly those who had been convicted on terrorism charges.

Prof. Peiris said that the government stand should be examined against the backdrop of a 17-year-old boy taking his own life, demanding the immediate release of LTTE cadres from custody.

The former law professor said he considered that suicide part of a sophisticated plan to influence the decision making process.

Prof. Peiris was addressing a public gathering at Anuradhapura on Sunday (Dec 6). He referred to Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera’s recent statement in Parliament that the government would explore possibility of offering a general amnesty to those who had been accused, charged and convicted under PTA or other emergency laws. Minister Samaraweera was responding to Jaffna District EPDP MP Douglas Devananda.

Continue reading ‘GL Peiris Expresses Serious Concern Over Granting of Amnesty to LTTE Cadres Convicted for Terrorist Offences’ »

Transfer of Rs 5 Million from SEC to Namal Rajapaksa headed NGO: Nalaka Godahewa,Dhammika Perera and Ronnie Ibrahim Remanded till Dec 14


By Madura Ranwala

The Fort Magistrate yesterday remanded till Dec. 14 Dr. Nalaka Godahewa, former chairman of Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) over alleged transfer of Rs. 5 mn to a sports promoting enterprise affiliated with Tharunyata Hetak NGO during the previous administration. The alleged transaction took place in 2013.

The NGO headed by UPFA MP Namal Rajapaksa had utilised the money to pay internationally known hip hop artistes who performed at the Carlton Super Sevens Rugby tournament organized by his organisation. The sports promoting enterprise had transferred the money to the US-based group at the behest of Tharunyata Hetak.

Continue reading ‘Transfer of Rs 5 Million from SEC to Namal Rajapaksa headed NGO: Nalaka Godahewa,Dhammika Perera and Ronnie Ibrahim Remanded till Dec 14’ »

Govt must not Reduce Security of Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa on any Grounds – The Island

(Text of Editorial Appearing in “The Island” of December 8th 2015 Under the heading “MR’s security”)

Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa is faced with serious threats due to the curtailment of his security and the release of hardcore Tigers, his office has said. The government has sought to deny this claim.

The despicable practice of governments reducing their opponents’ security in a bid to tame the latter is not of recent origin. The Rajapaksa government stripped the war winning Army Commander Gen. Sarath Fonseka of special security after he had fallen from grace and challenged the then President Rajapaksa politically. Today, the boot is on the other foot!

The present government obtained a popular mandate, promising to be different from its predecessor. Now, it has to make good that pledge and ensure that all political and military leaders responsible for the country’s successful war on terror are protected without leaving any room for allegations that it is using security as a tool to control and harass some of them.

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When Ex- Army Chief Sarath Fonseka said Sri Lanka Belongs to the Sinhalese but Minorities can live Without Demanding Undue Things!

By

Bandula Jayasekara

One morning the then Secretary to the President Lalith Weeratunga called and asked me, “What have you done? President, Gotabahya and Sarath Fonseka are very angry. What has the journalist you helped visit Sri Lanka written. He has written what General Fonseka didn’t say?” I requested Lalith to calm down and explained to him that Stewart Bell was a respected Canadian journalist from the National Post who always wrote against terror and was considered a balanced journalist and that is why I wanted him to have easy access in Sri Lanka. Lalith said: “It has become a big issue here and its making things difficult for us. The opposition, the international community and , Tamil Nadu are making an issue out of it after the publication.”

I immediately called Stewart, who had written a series based on his visit to Sri Lanka to the National Post. Several articles appeared when he was in Sri Lanka. I respected Stewart as a balanced and very responsible journalist. I knew he wouldn’t get anything out of context. This is an excerpt of the interview General Sarath Fonseka had given to Stewart and published in The National Post on 25 September 2008.

Continue reading ‘When Ex- Army Chief Sarath Fonseka said Sri Lanka Belongs to the Sinhalese but Minorities can live Without Demanding Undue Things!’ »

Sri Lanka Army Won the War as They Refrained From Eating Beef While Prabhakaran and the LTTE Perished Because They Ate Beef – Sivaloganathan Kurukkal

By Ru Kariyawasam

Kurukkal P. Sivaloganathan, Chairman of the Association of Hindu Priests of Jaffna, says that the Sri Lanka Army was blessed by gods and won the war as soldiers refrained from eating beef while the members of their counterpart, the LTTE, ate beef and perished.

Hindus venerate the cow and despise the practice of consuming beef. Kurukkal Sivaloganathan says that vegetarian Hindus were upset when LTTE members were found eating beef.

“Prabhakaran was a Hindu. But, he did not follow the path of Dharma. His father was one of the chief laymen of Ishwara Kovil of Valvettithurai. Prabhakaran did not practice his religion. But, some newspapers tried to portray him as a pious Hindu.

“Hindus are vegetarians. Some Hindus eat meat, but refrain from eating beef. Prabhakaran’s army ate beef, ignoring our pleas against it.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lanka Army Won the War as They Refrained From Eating Beef While Prabhakaran and the LTTE Perished Because They Ate Beef – Sivaloganathan Kurukkal’ »

4 Muslim MP’s Including Minister Bathiyudeen Shout at Sumanthiran and Prevent MP From Speaking on Shariah Law in Parliament

By By P.K.Balachandran

Four Muslim Members of Parliament, including a cabinet Minister, shouted down Tamil National Alliance (TNA) MP M.A.Sumanthiran, when he mentioned the term “Shariah” while speaking in parliament on Friday on a Saudi Arabian court’s order to “stone to death” a Lankan women for committing adultery.

The 43 year old Lankan woman, a mother of three, was to be stoned to death in Riyadh on Friday but the sentence was not carried out because the lady had appealed against the order with the assistance of the Lankan government.

Sumanthiran, also a leading Supreme Court lawyer, said that laws regarding the mode of punishment in various countries should be looked at afresh, from the human rights angle. He mentioned stoning in Saudi Arabia, flogging in Singapore and the use of the electric chair in some states in the USA as examples of practices which need to be reviewed. He further said that countries cannot prevent people from across the world questioning laws which violate human rights and cannot use religion to stall intervention.

He pointed out there has been international intervention in Sri Lanka to restore human rights in the island and Lanka has accepted it.

Continue reading ‘4 Muslim MP’s Including Minister Bathiyudeen Shout at Sumanthiran and Prevent MP From Speaking on Shariah Law in Parliament’ »

Vocal Protests to Sumanthiran’s Remarks on Shariah Law Could be Disturbing Signs of Sympathies with a Medieval Ideology

By

Ranga Jayasuriya

A Saudi Shariah court has sentenced one of our women there to death by stoning. Her offence was indulging in a sexual liaison out of wedlock with a fellow Sri Lankan. (The man has also been sentenced to 100 lashes)In general, sex is a personal matter of adult individuals, in which the State has no say. However, the Saudis have a penchant for capital punishment for many otherwise mundane affairs, including renouncing Islam and blogging dissent etc.

Last week, Riyadh carried out the beheading of 50 inmates convicted by their courts on various offences — not to be outdone by their ideological bedfellows, the slave- taking and blood-soaking terrorists of the Islamic State.

Last week, Opposition MP M.A. Sumanthiran was shouted down in Parliament by some Muslim MPs when he questioned legal groundings on stoning to death under the Shari ah law. That Mr. Sumanthiran had the courage to speak up what the vast majority of Sri Lankans ponder in silently is in stark contrast to the silence maintained by the otherwise rubble-rousing Rajapaksa coterie in Parliament. Vocal protests inside the House to Sumanthiran’s remarks could well be disturbing signs of not so covert sympathies with a medieval ideology.

Continue reading ‘Vocal Protests to Sumanthiran’s Remarks on Shariah Law Could be Disturbing Signs of Sympathies with a Medieval Ideology’ »

Can Our Citizens be Faulted if they Feel Deceived and Betrayed by the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe Govt?

by Dr A.C.Visvalingam

On 27 September 2015, the SUNDAY ISLAND published an article titled “THE FIRST 260 DAYS OF THE CURRENT GOVERNMENT” sent by the Citizens’ Movement for Good Governance (CIMOGG) regarding what were then seen as the pluses and the minuses of the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe government during its first 260 days in power.

At that point of time, we were inclined to give greater emphasis to the pluses than to the minuses on the presumption that public approbation would encourage the government to aim for more pluses in the future. Very disappointingly, the reality has proved to be otherwise.

Those with whom we have exchanged views over the past 65 days on S-W’s record have expressed sentiments such as the following:

“politicians cannot be expected to change their spots however sweetly they may talk”, “power has gone to this lot’s heads five times as fast as in the case of their predecessors”, “the election platform promise to abolish nepotism was a premeditated and callous lie”, “Sirisena may have been sincere at the beginning about not wanting a second period as Executive President, but it is becoming clearer by the day that he yearns to win the next Parliamentary elections under a suitably-worded new Constitution and become Prime Minister with virtually the same powers”, “in order to further his ambitions, Sirisena has decided to place the interests of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party ahead of Sri Lanka’s”, “the whole exercise leading up to the change of regime has been a monumental confidence trick” etc.

As we are still in no man’s land about the 20th Amendment, the Right to Information Act, the Audit Act and other promised legislation, there was no basis on which we could have ventured to disagree with these negative assessments.

Continue reading ‘Can Our Citizens be Faulted if they Feel Deceived and Betrayed by the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe Govt?’ »

Resistance Encountered by First Budget of New Govt Shows Signs of Exacerbating Instead of Abating.

By

C.A.Chandraprema

The first budget of the new government has run into stiff opposition from trade unions, farmers’ organisations and the like – a situation that was hardly unexpected given the provisions in the budget.

This is probably the first time in living memory that a budget has encountered such resistance and all the signs are that this will exacerbate in the coming days and weeks instead of abating. One may say that never has the first fully- fledged budget of a new government come in for flak like this.

Usually, the first two or three years of a government, is a honeymoon period when the public more or less goes along with the government in power. This time however things are working out differently. One may say that the government has brought this situation upon itself by creating impossible expectations among the general public.

In the past one year, the whole country regressed to the 1960s and 70s, when the government was supposed to give and the people were supposed to receive. It was the ethic of the Rodiya community which in feudal Sri Lanka was consigned by custom to begging. The Rodiya was obliged to beg and the non-Rodiyas were obliged to give when importuned and it was believed that both the giver and the receiver were exalted by the transaction.

This welfare dependency was more pronounced among the Sinhalese than either the Tamils or Muslims. It is J.R.Jayewardene who has to take the credit for rescuing the Sinhalese from the Rodiya mentality by boldly doing away with welfare measures such as the rice ration.

Continue reading ‘Resistance Encountered by First Budget of New Govt Shows Signs of Exacerbating Instead of Abating.’ »

Notion That All Wrongs Were Limited To The Rajapaksa Period Is In Part Dangerous And In Part Foolish

By

Kishali Pinto Jayawardene

In a major ironical twist unfolding before our eyes, former President Chandrika Kumaratunga has seen fit to wax eloquent on the importance of judicial integrity this week. Addressing a press conference, she is reported to have said that, over the last decade, the Sri Lankan public in general and she in particular, had lost ‘confidence in the judiciary.’ It was observed by her that ‘the Lokka’ had to give just one call to obtain whatever judicial orders that he wished.

Assessing the judiciary under Kumaratunga

These are richly farcical sentiments coming from a President under whose imperial command the Supreme Court of Sri Lanka commenced its ignominious descent into the worst post-independence controversies in the history of that once august institution.

The International Bar Association (IBA) put this very well in its first fact-finding mission to the country under the Kumaratunga Presidency. Concern was expressed regarding the undermining of the separation of powers between the executive and the judiciary. The lack of accountability of the Judicial Service Commission (JSC) was particularly worrying. The mission observed that ‘it was not confident that the JSC is acting entirely without outside interference’ (see ‘Sri Lanka: Failing to protect the Rule of Law and the Independence of the Judiciary,’ IBAHRI, November 2001).

Its second mission a few years later concluded with severe cautions in regard to the increased politicization of the judicial institution. Regardless, vociferous civil society critics and seniors at the Bar who had held forth on the misdeeds of the JR Jayawardene regime were silent during that period and suddenly became vocal again only after Kumaratunga was thrust out of power.

Continue reading ‘Notion That All Wrongs Were Limited To The Rajapaksa Period Is In Part Dangerous And In Part Foolish’ »

Was Mahinda’s “Secret” Meeting with Ranil in Parliament Over Son Yoshita Being Allegedly Implicated in Murder of Rugby Player Wasim Thajudeen?

By

Rasika Jayakody

When President Maithripala Sirisena, former General Secretary of the SLFP, visited Paris before the Parliamentary election in 2010, the Paris Branch of his party was bitterly divided.

Both factions of the Paris Branch of the SLFP attempted to hold separate meetings with the then General Secretary of the party who was visiting France on an official matter. President Sirisena, who had been in the party for nearly three decades, did not take too long to realize that an internal power struggle was simmering in the party due to administrative flaws of the then leadership.

President Sirisena’s next visit to Paris was early last week. Although the visit was fixed months ago, the plan was altered at the last moment due to the terrorist attack France’s capital city. After the attack, the President decided to cancel his visit considering security threats. However, there were multiple requests from the French government to visit Paris and also to attend the Global Climate Change conference – an event that drew the attention of the entire world.

The President decided to visit France a few days before he left for the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Malta. He confirmed to the French authorities that he would be visiting France after addressing the CHOGM as its outgoing Chairman. The President was also scheduled to deliver a three-minute speech at the Global Climate Change Summit, popularly known as ‘COP 21’.

President in Paris

Apart from the summit, the President also held a meeting with the Sri Lankan community in Paris on the first day of his visit. The meeting took place at the Sri Lankan Embassy and it was followed by a gala dinner at the official residence of Ambassador Thilak Ranaviraja. Only a select crowd was invited for the Ambassador’s dinner.

Continue reading ‘Was Mahinda’s “Secret” Meeting with Ranil in Parliament Over Son Yoshita Being Allegedly Implicated in Murder of Rugby Player Wasim Thajudeen?’ »

President Maithripala Sirisena Orders Withdrawal of 500 Army Personnel Assigned for Security to Ex-President Mahinda Rajapaksa

President Maithripala Sirisena has ordered the immediate withdrawal of an Army security contingent of some 500 personnel assigned to his predecessor Mahinda Rajapaksa. The move came after ministers, at their weekly meeting on Wednesday night, discussed a report by Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake.

In terms of the report, former President Rajapaksa had been assigned 130 police officers besides 500 army officers and personnel. It came to light that there was documentation to confirm that Police Headquarters had given approval for its contingent.

However, a Government source said there was no documentation either at Army Headquarters or the Ministry of Defence on how the soldiers and officers had been assigned.

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Ex – Chairman of Securities and Exchange Commission Nalaka Godahewa Evades Arrest as Police Crack Down on “Stock Market Mafia” Under Rajapaksa Regime

The Financial Crimes Division sent out fresh teams yesterday to arrest Nalaka Godahewa, former Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). He is wanted in connection with the SEC transfer of five million rupees to Tharunyata Hetak (A tomorrow for youth), an organisation headed by Parliamentarian Namal Rajapaksa.

According to investigations the money said to be allocated for an awareness programme among rural youth on investing in the stock market was transferred to a third party bank account in the United States as payment for a Hip hop dance group that performed at the ‘Carlton Super Sevens Rugby Tournament’ last year.

Continue reading ‘Ex – Chairman of Securities and Exchange Commission Nalaka Godahewa Evades Arrest as Police Crack Down on “Stock Market Mafia” Under Rajapaksa Regime’ »

Police FCID Cracks Down on “Mahinda Mafia”in Stock Exchange: SEC Ex – Chairman Nalaka Godahewa Absconding to Avoid Arrest;Ex – Dep Chair Dhammika Perera Arrested along with Ronnie Ibrahim.

The Police Financial Crimes Investigations Division is to arrest Nalaka Godahewa, former Chairman of the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) under charges pertaining to financial irregularities, authoritative Police sources said.

They also added that Police could not locate the former SEC Chairman’s whereabouts to arrest him yesterday.

Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa appointed Godahewa as SEC chairman in the mid 2012. He also served as the Chairman of the Sri Lanka Tourism Board and the Managing Director of Sri Lanka Insurance.

Meanwhile, the Police Financial Crimes Investigations Division (FCID) also arrested two well-known figures among business circles under the same charges.

Police sources said the two individuals – Dhammika Perera and Ronnie Ibrahim were arrested under instructions from the Attorney General.

Continue reading ‘Police FCID Cracks Down on “Mahinda Mafia”in Stock Exchange: SEC Ex – Chairman Nalaka Godahewa Absconding to Avoid Arrest;Ex – Dep Chair Dhammika Perera Arrested along with Ronnie Ibrahim.’ »

Mahinda Rajapaksa Speaking in Parliament Asks Govt not to Place Nations Security in Jeopardy Due to Antipathy Towards Him

Former President and Kurunegala District MP Mahinda Rajapaksa who spoke in Parliament for the first time since his election as an MP said yesterday that some who allege about wrongdoings during his regime remained silent then. “Some of them were even ministers in my Cabinet,” he said.

Mr. Rajapaksa who responded to a statement by his successor Maithripala Sirisena that 12,000 LTTE members were released during the previous regime said they were released after ensuring they would not go back to war again. But he said suspicions had arisen over this government’s action to release former LTTE cadres.

He said situation was same with regard to the deproscription of diaspora organizations. Mr. Rajapaksa said his government had set the stage for reconciliation by developing infrastructure facilities in the North and East and recalled that the LLRC and the Pranagama Commissions were appointed by him.

He said fulfilling the demands made by the Tamil diaspora was not reconciliation and asked the government not to degrade the security forces.

Mr. Rajapaksa asked the government not to bring in laws to enable the setting up of special courts to try security forces personnel.


The full speech made by Mr. Rajapaksa is as follows –

Hon. Speaker, In 2009, we militarily defeated the LTTE which had been officially named by the US Federal Bureau of investigation as the deadliest terrorist organisation in the world. Though we had defeated the military machine of the LTTE, their political and financial structures based in Western countries remain intact. Therefore, my government maintained constant vigilance to ensure that there was no resurgence of terrorism in Sri Lanka.

There were about four attempts of varying severity by separatist terrorists to regroup in the North but due to our vigilance my government was able to nip all those attempts in the bud. I see now that this vigilance no longer exists. My government rehabilitated and released over 11,000 LTTE cadres and retained in custody only those considered to be dangerous to the community.

The present government has been hastily releasing hard core terrorists without regard to the nation’s security due to political pressure from certain interested quarters. While dangerous LTTE detainees are being released, the Prevention of Terrorism Act is being used to imprison members of the military. The PTA was enacted to deal with terrorism, not to detain members of the armed forces. If any investigation is to be carried out into the conduct of military personnel, the government has a duty to deal with the issue under the laws applicable to the military or under the ordinary law of the country.

That is a basic curtsy that we have to extend to members of the armed forces who sacrificed so much for the country. We have to be heedful of the self respect of our armed forces. Officials of foreign organisations have been permitted unfettered access to Sri Lanka’s military installations such as the Naval base in Trincomalee.

This has resulted in an immediate danger posed to members of the intelligence wing of the Navy reminiscent of the situation that arose after the Millennium city betrayal in 2002. Hon Speaker, We have to be mindful of the events which occurred on the so called Mahaviru day marked recently.

The black flags and the posters on the Jaffna campus openly deified Prabhakaran and called for the establishment of Eelam. The provincial council of the Northern Province ordered that schools be closed and hartals and hunger strikes were organised in the North to bring pressure to bear on the government to release dangerous terrorists. A 17 year old youth jumped in front of a moving train and committed suicide. It is said that a letter was found in his possession demanding that LTTE prisoners be released forthwith.

It is not possible to believe that a teenager would have resorted to this behaviour without instigation and elaborate planning by others. We must be mindful of where these incidents are leading the country. Despite the danger signs that have been manifesting themselves, the government has taken the ill-advised move of removing the proscriptions on eight pro-LTTE organisations and 269 individuals.

I have seen on the internet photographs of the Tamil Youth Organisation and the Canadian Tamil Congress both of which were recently de-proscribed, hoisting the Eelam flag and paying public homage to Prabhakaran. These are organisations which my government banned to safeguard Sri Lanka’s security but they have all been irresponsibly de-proscribed by the current administration.

Officials of foreign governments have visited our country and made demarches to Sri Lanka’s leadership about withdrawing the military from the Northern Province. Decisions with regard to the deployment of troops are matters that should solely be within the sovereign jurisdiction of Sri Lanka.

I cannot approve of officials of foreign governments declaring that they will remain ‘cautious and vigilant’ with regard to military matters in Sri Lanka. The root cause of these problems is the ill-conceived foreign policy of the current administration which is based on bending over backwards to please certain foreign governments which are in turn influenced in their policy towards Sri Lanka by various Tamil Diaspora organisations which can deliver votes at elections in those countries.

Hon Speaker, In October this year, the present government ill-advisedly accepted and co-sponsored a resolution against Sri Lanka which is based on a report which states that there are ‘reasonable grounds to believe’ that Sri Lanka’s armed forces committed grave crimes during the last phase of the war against the LTTE. In terms of this resolution the government has agreed to establish a war crimes court to try Sri Lankan military personnel with the participation of foreign judges, prosecutors and investigators and to allow this mechanism to obtain funding from foreign countries.

They have also agreed to reform the domestic law to bring it into line with the laws implemented by international war crimes tribunals. They have also undertaken to remove through an administrative process, members of the military suspected of having committed human rights abuses even if there is insufficient evidence to charge them in a court of law.

When the British prime minister met our President recently, the former made an offer of six million pounds to reform the military. I do not believe that foreign governments should be sponsoring the reform of Sri Lanka’s armed forces nor should any such reform be done due to pressure from overseas.

I have come to learn that the senior military officers who led the various Divisions during the final phase of the war are to be retired without being given the usual service extensions. When these officers retire, they lose the institutional backing and protection provided by the military. Sending these officers on retirement at a time when war crimes investigations are being spoken of is a clear case of deliberately abandoning these officers.

It is my view that these officers should be granted service extensions by the government until the danger abates. The government has also agreed amend the Public Security Ordinance and to repeal the Prevention of Terrorism Act and replace it with legislation acceptable to the foreign powers.

I see this as a reckless dismantling of the country’s core security legislation. Hon. Speaker, The State owned Rakana Lanka Security Service built up a successful maritime security service in the Indian Ocean Region during my administration. More than twenty private security companies collaborated with Rakna Lanka in this enterprise in various capacities.

Sri Lanka earned a considerable amount of foreign exchange through this endeavour and it continued to function under the present government until very recently. But now I find that the government has for political reasons embarked on a course of action aimed at completely destroying this successful maritime security service which functioned with the approval of the relevant UN bodies.

Key individuals who provided political and military leadership to the war effort are now being hauled virtually on a daily basis before various police financial investigation units and commissions of inquiry probing allegations corruption and fraud.

I believe this is being done to tarnish the image that these individuals built up in the country by providing leadership to the war effort. I know that the people are following these developments carefully.

I wish to call upon the government to not to place the nation’s security in jeopardy over petty political considerations and due to their antipathy towards me and the government I led.

Thank you!


Courtesy:Daily Mirror

President Sirisena Declares in Parliament to Uphold National Security While Advancing Reconciliation and Ethnic Harmony

By Ashwin Hemmathagama

Assuring the nation that national security was still his first priority while efforts were being made to advance reconciliation and harmony between all communities, President Maithripala Sirisena joined the Committee Stage debate of the Ministry of Defence yesterday.

President Sirisena, who holds the Defence portfolio, condemned the use of extremist rhetoric in the country, saying it was being perpetuated by a few who were no longer powerful politically.

He urged lawmakers to join hands to support national reconciliation.

“Our first priority is national security. There will be no lapses. Recently bail was granted to some LTTE cadres and the Government removed the ban on eight Tamil diaspora groups, but extremists spread lies creating doubts about national security,” President Sirisena charged.

Continue reading ‘President Sirisena Declares in Parliament to Uphold National Security While Advancing Reconciliation and Ethnic Harmony’ »

Paranagama Commission Report Must be made part of National and International Discourse Despite Attempts by some to Discredit it

By

Lasanda Kurukulasuriya

“It is absolutely right to take decisive action against terrorists when they threaten the lives of innocent citizens.”

The speaker of these words was not former president Mahinda Rajapaksa or anyone in his government, but British Prime Minister David Cameron, expressing solidarity with French President Francois Hollande in the wake of the recent terror attacks in Paris. But it appears that what’s sauce for the goose is not sauce for the gander, as Western powers push for implementation of a US-led resolution crafted to make the Sri Lankan armed forces suffer ‘consequences’ for their role in defeating terrorism, in a part of the world far away from theirs.

The eruption of IS terror in Paris came at a time when in Sri Lanka, the Paranagama Second Mandate Report had become a subject of discussion, bringing into sharp focus the monumental hypocrisy of the Western political project in Sri Lanka.

What is more surprising however is that the Government of Sri Lanka (GoSL) seems to be collaborating in it (having co-sponsored the resolution, for example). There was some irony too in the fact that even while GoSL was (quite rightly) sending condolences to Paris, it was reportedly hauling up its own former service chiefs who led the fight against terrorism, before one of its numerous ‘Commissions of Inquiry.’

The peculiar trajectory of the debate over the Paranagama Report, both in and outside Parliament, dogged by various attempts to discredit it, have left many people perplexed, and many questions unanswered.

Continue reading ‘Paranagama Commission Report Must be made part of National and International Discourse Despite Attempts by some to Discredit it’ »

Ranjan Ramanayake and Arjuna Ranatunge Must Name the Journalists Allegedly on Payroll of Avant Garde and Ports Authority – “The Island”.

(Text of Editorial Appearing in “The Island” of December 5th 2015 under the Heading “Fish or cut bait!)

No sooner had Deputy Minister Ranjan Ramanayake claimed that there were journalists among 300 ‘outsiders’ who had benefited from Avant Garde largesse, than Ports and Shipping Minister Arjuna Ranatunga said a dozen journalists had been on the Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) payroll.

Both Ranatunga and Ramanayake are political matadors known for their pugnacity. They are not known for pulling punches. But, they have, strangely, stopped short of naming names, in this instance, for reasons best known to themselves. Ramanayake has told this newspaper that Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and JVP Leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake are also privy to a list of Avant Garde beneficiaries.

Ramanayake, in figure-hugging, short-sleeved shirts, flaunting his gym-toned muscles and flashing his trademark mega-watt smile, is a frequent visitor to the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC). It looks as if he were resident there, making complaints of corruption against various people including his ministerial colleagues. Why he has baulked at divulging the names of the journalists in the pay of Avant Garde defies comprehension.

What has happened to our Captain Cool? He treated killer bouncers, toe-crushing yorkers and full tosses alike, danced down the track, throwing caution to the winds, instilled fear into the much-feared pacies and wily spinners and sent formidable opponents on leather hunts? Time was when he displayed his buccaneering spirit on the political front as well; he had the courage to take on the Rajapaksas in their heyday and throw his weight behind the war winning army chief Sarath Fonseka in the 2010 presidential race. But, today, he is too pusillanimous to name a few journalists who have allegedly got paid by the SLPA! Has Arjuna given up the fight?

Continue reading ‘Ranjan Ramanayake and Arjuna Ranatunge Must Name the Journalists Allegedly on Payroll of Avant Garde and Ports Authority – “The Island”.’ »

“How can Govt Charge Persons Under the Draconian PTA After Saying it Would be Repealed?” Asks Opposition Leader Sampanthan

(Text of Speech made in Parliament on December 3rd 2015 by Leader of the Opposition and Trincomalee district parliamentarian Rajavarothayam Sampanthan)


ගරු රාජවරෝදියම් සම්පන්දන් මහතා (විරුද්ධ පාර්ශ්වයේ නායකතුමා)
(மாண்புமிகு இராஜவரோதியம் சம்பந்தன் – எதிர்க்கட்சி முதல்வர்)
(The Hon. Rajavarothiam Sampanthan – Leader of the Opposition)

Mr. Chairman, I am happy to start the Debate, on which a Cut has been moved by the Hon. Anura Kumara Dissanayake.

We are discussing the Votes of His Excellency the President, the Office of the Prime Minister, Judges of the Superior Courts, the Office of the Cabinet of Ministers and of several Commissions which have in terms of the Nineteenth Amendment, been appointed in recent times.

We are extremely happy that we are in the position to debate the Votes on these Commissions which today have been given a complete measure of independence to be able to perform their functions fearlessly without being in any way subservient to the Executive. I think that was achieved, Sir, as a result of the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment. The passage of the Nineteenth Amendment was eventually due to the very strenuous and indefatigable efforts of the President, His Excellency Maithripala Sirisena and the Prime Minister, Hon. Ranil Wickremesingthe.

It was due to the efforts of the President, the Prime Minister and persons who thought correctly that the system had to be changed, that in the interests of the country and that it was vital to bring about certain changes to ensure that these Commissions will be appointed through a Constitutional Council that would function independently and that the persons who were appointed would be persons of integrity, calibre and possessed the necessary qualities to be able to serve in these Commissions in the best interests of the country.

I am happy that under your guidance, Mr. Chairman, you have indeed exercised, in my view, a great deal of alacrity in ensuring that these Commissions have been appointed without delay all these Commissions have been appointed. I have the good fortune of being a Member of the Constitutional Council in my capacity as the Leader of the Opposition. We have cooperated and made appointments purely in the interests of the country without being guided by any other factor. Sir, I must also at this juncture record my deep appreciation of the manner in which you have guided us to achieve this very important task. We will wait and see how they will perform. I have not the slightest doubt that the performance will be something which the country, the people of this country will appreciate because the persons appointed are those who would, without fear or favour, serve the people of this country and not certain individuals, not certain high-powered persons in the Executive. They would be concerned with the best interests of the people of this country and would serve in the best interests of the people.

Continue reading ‘“How can Govt Charge Persons Under the Draconian PTA After Saying it Would be Repealed?” Asks Opposition Leader Sampanthan’ »

Northern Provincial Council Flouts Financial Regulations by not Crediting 20 Million Rupees Given by Companies to Provincial Treasury Acct -S.Thavarajah

Leader of the opposition of the Northern Provincial Council (NPC) S.Thavarajah has reported to the Auditor General that the Northern Provincial Council has been flouting the Financial Regulations in the Financial Management of the NPC.

In his letter to the Auditor General dated 01.12.2015 he has stated as follows-

The NPC entered into an agreement with Joule Power and Beta Power to set up a wind farm in Palai. In the year 2014 these companies have supplied 06 Nos. water bowsers to NPC as gratis under Corporate Social Responsibilities to the value of Rs. 20 million.

This year the money granted by these companies amounting to Rs. 20 million, has been kept in a separate account in the name of the Chief Secretary without being credited to the Provincial Treasury’s Account and appropriation approved by the council.

When this matter was raised in the Council, the Chief Minister replied that it is being held in a separate account.

Continue reading ‘Northern Provincial Council Flouts Financial Regulations by not Crediting 20 Million Rupees Given by Companies to Provincial Treasury Acct -S.Thavarajah’ »

Govt is Recruiting 2000 Persons Proficient in Both Sinhala and Tamil to Fully Implement Sinhala and Tamil as Official Languages – Chandrika Kumaratunga

by Zacki Jabbar

Only about five percent of employees in the public service are proficient in Tamil as the national language policy has not been implemented, says former President and current Chairperson of the Office For National Unity and Reconciliation (ONUR), Chandrika Kumaratunga.

She told a news conference in Colombo on Tuesday that on ONUR’s recommendation the government was in the process of selecting 2,000 persons who were proficient in both Tamil and Sinhala.

“Despite Sinhala and Tamil being official languages, Tamils still receive letters from the State in Sinhala. This is due to only five percent of public sector employees being proficient in Tamil. It is a serious issue which needs to be rectified as soon as possible. Our aim is to secure language rights for every Sri Lankan,” Kumaratunga said, adding that most of those being recruited were retired people but with the skills and experience to get the job at hand fast-tracked.

Continue reading ‘Govt is Recruiting 2000 Persons Proficient in Both Sinhala and Tamil to Fully Implement Sinhala and Tamil as Official Languages – Chandrika Kumaratunga’ »

Lankan Envoy to Saudi Arabia Azmi Thassim Commenting to Saudi Press Allegedly Endorses Execution of Sri Lankan Woman

By Shamindra Ferdinando

The government has sought an opportunity urgently to make representations to the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia regarding a Sri Lankan woman sentenced to be stoned to death on a charge of adultery.

Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera made the appeal on Wednesday (Dec. 2) during a hastily arranged meeting in Parliament with the Charge d’ Affairs of the Saudi embassy in Colombo.

Minister Samaraweera urged the Saudi diplomat to arrange for him to speak with Saudi counterpart as soon as possible to seek clemency for the condemned woman. Foreign Employment Minister Thalatha Atukorale, National Integration and Reconciliation Minister A. H. M. Fowzie and Chairman of the Sri Lanka Bureau of Foreign Employment R. K. Obeyesekere joined the discussion.

Continue reading ‘Lankan Envoy to Saudi Arabia Azmi Thassim Commenting to Saudi Press Allegedly Endorses Execution of Sri Lankan Woman’ »

Suicide of Senthuran:Tamil Politicians and Media Should Refrain From Pushing Youths Towards Unrealistic Political Goals

By

M.S.M.Ayub

After May 2009 a youth from the Tamil Community has taken his life for a ‘cause,’ according to Tamil politicians and Tamil media. Rajeswaran Senthuran, a 17-year-old student of Kokkuvil Hindu College in Jaffna had allegedly committed suicide by jumping in front of an express train from Colombo on November 26, a sentimentally important day for many Tamils in the north, since LTTE leader V. Prabhakaran’s birthday falls on that day.

A note had reportedly been found in Senthuran’s school bag containing a demand for the immediate release of the Tamil political prisoners, a hot topic in Tamil media these days and a comment supportive of the carving out of a separate Tamil State. Despite doubts raised by the police as to who had written the note and how it had crept into the boy’s bag, the general perception that now prevails among the Tamil people is that he died for a cause – getting political prisoners released.

The nationalistic emotions were high among the northern people next day, November 27 as the cremation of the boy coincided with the LTTE’s “Maveerar Day” which was commemorated in many places in the province. For several days prior to the “Maveerar Day” Tamil media, especially the newspapers had been carrying articles and comments by politicians, venerating and glorifying the LTTE leaders and the cadres with emotionally charged wordings, but without any coherent analysis of the past. Most probably this might have affected the equilibrium in Senthuran.

Continue reading ‘Suicide of Senthuran:Tamil Politicians and Media Should Refrain From Pushing Youths Towards Unrealistic Political Goals’ »

Sri Lankans want to Know What the Govt is Doing to Save the Life of Nameless Dying Woman in Saudi Arabia?

By

Ramya Chamalie Jirasinghe

As citizens of Sri Lanka we know only two facts about the ‘Nameless Dying Woman’ in Saudi Arabia. One, that she is a Sri Lankan and two that in a few days she will be stoned to death. (The informal news was that the execution is to take place on Dec 4).

The rest, as we have been told by the media and the spokes personnel of the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) of Sri Lanka are mere crumbs of information that we are supposed to be uncritically accept as the real story. We have been told that the woman refuses to be identified as she does not want to cause distress to her family in Sri Lanka. And we are supposed to believe this.

We have been told that the MEA has hired lawyers and are in the process of conducting a legal appeal and that diplomatic discussions are also going on. We are supposed to believe that this is the best solution and also the only option.

Continue reading ‘Sri Lankans want to Know What the Govt is Doing to Save the Life of Nameless Dying Woman in Saudi Arabia?’ »

No Legitimate National Security Reasons to Justify Increasing Defence Expenditure Under Sirisena Govt

By

Taylor Dibbert

The Sri Lankan government recently released its proposed budget for the coming year. It’s been met with an array of responses. Some commentators have questioned the calculations which the government has made, including over fundamental matters such as tax revenue.

Kusal Perera, a Colombo-based journalist, says that “most numbers are fake or arbitrarily inflated.” Among other matters, Perera is concerned that this budget will result in increased economic inequality.

On the positive, Maithripala Sirisena, the country’s current president, will control far less of the budget than his predecessor Mahinda Rajapaksa did during the end of his tenure.

According to, Verité Research, a think tank in Colombo, Rajapaksa controlled 62% of all expenditures in 2014, an incredible centralization of power. For 2016, it appears Sirisena would control approximately 10% of total expenditure.

Continue reading ‘No Legitimate National Security Reasons to Justify Increasing Defence Expenditure Under Sirisena Govt’ »

“Sri Lanka Must Become a High Income Country by 2030” Declares Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe

By Charumini de Silva

A confident Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday sounded determined to lead Sri Lanka to achieve higher socioeconomic growth, despite looming external shocks.

In remarks at the 30th anniversary celebrations of the Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE) followed by the ringing of the market opening bell yesterday, the Premier warned of Sri Lanka facing unpredictable external political and economic turmoil owing to the global fight against ISIS, drop in commodity prices, addition of Chinese currency Yuan to the IMF’s Special Drawing Rights (SDR) basket and a politically-motivated hike in US interest rates.

Wickremesinghe said these developments, on top of lowered world economic growth, “are going to impact us and the rest of the world economically” in 2016.

Continue reading ‘“Sri Lanka Must Become a High Income Country by 2030” Declares Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe’ »

Mangala Samaraweera Displays Photographs of Mahinda Rajapaksa in Parliament as “Evidence”of Secret Deals with LTTE and Tamil Diaspora by Previous Regime

By Saman Indrajith

Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera brought in some photographs of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa to the Chamber yesterday as evidence to prove his allegation that the previous regime had secret deals with the LTTE and Tamil Diaspora.

Holding up the photographs during his speech at the second reading debate on budget proposals the Minister said: “I would like to give these photographs to my friend in the opposition, MEP leader Dinesh Gunawardena. I have heard that Dinesh Gunawardena has a Rajapaksa shrine at his home and he is worshipping the Rajapaksa’s pictures. So, Dinesh can take these, too, and put them up there in that shrine.”

Continue reading ‘Mangala Samaraweera Displays Photographs of Mahinda Rajapaksa in Parliament as “Evidence”of Secret Deals with LTTE and Tamil Diaspora by Previous Regime’ »

Budget Passed at Second Reading by Majority of 107 Votes with 159 Voting for and 52 Against

By Saman Indrajith

The second reading stage debate was passed with a majority of 107 votes in Parliament yesterday.

It received 159 votes for and 52 against. Thirteen Mmembers were absent.

The vote was taken at 5.25 pm at the end of second reading stage debate that commenced on Nov. 21. The debate on the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe government’s first full budget was held for nine days.

At the end of the debate JVP MP Sunil Handunnetti asked for a division on the budget proposals from Speaker Karu Jayasuriya and a vote be taken by name.

Speaker Jayasuriya moved the House for a vote.

TNA, too, voted for the budget.

The JVP and MPs belonging to the UPFA’s Joint Opposition team voted against it.

Continue reading ‘Budget Passed at Second Reading by Majority of 107 Votes with 159 Voting for and 52 Against’ »

Chennai and many Coastal Areas of Tamil Nadu Engulfed by Floods Following Incessant Heavy rain

BY S VENKAT NARAYAN

Chennai and several coastal areas of Tamil Nadu were today marooned in flood waters following incessant heavy rains that pounded the city and the neighbouring districts cutting the state capital from rail and road links. The airport was shut down till Thursday morning with at least 700 passengers stranded.

According to unconfirmed reports, at least 200 people are feared in Chennai alone.

Some 70,000 people have been shifted to relief camps.

Though the heavy rains that lashed the city and the suburbs and neighbouring districts of Kancheepuram, Tiruvallur and Cuddalore for more than a day yesterday have shown a let up since this morning, a continuous drizzle under overcast skies spelled further trouble for citizens.

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Actions of Those in Command Would be Probed for Alleged War Crimes by Special Court and not Soldiers only Carrying out Orders”- Chandrika Kumaratunga

by Zacki Jabbar

Former President and Head of the Office for National Unity and Reconciliation Chandrika Kumaratunga said in Colombo yesterday that the Special Court to be established shortly to inquire into alleged war crimes would examine the actions of those in the main line of command and not soldiers who were only carrying out orders they had received.

Addressing a news conference at the BMICH to announce that discussions were underway among all stakeholders to introduce a National Policy on Reconciliation, she said that the Special Court to be established before the end of January would comprise only Sri Lankans drawn from among judges and respected members of the private bar.

Kumaratunga emphasised that foreign technological and forensic assistance that had been offered would be accepted purely to assist the Special Court in performing its functions better and deliver evidence-based justice.

Continue reading ‘Actions of Those in Command Would be Probed for Alleged War Crimes by Special Court and not Soldiers only Carrying out Orders”- Chandrika Kumaratunga’ »

“ 43% of Sri Lankans earn less than US$2 per day. We need to change this and Pass Benefits to all”- Ranil Wickremesinghe

By Ashwin Hemmathagama

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe yesterday staunchly defended his Government’s maiden budget, urging Parliamentarians on both sides of the aisle to think out of the box and put aside traditional political rivalries to back the appropriation bill for 2016.

The Budget for 2016 presented by Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake late last month has come in for both bouquets and brickbats, giving rise to a strong debate over the Government’s fiscal proposals in the country.

The Budget has been criticised for the cancellation of vehicle permit entitlements for both parliamentarians and public servants, revising fertiliser subsidies and school uniforms distribution, increasing emission test charges, and providing foreigners easy access to hold local lands.

But Prime Minister Wickremesinghe who addressed Parliament yesterday, said the criticisms were lacking in substance, and in most cases were not valid.

“Some said there was no taste at all in this budget. Others held the budget would destroy the economy and sell the country to foreigners. Certain members were unhappy to be in the Cabinet and decided to criticise the budget. All these are traditional political slogans that have been used for years and years. You are standing against this budget for no good reason. Maybe it is to raise objection or to fulfil a political party’s requirements. I urge you to shun politics as usual and take a more positive view of things,” urged PM Wickeremesinghe.

Continue reading ‘“ 43% of Sri Lankans earn less than US$2 per day. We need to change this and Pass Benefits to all”- Ranil Wickremesinghe’ »

Obnoxious Donald Trump Exemplifies the Worst of America

By

Taylor Dibbert

I was wrong about Donald Trump.

I never thought things would go this far. I never thought the Republican primary would get this out of hand.

“He doesn’t have a chance,” I told people.

“He’s an absolute joke.”

“He’s just a narcissist who can’t help himself.”

“Republicans are never going to get behind the guy. It’s not even clear to me that he’s a Republican.”

“If Donald Trump evens wins the nomination, I’m moving back to Sri Lanka — immediately.”

I was wrong about Donald Trump.

Continue reading ‘Obnoxious Donald Trump Exemplifies the Worst of America’ »

Soldiers who Committed Criminal Acts Cannot be let off the Hook Because they are “War Herous” – Daily News


(Text of an Editorial Appearing in the “Daily News”of December 1st 2015 under the heading – Partners in crime ; “War Heroes” must face the music)

There is today a misplaced notion propagated by the pro Rajapaksa Opposition that our soldiers should not be arrested, whatever misdemeanours on their part. True to form, at the forefront of this “Hands off our War Heroes” campaign are Dinesh Gunawardena, Wimal Weerawansa and Udaya Gammanpila.

The latest to join the bandwagon is the National University Teacher’s Association and the Kandy Association of Scholars and Professionals. According to Prof. G.L. Peiris who addressed a forum of these twin organisations, the teachers and professionals have expressed concern at the release of LTTE suspects and the arrest of soldiers.

Peiris, at this forum, of course went to town elaborating on his favourite theme these days, of a nation in peril and the return of the Tiger – all because of the Government’s decision to de-proscribe certain Tamil Diaspora groups in faraway Canada and other Western countries.

Peiris is perhaps of the view that these groups have the capability to resume the war in Sri Lanka, perhaps inspired by the tale of the French resistance group in Algeria who staged a spectacular but aborted bid on the life of French President Charles de Gaulle, as brought out in vivid detail in the blockbuster movie The Day of the Jackal, based on the novel by Frederick Forsythe.

Continue reading ‘Soldiers who Committed Criminal Acts Cannot be let off the Hook Because they are “War Herous” – Daily News’ »

Nine Army Generals Meet President Sirisena in Hush Hush Meeting at Negombo Hotel to “Explain Their Role” in Final Phase of War


A top-level meeting President Maithripala Sirisena held with a group of senior Army officers has ruffled feathers in the defence and security establishment. Neither Defence Secretary Karunasena Hettiaratchchi nor Army Commander Lt. Gen. Chrisanthe de Silva had prior knowledge of the meeting.

Most of the nine senior officers who met President Sirisena at a hotel in Negombo, while he was on a visit there, played a pivotal role in the final stages of the battle to defeat militarily the Tiger guerrillas in May 2009.

The officers, some of whom are due for retirement reaching 55 years, are learnt to have explained the roles they played during the military operation.

Continue reading ‘Nine Army Generals Meet President Sirisena in Hush Hush Meeting at Negombo Hotel to “Explain Their Role” in Final Phase of War’ »

Many good reasons for legalizing prostitution in Sri Lanka!

By

Ranga Jayasuriya

Last week, there was an interesting article in this newspaper that weighed favourably the merits of legalizing prostitution. That media, rights groups and civil society in general are viewing those complex issues in an increasingly pragmatic way — finally having overcome the dominant yet arcane moralistic posture — is a sign of maturity.

That is a pleasant contrast to the recent past. Nearly a decade and-a-half ago, an English newspaper published an article that suggested lesbians deserved to be raped by men in order to cure their ‘illness’. Though it may sound shocking now (and so was even then), the newspaper concerned refused to apologize and the then press council stood by the newspaper, agreeing that lesbianism was immoral and anti- social, hence needed to be cured.

For decades, the public discourse in those intimate yet intricate matters was dominated by moralists, bigots and religious leaders. And when complex social issues are viewed through the binary views of religious and moralistic teaching, it causes more harm than good. To further confound the problem, newly independent countries in our part of the world inherited a hefty load of arcane Victorian laws, which even by the time of independence were largely dormant. The political will and courage in our independent leadership were in short supply to rid our countries of those straight jacketed laws of the by-gone era. For instance, criminalizing prostitution under vagrancy and brothel ordinance is one such; criminalizing homosexuality is another.

Those arcane laws have caused more harm than good. Take for instance laws that criminalize prostitution. They leave hapless women who work the streets at the mercy of often corrupt police, who take ransom and sexual favours. Then there are pimps, who take a cut from the woman’s earning in return for protection, or simply letting her work in areas that they have demarcated as their territory. Thus a law that was meant to protect women has the opposite effect.

Continue reading ‘Many good reasons for legalizing prostitution in Sri Lanka!’ »

Is Mobitel Via Sri Lanka Telecom Planning to Buy Loss Making Hutch at Exorbitant Price?

Questions are being raised over the craving by Mobitel, which is listed for sale by the Government, for Hutch Sri Lanka’s operations at an exorbitant price.

In the unity Government’s maiden Budget presented a fortnight ago, Mobitel was included among state companies which will be divested via the Colombo stock market.

Despite pending state divestiture, Mobitel via its parent Sri Lanka Telecom, is apparently pursuing plans initiated under the previous regime to buy the loss-making operations of Hutch and consolidate its position in the highly competitive mobile telecom industry.

For want of better pricing, the previous administration at the Treasury halted SLT-Mobitel’s overtures on Hutch. The move is being pursued with greater zeal too despite the promise of good governance and prudence by the President Maithripala Sirisena-Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe Government.

Continue reading ‘Is Mobitel Via Sri Lanka Telecom Planning to Buy Loss Making Hutch at Exorbitant Price?’ »

Govt Appoints Retired Judge Rohini Perera as High Court Commissioner to Expedite Cases Under the PTA Despite Protests by BASL and Opposition.

By Shamindra Ferdinando

Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe, PC, yesterday rejected calls for cancelling the appointment of a retired High Court judge as High Court Commissioner to expedite hearing of cases pertaining to the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) as well as Emergency Regulations.

Minister Rajapakshe was responding to the Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) call to cancel the controversial decision. Former External Affairs Minister Prof. G. L. Peiris, too, on behalf of the joint opposition has urged the government to reverse the decision. The government recently named recently retired Judge Iranganie Perera as the High Court Commissioner.

Continue reading ‘Govt Appoints Retired Judge Rohini Perera as High Court Commissioner to Expedite Cases Under the PTA Despite Protests by BASL and Opposition.’ »

Mahinda Rajapaksa Blasts Budget as one that Would “Destroy the Economy ” and Specifically Outlines Six “Most Harmful”Budget Proposals

Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa on Saturday criticised the Unity Government over its maiden Budget saying it was full of catastrophic proposals that would destroy the economy whilst claims of higher expenditure on education were not true either.

Expressing his views at a media conference held at the Narahenpita Abayarama, Rajapaksa listed six specific proposals which in his opinion were “most harmful”.

Rajapaksa said that despite an attempt to create an impression of a populist budget with reductions in the price of gas and several foodstuffs and lower income tax rates, “the budget as a whole is guaranteed to drag the country backwards.” “The Achilles heel of this Government is fiscal and external sector management, which has placed the entire country on a ticking fiscal and balance-of-payments time bomb,” warned the former President.

“The gross fiscal irresponsibility displayed in the mini-budget earlier this year has continued in this budget as well,” he charged.

Continue reading ‘Mahinda Rajapaksa Blasts Budget as one that Would “Destroy the Economy ” and Specifically Outlines Six “Most Harmful”Budget Proposals’ »

“Undercover Operation”Launched to Locate the “Missing” Gem Studded Charmed Ring of Mahinda Rajapaksa

Cinnamon Grand staff launched an undercover operation at a wedding reception to locate a missing ring, not of the couple, but their main VIP guest, former president Mahinda Rajapaksa.

A search for the gem-studded ring, one of many worn by the former leader, was launched discreetly at the Oak Room of the hotel on Friday night. Washrooms were checked and the carpets scanned for the missing lucky charm.

Continue reading ‘“Undercover Operation”Launched to Locate the “Missing” Gem Studded Charmed Ring of Mahinda Rajapaksa’ »

Performance of the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe Administration Leaves Much to be Desired

By Tisaranee Gunasekara

“It is no better for a nation than for a single man to gain the whole world if it loses its soul.; and they also forget that they are sacrificing not just themselves for their patriotism (or what they think is patriotism) but also their country.”

Sebastian Haffner (Defying Hitler)

The extremists on both sides of the ethnic divide did their incendiary best. Their intent was provocation and given the ‘sensitivity’ of the issue, they would have been confident of instant success. The extremists up North behaved as if the very existence of the Tamil people depended on changing the name of Nagadeepa to Nainateevu. The extremists down South acted as if any such a name change would cause the immediate disintegration of Sri Lanka.

But the people, ordinary Tamils and ordinary Sinhalese, refused to take the bait. The screaming, burning, pillaging mobs Northern and Southern extremists were hoping for have failed to materialise, so far. The popular response to the ‘Nagadeepa-Nainateevu issue’ has ranged from indifference to bemusement, but never anger.

The absence of rage is due to the refusal of the UNP and the SLFP to become embroiled in this inane non-issue. History shows that mobs sprouted whenever the UNP or the SLFP used the race card. But this time both parties desisted from flame-throwing.

President Sirisena and Premier Wickremesinghe deserve some credit for this much needed display of sense and sensibility. The hybrid-government has its uses.

Continue reading ‘Performance of the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe Administration Leaves Much to be Desired’ »

Good Governance: The Gap Between Our Hopeful Expectations And The Emerging Reality Is Widening

by Dr.Devanesan Nesiah

Are we progressing towards Good Governance?

I wish I could answer this question with an unqualified yes, but I cannot. There has been significant progress on several issues, but also stagnation and even regression on several others. The gap between our hopeful expectations and the emerging reality is widening.

Like, perhaps a majority of our population, I rated the administration that was ousted in January this year to have been not only the worst since we attained independence, but also so firmly entrenched in authority that it could not be dislodged in the foreseeable future.

The smooth and peaceful ouster of that administration including its top leaders seemed to be miraculous. In my expectation, and perhaps that of most others, the new administration, once establishedthrough reelection in August, would take us unimpeded towards Good Governance and Reconciliation.

In fact progress has been disappointingly slow and uneven. There has been some credible progress in respect of some aspects of national reconciliation. But what has been achieved on the ground on some very urgent issues central to national reconciliation is minimal ( e.g. the release of prisoners held without trial for many years with no charges framed against them) . So too on the issue of greater devolution to the provinces, and that of missing persons

Continue reading ‘Good Governance: The Gap Between Our Hopeful Expectations And The Emerging Reality Is Widening’ »

Singer Mathangi “M.I.A.” Arulpragasam Releases Self-directed Video “Borders” on Refugee issues in Europe

by Harriet Gibsone

Most artists would be incapable of approaching a subject as serious as the refugee crisis in song. Not MIA, however, whose new album is on course to politicise pop once again. “The world I talked about 10 years ago is still the same,” she recently posted on Twitter. “That’s why it’s hard for me to say it again on a new LP.”

twitter.com/MIAuniverse

twitter.com/MIAuniverse

Today, the British artist of Sri Lankan descent premiered Borders, a track that proves she remains unique in her ability to implement ideas about pop culture and important global topics. With it comes a self-directed video, which makes a compelling statement on the continuing migration crisis, chastising the response of European politicians and lamenting the arrival of border fences to keep out migrants.
Continue reading ‘Singer Mathangi “M.I.A.” Arulpragasam Releases Self-directed Video “Borders” on Refugee issues in Europe’ »

Kokkuvil Hindu College Student Rajeswaran Senthuran (18) Commits Suicide by Jumping in Front of Train at Kondavil Railway Station


Calling for the release of Tamil political prisoners, Rajeswaran Senthuran, an 18-year-old student of Kokuvil Hindu College committed suicide by jumping in front of a train at the Kondavil Railway station yesterday.

The boy had written a letter in Tamil to President Maithripala Sirisena demanding the immediate release of all Tamil political prisoners without further postponements.

Senthuran, wearing his red school tie and white school uniform jumped in front of a moving train shortly after he left home in Kopay telling his family that he was going to school but instead jumped in front of a train near Kondavil station, which is nearly 3 Km away from his school.

Continue reading ‘Kokkuvil Hindu College Student Rajeswaran Senthuran (18) Commits Suicide by Jumping in Front of Train at Kondavil Railway Station’ »

Excruciating Questions Over the Role,Performance and Accountability of the Office of the Attorney – General

By

Kishali Pinto Jayawardene

Even with all the crestfallen realism which now informs the public mood close upon one year into the classic curate’s egg performance of the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe government, there is some cause for optimism.

‘Hard’ questions of democratic governance are forcefully and publicly interrogated as opposed to earlier discussions which took place in elite circles with little impact on national debate.

Exposing the ugliness

One of these excruciating questions concerns the role and performance of the Office of the Attorney General. Increasingly impatient with theoretical pontifications, the focus now is rather on the accountability of the Office. This is particularly so in the wake of public conflicts between senior officers of the Department as to whether or not to prosecute Avant Garde, the controversial maritime security company.

This week we are informed that the corrupt tentacles of this company reach not only across the political divide but also include journalists on its payroll. It may be good if the bandage on this festering wound is just ruthlessly stripped away to let the public take precise stock of the ugly nature of gargantuan profiteering.

Continue reading ‘Excruciating Questions Over the Role,Performance and Accountability of the Office of the Attorney – General’ »

People In The North-East Are Much Worse Off Than People In Other Parts Of The Country-Opposition Leader R.Sampanthan


(Text of Speech made in Parliament on November 28th 2015 by Leader of the Opposition and Tamil National Alliance Trincomalee District MP Rajavarothayam Sampanthan)


ගරු රාජවරෝදියම් සම්පන්දන් මහතා (විරුද්ධ පාර්ශ්වයේ නායකතුමා)
(மாண்புமிகு இராஜவரோதியம் சம்பந்தன் – எதிர்க்கட்சி முதல்வர்)
(The Hon. Rajavarothiam Sampanthan – Leader of the Opposition)

Thank you, Mr. Speaker.

An alliance Government with the SLFP Leader, His Excellency Maithripala Sirisena as President and the UNP Leader, the Hon. Ranil Wickremesinghe as Prime Minister, has presented the Budget for 2016. The presentation has been done by the Hon. Finance Minister, the Hon. Ravi Karunanayake.

This is the first time in the country’s history that the SLFP and the UNP are together in Government, particularly with a Member of the SLFP as President and a Member of the UNP as Prime Minister by mutual consent. The Leaders of the two Parties and the Parties have decided to work together in the interests of the country. This is a significant attribute of this Government.

In order to appreciate the importance of what has been achieved, it would be relevant to examine briefly how it happened. It did not happen by accident.

This country was, for some time, ruled as if it was a family fiefdom – it was some member of the family who decided on everything and anything. Totalitarianism was brazenly practised. The Constitution was amended so as to be in power forever or for long. This inevitably irked even the SLFP Members in Government, but they had to bide their time until the Presidential Election was announced.

On a fateful day in November, 2014, the incumbent President took the crucial decision to call for an election and made the announcement. This was followed by the Hon. Maithripala Sirisena, the Secretary of the SLFP and a Senior Minister in the incumbent Government, announcing his candidature. The UNP announced its support to the Hon. Maithripala Sirisena and he was anointed as the Joint Opposition Candidate. The late Mahanayake, Ven. Sobhitha Thero, played a very crucial and critical role in this event. The rest, Sir, is history.

Continue reading ‘People In The North-East Are Much Worse Off Than People In Other Parts Of The Country-Opposition Leader R.Sampanthan’ »

Ex- DIG Vass Gunawardena, his Son Ravindu and 4 Police Officers Sentenced to Death for 2013 Murder of Businessman Mohamed Siyam


Six suspects including former DIG Vass Gunawardena and his son Ravindu were yesterday sentenced to death after being found guilty for the abduction and murder of businessman Mohamed Siyam in 2013, by the Colombo High Court Trial-at-Bar.

The verdict of the high-profile case was delivered by the Trial-at-Bar comprising Colombo High Court Judge Lalith Jayasuriya (President), Colombo High Court Judge Kusala Sarojini Weerawardena and Colombo High Court Judge Amendra Seneviratne.

Former DIG of Police Vass Gunawardena, his son Ravindu Gunawardena and four other Police officers were indicted for murder and also indicted of the conspiracy to murder.

The four Police officers were named as KelumRangana Dissanayake, LakminaIndikaBamunusinghe, GaminiSanathchandra and Priyantha Sanjeewa.

Continue reading ‘Ex- DIG Vass Gunawardena, his Son Ravindu and 4 Police Officers Sentenced to Death for 2013 Murder of Businessman Mohamed Siyam’ »

Kopay Police Probe Death of 18 Year old Tamil Student Rajeswaran Senthuran to Ascertain Whether he Committed Suicide over Release of Tamil Prisoners Issue

By Madura Ranwala

The Kopay police have launched an investigation into an 18-year-old boy committing suicide after some people claimed that he had taken his life demanding the immediate release of political prisoners held in the South.

The police said that the claim had been made on the basis of a letter allegedly written by Sellaiya Rajeswaran Senthuram of Kopay North. The police said that the letter had been handed over to them.

Senthuram committed suicide by jumping before a moving train, plying from Kankasanthurai to Jaffna, at Kokkuvil yesterday morning.

Continue reading ‘Kopay Police Probe Death of 18 Year old Tamil Student Rajeswaran Senthuran to Ascertain Whether he Committed Suicide over Release of Tamil Prisoners Issue’ »

Anatomy of “Yahapalanaya”( Nallaatchi/Good Governance)

By

Prof. G.L.Peiris

“One of the most senior Ministers of the Government in a public speech in his home constituency has declared that Yahapalanaya is in tatters and that even the debris cannot be found.

It is quite obvious that this is the reality on the ground.

The question, however, is whether, leaving Yahapalanaya aside, there is today any kind of Palanaya at all in the country.

Let alone good governance, there is at present a total breakdown of governance, to a degree which this nation has not seen at any time.

Continue reading ‘Anatomy of “Yahapalanaya”( Nallaatchi/Good Governance)’ »

“Power Play ” Visit by Samantha Power and the “Power Games ” Played by the US in Sri Lanka.

BY

BANDULA JAYASEKARA

The government has been singing hosannas for America’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Samantha Power, who was here on a brief visit.

Is Samantha Power genuine genuinely interested in Sri Lanka or government politicians are gullible?

Is Sri Lanka bending over backwards to please the US?

Power, who had a strained relationship with former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, is a much welcome guest in Sri Lanka these days though she did not receive the same welcome in India. In Sri Lanka, Foreign Minister Samaraweera took it upon himself to host the US diplomat to dinner whilst in India only Joint Secretary Sujata Mehta in charge of Multilateral and Economic Relations which oversees the UN did so.

Power described Samaraweera as a good friend. However, she just couldn’t describe Indian Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj in endearing terms. India, which is very concerned on protocol issues, would never offer such welcomes. In a way it is not surprising that such things are happening in a country where ambassadors could even reach the former through text messages.

Late Lakshman Kadirgamar would have none of it. Certain protocols must be practised.

On an earlier occasion, Samaraweera, whom I respect, got flak from sections of the Sri Lankan media for his welcome hug for the US assistant secretary for South Asia, Nisha Biswal. They said he would have reserved it for his counterpart, US Secretary of State John Kerry.

Continue reading ‘“Power Play ” Visit by Samantha Power and the “Power Games ” Played by the US in Sri Lanka.’ »

Placing Too Much of Trust in Diaspora Groups so Early May Lead to Blunders


By

M.S.M.Ayub

It is doubtful whether the government has got its priorities right in respect of reconciliation, given the emphasis it has placed on matters pertaining to the Tamil diaspora.

Soon after the January 8 regime change, Foreign Affairs Minister Mangala Samaraweera had planned a diaspora festival to be held in December which was later put off indefinitely apparently due to possible protests by the southern nationalists. And now the government has removed 8 diaspora organizations and 267 persons from a list of 16 organisations and 424 persons including several Sinhalese and 30 women designated by the previous regime “in terms of the United Nations Security Council resolution 1373 which set out strategies to combat terrorism and to control terrorist funding.”

Continue reading ‘Placing Too Much of Trust in Diaspora Groups so Early May Lead to Blunders’ »

56 Persons Convicted Under PTA and 204 LTTE Suspects Currently Undergoing Trial in Courts Wont be Released Announces Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe

by Saman Indrajith

Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe, PC, yesterday said the government wouldn’t release those who had been convicted on terrorism charges.

He stressed that those who had been charged in courts, too, wouldn’t released.

The President’s Counsel was responding to an allegation that the release of hardcore LTTE terrorists would pose a serious threat to national security.

Addressing the media at the Parliamentary complex, MP Rajapakse said that among the LTTE cadres in custody were 56 found guilty of committing offences listed under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA).

The minister said that the government was considering the release of only 24 LTTE cadres against whom charges hadn’t been filed but kept in custody in connection with minor offences.

Continue reading ‘56 Persons Convicted Under PTA and 204 LTTE Suspects Currently Undergoing Trial in Courts Wont be Released Announces Justice Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe’ »

Frontline Socialist Party Leader Kumar Gunaratnam Re-remanded till Dec 11th by Kegalle Magistrate Prasanna Alwis

By

Manushi Silva

Activist of the Frontline Socialist Party Premakumar Gunaratnam alias Kumar Gunaratnam was re-remanded till December 11 when he was produced before Kegalle Magistrate Prasanna Alwis today.

Continue reading ‘Frontline Socialist Party Leader Kumar Gunaratnam Re-remanded till Dec 11th by Kegalle Magistrate Prasanna Alwis’ »

Remembering Rex de Silva

By Lasanda Kurukulasuriya

Rex de Silva

Rex de Silva

It’s hard to believe that Rex de Silva is no more, he left us too soon at 74. He bid his last farewell in his typical modest fashion – unbeknownst to many, cremated within hours of his death according to his last wishes. No public announcements, fanfare or ceremony. But that will not lessen the sense of loss to an entire generation of journalists he groomed, to whom he was mentor, role model and friend during his lifetime.

In those days, as Editor in Chief of the (now-defunct) Sun and Weekend newspapers of the Independent Newspapers group, Rex was a larger-than-life presence. Gifted with a combination of traits few can boastof in a ruthless industry, he was as dynamic as he was well-loved by all around him. It wouldn’t be far from the truth to say that in the editorial department, all the guys wanted to be like him, and all the girls had a secret (and sometimes not-so-secret) crush on him!

For those who worked with Rex, the image of that super-cool guy striding into office in his trademark blue jeans with camera slung over his shoulder, will be tempered by the knowledge of his unremitting professionalism and commitment. His enthusiasm was infectious. Always accessible to those who sought his counsel, Rex encouraged his protégés to investigate stories fearlessly, never to be afraid to speak ‘truth to power,’ and to ‘tell it like it is’ on the printed page.

As cub reporters he would give us assignments that took us among people from allwalks of life, high and low, and around the country, far and wide. I have heard it said that this was the best ‘journalism class’ anyone could hope to enroll in at the time.

Continue reading ‘Remembering Rex de Silva’ »

Japanese Tamil scholar and Authority on Chola Dynasty Rule Noburo Karashima dies of Leukemia aged 82

By

B Sivakumar

Japanese Tamil scholar and former president of the International Tamil Research Association Prof Noburo Karashima died of leukemia on Thursday. He was 82.

“Prof Karashima died of leukemia. He was planning to visit India in January next, but he cancelled the visit and was later hospitalised,” said Y Subbarayulu, a longtime associate of Karashima.

Karashima had served the International Tamil Research Association from 1989 till 2010. He was professor emeritus at University of Japan and Taisho University.

Karashima, a recipient of Padma Shri award, had been associated with Tamil Nadu for several years. He was an authority on Chola period life and literature.

Continue reading ‘Japanese Tamil scholar and Authority on Chola Dynasty Rule Noburo Karashima dies of Leukemia aged 82’ »

Mahinda “Gamana”Goes on at 70: How Mahendra Percy Rajapaksa Began his Political Journey

By D.B.S.Jeyaraj

Mahendra Percy Rajapaksa known to the world at large as Mahinda Rajapaksa reached the magical age of 70 on November 18th 2015. The age of seventy or three score and ten regarded as the span of life has a special aura about it. The Bible (psalm 90 verse 10) says “ The days of our years are threescore years and ten; and if by reason of strength they be fourscore years, yet is their strength labour and sorrow; for it is soon cut off, and we fly away”.William Shakespeare observes in his “Macbeth” – “Threescore and ten I can remember well: Within the volume of which time I have seen Hours dreadful and things strange; but this sore night Hath trifled former knowings”.

Celebrating the 70th Birthday

Celebrating the 70th Birthday

Mahinda Rajapaksa observed his milepost birthday on a religious note participating in a Bodhi pooja held at Anuradhapura. He was also in Kandy to pay homage to the tooth relic at Dalada Maligawa. The ex-president met with the Diyawadana Nilame of the Dalada Maligawa, Pradeep Nilanga Dela. Thereafter he called on the Anunayake of the Malwatte Chapter, the Ven Niyangoda Vijitha Siri Thera and had a private discussion. The Venerable Thera spoke to the media afterwards and said that, considering what is now taking place in the country, the former president was now seen to be worthy of merit. The former president also paid a courtesy call on the deputy registrar of Asgiriya Chapter, the Ven Narampanawe Ananda Thera.
Continue reading ‘Mahinda “Gamana”Goes on at 70: How Mahendra Percy Rajapaksa Began his Political Journey’ »

Frontline Socialist Party Leader Kumar Gunaratnam’s Mother Rajamani Gunaratnam Writes Letter to President Sirisena Seeking his Intervention

Rajamani Gunaratnam, mother of Frontline Socialist Party Premkumar Gunaratnam, has sought the intervention of President Maithripala Sirisena to sort the issue of her son’s Sri Lankan citizenship.

She has, in a letter to the President, written as follows –

“I am an 80-year-old retired school teacher. I was born in Undugoda in Kegalle and married to Aadimoolam Pillai Gunaratnam born in Jaffna. The fourth child of our marriage is Premakumar Gunaratnam and he was taken into custody on Nov. 04, 2015 and currently held at the Kegalle Remand Prison. Premakumar was born on Nov. 18, 1965 at the Kegalle Government hospital and received his primary education at the St Mary’s College in Kegalle and secondary education from the Pinnawala Central College. He was a student at the Engineering Faculty of the University of Peradeniya.

“My eldest son Ranjithan Gunaratnam, too, was a student at the Engineering Faculty of the Peradeniya University and was also the convener of the Inter University Students’ Federation. While he was engaged in political activities he was abducted in December 1989. We have not received any information about him ever since and not even received a death certificate. Both my sons were taken into custody and were held at detention centers several times.

Continue reading ‘Frontline Socialist Party Leader Kumar Gunaratnam’s Mother Rajamani Gunaratnam Writes Letter to President Sirisena Seeking his Intervention’ »

Only 3 out of 20 LTTE Linked Tamil Prisoners Selected for Release After Rehabilitation are Eligible to be Released says MA Sumanthiran MP.

By P.K.Balachandran

Only three of the twenty LTTE detainees who were earmarked for rehabilitation prior to release are eligible for rehabilitation, says the Tamil National Alliance MP and alliance spokesman, M.A.Sumanthiran.

He told the media here that most of the 20 detainees have more than one case against them and a few have already served their term and are due for full release anyway.

For a detainee to be eligible for rehabilitation, he has to be released from every case. And this will take time. Only three of the 20 have only one case against them and only these three can be released now, Sumanthiran said.

The TNA MP, who is also a senior counsel in the Supreme Court, said that he had pointed these out to Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, the Law and Order and Justice Ministers, and the Attorney General.

He has also told them that the conditions attached to the rehabilitation and release scheme are not acceptable.

Continue reading ‘Only 3 out of 20 LTTE Linked Tamil Prisoners Selected for Release After Rehabilitation are Eligible to be Released says MA Sumanthiran MP.’ »

Samantha Power the US Ambassador to UN Has in Recent Days Really Stirred Things up in Sri Lanka.

By

Taylor Dibbert

In recent days, Samantha Power, U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. has really stirred things up in Sri Lanka. She seems to have met virtually all of the key political players and the optics of her visit to the Northern Province were especially good. From the looks of it, Power left the island looking like a bit of a rock star.

While it’s easy to appreciate the fact that her agenda was wide-ranging, it’s important to keep in mind that, in President Barack Obama’s White House, very few people actually have control over foreign policy.

This means that, for the duration of Obama’s time in office, the trajectory of U.S.-Sri Lanka ties will probably be determined by a small group of people. In essence, optics matter, yet let’s not conflate optics with policy.

So where do we go from here?

Continue reading ‘Samantha Power the US Ambassador to UN Has in Recent Days Really Stirred Things up in Sri Lanka.’ »

Comparing and Contrasting Mahinda,Maithripala and Chandrika with Shakespeare’s Caesar,Brutus and Cassius Respectively

By Dr. Kamal Wickremasinghe

The memory of the key event that led to the 2015 regime change––the defection of Maithripala Sirisena from the SLFP a year ago last week––appears to have sunk without trace in the humdrum, moral-free politics of Sri Lanka. The defection that marked the pinnacle of the project to assassinate former president Mahinda Rajapaksa politically is yet to see its completion.

Notwithstanding that, the event that was made spicier by revelations that Sirisena had shared a meal of hoppers with Rajapaksa the previous night, giving rise to howls of ‘traitor’ from Rajapaksa loyalists deserves a bit more attention.

The electoral defeat of Rajapaksa, who appeared invincible until the defection invoked comparisons with the fall of the Roman Dictator Julius Caesar, with many writers attempting to enliven the undertones of treachery by colourising comment with the hackneyed, historically inaccurate Shakespearean quote, Et tu Brute? It was certainly drama that incorporated many dramatic elements such as characters in conflict and tragic or at least painful resolutions that appear to be still unfolding.

The purpose here is to ‘compare and contrast’ the characters, events and the aftermath of the ‘political’ downfall of Rajapaksa with the ‘physical’ assassination of Julius Caesar as portrayed in William Shakespeare’s The Tragedy of Julius Caesar ( or Julius Caesar) that debuted in 1599, opening the newly-built Globe Theatre in London (burnt to the ground on 29 June 1613).

The play portrays the hatching of conspiracy by 60 Roman senators to assassinate Julius Caesar, and the momentous events that followed the assassination. Although the title is Julius Caesar, the central psychological drama of Shakespeare’s play comprises the inner struggle of its ‘tragic hero’ Marcus Junius “Brutus”prior to joining the conspiracy against his friend Caesar, at the behest of the leader of the plot, his brother in-law Gaius “Cassius” Longinus.

The leading characters of the play – Caesar, Brutus and Cassius certainly had parallels in the Sri Lankan situation, with Rajapaksa, Maithripala Sirisena and Chandrika Bandaranaike comfortably fitting into the roles respectively, albeit with obvious dissimilarities relating to their levels of power and social background, and gender in one case. Such differences however are irrelevant to the character profiles.

Continue reading ‘Comparing and Contrasting Mahinda,Maithripala and Chandrika with Shakespeare’s Caesar,Brutus and Cassius Respectively’ »

Arrangement to Rehabilitate and Release LTTE Linked Tamil Detenues Runs Into Legal Difficulties

By P K Balachandran

The Sri Lankan government’s plan to send for rehabilitation and eventual release 217 Tamils detained for alleged links with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), has run into legal difficulties.

On November 17, the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) MP, M A Sumanthiran, had said that government would send the first batch for rehabilitation in ten days.

But, according to the Minister of National Dialogue, Mano Ganeshan, there may be a delay on account of the fact that some prisoners have more than one case against them.

A prisoner might be qualified for rehabilitation and release in one case, but not in another, he explained.

“We are discussing this issue with the Attorney General to find a way out. In a week or so, it may be sorted out,” Ganeshan told Express on Tuesday.

Continue reading ‘Arrangement to Rehabilitate and Release LTTE Linked Tamil Detenues Runs Into Legal Difficulties’ »

Of the Four Women Disliked by Mahinda Rajapaksa he Hated Samantha Power the Most.

By

Upul Joseph Fernando

A glance to the past of Mahinda Rajapaksa’s Presidency that spanned nearly a decade would reveal that there were four female names he mostly disliked. The first of that four was Chandrika Kumaratunga. The second was United States Ambassador to the United Nations Samantha Power. The third was United Nations Human Rights Commissioner Navi Pillay. The fourth was former United States Ambassador to Colombo Michele J.Sisson. Of the four, Mahinda mostly hated or disliked Samantha Power. Whenever Mahinda met with his Cabinet colleagues he used to repeat, “That thin woman in the White House is the person who is creating all these problems for me”.

Mahinda incurred heavy expenditure to create a rift between the then United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton and Samantha Power working through Lobby Ford entity in the United States and win over Clinton. Mahinda was told by his Advisors on Foreign Affairs and International Relations that during the 2008 election campaign of Barack Obama Samantha Power had described Hillary as a monster and had insulted Hillary noting there was a rift between Samantha and Hillary.

So Mahinda waited till a battle erupted between Samantha and Hillary, but it never occurred. Thereafter, Mahinda pinned hopes on Hillary’s successor John Kerry. Kerry told the Senate that Sri Lanka would get pushed to the lap of China if the United States proceeded with war crimes charges against the South Asian island nation and also stated in a report that such a stance would be detrimental to the interests of the United States. What Mahinda gathered from that situation was that Kerry would overpower Samantha’s powers.

Continue reading ‘Of the Four Women Disliked by Mahinda Rajapaksa he Hated Samantha Power the Most.’ »

What was Samantha Power, Doing on a Vsit to Sri Lanka and most Conspicuously Jaffna, where she met the Controversial Chief Minister?


By

Dr.Dayan Jayatilleka

“The Tamil guerrilla fighters in Sri Lanka first developed the explosive suicide vest…”

John Gray- ‘The Soul of the Marionette: A Short Enquiry into Human Freedom’ (2015)

France’s President dubbed Syria “the biggest factory of terrorists the world has ever seen”. In his path-breaking study of suicide terrorism, Chicago’s Prof. Robert Pape concluded that the Tamil Tigers fielded more suicide bombers than all the Islamist groups put together. This makes Sri Lanka’s North and East arguably the “biggest factory” of terrorist suicide bombers the world has ever seen. Yet, in the eyes of the West, the “victims” are mainly in Northern Tamil society, the very “factory” that produced the suicide bombers, is yet unprepared to denounce them and is preparing to commemorate them — while the “internationally accountable” guilty perpetrators are the armed forces from the largely Sinhala South which stopped the suicide bombers!

Ghastly as the savagery unleashed by the ISIS terrorists in Paris was, they didn’t wittingly slaughter children and babies, whereas in countless pre-dawn raids over decades, marauding Tigers stabbed and slashed to death sleeping infants and their mothers in “border villages”. In the West, citizens of cities hit by suicide bombing terrorists are rightly recognized as the innocent victims and counselled for post-traumatic stress disorder while in Sri Lanka the focus of Western and West-funded “psychosocial” concern are precisely the zones — the lair — from which the suicide bombers swarmed, rather than the ones they targeted. The North and East are regarded as “former conflict zones”, not the island as a whole and still less the Southern two-thirds, including Colombo.

President Hollande correctly called the challenge by the “ISIS army” a “war” and pledged to be “merciless” in “eradicating” terrorism. He denounced the “barbarians of Daesh”. French PM Manuel Valls says France “has an enemy, and that is radical Islamism”. When Sri Lanka strove to “eradicate terrorism” the West warned of a bloodbath and tried to stop us. Any suggestion that the Tigers were “barbarians” and that Sri Lanka’s “enemy” is or was “radical Tamil secessionism” would be labelled racist discourse against reconciliation. Recall that Gaddafi was framed for genocidal intent towards Benghazi when he pledged on TV to “mercilessly eradicate the terrorists”. His country was bombed and he was lynched. The terrorists later stormed the US embassy and murdered the Ambassador. Now the US has no embassy in the Libya it ‘liberated’.

However, the US seems to have two Ambassadors to little Sri Lanka. What was Samantha Power, the US Ambassador/Permanent Representative to the UN New York and the Security Council, doing on a visit to Sri Lanka and most conspicuously Jaffna, where she met the controversial Chief Minister? The UN is a multilateral posting, and unlike UN officials, UN ambassadors don’t visit countries (member states) unless specifically accredited to them. In Jaffna, Ambassador Power opined that “demilitarization…in the Northern province could not wait”. (Daily FT, Nov 23)

Continue reading ‘What was Samantha Power, Doing on a Vsit to Sri Lanka and most Conspicuously Jaffna, where she met the Controversial Chief Minister?’ »

Mahinda Rajapaksa Will be Remembered for Saving the Country even if Found Guilty of Heinous Wrongdoings.

By

Gomin Dayasri

Friends of Yahapalanaya (good governance) are hard to find and an extinguished breed. Needs to search vainly among the coterie enjoying the spill-offs from the gravy train to spot an unseen, unheard chump. Most holding appointments are not the squeaky clean. The genuine good governance supporters have left in dismay after watching it sorrowfully unfold.

Easy as train spotting. See it all on the road and watch the fuel burnt in official vehicles carrying good governance lightweights on their worthless meanderings without checks. Holding such high office are names that have not earned value or without a touch of class. Many are nobodies of some bodies.

Dismissed collectively as political upstarts by a hostile public, conscious of the rising public debt, as prices escalate on market shelves and coins collect and notes disappear in tired wallets. A few do contribute but are tarred by the same brush. Public over the years has been accustomed to seeing mighty corporations melt due to political foolery, irrespective of the government in office. These peddlers of power come from the same nurseries. A cause for anger, on seeing wastage, corruption, nepotism, and inefficiency – is understandable. Yahapalanaya is the same old song, sung again to a new tune by the same croaky voices.

Continue reading ‘Mahinda Rajapaksa Will be Remembered for Saving the Country even if Found Guilty of Heinous Wrongdoings.’ »

Samantha Power Appeals to Lankan Leaders to Stop Being Governed by Fear in Thought and Action

By

Dharisha Bastians

United States Ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power yesterday urged Sri Lankans to be less fearful of digging into a complicated past and turned introspective as she denounced current divisive political rhetoric in her own country in the wake of the Paris attacks, as “outrageous”.

“Fear is a bad advisor,” Ambassador Power said quoting UN diplomat Sergio Vieira de Mello, who was killed in a suicide attack in Iraq in 2003, as she addressed a town hall style gathering for Sri Lankan youth at the JDA Gallery in Colombo last

“The fear that is we dig too deep to a painful past, the pursuit of a bright future might be lost; the fear that certain liberties come at the expense of security are perfectly understandable and reasonable,” she said, in reference to Sri Lanka’s own struggle with coming to terms with the legacy of a painful civil conflict.

Continue reading ‘Samantha Power Appeals to Lankan Leaders to Stop Being Governed by Fear in Thought and Action’ »

South Asian Muslims in ISIS are Treated as Being Inferior to Arab Fighters and are Tricked into Deployment on Suicide Missions

Dreaded terrorist group ISIS does not consider South Asian Muslims, including Indians, good enough to fight in conflict zone of Iraq and Syria and treated as inferior than Arab fighters but often tricks them and push into suicide attacks.

According to an intelligence report prepared by foreign agencies and shared with Indian agencies, fighters from India, Pakistan, Bangladesh as well as certain countries like Nigeria and Sudan are considered inferior to Arab fighters.

There appears to be clear hierarchy wherein the Arab fighters are preferred as officer cadre and provided better arms and ammunition, equipment, accommodation and salaries.

“The fighters from South Asia are usually housed in groups in small barracks and are paid less than the Arab fighters and are provided inferior equipment,” the input says.

Continue reading ‘South Asian Muslims in ISIS are Treated as Being Inferior to Arab Fighters and are Tricked into Deployment on Suicide Missions’ »

Should Laws be Enacted to Protect Estimated 50,000 Sex Workers in Sri Lanka From Violence and Harassment?

by

Hasini Rupasinghe

Despite the reluctance to openly discuss this subject, is evident that sex workers are abundant in contemporary Sri Lanka. Although they are condemned in terms of cultural and religious aspects, their existence cannot be denied. No rational person would take up sex work over the choice of other work. No girl’s ambition is to become a prostitute as she grows. No parent or teacher dreams of a child to sell their bodies.

Even in countries where prostitution is legal, there are no institutes to specialise in sex work. Then why is this popular? How come it is trending? It was recently revealed that there are about 50 000 Lankan women engaged in prostitution. Sex workers have become a part of the community and should be given correct attention.

This is quite a sensitive topic and is hard to approach, as the widespread notion is that prostitutes corrupt society and bring negative values to the social structure. While poverty tops the list, coercion and desperation may be other reasons for women to be inclined towards sex work.

In many instances the need to provide for children would drive divorced or widowed women opting for sex work. That reasoning goes to the thousands of child-burdened war-widows especially in the North and North-East, who have suddenly become bread winners without education or employable skills. Drugs, human trafficking and failed adolescent experimentation could be other possible rationales.

Sex work/ Prostitution is not legalised in Sri Lanka. We are often filled with news about brothels being raided and prostitutes being arrested. Organisations such as Centre for Sex Worker’s Rights (CSWR) and women’s rights activists have been demanding legal rights in order to create a recognised position for them in society.

Continue reading ‘Should Laws be Enacted to Protect Estimated 50,000 Sex Workers in Sri Lanka From Violence and Harassment?’ »

“Sri Lanka will not Allow Other Countries to Establish Naval Bases in the Island”- Ranil Wickremesinghe

By P.K.Balachandran

Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has said that Lanka will not allow other countries to set up naval bases in it.

“We would like to reiterate that there would be no naval bases allocated to other countries within Sri Lanka,” Wickremesinghe declared in his keynote address at the 6 the annual international naval conference called “Galle Dialogue” at the south Lankan port city of Galle on Monday.

The Prime Minister’s remark is significant in the light of China’s alleged bid to set up a naval base in Lanka as part of its plan to set up naval bases and civilian ports nicknamed the “String of Pearls” across Asia.

Continue reading ‘“Sri Lanka will not Allow Other Countries to Establish Naval Bases in the Island”- Ranil Wickremesinghe’ »

Presidential Commission of Inquiry Probing 16 “Mega Corruption”Cases Drops Action Against 15 of them Except for Ex-MP Sarath Kumara Gunaratne


By Shamindra Ferdinando

Presidential Commission of Inquiry to investigate and inquire into Serious Acts of Fraud, Corruption and Abuse of Power, State Resources and Privileges has dropped investigations into at least 15 cases on the grounds that the state didn’t suffer revenue losses due to those transactions.

Having completed investigations into 16 cases, the Commission had recommended further legal action as regards only one of them, authoritative sources told The Island.

The Commission late last week informed the Attorney General and the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC) to initiate action against former UPFA Gampaha District MP Sarath Kumara Gunaratne and four former Ceylon Fisheries Corporation officials over the Negombo lagoon development project implemented during the previous administration.

All complaints received by the Commission dealt with alleged corrupt transactions involving those who had been in power or their associates. The Commission admitted terminating investigations into 15 cases.

Continue reading ‘Presidential Commission of Inquiry Probing 16 “Mega Corruption”Cases Drops Action Against 15 of them Except for Ex-MP Sarath Kumara Gunaratne’ »

Mainstream Islam in Sri Lanka Being Tolerant and Benign is our Greatest Defence Against Islamic Radicalization.

By

Ranga Jayasuriya

Last week, terrorists of the Islamic State butchered 130 men and women in Paris while they were – as one newspaper put it – indulging in life’s innocent pleasures: watching a concert, a football friendly and drinking beer by the roadside. Those terrorists – at least five of them – were identified as French Muslims.

A week before that incident, Sri Lankan Muslim organizations, led by Jamiathul Ulama came together to demand that the government in Colombo denied visa to one rabid Islamist preacher, Jainul Abideen, the founder of Tamil Nadu Thawheed Jamaat. Abideen was invited by Sri Lanka Thawheed Jamaat, a fringe group of Wahhabis awash with Gulf money. The government conceded. Abideen was refused a visa for a second time. In 2005, the government denied him an entry visa on the same grounds.

Obviously there is no direct link between the two incidents in Paris and Colombo. But, the threat of growing Islamic fundamentalism is global.

The nihilistic cult of Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) now boasts the allegiance of 36 terrorist groups around the world. In other parts, Al Qaeda, its affiliates and franchise groups are vying for the gory mantle of being the Salafi Jihad’s torch-bearers. Muslim communities worldwide are the swamp that Jihadist fish swim and proliferate. In this vast global lake, resistance that emanates from some small corners like ours to this virulent radicalization matters. If nothing else, the response from mainstream

Sri Lankan Muslim organizations, which stood up against Abideen tells us, that they are more enlightened than many of their counterparts in the world. (The Muslim Association of Britain, once hosted Anwar-al-Awlaki, a Yemeni-American terrorist preacher and a recruiter for Al-Qaeda on a lecture tour).

Sri Lankan Muslim community has not yet been fully exposed to Salafi- Jihadi fundamentalism that has extended its tentacles from the Middle East to South East Asia and Sub Saharan Africa. (Though more and more local Muslim women, especially in the East wear Burqa, the all-encompassing Islamic garment).

However, given the global reach of fundamentalist Islam, no community is safe from exposure — including our own.

Continue reading ‘Mainstream Islam in Sri Lanka Being Tolerant and Benign is our Greatest Defence Against Islamic Radicalization.’ »

Conduct of President Sirisena Shows that he is Still a Conventional Political Creature with no Elevation From That Level.


by Upul Kumarapperuma

At the time of the campaign for presidency, Maithripala Sirisena and his team advocated for a new political and socio economic culture in the country, which had become the main attraction for the upper middle class, the middle class, and the minorities to cast their vote for electing him as the President.

Unlike other politicians, President Sirisena made a self-proclamation that he would play an apolitical role in his national government. Both terms namely “Apolitical President” and “National Government” were able to win the hearts of the aforementioned sectors as the country was fed up with the political turbulences created against the opposition during the Rajapaksa rule.

The imminent necessity of having an apolitical President was triggered by the conduct of then President Mahinda Rajapaksa. He grabbed enormous power for the sake of law and exercised that for his survival. Therefore, the country believed that an apolitical leader would be the foundation for a depoliticized society and a social structure which would run separately from the whims and fancies of politicians.

Continue reading ‘Conduct of President Sirisena Shows that he is Still a Conventional Political Creature with no Elevation From That Level.’ »

Distributing Cash Vouchers Instead of Free School Uniforms will cause new set of Problems

By Udaya P. Gammanpila

The late President R. Premadasa introduced the free distribution of school uniforms to ensure that poor children would not avoid schooling because of the non-availability of uniforms. Although governments changed several times, nobody stopped this vital project which has immensely contributed to keep Sri Lanka’s literacy rate above the world average.

The United National Party (UNP) government in 2002, considered the distribution of school uniform clothes as a time consuming and tedious task. It found that the process of calling for tenders to distribute school uniforms was totally unnecessary. Hence, it introduced a cash voucher to replace uniform clothes. The value of the voucher depended on the required size of the material and its cost in the market. After the distribution of vouchers to parents, a set of new problems cropped up.

Continue reading ‘Distributing Cash Vouchers Instead of Free School Uniforms will cause new set of Problems’ »

President Sirisena Clarifies that he has no Ambition of Becoming an Executive Prime Minister After Abolishing Executive Presidency

Obtaining the approval of the Central Committee members of the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), which he now leads, to show it was their initiative, President Maithripala Sirisena last Wednesday gave a two-page ‘note’ to his ministers. Titled “Amendments to the Constitution,”He timed it for the week that marked the first year since he quit the previous Government to contest the January presidential election against Mahinda Rajapaksa.

It read –

“In the Manifesto published as the Common Candidate of the alliance at the Presidential Election and in public statements we stated that two major Constitutional Amendments will be undertaken, if I were elected as the President. (Maithree palanayak – Sthavara Ratak)

“These two amendments were:

1. To abolish the Executive Presidency and transfer powers to Parliament.

2. Amend the proportional representation electoral system and ensure democratic participation of the people through a more democratic electoral system.

“Though we succeeded in amending the constitutional provisions relating to executive powers of the President and to re-establish the Independent Commissions within a short span of time, we have to admit that we have not been able to fulfil the total aspirations of the people. Though we attempted to reach agreement on an acceptable framework to revise the electoral system, this exercise failed. We are aware that our electors who looked forward to an era of good governance would not have been happy with the outcome. We have observed that there are many critics who openly criticise the failure of our political parties, the government and its leaders. This is not a secret.

Continue reading ‘President Sirisena Clarifies that he has no Ambition of Becoming an Executive Prime Minister After Abolishing Executive Presidency’ »

Cleverly Crafted UNP-SLFP Coalition Budget for 2016:The Good, The Bad and The Dangerous

By

C.A.Chandraprema

The first fully fledged budget of the UNP-SLFP coalition was as cleverly crafted as the circumstances would permit. The government had some difficult reforms to implement not just because the IMF recommended them but because the reforms mentioned in this budget were a prominent part of the UNP’s own parliamentary election manifesto.

In order to head off possible resistance to those reforms, the government has sought to give more concessions to the people – a wise strategy. The levy on potatoes was reduced by Rs 25 per kg, big onions by Rs. 25, the price of a 400 gram packet of locally manufactured milk powder has been reduced to Rs 295/- and the local milk powder manufacturer, will get a subsidy of Rs 30/- per 400 gram packet. Infant milk powder has been reduced by Rs. 100 per kg. The price of canned fish (425 grams) has been reduced to Rs. 125. Certain varieties of rice also have been brought under price controls.

The maximum retail prices of sprats and dhal have been reduced to Rs. 410 and Rs. 169 respectively. The price of a gas cylinder has been reduced by Rs. 150. The private sector which was rattled by the super gains tax has been pacified with a corporate tax rate of 15% with a higher rate of 30% for the betting and gaming, liquor, tobacco, banking and financial services, insurance and leasing and trading activities.

The maximum personal income tax rate has been fixed as 16% and the tax free threshold has been raised from Rs.750,000/- to Rs.2.4 million – a move that will no doubt make a lot of private sector employees happy. The 2.5 percent withholding tax on interest on fixed deposits has also been lifted. The Rs. 10,000 allowances will be considered for the pension payment at the time of retirement.

Continue reading ‘Cleverly Crafted UNP-SLFP Coalition Budget for 2016:The Good, The Bad and The Dangerous’ »

Maithripala Tells SLFP the Party Would have Treated him in Style like Chandrika if he too Hailed from an Aristocratic Family

By

Prasad Gunewardene

Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake, last Friday, unfolded the debut Budget of the Sirisena-Wickremesinghe Government which was people-friendly and development-oriented in nature. While introducing relief to the consumers on several essential food commodities, priority was focused on health and education while taxes were imposed on several sectors and items.

Overall the Budget did not place many burdens on the working class. So, the new Government has drawn up economic plans for the coming year. Though the Government of Unity successfully introduced the Budget aimed at developing the country, while providing concessions to the people, the political front of the Unity Government looks to be in turmoil with infighting raging by the day in both the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) and the United National Party (UNP).

In the SLFP, the group loyal to Mahinda Rajapaksa is planning the formation of a common front to contest the next Local Government elections due in March 2016. In the UNP, the Avant Garde controversy has caused disunity in the rank and file. Though it was reported that President Sirisena and Premier Ranil Wickremesinghe had advised the ministers in question not to clash in the open over the controversy, the battle continued much to the embarrassment of the two leaders.

Continue reading ‘Maithripala Tells SLFP the Party Would have Treated him in Style like Chandrika if he too Hailed from an Aristocratic Family’ »

Premier Ranil to Move Resolution in Parliament for setting up a Constitutional Assembly to Formulate a New Constitution for Sri Lanka


(Significant Highlights of a Draft Resolution that is to be Moved in Parliament by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe for the Setting up of the a ‘Constitutional Assembly.to Formulate a Draft Bill to Enact a new Constitution for Sri Lanka)

• “THIS HOUSE RESOLVES THAT: There shall be a Committee of Parliament hereinafter referred to as the ‘Constitutional Assembly’ which shall consist of all Members of Parliament, for the purpose of deliberating on, and seeking the views and advice of the people, on a new constitution for Sri Lanka, and preparing a draft of a Constitution Bill for the consideration of Parliament in the exercise of its powers under Article 75 of the Constitution.

• The Hon. Speaker of Parliament shall be the Chairman of the Constitutional Assembly. There shall be seven (7) Deputy Chairmen of the Constitutional Assembly, who shall be elected by the Constitutional Assembly. In the absence of the Hon. Speaker, the Constitutional Assembly shall elect one of the Deputy Chairmen to chair the sittings of the Assembly.

• A Legal Secretary to Constitutional Assembly and assistants to such Legal Secretary; and Media (including Social Media) Staff of the Constitutional Assembly (are to be appointed). The Media Staff shall set up and maintain a website and use other appropriate media, towards giving due publicity to the process for the adoption of a new Constitution for Sri Lanka. The Media Staff shall ensure that the proceedings of the Constitutional Assembly and its committees, as well as public representations/submissions are documented and published on such website along with such other relevant expert or technical opinions.

• The Prime Minister shall, at the first meeting of the Constitutional Assembly present Resolution for adoption by the Constitutional Assembly, calling upon the Steering Committee to present a Resolution proposing a Draft Constitution Bill for the consideration of the Constitutional Assembly (prior to its submission to the Cabinet of Ministers and Parliament).

Continue reading ‘Premier Ranil to Move Resolution in Parliament for setting up a Constitutional Assembly to Formulate a New Constitution for Sri Lanka’ »

Maithripala Govt Removes Ban on 8 Organizations and 269 Individuals Proscribed by Mahinda Govt as “LTTE” in 2014.

By

P.K.Balachandran

By a gazette extraordinary issued on Friday, the Sri Lankan government lifted the ban on several outfits and individuals previously thought to have been working for the LTTE.

On March 21, 2014, 16 organisations and 424 individuals were proscribed under the UN Act No: 45 of 1968. But, the latest gazette notification bans only eight organisations and 155 individuals.

The de-listed organisations are: Global Tamil Forum (GTF); British Tamil Forum (BTF); National Council of Canadian Tamils (NCCT); Tamil Youth Organization (TYO); World Tamil Coordinating Committee (WTCC); Canadian Tamil Congress (CTC); Australian Tamil Congress (ATC); Tamil National Council (TNC).

Organisations which are still banned are: the LTTE; Tamil Rehabilitation Organization (TRO); Tamil Coordinating Committee (TCC); World Tamil Movement (WTM); Transnational Government of Tamil Eelam (TGTE); Tamil Eelam Peoples’ Assembly (TEPA); World Tamils’ Relief Fund (WTRF) and Headquarters Group (HQG).

Continue reading ‘Maithripala Govt Removes Ban on 8 Organizations and 269 Individuals Proscribed by Mahinda Govt as “LTTE” in 2014.’ »

Who is Samantha Power and why is she Visiting Sri Lanka?

By Sulochana Ramiah Mohan

“So in Sri Lanka’s case, I don’t think anybody’s disputing the right of a sovereign government to put down a rebellion within its territory, never mind one as brutal as the LTTE, but the question is, how you go about doing that and whether you observe the laws in war. Again, my government – Louise Aarbour is here from the International Crisis Group that has done very important work on Sri Lanka, on the ground there, in terms of what was done. Again, the reason that we have these principles is to stand by them.

“In the event that they’re just thrown out there, then there can be perverse consequences, but again, I think our struggle is to rationalize and ensure that they are more binding than they have often been.” – Samantha Power, at an International Symposium on preventing genocide and mass atrocities while serving as US President Barak Obama’s Special Assistant for Multilateral Affairs and Human Rights.

Samantha Power is the Ambassador of the United States to the United Nations and her high profile job goes hand in hand with her work as a human rights activist. She was a war reporter from 1993 to 1996 covering Yugoslav wars for US News and World Report, The Boston Globe, The Economist, and The New Republic.

Focal person

She is also considered to be US President Barack Obama’s ‘focal person’ who monitors human rights actions, investigates, researches and establishes policies on human rights, genocide, war crimes, International Humanitarian Law (IHL) for the administration’s specific understanding.

She is in town today.

Continue reading ‘Who is Samantha Power and why is she Visiting Sri Lanka?’ »

Cold War Between Minister Harin Fernando and MP Chatura Senaratne Heats up Publicly

BY

RASIKA JAYAKODY

Telecommunications and Digital Infrastructure Minister Harin Fernando was livid early this week as he got to know that UNP MP Chathura Senaratne, the son of Health Minister Rajitha Senaratne, visited his ministry in search of some documents pertaining to alleged deals done by the Minister.

Senaratne, despite his links with the SLFP, he contested the last Parliamentary election on the UNP ticket and got elected to Parliament from the Gampaha district. In the run up to the last Presidential election, he was a stalwart of the Pivithuru Hetak National Movement, led by Parliamentarian Ven. Athuraliye Rathana Thera.

Chathura rose to fame a few months before the Parliamentary election this year, when he challenged former President Mahinda Rajapaksa to defeat him from the Beliatta seat. Although Chathura’s challenge was akin to David challenging Goliath, the statement went viral on social media and the young politician instantly became a known character among the country’s political circles.

Those who made Fernando aware of Chathura’s moves told the Minister that a Secretary of the Deputy Minister of the same ministry assisted the Parliamentarian. The Deputy Minister of Fernando’s Ministry is Tharanath Basnayake, a young Parliamentarian of the UPFA who received a portfolio from President Maithripala Sirisena. Fernando received information that the Secretary of his Deputy Minister was previously affiliated with Parliamentarian NamalRajapaksa.

Continue reading ‘Cold War Between Minister Harin Fernando and MP Chatura Senaratne Heats up Publicly’ »

Indictment Filed in Colombo High Court Against Supreme Court Judge Sarath de Abrew for 2 Counts of Sexual Abuse Under 365 B of Penal Code

By Lakmal Sooriyagoda

The Attorney General has filed an indictment in the Colombo High Court against Supreme Court Judge, Sarath de Abrew with committing grave sexual abuse on a domestic helper on or around June 26 this year.

The indictment has been filed under two counts on committing grave sexual abuse, which comes under Section 365 B of the Penal Code.

This is the first time a sitting Supreme Court judge has been indicted in the High Court on a criminal charge.

Continue reading ‘Indictment Filed in Colombo High Court Against Supreme Court Judge Sarath de Abrew for 2 Counts of Sexual Abuse Under 365 B of Penal Code’ »

What Hampers Justice is not the Absence of Sufficient Law or Capable Officers but the Lack of Will.

By

Kishali Pinto Jayawardene

There is an uncanny sense of déjà vu in the air.

The persistent recalling of worrisome history is pervasive, whether in regard to roguery relating to public funds, ministers appointing relatives to state offices because they are ‘trusted’ or the intimidation of citizens and students.

Continuation of an abusive state apparatus

Unlike its infinitely cruder predecessor, this new Government is more inclined to likeable optics on liberal reform. But would optics alone suffice? And in the absence of once strident critical voices, who were (rightly) outraged at Rajapaksa misdeeds, this question becomes even more acute.

This week, the Minister of Foreign Affairs is reported to have sworn in all solemnity that if state agents were ‘proved’ to have ‘questioned’ relatives of missing people who had met the United Nations Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances, they would be disciplined. This was in response to the Working Group’s considerable public disquiet in that regard.

These are tormenting echoes of the past. As late as last year, such ‘questioning’ was a prelude to the enforced disappearance of these unfortunates. While thankfully such atrocities are seemingly no longer part of deliberate state policy, Sri Lanka’s security apparatus appears to have continued with little change despite the turnover in political leadership early this year. This is evidenced by the Avant Garde controversy, to name just one example.

Continue reading ‘What Hampers Justice is not the Absence of Sufficient Law or Capable Officers but the Lack of Will.’ »

Cabinet Decision to Abolish Executive Presidency and Amend Election Laws is a Welcome Move

By

Lucien Rajakarunanayake

The Cabinet approval to go ahead to abolish the Executive Presidency and change the electoral system, is a welcome move to the core of the policies approved by the people in the mandate given to President Maithripala Sirisena in the Presidential Poll of January 8 this year. This should help revive the public discussion and debate that was alive from March 2014, and came into sharper focus with the attempt by Mahinda Rajapaksa to seek a third term in office, as he completed his 69th birthday last year.

With this Cabinet decision we move towards realization of a major policy of governance that had been promised, but not implemented by two Executive Presidents – Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga and Mahinda Rajapaksa, and the implementing of a policy that the UNP had called for since 2001, but did not have the parliamentary strength to proceed with.

The record on this promise to abolish the Executive Presidency is most interesting. In October 1994, the JVP obtained a pledge from the SLFP presidential candidate Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga, to implement this, and consequently withdrew their presidential candidate in the election that followed. Although CBK won that election with a huge personal majority and the next presidential poll too, the pledge was not carried out. While she lacked a parliamentary majority for the purpose, there was also no political campaigning to achieve this goal.

Continue reading ‘Cabinet Decision to Abolish Executive Presidency and Amend Election Laws is a Welcome Move’ »

Obama Administration Should use Samantha Power’s Visit as an Opportunity to Recalibrate Washington’s Rhetoric on Sri Lanka.

By Taylor Dibbert

Samantha Power, America’s Ambassador to the United Nations (UN), is in India and Sri Lanka from November 18 – 23. In India, she’s set to meet human rights activists, members of civil society and senior government officials. On November 20, she’ll give a speech about UN peacekeeping.

While far less significant on the geopolitical front, Power’s visit to Sri Lanka could be a tricky balancing act. Regarding the Sri Lanka portion of her trip, the U.S. mission to the UN has stated the following:

In Sri Lanka, Ambassador Power will highlight the United States’ commitment to strengthening the bilateral partnership, and she will underscore U.S. support for the country’s efforts toward reconciliation, accountability, and lasting peace in the aftermath of a devastating civil war.

In Colombo, she will meet with senior government officials, community leaders, civil society groups, and youth.

Continue reading ‘Obama Administration Should use Samantha Power’s Visit as an Opportunity to Recalibrate Washington’s Rhetoric on Sri Lanka.’ »

First National Budget of Sirisena-Wickremesinghe Govt Proposes to Provide Relief to the People by Reducing the Prices of Essential Commodities

By

Sandasen Marasinghe, Irangika Range and Disna Mudalige

The 70th budget, the first ever budget of the National Government presented by Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake in Parliament yesterday, proposes to provide relief to people by reducing the prices essential commodities.

The budget has been designed to promote rural development, industry development, guarantee the land rights of the people and solving their housing issues while laying special emphasis on the education and health sectors.

The minister proposed in the budget proposals to reduce prices of 11 selected essential commodities. It was proposed to reduce price of a 12.5 kg cylinder of gas by Rs 150. The tax on 1 kg of potatoes, onions reduced by Rs 25 each.

The price of locally manufactured 400g packet of milk powder by Rs 30, while a1kg packet of infant milk powder by Rs 100. It was also proposed to bring down the maximum price of 425 g tin of canned fish to Rs 125 while the maximum price of 1 kg of sprats was brought down to Rs 410 as at most of the places it is sold at Rs 800.

The minister also proposed to sell a kilogram of dhal at a maximum price of Rs 169 .

The price of 1 litre of kerosene is proposed to be reduced by Rs 10. Rs 3,000 million is to be allocated for the provision of these concessions,” Finance Minister Karunanayake said.

“The prices of essential food commodities in the market have increased rapidly since the previous government had not implemented any action to manage price fluctuations during the November and December season,.the minister said”

Continue reading ‘First National Budget of Sirisena-Wickremesinghe Govt Proposes to Provide Relief to the People by Reducing the Prices of Essential Commodities’ »

Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake Presents 2016 Budget Described as “A Budget for all”

The Unity Government yesterday presented what the Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake described as “a Budget for all” providing relief to the masses, the working class and the private sector, initiating reforms , opening up the economy for foreigners and non-residents as well as heavily taxing vices.

Government MPs hailed the 2016 Budget but Opposition members breathed fire saying it reflected failure and spelt disaster for the economy and the country.

The private sector’s initial reaction was one of cautious welcome with some saying it is a people and business friendly or a “win-win” Budget whilst others opined that it was a zero-gain Budget.

Independent analysts said Budget 2016 was comprehensive and progressive though it lacked the so-called “revolutionary” element which the Finance Minister assured many weeks ago. Initial reactions to tax proposals were mixed but more clarity and a well assessed response is likely in the next few days.

However, wrapping up a four and a half hour Budget presentation, Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake termed Budget 2016 as “an unprecedentedly innovative set of proposals encompassing benefits and opportunities for all strata of the society.”

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TNA Parliamentarian M.A.Sumanthiran Calls Upon Chief Minister CV Wigneswaran to Accept his Continuous Offer of Assistance for Northern Provincial Council

Northern Province Chief Minister Mr C. V Wigneswaran issued a lengthy explanation yesterday in response to allegations that he acted against the Tamil National Alliance at the General Elections held in 2015. In this regard, I welcome his confirmation of incidents I have highlighted previously. The acceptability or otherwise of his explanations and his interpretations of his own conduct are matters to be decided by the party.

Honourable Wigneswaran was specifically handpicked by the leader of the Tamil people Mr. Sampanthan to function as the Chief Minister of the Northern Province. The people responded expressing overwhelming support for the leader Mr. Sampanthan’s choice. This support for Mr.Sampanthan has been continually demonstrated at successive elections.

There is a sacred bond between the Tamil people and their leader. Those who attempt to sever this bond have been rejected by the people in the past, and they will continue to be rejected by the people. Each of us is duty bound to act loyally towards the party and its leader.

As far as I am concerned, there is no room whatsoever for compromise with respect to the need for loyalty. I affirm that my actions in relation to party affairs will continue to manifest this unequivocal position.

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UN Working Group Discovers “Secret Underground Detention cum Torture Center” in Trincomalee Naval Base

By P.K.Balachandran

The UN Working Group on Enforced or Involuntary Disappearances (UNWGEID), which has just concluded its visit to Sri Lanka, had discovered a “secret underground detention cum torture center” located in the Lankan naval base at Trincomalee in the Eastern Province.

Giving details of the “successful discovery” at a press conference here on Wednesday, Ariel Dulitzky, a member of the UNWGEID, said that the center might have been used officially or unofficially from 2010, going by the date scribbled on the wall. The walls had blood stains, he revealed. And the structure of the complex suggested that “systematic torture” was conducted there, the UN official said.

Although there were only 11 or 12 cells in the complex, the number of those who were detained or tortured there could have been “many more”, he added.

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Govt Announces Six month Time-frame for Abolition of Executive Presidency Through a new Constitution

by Zacki Jabbar

The government yesterday set a time frame of six months to abolish the executive presidency through a constituent assembly.

Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera, addressing a news conference at Sirikotha said that the Cabinet of Ministers had unanimously approved proposals by President Maithripala Sirisena to scrap the executive presidency and also introduce a new electoral system based on a combination of the first-past-the-post and proportional representation systems.

A committee headed by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe would within the next three weeks produce a draft of the proposed amendments, he noted.

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“Govt Exploring Possibility of Providing Remanded FSP Leader Kumar Gunaratnam some Legal Relief -Mangala Samaraweera

by Zacki Jabbar

Leader of the Frontline Socialist Party (FSP), Premakumar Gunaratnam alias Noel Mudalige who was further remanded yesterday for allegedly violating immigration laws by the Kegalle Magistrate, could receive some relief, the government said.

“We are exploring the possibility of providing Gunaratnam with some legal relief “, Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera told a news conference in Colombo.”But it all depends on what the court determines.”

The Minister pointed out that the FSP leader had been accused of overstaying his visa.

The law had to be applied equally to all those alleged to have committed offences, he said adding that considering the circumstances of Gunaratnam’s case, he could receive some relief.

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All Lawyers at Kegalle Courts Appear for Frontline Socialist Party Leader Kumar Gunaratnam Further Remanded Until Nov 27th

By Saman Indrajith

Kegalle Magistrate Prasanna Alwis yesterday ordered Leader of the Frontline Socialist Party Kumar Gunaratnam further remanded till Nov. 27.

The order was given when a case against Gunaratnam for violating immigration rules was taken up at the Kegalle Magistrate’s Court yesterday.

When the case was taken up all attorneys-at-law present in the court stood up and appeared for Gunaratnam.

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Did Health Minister Senaratne “Accept” Five Million Rupee Bribe “Offered” by Avant Garde Chairman Senadhipathi?

By Dharisha Bastians

Explosive revelations about the ongoing Avant Garde controversy continue to shake the ruling Government, with new audio tapes emerging yesterday that appears to implicate a senior aide to Minister Rajitha Senaratne as accepting a Rs. 5 million bribe from the chairman of the private maritime security company in the dock, Nissanka Senadhipathi.

Minister Senaratne, who is presently overseas, then released an audio recording to counter the first recording that appeared on the news and gossip website, lankaenews.com, which purportedly shows that same aide informing Senadhipathi that the Minister had refused the money.

The second recording appeared on Minister Senaratne’s verified Facebook account, with the title “Proof of Rajitha’s innocence: Audio tape proving that Rajitha Senaratne refused the money sent by Nissanka Senadhipathi”.

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Mahinda Rajapaksa Enlightened: “Bale Thiyanakota Mole Ne;Mole Thiyanakota Bale Ne”(When Powerful no Wisdom; When Wise no Power)

(Text of an Editorial appearing in “The Island” of November 18th 2015 under the heading “MR at 70”)

Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa turns 70 today. Candles must now be costing him more than the cake as Bob Hope famously said.

Nothing hurts a politician who has savoured power more than being voted out. Mahinda made the mistake of banking on people’s gratitude to win elections without giving a tinker’s cuss about allegations of corruption, nepotism, cronyism, abuse of power, scandals etc. against his government. He thought people would continue to vote for him faithfully because he had provided unwavering political leadership for the country’s successful war on terror.

Cocky, he cherished the same delusion as the builders and owners of Titanic, which they considered invincible. He misjudged a political iceberg in his path and took what lay unseen underwater for granted. He sailed on, oblivious to the lurking danger and heedless of warnings only to have the shock of his life on Jan. 08

Continue reading ‘Mahinda Rajapaksa Enlightened: “Bale Thiyanakota Mole Ne;Mole Thiyanakota Bale Ne”(When Powerful no Wisdom; When Wise no Power)’ »

Mahinda Rajapaksa is a Lion Whose Decade of Rule Represented the Virtues and Flaws of the Lions

By

Dr.Dayan Jayatilleka


“I’m sorry Mr. Boucher, what can I do if our terrorists aren’t Islamic?”
– President Mahinda Rajapaksa to US Asst. Secretary of State Richard Boucher, May 2007

The terrorist barbarities wrought on Friday the 13th November 2015 in Paris remind us of the Tiger terrorist slaughter of civilians in Naiaru, Kokilai, Anuradhapura, Maradana, Pettah, Dehiwela, the Central Bank, Kebitigollawa, Arantalawa, Kattankudy and innumerable border villages—massacres which were at least as large as those in Paris when we regard the respective sizes of our countries’ populations. For decades, the daily sound was of the sirens of ambulances and the wails of the bereaved, the scene was of hospitals under siege with the flood of the wounded and dying.

When he was elected President in 2005, Mahinda Rajapaksa took over a divided country, battered by suicide bombings, assassinations of leaders and overrunning of military camps; a state in retreat, a nation humiliated, a military unprepared and demoralized, a country in the coils of a seemingly endless war waged by a highly motivated and confident enemy with heavy artillery, a navy and a fledging air arm and a global support network.

When he left office a decade later ours was a country without war, liberated from terrorism, a reunified territory, a Sri Lankan state with its borders restored to their natural boundary the Indian Ocean, a fast-modernizing economy, and a landscape which showed no trace of a thirty year conflict.

A man or woman is judged by the scale and scope of the challenges he/she faces, the manner in which he/she faces them, the way in which those who came before him/her faced that challenge, and the relative performance of others in his/her own time and at other times, living in other places,facing the same type of challenge.

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Samantha Power may have to Discuss “Yahapalanaya Hell” with a Govt Protecting Gotabhaya Rajapaksa

By

Upul Joseph Fernando

It is reported that United Nations Representative of the United States, Samantha Power, is expect to visit Colombo shortly. She may be arriving to evaluate the progress with regard to the Resolution passed at last September sessions of the UNHRC in Geneva.

Ahead of her visit to Colombo, a meet was held in Colombo between President Maithripala Sirisena and former Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa. Following that meet, Gotabaya revealed that the President had given him an assurance. The assurance is that the President would never betray the trust of the Armed Forces.

Gotabaya held media conferences after meeting the President to emphasize that the President had accepted his (Gotabaya’s) view point with regard to war crimes allegations levelled by America.

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Doctrine of Buddha is more Powerful than Executive powers and Privileges Enjoyed by Political Leaders and Politicians

By

Prasad Gunewardene

Buddha’s doctrine is practical and powerful than the executive powers and privileges enjoyed by political leaders and politicians by virtue of being elected to such offices through the votes of the people. Those leaders rule through provisions embedded in Constitutions to either consolidate or protect them. Some use such Constitutions with a view to rule forever. But Nature and the Doctrine of Buddha is more powerful.

Over the past four decades with an executive system of Constitution in force we’ve witnessed how our Rulers used the Constitution for their benefit. They paid homage to many venerated Buddhist Temples and Sites and made pledges for the people and the country from those hallowed precincts. The valuable advice given by true Buddhist prelates were ignored. Leading Buddhist prelates were either insulted or intimidated to safeguard political power.

This Writer is a Catholic who has hope and faith in his religion whilst respecting and following the Doctrine of Buddha which is the only practical way to lead a brave life with a clear conscience.

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President Sirisena who Swore Upon Sobitha Thero’s Coffin to Abolish Executive Presidency to Present Special cabinet Paper

By Dharisha Bastians

President Maithripala Sirisena will present a special cabinet paper today, proposing wide ranging constitutional reform, including the abolition of the executive presidency and major changes to the country’s electoral laws.

President Sirisena, who swore upon the coffin of respected Buddhist Monk, Maduluwawe Sobitha last week that he would do everything in his power to abolish the presidency in accordance with the Thero’s wishes, said the cabinet paper will be presented to his Ministers at the weekly meeting today.

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Prof G.L.Peiris Objects to Govt Ameding PTA and Releasing LTTE Suspects after Rehabilitation.

By Dasun Edirisinghe

Former External Affairs Minister Prof. G. L. Peiris yesterday warned that the government decision to amend the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) was ill-advised.

Addressing the media at the N. M. Perera Centre in Borella, he said that the government had buckled under pressure from the Global Tamil Forum (GTF) and the Tamil National Alliance.

The government would amend the PTA as the first step towards repealing the Act, Prof. Peiris said, adding that the government was implementing an election pledge given to the TNA and other groups in return for votes at the last presidential election.

Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government had rehabilitated about 12,000 LTTE cadres and released them, but the remaining 235 in custody could not be released simply as they were responsible for acts of terrorism, he said.

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Tamil Prisoners Suspend Hunger Strike till Dec 15 after Assurances of Release after Rehabilitation by Govt Minister DM Swaminathan

A hunger strike launched by the LTTE suspects in four prisons demanding their immediate release has been suspended till Dec. 15.

Hunger strikers suspended their action at 8.00 am yesterday following an assurance given to them by Minister of Prison Reforms, Rehabilitation, Resettlement, and Hindu Religious Affairs D. M. Swaminathan in the presence of TNA parliamentarian M. A. Sumanthiran and Commissioner General of Prisons at the Welikada Prisons on Monday evening.

Minister Swaminathan told The Island that over 153 suspects taken into custody under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA) had been engaged in the hunger strike. Of these 28 were in Anuradhapura prison, nine in Batticaloa, 12 in Bogambara and 104 in Magazine prisons. Of 104 in the Magazine prison, 24 had been given bail on Monday.

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Wimal Weerawansa Threatens Joint Opposition Pull out from All Party Conference Convened by President Sirisena

By Dasun Edirisinghe

Former Minister Wimal Weerawansa said that parties in the joint opposition will consider withdrawing from the All Party Conference (APC) called by President Maithripala Sirisena if the government was not prepared to take decisions on reconciliation and accountability issues based on the APC resolutions.

Addressing the media at the N. M. Perera Centre in Borella, the National Freedom Front Leader said that the UNP government, especially Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera had plunged the country into a difficult situation by jointly sponsoring the US resolution in Genera against Sri Lanka.

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C.V.Wigneswaran Must Change his “Ayatollah of Tamil Nationalism” Posture or Resign Chief Minister Post with Dignity like Tilak Marapana

by K. Thirukumaran

Aside from the intra-Party issues, the first elected Chief Minister of Northern Province is not serving the constituents whom voted him. Mr CV Wigneswaran while in office he has shown “conflicts of interest” with people who are not beneficiaries of the Northern Provincial Council.

Instead he is largely giving voice to the small vociferous section within North-East/Sri Lanka and the diaspora. His actions on the genocide resolution is a prime example of this.

Mr CV Wogneswaran at The Northern Provincial Council-Feb 2015

Mr CV Wogneswaran at The Northern Provincial Council-Feb 2015

It is not about “passing the resolution” or the term “genocide” but it was a spotlight on NPC taking matters beyond its mandate and slipping from established norms and our failure to showcase our credibility in “governing” – something we “demand” from The governments of Sri Lanka!

In the aftermath of May 2009, the Tamil side was depicted as not having a democratic side and diaspora organizations such as TGTE and NCCT came out and said they have formed people elected bodies. These bodies have only held one public election since formation. Amidst such diaspora setup, the genocide resolution was drafted by a diaspora member known to the Chief Minister and tabled and passed just after a new government took office.

The Chief Minister’s actions are hindering the other relevant every day life matters that NPC must and could address, which were also prominently outlined in the TNA manifesto of NPC.
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Sirisena-Wickremesinghe Govt Getting Ready to Deport Kumar Gunaratnam Alleges Frontline Socialist Party

By Saman Indrajith

The Frontline Socialist Party (FSP) yesterday announced that it would mobilise all social, civil society and human rights organisations that had pledged their solidarity with them to secure the release of party leader Kumar Gunaratnam, who is now in remand custody for violating immigration laws.

Addressing a press conference at the Centre for Society and Religion in Colombo, party’s Propaganda Secretary Pubudu Jayagoda said that they were now convinced that the government was getting ready to deport Gunaratnam.

“But, we reiterate that the matter is entirely political and would mobilise all forces to secure Gunaratnam’s release,” Jayagoda said.

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Human Rights Commission Chaired by Dr.Deepika Udagama to Take up Avant Garde Issue with Attorney – General’s Dept

By Shamindra Ferdinando

Chairperson of the newly constituted Human Rights Commission (HRC) Dr. Deepika Udagama yesterday assured that she would certainly look into the Attorney General’s Department.

Addressing the media at the HRC head office at Kynsey Road, Borella, Dr. Udagama stressed the importance of protecting the independence of the AG’s Department, the judiciary and the police. She was flanked by Commissioners, attorney-at-law H. Ghazali Hussain, attorney-at-law Saliya Pieris, Ambika Satkunanathan and Dr. U. Vidanapathirana.

Dr. Udagama was responding to a query by The Island whether the HRC would intervene in the wake of an influential section of the government questioning the conduct of the AG over his handling of the vexed Avant Garde Maritime Services (AGMS) issue.

Asked to explain how the HRC intended to restore public confidence in the AG’s Department, Dr. Udagama said that the HRC would take it up with the AG.

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Tamil Prisoners Call off Hunger Strike Following Discussion with Minister DM Swaminathan,MA Sumanthiran MP and Prisons Commissioner General

(Text of a Press Release Issued by the Tamil National Alliance Media Office on November 17th 2015)

The hunger strike launched by the Tamil political prisoners has been temporarily called off until 15th December 2015.

The prisoners have come to this decision following a discussion with Minister D.M Swaminathan, Tamil National Alliance Parliamentarian M.A Sumanthiran, and Commissioner General of Prisons on the decisions taken at the meeting of high level government officials yesterday.

The prisoners acknowledge the efforts of Hon Minister D.M. Swaminathan, Hon. M.A. Sumanthiran and the Commissioner General of Prisons with regard to their release.

Terrorist Assault on Innocent Civilians in Paris is Predictable Outcome of Military Escalation by US and European Imperialism

By

Alex Lantier and Barry Grey

The terrorist atrocity carried out in Paris by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) has been seized upon by the United States, France and the other imperialist powers to intensify the policies of war and plunder that destroyed entire societies in the Middle East and created the conditions for the growth of reactionary forces such as those that killed 129 people and wounded hundreds more last Friday night.

These forces have been funded and armed by Washington and France and regional allies such as Saudi Arabia and Turkey. ISIS itself is a product of imperialist machinations in Libya, Syria and Iraq, just as Al Qaeda was the product of the earlier anti-Soviet intervention in Afghanistan. ISIS and other Al Qaeda-linked terror groups have been used as proxy armies to carry out regime-change in Libya and prosecute the war for regime-change in Syria.

The criminal assault on innocent civilians in Paris is the predictable outcome of US and European imperialism’s relentless escalation of military operations.

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85 Tamil Prisoners Prefer to Undergo Rehabilitation and be Released Rather than Seeking Bail States Law and Order Minister Sagala Ratnayake

By P K Balachandran

The Sri Lankan government has said that it proposed to send Tamil Tiger detainees for rehabilitation before releasing them, Tamil National Alliance (TNA) MP M A Sumanthiran told Express on Monday.

Sumanthiran said that at the talks held with the Law and Order Minister Sagala Ratnayake at the Prime Minister’s office earlier in the day, the government told the Tamil leaders that the first batch will go for rehabilitation within the next 10 days.

Minister Ratnayake said that 85 prisoners had submitted in writing that they would rather go for rehabilitation, leading to release, than seek bail and go through the tedious legal process.

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