Monday, April 30, 2012

http://news.nationalpost.com/2012/04/30/u-s-wants-15-years-for-toronto-man-convicted-in-tamil-tigers-terror-plot/

U.S. wants 15 years for Toronto man convicted in Tamil Tigers terror plot

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Ramanan Mylvaganam pleaded guilty to a single count of conspiracy to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization. He faces up to 15-year imprisonment.
The U.S. Department of Justice is seeking a 15-year prison sentence for a Canadian who pleaded guilty to terrorism conspiracy for his role in a plot to supply separatist rebels in Sri Lanka.
In a sentencing report filed in a Brooklyn, N.Y. court, U.S. attorney Loretta Lynch said Ramanan Mylvaganam had committed “a gravely serious offence” by attempting to procure equipment for the Tamil rebels.
“Any sentence other than a substantial sentence of incarceration risks undermining respect for the law by suggesting that a defendant can evade serious punishment for providing material support to a terrorist organization,” she wrote.
But the defence has asked the judge to sentence Mylvaganam to time served and release him, arguing the Sri Lankan civil war at the heart of the case was over and the Canadian was not a political zealot.
“This case represents the one, isolated transgression on his part,” his lawyer Jerry Fong wrote. “His failing in this case is one of judgment. However, Mr. Mylvaganam certainly has learned his lesson and is truly remorseful.”
His sentencing was scheduled for Friday.
Mylvaganam, 35, is accused of trying to buy night vision goggles for the Tigers and assisting Suresh Sriskandarajah, who had allegedly been asked by a senior rebel procurement agent to buy computer equipment, electronic components and communications equipment.

President Premadasa’s 19th death anniversary:

Remembering a dedicated optimist





Former President R. Premadasa

President Premadasa's 19th death anniversary falls today (May 1, 2012). He was assassinated by the LTTE while taking part in the May Day rally in 1993, in Colombo. Sri Lanka's poor, especially those without proper shelter regarded President Premadasa as a great man, a man who felt for his country and had a burning desire to help the poor and the downtrodden, as perhaps he himself came from the same soil. He was destined to reach the top, but unfortunately on reaching the top he found he had to make the supreme sacrifice for not belonging to the ruling clan and class.

Humanitarian politician


The late President Premadasa moved step by step, from Sucharitha to local politics; from the Colombo Municipal Council to Parliament; from backbencher to Junior Minister to Minister and Prime Minister; and finally President. Although he was in a hurry to complete his pro people work he was not in a hurry to get to the top. He was an optimist and worked patiently for the country, the outcome of which could be seen even today throughout the island. People still remember him with gratitude. Some in rural areas light a lamp for him.

'Man's prime duty is to help mankind survive.' The late President Premadasa, the humanitarian politician who made this statement with overwhelming love for mankind was the fifth leader of the United National Party, the eighth Prime Minister of Sri Lanka and its second Executive President. In a country where the selection of leaders was traditionally based on caste lineage and wealth it is no exaggeration to state the late President was a leader who was exalted to that position by his fellow countrymen. Some of the development policies and ideas discussed in international forums today were pioneered by President Premadasa. Not just our country, but the world too can learn from his poverty alleviation programmes. His optimistic ideas and policies which bore exceptional success are relevant today as well as tomorrow.

Each time he visited a foreign land President Premadasa made it a point to make a note of some experience which would benefit his own country. That is the way he introduced pre-fabricated bridges and pre-fabricated houses to Sri Lanka. At an Annual General Meeting of the United Nations, due to the efforts of the late President Premadasa the year 1987 was declared 'International Housing Year' and to uphold this concept he declared a target of 1.5 million houses for Sri Lanka.

The Sevana lottery, the National Housing Development Authority, Janasaviya, Sevana Sarana Foster parents' scheme, the 15,000 village project, the 200 garment factory project, National Stadium at Keththarama, the Tower Hall Foundation, Sarasavipaya, pension scheme for aged actors and singers, free school uniforms to schoolchildren, robes for student Bhikkus are some of the significant projects launched by the late President. It is only through the eyes of a book that one could describe the efforts of this humanitarian personnel to help mankind survive. In a nutshell, he was an optimist politician who served the public.

Deprived masses


In his first Presidential address President Premadasa said his government would provide the basic conditions where liberty and discipline would be ensured. It was a clear signal of his philosophy of less government and more participation and total involvement of the people. He governed with the full participation and involvement of the people, literally witnessed to the last moment of his time.

During his tenure roads were repaired, bridges and culverts strengthened, government buildings colour washed and spruced up. It was as if the beam of a searchlight had been focused on some dark corner. Perhaps it was to reawaken the stupor of the village so that it would spread from village to village and then awaken the whole country. He appeared frequently on TV but if one cared to have a closer look it was always in a project where he was helping the deprived masses with his burning desire that society understand the deprivations among the poor. This was certainly anathema to some and therefore they came to wrong conclusions.

Private sector


As Prime Minister, Premadasa ensured that government projects assigned to his ministry were carried out properly and with due priority by the relevant departments, Boards and corporations.

The first phase of the development was the successful completion of the Parliament building with necessary infrastructure at Sri Jayawardenepura, Kotte. Colombo's new business centre was strategically implemented at Echelon Square. The construction of the Colombo Hilton and other luxury hotels were undertaken and successfully completed. The Courts Complex and the private sector property development in the Beira Lake area changed the city's skyline.

In Colombo the late President carried out a programme for the construction of flats to improve the living conditions of the poor. He pioneered the Maligawatte flats which is acknowledge as the largest in the city. President Premadasa promoted private sector home building as a result of which banners and advertisements offering housing opportunities particularly to the middle class appeared for the first time in Colombo and the suburbs in the mid 80s. His initiative to improve the living conditions in Colombo's slums gave instant redress and hope to a large section of the underprivileged who had until then existed without any recognition of their needs, marginalised from Colombo's mainstream concerns.

President Premadasa's strategies derived from his rich and varied experiences as a committed social worker, a hardened politician and an astute strategist and most of all from being a self made man through a lifetime of disciplined hard work. As President he was every moment the unmistakable President in chief until his untimely death at the hand of an assassin on May 1, 1993, during the march of the workers on a day dedicated to them. Thus ended the heroic life of a great man making his optimism a matter of doubt to all those who observed the political events of the country during his time.

 

http://www.defence.lk/new.asp?fname=anti-human_trafficking_bill_adopted_by_canadian_house_of_commons_20120430_03

Anti-Human Trafficking Bill adopted by Canadian House of Commons


The Canadian House of Commons unanimously adopted an Act to amend the Criminal Code (trafficking in persons) at Third Reading on April 27.

The Bill will now go to the Senate for consideration.

"I am absolutely delighted with the adoption of the bill by the House of Commons and look forward to it being adopted by the Senate in a timely manner," said MP Joy Smith. "The bill will have a significant impact on the anti-human trafficking efforts of Canada here at home as well as abroad. This legislation will place important legal tools into the hands of prosecutors and law enforcement."

The Bill amends the Criminal Code by adding the current trafficking in persons offences to the list of offences which, if committed outside of Canada by a Canadian or permanent resident, could be prosecuted in Canada. The Bill also adds an interpretive aid for courts to provide greater clarity of the definition of exploitation in the Criminal Code.

Under the proposed legislation, migrants who arrive on smuggling ships could be detained for up to a year and, even if accepted as refugees, they would not be allowed to become landed immigrants or sponsor relatives for five years.

The Canadian government says the tough measures will make migrants less willing to pay the fees demanded by smugglers.

The bill was introduced as a response to two smuggling ships that arrived off the British Columbia coast in 2009 and 2010 carrying almost 600 Tamil migrants who had agreed to pay smugglers tens of thousands of dollars for the journey to Canada from Thailand.

In 2009, the MV Ocean Lady brought 76 Tamil migrants to British Columbia, and the MV Sun Sea brought 492 a year later.

Meanwhile, in a latest report published in Globe and Mail said there are still thousands of Tamils in Thailand waiting to go to Canada.

The latest UNHCR figures from March, obtained through a third party by The Canadian Press, show that 275 Sri Lankan Tamils have been granted refugee status, while another 142 have not. Aid agencies say more Tamils - nobody knows how many - haven't bothered approaching UNHCR.

Elaborating on the situation of one asylum seekers named Vishnu, a former LTTE member in Thailand, the Globe and Mail said her parents arrived in Canada as refugees about a decade ago and settled in the Toronto area after gaining their citizenship. They live on social assistance and are not eligible to sponsor her.

Vashni says she was forced to join the Tigers as a teenager because her older brother fled the country; in northern Sri Lanka, the Tigers had a rule that each family had to supply at least one member.

She says she was never trained as a fighter, and worked as a runner and intelligence gatherer. She managed to flee Sri Lanka in the 1990s. She returned a few years ago, hoping for a fresh start in the capital of Colombo.

But the army eventually caught up with her in the months following their May 2009 rout of the Tigers. She fled, eventually reaching Thailand 25 months ago.

Judging the validity of each Tamil refugee claimant is tricky, officials said.

It is true that the LTTE, have a long history of forced conscription. There was a requirement that one member of every family join the LTTE."

But the officials says that can also be a story that an asylum seeker tells to win freedom in another country.

Courtesy: The Vancouver Sun

 

http://www.defence.lk/new.asp?fname=sriLanka_ranks_first_among_SA_countries_on_change_readiness_index_20120430_05

Sri Lanka ranks first among SA countries on Change Readiness index


The recently released results of the 2012 Change Readiness Index have ranked Sri Lanka at the 22nd place among 60 developing and emerging world economies and first among South Asian countries.

The survey conducted by the KPMG International, in collaboration with researchers from the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) has assessed the level of change readiness across 60 countries with a focus on developing and emerging markets.

India has ranked 23th place, Bangladesh at 45th place, Nepal at 50th, and Pakistan at 54th place.

In introducing the results of the first Change Readiness Index, the researchers say in the current uncertain economic conditions, countries, businesses and institutions around the world are undergoing unprecedented change with new challenges and opportunities every day and some countries, however, are better able to manage and mitigate the risks associated with change and capitalize on new opportunities.

They have evaluated the need and opportunity for a new forward-looking index - the Change Readiness Index - to assess the capability of individual countries to manage change. The Index is based on the premise that the underlying capability of a country to manage change is dependent on certain fundamental characteristics.

In developing the Change Readiness Index, KPMG and ODI have examined the available academic literature and existing indices and data to ascertain how the concept of 'change readiness' could be best measured, the report says.

From this, a set of indicators were identified as influencers on a country's underlying capability to manage change and these factors have been categorized into three broad groups - Economic capabilities, Governance capabilities, and Social capabilities. Each category has been assigned a score and a rank.

KPMG and ODI expect the Change Readiness Index to signal which countries are better prepared to cope with change, and thus provide new and important information about the potential future economic prospects of a country.
http://www.defence.lk/new.asp?fname=a_poser_to_karunanidhi_20120430_02 
poser to Karunanidhi :

Why not a referendum on Kashmir-Eelam?


[By : Lucien Rajakarunanayake]

Tamil 'Eelam' is for Tamil Nadu politicians what the full moon is for hungry wolves., is what the lead editorial in The Hindu of April 23, said on the attempts by Karunanidhi and Tamil Nadu politicians attempts to arm-twist New Delhi on his proposal for a UN backed referendum on Eelam in Sri Lankan territory. It said that: All their howling is indicative, not of any yearning for a distant, dreamy Eelam, but of the baser urges of the politics of the here-and-now. Former Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi, who heads the Dravida Munnetra Kazhagam, a prominent constituent of the United Progressive Alliance government at the Centre, gave a call last week for the creation of a separate nation for Tamils in Sri Lanka, on the lines of Montenegro, South Sudan, East Timor and Kosovo.

It added with a note of caution that: Far from forcing the Sri Lankan government into reaching a settlement on devolution of powers to the minority Tamils, Mr. Karunanidhi appears to have further aided the politicisation of this sensitive issue in Tamil Nadu.

Acknowledging how the parties of Tamil Nadu contributed in no small measure to the shaping of India's stand on the recent resolution against Sri Lanka at the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva, The Hindu stated that, to suggest that the U.N. conduct a referendum for the division of Sri Lanka on ethnic lines can only have the effect of prompting the Mahinda Rajapaksa government to resist all international efforts to speed up the peace and reconciliation process.

In any case, Kosovo or Montenegro, South Sudan or East Timor is not comparable to Sri Lanka. But then Mr. Karunanidhi was only looking for instances of new nations formed on the basis of referendums or external intervention, and not seeking to make a cogent case for the resolution of Tamil grievances in Sri Lanka. In 2000, the model of political division he cited was that of Czechoslovakia, which split into the Czech Republic and Slovakia. In Mr. Karunanidhi's words, this was separation without bloodshed, a peaceful resolution of a conflict in a country with sharp divisions, The Hindu said.

But what is so easily forgotten is what happened elsewhere after this so-called separation without bloodshed. The division of Czechoslovakia is just one example of the crisis in the Balkans. The tragedies of Bosnia-Herzegovina and Croatia and the massacre at Srebrenica are still fresh in the memory of many who have even a mere nodding acquaintance with the breakup of the former Yugoslavia on ethnic lines. Even the Dayton Accords have not yet healed the wounds of the crisis as seen in the recent commemoration of the 16th anniversary of Srebrenica. If anyone if to be fooled by the independent statehood of Kosovo, which is still not recognized by Serbia, there is enough already happening between Sudan and South Sudan, to have much more than mere doubts about the success of UN backed , encouraged or supported referenda to divide nations and countries.

Jammu & Kashmir

Rather than look at far away Czechoslovakia, or think of Montenegro, South Sudan, East Timor and Kosovo for the promotion of Eelam, it is better if Karunanidhi and those who think alike, would look closer home in India, where the UN mandated plebiscite is yet to be held from 1948 to decide on the actual status of Jammu and Kashmir. From the time of Prime Minister Jawaharlal Nehru to this day India has rejected any attempt to genuinely resolve the Jammu Kashmir issue, by not creating the necessary conditions to hold the UN mandated plebiscite - the vote by which the people of a political unit determine autonomy or affiliation with another country.

There is now a debate in India whether the plebiscite is an issue of not. Yet, commentator Amaresh Misra wrote in October 2011 In August, 2011, that the State Human Rights Commission (SHRC) of Kashmir brought out a report, after three years of painstaking investigations that revealed shockingly the existence of 38 sites of unmarked graves in North Kashmir. Estimates vary, but more than 2,500 unidentified bodies were unearthed during the exercise. The SHRC has asked for DNA profiling to identify these bodies and determine whether they are dead militants or dead, ordinary Kashmiris.

The Kashmiri Association of Parents of Displaced Persons (APDP) has been agitating for several years about locating more than 10,000 missing persons. These people could have been targets of militants, or of the Indian army, or both. It is suspected that many more unmarked graves exist in other areas of Kashmir. The SHRC has requested the State government to conduct a thorough enquiry in the matter.

Truth seeking, and coming clean on facts, plus justice and compensation for people killed either by the army or the militants, will boost Indias credibility. In fact, the unmasking of the issue of unmarked graves is integral to `Kashmir is an integral part of India logic.

Karunanidhi and others in India who are so-vocal and demanding action about the plight of Tamils in Sri Lanka, and suggesting a UN backed referendum for a separate Eelam, need only look north to what is happening in Jammu- Kashmir, and begin to take the necessary steps to consult the people of J & K as to what their preference for statehood is whether it is to be part of India, part of Pakistan, or two parts of either country or even a separate state of Kashmir-Eelam.?

As the US-based security website GlobalSecuruty.org states: The concept of partition is anathema to Indians. Kashmir's symbolism to India is as critical a consideration as any security significance associated with this fragment of ice and rock threaded by a beautiful valley. India is unwilling to lose even one additional hectare of this land. New Delhi is also concerned that Kashmiri autonomy would set a precedent for breakaway movements in other Indian states (e.g., Punjab or Assam). It will also be interesting to know how India will in fact react to the promotion of separatism in neighbouring Sri Lanka by the likes of Karunanidhi and Jayalalitha, when considering the separatist tendencies that prevail in many parts of the country today.

Looking back at not so distant history, GlobalSecurity.org states: In 1952 the elected and overwhelmingly Muslim Constituent Assembly of Jammu and Kashmir, led by the popular Sheikh Mohammed Abdullah, voted in favor of confirming accession to India. Thereafter, India regarded this vote as an adequate expression of popular will and demurred on holding a plebiscite. After 1953 Jammu and Kashmir was identified as standing for the secular, pluralistic, and democratic principles of the Indian polity. Nehru refused to discuss the subject bilaterally until 1963, when India, under pressure from the United States and Britain, engaged in six rounds of secret talks with Pakistan on "Kashmir and other related issues." These negotiations failed, as did other such efforts later. So much for the promotion of the rights of the truly oppressed people of Jammu & Kashmir, even with a UN mandate.

It adds that: Kashmir's demographics illustrate the complexity of the issue. The territory can be divided into three regions -- Jammu, the Kashmir Valley, and Ladakh -- each of which is dominated by a different ethnic group. Jammu is inhabited mainly by a Hindu majority, the Kashmir Valley is settled by a Muslim majority, and a Buddhist majority resides in Ladakh. While there is an identifiable Kashmiri ethnicity, the three groups are ethnically distinct, complicating any notion of "Kashmiri nationalism."

Those who talk of a referendum, whether UN backed or India manipulated on the setting up of an Eelam in Sri Lankan territory, must also have a proper understanding of the demographics of m Sri Lanka, and not only the present post-conflict situation in the Northern Province. One cannot forget that the original call for Eelam, by the LTTE, and its political backers of the TNA had planned an Eelam that included the North and East, with little concern for the demographics of the East that would have made such a polity untenable from the outset.

Karunanidhi can either take Sri Lankas Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksas advise and seek to have his unrealized dream of Eelam established in Tamil Nadu in India, or before he talks of Eelam related referendum in Sri Lanka, work towards resolving the crisis of Jammu and Kashmir, with or without UN intervention or nudging.

The Hindu concludes its editorial stating that "for good reasons, India has a firm position on seeking a solution within a united Sri Lanka. Political parties in Tamil Nadu should see the sense behind this." One can only hope the thinking of the leader writer is correct, and whatever Karunanidhi's life's mission is, that political parties in Tamil Nadu would see the sense behind such a policy, and stop their full moon wolf howls for Eelam over here.

-The Ministry of Defence bears no responsibility for the ideas and opinion expressed by the numerous contributors to the "Opinion Page" of this web site-

http://www.dailynews.lk/2012/05/01/news01.asp

Austria hails SL’s post- conflict development


* Pleased with investment prospects

* No LTTE rump on Austrian soil


Austria yesterday hailed the tremendous achievements made by Sri Lanka in terms of development in the aftermath of the conflict that plagued the country’s progress for more than three decades.


Dr Waldner

“Sri Lanka has made an enormous effort in development in almost all sectors after the conflict and Austria is ready to help achieve Sri Lanka’s development targets, Austrian State Secretary of Foreign Affairs, Dr Wolfgang Waldner told the Daily News.

He said Austria has focused on investment opportunities and closer trade ties between the two countries.

“We have identified a number of development projects for investment,” he said. The Austrian deputy minister said his country will invest in projects including the Kataragama sewerage system development and various infrastructure projects worth over 100 million euros in Sri Lanka.

Waldner said he focused on economic and political ties between the two countries during his meeting with his Sri Lankan counterpart Neomal Perera and Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa.

The Austrian deputy foreign minister said the LTTE was proscribed in the European Union when his country was holding the presidency and it leaves no room for LTTE remnants. No LTTE activists are operating in Austria, he said.

Waldner said the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) will help promote reconciliation among communities in the aftermath of conflict and hoped that the government will implement the LLRC recommendations.

Sunday, April 29, 2012

http://www.ceylontoday.lk/16-5320-news-detail-give-up-confrontational-politics.html

Give up confrontational politics

Date:2012-04-29 07:05:00
Embrace realistic thinking KP tells Tamils

By Our Political Correspondent

One time LTTE key financier Kumaran Pathmanathan (KP) has said Tamil political parties should shy away from confrontational politics and embrace realistic thinking in overcoming issues faced by the Tamils.

Pathmanathan made this observation during an opening ceremony for a home for the orphans in Mulliyawalai in the Mullaitivu district on Friday.

The orphanage and several other post-war development activities have been initiated by NERDO (North East Rehabilitation Development Organization), initiated by him with the donations mainly received from the Tamil Diaspora abroad.

Pathmanathan speaking at the ceremony of the `Barathy Home’ orphanage in Mulliyawalai said Tamil politicians in the country and certain fractions of the Tamil Diaspora are using the innocent Tamils in the North and the East as scapegoats for their political gains.

He said this is not the time to play around with the lives of thousands of innocent civilians who are striving hard to come out of the miseries they had undergone in the past. “All of us have made mistakes in the past. But we should not make the same mistakes again and play around with the lives of the innocents,” he said.

“The war has created thousands of widows and orphans in the North and the East and in the country at large. A significant number of them have been maimed. So we must be sensible and humane with regard to the issues we come across in the post-war conditions.

Confrontational attitudes in politics are not going to take us anywhere. We must have a realistic approach in dealing with our issues. As far as the Tamil politicians are concerned they must take a common stance in solving the issues instead of having fragmented opinions,” Pathmanathan said.

Fifteen individuals from the Tamil Diaspora who are supporting NERDO from London, Canada, Australia and France were also present at the event.

`Barathy Home ‘has been set up on a 25 acre land in Mulliyawalai to house the destitute female children. Another home called `Sencholai’ will also be opened in the Mullaitivu district shortly, according to Pathmanathan .

The NERDO has also initiated various programmes such as for vocational training for war widows in Point Pedro in the North.

NERDO is a non- governmental organization funded mainly by the Tamil Diaspora abroad and certain philanthropists in the country. The government is only providing with the logistical support,” Pathmanathan said.


SL on remarkable recovery track

http://www.dailynews.lk/2012/04/28/fea01.asp

Statement by Ravinatha Aryasinha, ambassador of Sri Lanka to Belgium, Luxembourg and the EU, at the European Parliament South Asia Delegation’s discussion on Sri Lanka on April 24, 2012.

Less than three years ago, as Sri Lanka emerged from its 30 year long struggle against LTTE terrorism, there were many ‘prophets of doom’, including in this Parliament, who mis-judged both Sri Lanka’s will and capacity.

Pessimistic projections


It was said;

- that the IDP welfare villages set up were a 'humanitarian catastrophe' and that malnutrition, disease and death would be rampant

- that the government was not interested in de-mining and that the conflict affected areas will remain unused forever


Ambassador Ravinatha Aryasinha

- likening the Sri Lankan IDP welfare villages to "concentration camps", it was said that the IDPs would be "incarcerated" there indefinitely

- the government's intent regards the ex-LTTE combatants was questioned, claiming that "their lives were in danger

- that the emergency would not be rescinded nor the high security zones disbanded

- that the government would not be able to undertake the massive investment that was needed to restore livelihoods and ensure infrastructure development in the previously conflict affected area, let alone ensure economic growth in the rest of the country given emerging global trends

- the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) was mocked as comprising 'government stooges' and the prediction was that their report would be a 'whitewash'. As you yourself recently reminded me Madam Chair, "many even doubted whether the LLRC report would ever see the light of day"

Facts on the ground


Given this backdrop, the verifiable facts on the ground prove the 'prophets of doom' dismally wrong.

- the socio-economic, nutritional and mortality indicators in the IDP villages housing the displaced,

were deemed commendable by international standards, to that of a normal population of this magnitude.

- of the estimated 2061.53 Sq. KMs contaminated with land mines and UXOs, as at the end of March 2012, 1,936.80 Sq. KMs, or 94 percent of the area had been cleared. Eighty percent of this demining work was carried out by the Sri Lanka Army, which is a remarkable achievement in any post-conflict situation.

- from a high of 297,000 a little under three years ago, 98 percent of the IDPs have left and numbers at the only remaining welfare village at 'Manik Farm' has come down to 6,022 persons (1,800 families), and the government has pledged to resettle those remaining by the end of June this year.

Here again the government has borne most of the cost, spending 360 Million USD for the IDP resettlement programme. An initiative aimed at the construction of over 78,000 new houses in the North has been launched which includes those built under the North East Housing Construction Programme (NEHRP) with donor assistance.

- of the 11,995 ex-LTTE combatants who surrendered or were arrested at the end of the conflict, 90.7 percent, or 10,874 (which includes 595 child combatants) have been rehabilitated and re-integrated into society. Protective Accommodation and Rehabilitation Centres (PARC) established in many parts of the country conducts psycho-social care such as counselling and drama, dance and music therapy as well as spiritual and religious programmes. Adult cadres have been provided with extensive vocational training making them employable once released.

- the High Security Zones have been reduced by 63 percent, from 4098 Sq KM to 2582 Sq KM. The emergency regulations lapsed completely with effect from August 30, 2011. Since then, and with improvement of the security situation in the former conflict affected areas, civil administration has been fully restored and the role of the military has been increasingly confined to security related matters.

- the government has already provided US $ 318 million for the socio-economic and livelihood development in the Northern and Eastern provinces, and a substantial portion of this money has been allocated for the self-employment loan schemes. Moreover, the government has allocated a further sum of US $ 700 million for infrastructure and economic development programmes including housing, roads, bridges, schools, hospitals and irrigation schemes.

The government has also embarked on 27 donor assisted development projects of which 23 are implemented in the North and the East. These development projects are valued at approximately US $ 201 million for the year 2011 alone.

The allocation of infrastructure development in the Jaffna district in the Northern Province is USD 300 million, while US $ 250 million and US $ 150 million have been invested in development projects in the Killinochchi and Batticaloa districts, respectively. The results from these efforts have been tangible, with the Northern Province recording a 22 percent growth rate. Further, in terms of investment promotion, the Atchchuveli Industrial Zone is being developed in a 25 acre land area and is expected to attract approximately 40 local and foreign investors. This project is expected to generate 6,000 employment opportunities.

As a transport facility, Palaly airport and the Kankesanthurai (KKS) harbour, which is situated only 10 Km from the Zone, has been upgraded. The government expects that this project will enable small and medium enterprises to better tap into advantages to investors.

Notwithstanding the worsening global economic environment, Sri Lanka has also shown considerable economic resilience;

*Sri Lanka's economy grew by 8.3 percent in 2011, the highest in Sri Lanka's post independence history, sustaining a momentum of over 8 percent for the first time in two consecutive years.

*Improved consumer and investor confidence arising from the peace dividend, favourable macro-economic conditions, increased capacity utilization, expansion of infrastructure facilities and renewed economic activity in the Northern and Eastern provinces has underpinned this growth.

*Inflation remained at single digit levels for the third consecutive year.

*Unemployment declined to its lowest level of 4.2 percent in 2011, from 4.9 percent in 2010.

*In 2011 Sri Lanka's international trade has also performed commendably, with export income growing by 22 percent. Closer home, according to the Sri Lanka Central Bank statistics, it is noteworthy that in 2011 Sri Lanka's exports to the EU (US $ 3,576 million) grew by 24.4 percent , compared to the corresponding period of 2010 (US $ 2,875 million).

*With respect to Foreign Direct Investment (FDI), including loans, grew by 107 percent to US dollars 1,066 million in 2011 over US dollars 516 million in 2010. European investment in Sri Lanka in 2011 amounted to US $ 197 Million, which was 18.4 percent of the total FDI attracted by the country.

*Tourist arrivals to Sri Lanka grew by 30.8 percent in 2011, with visitors from Europe recording a 42 percent increase.

- as for the LLRC, the domestic mechanism based on the principle of restorative justice established by the President of Sri Lanka on May15, 2010 to make recommendations aimed at ensuring that there is no recurrence of the unfortunate situation of the past and to promote national unity and reconciliation amongst all communities in Sri Lanka, we now have a clear document with which to engage and consolidate peace.

a) Notwithstanding the magnitude of the task of dealing with a 30 year long conflict, that the LLRC completed its comprehensive report in 20 months, and the government in turn made the full report public shortly after, speaks volumes about the openness and transparency shown in this regard.

This is in contrast to similar endeavours such as the UK Chilcott Commission of Inquiry, where the Commission appointed in 2009 to inquire into matters spanning for only a period of less than nine years, is yet to produce a report.

SL on remarkable recovery track - Part II:

LLRC critics and ‘goal post-shifting’

http://www.dailynews.lk/2012/04/30/fea01.asp

Continued from Saturday (28)

Statement by Ravinatha Aryasinha,
ambassador of Sri Lanka to Belgium,
Luxembourg and the EU, at the European Parliament South Asia Delegation’s
discussion on Sri Lanka on April 24, 2012


b)The multitude of voices that earlier questioned the credibility of the LLRC and expressed doubts as to whether the report would ever see the light of day, who are ironically now asking that the LLRC report be implemented, are only exposing their previous poor judgement and re-affirming their practice of constantly shifting goal posts.

C)The suggestion made in some quarters, that the LLRC report does not address accountability issues in the last phase of the conflict is without basis. What those who make this charge seem to be really saying is simply that the authors of the LLRC report have not arrived at the same conclusions that these elements who obsessively wish to see Sri Lanka being made a scapegoat had wanted them to.

On the contrary, the LLRC report offers us detailed observations and recommendations on International Humanitarian Law issues relating to the final phase of the conflict.

* It clearly accepts the position that the protection of civilian life was a key factor in the formulation of policy for carrying out military operations and that the deliberate targeting of civilians formed no part of this policy.


An LLRC sitting. File photo

* The report notes that military operations were conducted professionally, but if there is evidence of transgression by individuals, this of course should be examined.

* On the basis of evidence placed before them, the LLRC also points to several specific episodes which, in their view, warrant further investigation. These episodes are referred to in the report, in a variety of settings.

I might add here, that the government of Sri Lanka has not contested the conclusions of the LLRC, unlike NATO, which is strongly contesting the position taken by Judge Philippe Kirsch in the COI report on Libya with regard to the need to further investigate NATO operations in Libya. We have yet to see Western countries critiquing NATO's position on this matter, which is a clear application of double standards on their part, when compared to the strident calls being made in relation to alleged events in Sri Lanka based on the flimsiest of evidence.

In fact the Leader of the House Nimal Siripala de Silva was to observe in tabling the LLRC report in Parliament on December 16, 2011 "It is a matter of the greatest importance to the government to have the truth relating to each of these matters established in a manner that puts controversy to rest for all time. The government has asserted clearly on many occasions that, if reliable evidence is available in respect of any contravention of the law, the law of the land will be set in motion". The Leader of the House was also to note that "the government, of its own accord, has already carried out a series of measures including a comprehensive census in the Northern Province, which will enable firm and verifiable conclusions to be arrived at on issues involving accountability, without any element of conjecture or speculation".

Channel 4 video footage


Following up on this pledge, already two Courts of Inquiry and a Board of Inquiry have been established by the Sri Lanka Army and Navy respectively and have commenced investigations into specific incidents identified by the LLRC.

The mandate of the Court of Inquiry is to investigate, inter alia, civilian casualties and the Channel 4 video footage; including whether any deliberate and international attacks were made by the Army on civilians, with a view to causing them harm or damage, or on any hospitals or no-fire zones.

If so, the persons responsible for any such activity and to make recommendations with regard to the measures that should be taken with regard to such persons. In respect to the controversial Channel 4 footage, the Court of Inquiry has been specifically mandated to ascertain whether any member of the armed forces was involved in the events depicted, authentic or otherwise and to recommend the measures to be taken.

d) On the implementation of the LLRC report, sound prioritization no doubt is an essential aspect of a practical strategy for implementation of these recommendations, where it is important to distinguish between measures addressing humanitarian needs as a matter of urgency, and longer term initiatives. As External Affairs Minister Prof. G. L. Peiris was to observe recently, "We will move forward at our own pace and our policy will be determined by the interests of the people in this country. The LLRC is our own Commission, so to implement the LLRC recommendations we do not need any external pressure. We will do it anyway and of course we will keep the international community informed".

e) We must remember that there are many issues on which recommendations have been made in the LLRC report - such as demining, IDP re-settlement, ex-LTTE combatants, de-militarization, socio-economic and livelihood development - which as I have already observed is at an advanced stage of implementation.

f) Additionally,

* GOSL has also taken steps to disarm the so-called 'paramilitary groups'. In order to bring about an end to the possession of unauthorized weapons, an institutionalized process with legislative oversight has been set up to record specific details on weapons recovered, and also setting a deadline for surrendering of illegal weapons, as was done in the Eastern Province.

* The National Human Rights Action Plan for the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights developed through a participatory process between government and civil society and approved by the Cabinet in September 2011, is presently being implemented. The Action Plan presents a structured framework to monitor the implementation of existing laws, policies and practices and to enhance a better understanding and respect of human rights.

* GOSL has also taken steps to establish normalcy and re-democratise the Northern and the Eastern provinces, including through the full participation in Presidential and Parliamentary election, the holding of Provincial Elections in the Eastern Province, and Local Government elections. Local Government elections have been held in all areas of the North with the exception of two local authorities in the Mullaitivu district, namely Puthukudiruppu and Maritimepattu. LG elections in these two local authorities which were scheduled for March 24, 2012 were postponed due to an Interim Order issued, as two petitions are pending before the Court of Appeal.

* In order to evolve a multi-party consensus with respect to constitutional changes, the government has sought the appointment of a Parliamentary Select Committee (PSC), while being also engaged in bilateral discussions with Tamil political parties, as well as Muslim representation in furtherance of this objective.

The government has already nominated its members to the PSC and is awaiting the nomination of members representing the Opposition, especially from the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), after which sittings can commence.

* Development related work in the Northern and Eastern Provinces, which during the conflict situation and immediately thereafter came under the purview of the Presidential Task Force for Resettlement, is now carried out under the supervision of the relevant line ministries, in coordination and consultation with the provincial and local government representatives.

* Following its launch in January 2012, the government is also effectively implementing the Trilingual Policy aimed at enabling Sinhala, Tamil and English competence to Sri Lankans. The 10 Year National Plan for a Trilingual Sri Lanka provides the blueprint for the first determined effort by any administration since 1987 when Tamil was made an official language, to seriously implement the provisions for a Trilingual Sri Lanka already available in the law with the passing of the 13th amendment to the constitution. Already more than 1,600 Tamil speaking Police officers have been recruited and the Civil Service in the North and East is largely composed of members of the Tamil and Muslim communities.

* GoSL has established a specialized institution for Rehabilitation of Persons, Properties and Industries Authority (REPPIA), responsible for providing compensation for the persons who have suffered loss/damage due to terrorist violence.

* A Land Task Force has been established at provincial and district level to deal with land issues. The government has also begun a process to revise laws to enable considering claims for immovable property including land of the displaced or disadvantaged persons. To any objective observer, the steps I have outlined above would have constituted a sufficient body of evidence of both the GOSL's intent and the commitment to deliver in just under three years since the ending of the terrorist conflict to ensure that Sri Lankans

* cutting across ethnicity, religion, regional and class differences, could move forward towards peace, reconciliation and development, in a spirit of inclusivity.

HRC resolution on Sri Lanka


It is in such context that GOSL believes that the resort to action on Sri Lanka through a resolution within the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva last month was unnecessary and unwarranted, and could in effect negatively impact the ongoing reconciliation process. First, the resolution ignored the significant steps taken and results shown by GOSL over the past near three years since the ending of LTTE terrorism in Sri Lanka - action which has few precedents and which will be hard to replicate in comparable situations.

Second, it prejudged Sri Lanka’s intention to implement the recommendations of the LLRC, less than three months since this domestic mechanism put in place by GOSL was made public, and the time-bound National Human Rights Action Plan, which has many synergies with the LLRC, has commenced implementation in a structured manner. In doing so, it also undermined the well-entrenched rule of international law, that domestic remedies must first be exhausted, and amounts to an undue interference in an internal process.

Third, given that Sri Lanka would in any case come up for comprehensive discussion during the HRC’s second cycle of the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) in October this year, the haste with which this resolution was sought to be imposed, brings into serious question the motivations of its proponents, who seem to disregard the principles upon which the HRC was founded, as a forum to address developments concerning human rights of all countries, in a cooperative, non-selective, and impartial manner.

Fourth, it also underlined the continuing prejudice against Sri Lanka prevalent among sections of the international community, who regrettably continue to be manipulated by INGOs and particularly the rump elements of the LTTE living abroad and their sympathizers, which are intent on vilifying Sri Lanka. It is this self-seeking vociferous minority living in greener pastures overseas, and continue to advocate mono-ethnic separatism in Sri Lanka while espousing the ideology of the LTTE, using its resources and being manipulated by its surviving military leaders, who would prefer to see Sri Lanka remain locked in the past. With 15 countries voting with Sri Lanka, and eight countries abstaining, the final result in Geneva was that 23 countries, out of a total of 47 members of the Human Rights Council did not support the Resolution, while 24 supported it. Many countries which voted with Sri Lanka were acutely conscious of the danger of setting a precedent which enables ad hoc intervention by powerful countries in the internal affairs of other nations. The eight abstentions also reflected clear resistance of pressure by powerful countries to support the resolution by less powerful developing countries on a matter of principle. The resolution therefore finally became an example of a highly selective and arbitrary process within the Council not governed by objective norms or criteria of any kind, the implications of which were not lost on many countries.

As far as Sri Lanka is concerned, our policy in respect of all matters will continue to be guided by the vital interests and well being of the people of our country, in keeping with accepted legal norms. Sri Lanka remains confident, that as we have done in the past, over time, we will be able to prove to all, including the present day ‘prophets of doom’ who continue to shift goal posts and apply double standards when it comes to Sri Lanka, that they were wrong.

Concluded

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Lanka’s quest to become Wonder of Asia :
http://www.dailynews.lk/2012/04/27/fea01.asp

IT sector to play pivotal role in SL’s development - Minister Siyambalapitiya


Information Technology plays an important role in Sri Lanka’s quest to become the Wonder of Asia by 2016. We plan to increase Information Technology literacy by setting up computer labs at school level. The President has allocated funds from the 2012 budget for this purpose. Computer labs will be provided to schools through the Nenasala programme while the entire country will get Internet facilities through the E-Sri Lanka programme. This will help create more jobs in the IT sector, said SLFP Deputy Secretary and Telecommunication and Information Technology Minister Ranjith Siyambalapitiya on current issues and his engagement in the Deyata Kirula exhibition.

Q: What are the plans of your ministry in 2012 to push forward Mahinda Chinthanaya - Vision for the Future?

A: Sri Lanka is going to be the Wonder of Asia by 2016 and my ministry has taken the task of increasing Information Technology literacy of Sri Lankans up to 75 percent. We expect to earn an income of two billion dollars and to create 200,000 jobs in the IT sector. We have to teach IT to Sri Lankans to achieve all these goals and the best place to do this is the school. President Mahinda Rajapaksa allocated Rs.500 million from 2012 budget to start a programme to provide 200 computer labs for rural schools.


Telecommunication and Information Technology
Minister Ranjith Siyambalapitiya

In addition, the Telecommunication Regulation Commission will construct computer labs in one selected school in every district of the country. They commenced the programme from Jaffna and Badulla. We provide computer labs for the schools located in districts where the Deyata Kirula exhibition takes place. We are providing computer labs to schools in Polonnaruwa, Ampara, Trincomalee and Batticaloa during this year.

When we implement this strategy, all schools in the country will receive a good computer lab in the next two years. We will cover the entire country with Internet facilities through our E-Sri Lanka programme supported by Sri Lanka Telecom (SLT). The programme which commenced from Jaffna district will be completed this year. The Nenasala programme will continue as usual.

The main objective of this service (hot line) is giving people information on public services. 1919 the Government Information Centre is getting popular day-by-day and a large number of people use it daily. We need the support of all to take this forward and to develop this service further. We regularly update our information but some institutions get late to update us with their latest changes such as the change of their location (address) etc. This cause problems for us because when we provide outdated information to the public we lose our credibility. The staff of 1919 service should be aware of all the information on all public services (departments and their procedures).

We will organize a special workshop for all heads of state institutions next month to educate them on the importance of updating us on their latest changes etc.

Q: What measures are you taking to prevent cyber crimes in Sri Lanka and children’s access to pornography?

A: We are fully ready for this task. We can help people in many ways. The Sri Lanka Computer Emergency Readiness Team (CERT) is the special institute which has been set up for this task. It operates under the purview of Information and Communication Technology Agency(ICTA). Even when the Police receive a complaint, this institution assists them. It assists the courts during the entire course of the proceedings. We have planned to expand its operations under the new development strategies taking place in the IT sector. We always use the school, the temple, the church, the Kovil and the mosque to establish ‘Nenasala’ and ‘Computer Labs’. It helps us prevent children from viewing pornography when computer and Internet facilities are available in such institutes. These institutions assist children to develop spiritually.

Then children will be weaned away from bad things which are available on the Internet. The mentality of children will not incline towards evil when facilities are available in places where their minds develop spiritually.

Q: Signal towers of various mobile phone service providers have mushroomed all over the country causing damage to people’s properties and health. What measures that have been taken to solve this problem?

A: There are some problems and opinions but still such facts have not been properly proved through in-depth scientific researches. But it is our responsibility to maintain the required standards of these towers. It is up to the Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (TRC).

We have come a long way in this field. Around 7.5 million Sri Lankans use mobile phones at the moment. Earlier, our problem was how to reach this level. But now we have to pay special attention towards maintaining required standards and quality. We hope to build multi-task towers similar to the Kokavil transmission tower in the future. Similar type of towers can be used without constructing towers in every nook and corner. We can then remove the existing towers which can cause a hindrance to people’s lives. We will build such multi-task towers keeping to the highest standards giving priority to the people’s safety. Our special attention has been focused on this now.

Q: What can you do when it comes to changing wrong attitudes towards providing access to Internet and computers by school authorities and some heads of department and institutions?

A: We have already identified this problem and it is important to communicate the right message to the public, especially to school, office and other relevant authorities, in order to solve it. Still people strongly believe that even though computers and the Internet facility is very valuable, children should not be allowed to use these facilities. There is a wrong notion among some administrators in offices and other institutions that computers and Internet facilities are not meant for the use of ordinary staff but only for heads of department/sections.

We identified this problem and are now conducting countrywide seminars to educate the public on this wrong opinion and attitude. We tell them that computers and Internet facilities are not gold and the maximum use should be made out of them. We tell parents to allow children to browse the Internet to acquire knowledge. We explained them that depriving children from using computers and Internet facilities make the value of such equipment and facilities worthless. We have also emphasised that the office assistants should also have access to computers and Internet facilities. During the seminars conducted, we allocated a whole day to this specific subject and area. We also highlighted the importance of building a very close relationship with the public and communicating the right message to them.

Q: As the chief organizer of the Deyata Kirula national exhibition, what do you have to say about various allegations made by some political parties and politicians?

A: Opposing is very natural and a usual practice in Sri Lanka. It is the long standing tradition of our political parties. All Sri Lankan political parties in the Opposition (including the SLFP and UPFA when they were in the Opposition) did not point out or praise anything good. It is a common feature of all Opposition political parties in Sri Lanka. The war has ended and the entire country is enjoying the dividends of peace. People no longer fear for their lives. The Opposition fails to admit this fact. Therefore, there is no point of talking about the positive things that the country is experiencing that the Opposition political parties cannot see.

Deyata Kirula is a giant programme and roads worth Rs. 20 billion were constructed in the Anuradhapura district.

The Opposition is too bankrupt to admit this fact. But, if a pot-hole appears on one of these roads, Opposition political parties and media are quick to point it out.

They thrive by only looking at the negative things. People only try to point out what is wrong and that is human nature. So some sections of the media sell all the ‘wrong’ and ‘disgusting’ things to people. One of the basic objectives of an exhibition is displaying things.

Sometimes, we are compelled to remove parts of what we built because such things cannot be used in the specific area. But we always try to build permanent buildings, structures etc.

For example, we built an exhibition hall in order to use it as a paddy storage centre in the future. It now functions as a paddy storage centre. All buildings were constructed by state institutions and no contracts were given to private contractors. We constructed the buildings to be used for the exhibition and the required additions to them were done later (just after the conclusion of the exhibition) to change them into specific buildings, such as, paddy storage. But certain sections of the media eagerly waited until certain parts of those buildings were removed after the exhibition and tried to paint a different picture to the public through deception.

We commenced the exhibition in 2007 when people were living in a very insecure environment where bomb explosions were the order of the day. Even 10 people were scared to gather around for something for fear of getting caught to a bomb explosion.

Deyata Kirula gave hope for all of us and it proved that we can do things without any fear. We held this exhibition twice in Colombo in the middle of bomb explosions and later brought it to other parts of the country.

Then we added development to this exhibition and always tried to hold it at a minimal expenditure and environment damage.

We always used state institutions to carry out construction work and used the labour of Civil Defence Force personnel. This exhibition highlights the massive progress made by the country. The exhibition brings development to that specific district.

We have decided to seek a debate in Parliament regarding this subject. The debate is to be requested by us, the UPFA MPs. We would have never asked for such a debate if we did anything wrong. During the final speech of this debate I will answer all questions and explain everything.

Q: What do you think about the past two years of the United People's Freedom Alliance (UPFA) government?

A: The journey of the UPFA government during the past two years has been a victorious one. When President Mahinda Rajapaksa took over the country, the people handed over to him two challenges. The first one was ending the war and creating permanent peace and the second challenge was achieving development. He successfully completed the first challenge and is now heading towards achieving the second goal. According to a recently released Central Bank Report, Sri Lanka has maintained an economic growth rate of over eight percent during the past three years. In 2011, the rate was 8.3 percent and this was the highest economic growth recorded by Sri Lanka since independence. The Central Bank report is an independent document.

Q: In your opinion what can the Sri Lankan public and media do in order to prevent any future foreign conspiracies?

A: Both the media and Opposition should accurately and clearly identify national issues. They should not play with them. But they do the very thing. That is the main problem that exists. The Opposition is trying to use such issues to grab power. Some sections of the media seek the possibility of selling such issues to the public to earn money. Because of these things, the public, sometimes tend to take national issues lightly.

We all have to identify our goals and clearly divide them into two sections as the goals that can be played with and the national goals (that cannot be played with). Nobody can argue with national goals. If this happens we can develop the country and walk forward.

This happened during the humanitarian operation. During the humanitarian operation, the media understood their responsibility and acted accordingly, but the Opposition did not act in a responsible manner at that time

Sunday, April 22, 2012

 

http://www.defence.lk/new.asp?fname=good_friends_indeed_20120420_04

Good friends indeed


Rehabilitated ex-LTTE combatants together with their family members and members of the security forces held a New Year Festival at the Vavuniya Municipal Grounds on 19th April 2012.

The rehabilitated youth and members of the security forces are seen taking part in "Kotta Pora" sporting event at the New Year ceremony. Around 700 rehabilitated youth joined this festival from Vavuniya & Polonnaruwa rehabilitation centres.

http://www.defence.lk/new.asp?fname=karunanidhi_can_have_eelam_in_india_20120420_01

Karunanidhi can have Eelam in India: Defence Secretary


Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa yesterday said if DMK Leader and former Tamil Nadu Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi's unfulfilled dream was a Tamil Eelam, he should work for it in India because the largest population of Tamils live in the Tamil Nadu state of India and not in Sri Lanka.

"A much bigger population of Tamils live in Tamil Nadu in India than the Tamil population in Sri Lanka. If Karunanidhi wants a Tamil Eelam he can have it in Tamil Nadu. He should not come to make Eelams in Sri Lanka. This is a sovereign country. We consider those who talk about Eelam as terrorists," the Defence Secretary told the Daily Mirror.

The Defence Secretary expressed these views responding to a statement made by india's DMK party President and former Tamil Nadu chief minister M. Karunanidhi to the effect that India should urge the United Nations to bring pressure on Sri Lanka to hold a referendum regarding Tamil Eelam in Sri Lanka. Karunanidhi wields significant political power with the Indian Central Government as his political party is a significant constituent of the Indian Congress led ruling alliance - the UPA.

"There is no war now in Sri Lanka. There exists ethnic harmony and every one lives peacefully. Karunanidhi should not attempt to arouse the Tamil people in Sri Lanka. Karunanidhi is also one among the many Indian politicians who are bent on destroying our country by making controversial statements. It is a pity that they are adopting to such low political tactics. Karunanidhi should realize that ours is an independent country and should not attempt to establish Eelam, and if he wishes he could do so in Tamil Nadu where a larger concentration of Tamil people live," the Defense Secretary further stated.

Courtesy : Daily Mirror

 

 

http://www.defence.lk/new.asp?fname=sriLanka_reconciliation_versus_interventionism_20120418_01

Sri Lanka: Reconciliation versus Interventionism


After a civil war which lasted nearly 30 years, Sri Lanka defeated the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam ("the Tamil Tigers") in 2009. It did so after rejecting outside intervention by Western powers which wanted the rebels and the government to negotiate as equal partners and which proposed international mediation and oversight.

Following the victory, the government appointed an independent Lessons Learned and Reconciliation Commission which has submitted proposals for how to take the country forward. Three years on, the United States, Amnesty International and Channel 4 in Britain have started to wage a campaign against Sri Lanka - a campaign which culminated in the vote of a hostile US-backed resolution in the United Nations Human Rights Council in March 2012.

At the same time, Channel 4 has produced two documentaries, in 2011 and 2012 alleging war crimes committed by the Sri Lanka army during the final campaign and a subsequent government cover-up of these. The government retorts that the figures of casualties claimed by Channel 4 (as by supporters of the Tamil Tigers) are inflated and that war crimes are being investigated.

The Centre for the Study for Interventionism has produced a video on the issue. Why are the United States, Britain and famous international NGOs and media outlets cranking up the propaganda against Sri Lanka? Is there a geopolitical motive behind this? Will such interventionism from outside really help reconciliation on the ground? Is it right that international bodies, NGOs and foreign media should risk opening up old wounds when they, unlike the Sri Lankan government, will never have to bear any responsibility if their decisions turn out to be mistaken?

http://www.defence.lk/new.asp?fname=Rehabilitating_LTTE_cadres_to_spend_New_Year_with_families_20120411_03

Rehabilitating LTTE cadres to spend New Year with families


Ex-LTTE cadres, who are currently being rehabilitated, would be given a chance to celebrate the upcoming Sinhala and Tamil New Year with their families, the Ministry of Prison Reforms and Rehabilitations said. "The authorities will facilitate the proramme on the New Year's day at all rehabilitation centres," Secretary to the Ministry, A. Dissanayake said.

Currently, there are nearly 650 ex-LTTE cadres in four rehabilitation camps, situated in the Vavuniya district and Welikanda and Kandakadu in the Eastern Province, undergoing one year's rehabilitation.

This month nearly 30 chosen inmates, whose conduct has been good, would also be allowed to visit their families under the home visiting programme, Dissanayake said.

He also said that plans were afoot to obtain correctional orders from Courts and engage inmates with minor offences in social services programmes.

"Currently, there are nearly 2,000 such inmates causing heavy congestion in prisons countrywide," Dissanayake said.

Courtesy : The Island

 

http://www.sundayobserver.lk/2012/04/22/sec03.asp

De-mining completed in Vavuniya district


Demining has been completed in the Vavuniya district, all displaced families from the district have been resettled in their original homes and several major programs on an unprecedented level have been launched to promote livelihood facilities of the people, Government Agent Ms. P.S.M. Charles told the Sunday Observer.

After the elimination of terrorism, the district saw many far-reaching programs for social and economic well-being of the people and these programs have been implemented under the guidance of President Mahinda Rajapaksa and under the direct supervision and funding by Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa. Minister Rishad Bathuideen and Provincial Governor Maj. Gen. G.A. Chandrasiri who are co-chairs of the District Development Committee play a significant role towards the implementation of these programs, the GA said.

Government Agent Ms. P.S.M. Charles on an inspection tour

Under the Emergency Northern Recovery Project (ENRP), 67 minor tanks have been renovated at an expenditure of Rs. 207.84 million, 42 public buildings were renovated or repaired at an expenditure of Rs. 247.29 million, internal roads were rehabilitated at a cost of Rs. 109 million and the water supply scheme at Nedunkerny was rehabilitated at a cost of Rs. 175 million.

Waste water and Storm water drainage system in Vavuniya town was constructed at an expenditure of Rs. 44 million and the Dry Zone Urban Water Sanitation Project was completed at an expenditure of Rs. 3,080 million, the GA said.

Rehabilitation of roads, construction of rural training centres, construction of People Shops, wells have been dug, rural water supply and tube wells were some of the other projects that have been completed under the targeted development activities. Funds were also disbursed under Micro Financing and Capacity building projects, she said.

The other major projects in the pipeline are the establishment of a dedicated economic centre at Omanthai, a commercial complex at Vavuniya town, technical college and industrial estate at Omanthai (work has already been started), a District Secretariat complex at Thandikulam, a transport terminal point at Vavuniya town, developing Eco-Tourism in identified locations, establishment of a garment factory at Pampaimadu and Nelunkulam and alienation of lands for officers to construct houses through the NHDA, the GA said.

The paddy yield in the Maha season this year had doubled compared to the previous six consecutive Maha seasons mainly due to proper water management and quality seed paddy that was supplied to farmers, enhanced facilities extended, provision of fertiliser at subsidised prices and the presence of displaced agricultural families in their own homes, the GA said.

Paddy cultivation was undertaken in over 50,000 acres of paddy land in the last Maha season and the yield per acre was 120 bushels as against 60 bushels in the previous seasons. Highland crops including black gram and mustard seed that were cultivated in over 20,000 acres also had good harvests.

All irrigation canals have been concreted now, unlike previously, to make sure water is not wasted. Sixty four-wheel tractors and more than 200 two-wheel tractors were distributed among the farmers. Good quality seed paddy and seed black grams, seeds of other highland crops and vegetable seeds were also distributed to the farmers, the GA said. Bank loans were given to 4,500 families.

Over 15,000 acres of jungle land was cleared in Vavuniya North (Cheddikulam) by the Government and given to the farmers for the cultivation of paddy and other highland crops, she said. Barbed wires to poor farmer families were also distributed for them to have their paddy crops protected from wild animals, she said.

Water pumps were distributed among a large number of farmers.

Four Rice Mills have been established in Vavuniya and one is equipped with modern machinery. Each mill is capable of processing 20,000 kg of rice per day, the GA said.

A poppadom factory has been started in Vavuniya under USAID assistance and 20 persons are being employed in the factory, she said. 7,000 tonnes of paddy was purchased by the Multi-purpose Cooperative Societies (MPCSs) at the guaranteed price and is stored in some of the 18 warehouses of the MPCSs, she said. 18,000 kg of black gram was also purchased and is stored in the warehouses. While private traders purchased the black gram at the price of Rs. 70 per kg the MPCS purchased it for Rs. 140 per kg, the GA said.

A lorry has been provided to the Vavuniya North Agricultural Society for the purpose of marketing the farmers’ products in the neighbouring districts in an effort to reduce on the the cost of transport.

Fishing nets, boats and bicycles have been distributed among fisher families who are engaged in fresh water fishing in ponds and tanks in the district, the GA said. Village level farmers’ societies are now being established and training in modern methods of agriculture is being provided to the farmers.

With rains already experienced and the South West monsoonal rains anticipated soon, farmers are getting ready for the Yala season cultivation, she said.

Hybrid cows, goats and poultry have been distributed among most of the resettled families for rearing so that their income will be supplemented, the GA said.

 

http://www.sundayobserver.lk/2012/04/22/fea02.asp

US troops posed with body parts of Afghan bombers

The paratroopers had their assignment: Check out reports that Afghan police had recovered the mangled remains of an insurgent suicide bomber. Try to get iris scans and fingerprints for identification.

The 82nd Airborne Division soldiers arrived at the police station in Afghanistan’s Zabol province in February 2010. They inspected the body parts. Then the mission turned macabre: The paratroopers posed for photos next to Afghan police, grinning while some held - and others squatted beside - the corpse’s severed legs.

A few months later, the same platoon was dispatched to investigate the remains of three insurgents who Afghan police said had accidentally blown themselves up. After obtaining a few fingerprints, they posed next to the remains, again grinning and mugging for photographs.

A soldier from the US Army’s 82nd Airborne with a dead insurgent’s hand on his shoulder. Pic: Los Angeles Times

Two soldiers posed holding a dead man’s hand with the middle finger raised. A soldier leaned over the bearded corpse while clutching the man’s hand. Someone placed an unofficial platoon patch reading “Zombie Hunter” next to other remains and took a picture.

The Army launched a criminal investigation after the Los Angeles Times showed officials copies of the photos, which recently were given to the paper by a soldier from the division.

“It is a violation of Army standards to pose with corpses for photographs outside of officially sanctioned purposes,” said George Wright, an Army spokesman. “Such actions fall short of what we expect of our uniformed service members in deployed areas.”

Wright said that after the investigation, the Army would “take appropriate action” against those involved. Most of the soldiers in the photos have been identified, said Lt. Col. Margaret Kageleiry, an Army spokeswoman. The photos have emerged at a particularly sensitive moment for US-Afghan relations. In January, a video appeared on the Internet showing four US Marines urinating on Afghan corpses. In February, the inadvertent burning of copies of the Koran at a US base triggered riots that left 30 dead and led to the deaths of six Americans. In March, a US Army sergeant went on a night time shooting rampage in two Afghan villages, killing 17.

The soldier who provided The Times with a series of 18 photos of soldiers posing with corpses did so on condition of anonymity. He served in Afghanistan with the 82nd Airborne’s 4th Brigade Combat Team from Ft. Bragg, N.C. He said the photos point to a breakdown in leadership and discipline that he believed compromised the safety of the troops.

Security shortcomings


He expressed the hope that publication would help ensure that alleged security shortcomings at two US bases in Afghanistan in 2010 were not repeated. The brigade, under new command but with some of the same paratroopers who served in 2010, began another tour in Afghanistan in February.

US military officials asked The Times not to publish any of the pictures.

Capt. John Kirby, a Pentagon spokesman, said the conduct depicted “most certainly does not represent the character and the professionalism of the great majority of our troops in Afghanistan.... Nevertheless, this imagery - more than two years old - now has the potential to indict them all in the minds of local Afghans, inciting violence and perhaps causing needless casualties.”

Kirby added, “We have taken the necessary precautions to protect our troops in the event of any backlash.”

The Times Editor Davan Maharaj said, “After careful consideration, we decided that publishing a small but representative selection of the photos would fulfill our obligation to readers to report vigorously and impartially on all aspects of the American mission in Afghanistan, including the allegation that the images reflect a breakdown in unit discipline that was endangering US troops.”

The photos were taken during a year-long deployment of the 3,500-member brigade, which lost 35 men during that time, according to icasualties.org, a website that tracks casualties. At least 23 were killed by home-made bombs or suicide bombers.

Suicide attacks on two bases of the brigade’s 1st Battalion, 508th Parachute Infantry Regiment killed six US soldiers and four Afghan interpreters. The platoon whose soldiers posed for the photos was part of the battalion.

The soldier who provided the photos, and two other former members of the battalion, said in separate interviews that they and others had complained of inadequate security at the two bases.

An Army investigation into a July 2010 suicide attack in Kandahar that killed four US soldiers found that senior members of the battalion had complained about security. But it concluded that force protection measures were “reasonable and prudent” in the face of limited resources.

Virtually all of the men depicted in the photos had friends who were killed or wounded by home-made bombs or suicide attacks, according to the soldier who provided the images. One paratrooper on the mission wore a bracelet bearing the name of a fallen comrade.

Suicide bomber


On the first mission, to the police station in the provincial capital of Qalat, Afghan police told the platoon that the severed legs belonged to a suicide bomber whose explosives detonated as he tried to attack a police unit, according to the soldier who provided the photos.

On the second mission, to the morgue in Qalat in late April or early May 2010, Afghan police told the platoon that explosives had detonated as three insurgents were preparing a roadside bomb.

The Pentagon declined a Times request that Army officials contact all active-duty soldiers in the photos to provide an opportunity to comment. The Times sent requests for comment by email and Facebook to seven soldiers in the photos. One, now serving in Afghanistan, declined to comment. The others did not respond.

The photos were taken during a tumultuous period in the brigade’s deployment.

In January 2010, the commander of the brigade’s 2nd Battalion and the battalion’s top non-commissioned officer were relieved of duty and ordered home after slides with racial and sexist overtones were shown during daily PowerPoint briefings.

- Los Angeles Times

http://www.sundayobserver.lk/2012/04/22/main_Editorial.asp

White van myth exploded


Abducted by unidentified men in a white van! This has been the buzzword of those who have been conspiring against Sri Lanka and its Government during the past few years.

Be it the LTTE rump, Tiger sympathisers, Tamil diaspora, countries supporting them indirectly or even opportunistic Opposition politicians here - all used this popular slogan in different forms to achieve their hidden agendas. Surprisingly, none of them has come forward to furnish any concrete evidence to the police or defence authorities to probe such baseless and concocted allegations which are aimed at tarnishing Sri Lanka’s image and its defence establishment. This has proved to be a money-spinner for some NGOs and bankrupt Opposition politicians.

The LTTE rump, Tiger sympathisers or Tamil diaspora making such wild allegations to bring the Government into disrepute and woo the sympathy of the international community is quite understandable. Certain politicians in Canada, UK and Australia, who depend heavily on the votes of adopted Tamils from Sri Lanka for their political survival, also dance the fandango around LTTE shadow organisations.

What confounds all patriotic and peace-loving people of Sri Lanka is the shameful conduct of some Opposition politicians who utter diabolical lies to realise their petty political ambitions. Would politicians in other countries descend to such an abysmal level of turning traitors to their motherland, putting self before country?

A certain television channel, which caters to ‘headless’ people, and some newspapers, dish out various stories on these so-called ‘white van abductions’. One particular television channel allocates a segment of its news bulletin to abductions almost on a daily basis, showing clippings of weeping relatives to rouse passions and instill fear and apprehension in the public. The same story is aired ad nauseum in different presentations.

However, such programs fail to highlight the real motives behind such incidents. It has been revealed that most of these incidents stem from personal problems such as extra-marital affairs, business and gang rivalry. Those who report such abductions in a heart-rending manner don’t make further inquiries and provide tangible evidence in support of such investigations. Even if the Security Forces were to uncover such mysteries, they are reluctant to do so as all such incidents are conveniently credited to the ‘Government’s account’.

The Government’s responsibility to protect its people and conduct investigations on such incidents is by no means disputed. While the Government and its security establishment make every endeavour to uncover such incidents, it is the responsibility of those who level various accusations and the public to furnish whatever evidence they have on such abductions. In making such allegations without any concrete evidence, Opposition politicians only play into the hands of LTTE ghouls and help certain countries which are attempting to sully Sri Lanka’s image and bring its leaders and Security Forces before the war crimes tribunal on alleged war crime charges.

The recent high-drama enacted by Premakumar Gunaratnam, alias Noel Mudalige and the Australian High Commissioner in Sri Lanka Robyn Mudie exposed the true nature of the so-called white van abductions. How the Australian High Commissioner Mudie apparently turned magician to produce overnight the original passport of Noel Mudalige still remains a mystery. Had it not been for the swift action of the Security Forces to uncover the dual role of the JVP rebel leader, his disappearance would still remain a ‘white van abduction’.

Similarly, there was a big hue and cry recently over two men who went missing in Wellampitiya and villagers surrounded the police station and complained that some people had been abducted in a white van. However, when the defence authorities investigated the matter, it was found that they had been apprehended by Excise Department officials for a certain offence and that too after apprising people in the vicinity. Lo and behold, it turned out to be a black van.

Another story doing the rounds on ‘self abductions’ has also come to light. A married man who had spent a few days with his mistress, had told his wife when he returned home that he had been abducted in a white van and was later released. These are some of the true-life ‘white van stories’ that have received the least publicity.

Another aspect of the white van drama was brought into sharp focus by Lakshman Kiriella to resurrect his moribund political image. In an interview with a daily newspaper, Kiriella had said that a certain woman had told him that when she had gone to the police station to complain about her son’s abduction, she found the same person who had come to abduct her son at the police station.

Nevertheless, when Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa sought evidence to elicit further details on the matter for investigations, Kiriella made a futile effort to seek cover under Parliamentary privileges.

It goes without saying that Members of Parliament (MPs) enjoy Parliamentary privileges only for statements they make in Parliament. Hence, Kiriella should realise that he could not make sweeping statements in public and get away with it.

Gotabaya Rajapaksa, in his capacity as Secretary to the Ministry of Defence, is the senior most administrator of that ministry. He is consulted even when MPs seek answers from the Defence Minister. The Defence Secretary has a bounden duty to seek evidence and initiate an investigation on any serious allegation.

Instead of providing information and assisting the Defence Ministry on the original allegation he made in public, Kiriella had said that he would raise a privilege issue in Parliament against the Defence Secretary. The UNP MP now gloats about his privileges and the protocol ladder in the Government Establishment Code. In the event Kiriella’s allegation had been sincere, he should have come forward and furnished the information he was privy to, and thereby assist the defence authorities.

The Defence Secretary is the ideal person to address such allegations and order investigations to mete out justice. Is there any other better person for the job? It appears that Kiriella is now attempting to take cover under Parliamentary privileges without elaborating on what he had said earlier.

As a responsible citizen, veteran lawyer and a people’s representative, Kiriella should have obtained the name of the officer at the police station he alleges and lodged a complaint accordingly with the IGP. However, it seems that Kiriella had conveniently forgotten the fact that the highest number of abductions and extra-judicial killings took place when his party - the UNP, was in power in 1987-88.

Thursday, April 19, 2012

http://www.defence.lk/new.asp?fname=indian_delegation_happy_with_SL's_rebuilding_effort_20120418_02Indian delegation happy with SL's rebuilding effort
www.defence.lk">
The Joint Parliamentary
delegation led by Lok Sabha Opposition Leader Sushma Swaraj called on Economic
Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa yesterday(April 17). Picture by Chaminda
Hittetiya
The visiting Indian Joint Parliamentary delegation has expressed
its satisfaction on the efforts taken by the government of Sri Lanka to rebuild
the former conflict affected areas. They have also called for stronger ties
between the two nations.
They said that more information should be made available to the
people of Tamil Nadu to make them aware of the truth concerning the Tamil people
of Sri Lanka.
The members of the delegation aired these views during a meeting
with Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa yesterday morning.
During the interaction with the minister they also suggested
that it was important to alleviate existing suspicion between the two
communities to help in the realization of long lasting peace in Sri Lanka, the
Economic Development Ministry said.
The Head of the delegation, Opposition Leader of the Lok Sabha
Sushma Swaraj stated that they respect the integrity of Sri Lanka and wish for
stronger ties between the two countries, the ministry added. According to them,
several delegates during discussions had expressed satisfaction on the efforts
undertaken by the government in resettling the IDPS, in addition to building
infrastructure and efforts at livelihood development in conflict affected areas.
Minister Basil Rajapaksa briefing the delegates on the ongoing
work in the former conflict affected areas said that the government was able to
resettle 95% of the IDPs, displaced after 2005, with better facilities than
those which they enjoyed before the crisis.
He had pointed out that the remaining IDPs mainly consisted of
ones who fled to India and other countries during the conflict period.
All facilities required for civilian life are in operation in
these areas and IDPs are provided with core houses using the tin sheets and
cement provided by the Indian government, he said.
He also had described that in addition another 50,000 permanent
houses are being built in the conflict affected areas with Indian financial
assistance.
IDPs were also provided with cash grants, cash for work,
resettlement kits and a six month dry food ration now extended for two years.
The minister said that all infrastructure facilities, such as,
roads, railways, harbours and airports are being developed and agriculture,
fisheries and other economic activities have been restored. The minister
suggested that the delegation should visit these areas and observe the changes
for themselves.
Courtesy: Daily News