SRI LANKA: Journalist of ‘Sunday Apple’ newspaper tortured by Assistant Superintendent of Police of Tangalle

October 9th, 2017

ASIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION-URGENT APPEALS PROGRAM

Dear Friends,

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) received information about Mr. Susantha Bandara Karunarathna, a journalist working for the ‘Sunday Apple’ newspaper. He was tortured by the Assistant Superintendent of Police of Tangalle, I. T. Daluwath. Susantha was engaged in his duties as a journalist, covering a peaceful protest at Hambantota Town on 6 October 2017. He was illegally arrested, detained, tortured and denied urgently needed medical treatment. The senior Consultant Surgeon examined the patient at the Debarawewa District Hospital, directing the Police to take the patient for immediate treatment at the Hambantota General Hospital. However, the Police refused, produced him before the Magistrate Court of Hambantota, remanding him in Tangalle Remand Prison. When his physical condition turned serious, Prison Authorities admitted him to the Hambantota General Hospital the next day. Observing the severity of the situation, the Doctors transferred the patient to the Matara General Hospital. Police have severely tortured, inhumanly denied urgently needed medical treatment and obstructed the journalist from doing his work.

Case Narrative:

Susantha Bandara Karunarathna, is a journalist working for the ‘Sunday Apple’, a widely popular national newspaper.

On 6 October 2017, Susantha was directed by his media organization, the Times Networks Private Limited, to cover the peoples protest at Hambantota Town. It was organized by several organizations including legally accepted political parties. The protest numbered thousands of people including religious leaders, members of the National Parliament, Provincial Council members representing the Island and a large gathering of civil society activists. All are demanding the protection of national resources and the peoples’ welfare.

While Susantha was engaged with his official duties he was arrested by the two Police Officers pictured above. Although he explained to the Officers his official duties, they did not pay any attention and continued to obstruct his work. Later he was dragged to a Police vehicle. Two Police Officers held his both arms tightly against his body. The Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) I.T. Daluwattte, of the Tangalle Division, approached him, slapping him hard on his left ear. He felt severe pain. Immediately the left side of his head became numb. He could not hear any sound in his left ear.

Then he was brought to the Police vehicle and taken to the Veerawila Police Station. His fellow journalists kept protesting his arrest with the Police Officers. They were fortunate to cover the illegal activity of the Police Officers as well.

Susantha’s left ear started to bleed. He informed the Officers of this development. They brought him to the Debarawewa District Hospital. The senior Consultant Surgeon examined the patient and directed he be taken for immediate treatment to the Hambantota General Hospital. However, the Police refused. Instead, they produced him before the Magistrate of Hambantota, remanding him in the Tangalle Remand Prison.

When the victim’s condition turned serious, the Prison Authorities transferred him to the Hambantota General Hospital the next day. The Doctors, considering the severity of the patient transferred him to the Matara General Hospital. Urgent surgery needed to be performed under superior facilities and various medical specialties. Doctors confirmed serious damage to the membrane of the ear drum coupled with internal bleeding which caused serious side effects, including loss of hearing. Susantha is still under treatment at the Matara General Hospital.

Media organizations, human rights activists and concerned civil society parties raised strong voices. They considered this a serious violation of the journalist’s rights by a senior Police Officer. They further mentioned that:

1) Susantha was arrested while he was engaged in his legal duties.
2) In Police custody, he was severely tortured after his upper body was tightly restrained by two Officers.
3) Susantha has never participated in any violent activity or breached any Law.
4) He has never used force against any Law Enforcement Officer.
5) He has never obstructed the duty of any Police Officer.
6) He was detained in violation of his civilian rights.
7) He was obstructed in his duties as a journalist.
8) Susantha was produced before the Courts under fabricated charges.
9) He was denied urgently needed medical treatment.
10) Police have acted against directions of the Medical Doctors, knowing well that the patient could lose his hearing besides endangering his life.

All the concerned parties demand a full, prompt, efficient, independent, impartial inquiry into the incident. Demand that the proper Authorities put the responsible Police Officers on immediate suspension of duty. The Attorney General direct the Inspector General of Police (IGP) to initiate a full-scale investigation. Indict and prosecute the Police Officers under the Convention Against Torture And Other Cruel, Inhuman Or Degrading Treatment Or Punishment No: 22 of 1994.

Video link to the torture: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M1B-97tWzhs

https://youtu.be/l-3X-ySRfh8

Suggested Action:

Please send letters to the Authorities listed below expressing your concern about this case. Request an immediate investigation into the allegations of illegally arresting, detaining and torturing a working journalist by Police perpetrators. Prosecute those proven to be responsible under Criminal Law for misusing the powers of the State. Officers involved must be subject to an internal investigation for breach of Police Departmental Orders. Request the National Police Commission (NPC) and the Inspector General of Police (IGP) to open a special investigation into the malpractices of Police Officers who abuse their powers.

To support this case, please click here:

SAMPLE LETTER:

Dear ________,

SRI LANKA: Journalist of ‘Sunday Apple’ newspaper tortured by Assistant Superintendent of Police of Tangalle

Name of Victims: Susantha Bandara Karunarathna, a journalist working for the ‘Sunday Apple’ newspaper

Alleged perpetrators: Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) Tangalle Division

Date of incident: 6 October 2017

Place of incident: Hambantota Police Division

According to information I have received Mr. Susantha Bandara Karunarathna, is a journalist working for the ‘Sunday Apple’, a widely popular national newspaper.

On 6 October 2017, Susantha was directed by his media organization, the Times Networks Private Limited, to cover the peoples protest at Hambantota Town. It was organized by several organizations including legally accepted political parties. The protest numbered thousands of people including religious leaders, members of the National Parliament, Provincial Council members representing the Island and a large gathering of civil society activists. All are demanding the protection of national resources and the peoples’ welfare.

While Susantha was engaged with his official duties he was arrested by the two Police Officers pictured above. Although he explained to the Officers his official duties, they did not pay any attention and continued to obstruct his work. Later he was dragged to a Police vehicle. Two Police Officers held his both arms tightly against his body. The Assistant Superintendent of Police (ASP) I.T. Daluwattte, of the Tangalle Division, approached him, slapping him hard on his left ear. He felt severe pain. Immediately the left side of his head became numb. He could not hear any sound in his left ear.

Then he was brought to the Police vehicle and taken to the Veerawila Police Station. His fellow journalists kept protesting his arrest with the Police Officers. They were fortunate to cover the illegal activity of the Police Officers as well.

Susantha’s left ear started to bleed. He informed the Officers of this development. They brought him to the Debarawewa District Hospital. The senior Consultant Surgeon examined the patient and directed he be taken for immediate treatment to the Hambantota General Hospital. However, the Police refused. Instead, they produced him before the Magistrate of Hambantota, remanding him in the Tangalle Remand Prison.

When the victim’s condition turned serious, the Prison Authorities transferred him to the Hambantota General Hospital the next day. The Doctors, considering the severity of the patient transferred him to the Matara General Hospital. Urgent surgery needed to be performed under superior facilities and various medical specialties. Doctors confirmed serious damage to the membrane of the ear drum coupled with internal bleeding which caused serious side effects, including loss of hearing. Susantha is still under treatment at the Matara General Hospital.

Media organizations, human rights activists and concerned civil society parties raised strong voices. They considered this a serious violation of the journalist’s rights by a senior Police Officer. They further mentioned that:

1) Susantha was arrested while he was engaged in his legal duties.
2) In Police custody, he was severely tortured after his upper body was tightly restrained by two Officers.
3) Susantha has never participated in any violent activity or breached any Law.
4) He has never used force against any Law Enforcement Officer.
5) He has never obstructed the duty of any Police Officer.
6) He was detained in violation of his civilian rights.
7) He was obstructed in his duties as a journalist.
8) Susantha was produced before the Courts under fabricated charges.
9) He was denied urgently needed medical treatment.
10) Police have acted against directions of the Medical Doctors, knowing well that the patient could lose his hearing besides endangering his life.

All the concerned parties demand a full, prompt, efficient, independent, impartial inquiry into the incident. Demand that the proper Authorities put the responsible Police Officers on immediate suspension of duty. The Attorney General direct the Inspector General of Police (IGP) to initiate a full-scale investigation. Indict and prosecute the Police Officers under the Convention Against Torture And Other Cruel, Inhuman Or Degrading Treatment Or Punishment No: 22 of 1994.

Video link to the torture: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=M1B-97tWzhs
I request the intervention of your good offices to ensure that the Authorities listed below open an immediate investigation. Look into allegations of violations of the fundamental rights of the victim by Officers of the Sri Lanka Police Department. The Officers involved should be subject to an internal investigation for breach of Police Departmental orders.

Yours sincerely,

———————
PLEASE SEND YOUR LETTERS TO:

  1. Mr. Pujith Jayasundara
    Inspector General of Police
    New Secretariat
    Colombo 1
    SRI LANKA
    Fax: +94 11 2 440440 / 327877
    E-mail: igp@police.lk
  2. Mr. Jayantha Jayasooriya PC
    Attorney General
    Attorney General’s Department
    Colombo 12
    SRI LANKA
    Fax: +94 11 2 436421
    E-mail: ag@attorneygeneral.gov.lk
  3. Secretary
    National Police Commission
    3rd Floor, Rotunda Towers
    109 Galle Road
    Colombo 03
    SRI LANKA
    Tel: +94 11 2 395310
    Fax: +94 11 2 395867
    E-mail: npcgen@sltnet.lk or polcom@sltnet.lk
  4. Secretary
    Human Rights Commission
    No. 36, Kynsey Road
    Colombo 8
    SRI LANKA
    Tel: +94 11 2 694 925 / 673 806
    Fax: +94 11 2 694 924 / 696 470
    E-mail: sechrc@sltnet.lk

Thank you.

Urgent Appeals Program
Asian Human Rights Commission (ua@ahrc.asia)

Read this UAC online

Visit our website with more features at www.humanrights.asia.

You can make a difference. Please support our work and make a donation here.

Asian Human Rights Commission

G/F

52 Princess Margaret Road

Ho Man Tin, Kowloon

Hongkong S.A.R.

Tel: +(852) 2698-6339 Fax: +(852) 2698-6367

Web: www.humanrights.asia

twitter/youtube/facebook: humanrightsasia

කළු සල්ලි ගෝනිවල දාගෙන ලංකා බැංකුවෙන් පැන්නූ ජනාධිපතිවරණ ‘හංසයා’ පක්‍ෂයේ සභාපති අත්අඩංගුවේ..

October 9th, 2017

 lanka C news

පොලිස් අපරාධ පරීක්‍ෂණ කොට්ඨාශය විසින් ලිට්රෝ ගෑස් සමාගමේ සභාපති ශලීල මුණසිංහ අත්අඩංගුවට ගෙන ඇත.

මොහු අත්අඩංගුවට ගෙන ඇත්තේ විදෙස් රටක සිට මෙරට ලංකා බැංකු ශාඛාවකට විශාල මුදලක් ගෙන්වාගෙන එය මාරු කර ගැනීමේ සිදුවීමක් සම්බන්ධයෙන් මුල්‍ය විශුද්ධිකරණය යටතේය.

අදාල මුදල් තොගය ලිත්‍රො සභාපතිවරයා හා අත්අඩංගුවේ සිටින තවත් සැකකරුවකු සමග පැමිණ විශාල මුදල ගෝනිවල දමා රැගෙන යන ආකාරය ලංකා බැංකුවේ කැමරාවල සටහන්ව තිබී ඇත.

ශලීල මුණසිංහ හිටපු මුදල් අමාත්‍ය රවි කරුණානායකගේ ලගම හිතවතකු වන අතර මෛත්‍රීපාල සිරිසේන මහතාට ජනාධිපතිවරණය සඳහා ලබාදුන් හංසයා පක්ෂයේ සභාපතිවරයාද වෙයි.

කළු සල්ලි ගෝනිවල දාගෙන ලංකා බැංකුවෙන් පැන්නූ ජනාධිපතිවරණ ‘හංසයා’ පක්‍ෂයේ සභාපති අත්අඩංගුවේ..

SRI LANKA: Innocent man illegally arrested under fabricated charges

October 9th, 2017

ASIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION-URGENT APPEALS PROGRAM

Dear Friends,

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has received information regarding Mr. Aandige Charuka Malinda Peiris, a resident of Kantale Police Division. Malinda was illegally arrested by Police Officers of the Kantale Police Division on 21 June 2017. He was not given any reason for his arrest. He was detained in a cell, accused of supporting the escape of his village friend from Police arrest. The victim does not know where his friend is. He reiterated the fact that he has not been involved in any illegal activity. The victim stated that the Police acted arbitrarily and illegally, violating the Law.

Case Narrative:

The Asian Human Rights Commission has received information about Mr. Aandige Charuka Malinda Peiris, of No: 166/2/A, Bhathiyagama, Kantale in the Trincomalee District. Malinda is a day laborer and is married.

At 7 p.m. of 21 June 2017, while at home, 8 uniformed Police Officers came to Malinda’s
home and asked him to come outside. When outside, Officers dragged him with hands cuffed, put him in a parked vehicle and brought him to the Kantale Police Station. Malinda questioned the Officers as to the reason for his arrest. He was accused of supporting another to escape arrest. This particular villager was his childhood friend. Malinda denied helping his friend to escape arrest and leave the village. Malinda vehemently denied the accusations and entreated the Officers to release him.

The next day, 22 June, Malinda was produced before the Kantale Magistrate and released on bail.
Malinda states that he was illegally arrested and detained in a cell by the Kantale Police. They had violated his fundamental rights guaranteed him by the Constitution.

Suggested Action:

Please send letters to the Authorities listed below expressing your concern about this case. Request an immediate investigation into the allegations of illegal arrest by the Police. Prosecute those proved to be responsible under Criminal Law for misusing the powers of the State. The Officers involved must be subject to an internal investigation for breach of Police Departmental Orders. Please request the National Police Commission (NPC) and the Inspector General of Police (IGP) to open a special investigation into the malpractices of Police Officers who abuse their powers.

To support this case, please click here:

SAMPLE LETTER:

Dear _______

SRI LANKA: Innocent man illegally arrested under fabricated charges

Name of Victim: Mr. Aandige Charuka Malinda Peiris, of No: 166/2/A, Bhathiyagama, Kantale in                               the Trincomalee District

Alleged perpetrators: eight Police Officers attached to the Kantale Police Station

Date of incident: 21 June 2017

Place of incident: Kantale Police Division

According to information I have received Mr. Aandige Charuka Malinda Peiris, of No: 166/2/A, Bhathiyagama, Kantale in the Trincomalee District. Malinda is a day laborer and is married.

At 7 p.m. of 21 June 2017, while at home, 8 uniformed Police Officers came to Malinda’s
home and asked him to come outside. When outside, Officers dragged him with hands cuffed, put him in a parked vehicle and brought him to the Kantale Police Station. Malinda questioned the Officers as to the reason for his arrest. He was accused of supporting another to escape arrest. This particular villager was his childhood friend. Malinda denied helping his friend to escape arrest and leave the village. Malinda vehemently denied the accusations and entreated the Officers to release him.

The next day, 22 June, Malinda was produced before the Kantale Magistrate and released on bail.
Malinda states that he was illegally arrested and detained in a cell by the Kantale Police. They had violated his fundamental rights guaranteed him by the Constitution.

I request the intervention of your good offices. Ensure that the Authorities listed below open an immediate investigation into the allegations of violations of the fundamental rights of the victim by officers of the Sri Lanka Police Department. The officers involved should be subject to internal investigations for breach of Police Departmental Orders.

Yours sincerely,

———————
PLEASE SEND YOUR LETTERS TO:

  1. Mr. Pujith Jayasundara
    Inspector General of Police
    New Secretariat
    Colombo 1
    SRI LANKA
    Fax: +94 11 2 440440 / 327877
    E-mail: igp@police.lk
  2. Mr. Jayantha Jayasooriya PC
    Attorney General
    Attorney General’s Department
    Colombo 12
    SRI LANKA
    Fax: +94 11 2 436421
    E-mail: ag@attorneygeneral.gov.lk
  3. Secretary
    National Police Commission
    3rd Floor, Rotunda Towers
    109 Galle Road
    Colombo 03
    SRI LANKA
    Tel: +94 11 2 395310
    Fax: +94 11 2 395867
    E-mail: npcgen@sltnet.lk or polcom@sltnet.lk
  4. Secretary
    Human Rights Commission
    No. 36, Kynsey Road
    Colombo 8
    SRI LANKA
    Tel: +94 11 2 694 925 / 673 806
    Fax: +94 11 2 694 924 / 696 470
    E-mail: sechrc@sltnet.lk

Thank you.

Urgent Appeals Program
Asian Human Rights Commission (ua@ahrc.asia)

Read this UAC online

Visit our website with more features at www.humanrights.asia.

You can make a difference. Please support our work and make a donation here.

—————————–

Asian Human Rights Commission

G/F

52 Princess Margaret Road

Ho Man Tin, Kowloon

Hongkong S.A.R.

Tel: +(852) 2698-6339 Fax: +(852) 2698-6367

Web: www.humanrights.asia

twitter/youtube/facebook: humanrightsasia

වාහන යන එන තැන දැනගන්න අලුත්ම ක්‍රමයක්‌ – මෙය මානව හිමිකම් උල්ලංඝනය කිරීමක්‌ – ආචාර්ය ප්‍රතිභා මහානාමහේවා Divaina  09 10 17

October 9th, 2017

Dr Sarath Obeysekera    

Also read

https://www.lankaweb.com/news/items/2017/10/08/hi-tech-number-plates-to-keep-tabs-on-vehicles/

You do not have to be a legal wizard to predict what I said in Lanka web.

I predicted last year about the possibility of becoming a police state under the pretext of Democracy .USA and Europe are purportedly democratic have various ways of detecting the movement of people and even vehicles in their own country and in countries infested with terrorism .USA finds the movement of terrorist leaders using satellite technology to detect them whereabout of the leaders before they annihilate them. Methods such as planting a chip in car plate numbers will increase theft of car-number plates before criminals resort to nefarious activities .When the system identifies the location of a particular vehicle in an area where criminal activity has taken place law enforcement will gun after the wrong owner and drags to fourth floor ?

Unless the person show some full proof alibi with a CCTV footage he/she  will have to sit in front of investigators who will torment you .

Government is surely going ahead to implement such system may not be to protect that people but to protect the system of governance ( good or bad ).

Whenever I drive my car which is sometimes stopped by ( not so educated ) soldiers and police the question they ask is Mister ,where are you coming from ? or where are you going >” If one gives the wrong answer * like in Slum Dog Millionaire Film you are in trouble .If you change your mind and change the destination you may be charged for misleading the law enforcement ?

One day ,state may make it compulsory to install a chip in newly born infant so that they can monitor the movement until he /she grows up and die at old age >

This may be the first step to have military state and violation of fundamental rights .

I will not object if the state installs such chips in every three wheeler so that they know the owners are up to, like visiting drug supplier or vice suppliers .

Government pay also install such chips in vehicles which enter Colombo City where a Congestion Charge ( like in London where vehicles are charge for entering the City ) may be imposed .Every month they can send a bill to the owner for entering Colombo.

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

The Criminal Investigation Bureau CIB confirms suspect nabbed for hacking; US$500,000 unaccountable

October 9th, 2017

http://focustaiwan.tw

Taipei, Oct. 9 (CNA) The Criminal Investigation Bureau (CIB) said Monday that one Sri Lankan accused of helping hackers to steal about US$60 million from a Taiwanese bank has been arrested in the South Asian country.

The Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC), Taiwan’s top financial regulator, said that day that while most of the lost funds have been recovered, about US$500,000 remains unaccounted for.

Chiu Shao-chou (邱紹洲), a CIB section chief, told the press that the suspect was captured by Sri Lankan police when he tried to withdraw about US$26,000 after the money was wired to his account from Taiwan Oct. 6.

Chiu said that after raiding the suspect’s residence, Sri Lankan police found some other people, but whether they are accomplices requires further verification.

Chiu Shao-chou (邱紹洲)

Sri Lankan media cited international wire reports as saying that the man is an executive of a Sri Lankan state-owned enterprise and has a bank account in the name of J.C. Nammuni.

On Friday, Far Eastern International Bank (遠東商銀), one of Taiwan’s medium-sized lenders, said it reported to the FSC and the CIB that the bank found that its computer system had been infected with malware, which affected some of its PCs and servers, as well as the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication’s (SWIFT) network.

SWIFT is a member-only organization that provides safe and secure financial transactions for its members via a standardized proprietary communication platform that can facilitate the transmission of information about financial transactions.

According to Far Eastern Bank, the malware allowed the hackers to wire about US$60 million from the accounts of the bank’s clients to foreign destinations such as Sri Lanka, Cambodia and the United States.

The CIB is planning to send a team, including IT experts of Far Eastern Bank, to Sri Lanka in the coming days to gain a better understanding of the case and provide assistance to police there.

The CIB told CNA that the bureau needs time to prepare for the probe in Sri Lanka, as the two countries have no diplomatic ties and no Taiwanese official representatives are stationed there.

Chiu said that after the CIB received the report from Far Eastern Bank, the bureau pinned down some servers located in the U.S. and the Netherlands that were used by the hackers to wire funds from the bank to overseas.

He said the CIB has provided information about the case to police in the U.S. and Europe after asking for assistance.

It is the first case of a Taiwanese bank suffering from such a serious hacking incident.

FSC Banking Bureau Deputy Director Chuang Hsiu-yuan (莊琇媛) said Far Eastern Bank has recovered US$57 million wired to Cambodia, US$1 million to the U.S. and US$1.6 million to Sri Lanka.

Chuang said that the FSC has asked Far Eastern Bank to submit a report in one week to detail the hacking incident before determining whether the bank will face a fine for negligence.

(By Liu Chien-pang, Liao Yi-yang and Frances Huang)
Enditem/J

2 arrested in Sri Lanka in Taiwan bank hack

October 9th, 2017

hotforsecurity.bitdefender.com

Sri Lanka’s Criminal Investigation Department, in collaboration with Taiwanese law enforcement, has apprehended two suspects in Colombo for allegedly aiding in the hacking of a bank in Taiwan that culminated in the theft of millions of dollars, writes AFP.

The two allegedly hacked the bank’s computer systems and were arrested after trying to withdraw money from their accounts. A third suspect is at large.

We are looking at some $1.3 million that had come into three accounts in Sri Lanka,” said an official who requested to stay anonymous. We have taken two people into custody and we are looking for one more person.”

According to Taiwan News, the victim is the Far Eastern International Bank, hacked after a hacker put a virus into the bank’s computer system and tried to remove less than US$500,000 (NT$15,000).”

The Financial Regulatory Commission in Taipei confirmed that malware was used to breach the bank’s SWIFT system, but no other comments were made.

The Far Eastern International Bank reported suspicious transactions to the United States, Cambodia and Sri Lanka. Most of the stolen money was recovered, said Taiwanese police.

Through the planted malware, hackers conducted virtual transactions to move funds totaling nearly US$60 million from Far Eastern Bank customers’ accounts to some foreign destinations such as Sri Lanka, Cambodia and the United States,” the bank said.

Sri Lanka’s opposition warns against proposed airport deal with India

October 9th, 2017

livemint.com

Sri Lanka’s opposition alliance spoke out against the proposed lease of an airport to an Indian firm, warning the government not to allow the country become a ‘pawn’ in international power politics.

Colombo: Sri Lanka’s opposition alliance, led by former president Mahinda Rajapaksa’s son, on Monday opposed the proposed lease of an airport to an Indian company, warning the government not to allow the country become a pawn” in international power politics.

An Indian company had made a bid to develop the Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport (MRIA), which was built by the Rajapaksa government under massive borrowings from China. MRIA, built at a cost of $209 million, has been dubbed the world’s emptiest international airport due to the fewest number of flights operating from it. The proposed leasing comes in the wake of a similar deal to hand over an adjoining sea port at Hambantota to a Chinese company for 99 years.

We tell the government not to allow Sri Lanka become a pawn in international power politics,” Namal Rajapaksa said, addressing Parliament on a zero-hour motion by the Joint Opposition (JO) to oppose selling of state assets. The deal to run the Mattala airport as a joint venture with India is yet to be finalized. Namal said while the government had opted for an Indian firm on the MRIA, the Hambantota sea port—within close proximity to MRIA—had been given to China.

Dullas Alahapperuma, the JO leader who moved the resolution, said that the government decision on the MRIA would lead to serious national security and defence implications. Alahapperuma claimed that Indian company GMR is to be handed over the MRIA for $205 million on a 99 year lease. We demand that government stop this deal,” Alahapperuma said.

Namal was also quizzed by police on Monday to answer questions related to Friday’s anti-government demonstration at Hambantota. Some 28 JO supporters were arrested for defying a court order which prevented demonstrations in the area. Rajapaksa charged that police had been visiting homes in the area in the night to target protestors.

The police had fired tear gas and water cannons at demonstrators who tried to enter the Indian consulate at Hambantota last week to protest the proposed deal with India. The JO said they stand opposed to the present government’s programme of selling state assets.

Sri Lanka nabs suspects in bank hacking attack

October 9th, 2017

Courtesy Taipei Times

The Criminal Investigation Bureau (CIB) yesterday said that two Sri Lankan citizens accused of helping hackers steal about US$60 million from Far Eastern International Bank (遠東商銀) have been arrested in the South Asian country.

The Financial Supervisory Commission said that while most of the stolen funds were recovered, about US$500,000 remains unaccounted for.

CIB section chief Chiu Shao-chou (邱紹洲) said one suspect was captured by Sri Lankan police when he tried to withdraw about US$26,000 after the money was wired to his account from Taiwan on Friday.

Sri Lankan police have found some other people, but whether they are involved would need to be investigated, Chiu said.

Sri Lankan media cited international wire reports as saying that one suspect is an executive of a Sri Lankan state-owned enterprise and has a bank account in the name of J.C. Nammuni.

There was no information as of press time last night about the identity of the second suspect who was arrested.

Far Eastern International Bank (遠東商銀) on Friday said it reported to the commission and the CIB that it had discovered its computer system had been infected with malware, which affected some of its PCs and servers, as well as the Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication’s (SWIFT) network.

SWIFT provides safe and secure financial transactions for members of the organization via a standardized proprietary communication platform that can facilitate the transmission of information about transactions.

According to Far Eastern Bank, the malware allowed the hackers to wire about US$60 million from the accounts of the bank’s clients to foreign destinations.

The CIB plans to send a team, including Far Eastern Bank information technology staff, to Sri Lanka to help with the investigation and provide assistance to local police.

The bureau said it needs time to prepare for the delegation, as Taiwan does not have diplomatic relations with Sri Lanka and no Taiwanese representatives are stationed there.

After the bureau received the report from Far Eastern Bank, it identified some servers in the US and the Netherlands that were used by the hackers to wire funds from the bank to overseas, Chiu said.

The bureau has provided information about the case to police in the US and Europe after asking for their assistance, he said.

It is the first case of a Taiwanese bank experiencing such a serious hacking incident, he said.

Banking Bureau Deputy Director Sherri Chuang (莊琇媛) said Far Eastern Bank has recovered US$57 million that had been wired to Cambodia, US$1 million that was sent to the US and US$1.6 million sent to Sri Lanka.

Kabir, Malik should be brought before PCoI: CHR

October 9th, 2017

Ajith Siriwardana Courtesy The Daily Mirror

Centre for Human Rights and Research (CHR) Executive Director Keerthi Tennakoon said yesterday State Enterprises Development Minister Kabir Hashim and Minister of Development Strategies and International Trade Malik Samarawickrama, who was said to have participated in the first discussion with regard to the issuance of Central Bank Bonds in 2015, should be summoned before the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (PCoI).

He told a news conference that there was an attempt to suppress the investigation of bond scam by passing the buck to Ravi Karunanayake, who was Finance Minister for the name sake, while Minister Kabir Hashim was the Subject Minister of State Banks and Central Bank was under Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.

He said it was revealed by Committee on Public Enterprises (COPE), audit reports and in the PCoI that the bond scam had begun from a meeting attended by Minister Hashim and Mr. Samarawickrama, who did not have any portfolio at that time but they had not been summoned before the commission so far.

He said the PCoI should give them an opportunity to reveal what they know about the bond issuance.

They may not have involved in the scam but they are the best witnesses to reveal the truth,” he said.

Mr. Tennakoon said the commission was appointed to identify the people who were involved in the bond scam not to identify those who purchased houses or initiate business from Arjun Aloysius’ money.

He said those who were behind the bond scam should not be allowed to get away by hiding behind Ravi Karunanayake.()

Govt PARTIES split over Foreign Policy

October 9th, 2017

By Shaahidah Riza and Methmalie Dissanayake Courtesy  Ceylon Today

The two main constituents of the United National Front for Good Governance (UNFGG), the United National Party (UNP) and Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), seem to be at loggerheads over the country’s foreign policy decision making.

Commenting on the government’s decision to impose sanctions on the Democratic People’s Republic of North Korea (DPRK) State Minister of Highways and SLFP stalwart Dilan Perera maintained that he doesn’t see any difference between some of the actions of the USA and that of North Korea.

“As you know North Korea has been one country that has been violating some of these conventions and is also a menace to world peace. By saying that, I am not saying that the US is not a menace as well. In my book I don’t see any difference between some of the actions of the USA and that of North Korea.,” he said.

Perera said that Israel is another country that had violated UN conventions and added that Sri Lanka has to always realize that Israel is not second to North Korea in violating some of the agreements.

“Even in the so called consensual government, the SLFP has always been saying that the former UNP Foreign Minister should be very careful when he takes sides with regard to issues dealing with Israel. The SLFP has been very clear that when it comes to UN resolutions and conventions violated by Israel its position is that Israel is not second to North Korea,” he said.

Meanwhile, commenting on the issue, State Minister for Finance Eran Wickramaratne said that Sri Lanka will defend its territorial integrity and markets. In response to Ceylon Today’s query with regard to the incumbent government’s rise to power was based on implementing a non-aligned foreign policy, Wickramaratne said,…”Our policy is a very pro-Sri Lanka policy where we will defend the territorial integrity of our country. Also we will defend our markets, as the living standards of the Sri Lanka people depend on our market. That distinguishes our foreign policy from the foreign policy of the earlier regime. The earlier regime put our markets at risk. We actually lost some of our markets.”

When asked whether the economic sanction had nothing to do with North Korea’s nuclear programme, he responded that Sri Lanka is a signatory to various international conventions. He went on to note that the Government wants to be sure that they are in compliance with our international obligations.

When asked whether Sri Lanka would continue its trade and diplomatic ties with Israel despite its controversial nuclear programme, Wickramaratne responded, “There are many countries in the world that have nuclear capability over a long period of time, if that was done in a peaceful manner, then nuclear power is used for that.

Obviously if nuclear power is being used to threaten other countries then it is natural. We are small country; we will work through the United Nations in opposing such aspects.”

Speaking to Ceylon Today, Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) MP, Bimal Rathnayake said that as a country which faced so many troubles due to the agendas of imperialists, Sri Lanka should have stayed neutral in the North Korea – USA dispute.

“North Korea, unlike USA has not attacked any country in the world and it has not connections with international terrorist organizations.

Also North Korean authorities have never interfered in internal affairs of other countries. But they did not act according to the wishes of the USA. This is why the USA wants to suppress North Korea by imposing economic sanctions,” Rathnayake said.

Meanwhile, Joint Opposition (JO) Leader Dinesh Gunawardena stressed that since taking the office, this Government has followed a pro-American principle.

He said, “As a country Sri Lanka should encourage those parties to come to an effective solution so the peace of the world will be protected. That is what we did in the past. The Government should keep it in its mind before make such haste decisions.”

Sri Lanka: Facts and Fiction

October 9th, 2017

By Shivanthi Ranasinghe Courtesy Ceylon Today

Vithya Sivaloganathan’s murder trial exposes the real national issue in Sri Lanka and the surrounding paradox between fact and fiction. The attempt was to pin the crime on the Sri Lankan Army and Navy, but it failed. The real culprits were the criminal elements living within Jaffna society. The involvement of the State Minister Vijayakala Maheswaran in attempting to release the mastermind is clear evidence of corruption at the highest levels of power. The motive behind this grisly murder was to pander to the perverted and sadistic fantasies of the European pornographic market.

The thorough and proper investigations and the fair trial by the Sinhala CID officers and the Tamil Judges show that the Sri Lankan society lives as one nation. For 30 years, we had a terrorist issue in this country. Initially, we contended not with one, but numerous terrorist groups. In our minds, we have only the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam because about 20 years ago the LTTE cannibalized the other terrorist organizations and swelled like an anaconda.

These organizations were financed, armed and trained by the Indian Government from the ’70s onwards. They literally exported a domestic issue to Sri Lanka. The Indian Central Government needed a strategy to garner the support of South India, who was agitating for their own independence. By showing the northern peninsula and the eastern coast of the neighbouring island, Sri Lanka, as the Tamil Homeland and pledging support to win it for Tamils, the Indian Central Government cleverly solved their dilemma – or thought they did, until it boomeranged and killed their former Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi.

Sri Lanka’s Northern peninsula is well recognized for its people’s intellectual capacity. During the colonial era, the missionary schools were largely established in this region. Though these schools taught a language and customs and practices totally alien to the Hindu society, Tamil parents sent their children to these schools for education. Some even changed their religion to accommodate the new order. As a result, the civil administration and English speaking society was largely comprised of Tamils from the North. As Shenali Waduge highlights “Sri Lanka: by 1956, 30 per cent Ceylon Administrative Service, 50 per cent clerical service, 60 per cent engineers and doctors, 40 per cent Armed force were held by ONLY Tamils who were less than 10 per cent of the population.”

The Northern Tamils are also known as a hard-working community. Living in a rather inhospitable environment, as especially farmers, requires grit and those in the North shows no lack of it.

Less acknowledged is the sub-criminal society that fell between the cracks of this intellectual and farming communities. Largely downtrodden as the low castes, they were engaged in underworld activities as smuggling contraband between the northern tip of Sri Lanka and the southern tip of India. At the beginning, it was mostly harmless items such as saris that fetched a good price for the merchant community. Then, since the mid ’50s, this contraband extended to other items such as small arms and rifles.

The market for it was the then northern Tamil politician. In the post-colonial era, other communities were also joining the ranks of civil society. This change, which Tamil politicians saw as a dilution of their own position in society, became a chip on their shoulder.

It was this nexus, between the angry Tamil politician and the low caste smuggler that the Indian Government exploited in the ’70s. The Tamil politician and the Indian Government encouraged this sub-criminal community into the marauding murderers they eventually became, destroying at least two Tamil generations in the process by their own hands.

Ceasefire Agreement

In time to come, these criminal elements marketed as freedom fighters (and now as political prisoners) became pivotal in the geopolitical strategies of the West. The Norwegians involvement in the early 2000s, for instance, is a well-known interference. They came in the guise of engineering peace and pushed through the infamous Cease Fire Agreement in 2002 (CFA 2002). It was severely inimical to Sri Lanka’s national security and strengthened terrorism in Sri Lanka, instead of curtailing it.

The CFA allowed the LTTE, among other things, to create a network of sleeper cells in Colombo itself. That fear alone, that the LTTE now had the means to activate any terror within the commercial capital of Sri Lanka, was paralyzing, investors and tourists, as well as ordinary routines in day-to-day lives deterred, severely impacting our economy.

Our security advisors were never consulted on the CFA, and nor was it taken to debate in Parliament. The then Prime Minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe (now incumbent), signed it without the knowledge of even his own party. This CFA placed Sri Lanka at great disadvantage against an illegal, non-State actor, proscribed by all civilized nations that many speculate that Wickremesinghe himself may have not even read it. The secrecy and Wickremesinghe’s apparent ignorance of the CFA contents indicates that Norwegians as its engineers understood very well the implications of it. The LTTE on the other hand would have never placed their signature blindly. They would have bickered and bargained and milked it to the maximum, as was their practice when they were at the negotiating table. Thus, we were at a severe disadvantage of having been bound to an agreement that we were ignorant of, let alone understood.

Yet, the Norwegians pushed it and the West-led international community and their allies like Japan supported it. They all profess that their interest is to engineer peace and bring reconciliation between two warring ethnic

communities. They ignore the basic fact that the two ethnic communities that they insist are warring among themselves are actually living as one society and do not even see themselves as apart. Soon after the 18-year old Vithya’s grisly murder in the North, 4-year-old Seya Sadewmi was murdered in the South. The outpouring grief and anger to one was no different to the other. Sri Lanka as a whole was aghast and angered by these two grisly murders. As proven by Vithya’s case, justice was not brought by one community, but both Sinhalese and Tamils.

In fact, as reported by this newspaper on 1 October, during the war Vithya was living in Colombo. Her family returned to Punguduthivu only after the war concluded and Vithya joined them two years later. If the war was between the Sinhalese and the Tamils, as interested parties insist, then it is illogical for Vithya and her family, who are Tamils, to be in Sinhala concentrated areas during the height of tensions and return to an area dominated almost to exclusivity with Tamils afterwards.

If facts were allowed to speak, then the case would be: During the 30 years of war against terrorism, all civilians in the North and East were the worst affected. The Tamils living there were subjugated and terrorized by a section of their own community. This terror and dehumanizing was politicized and justified by their own representatives for their political survival.

It was the very same element, that sympathized and legitimized the LTTE and even today espouses separatism, which tried to pervert justice to Vithya. Vijayakala Maheswaran as the State Minister for Child Affairs and as a mother of two daughters and a son was caught on video releasing the mastermind of this heinous crime. At the time, he was tied to a tree. She claimed it was to prevent the angry mob from lynching him. This does not explain why he was then not handed over to the proper authorities and why he had to be arrested in Colombo.

This case did not start with Vithya and to every indication will not end with her.

Our terrorist issue could have got sorted at least by 1987 had India not intervened. The LTTE not only survived for another 22 years to kill and terrorize, we ended with the 13th Amendment to the Constitution. That was the Indian solution for us. It did not bring relief to us, but clearly demarcated the lines the country could be broken into at a future date.

Over the course of these 30 years, numerous countries in various labels got involved. The Sri Lanka Donor Group Co-Chairs consisting of the European Union, Norway, Japan and the US was one such group. Though they were so interested in architecting various peace-building solutions, they were not as keen in helping build us our economy. In contrast, China who never took an interest in our internal matters played a pivotal role in rebuilding our economy.

In 2009, we finally concluded the war. Instead of celebrating and letting peace settle in, these very same peace-bearers turned our war victory into a war crime. While Prabakaran still reigns as “supremo”, Mahinda Rajapaksa who ended the terror era is vilified as a scoundrel. Former U.S. State Secretary John Kerry is on record for taking credit for installing the incumbent Government.

Global competitiveness

In 2015, Sri Lanka was in the 68th position in the World Economic Forum Global Competitiveness Index. In 2016, we fell to the 71st and in 2017 to the 85th places. In September 2017, the inflation was at 7.1 per cent amidst increasing food prices, but the IMF is happy with the Government’s reform performances.

A country in debt is a country crumbling under siege. If we fail to arrest the situation, then we will have to surrender our resources and be under the dominance of our debtors.

This is our actual national question and not some ethnic issue purported by interested parties.

We may have gained our Independence in 1948, but we had never been free from the neo-colonial agendas. If India and our neighbouring East Asian countries could rise above it and be a force to reckon, then so can we – but first we must understand the national issue we are actually confronted with, instead of grappling on some fictitious problem.

Bond Commission investigates EPF, ETF dealings (English)

October 9th, 2017

Ada Derana

Taiwan to send team to Sri Lanka for probe into bank hacking

October 9th, 2017

Courtesy Adaderana

Taiwan’s Criminal Investigation Bureau (CIB) said Monday that it was preparing to send investigators to Sri Lanka to seek further details on the reported arrest there of two suspects accused of helping hackers stealing millions of US dollars from a Taiwanese bank.

However, due to the fact that Taiwan has no diplomatic ties with Sri Lanka or any government representatives stationed there, the CIB told CNA, it would take some time to get everything in order for the investigators to go there.

According to local and regional news reports, Far Eastern International Bank was hacked by means of a computer virus and some US$60 million was wired to the accounts of the suspects at a Sri Lanka bank in the capital Colombo.

Two suspects were arrested last week in Sri Lanka when they tried to withdraw the money, and police there were look for a third person, according to the news reports.

We are looking at some US$1.3 million that had come into three accounts in Sri Lanka,” an unnamed Sri Lankan official involved with the investigation was quoted as saying in an AFP report. We have taken two people into custody, and we are looking for one more person.”

On Saturday, Far Eastern Bank said it had recovered most of the stolen money and that its losses would amount to no more than US$500,000.

The bank said it noticed some irregularities in its computerized transaction system on Tuesday and then discovered that some of its computers and servers had been infected with malware.

The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication’s (SWIFT) network was also compromised, which allowed the hackers to wire money to international destinations such as Sri Lanka, Cambodia and the United States, Far Eastern Bank said.

The bank said that on Thursday it reported the matter to Taiwan’s Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC) and the CIB, which in turn informed the International Criminal Police Organization and asked for assistance.

The FSC said that it was an isolated case in Taiwan and advised that Far Eastern Bank, not its customers, should absorb the losses, the bank said.

Over the weekend, after Premier Lai Ching-te was informed about the case, he asked the relevant agencies to review Taiwan’s information security and to close any loopholes, according to Cabinet spokesman Hsu Kuo-yung.

Source: CNA

-Agencies

Litro Gas Chairman arrested over Taiwan money transfer scandal

October 9th, 2017

The CID arrested the Chairman of Litro Gas N.M.S Moonesinghe in connection with the transfer of 1.1 million USD from the far Eastern Bank of Taiwan to a Sri Lankan bank account.

Taiwan law enforcement authorities launched an investigation into the incident after the Far Eastern Bank was hacked by means of a computer virus where over US$ 60 million was siphoned to an account in Sri Lanka.

Two suspects were arrested last week in Sri Lanka when they tried to withdraw the money, and police there were look for a third person, according to the news reports.

We are looking at some US$1.3 million that had come into three accounts in Sri Lanka,” an unnamed Sri Lankan official involved with the investigation was quoted as saying in an AFP report. We have taken two people into custody, and we are looking for one more person.”

On Saturday, Far Eastern Bank said it had recovered most of the stolen money and that its losses would amount to no more than US$500,000.

The bank said it noticed some irregularities in its computerized transaction system on Tuesday and then discovered that some of its computers and servers had been infected with malware.

The Society for Worldwide Interbank Financial Telecommunication’s (SWIFT) network was also compromised, which allowed the hackers to wire money to international destinations such as Sri Lanka, Cambodia and the United States, Far Eastern Bank said.

The bank said that on Thursday it reported the matter to Taiwan’s Financial Supervisory Commission (FSC) and the CIB, which in turn informed the International Criminal Police Organization and asked for assistance.

The FSC said that it was an isolated case in Taiwan and advised that Far Eastern Bank, not its customers, should absorb the losses, the bank said.

Over the weekend, after Premier Lai Ching-te was informed about the case, he asked the relevant agencies to review Taiwan’s information security and to close any loopholes, according to Cabinet spokesman Hsu Kuo-yung.

YAHAPALANA ELECTIONS AND ‘REGIME CHANGE’ Part 5

October 8th, 2017

KAMALIKA PIERIS

President Maithripala Sirisena   is firmly ensconced in his seat as President. It is will not be easy to tip him out, whatever his opponents think. But the media is not always admiring towards President Sirisena. Colombo Telegraph   under the headline Entire Sirisena Family At The UN”   said, Colombo Telegraph reliably learns that President Maithripala Sirisena, who is currently in New York for the 72nd Regular Session of the UN General Assembly has been accompanied by his wife Jayanthi, son Daham and daughters Chathurika and Dharani . Two years ago Daham Sirisena was spotted attending the UNGA sessions and seated with the Sri Lanka delegation, raising eyebrows and causing much embarrassment to the President”.

Sunday Times, 24.9.17 pointed out that Sri Lanka is usually given the opportunity of making its speech on the opening day, but that that the Hall usually empties after the main speech. Sunday Times showed a photograph of the Hall, with most seats empty, and said Pictured here is President Maithripala Sirisena addressing UNGA this week. He spoke in Sinhala.

President Sirisena recently had a book written about him. The writer was his daughter. Ryp van Winkle commented.  My dear Chathurika, I thought of writing to you when I heard that you had written a book about your father. Already, some people doubt whether you really wrote that book because you were not known for your literary talents until now.” Ryp van Winkle continued, In the book, you paint a picture of your father as a very principled man. If so, can you ask Janaadhipathi thaaththa why he allowed corrupt people who lost at the election to sneak back in to Parliament through the National List and made some of them ministers?

Ryp van Winkle had a few more questions. Can you also ask Janaadhipathi thaaththa why he insists on controlling the Blue party when the majority of Blue party MPs don’t want him as their boss and have formed a separate group? Your father promised us an efficient government with a Cabinet of thirty ministers. If so, can you ask Janaadhipathi thaaththa why we now have almost a hundred ministers of one type or another who go about contradicting and attacking each other in public, while no work gets done?

.Also can you ask Janaadhipathi thaaththa why the GMOA is always on strike and all medical schools are at a standstill over a private medical school issue which has not been settled for so long? Your father claimed that Mahinda maama was a dictator and promised to be democratic in everything that he did. If so, can you ask Janaadhipathi thaaththa why local government and provincial council elections have been postponed?

President Maithripala Sirisena is not a ‘hands on’ President and does not even pretend to be so.  Television news on 14.9.17 showed a discussion between the RDA officers, cabinet ministers and President over the tender for the Central expressway. President Sirisena seemed to know nothing about the tender and wanted to know what the media was complaining about. RDA explained that it was over tenders that were made for the third stage of the Central expressway, they were having difficulties with it. President Sirisena seemed to have no idea about how the work was progressing either. He complained that when he went to Kandy recently, he couldn’t see any work being done on the expressway.

The Rajapaksas, on the other hand are, it appears, still in the picture, in the literal sense too. At the reception hosted by the Embassy of China to celebrate the 68th anniversary of the founding of the Republic of China, the chief guest was Minister Rajitha Senaratne. Mahinda Rajapakse was also there and television news showed the warm welcome he received. In the photo spread of the event in Sunday Island 1.10.17 the centre photo was of Mahinda Rajapaksa with the ambassador. There is as second photo of Rajapaksa shaking hands with John Amaratunge   while Sarath Amunugama looks on. This gives the impression to the casual reader that the chief guest was Mahinda Rajapaksa!

Rajapaksa led a delegation on a tour of Japan in June 2017. The delegation was also invited to participate in a function at the Muryoko-in Buddhist Temple in Koya, Wakayama by the Japan-Sri Lanka Buddhist Organization for International Cooperation. The Sri Lankans living in Japan had met Rajapaksa. Sri Lankan businessmen in Japan, including vehicle importers, had complained to Rajapaksa that they were no longer in a position to survive due to disastrous government policies. They are asking us, the Joint Opposition, to take up this issue with the government as other sections of the Opposition have been rendered ineffective through bribes, said Rajapaksa, on his return. They were frustrated with the conduct of Yahapalana government and they are asking for a regime change in Sri Lanka.

Dayan Jayatilleke wants to see Mahinda Rajapaksa as Prime Minister and Gotabhaya as President. Sinharaja Tammita Delgoda says the silent figure in the equation is Gotabhaya Rajapaksa. Gotabhaya’s   Facebook site, titled ‘New Hopes rising’, looks to the future and hints at a new dawn. A powerful political force, in the public mind, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa represents achievement and doing, a man ‘who will do what he says going to do.’ Towards the end of 2014 the Rajapaksas were the past. Now they could be the future, concludes Delgoda.

Cracks are appearing in Yahapalana rule, but they are unlikely to shake Yahapalana or its handlers. ‘SLFP rebels’ took control of SLFP Lawyers Association in the Ratnapura District in March 2017. The Association comprises lawyers representing Ratnapura, Pelmadulla, Balangoda and Embilipitiya courts.

In September 2017, there were two sets of resignations from the SLFP. Three councilors of the Eastern Provincial Council representing Ampara district resigned from SLFP and joined the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna. They appeared on television news and made a brief propaganda speech for Podujana as well. Thirteen UPFA members of the North Central Provincial Council also resigned from the SLFP and joined Podujana.

Chairman of the Colombo Commercial Fertilizer Company, Thusitha Halloluwa tendered his resignation, stating that he can no longer work under Agriculture Minister Duminda Dissanayake, due to political interference. Halloluwa complained that he was ordered to pay a monstrous breakfast bill amounting to Rs. 1.5 million, hosted by an institution coming under the Agriculture Ministry. I rejected the request as it was against the financial regulations to spend public funds in that manner. Public funds must be spent responsibly”. Colombo Commercial Fertilizer Company is under the Ministry of Agriculture.

Colonel  Sunil D. Peiris, Director of Human Resources at SriLankan Airlines,  and member of  its  Board of Directors, resigned from his position in July 2017, after a recent meeting summoned by President Maithripala Sirisena,  regarding the order for A350s placed by the former regime. The airline’s directors faced a barrage of accusations from ministers, mainly Dr. Rajitha Senaratne and General Sarath Fonseka, who incidentally was a relatively junior officer in the army during the tenure of Col. Peiris who headed the first Commando Regiment.

We went to the meeting armed with facts. But before any member of the Board could explain matters, we faced a tirade of accusations from Ministers Senaratne and Fonseka, with the former accusing us of many things. Many of the accusations I must assert were diabolical lies, dished out by some ministers. We were humiliated.  None of the directors including Chairman Ajith Dias were given an opportunity to explain their position. It was a one-sided meeting, he said.

People are waiting for a change. The Joint Opposition has been able to mobilize the masses without any political party at all. What counts now are not labels or name boards but masses of people, observed Chandraprema.

In  September 2017,the opposition  started a new organization  called ‘Eliya’. Its leader is Gotabhaya Rajapaksa.   ‘Eliya’ is a mass organization unlike Viyath Maga which is restricted  to professionals . ‘Eliya” was ceremonially launched at the Golden Rose hall in Boralesgamuwa. The large hall at the Golden Rose which is bigger than the main ballrooms of most top end city hotels was packed by 5.00 pm with standing room only before the event began. The turnout was all the more surprising because this event was held on a working day and 5.00 pm was the peak of the evening rush hour.

‘Eliya’ launch was in the form of a seminar on the proposed new constitution. The panel of speakers included Gotabhaya Rajapaksa who introduced the new organization to the audience. Ven. Prof. Medagoda Abhayatissa , Dr Dayan Jayatilleke, Rear Admiral Sarath Weerasekera, Dr Seetha Arambepola, Rev. Fr. Wimal Tirimanne, Tamara Kunanayagam, Lawyer Rushdi Habib and Maj. Gen. Kamal Gunaratne were among the speakers at this event. Photos showed a large gathering of bhikkus.

The respected Catholic priest, Rev. Fr. Tirimanne spoke at length. It was clear that the majority of the votes received by President Maithripala Sirisena were from the minority communities in the North and East and elsewhere, Rev Tirimanne said. Incumbent Prime Minister, D.M.Jayaratne,  had a clear cut majority in parliament, but  Ranil Wickremesinghe was appointed Prime Minister though he only  represented 46 MPs in  a Parliament of 225. Such a thing has not been heard of anywhere in the world. Furthermore, defeated candidates were brought into parliament through the back door.

Rev. Fr. Tirimanne also observed that local government and Provincial Council elections are being indefinitely postponed with flimsy, ridiculous excuses and the President repeatedly says that this government will continue till 2020 no matter what – implying thus that they would remain in power whether they have a majority in parliament or not .These are the people who are going to draft a new constitution for Sri Lanka, he observed.

Rev. Fr. Tirimanne also stated that there were issues about the legitimacy of the mandate for a new constitution and the credibility of the agents who want to draft a new constitution for this country. He pointed out that in 1972 and 1978, the constitution was changed by governments that had a huge mandate but that in contrast, the present government had been elected with a slim majority and in his opinion this did not constitute a mandate to carry out such drastic change in our country.

Yahapalana has not held   elections for Local Government and Provincial Council elections since it came to power in 2015 nearly three years ago. The elected institutions of government are going into abeyance stage by stage from the bottom up, observed critics. Today not a single local government institution is functioning countrywide. This is no accident. Yahapalana wishes to see the local government bodies  become inactive. Also, when Provincial Councils are dissolved, provincial politicians become nobodies overnight,  leaving only an elected Parliament under the control of Yahapalana .

The local government institutions were dissolved in two stages. The Pradeshiya sabhas went first, Municipal Councils followed some months later. he period of office of all these bodies   expired by the end of 2016.  335 local government bodies, consisting of 22 municipal councils, 41 UCs, and 271 Pradeshiya sabhas, are now without public representatives for two years. They are under a Special Commissioner.

Commissioners are now running the country’s Municipal Councils, Urban Councils and Pradeshiya Sabhas, said critics. Bodies that should be run by persons elected by the people’s vote are now run by officials and political nominees. Yahapalana keeps postponing local government elections. Before they can be held,  the Municipal Councils ( Amendment) Bill, Urban councils (Amendment) Bill  and the Pradeshiya sabha (Amendment) Bill will  have be passed in Parliament.

Then it was the turn of the Provincial Councils They also will be dissolved one by one, predicted critics and come under Governors’ rule.  Sabaragamuwa, North Central and Eastern Provincial Councils ended their terms in September 2017. Having postponed the local government elections for more than two years. Yahapalana  is now exploring ways and means of postponing Sabaragamuwa, Eastern and North Central Provincial Councils polls, observed critics in August 2017.  In the process, they are doing things that nobody has ever done before, said Chandraprema.

Here is what Yahapalana  did. Yahapalana resurrected the Provincial Council Elections (Amendment) Bill  which had been presented in Parliament months earlier. This was a Bill to make certain minor technical corrections to the local government elections law.  The government took this bill up for debate in Parliament in August, 2017 and at the committee discussion stage introduced over 50 new amendments  which completely changed the objectives of the Bill and also the  mode of elections   instead of introducing a new electoral system in place of the proportional representation system, these amendments re-introduced the proportional representation system through the back door without any public discussion at all.

The original gazette ran to 15 pages and the amendments ran to another 15 pages. The two main sections in the brief one page Bill were deleted, and replaced with 22 new sections in a now 21-page Act. These sections had no relation whatsoever to  the original Bill. All the Schedules to the principal enactment were repealed. There was a new  section to establish a Delimitation Committee.  The percentage of female candidates contesting a Provincial Council  poll was altered from 30% to 50%. The Bill presented for a Third reading was a completely new Bill which had no relation whatsoever to the original Bill that had been published in the Gazette and placed on the Order Paper.

Joint Opposition complained that the amendments had been given to the Joint Opposition only on the morning of the debate   and they had  no time to study the amendments. Dinesh Gunawardena observed that the contents of the Bill did not relate to the title. ‘These were entirely new laws. The Government should have first gazetted such new laws giving the public an opportunity to study the provisions and challenge it, if necessary, before the Supreme Court’. Further, the English version differed from the Sinhala text.

Speaker  Karu Jayasuriya came in for criticism over his handling of this matter. Dinesh Gunawardena said that Speaker Jayasuriya had allowed his party to operate with impunity at the expense of parliamentary traditions and Standing Orders,  The Speaker had paved the way for the UNP, a section of the SLFP (those loyal to President Sirisena), TNA and JVP to bring in the controversial amendments to the Provincial Council Elections (Amendment) Act at the eleventh hour.

Further that he had displayed his partiality towards the UNP led project by giving two hours and forty minutes for the government to secure the required two-thirds majority.. Gunawardena argued that Speaker Karu Jayasuriya should not have allowed this Bill to become law.  Jayasuriya was clearly supportive of the Yahapalana regime change. He was associated with the earlier attempted regime change of the 2010 too.

The government has now hit on   a device that can prevent proper discussion and even judicial review of a Bill, by withholding the most important parts from the original Bill, keeping it back till the committee stage in parliament, commented Chandraprema .Yahapalana has now taught Sri Lanka how to gazette one Bill and pass a completely different one, by introducing new amendments at the Committee stage in Parliament.

This action by Yahapalana has created a furore. Many organizations have protested over the issue. Can a  government gazette a Bill and then proceed to introduce several amendments at the committee stage which, in effect, constitutes a completely different Bill, and thereby deny the citizen the opportunity to invoke the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court in respect of that substantially new Bill, asked critics.

Joint Opposition was consulting its lawyers prior to going before Supreme Court. MP Udaya Gammanpila has asked for a directive from Supreme Court to the National Elections Commission ordering them to hold the three Provincial Council elections. In an unprecedented move, one time Chief Justice Sarath Nanda Silva filed a fundamental rights petition in the Supreme Court challenging the Bill. Attorney at law Aruna Laksiri Unawatuna filed an application for interventions,      requesting court to dismiss the application by Sarath Silva, saying that an Act of Parliament could not be challenged in a court of law. TNA parliamentarian M Sumanthiran and lawyer Rajika Kodituwakku also filed similar petitions.

The Bar Association of Sri Lanka (BASL) said that there was a clear set of procedures to be followed when Bills were passed. The Yahapalana government had had adopted methods in contravention of the due process. This would have an adverse impact on the rule of law as well.  President, BASL said his Association intended to discuss the issue with President and Prime Minister and hoped to provide legal advice on the matter.

The People’s Action for Free and Fair Elections (PAFFREL) have complained to the Supreme Court that the Twentieth Amendment to the Constitution,  violates people’s sovereignty and franchise and it needs to be passed with a two-thirds majority in Parliament and approved by people at a referendum. The proposed amendment also seeks to enable Parliament to postpone Provincial Council elections until October 18, 2019 and exercise powers of the dissolved councils until such time. This is in violation of Article 75 of the Constitution.

The government has been saying that they will be holding the postponed Local Government  elections in January 2018 and the postponed PC elections in March 2018.  But one can  be sure that they will not hold any elections between now and the next Presidential or parliamentary election, said Chandraprema.    There are enough complications in the amendments to the LG elections law and the  recent PC elections law to ensure that no elections are held in  the foreseeable future.  The new Act includes a Delimitation Committee, to carve out electorates within a province. Like in the case of the demarcation of boundaries for local bodies, this can  go  on forever.

Judging by the lengths Yahapalana want to in Parliament to avoid holding elections to three Provincial Council, one can be certain that despite anything this government may say,  they  will not under any circumstances hold the local government elections, which have to be held countrywide, declared Chandraprema.   Such elections would show the loss of the government’s legitimacy countrywide instead of in just two or three provinces.  They  do not want to face the Provincial Council  polls  either as they fear they will lose those as well.  So we are now faced with a situation where no elections will be held in the foreseeable future.

The government is scared of facing an election  knowing that it will end in ‘certain defeat’ for Yahapalana . We have seen angry demonstrators say on camera in television news,  Wait until the next election comes.”An election defeat would have had fatal consequences on  Yahapalana’s  already tenuous hold on power.  Yahapalana thinks that by somehow dodging elections in this manner  it will be able to  hang on at least until the term they were elected for runs out. This is a government that is engaged in a headlong quest for political survival.

Chandraprema observed that when  the recent elections to Cooperative Societies were held  the government lost by huge margins. Given the fact that the Cooperative Societies have something like eight million members, the message that the government got was that they were looking at a resounding defeat at the next election.

The Joint Opposition group won elections in three divisional areas , Amatiyagoda, Warayara and Welkiniyaya of the Godakawela Cooperative Society in the Ratnapura District in August 2017, UNP did not get a single seat.  UNP members assaulted officials and Opposition members to disrupt elections in 20 other areas  they did so in the presence of the police. The UNP-led disruption started at the Ambawila divisional area election held at the Ambawila Rajamaha Viharaya. Chief Incumbent of the temple Ven. Hatnagala Dhammarathana Thera asked cooperative officials not to hold the election to prevent further violence. Similar incidents were reported from several other areas. It was reported that  there had been a heavy presence of outsiders at the polling centre in Pallebedda. Accordingly, Provincial Cooperative Commissioner decided to postpone the polls in the other 20 divisional areas until further notice.

Yahapalana celebrated the 70th anniversary of parliamentary democracy in Sri Lanka in October 2017. There was very poor attendance at the special sitting. MPs of both sides, including front row members were missing. At least 70 MPs did not attend.

MPs who attended used the opportunity to hit  Yahapalana . JVPs Anura Kumara Dissanayake said that democracy was strangled in Parliament. . Parliamentary democracy was at very low ebb,  said Aluthgamage , “The Joint Opposition  has no opportunity to speak in Parliament . The rest of the  Opposition is silent on all issues the country is facing right now.”They only took up issues which affected the people of the North.

Yahapalana  started by enjoying the support of the Maha Sangha, notably the support of Maduluwawe Sobitha. A  second group led by Ven.Murutthuwe Ananda   were with the Opposition.  A third group Bodu Bala Sena and Ravana Balaya were manipulated to ensure political victory   and also bring Buddhism and the Maha Sangha into disrepute.

Bodu Bala Sena and Ravana Balaya  are still at it, speaking aggressively, in a manner which is not in keeping with the dignity of the sangha and  threatening actions which also are not  suitable. Ittakande Saddhatissa  representing Ravana Balaya said on television news  on 31.7.2017.  That  there are MPs in the government who accepted money from Arjun Aloysius. There is evidence  to prove this. ‘Janadipathi ovunge amaethi pattama no galavanava nam  minisuth ekka ekathuvela maha paredi eka karanna api sudanam.’

But never before has any  government  angered the  Maha Sangha. The Maha Sangha are now angry with Yahapalana   and are very vocal about it, too.  A group of bhikkus  called a media conference,  and this was  shown on television news on 14.9.17. At this conference,  Ven.Murutthuwe Ananda  of the Mawbima Surakeema Jathika Balaveaya protested strongly about the insulting attitude of Yahapalana to the sangha. Never before has there been a government that has insulted the sangha like Yahapalana does, he said. Ven. Gonbaddala Samitha of Pavidi Handa   protested that the sangha has been referred to as ‘thamusey’. The public should avoid using offensive terms for sangha. Ven. Omare Kassapa  said that the president  should tell these people to shut up and not insult the sangha.

The speakers also included Ven. Iththakande Sadhatissa of Ravana Balaya, Ven. Kamburugamage Vajira, Ven Walgama Chandraratana of Sri Lanka Maha Sangha Sabhawa and Ven. Kakunawimala Vanarathana of Vidylankara Pirivena, Pannipiya. The bhikkus specifically named Sarath Fonseka, Rajitha Senaratne and Ranjan Ramanayake as those who had  insulted the sangha. There was reference to the sil redi issue as well. Yahapalana retaliated with their own madhya hamuwa where they said that the bhikkus were getting unnecessarily worked up. However, the SLFP spokesman said that MPs should keep their mouths shut about the sangha.

Anti-Yahapalana bhikkus are now appearing on   lecture platforms and on televised media conferences.   Chairman of the Trincomalee Sashanarakshaka Bala Manadala, Ven Nugegoda Chandrajothi  said the government should implement projects to develop the country but that should not be done by selling the national assets to the foreigners,

The sangha are also  turning militant. Regional Development Minister Field Marshal Sarath Fonseka had said that Ven. Elle Gunawansa  ,Chief incumbent of Dharmayathanaya, Colombo was a mad man in robes. Elle Gunawansa said that this remark had compelled him to decide to join the camp of patriotic forces and get on the political stage for the sake of the country.

The Maha sangha are also now getting very worried about the political  direction taken by  Yahapalana . A group of Buddhist monks, together with a large number of laypersons, performed an adistana pooja in front of Sri Dalada Maligawa in December 2016, pledging to oppose the proposed Constitution which, they said, according to their information, would include provisions inimical to the country’s interests.

This group said they would urge parliamentarians not to back the new constitution. They said the government had to desist from facilitating a federal setup through the proposed Constitution and depriving Buddhism of the foremost place given in the existing Constitution. The monks said Provincial Councils must not be given land and police powers.

Prior to the adistana pooja the Bhikkus led by most Venerable Medagoda Abhayatissa Nayaka Thera of Pepiliyane Sunethradevi Pirivena called on the Most Venerable Dimbulkumbure Sri Wimaladhamma Anunayake Thera of Malwatte, and requested that the heads of the government be urged to refrain from introducing constitutional provisions detrimental to the country. Several Bhikku organizations had prepared a memorandum demanding that 12 provisions in the existing Constitution be retained in any future constitution. The memorandum had been signed by 104 leading Buddhist monks.

Venerable Bengamuwe Nalaka  said that the Maha Sangha would launch a house-to-house campaign to educate the people on the need to oppose the new constitution. Venerable Nalaka said any decision in Parliament on constitution could not be  taken seriously as  some MPS and ministers  had been rejected by the people at the last general election.  Venerable Ittekande Gnanissara  said that every attempt would be made to defeat the new constitution to be jointly tabled by President Maithripala Sirisena, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremasinghe and TNA R. Leader Sampanthan. The deputation included Venerable Induragane Dhammaratana , Ven. Bellanwila Dhammaratana, Dr. Gunadasa Amarasekara, Sudath Gunasekara, Sarath Weerasekara and  Manohara de Silva.

‘This (13-A) war is not winnable’

October 8th, 2017

C.Wijeyawikrema

Buddhist war – I

This war is not winnable” black-whites’ theory lasted for over 30 years. Supporters of it marched in Colombo streets, with lotus flowers in hand, demoralizing soldiers will. According to Erick Solheim, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa was the only top-level person in the government to say, this war is winnable.” Yes, there was contribution from some Tamils, Muslims and Christians, but It was the poor Sinhala Buddhist village boys and girls who finished the 33-year war, with Gotabhaya at the helm. Credit goes to Mahinda R for appointing him for the mission, who in turn utilized Sarath F for the job. In 2005, MR won with a razor-thin margin because of the Sinhala Buddhist (and poor Catholic) vote, and the oxygen for a mindset to fight to the end was provided by monks and key Sinhala Buddhist leaders. For example, Ven. Elle Gunawansa did everything at the war front except taking a gun to his hands. For soldier in all different forces it was a noble task of saving the motherland. Yet, after the war victory, after enormous sacrifice, unfortunately, mismanagement with a black-white mentality crept in; thus, the end of one war paved the way for a beginning of a new paper and pen war.  Prabakaran was named a Tamil Keppettipola by Wigneswaran who has two Sinhala daughters-in-law and grandchildren. Citing four Tamil history professors, W says that the king Devanampiya Tissa was a Tamil king.

Buddhist war – II

Civil mismanagement of Sri Lanka by black-whites from 1931 or from 1948 commenced again after May 19, 2009, after 3 short years of war management. The gun as a good tool was replaced by pen as a bad tool. When Tamils were calling MR, a Maha Raja, he forgot that the purpose of the use of gun was to rescue the country from mismanagement. His first act after kissing the soil at the airport tarmac should have been to abolish 13-A by a presidential proclamation. The land commission appointed in 1987 by JRJ recommended in 1990 to replace the 9-province artificial division of the island with river basin boundaries. This plus a Jana Sabha system to empower people freeing them from politicians’ grip was the non-black-white, non-Christian path. The new paradigm. Instead, he ate a Ban Ki Moon and Manmohan Singh dead-rope. And, Sri Lanka thus entered the Buddhist war II, this 13-A war is not winnable” war. With UNP deploying hardcore old Marxists to do the dirty federal job, a second Nandikadal looks beyond reach. But this black-whites’ war, must be defeated, this time by a new Buddhist war, reminiscent of the 1873 Great Panadura Vaadaya.

The local govt….

Jana Sabhas or local government units that existed prior to 1978 are re-demarcated with river basin boundaries, will solve the issue of meaningful power devolution issue and will be a window to eradicate ethical and moral decline in the society, if members for them are elected on a non-partisan basis. A detail scheme of how based onpeople empowerment created and allowed to function on a non-partisan basis

Why Buddhists kill?

The phrase, Buddhist war, is used as an explanation to Navaguna Vala” (rosary beads) Buddhists, identified in the song by Nanda Malini.  Christian Tamil Stanley Tambiah invented this theory of Buddhists betraying Buddhism to provide cover to anti-Buddhist activities in Sri Lanka. His supporters such as H. L. Seneviratna and Gananatha Obeysekara propagated this theory in the western world via their books replete with half-truths. The truth that Sinhala Buddhists are not even 0.001 of the 8 billion-world full of Muslim and Christian (and Tamil separatist) threat, got buried under this theory. It is this theory that is playing a major role in attacking and jailing socially active Buddhist monks as criminals. Tambiah knew very well that King Dharmashoka doctrine did not save Buddhism in India, and Buddhism cannot survive in a hostile world by preaching loving kindness to death. Monks behaving stupidly as crook politicians’ cat’s paw must be separated from the Buddha Sasanaya. I challenged Tambiah by email, on the falsity of his theory, but neither he nor H L Seneviratna responded.

New questions-new answers

The two Buddhist wars were a result of asking wrong questions by Buddhist and non-Buddhist black-white politicians. Or they got new answers to the old questions. Instead, we need to ask new questions. Surprisingly, even the dedicated, rapidly growing, Sinhala Buddhist newer and younger leadership is still not asking new questions. Really speaking, they do not even have to ask questions, because they already have two new answers (solutions) before them. (1) In 1990, one answer was given by a land commission appointed by JRJ, a prisoner of Rajiv-Dixit 13-A debacle, to remove the 9-province artificial division by re-demarcating regions based on river basins. (2) Since 1932-48, there was a socio-economic-political-spatial solution applied so successfully by the late Ven. Kalukondayave Pragnasekara Mahanayaka Thero, the crime control and village reconstruction national movement with active participation of Muslims and Tamils. A modern version of this model, the Gami Diriya program was implemented successfully during 2005-10, without political interference. Both programs of 1932 and 2005 were sabotaged by black-white officers and politicians.

The Gami Diriya program was supposed to be introduced to Jaffna area. The dedicated director general left for a UN job to implement a similar idea in another poor country. I met him and witnessed his disgust and anger against corrupt politicians. A divi naguma monster is now sitting on the country. Ammunition to win the 13-A war is there, if the emerging new leadership get rid of black-white residues among them and educate the voter, Sinhala, Tamil, Muslim and Christian. In the past, Sinhala Urumaya lost its mission because of enemies within. These two answers (solutions) must be taken directly to people, piercing the TNA separatist barrier. A Jana Sabha run by ‘lower caste’ Tamil groups is anathema to Sumanthiran, Sampanthan and Wigenswarans. Tamil householders do not ask police or land powers or a merger of N & E. They do not care if Devanampiya Tissa was a Tamil or a Greek.  For the next war, an Election manifesto with these solutions as election pledges must be distributed island-wide. An Action Committee of about 20-30 (shadow cabinet?) covering all key organizations against 13-A, should develop a program of action guided by the Asgiri Karaka Sabhava and other Nikaya Sabhas.  The 2002 Buddhist commission report is also important in this regard.

Local Government Report

In 1999, the report of the commission of inquiry on local government reforms (Abhayawardena Report), recommended going back to the old local government system with ward-based elections, abolishing the pradesheeya sabha thuggery. If this old local government system is rejuvenated with natural boundaries the concept of devolution and empowerment could be implemented through them. It is not the best like a GSN-level Jana Sabha system in identifying more minority-empowering natural units, but still better than a province-based unit which only create a local politician clique, exploiting Tamil ethnic cows. Providing spatial bases for Tamil identity or Tamil aspirations on this scale is the real Buddhist Middle Path because Dayan’s middle path instill fear in the Sinhala mind for known reasons. For example, SJVC then talked about a Tamil homeland. Now in 2017, Wigneswaran talks about Tamils as the original race in the island and Tamil Buddhists reverting to Hinduism after a short break in history. Whether this is truth, myth or delusion, it does not matter. But this kind of mindset does not support the conciliation (unity) by division philosophy of either Dayan’s or Jayampathy’s or the 225-strong joke called the parliament.

Euro-centric Black-whites

Tamilness in Sri Lanka became problematic in Ceylon first in the years, 1918-1923. It began with the Ponnambalam brothers realizing that soon they were going to lose the leadership role in Ceylon with the ever expanding ‘threat’ of more and more voters! After the Olcott phenomenon that began in 1880, and the Buddhist-Islam riot in 1915, Buddhist monks lost their socio-political clout to nobodies who became new somebodies. Therefore, the conflict arising out of Tamilness in Ceylon became a petty, Christian conflict between Sinhala and Tamil black-white elites. The so-called freedom fight was a fight for a foothold on the white ruling ladder for some government jobs. Freedom as removal of white man’s anti-Sinhala Buddhist laws enacted since 1815 was never a concern until the 1956 Buddhist commission Report. It was Hitler who helped to get the freedom by petition.

Buddhist Middle Path of reasonableness had no role in the Sinhala-Tamil black-white conflict in the 1930s or 1940s. One reason for this could be that the white masters managing and manipulating the drama knew discrimination with reason is not in conflict with rules of Buddhism. No two persons are the same but they deserve equal opportunity. The other reason simply was that non-Buddhist black-whites did not wish to change the status quo. We know that in 1958 the reasonable use of Tamil language Bill was opposed by black-whites led by JRJ and Dudley with a march to Kandy stopped at Imbulgoda by S D Bandaranayaka.

Whether we like it or not, we cannot deny the fact that PMs and Presidents of Ceylon/Sri Lanka acted as unreasonable, non-Buddhist black-whites in handing the Tamil separatist issue. Only exception perhaps was SWRD, but even he got confused mixing language issue with land issue. Giving land powers to politicians asking a homeland was suicidal and this was why Ven. Baddegama Wimalawansa opposed his pact with SJVC. Dudley went all the way allowing a Tamil in anywhere in the country a priority claim to land in N&E over a Sinhalaya living in the neighborhood where parcels of land was to be distributed.

While the idea of moving the capital from Colombo to Anuradhapura appeared several times in the 1950s, lack of knowledge, wisdom or education could be understood as the reason for not thinking the unsuitability of the artificial 9-province division originated in 1832. CCS officers, Peradeniya professors and politicians in the 1950s all ignored this basic issue. The geography professor who should have been the researcher in this regard was silent despite land utilization projects done in England since 1940s by geography professors in London. Peradeniya was full of Tamil teachers, and no doubt they did not want to talk about this after the Federal Party floated the Tamil homeland myth based on 9-province division. So, I found one solitary research paper by the geography professor, K. Kularatnam, on the topic of Tamil influence on place names of Sinhala towns in the south!

Those who created 1972 or 1978 private/partisan constitutions did not think of the two answers mentioned above, despite the fact that the environmental concerns raised at the UNO level were invading Sri Lanka by that time. I say this because, I prepared the first UN-instigated environmental management law report for Sri Lanka at that time as an officer of the then National Science Council. At least after 1990 when a land commission report recommended re-demarcation of the island based on river basins, black-white regimes in power since then ignored it. R Premadasa who increased 4,000 GSN units to a mind-boggling 14,000 must be considered an idiot, just like JRJ moved the capital to a marshy land just 10 miles from the Colombo city old reclaimed marshy land. Which was more important, a bogus Buddhist ministry or a genuine concern for the protection of Sri Lanka? Paskaralingam who was so close to RP in secretly providing arms to tigers, who left the country secretly under unusual circumstances, the day after RP was killed, did not show RP the 1990 land commission recommendation. JRJ wanted a just society and RP built more stupas than any king lived in the island! From such madness the country fell into a period of package deals by CBK aimed at balkanization of the island using the 9-province Colebrooke division with an open plan to create a monoethnic Tamil region. It is in this historical context one ought to digest the gravity of MahindaR’s failure to abolish 13-A, by a proclamation at the end of the war.

‘You cannot legislate against geography’

Why 13-A is a death trap is a topic that has generated volumes of material.  For our purposes now, suffice it to state that as long as 13-A is part of our law, the country will not be safe from Eelam separatism.  Prabakaran rejected it then and TNA rejects it now unless it becomes a new 13-A plus. This is where 13-A step-father Dayan Jayatilaka comes to the scene. Born as a Christian, this well-read Euro-centric Marxist is becoming increasingly a Buddhist literatus as the single locomotive pulling the 13-A burden. He is actually better than the other Marxist Jayampathi Wickremaratna at this game. Dayan presents a Buddhist 13-A. 13-A with a remerged N & E is Tamil extremism; opposition to his full (police+land) 13-A with de-merged N & E is Sinhala extremism. He has not read the Ummagga Jathakaya, so this latter arrangement is the Aristotle’s mean!  The war killed Prabakaran as well as 13-A theory. Tamil people will not benefit from 13-A. They benefit if they are empowered, removing Tamil politician manipulating them, just like Sinhala politicians manipulating Sinhalayas.

On the 13-A war, surprisingly, not a single Sinhala politician says it could be defeated. Wimal Weerawansa or Udaya Gammanpila does not speak against it anymore. Public interest lawyer, Nagananda Kodituawkku is the only person who said publicly that he will abolish this 13-A death trap, if he wins the next presidential election in 2020. This 13-A war is not winnable,” theory is now 30 years old, and Jayampathi, the old Marxist of CBK’s package deal fame is beyond the 13-A stage. He is talking about a new setup. His new constitution will create a more unitary” Sri Lanka than it is now. But, CBK boasts that Jayampathi’s constitution is exactly what she presented during 1995-2000. She is correct, because Jayampathy’s more unitary than the 1978 thing has clauses to prevent separation. Why do you want such clauses unless his more unitary thing has things prone to or susceptible to division/secession?  CBK’s thing was a change from unitary to federal. Jayampathy created a divided-CBK path. And, after doing that, he says he has introduced several provisions as road blocks or brakes (safeguards) to prevent (or slow down?) the likes of Wigneswaran taking that path! The question is how can you unite by dividing?

This war is not winnable crowd has become the new this 13-A war is not winnable crowd. Their game plan is clear. They put the unitary and foremost place to Buddhism words as baits while hiding the disastrous western-manufactured non-majoritarian traps based on race, language and religion, planted all over their new constitution to guarantee the certain death of the only piece of real estate available to Sinhala Buddhists.  Jayampathi’s American sponsored multi-prone propaganda machine is so well-oiled that his latest client is the single elephant (no karaka sabha) Malwatte Mahanayaka. This is a foreign-designed grand plan, a counter force created to derail the Asgiriya Karaka Sabha efforts.

LLRC in the past could not avoid mentioning the phrase Jana Sabha. Even the APRC majority report of Tissa Vitharana praised the Jana Sabha concept. Therefore, Jayampathy could not help, but mention Jana Sabha in his federal-prone scheme. But, the role given to them is that of advising the local pradeshiya sabha, which is a collection of local political crooks. This is an insult to that noble, democratic, consensual Buddhistic concept.

While Jayampathi is still talking about Tamil moderates, Dayan no longer takes that path. He selected the Buddhist middle path that he really does not know. Buddhist Middle Path has eight elements, other than an Aristotle mean to meet the territorial psyche etched in some Tamil separatist about a Tamil homeland as Dayan repeats. A holistic perspective is needed. When TNA is demanding a merger of N & E, Dayan’s plan goes out of the window.  But he has other plans too. English language newspapers and the Colombo Telegraph website repeat, his middle path 13-A will save Sri Lanka from a future Indian-US naval blockade. He brings Fidel Castro’s wisdom to dismiss the only dissenting view printed by an English language newspaper, retired geography professor G H Peiris’, not knowing that Cuba had the services of loyal spies in USA. The best example was Miss Ana Belen Montes who as a key officer in the US Defence Intelligence Agency supplied Castro everything US was planning against Cuba for 16 years. She did it not for money but because of her desire to help victimized Cuban people. Her principles were such that when she found she was under surveillance, she did not want to escape to Cuba. It was this kind of heroism we saw with the Hasalaka hero.

Buddhist paradigm vs. Black-white paradigm

Not only Buddhist monks had no say in legislative matters, Buddhist laymen had no representation in the Legislative Council for a long time. When Anagarika Dharmapala tried to work with the Ceylon National Congress, he soon realized it was not possible. His socio-economic developmental ideas received no recognition, instead everybody under the colonial system worked in collusion to get rid of him. This crowd included new somebodies such as D S Senanayaka, and even D. B. Jayatilaka.  Dharmapala follower, Ven. Kalukondayave Pragnasekara floated a national crime eradication and rural reconstruction program with Justice Akbar and ASP Osmond de Silva, which became a successful model during 1932-1948, which he wanted to expand to cover all administrative districts in the island, but white and black-white establishment sabotaged it.

It is this model that we must use to replace 13-A, along with the idea of replacing the artificial 9-province division with river basin regions recommended by the 1990 land commission report.  This is the Buddhist paradigm, which will end the 13-A war defeating Lal Wijenayaka’s and Jayampathis thus, putting the American and Indian plans on logs. I doubt if the late Ven. Soma knew about the 1990 land commission report or the Kalukondayave model. The LLRC, most probably did not know about this land commission report.  BBS did not utilize them. Before the flag or the name of the country, people must be provided with an agenda that meets their day to day wants and needs. People who are struggling to feed the family, school for children, medicine etc. will not worry about Halal meet or Wahabism until, one fine day in the near future, ISIS gunners enter their homes. It is the duty of the Sinhala Buddhist leaders to give leadership to these people.  Some educated men suggest creating a new 10th province covering the sea coast, instead of taking the shortest path readily available for the welfare of the people at grassroot level.

In 2006 and 2009 respectively, I prepared two essays relating to the two solutions discussed in this essay. They appeared in the Island newspaper with maps in colour. Except for one or two typo errors, these essays, I think, are timeless. Links to these essays are given below.

http://www.island.lk/2006/10/25/midweek1.html

http://www.island.lk/2009/02/25/midweek1.html

The black-white argument of 13-A-anchored expansion of power sharing is based on the need of Tamils to achieve their national aspirations. Aspirations come naturally in a homeland, and the Tamil homeland is Tamil Nad. How many homelands a nation could afford to possess in this world? Was it not the rule, one homeland plus equality of personal opportunity outside it? Black-whites are deliberately blind to the ground truth that for the TNA leaders power sharing means full autonomy and the Kosovo path sooner or later.  Under an environmental, geography-based solution, there will be plenty of room for Tamil aspirations within a number of fairly large territories, without making Sinhalayas nervous about exceeding reasonable aspirational limits. Yalpanam region will be almost Tamil, but not mono-Tamil. The crocodile tears of Devanesan Nesiah from Australia that India will never allow an Eelam in Sri Lanka, thus contradicting DayanJ is simply Eelam propaganda in disguise. Does he not believe that Trinco harbor with a friendly Tamil TNA politician clique in Jaffna is an irresistible pricy catch for American dollars. The world knows how Modi was not given visa to enter U.S. as a chief minister, but received repeated personal invitation from the president after became PM.

Of all the Euro-centric black-whites, Dayan is unique because he could poison Gotabhaya’s mind into accepting his line of 13-A middle path. If the Eliya project does not consider the solutions proposed in this essay- 1933 Kalukondayave model, 1990 land commission recommendation plus the 1999 local government report- what is in store for the people after opposing the Jayampathy scheme? The Eliya group should establish links with the Asgiriya Karaka Sabha. The country knows constitutional gymnastics of other black-whites aimed at delivering a document to the satisfaction of USA, India and UNHCR. If they are successful in that task, this 13-A is not winnable war will go on until the next presidential election or the one after that. That is until America and India decide to divide the country because without foreign military support an Eelam cannot survive. Only path this could be avoided is the Buddhist reasonableness path guided by the monks. Just like in the past, militant Buddhism, disciplined, non-violent and informed, is the only answer to a country ruined by politicians.

C.Wijeyawikrema

Oct 8, 2017

 

 

GMR of India and we need to be careful ………. Making Mattala Airport viable lessons from RGIA Hydrabad

October 8th, 2017

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

India’s largest airport developer and operator GMR Group is willing to convert Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport (MRIA) into a profitable venture, if a request comes from the Sri Lankan Government.

It was reported in the local media in August that an Indian company has made a proposal to the Civil Aviation Minister to take over MRIA, indicating that it would pump US$ 205 million into the airport for a 70 per cent share for 40 years. The proposal was approved by the Cabinet.

However, the name of the company that was keen to invest in MRIA – which has earned the dubious honour of being the ‘world’s emptiest international airport’ – was not revealed. Opened in March 2013, MRIA initially saw several airlines operating there. It was also hyped to be Sri Lanka’s first Greenfield airport and the national carrier SriLankan was expected to create an airline hub there. Unfortunately, all these plans fell apart due to lack of demand. The question then was how to turn this US$ 209 million investment into a profitable venture

Maldives pays US$271m in damages to India’s GMR

The government of the Maldives has paid US$271million in damages to Indian infrastructure firm, GMR, for the abrupt termination of a lucrative contract to develop and manage the country’s main airport.Attorney General Mohamed Anil said that the state-owned Maldives Airports Company Ltd had settled the payment on Tuesday without drawing on the state budget.Former President Mohamed Nasheed, whose government signed the contract with GMR in 2011, subsequently condemned his successor, Dr Mohamed Waheed Hassan, for terminating the deal against international law in a Twitter post. Waheed responded by defending the move as the right decision for the Maldives.

GMR is a powerful corporate entity we Sri Lankans do not want tom face the same situation like with Air Bus Company where we end up in paying colossal amounts of  penalties  for defaults We have to ne weary of inviting such giants to invest in Mattala considering the debacle like in Male where GMR claimed a thumping amount in an Arbitration Centre in Singapore.

GMR was also eying to develop a Marina in Galle Harbour and now trying for Mattala in South is sign that India wants to have control of South since Chinese have taken over Hambantota Port .

By any chance of a successive government decides to terminate Mattala Agreement with GMR it is evident that we will be facing another arbitration in Singapore .

Whatever we do in Sri Lanka ,we should hire international project management team to scrutinise the hidden clauses in the mending agreements with GMT

We are a poor nation and we do not want to end up bankrupt .

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

UNITARY OR NOT? “Contradictions regarding the interim report on the Constitution”

October 8th, 2017

By Amila Wijesinghe, LLB (Hons), LLM (Public International Law), BPTC Candidate (Nottingham Law School)

The interim report of the new Constitution presented by the Steering Committee of the Constitutional Assembly has been the subject of much controversy in the last few days. Whilst President Sirisena has insisted that there is nothing in the draft that would diminish the unitary status of the country, there has been an outcry from several parties that were concerned by parts of the report that seem inimical to this unitary status. The controversy that this report has attracted was demonstrated at the Central Provisional Council when it was set alight by members of the National Freedom Front during the council session.

Unitary vs Federal

In any state, governance is distributed between the centralised decision making body and local government. In a unitary system, the central government may decide which powers to devolve to the local bodies in the interests of an efficient administration of the localities. The local level governments can enjoy significant amounts of autonomy under this system, but the distinction lies in the fact that the central body retains constitutional authority. In a federal system this authority is shared with the provincial entities. They share decision making powers in a manner that means that sovereignty is not exclusive the central government, but shared with the regional subsidiary bodies. The provincial governments would be subsidiary entities that wield constitutional authority over a broad range of issues making them sovereign in many respects.

Contradictions in the government’s claims

There seems to be some contradiction between the government’s assertions and the suggestions contained within the report. The current Constitution is explicit in Article 2 that ‘The Republic of Sri Lanka is a Unitary State’.

The interim report on the other hand, rather arbitrarily declares that the English word ‘unitary’ is inappropriate for Sri Lanka. Part of its justification seems to be that ‘it is now possible for Northern Ireland and Scotland to move away from the Union’. Whilst Scotland did indeed hold a referendum in 2014 (and there are currently calls for a second), it was not the result of any change to the word unitary. The UK is unitary and its parliament holds constitutional powers, with devolved powers given to Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. Under ordinary circumstances, Scotland’s powers are limited and they would not have been able to legitimately enact legislation affecting the Union to such a degree. However, the referendum was a result of mutual agreement by the Scottish and UK parliaments following the Edinburgh Agreement signed by the two governments, which temporarily lifted the restrictions on the Scottish parliament’s power to hold a referendum through a section 30 order (under section 30 of the Scotland Act 1998). Essentially, it had nothing to do with any change to the meaning of the word unitary.

After deciding on such questionable grounds that the term unitary state is now somehow obsolete, the report goes on to claim that the Sinhala term ‘aekiya raajyaya’ (which has so far been known to

translate as unitary) should now translate to ‘undivided and indivisible’. So, in a rather extraordinary move, the report has done away with the word unitary altogether and changed the meaning of ‘aekiya raajyaya’. It goes on to suggest that the Constitution word this as:

‘Sri Lanka (Ceylon) is a free, sovereign and independent Republic which is an aekiya raajyaya / orumiththa nadu, consisting of the institutions of the Centre and of the Provinces which shall exercise power as laid down in the Constitution. In this Article aekiya raajyaya / orumiththa nadu means a State which is undivided and indivisible’

The interpretation of this would seem that even though most Sri Lankans would assume the inclusion of ‘aekiya raajyaya’ to refer to the unitary status of the country, neither the English, Sinhala nor Tamil versions of the Constitution would support that, if this new Constitution is adopted. This seems like a rather disingenuous form of wordplay. They seem to have taken out the English word unitary and included the Sinhala and Tamil phrases hoping that pro-federalists would be satisfied by the fact that the word unitary was removed, and that anti-federal/pro-unitary citizens would be lulled into the belief that the country’s unitary status was preserved as an ‘aekiya raajyaya’.

Does the interim report’s proposals preclude federalism?

The current government has repeatedly claimed that the report does not infringe on the country’s unitary status and does not allow any form of federalism. However, as discussed above, it has gone out of its way to exclude the term unitary and replace it with ‘undivided and indivisible’. It also states that ‘There shall be specific provisions included in the Constitution to prevent secession (division of the country)’. What this provision would suggest is that division of the country refers to secession. In section II which contains the principles of devolution, part 2.2 specifically states the phrase ‘undivided and indivisible’ as relating to the safeguards against secession. So, when referring to the country being ‘undivided and indivisible’, this would seem to refer to the prevention of secession, and there is nowhere in the report that explicitly denies federalism. Indivisible and federal are not necessarily incompatible concepts. The pledge of allegiance of the United States, a well-known example of federalism, describes itself as ‘one Nation, under God, indivisible.’ This pledge is repeated in congress, government meetings and schools all around the US, showing that the term indivisible is not necessarily at odds with federalism.

Does the report take a more federal approach?

Very few (if any) states can claim to be entirely unitary. It tends to be the case that powers are decentralised to some extent and most countries will lie somewhere in between the spectrum, with unitary and federal ideals at both ends. In fact, Sri Lanka is arguably already somewhat semi-federal to some degree, as the 13th amendment devolves much centralised powers (with some limitations) in a way which mirrors some quasi-federal features. Semantics aside, the devolution of power is not necessarily against a unitary state, as it often forms an essential part of a unitary state’s governance at the local level, and what matters more is the substance of the Constitution – regardless of what the state may be called.

Part 7 of the second section of the report, recommends curtailing the powers of the Governor, which has previously been seen as a safeguard to protect the country’s unitary status as an appointee by the President. The report advocates that the governor’s role, which would previously have included certain powers and executive authority, be reduced to a ceremonial one.

As another example, an identifying characteristic of a federalised state is that it’s Constitution will guarantee significant powers to the intermediate governmental bodies of the provinces and they are

often represented at the national legislature through a second chamber (such as a senate or upper house). These will often be a deciding factor for any amendment to the constitution as their consent will be necessary for the ratification of any such changes. Interestingly enough, part VI of the report calls for the establishment of a second chamber, with 45 of the 55 members drawn from the Provincial Councils. This chamber would be able to refer ordinary legislation back to Parliament for reconsideration, be able to exercise oversight, and ‘No Constitutional Amendment shall be enacted into law unless passed by both Parliament and the Second Chamber, with special (2/3) majorities.’

This article does not intend to comment on the merits of federal versus unitary forms of governance, nor is it intended to advocate for either. However, the interim report’s duplicitous approach at the very least calls into question the motives of the current government and the assertions about the issue that they have made so far. The Constitution should represent the people, and any changes must always be done in a transparent and open manner.

 

බැදුම්කර වංචාවේ ‘සුපිං විමර්ශන‘ මුලාවක්. පළමු රැස්වීමට සහභාගි වූවේ යැයි කියන කබීර්, මලික් අමාත්‍යවරුන්ගෙන් සත්‍ය සොයා ගත යුතුයි

October 8th, 2017

මාධ්‍ය ඒකකය ශ්‍රී ලංකා මානව හිමිකම් කේන්ද්‍ර‍ය හා කැෆේ සංවිධානය

බැදුම්කර වංචාවට සම්බන්ධ තැනැත්තන් හදුණාගැනීමට පත් කළ ‘බැදුම්කර කොමිසම‘ රාජ්‍ය බැංකු බාර කබීර් හෂීම් අමාත්‍යවරයාත්, එදා කිසිම රාජ්‍ය තනතුරක් නොතිබුණු මලික් සමරවික්‍ර‍මත් අතහැර ‘අක්‍ර‍මිකතා පිළිබද වගකිව යුතු තැනැත්තා හෝ තැනැත්තන් හදුණාගන්නට උත්සහ දැරීම ‘ඇරලා බලන්න ලයිෂන් තිබිය දී ඔබලා බලන කොමිෂන් වැඩක්‘ යැයි  ශ්‍රී ලංකා මානව හිමිකම් කේන්ද්‍රයේ විධායක අධ්‍යක්ෂ කීර්ති තෙන්නකෝන් මහතා පවසයි. 

අද රාජගිරියේ පැවති පුවත්පත් සාකච්ඡාවක් අමතමින් තෙන්නකෝන් මහතා ප්‍ර‍කාශ කළේ ගැසට් නිවේදනයට අනුව ‘ රාජ්‍ය බැංකු විෂය භාර අමාත්‍යවරයා කබීර් හෂීම් මහතා යි.  මහ බැංකුව තියෙන්නේ අග්‍රාමත්‍ය රනිල් වික්‍ර‍මසිංහ මහතා යටතේ යි.  එසේ තිබිය දී, නමට පමණක් මුදල් ඇමති රවී කරුණානායක මහතා පිටින් සියළු කුණු යවා ‘බැදුම්කර මහ මගඩිය‘ යට ගැසීමට උත්සහ දරනවා.  අප කථා කරන්නේ රුපියල් බිලියන 12 කට වැඩි වංචාවක් පැය 72 ක දී සිදු වූ විෂයක් ගැනයි.  සේවක අර්ථසාධක අරමුදල ඇතුලු ලංකාවේ වැඩ කරන පන්තියේ ජනතාවට සිදු වූ පාඩුව ගැන තවම අදහසක් හෝ නෑ.  කොමිසම පත් කළේ මේ ‘අක්‍ර‍මිකතාවන්ට සම්බන්ධ වී ඇති තැනැත්තන් හදුණාගැනීමටයි‘.  එහෙම නැතිව ඇලෝසියස් ගේ මුදලින් නිවාස මිලදී ගත්, ව්‍යාපාර සිදුකරන පුද්ගලයින් හදුණාගැනීමට නොවෙයි. රවී ගේ ශරීර කුඩුවට මුවා වී මහ මගඩිය පිටුපස සිටි පුද්ගලයින් සැගවීමට ඉඩ නොදිය යුතුයි.  කබීර් හෝ මලික් බැදුම්කර වංචාවට අදාළ මුල් රැස්වීමට සම්බන්ධ වූයේ කෙසේද? ඒ සදහා ඔවුන් පෙළඹවූයේ කවුරුන්ද? යන්න හෙළදරව් කර ගැනීම වැදගත්.  ඔවුන් දෙදෙනා ද මෙම අක්‍ර‍මිකතාවට සම්බන්ධ නොවන්නටත් හැකියි. නමුත්, ඔවුන් ඉහළම වැදගත්කම ඇති සාක්ෂිකරුවන් බව නම් පැහැදිලියි. 

බැදුම්කර මගඩිය පටන්ගන්නේ කබීර් හෂීම් හා මලික් සමරවික්‍ර‍ම දෙදෙනා සිටින රැස්වීමකින් බව කෝප් කමිටුවෙත්, විගණන වාර්තා හා බැදුම්කර කොමිසමේ අනාවරණය වී තිබෙනවා.  ඒ බව රටම දන්නවා. හැබැයි තවමත් කබීර් හෂිම් හෝ මලික් සමරවික්‍ර‍ම කොමිසම හමුවට ගෙන්වා නෑ.  ඔවුන්ට තමන් දන්නා කරුණු හෙළි කිරීමට අවස්ථාවක් ලබාදීමට කොමිසම කටයුතු කළ යුතුයි.  අනෙක් අතට, මෙය ඔවුන් දෙදෙනා පටවලා වෙනත් අයෙකුට ගැලවීයාමට ලබාදුන් අවස්ථාවක් නම් එය ද හෙළිදරව් කර ගැනීම කොමිසන් සභාවේ රාජකාරියක්.  මහ බැංකුවේ මධ්‍ය මට්ටමේ නිලධාරීන්ට ලැබෙන ප්‍ර‍මුඛත්වය හෝ ප්‍ර‍මුඛ දේශපාලනඥයින්ට ලැබී නැ.     

රවී කරුණානායක මහතා පෙන්වා මේ වංචාවේ මහ මොළකරුවන් ගැලවී යාමට උත්සහ දරන බවක් පෙනෙන්නට තිබෙනවා.    මේ වන විට මහ බැංකු වංචාව පිළිබද චෝදනා එල්ල වී ඇති මහ බැංකු නිලධාරියෙකුට රජයේ උපදේශක පත්වීමක් ලබා දෙන්නට සුදානම් වෙනවා.  බැදුම්කර කොමිසම තවත් සති 2 කින් සිය කටයුතු අවසන් කළ යුතුයි.  කොමිසම හෙමින් හෙමින් ඉනිමග නැගලා, අන්තිම පඩි දෙක තුනට ඉස්සර ඉණිමග පෙරළිය යුතු නෑ.  රටම බලාගෙන ඉන්නවා. ලෝකයම බලාගෙන ඉන්නවා.  යහපාලන රජයේ දුෂණ විරෝධය ඇත්තක් ද? බොරුවක් ද? කියලා.  ඇස්බැන්දුමක් ද? කියලා.

පරිගණක දත්ත විනාශ කිරීම, දුරකථන දත්ත විකෘති කිරීම ගැන රහස් පොලිස් පරීක්ෂණ සිදුවීම හොදයි.  නමුත්, සැබෑ ලෙසම අපරාධ පරීක්ෂණයක් ඇරඹිය යුත්තේ බැදුම්කර කොමිසම විසින් අනාවරණය කර ගන්නා තැනැත්තන් පිළිබදවයි.  ‘සූපිං කෑලි‘ පිළිබද කථා ඇස්බැන්දුමක් නොවිය යුතු යැයි ද, තෙන්නකෝන් මහතා පැවසීය.

මාධ්‍ය ඒකකය

ශ්‍රී ලංකා මානව හිමිකම් කේන්ද්‍ර‍ය හා කැෆේ සංවිධානය

2017 ඔක්. 8

SIL-REDI and TREACHERY

October 8th, 2017

Upali Cooray

Public administration has a rich history that dates back to the Greeks. Public administration is putting laws in action to better serve a civilization and the public. While the idea of public administration dates back thousands of years, it played a significant role throughout history as countries developed and new technology changed the way we live and interact.

400 B.C. Plato recognizes the separation between management and developed the concept of democracy. At this time, the Greek people began electing their leaders and became educated on social services. It is also at this time that politician’s begin a very loose version of campaigning to expose ideas on platforms in order to gain a place in office. 325 B.C. We all know Alexander the Great wasn’t a guy who messed around. His organizational skills were beyond his time and helped him organize an army large enough (and smart enough) to conquer most of the world. This isn’t your typical public administration, but it does illustrate how important proper delegation helps the governments (or ruling party) conquer.

In 1525 Machiavelli realizes the cohesiveness and organization are essential tools for public administration. He also realizes that it’s most effective when you have a group of committed to a cause, versus a group of people who are being forced to participate.

In 1776 Adam Smith pens his book, Wealth of Nations which discusses public administration and specialization. The book focuses on the economic state of America and what create a wealthy nation. Smith’s becomes a benchmark for developing effective public administration that creates a capitalistic society.

Patronage is often the reason why public reforms are attempted and almost equally often the reason why they fail. Patronage is a political problem that requires a political solution. The 1997 World Bank report mentions patronage as a disease of government. Yet it stubbornly persists in many countries, including Sri Lanka, where all remedies have been canvassed at one time or the other.  Sri Lanka has the highest life expectancy of any south Asian country but saddled with a public sector that has sometimes seemed to be not so much unreformed as unreformable. Politicians have a vested interest in maintaining a patronage system. The expectation that the public sector should provide jobs is the root cause. This is exacerbated by changes of government following of which a fresh crop of patronage appointments sprouts. Politicians consider that governments exist to provide jobs for their supporters.

Recent happenings at the highest levels of Sri Lankan bureaucracy reflect how patronage has rooted deep in to the country’s administration. One cannot foresee any headway in the near future. The highest level of Sri Lanka’s bureaucracy is the Secretary to the President. There have been seven secretaries to the President since 1979. They are.

W.M.P.B Manikdiwela SLAS (1979 -1989)

K.H.J Wijedasa SLAS (1989 – 1994)

  1. Balapatabandi (1994 – 2003)

W.J.S Karunaratna SLAS (2003 -2005)

Lalith Weeratunga SLAS (2005 – 2017)

P.B.Abeykoon SLAS (2015)

Austin Fernando SLAS (2017 – present)

Bradman Weerakoon who was in office prior to the Presidential system was introduced has served seven heads of states in a career spanning half a century. He has served as secretary to Prime ministers Sir Jhon Kotalawala, S.W.R.D Bandaranaike, Vijayananda Dahanayake, Sirimavo Bandaranaike and Dudley Senanayake.  M.D.D Peiris is another veteran civil servant who has worked as secretary to the prime minister and did not tolerate patronage K. Balapatabandi is the only non SLAS officer who was sponsored by President Chandrika Kumaratunga, a clear cut political patronage case.

The secretary to the former president was imprisoned for providing funds for distributing “Sil Redi”(clothes of virtue) during the election period in 2015. It is nothing but political patronage which put him in to trouble. This officer who is much respected and has done much to the country by way of making opportunities of information technology to penetrate all undeveloped areas in the country cannot by any means called dishonest. Even the verdict of the case points out that he did not have any personal benefit in allocating money to distribution of “Sil Redi”. He succumbed to patronage to satisfy his political master. The former president is now confirming that his secretary was given orders by him to allocate Six hundred million rupees for distribution of “Sil Redi”. The question is why didn’t the former president appear before courts when the case was being heard and confirm he gave orders? He was not to be seen when his secretary and former chairman of the TRC were bailed out.

In 2015 the new Sirisena- Wickramasinhghe government cosponsored a resolution (30/1) with US and other member countries to address the Human rights violations in the country during the internal war and thereafter. It contains 25 key undertakings by the Sri Lankan Government across a range of human rights issues. Now the UNHCR has expressed its concern about the actual willingness of the government to fully implement all aspects of the resolution (30/1). A key element of the resolution consists of transitional justice promises: a special court including international judges and prosecutors to try all parties to the conflict, an office on missing and disappeared persons, a truth seeking and reconciliation mechanism and a reparations mechanism. The government has made only halting progress in fulfilling these commitments. The office on missing and disappeared persons is yet to be established. The ongoing resistance to any foreign involvement in the four mechanisms is coming not only from officials but also from the president and the prime minister. The will to implement any of the proposals is dwindling.

One should now go back to 2002 when the Ranil Wickramasinghe government signed a cease fire agreement with LTTE with Norwegian assistance. The LTTE used government adherence to the pact to build up its own strength with massive importation of weapons while paying little attention to the idea of ending hostilities. In five years, Sri Lanka monitoring mission found the LTTE guilty of 3830 violations, while holding the government responsible for only 351. It was dreadfully clear that no negotiations are possible with LTTE. The diaspora and the western powers were hell bent on carving out a Tamil Elam in the north and east of Sri Lanka.  The current attempt of the Sirisena -Wickramasinghe government to have the 20th amendment passed is a devious way to establish federalism in the country. What the LTTE couldn’t achieve by force is being given on a platter. Many organizations in addition to TNA have opposed these proposals. These movements have been demanding that the police and land powers should be given to provincial councils. Though Ranil agreed to this demand, Maithree has not committed still.

The present secretary to the President was the secretary defense during the period CFA (cease fire agreement with the LTTE) agreement was signed. The millennium city episode which happened in January 2002 where a safe house maintained by the Directorate of Military Intelligence (DMI) of the Sri Lanka Amy at Millennium city, Athurigiriya was raided by the police led by Kulasiri Udugampola ended up exposing the SL Army intelligence officers and thus LTTE was able to assassinate 80 informants and Army intelligence officers including Lieutenant Colonel Tuan Nizam Muthaliff. He was the Commanding officer of the 1st Battallion, Military Intelligence Corps.

The construction of the Manirasakulam camp in Kinniya commenced   and the LTTE spurned the protests by the army and as stipulated in the MOU the (Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission) SLMM took over the issue direct with LTTE political wing chief Thamilselvam who maintained that the camp was there even at the time of signing the MOU, that it is in LTTE held area and refused to budge.

All attempts by the SLMM to have the camp dismantled failed miserably. The LTTE built bunkers there. After everybody else failed, Eric Solheim the Norwegian came all the way to solve the problem, and probably to “teach the Tigers a good lesson”. But the LTTE refused to discuss the subject.  But the GOSL maintained a stoic silence on the issue and all those who talk of the peace, or rather the appeasement process, were worried only about the interim administration. Day by day the LTTE advanced even in the East in the direction of the Elam. People began to raise eye brows about the stance taken by the Tigers vis-a-vis visits to the North by government ministers.

The GOSL did not break its baffling silence and issue a clear statement regarding its stance on the Manirasakulam camp of the LTTE which was close to the strategic port of Trincomalee. The failure to keep the people informed of its stance was construed as a betrayal of the confidence the public have placed on the UPFA.

In 2002 The Ranil Wickramasinghe government permitted import of powerful radio transmission equipment purported to be for the SLMM but in actual fact for the use of LTTE.

Prabhakaran was able to achieve Elam more or less during Ranil Wickramasinha’s (RW) last tenure. Arms were coming in to the country in rouge ships unhindered. It was alleged that RW attempted to send the navy Commander abroad for 14 days purported to be courtesy visits enabling a rouge ship anchored in Indonesia with 60 tons of arms to the LTTE to discharge it’s cargo in the eastern coast of SL. President   Chandrika Kumaratunga in her letter to RW on 06/10/2003 bares this fact. She further states that knowing this ruse, she reduced the Navy Commander’s visit just to four days.

Adhistanaya (determininaton) a Sinhala book written by former Navy Commander Wasantha Karannagoda is very explicit in how his efforts to thwart LTTE arms supplies were seen as wrong by the defense secretary at that time. The former secretary now the secretary to the President in his book my belly is white, like Operramire the snake in the Ghanian folk tale who, at death bed contorts himself to expose his pure white belly, the author attempts to exonerate himself and his colleagues from the charges leveled against them during their quest in peace-making. After all, like the author says, as public servants they only rose to call of duty The policies and actions of RW and his patronizing bureaucratic cohorts who claim RW is competent and charismatic amount to treachery against the country and that’s not “call of duty”. How can a person(RW) who could not become the head of state be called “charismatic? In a subsequent interview with Sanjana Haththotuwa (centre for policy studies) in 2008 the same secretary is “ambivalent”about the past deeds.

The court was correct in finding Weeratunga and Palpita misused state funds to satisfy their political master but implicit treachery committed by the politicians and top bureaucrats carry on regardless tasting power. It is said that the present secretary to the president is the mentor of Maithreepala Sirisena the “Grama Niladhari” (village officer). This is patronage at its best.

I end this article quoting Aeschylus the great Greek dramatist and poet who lived in 525 BC to 456 BC.

I have learned to hate all traitors, and there is no disease that I spit on more than treachery UPALI COORAY egalwan288@gmail.com

සෙක්කුවෙන් උනන සල්ලි

October 8th, 2017

වරුණ චන්ද්‍රකීර්ති 

එල්ලංගාවක් කියලා කියන්නේ ඇල මාර්ගවලින් එකිනෙකට සම්බන්ධ වෙන වැව් පද්ධතියකට. අපේ මුතුන් මිත්තෝ ඇල මාර්ග හදලා තිබුණේ වැව් එකිනෙකට සම්බන්ධ කරලා ජල පද්ධතියක් පවත්වාගෙන යන්න මිසක් වැවකින් කුඹුරුවලට ජලය බෙදන්න නෙවෙයි. ඉතින් බොහෝ වෙලාවට මේ ඇල මාර්ග හදලා තිබුණේ පොළොවේ සමෝච්ච මට්ටම්වල. හැතැප්මකට අඟලක් කියන ආනතියට යෝධ ඇල හදලා තිබුණා කියන කතාවේ තේරුමත් ඒකයි. කලාවැවේ ඉඳලා තිසාවැවට ජලය ගලාගෙන ගියේ මග දිගට තිබුණු එල්ලංගා ගණනාවක් ම පෝෂණය කරමින්. එල්ලංගාව හින්දා පොළොවේ තෙතමනය ආරක්‍ෂා වුනා. ගස් වැල් හොඳින් හැදිලා සතා සිව්පාවන්ට හොඳින් ජීවත්වෙන්න පුළුවන් ඒ වගේ පොළොවක තමයි. ඉතින් ඒ පොළොවේ මිනිස්සුත් තමන් ගේ ගොවිතැන් බත් කරගෙන බොහොම සතුටින් ජීවත්වුනා.

කාට හරි හිතෙන්න පුළුවන් මේක නිකම් ම නිකම් සුන්දර කල්පනාවක් කියලා. ඒත් දැනටත් මේ විදිහේ එල්ලංගා අපේ රටේ වියලි කලාපය කියලා හඳුන්වන ප්‍රදේශයේ තියෙනවා. ඒකට දෙන්න පුළුවන් හොඳ ම උදාහරණය තමයි හොරිවිල ගමත් ඊට යාබද ව තියෙන උඩකඩවල ගමත් පෝෂණය කරන එල්ලංගාව. මේ එල්ලංගාවට වැව් දොළහක් අයිතියි. අපි කවුරුත් දන්නවා හොරිවිල ගම තියෙන්නේ පලුගස්වැව ප්‍රාදේශීය ලේකම් කොට්ඨාශයේ කියන එක. පලුගස්වැව කියන්නේ අනුරාධපුරය දිස්ත්‍රික්කයේ දුෂ්කරයි කියලා නම් කරලා තියෙන ප්‍රදේශයක්. ඉතින් ඒ වගේ ප්‍රදේශයක මෙහෙම දෙයක් තියෙනවා කියලා හිතන එකත් පුදුමයක්.

මේ එල්ලංගාව ලෝක උරුම ලැයිස්තුවට ඇතුළත්කිරීමේ සූදානමකුත් තියෙනවා. ඒක හොඳ දෙයක්. මොකද අපේ මිනිස්සු අපේ ම දේක වැදගත්කම දැනගන්නේ ඒක හොඳයි කියලා බටහිර රටකින් ලේබලයක් ඇලෙව්වාම. ඉතින් මේ ගැන හොයලා බලන්න ආහාර හා කෘෂිකර්ම සංවිධානයේ ලොක්කෙක් හොරිවිලට ආවා කියලා වාර්තාවක් 2016 දෙසැම්බර් මාසයේ පත්තරවල තිබුණා. ගෝලීය වශයෙන් වැදගත් කෘෂිකාර්මික උරුමයක් හඳුනාගන්නේ ආහාර සුරක්‍ෂිතතාවට ඒකෙන් ලැබෙන පිටුබලය, කෘෂි සහ ජීව විවිධත්වය, දේශීය හා සාම්ප්‍රදායික දැනුම භාවිතය, සංස්කෘතික සහ සාම්ප්‍රදායික අගය පද්ධතියට මුල් තැන දීම, සාම්ප්‍රදායික සමාජ සංවිධාන පවත්වාගෙන යෑම, අනන්‍ය වූ භූ දර්ශන පවත්වාගෙන යෑම වගේ කරුණු සළකලා කියලා ආහාර හා කෘෂිකර්ම සංවිධානය කියනවා. ඉතින් හොරිවිල ගමට ඒ අවශ්‍යතා ඔක්කොම සපුරාගන්න පුළුවන් වුනා ද කියන එක නම් මේ ලේඛකයා දන්නේ නෑ. ඒ කොහොම වුනත් හොරිවිල ගමේ එල්ලංගාව තවමත් හොඳින් තියෙනවා.

මේ එල්ලංගාව ලෝක උරුමයක් කරන වැඩේට අදාළ ව ආණ්ඩුවේ කාර්යාලවල ලිපිගොනු ඉවරයක් නැතුව ඉහළ පහළ යනවා ඇති. ඒත් මේ වැඩේ කරන්න ආණ්ඩුවටවත් ආණ්ඩුවේ නිලධාරීන්ටවත් බෑ. මේ උරුමය රැකගෙන පෝෂණය කරලා තියෙන්නේ ඒ ගමේ ම මිනිස්සු. ඉතින් ඉතිරි වැඩ ටිකත් කරන්න වෙන්නේ ඒ මිනිස්සුන්ට ම තමයි. රස්සා හොයාගෙන මිනිස්සු ගම් අත හැරලා යන කාලයක සාම්ප්‍රදායික දේවල් ආරක්‍ෂා කරගන්නවා කියලා කියන්නේ ලේසි වැඩක් නෙවෙයි. ඒත් එහෙම කිය කියා හිටියා කියලා මේ වගේ වැඩ සිද්දවෙන්නේ නෑ. මේවා කරන්න පුළුවන් ක්‍රමයක් අපි අපි ම හොයාගන්න ඕන.

ඉතින් මේ වැඩේ කරන්න වෙන්නේ කොහොම ද?

මුලින් ම කරන්න ඕන ගමේ මිනිස්සු ගමේ ම නවත්තගන්න ක්‍රමයක් හොයාගන්න එක. ගමේ මිනිස්සු දුක් විඳගෙන ගමෙන් පිටට යන්නේ රස්සා හොයාගෙන. ඒ කියන්නේ අද පවතින ආර්ථික ක්‍රමය ඇතුළේ අපි කාටත් උවමනා කරන සල්ලි හොයාගෙන. ඉතින් සල්ලි උපයන ක්‍රම ගම ඇතුළේ ම හදාගන්න බැරි ද?

මේ කාරණය ගැන හිතද්දි මේ ලේඛකයාට මතක්වෙන්නේ තමන් කුඩා කාලයේ දැකලා තියෙන සෙක්කුව. කුඩා කාලයේ මේ ලේඛකයා පඬුවස්නුවර පැත්තේ ගමක ජීවත්වෙලා තියෙනවා. ඒ ගමේ එක වත්තක සේක්කුවක් තිබුණා. සෙක්කුවේ තෙල් හින්දේ සෝමතිලක අයියා. පොල් තෙල් විතරක් නෙවෙයි. තව තව ගොඩක් තෙල් ජාති ඒ සෙක්කුවේ හින්දා. සෝමතිලක අයියාට කරන්න තිබුණේ තෙල් හිදින්න ගන්න කොප්පරා ටික සෙක්කුට දාලා ගොනා ව දක්කන එක. ඉතින් සෙක්කුවෙන් තෙල් හිඳින වැඩේ ඒ කාලේ අපේ ගම්වල සාමාන්‍ය දෙයක්.

එත් ගම්වලට තෙල් මෝල් ආවට පස්සේ සෙක්කුවලට වැඩ නැතිවුනා. ඊ ළඟට වුනේ ගම්වල තිබුණු සෙක්කු ගල් ගලවාගෙන ගිහිල්ලා සංචාරක හෝටල් වටේ හිටවන එක. ඒක කරලා තිබුණේ උද්‍යාන සැරසිල්ලක් විදිහට. මිනුවන්ගොඩ ඉඳලා කොටුගොඩට යන පාර අයිනේ ගෙදරක සෙක්කු ගල් ගොඩක් ගොඩ ගහලා තියෙනවාත් මේ ලේඛකයා දැකලා තියෙනවා.

විවෘත ආර්ථිකයත් එක්ක තව තව තෙල් ජාතිත් අපේ රටට ගලාගෙන එන්න ගත්තා. ඒ එක්ක ම පොල් තෙල් අගුණයි කියලා කතාවකුත් පැතිරෙන්න ගත්තා. ඒත් අපේ මිනිස්සු තවමත් කෑම හදන්නේ පොල්තෙල් දාලා. මේ මෑතක ඉඳලා කියනවා වඩා හොඳ වර්ජින් කොකනට් ඔයිල් කියලා. වර්ජින් කොකනට් ඔයිල් කියන්නේ සෙක්කු තෙල්වලට. සෙක්කුවේ හිඳින තෙල් මෝලේ හිඳින තෙල් වගේ රත්වෙන්නේ නෑ. ඉතින් ගුණය වෙනස් කියන එක පුදුමයට කාරණයක් නෙවෙයි. කොහොම හරි සෙක්කු තෙල්වලට (වර්ජින් කොකනට් ඔයිල්වලට) ලෝකය පුරා ම ලොකු ඉල්ලුමක් ඇතිවෙලා තියෙනවා. ඉතින් අපේ රටේ කට්ටියත් එක එක යන්ත්‍ර සූත්‍ර ගෙනැල්ලා වර්ජින් කොකනට් ඔයිල් හිඳින්න පටන් ඇරගෙන.

ඇයි අපිට බැරි අපේ ගම්වල ආයෙත් සෙක්කු කරකවලා තෙල් හිඳින්න. මේ විදිහට හිඳින්නේ වර්ජින් කොකනට් ඔයිල් හින්දා ඒවා අඩු ගණන්වලට දෙන්න ඕනකමක් නෑ. අනිත් කාරණේ මේ තෙල් විකුණන්න ගමෙන් පිටට යන්න ඕනත් නෑ. මේ විදිහට සේක්කුවලින් තෙල් හිඳිනවා කියලා දැනගත්තා ම නගරවලට, ඒ ආසන්නයේ ගෙවල්වලට ගාල්වෙලා ජීවත්වෙන අපේ මිනිස්සු ළමයි බමයි ඇරගෙන ගම්වලට ම එයි ඒ අසිරිය විඳගන්න. ඉතින් ඒ එන මිනිස්සුන්ට තෙල් විකුණන එක අමාරු දෙයක් නෙවෙයි.

බත්තරමුල්ලේ හදලා තියෙන්නේ අපේ ගමක් නෙවෙයි. ගමක් කිව්වා ම තව කොච්චරක් නම් දේවල් තියෙනවා ද? මැටි ගහපු ගෙවල් ටිකක් හදලා පොල් අතු ටිකක් බැන්ද පලියට ඒක ගමක් වෙන්නේ නෑ. ඉතින් වැව්, කුඹුරු, පන්සල් තියෙන අපේ ගම්වල ඇත්ත අපේ ගම් හදන එක අමාරු වැඩක් නෙවෙයි. ඒකට කරන්න ඕන ගමේ කරපු කර්මාන්ත ආයෙත් වතාවක් ගමට හඳුන්වලා දෙන එක විතරයි.

මේ ලේඛකයා ගේ නැගණිය ගේ ගෙදර අදටත් වී බිස්සක් තියෙනවා. මීට අවුරුදු දහයකට පහළොවකට කලින් ඒ ගෙදර වී බිහි දෙකක් තිබුණා. ඊටත් කලින් වී බිහි හත අටකට වඩා තිබුණු බවකුත් මේ ලේඛකයා අහලා තියෙනවා. කොහොම හරි දැන් ඉතිරිවෙලා තියෙන්නේ එක වී බිස්සයි. ඒ බිස්ස වහලා තියෙන්නෙත් තල අතුවලින්. ඒකට හේතුවෙලා තියෙන්නේ දැන් ගම්වල පිදුරු නැති එක. ගොයම් කපන්නේ භූතයාගෙන් හින්දා පිදුරු එළියට එන්නේ බොහොම කෙටියට කැපිච්ච කෑලි විදිහට. ඒවා වහළකට අතුරන්න බෑ. ඒ විතරක් නෙවෙයි. බිස්ස වෙනුවෙන් ම ගොයම් ටිකක් වෙනම කපාගෙන පිදුරු වෙන් කරගත්තත් ඒවා වැඩි කාලයක් පවතින්නේ නෑ. මොකද රසායනික පොහොර ගහලා හැදිච්ච ගොයමේ පිදුරු ඉක්මනින් දිරනවා.

ඒ කොහොම වුනත් වස විස ගහන්නේ නැතුව ගොයම් වවාගත්තොත් වී බිහි ටික ආපහු හදාගන්න බැරිවෙන එකක් නෑ. ඉතින් මී හරක් දාලා කුඹුරු හාන, අත්තමට කයියට ඒ කුඹුරුවල වැඩකරන, වී බිහි තියෙන, තෙල් හිඳින සෙක්කු තියෙන ගම් බලන්න අපේ මිනිස්සුත් විදේශවලින් එන සංචාරකයෝත් ඇදිලා ඒවි. ඉතින් ගමේ හිඳින තෙල්, ගමේ හැදෙන ගඩාගෙඩි, වී හාල්, ගමේ හදන කැවිලි, අත්කම් නිර්මාණ ඒ මිනිස්සුන්ට විකුණලා ආදායමක් උපයාගන්න අපේ මිනිස්සුන්ට බැරිකමක් නෑ. ගම තියෙන්නේ ප්‍රධාන පාරෙන් ඈත නම් ගමට මිනිස්සු ගෙනියන්න බරකරත්ත, බර භාග, බක්කි යොදවන්න බැරිකමකුත් නෑ. ඉතින් මේ විදිහට ගමට එන මිනිස්සු ගමේ සෙක්කුවේ හරකා එක්ක සෙල්ෆියක් ගහලා ෆේෂ් බුක් එකටත් දමාවි!

මේ හැම දෙයක් ම සාර්ථක වෙන්නේ ගමේ සංස්කෘතිය ඒ විදිහට රැකගන්න අපිට පුළුවන් නම් විතරයි. ඒ වගේ එක ගමක් අනෙක් ගමෙන් වෙනස්වෙන්න ඕන. හැම ගමකට ම පුළුවන් වෙන්න ඕන තමන් ගේ අනන්‍යතාව රැකෙන විදිහේ වැඩක් කරන්න. තම තමන්ට අදාළ විදිහට සංස්කෘතික අංග හදාගෙන වැඩිදියුණු කරගන්න එකත් මේ වැඩේට අදාළයි. තම තමන් ගේ ගම්වලට අදාළ කතන්දර හදාගන්න එකත් කෙරෙන්න ඕන. එහෙම වුනොත් විතරයි ඒ හැම ගමකට ම ඇති පදම් ආදායම් උපයාගන්න පුළුවන් වෙන්නේ.

මේ යෝජනාකරන්නේ ගමේ උරුමය විකුණාගෙන කන්න කියලා කාට හරි චෝදනා කරන්න පුළුවන්. ඒත් මේ වගේ වැඩවලින් ගමේ උරුමයට පණ එන බව අපි අමතක කරන්න හොඳ නෑ. එහෙම නැතුව මේ විදිහට ගම් පාළුවෙලා ගියොත් ඉතිරිවෙන දෙයක් නෑ. අපි පටන්ගන්න ඕන අද අපි වැටිලා ඉන්න තැනින්. අපි කවුරුත් කරන්නේ සල්ලි හොයන සෙල්ලම්නේ. ඉතින් ගමේ මිනිස්සුන්ටත් ගමේ ඉඳලා ම ඒ වැඩේ කරගන්න දෙන එකේ වැරැද්දක් නෑ.

මේ විදිහට මිනිස්සු ගම්වල රැ‍ඳෙනවා නම් තමයි එල්ලංගාව ලෝක උරුමයක් කරන වැඩේ සාර්ථක වෙන්නේ. ඉතින් මේ විදිහේ එක ගමක් හරි අපි හදමු!

වරුණ චන්ද්‍රකීර්ති 

Remembering Vivien Gunawardena

October 8th, 2017

By Dr. Tilak S. Fernando
2017-10-07

Vivian Gunawardena has gone down in Sri Lankan politics as a dynamic woman who embraced politics long before ‘Women’s lib’ was heard of in the West. Being fearless and outspoken, a quality that she inherited from his uncle, the late Phillip Gunawardena (Boralugoda Lion), she pioneered and set up Sri Lanka’s first Socialist Women’s Organisation – The United Women’s Trust. Vivian Gunewardena’s 101st birthday or the 31st death commemoration falls on 3 October 2017. As a tribute to this outspoken, fearless female politician, the writer wishes to reminisce about a personal interview he had with her in London, at the time she cut short her holiday, purposely to take an active role on the political platform in Sri Lanka, prior to the general elections on 16 August 1994.

What inspired Vivian Gunawardena to enter politics at a time when the Sri Lankan political climate was male oriented? Her father being a doctor helped her to access hospitals often when she was young. It was then, as a young girl having seen the level of suffering and inequalities associated with poverty, and influenced by her uncle Philip Gunawardena, who was aggressively involved in the anti-British movement, she became exposed to the activities of the socialist movement.

She was known to be ‘rebellious’ from her younger days. She defied her father, who vehemently discouraged her entering university education, but with the backing of her two uncles, she entered the university and graduated. Even at the age of 78, she had not changed much in her attitudes and convictions.

Decision-making

Why did she decide to embrace socialism when the cream of the Lanka Sama Samaja Party (LSSP) at the time was made up of either the upper middle class or rich families? She felt, it had nothing to do whether one came from the poorest family or an aristocratic family, but what matters was one’s intentions and values to achieve results, in order to help the majority.”

Vivian Gunawardena’s intensifying activities within the LSSP brought her to a close association with Leslie Goonawardena, the chief propagandist at the time. Finally she fell in love with him, but her father once again opposed to the match, as the two families were of different castes! Apart from formal family disagreements, Leslie Goonawardena was a Christian and a revolutionary, who was under surveillance by the British Colonial regime at the time. Vivien in her normal fashion endured it all, until finally a judicial mediation helped her to get married to Leslie Goonawardena in 1939.

Vivian Gunawardena entered Parliament on the LSSP ticket between 1956–60, 1964–65 and 1970–77 and served as the Junior Minister of Health towards the latter part. She was also a member of the Colombo Municipal Council on several occasions. Being a life-long trade unionist, she dedicated her services as the President of the All Ceylon Local Government Workers’ Association until her death.

LSSP policy

We focussed next on a vital point with regard to policy decisions of the LSSP. The writer was curious to find out as to why the LSSP did not think of grooming a charismatic young leader, such as Vasudeva Nanayakkara or Wickremabahu Karunaratne for the development of the party at the time?

You mentioned the word Wickremabahu, she exclaimed! “Nothing will make me think in terms of Wickremabahu as a leader of a political party that we are aiming to create by making equality in living standards. I think Wickremabahu’s coming into this movement was accidental! Vasudeva Nanayakkara is so erratic, and he is not capable of working in an organised fashion”.

You know in life quite often, you come across many things and situations where you don’t argue and try to win over the majority. You can’t do it all the time! You have to sometimes knuckle under and see how you can convince the majority, and entice them to your side without harming your party. But to leave the party and start another faction against your own party would be to lessen the future influence and the ability of that party to achieve its goals“(Sic).

There are, of course, several suitable candidates at the moment in the party, but the fact of the matter is, to become a leader of a political party, one should also be educated. And if I may give a direct answer to your question with regard to the future material, Yes, I admit, the LSSP has not achieved that important base“.

Troublemakers

Diverging our conversation into another area where the LSSP was branded as ‘trouble makers’, as back as 1956, and accused of organising various industrial strikes that crippled the progress of the country, the writer became anxious to find out how the general public could have faith in the LSSP in the future, considering such catastrophic situations of the past?

“That’s very unfair and untrue,” said she, expressing that it was the LSSP, which started the union movement in Sri Lanka. ‘In the absence of a trade union movement, workers were helpless and there was no way of safeguarding the interests of the working forces; we fought for the basic pension rights and index linked wage rises to help the working classes to keep them on a par with the rising cost of living. You know, even the workers today have forgotten what the LSSP did for them! We brought development plans into the budget as we believed in actual unionism, as a working class movement, to give a better standard of living for the workers and their children“.

Nationalisation of tea plantations became the next topic of conversation and how the LSSP was blamed for the introduction inappropriate legislation to curb imports, which resulted in creating numerous queues whereby pushed the general public into untold misery. It was then the people started to direct an accusing finger at the LSSP for shortsighted and closed economic policies adopted by the LSSP while sharing power with the SLFP.

Vivian Gunawardena viewed this problem from a different angle altogether, and said: “Actually, the ruination of the plantation industry took place after the privatisation, and not before! The plantation industry was the highest income-earning asset in the country before nationalisation, but nationalisation was done when the foreigners started to take away the major share of the income. They were not re-investing; neither did they improve working and living conditions of the workers. Colvin (Colvin R. de Silva) was just about to introduce a housing scheme for the estate workers and establish community centres et al, when we were thrown out of the coalition in 1975! Felix Dias didn’t allow us to carry out our programmes, what we had in mind for the estate workers. We never got the time to fulfil our commitments to the people. Today even Thondaman himself says, it is not profitable because the UNP handed the estates over to the private sector over five-year period.”

Dr.

The LSSP had the best of brains and intellectuals, such as Dr. N.M. Perera, Dr. Colvin R. de Silva, Leslie Goonewardena, Bernard Soyza and yourself, yet the LSSP failed to make an impact on the masses for the past 50 years or so, and the LSSP was never elected to power! What would have been the missing element in the LSSP? The writer asked her finally.

The answer to that question she said was due to the fragmentation within the party into ‘Communist’ and ‘Samasamajist,‘ within a very short period time. Two factions of the same party opposed each other to Stalin’s ideology in the Soviet Union while accepting socialism. The Socialism adopted by Vivien Gunawardena batch was far more superior than to what existed in Russia!

tilakfernando@gmail.com

යුද හමුදාවේ පවත්නා පශ්චාත් ව්‍යසන ක්ලමථ අක්‍රමතාවය (PTSD) පිලිබඳව අධ්‍යනය

October 8th, 2017

Dr Neil Fernando and Dr Ruwan M Jayatunge

යුද හමුදාවේ පවත්නා පශ්චාත් ව්‍යසන ක්ලමථ අක්‍රමතාවය (PTSD) පිලිබඳව විශේෂඥ මනෝ වෛද්‍ය නීල් ප්‍රනාන්දු මහතාත් මමත් 2002 – 2006 කාලයේදී අධ්‍යනය කරන ලද අතර අප වෙත යොමු කරන ලද සොල්දාදුවන් 824 අතරින් සොල්දාදුවන් 56 දෙනෙකු පශ්චාත් ව්‍යසන ක්ලමථ අක්‍රමතාවයේ පූර්ණ ලක්‍ෂණ පෙන්වූ බව සොයා ගත්තෙමු. මෙම අධ්‍යනය සංග්‍රාමික පශ්චාත් ව්‍යසන ක්ලමථ අක්‍රමතාව (Combat Related PTSD) පිළිබඳව ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ කරන ලද ප්‍රථම අධ්‍යනයයි.

Combat Related PTSD Among The Sri Lankan Army Servicemen

 Dr Neil Fernando and Dr Ruwan M Jayatunge

Abstract

The study investigated combat related PTSD (Post Traumatic Stress Disorder) and psychosocial problems among Army servicemen who fought in the Eelam War in Sri Lanka. A total of eight hundred and twenty four (824) Sri Lankan Army servicemen of the infantry and services units who were referred to the Psychiatric ward Military Hospital Colombo were screened for combat related PTSD in the period August 2002 to March 2006. The soldiers were administered the PTSD Check List based on DSM 4 with a structured face to face interview  by the Consultant Psychiatrist of the Sri Lanka Army. Among the eight hundred and twenty four (824) Sri Lankan Army servicemen fifty six (56) were found with full blown symptoms of PTSD. The combatants with PTSD experienced psychosocial problems that affected their military, personal and family lives. Disciplinary infractions, low motivation, suicidal ideation, alcohol and substance abuse and family violence were identified among the victims. Effective interventions would be needed to treat combatants with combat related PTSD.

Key Words: Sri Lankan Army Servicemen, Eelam War, Post Traumatic Stress Disorder

Introduction

The 30 year armed conflict in Sri Lanka has produced a new generation of veterans at risk for the chronic mental health problems that resulted following prolonged exposure to the war. Over 100,000 members of the Sri Lanka Army had been directly or indirectly exposed to combat situations during these years.  A large number of combatants underwent traumatic battle events outside the range of usual human experience. These experiences include constantly living in a hostile  battle ravaged environment,  seeing fellow soldiers being killed or wounded and sight of unburied decomposing bodies, handling human remains,  hearing screams for help from the wounded, and of helplessly watching the wounded die without the possibility of being rescued etc. These war trauma experiences changed their psychological makeup drastically. Following the combat trauma in Sri Lanka, a significant number of combatants of the Sri Lanka Army were diagnosed with Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).

 The Sri Lankan Armed Conflict

Sri Lanka’s armed conflict was unique than other global conflicts and it had its own specifications. It was a conflict between the Government Forces and a rebel group better known as the LTTE (The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) whose intensions were racial separation. The conflict started with small guerrilla attacks and later evolved in to a massive armed conflict. The conflict took place predominantly in the Northern part of Sri Lanka.

The LTTE launched attacks against the military and civil targets from 1976 to 2009 killing a large number of people and disabling thousands. The LTTE was regarded as the most lethal terrorist group in the world. In the subsequent years the LTTE was banned in UK, US, India and in Canada.

The LTTE attacked the Sri Lankan armed forces with modern weapons. The LTTE used numerous unconventional methods to fight the Sri Lankan Forces using child soldiers and suicide bombers.  Sri Lankan military forces had to deploy its entire bayonet strength for nearly 30 years. The Northern conflict became one of the longest conflicts in the recent history.

From 1987 to 2009, the Sri Lanka Army had conducted major military operations against the separatists in which a large number of soldiers participated. In 2009 May the Sri Lankan government declared that the country won the war against the LTTE. The victory came at a huge price. The war caused lasting symptoms of paralyzing anxiety, grief, and hopelessness among the victims. The Eelam War created a collective trauma.

The Eelam War in Sri Lanka had generated a considerable number of soldiers affected by combat related stress. Although psychological trauma experienced by the soldiers was colossal it has been the least discussed. Deplorably Psychological wounds of the Eelam war were not addressed appropriately and the deleterious effects of combat trauma still affect the combatants.

Combat Related PTSD and Sri Lankan Combatants

The prolonged war in Sri Lanka has triggered widespread psychological trauma among the soldiers. The victims experienced intrusive thoughts, flashbacks, nightmares, intense rage, apathy, cynicism, alienation, depression, and mistrust and reduced life interests. These psychological scars affect in their daily lives making them dysfunctional and vulnerable.

The studies have shown that PTSD could be a disabling condition that affects the war veterans. Norris et al. (2002) indicate that Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) represents a common, if not the most prevalent, mental health problem in community studies in post-conflict areas.

There were no comprehensive studies to address the combat trauma reactions that surfaced among the Sri Lanka Army soldiers. It became a timely requirement to study the impact of combat stress reactions among the servicemen who faced one of the deadliest conflicts of the 21st Century.

Method

This study was conducted by the Visiting Psychiatrist of the Sri Lanka Army with the permission of the Medical Advisor -Sri Lanka Army Medical Corps. From August 2002 to March 2006, eight hundred and twenty four (824) Sri Lankan Army servicemen of the infantry and services units who were referred to the Psychiatric ward Military Hospital Colombo were screened for combat related PTSD. This study was conducted while the soldiers were still on active duty.

The study sample consisted of servicemen referred to the Psychiatric Unit Military Hospital Colombo during August 2002 to March 2006. Mainly the referrals were done by the medical officers of the OPD, Consultants in the Medical and Surgical units, Palaly Military Hospital, Victory Army Hospital Anuradhapura and other military treatment centers. The affected combatants had behavioral problems, psychosomatic ailments, depression and anxiety related symptoms, self-harm, attempted suicides, alcohol and substance abuse, and misconduct stress behaviors. The sample consisted of 824 (male = 806 , female = 18) combatants of the Sri Lanka Army.

Client safety guidelines were observed during the study and informed consent was obtained and the methods used ensured participants’ anonymity. These soldiers were administered the PTSD Check List based on the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (American Psychiatric Association, 2000) with a structured face to face interview. This schedule designed from similar trauma questionnaires used elsewhere in the world to detect PTSD.

Results

Study results among the Sri Lanka Army soldiers and officers were as follows:

PTSD rate is 6.7% following analysis of questionnaire from 824 combatants.

PTSD Numbers

Full criteria      56

Partial  6

Exposure to combat was significantly greater among those who were deployed in the North and East of Sri Lanka. The percentage of study subjects whose responses met the screening criteria for major depression, generalized anxiety, or PTSD was significantly higher after serving in the above mentioned areas.

Among the 824 Sri Lankan combatants 135 (16.38%) were diagnosed with Adjustment Disorder,   129 (15.65%) were diagnosed with Depressive Disorder, 78 (9.46%) were diagnosed with Psychiatric illnesses such as Schizophrenia, Bipolar Affective Disorder and Acute Transient Psychotic Disorder, 65 (7.88%) were with Somatoform Disorder, 89 (10.8%) with Dissociative Disorder, 27 (3.27%) with Traumatic Brain Injury and 29 (3.51%) with Alcohol Abuse and Dependence and Substance Abuse Disorder.

The combatants with full-blown symptoms of PTSD were found with following associations:

Those who have served in the operational areas (for more than 3 years)                                                        45

Sustained grievous injuries –                   15

Sustained none grievous injuries”            22

Witnessed Killing-                                    49

Past attempted suicides-                           17

Experienced childhood trauma                 30

Results suggest that exposure to active combat may be responsible for stress reactions such as PTSD among the combatants.  The soldiers affected by war trauma had behavioral problems and their productivity was plummeting. Frequently the soldiers who had positive features of combat related stress without any physical disabilities were compelled to serve in the operational areas and engage in active combat. Some were charged with malingering when they tried to seek medical attention. A large number of Sri Lankan soldiers have become deserters over the past few decades. The numbers are exceeding over 50, 000 (AFP, 2011).

Sri Lankan Combatants with Complex PTSD

Some of the Sri Lankan combatants with full blown PTSD showed a wider range of clinical symptomatology with sever psychosocial impairments and these veterans would fit in to the diagnostic category of DESNOS (Disorders of extreme stress not otherwise specified) or Complex Post Traumatic Stress Disorder (C-PTSD). According to Herman (1992) Complex

Post-traumatic stress disorder (C-PTSD) is a psychological injury that results from protracted exposure to prolonged social and/or interpersonal trauma in the context of either captivity or entrapment those results in the lack or loss of control, helplessness, and deformations of identity and sense of self. Luxenberg, Spinazzola, & van der Kolk (2001) elucidate that characteristic of DESNOS is trauma which involves interpersonal victimization, multiple traumatic events, or, events of prolonged duration with disturbances in six areas of functioning  such as   regulation, of affect and impulses,  attention or consciousness, self-perception ,relations with others, somatization  and systems of meaning. During the Eelam War in Sri Lanka a large number of combatants experienced traumatic events that shook their foundations of beliefs about safety. They were exposed to combat for long periods and some had spent over decades in the operational areas constantly facing hostile enemy attacks. War was a cumulative traumatic experience for most of them.

Psychosocial Problems Associated with Combat Trauma

Combatants with war trauma experience problems in their living, working, learning, and social environments. Combat trauma has created potent barriers that obstruct recovery and personal growth. Post war researches of the Vietnam, Iraq and Afghanistan wars have shown that the combat exposure could negatively affect the mental health of the combatants. Hoge et al.(2004) indicate that exposure to combat results in considerable risk of mental health problems, including PTSD, major depression, substance abuse, impairment in social functioning, an inability to work, and the increased use of health care services. These psychosocial problems have domino effects that can last for many years. The Sri Lankan Army Servicemen diagnosed with PTSD need effective psychosocial rehabilitation to acquire functionality, recovery and reintegration.

Alcohol and Substance Abuse

Jacobsen et al. (2001) point out that 22-43% of people living with PTSD have a lifetime, prevalence rate of substance use disorders and the rate for, veterans is as high as 75%. The studies based on Vietnam and Afghan veterans in the US reveal that alcohol and substance abusers could be potential health hazards that go hand in hand with combat trauma. Analysis of data collected in a 1977 U.S. national epidemiologic study of substance abuse revealed that Vietnam veterans had substantially higher levels of alcohol consumption and binge drinking, than comparable groups of Vietnam era” veterans with no Vietnam service other veterans and non-veterans (Boscarino, 1981).

Alcohol, tobacco and cannabis abuse are most prevalent problems among the Sri Lankan combatants experiencing war trauma and these practices lead to a significant health risk. The soldiers with PTSD often use alcohol and other substances to reduce the impact of intrusive memories, nightmares and break the social isolation. Alcohol and substance abuse have caused intense health, economical and family problems and the veterans need effective coping strategies to overcome the negative influence.

Domestic Violence

Sri Lankan women generally enjoy a higher degree of gender equality than, many women in other countries in the region (UN- Human, Development Report 2001). However in the recent past there have been upsurge in acts of domestic violence and violence against women in Sri Lanka. The impact of the armed conflict on women in Sri Lanka has been felt in different ways by women of different ethnicities and social classes and by, women living in different areas of the country (OMCT 2002). According to the Police Women and Child Protection Bureau of Sri Lanka anywhere from 8,000 to 10,000 cases of domestic violence are reported to police annually. Domestic violence has become a pervasive societal problem in Sri Lanka with the Eelam War.

Combat trauma is a collective ordeal and both soldiers and their families face the psychosocial repercussions of war. Recent research has provided compelling evidence of mental health problems in military spouses and children, including post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), related to the war-zone deployments, combat exposures, and post-deployment mental health symptoms experienced by military service members in the family (Nash & Litz ,2013).

Often the families experience frustration, anxiety, marital problems, and behavioral problems. When the stress is overwhelming spouses emotionally distancing themselves from their husbands creating a deep void in the family communication. Combat trauma has created significant unhappiness, stress and conflict in marriages and families. Many spouses and children have become the secondary victims of the war.

The studies have shown that combat trauma linked to domestic violence. A number of studies have found that veterans’ PTSD symptoms can negatively impact family relationships and that family relationships may exacerbate or ameliorate a veteran’s PTSD and comorbid conditions (Price & Stevens, 2010). Jordan et al. (1992) indicate that Male veterans with PTSD are more likely to report marital or relationship problems, higher levels of parenting problems, and generally poorer family adjustment than veterans without PTSD.

Family violence is a widespread problem that occurs among the combatants with PTSD in Sri Lanka. Of the 56 Sri Lankan soldiers with PTSD 13 of them reported that they frequently physically abuse their spouses. They often used force to inflict injury, either emotional or physical, upon their spouses.

Suicide and Deliberate Self-Harm

Suicide is regarded as one of the major public health problems in Sri Lanka and has received considerable attention in recent years.  According to the World Health Organization Sri Lanka has one of the highest rates of suicide in the world (WHO, 1999).   Fernando et al. (2010) argue that deaths from suicide reached a peak in Sri Lanka in 1995. This phenomenon occurred exactly twelve years after the Eelam War.

Numerous researches indicate that there is a correlation between combat trauma and suicidal behaviors (Knox, 2008). Studies suggest that suicide risk is higher in persons with PTSD (Ferrada, Asberg, ., Ormstad, & Lundin 1998). Many researchers believe that    disturbing symptoms of PTSD increase the suicide risk and others of the view that comorbid psychiatric symptoms that are associated with PTSD drive the victims to commit suicide.  Studies estimated that patients suffering from PTSD have up to a seven-fold increased incidence of suicide, and four-fold increased risk of death from all external sources (Bullman &Kang, 1994).

There are many psychosocial and economic factors that contribute to suicides in Sri Lanka. Some Sociologists had viewed that the prolonged armed conflict in the North had drastic effects on the suicide rates in Sri Lanka.  During the past 15 years in war-torn Sri Lanka, it is estimated that nearly 50000 persons have been killed. Deaths due to suicide, in the same period, are estimated to be 106000 – twice the number due to war (WHO, 2001).  A significant number of soldiers have committed suicide in the battlefield during the Eelam War. In addition, a considerable amount of uncompleted suicides and self harm had been reported. ). Based on the said study of the 56 Sri Lankan soldiers diagnosed with PTSD 17 of them had suicidal attempts in the past.  According to the Military Spokesperson of the Sri Lanka Army from 2009 to 2012 postwar period nearly 400 soldiers had committed suicide (Sriyananda, 2012).

Psychosocial Rehabilitation of the Combatants

Rehabilitation is an ecological approach that aims at the long term recovery and maximum self-sufficiency. In 1996 the World Health Organization came out with a consensus statement on psychosocial rehabilitation. The WHO defined psychosocial rehabilitation as a process that facilitates for individuals who are impaired, disabled or handicapped by a mental disorder to reach an optimal level of independent functioning in the community (WHO, 1996).

Combatants with war trauma need psychosocial rehabilitation to recover. Warren (2002) of the view that addressing the broader emotional, social and economic needs of survivors is a critical aspect of the rehabilitation process.  Psychosocial Rehabilitation practices help war veteran’s re-establish normal roles in the community, independence and their reintegration into community life. These interventions should help to manage behaviors, perceptions and reactions to the physical / psychological injury or condition which may hold back the process of recovery or maintenance of the veteran’s well-being.

A combat veteran’s transition to civilian society from combat is fraught with complications in familial and interpersonal relations, vocational endeavors, and at times, adherence to societal and legal boundaries (Fairweather & Garcia, 2007).  A range of social, educational, occupational, behavioral and cognitive interventions would be needed to address the needs of the combatants who were affected by war trauma. The Sri Lanka Army combat veterans with PTSD will need an effective psychosocial rehabilitation process to reintegrate in to civilian society after their military service.

Case Discussion

1)                  Private UG met with a blast injury in 1997 near Thaladi camp in the Northern Sri Lanka. He was wounded and psychologically shattered by the blast. After several months of the incident he complained of severe headache, insomnia and unexplainable fear feelings. Private UG experienced nightmares related to the blast injury and always wanted to avoid the places and conversations related to the blast injury. Despite the overwhelming stress he was compelled to serve in the war zone. He became irritated and could not control his anger. Several times he was punished for disciplinary infractions by his platoon leaders. His private life was falling apart as well.  Often he experienced sexual dysfunctions and became abusive towards his spouse.  As a result of family turmoil, his wife left him. Following family problems and work related stress Private UG tried to commit suicide. In 2002 He was referred for psychological therapy and diagnosed with PTSD. He was treated with medication, CBT and EMDR which helped to minimize his anxiety related symptoms.  He was treated as an inpatient at the Military Hospital Colombo and then referred for family counselling.  The follow up revealed that his wife had returned home and Private UG is leading a productive life now.

2)                   Lt BXX26 witnessed the death of seven soldiers in Paranthan (in Northern Sri Lanka) following mortar attacks. Although he was physically unharmed he witnessed how the incoming mortar killed seven of his men immediately. Their bodies were blown in to pieces and this horrible event caused an acute stress reaction in him. Later he was evacuated to Colombo. After the Paranthan incident Lt BXX26 experienced intrusions, flashbacks, nightmares and avoidance. He was diagnosed as having PTSD.  Lt BXX26 felt that he was personally responsible for the deaths of seven soldiers in Paranthan and had severe survival guilt. Following overwhelmed negative feelings several times he tried to commit suicide. His treatment took years and finally the doctors were able to diminish the survival guilt and suicidal ideation.

3)                  L/ Cpl WXX43 became a psychological casualty of the war after handling human remains at Mulative- Comma Point.   He could not forget the decomposed and swollen bodies that he buried. Some of the victims were known to him and some were his platoon members who fought with him against the enemy. The bodies were half swollen and putrefied. Some of the dead bodies were eaten by the Monitor Lizards (Varanus exanthematicus). It was a dreaded picture that he could not forget. Following these events he felt despair. Gradually his nights became disturbed; he was depressed and had no aim in life. He stopped associating with people and became more withdrawn. His mind was full of past combat events and sometimes he had a sense of re-experiencing the traumatic battle events especially the events that occurred at Comma Point. While experiencing PTSD symptoms Corporal W became extremely hostile. Once he physically punished his teenage daughter and she was hospitalized for several days.  He became disgusted with life and numerous times he planned to commit suicide.  He was consuming large amounts of alcohol to evade startling reactions and nightmares. In 2003 he decided to take his own life and took Organophosphate pesticide. His life was saved by immediate hospitalization. After the medical treatment he was referred for a psychological evaluation and found with full blown symptoms of PTSD.

4)                  Private SXXT31 served in the operational area for 9 years and firsthand experienced combat trauma. He witnessed how his unit members got killed following enemy fire, mortar blasts and artillery attacks etc. and became severally overwhelmed while handling human remains. After experiencing these events over a long period he suffered severe transient headaches and loss of memory. By 2002 he was diagnosed with full blown symptoms of PTSD. He was frequently troubled by nightmares and flashbacks. When he experienced flashbacks he used to re live the traumatic event and often became disconnected from reality. Once Private SXXT31 went in to a dissociative flashback and he had squeezed the neck of his five year old daughter. When the little girl was suffocating his wife accidentally noticed the horrible event and alerted the neighbors and saved the little girl from Private SXXT31’s strong grip. The girl was immediately hospitalized and later recovered. Private SXXT31 became extremely distressed and felt guilty after realizing that he tried to strangle his own daughter. He had no memory of the incident and did not realize how he grabbed the daughter’s neck.

5)                  Private MXX33 underwent traumatic battle events in the North and as a result of war trauma he suffered full blown symptoms of PTSD. His condition was undetected and untreated for a number of years. After he became a psychological casualty of the war his behavior changed drastically. He became hostile and several times he was charged with disciplinary infractions. He could not serve in the operational areas. He felt uncomfortable to travel in military vehicles which trigged after seeing a land mine explosion in Mannar and to carry fire arms. He could not get a help from his unit and finally decided to become AWOL. He found a job in a private company as a driver.  While he was employed in the company his PTSD symptoms troubled him once again. He had nightmares, intrusions and flashbacks. His memory was fading and he could not concentrate. His hostile behavior led his wife and children to leave him.  Following stress, isolation and depression he tried to commit suicide by hanging. His neighbors immediately intervened and hospitalized him. At the hospital he revealed that every night in his dreams he used to see the horrible events of the war. When he was experiencing flashbacks he could hear gun fire and the helicopter sounds.   He could not tolerate noises and his emotions had become numbed. After structured clinical interviews Private MXX33 was diagnosed with PTSD and sent for appropriate treatment.  He rejoined the Army and today serves as a productive member. He is now free of suicidal thoughts.

Treatment Methods

In Sri Lanka the psychological victims of war trauma are generally treated with Allopathic medicine, traditional Ayurvedic medicine, Psychotherapy and Spiritual therapies. For treatment procedures of combat related PTSD medication and psychotherapy are widely used.

Drug therapy is an essential component of PTSD treatment in Sri Lanka. Serotonin Reuptake Inhibiters like fluoxatine paroxatine are often used to combat depression and anxiety.  These drugs provide symptomatic relief. Sometimes Antipsychotics (typical and atypical) are prescribed to relieve severe anxiety, agitation, delusions, hallucinations and disordered thought.

Psychotherapy and counselling are important therapies in treating PTSD. According to Bisson et al. (2007) the first-line psychological treatment for PTSD should be Trauma-focused cognitive-behavioural therapy or EMDR (Eye Movement Desensitization and Reprocessing). Among the Psychotherapies CBT and EMDR are broadly used to treat Sri Lankan combatants.   EMDR is one of the evidence based effective approaches in the treatment of PTSD (Bisson et al, 2007). Sri Lankan combat veterans diagnosed with combat related PTSD showed significant improvements from pre- to post treatment following EMDR (Jayatunge , 2008).

Some combatants and their families prefer to use indigenous treatment methods as supportive therapy.  In addition spiritual therapy and meditation (Methha meditation -meditation of loving-kindness, Vipassanna meditation -mindfulness mediation) are widely used in rehabilitation centers.

Conclusion

These findings indicate that combat related PTSD is becoming one of the critical mental health problems among soldiers in Sri Lanka. The affected combatants with war trauma experience problems in their living, working, learning, and social environments. War trauma has drastically impacted their mental health and long-term functioning. Effective measures have to be implemented to heal combat trauma in Sri Lanka.

  Dr. Neil Fernando

Dr. Neil Fernando (MBBS, MD) is a Senior Consultant Psychiatrist and a Senior Lecturer at Kotalawala Defense University. He was the visiting Psychiatrist of the Sri Lanka Army.  Dr Neil graduated from the Faculty of Medicine, University of Peradenitya in 1979 and joined the state health service.   Dr Neil Fernando is one of the best known psychiatrists in Sri Lanka today. He is the pioneer in community mental health services in Sri Lanka.

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Expressways,corruption and flipside of development

October 8th, 2017

BY DR. PRASANNA COORAY Courtesy The Island

We, Sri Lankans, never learn from our past mistakes. After all, it is popularly said that Sri Lankans don’t remember “anything” for more than one week.

Not many moons ago the Southern Expressway wreaked havoc by worsening the flood situation in the South. It not only got inundated in several places, between Kaduwela and Matara, but also caused areas, on either side of it, to be submerged. The locations, the expressway, and its immediate environs, went under water last May, include the 32 km post area in Galenigama and the Nilwala entry point, in Godagama Matara. The Nilwala entrance went about seven feet under water. The Matara-Akuressa, Matara-Hakmana and Matara-Kamburupitiya highways remained submerged for days on end.

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The environmental degradation, associated with expressway building, including the forest cover destruction, fragmentation of wetlands, and interference with the fragile flood plains, etc., contributes to this worsening flood situation and other disasters like landslides that go hand in hand with floods. Even the Cabinet spokesmen, in the immediate aftermath of the floods, claimed the bigger damage to life and property had resulted from landslides that came along with floods, rather than due to the floods per se.

Central Expressway – the Fury of Kurunegala

No sooner the deluge has receded in the South than the government has embarked on another expressway building project, this time around, in the North Western Province. The stages 2 (Meerigama to Kurunegala, with a link road joining from Ambepussa) and 3 (Pothuhera to Galagedara) of the Central Expressway Project (CEP), commenced taking precedence over the stages I (Kadawatha to Mirigama) and IV (Kurunegala to Dambulla) of the project. As for the information, foreign funding for stages I and IV has very much lulled for some issues associated with the project implementation, including the failure of payment of compensation and resettlement of the displaced.

During the last couple of weeks, the outskirts of Kurunegala town has been a hotbed of agitation against the CEP. Sanjeewa Kulathilake, president of Kurunegala Parisaraya Surekeeme Ekamuthuwa (Collective for Protection of Kurunegala Environment), a resident of Henamulla, in Kurunegala, spoke to “The Island” on the plight they undergo in the hands of authorities.

“The lands for the construction of the expressway were identified and surveyed in 2014 during the tenure of the last government. We had meetings with the authorities then and we were told that the expressway will be built on pillars. They then categorically said it won’t be built on ground fill. They said that for land lost we will be paid compensation for 20 years ahead, and for a coconut palm, depending on the pluck, for five years ahead. Likewise, compensation was determined for paddy lands and other plantations. They said many fairytales like that then. They were the very same officials as now. Now they deny that they ever said these”.

Kulathilake, commenting on the sudden change in the stance of the authorities, “On June 27 (this year) the RDA tells us the road will be built on a ground fill and not on pillars as we were told before. The height of the ground fill will be 20 feet, and 26 feet in some places.

“We sent a petition to the President, with copies to the Prime Minister, Minister of Highways, Central Environment Authority (CEA), Agrarian Services Commissioner and 10 other institutions. To this day we have not received any response from the President’s office. Only the Prime Minister and CEA wrote back. The PM’s office, by letter dated 17.07.2017, said the issue will be settled within 30 days.

“Then we had a meeting with a representative of the PM’s office. He told us the project is now planned to be built on ground fill. Any consequences, like floods, could be seen only after the completion of the project. And he tells us that’s development.

“We understand that there have been serious malpractices with regard to granting of compensation. The people had been intimidated by the authorities to sign documents relating to compensation. They have neither shown the document nor were given a copy of it”.

The media had already exposed a lot of misdeeds associated with the CEP construction, from the credibility and competency of the firms involved, to the colossal sums of money to be spent on the building of the said segment of the expressway. As it is, a conservative estimate of the CEP stands at a whopping Rs. 4.2 billion per km, four times that of the Southern Expressway, opened four years ago. (A comparative analysis of the cost of expressway construction in Sri Lanka will be done later in this article). Many uncertainties are known to remain with regard to the future of the other two stages of the project, as well. Two reasons that are known to have come strongly with regard of this multi-billion rupee mega project are the diversion from the originally planned “above the ground” mode to “earth embankment” mode, and the failure to pay compensation and implement a justifiable resettlement plan for the people who are to lose their houses and lands.

A time tested flawed mode of construction?

Is “embankment” a flawed method of highway construction in Sri Lanka? From its face value, that is what is to be deduced, following the Southern Expressway fiasco a few months back. (It is also said that the construction of the High Level Road from Colombo to Ratnapura, as an alternative to the frequently flood hit Low Level Road, further worsened the flooding situation in areas like Hanwella and Kaduwela).

But the once bitten Road Development Authority (RDA) doesn’t seem to be twice shy. Its Project Engineer, SLakmal Bandaranayake, rejects the possibility of road building on embankment as a reason for flooding with regard to the CEP.

“Lack of enough viaducts was one reason for the flooding experienced with the Southern Expressway. But in the CEP we have taken enough cognizance of that situation. There will be a number of viaducts in the flood plains to avoid flooding”, commented Bandaranayake.

RDA, Chairman Nihal Sooriyarachchi, comparing and contrasting the construction methodology adopted in Southern Expressway with the CEP said, “If you take the Southern Expressway, from Kottawa to Godagama, nothing is on columns except the bridges and culverts. The CEP is different. It will have many viaducts to avoid flooding”.

The RDA bigwigs seem to be very confident about the assurance given by the Sri Lanka Land Reclamation and Development Corporation (SLLR&DC), with regard to the non-possibility of flooding as a result of the construction of CEP.

“The SLLR & DC, another governmental institution and a third party, conducted the hydrological studies and we have undertaken enough and more precautionary measures to avoid flooding as per their recommendations”, said Sooriyarachchi.

But activist Kulathilake is not ready to buy the RDA’s argument. “That’s a falsehood. I have asked them to show where the viaducts will be erected. They have failed to do that. Even according to the EIA report, through the entire length of 39.7 km from Mirigama to Kurunegala, it will have only 1.6 km length of viaducts”, said Kulathilake, contradicting the RDA.

Soil for construction

It is common practice in Sri Lanka to build expressways on embankments built with soil brought from elsewhere. This filling up process requires 120,000 cubic meters of soil for a km. The gargantuan volumes of soil and boulders needed for the building of highways are supplied through razing of hillocks and excavating large pits in the interior of the country. Structurally, this model, while fragmenting the land along the course of the expressway, that includes the ecologically sensitive areas like the wetlands and forests, has also given rise to a number of environmental (and social) problems by directly contributing to the flood debacle that we have come to experience lately. Some of the areas affected are Idulgoda kanda, Kaduruk Kanda, Tampana, Konpola, Rokke Kanda.

Ven. Wekadawela Rahula Thera of Centre for Environmental and Nature Studies (CENS), who is also in the forefront of the campaign to protect the Kurunegala environment said, “This mountain range is situated three to four km from Henamulla. All these belong to the western boundary of the central hills of the country. Tampana, in particular, is a great water store. It is always soaked with water. All the water that falls down these mountains during the rains, then collect into the Venru wewa. In future, when Venru wewa reaches its spill level the water will again collect like in a tank, formed by the raised earth embankment of the expressway, worsening the floods situation in Kurunegala”.

Kurunegala is prone to deluge during heavy rains. Kulathilake reminded the devastation caused to the Kurunegala city in 2012, the worst inundation they experienced in the recent past.

Sooriyarachchi, commenting on the mitigatory actions against floods embedded in the project design said, “In catchment areas you have to calculate the maximum rainfall that occurred in 100 years, which is called 100 year flood. Due to climate change a larger margin is kept for the safety factor, which we have done”.

Two reasons for a highway to go on pillars Sooriyarachchi identified as “when you go through catchment areas like paddy fields” and “on encountering bad geological conditions”.

“Even when you go through paddy fields you can go on embankment leaving necessary space for water to flow through, without causing floods upstream. In areas of bad soil, you need to pile into the bedrock and erect pillars. We have done our calculations and have ascertained what distance need to go on earth embankment and on viaducts respectively. Despite that some people demanding the entire length to be traversed on pillars”.

Sooriyarachchi identifies economical reasons as the main cause for considering earth embankment over the other options in expressway construction in Sri Lanka.

However, the economic factors cannot be taken for granted and needs to be weighed against the other factors such as social and environment costs and above all, the safety of people considering the enormity of the project in question.

Production cost of expressways in Sri Lanka

To say the least, the cost of expressway building in Sri Lanka is not only enormous in absolute terms, but also disproportional in relative terms. In absolute terms – it spends much more money per km than many other countries around the world. In relative terms – it spends more money on expressway building than any other country of similar economic standing in the world. (Mind you, all these calculations done for Sri Lanka are for expressways built on earth embankments as opposed to pillars, the former according to the experts being the cheaper method. Yet, the Sri Lankan figures are soaring high, see Table 2).Prof. Amal Kumarage, senior professor, Department of Transport and Logistics Management of University of Moratuwa, who meticulously studied the economics of road building over the past couple of decades in Sri Lanka, stipulates that in the past, the cost of constructing roads had matched the global norms. However, over a period of 5 – 6 years, this has increased 2 – 3 times over and above the rate of inflation. Prof. Kumarage’s publication titled “The Real Cost of Highway Development – who has got the numbers right?” cites University of Oxford’s “benchmarks” for global road construction costs in developing countries. The University of Oxford has studied over 300 express/ highway constructions around the world in arriving its recommendations.

Table 1

 

 

 

 

 

Kumarage argues that even the “high” averages of the global expressway construction costs are significantly lower than the costs in Sri Lanka. Construction costs can sometimes become high as they are heavily influenced by the frequency and type of interchanges and other structures, especially tunneling. Even allowing for such variations, Kumarage points out the costs incurred for some of the expressways in Sri Lanka are simply unacceptable (see Table 2).

Table 2

 

 

 

 

The above Table, in no uncertain terms, depicts how the costs of expressways in Sri Lanka have varied, between the projects, as well as between different sections of the same project. All expressway constructions except the Kottawa – Godagama sections of the Southern Expressway, have been much higher than the Oxford University recommended maximum accepted cost per km. Further, the figures for Sri Lanka are far exceeding than the average for India (2.7 mn USD per km), 6 lane Islamabad-Peshawar (0.8, built in 2007) and 6 lane Hazra (5.4, built in 2017), the latter two in Pakistan, just for a comparison with other countries in the region.

The spectre of “corruption”

The Oxford University, as well as the World Bank (which had also done a separate study on the cost of expressway construction worldwide) categorically identifies “corruption” as a crucial factor responsible for the inflated cost of expressway construction in any country.

Although the RDA argues that building on earth embankments (even at the expense of all the social and environmental risks associated with it) is the method of choice for minimizing the cost of expressway construction in Sri Lanka, what had eluded from the perimeter of the discussion is the “corruption” factor.

The scientific studies have stipulated that corruption is the main reason for soaring costs associated with the expressway construction in any country. Unless this is put right, Sri Lanka should not proceed in its grandiose expressway projects, which have come to cause severe strain on the country’s economy and development. This has become an all important reason for country’s worsening inflation, cost of living, poverty, as well as under development. The hard earned foreign exchange is siphoned off for expressway construction. Once this is sorted out, the country can carry out these projects without harming people, all forms of life and the environment.

Hi-tech number plates to keep tabs on vehicles.

October 8th, 2017

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

A Radio Frequency Identification system to be introduced to new number plates will help police to keep close tabs on vehicle movements.
The new number plates will be introduced next year, Motor Traffic Commissioner General Jagath Chandrasiri told the Sunday Times. By Damith Wickremasekara

Is this Infringement of fundamental rights?? Sri Lankan Human rights lawyers will have a field day?

Government is in the process of issuing E-National Identity Cards ( NIC)  soon, where all the information such as driving licence .blood group ,driving licence number ,next of kin , address .tax files ,( income ) ,etc. etc. .Now State Apparatchik will know where someone’s  car has gone during the day and mileage done .Husbands  cannot   go to see their  mistress  and wives cannot drivee to see the paramours .Buddhist monks cannot got for evening parties or meet political affiliates . (Politicians cannot stealthily visit their opposition parties to discuss underhand deals) or private bus owners use unauthorised routes to collect passengers on the sly?

Even UK does not have that facility and I am not sure about USA which is de facto military state has such system? Even Russia does not have such facilities to check the car number plate unless you have camera which read the number plates and automatically connect with the system to check in the DVLA (Driving and Vehicle Registration Agency’s data base.

I am sure that that someone is bright enough will go to courts and claim that government is violating Fundamental Rights and obtain an Injunction.

Many people are not aware of the fact that, introduction of number plates printed in a printing  shop brought in by a foreigner who introduced it to the  a Minister of Transport at that time and promised to pay him few rupees per number plate ?( just like the case of Cement Bagging Factory in the port in the midst of a controversial claim that someone was getting few rupees per bag when it leave the port or even the case of flour milling factory in Trinco there as some allegation of life time payments ) .

We need an efficient high-tech police force like in Europe with access to CCTV system on strategic locations along the roads and a broadband connected computer system in the police vehicle to check the details of culprits when they notice a violation.

Such system where you identify the car and note where they have been roaming around, people can get blackmailed?

One will wonder whether someone on the government has got a bright idea to claim a rupee for each number plate for having introduced such system.

National Transport Commission shall obtain public opinion before introducing such system and analyse the merits before spending tax payer money

Dr Sarath Obeysekera

සියළුම හෙද නිළධාරීන් සඳහා 1 ශ්‍රේණියේ උසස් වීම්

October 8th, 2017

සමස්ත ලංකා හෙද සංගමය.

ජනක සුගතදාස මහතා
ලේකම්
සෞඛ්යෙ හා දේශීය වෛද් අමාත්යංශය
කොළඔ 10

මහත්මයානනි,

මුල් පත්වීමේ දින සිට සේවා කාලය වසර 12ක් සම්පූර්ණ කළ සියළුම හෙද  නිළධාරීන් සඳහා 1 ශ්රේණියේ උසස් වීම් ලබා ගැනීම

මෙරට 33000 පමණ  වන සමස්ථ හෙද කාර්ය මණ්ඩලය සැලකූ විට ඔවුන්ගේ විවිධ හෙද කණ්ඩායම් අතර වැටුප් විෂමතා ගණනාවක් නිර්මාණය වී තිබේ. ඒ තුල ඔවුන්ට ශ්‍රේණිගත උසස්වීම් සඳහා ගතකළ යුතු කාළය පිලිබඳව කර ඇති වෙනස්කම් නිසා සිදුව ඇති වැටුප් විෂමතා මෙන්ම, නව හෙද ව්‍යවස්ථාව ක‍්‍රියාත්මක කිරීමේදී ශ්‍රේණිගත උසස් වීම් සඳහා කාළය වැඩිකිරීම මගින්ද වැටුප් විෂමතා ගණනාවක් නිර්මාණය කර ඇත. මේතුල හෙද හෙදියන් අතර වැටුප් අර්බුද ගණනාවක් හට ගෙන ඇත.

මෙම වැටුප් විෂමතා අතරට එක්වන අමාත්‍ය මණ්ඩල ලේකම්ගේ අමප /12/0074/509/003හා 2014/07/04 දිනැති ලිපියෙන් 2014/06/19 දිනැති අමාත්‍ය මණ්ඩල රැස්වීමේදී ප‍්‍රතිපත්තිමය කරුණක් ලෙස සලකා 2001/10/11 දින සිට 2005/12/31 දින දක්වා හෙද සේවාවේ 11 ශ්‍රේණියේ වසර 07 ක සක‍්‍රීය හා සතුටුදායක සේවා කාළයක් සහිත, මුල් පත්වීමේ දින සිට වසර 12ක සේවා කාළයක් සම්පූර්ණ කරන හෙද නිළධාරීන් 1 ශ්‍රේණියට උසස් කිරීමට ගෙන ඇති තීරණය නිසා හෙද සේවාවේ පැවති වැටුප් විෂමතා ගැටළු තවත් වැඩි වර්ධනය කර තිබේ.

ඉන් අනතුරුවද අමප/12/0358/509/015හා 2014/09/19 දිනැති ලිපියෙන් දැනුම්දුන් 2014/09/04 දිනැති අමාත්‍ය මණ්ඩල රැස්වීමේදීද ප‍්‍රතිපත්තිමය කරුණක් සේ සලකා රාජ්‍ය සේවා කොමිෂන් සභාවේ ලේකම්ගේ නිර්දේශයෙන් 2006/01/01 දින සිට 2010/10/31 දින දක්වා ඉහත උසස්වීම් සඳහා තවත් හෙද කණ්ඩායම් කීපයකට අවස්ථාව ලබාදී ඇත.

ඉන් පසුව හෙද සේවාවේ ඇති වී ඇති වැටුප් විෂමතා නිවැරදි කරන ලෙස ඉල්ලා හෙද වෘත්තීය සමිති ගෙන ගිය වෘත්තීය ක‍්‍රියාමාර්ග හමුවේ 2017/05/02 දිනැති අමාත්‍ය මණ්ඩල රැස්වීමේදී නැවතත් ප‍්‍රතිපත්තිමය කරුණක් සේ සලකා අමප/16/1188/718/052හා2017/05/10 දිනැති ලිපියෙන් 2001/10/11 දිනට පෙරාතුව සිටි හෙද කණඩායම් සඳහාද වසර 12න් 1ශ්‍රේණියේ උසස්වීම ලබාදීමට කටයුතු කර ඇත.

මේවන විට හෙද සේවාව තුළ 2010/11/01 දිනෙන් පසුව මුල්පත්වීමේ දින සිට වසර 12 ක සේවා කාළය සම්පූර්ණ කළ හෙද නිලධාරීන් 4000කට ආසන්න පිරිසක් සිටී. නමුත් ඔවුන්ට 1ශ්‍රේණිය ලබා දී ඇත්තේ වසර 15 කිනි. ඔවුන් සඳහා ඉහත ක‍්‍රමවේදය අනුව උසස්වීම් ලබා දීමට කටයුතු කර නැත. එය ඔවුනට සිදුකර ඇති අසාධාරණයකි.

ඒ අනුව එම පිරිස් සඳහාද ඉහත උසස්වීම් ලබාදී ඇති ප‍්‍රතිපත්තිමය කරුණක් සේ සලකා ගෙන ඇති තීරණය පදනම් කරගෙන ඔවුන්ටද මුුල් පත්වීමේ දින සිට වසර 12 සම්පූර්ණ කිරීම මත 1වන ශ්‍රේණියේ උසස්වීම ලබා දීමට ක‍්‍රියා කරන මෙන් ඉල්ලා සිටිමු.

(මෙයට එරෙහිව 2017/10/10 වන දින පෙ.ව 10 ට බොරුල්ලේ පිහිිටි මානව හිමිකම් කොමිසම වෙත පැමිණිල්ලක් ඉදිරිපත් කිරීම සඳහා සංගමය කටයුතු සූදානම් කර ඇති අතර ඉදිරියේදී වෘත්තීය අරගලයක් සඳහා සැලසුම් කර ඇත. 

ස්තුතිය.

මෙයට,

හෙද නිළධාරි ගාමිණී කුමාරසිංහ

සභාපති

සමස්ත ලංකා හෙද සංගමය.

Enriching the political class

October 8th, 2017

Editorial Courtesy The Island


Last week’s celebration of 70 years of parliamentary democracy in Sri Lanka triggered debates and discussions at different levels countrywide. Several Speakers from the Parliaments of country’s belonging to the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation were here for the event commemorated with a special session of the incumbent Parliament when the predictable hosannas were sung praising the achievement. Churchill once famously said that “democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others.” The quote itself, experts say, was not minted by the famous British prime minister/orator though he used it in a speech in the House of Commons in 1947. The verbatim context of that speech makes abundantly clear that Churchill preceded the famous quote with the words “it has been said.”

While few, if any, will deny the benefits of representative democracy, it will be an interesting exercise to determine whether the people or their representatives have benefited more from the parliamentary system. In the years that have passed since the ceremonial inaugural session of then Ceylon’s first Parliament in October 1947, Members of Parliament have greatly benefited not only from the progressively increased emoluments, perquisites and privileges that have today scaled what many see as obscene heights. There is no escaping the reality that the system has enriched the political class beyond reason and it would not be wrong to say that most people by and large resent this. That is unsurprising given the condition of the vast majority of the people they represent evidence by the gleeful alacrity with which the media have seized on each and every one of their growing perks over the years and presented it to the wider public. This continuing exercise feeds the people with information ranging from what MPs eat at the subsidized parliamentary canteen and at what price, to the recent payment of a special monthly allowance of Rs. 100,000 to fund an electorate office.

Who can justify the grant of duty free vehicle permits to legislators? It can be argued with some degree of credibility that MPs need a decent vehicle to serve the electors. But giving them duty free permits to import luxury vehicles that are ordinarily very highly taxed, and allowing them to either flog the permits themselves or the vehicles once they are imported and pocket many millions, takes not just the cake but the whole bakery. It has been weakly argued that fighting elections cost a bomb and MPs must be given an opportunity to recoup their election expenditure. Uncomfortable questions like how they incurred such expenditure in the first instance are never asked. Though it has been said that Prime Minister SWRD Bandaranaike mortgaged his properties to fund the SLFP, there will not be many who went to the banks to fund even themselves. Wealthy politicians of an earlier vintage are known to have spent hugely from their own resources for the honor of serving the people. But such persons today would belong to the species rara avis. Businessmen who fund politicians do not do so for philanthropic reasons. Most financiers of politicians regard their funding as investments on which fat dividends can be collected with the patronage of winning candidates.

It is not the system that is bad but the people. Human nature is necessarily selfish and there is no political divide between government and opposition when parliamentarians vote themselves lavish perks. Dr. N.M. Perera, the late LSSP leader, was very much a fulltime politician. He did not practice a lucrative profession like some of his colleagues and, perhaps wondering how he could survive after retirement, was an early proponent of parliamentary pensions. Once granted, these were extended to surviving spouses. There has been frequent comment on the fact that MPs qualify for pensions after just five years of parliamentary service unlike public servants who have to serve many years to become entitled to the pension benefits. Husbands and wives have served in our Parliament and we would not be surprised if there were recipients of more than one pension!

While focusing on the negative aspects of the parliamentary system enabling its people to aggrandize themselves, we must never forget that it has over the 70 years of its existence also been of great service to the electors. MPs have been able to raise shortcomings in electorates in the House and find redress for constituents, initiate necessary public expenditure, focus on failures of governance and place those responsible before the bar of public opinion, become influential intermediaries – rightly or sometimes wrongly – between the public and the bureaucracy and much more. Our Parliament has produced some classy orators who could rank with the best in the world with the front benches on both sides of the House – and sometimes the backbench – including towering personalities who were ornaments of the legislature. There has always been the good with the bad and the fault of undesirables being elected to Parliament must be laid at the door of political parties for nominating them and the people themselves for electing them.

Democracy then, we must conclude, is the worst form of government except for the others. Thankfully we have been spared of those others by the failure of an attempted coup d’etat in 1962 and the effort by the JVP which now has some of its members elected to the legislature to overthrow the elected government in 1971 and 1988-89. Our people too have been using their franchise is far greater numbers than in many of the more developed democracies.

Video shows police officer attacking protester

October 8th, 2017

Courtesy The Daily Mirror

A video footage captured following the joint opposition-led protest held at Hambantota today, showed a senior police officer assaulting an arrested protester.

Meanwhile, posting the video on his Twitter page, MP Namal Rajapaksa asked, A.S.P. Daluwaththa, is this Yahapalanaya?”

When contacted, Police spokesman Ruwan Gunasekara said he was yet to see the video.

Police commission to probe assault on protester

The National Police Commission (NPC) has launched an investigation into an alleged assault on a protester by an Assistant Superintendent of Police during the Joint Opposition’s protest march in Hambantota on Friday.

A spokesman for the NPC said that it has instructed the Police Chief to submit a report on the incident and also a special meeting will be held on October 11 to discuss the matter.

A video footage captured following the joint opposition-led protest held at Hambantota, showed a senior police officer assaulting an arrested protester.

Youth assaulted in H’tota protest transferred to Matara Hospital

The youth, who was assaulted by an ASP during a protest staged by the Joint Opposition in Hambantota on Friday, has been transferred to Matara Hospital, sources said.

The National Police Commission (NPC) had launched an investigation into the alleged assault on the youth.

 

Presidential Commission on Treasury Bond scam Text messages take centre stage

October 8th, 2017

BY Kavindya Chris Thomas Courtesy Ceylon Today

Following a week-long intermission, former Governor of Central Bank of Sri Lanka Arjuna Mahendran, this week faced the next round in the cross-examination ring with acting Solicitor General Dappula de Livera. Thus began another eventful week at the Presidential Commission of Inquiry probing the Treasury Bond issuance by the Central Bank of Sri Lanka (CBSL), which churned out new and shocking information.

Monday: AM 22 and Conflict of Interest

On Monday (2) ASG de Livera suggested that the witness had contradicted his own testimony late last month regarding the request made by former Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake. He had previously testified that a Rs 75 billion requirement of funds was made to him concerning planned road development projects, as substantiated by a letter purportedly written by Karunanayake that was furnished to the Commission as evidence (document No. AM22). However, the Prime Minister, in a statement to Parliament on 17 March 2015, had referred to an urgent requirement of Rs 15 billion only. This was later clarified by Mahendran as an initial requirement of Rs 15 billion needed immediately, followed by a further Rs 75 billion.

ASG de Livera claimed that Mahendran had changed his position, adding colour to his previous testimony, accusing him of never having mentioned this Rs 15 billion. Mahendran denied this, claiming to have definitely mentioned it.

Conflict of interest

Following this, the Attorney General’s Department questioned Mahendran regarding the potential conflict of interest with regard to Mahendran’s son-in-law Arjun Aloysius. Here, de Livera said the decision to go for public auctions had not been conveyed to the market until 6 March 2015, despite the fact that Mahendran had been privy to this information since 24 February.

“This information went to your son-in-law between 24 and 27 February,” he said.

“I can’t speak for him,” said Mahendran.

This explained PTL’s bid of Rs 15 billion, continued de Livera, suggesting that it was Mahendran who had conveyed this market sensitive information to his son-in-law.

“I wouldn’t have done such a foolish thing. I have been in banking for 35 years. I know exactly what good governance is and what price sensitive information is,” responded Mahendran.

While this debate was raging on, Justice Prasanna Jayawardene opined that it was also important to highlight that the Mahendran’s predecessor former CBSL Governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal, too, had a sister that served as a director of the controversial primary dealer; Perpetual Treasuries Ltd. Acceding that two wrongs do not stand to make anything right, Justice Jayawardene claimed that this conflict of interest has arisen in the past.

Tuesday: New Texts and Staff Transfers

Several new text messages, extracted from Arjun Aloysius’ phone, referring to individuals known as ‘AM’ and ‘RK’ were produced on Tuesdays (3) cross examination of Mahendran.

Accordingly, seven new text messages, that had taken place between 22 November 2016 and 4 January 2017, between Arjun Aloysius and his personal assistant, Steve Samuels, were produced before the Commission.The text messages refer to certain ‘To-do lists for AM and RK’ maintained by PTL. The seven text messages refer to these files meant for individuals regarded as ‘ArjunaM’, ‘AM’, ‘Arjuna’ and ‘RK’.

Following are brief extracts of the text messages as read out by ASG de Livera during the proceedings;

Text message 1: “Also, we have the A. Mahendran to-do list.”

Text message 2: “Chairman, awaiting update on to-do-list files on ArjunaM and RK”

Abbreviations

Mahendran resolutely maintained that he does not know who the abbreviations referred to and claimed that ‘AM’ could mean to also refer to his son and his daughter; Arvind and Anjalie, were A. Mahendran’s. He also questioned the authenticity of the document containing the text messages.

When de Livera suggested that Mahendran had lied to the commission about his involvement with PTL following his resignation from CBSL, the former Governor opined that Aloysius had merely informed him about PTL being curtailed by CBSL to which he had simply recommended seeking legal advice.

“I have never heard [Minister Ravi Karunanayake] being referred to as RK,” Mahendran went on to say, adding that he calls the former Finance Minister ‘Ravi K.’

At this point, ASG de Livera pointed out that the Minister himself had previously denied in his testimony before the commission that ‘Ravi K’ was any reference to him.

Text message 3: “Leaving office. Going to Flower Road residence to deliver AM and RK files. Hope to catch Dilshan at the Ministry”.

As confirmed before Mahendran lived at his residence in Flower Road, Colombo 7 which had been gifted to his daughter following her marriage back in 2012. It was also acceded that this was where Aloysius resided as well. However, Mahendran denied that this meeting took place and claimed ignorance as to who ‘Dilshan’ is as well.

Text message 4: “Reminder. Meeting with RK. New to-do-list file for AM delivered to home.”

Text message 5: “Update. Asela is bringing document. Do you want me to bring it to AM?”

Text message 6: “Good luck with RK. Hope AM has a good meeting.”

Mahendran unaware

Again Mahendran claimed that he was unaware what these text messages refer to. He denied that he met anyone as per the text suggest. “I’ve never received such a file,” he said adding, “I don’t know the relevance I have to this.”

To this, Additional Solicitor General Dappula de Livera accused Mahendran of lying. He noted that Mahendran had previously claimed that he had not maintained official communication with his son-in-law Aloysius during and after vacating his position at the CBSL. Commissioner Justice Prasanna Jayawardena, in the meantime, “Is your son-in-law a friend of Angelo Mathews’?”

“You’re lying through your big teeth,” ASG de Livera accused Mahendran and went on to suggest that he was in contact with Aloysius well after vacating his position at the CBSL. Mahendran of course, denied these accusations calling the Commission and the Attorney General’s Department to properly verify the evidence that had been brought before him. He called it an “unprofessional job” and an “odd document”. ASG Yasantha Kodagoda retorted at this comment saying, “very much like the bond auction!”

Later that day, Mahendran was questioned regarding the 501 staff transfers, including those of the department heads. It was suggested that the staff transfers were made to accommodate his own agenda within the CBSL, to influence market activities as planned by Aloysius. ASG de Livera claimed that these staff transfers that had taken place during his tenure had managed to de-establish the CBSL itself. Mahendran denied it.

Wednesday: Ravi K orders State Banks to bid low

The heads of three State Banks on Wednesday (4) told the Commission, that they were compelled to make lower bids, on the request of the then Minister of Finance, Karunanayake, in both controversial Treasury Bond auctions which earned Perpetual Treasuries Ltd. billions of rupees in unlimited profits.

On the day prior to both auctions, they said, they were summoned to the Finance Ministry, by Karunanayake and informed that since money was needed at a lower rate of interest for a State requirement, to submit very low bids at the next day’s auctions. At the same time, the limits on the bids to be submitted were given to them, the Chairmen and General Managers of the National Savings Bank, People’s Bank and Bank of Ceylon, told the Commission.

Chairman of People’s Bank Hemasiri Fernando and General Manager N. Vasantha Kumar, Chairman of the National Savings Bank Aswin de Silva and Deputy General Manager and Advisor on Treasury Affairs A. A. Lionel, Chairman of the Bank of Ceylon Ronal Chithrananda Perera, confirmed these revelations under oath.

Treasury Bond Auction

On 28 March 2016, that is the day before the Treasury Bond Auction, held by the CBSL on 29 March, and also on 30 March 2016, the day before the Treasury Bond Auction was held on 31 March 2017, Karunanayake had summoned them to the Ministry and held two meetings and at both these meetings the Minister himself had handed them the limits of the bids to be submitted.

The witnesses said the Economic Advisor to the Prime Minister, R. Paskaralingam and Secretary to the Treasury Dr. R. H. S. Samaratunge had both been present at the two meetings and Deputy Governor P. Samarasiri had representing CBSL had also participated in those meetings.

“We were assured that nothing higher would be accepted,” said Kumar.

Witnesses added that, they had submitted lower bids from their banks according to the limits handed to them by Karunanayake, however, it was Perpetual Treasuries Ltd. which submitted somewhat higher bids and was successful at both auctions and earned a massive profit. Giving evidence for the first time before the Commission, Central Bank official N. Vasantha Kumar said during the tenure of more than 30 years in the banking service, or even externally, no Finance Minister had ever, in this manner, influenced a Treasury Bond Auction in order to ensure undue advantages for a different bidder nor had he even heard of an occasion where the profit of billions that the State banks could have earned was prevented.

Chairman of the People’s Bank Hemasiri Fernando said since he was not a Banker, he could not make a statement about figures immediately but that the seriousness of the harm that had been done to State Banks through this action could be understood easily by anyone.

The witness also said that during this activity, Deputy Governor of the Central Bank P. Samarasiri had also intervened in the transaction. At the same time, another witness said that he was informed by the Deputy Governor of the Central Bank, himself to attend the meeting at the Minister’s office.

He made this statement in response to cross questioning by the lawyer Harsha Fernando, who represented the Deputy Governor of the Central Bank, Samarasiri.

Responding to Judge Prasanna Jayawardena of the Commission, Chairman of the National Savings Bank Aswin de Silva said he, who has served in Australia for a period of nine years, was surprised by this procedure and that he was also utterly amazed at the fact that the Deputy Governor of the Central Bank P. Samarasiri had supported these activities.

12,000-year-old hidden village in Vavuniya

October 8th, 2017

By Mullativu Shashikumar Courtesy Ceylon Today

Historical evidence of the human history of our country is traced only as far back as the arrival of the Buddha and later the arrival of Prince Vijaya. Most historical facts are drawn from stone inscriptions that are dated back to ancient times. However, most of these inscriptions don’t go beyond 2,500 years. Hence, the discovery of evidence that tells of human activities that go beyond the recorded history of the country is of paramount importance.

It is in such a context it was reported that a group of Buddhist monks are engaging in excavation work in a remote village in Vavuniya, where evidence have been unearthed of a 12,000-year-old history and 1,300-year-old Buddhist history.

To reach the remote village of Kongrayamkulam one has to travel about 25 km from the Vavuniya town towards Settikulam Divisional Secretariat Division. From there it is a journey of about 16 km to the village. The excavation site is inside the jungle adjacent to the village.

When we got there, several monks attached to the Archaeology Department of the Bhikshu University of Sri Lanka, Anuradhapura were engaged in the final excavation work.

Ven. Galwewe Wimalakanthi Thera, Lecturer and Head of the Department of Archaeology at the University, was leading the team of monks.

“We wanted to look into the activities of pre-historic humans who lived in the Dry Zone, particularly on the right bank of Malwathu Oya. We commenced this task with the belief that we would be able to find archaeological information on the activities of the pre-historic humans and their settlements in Sri Lanka. Very little attention has been paid to this site in the past. Now we have found out the historical significance of this place,” the Thera said.

Stone inscriptions

He also said, “By now we have discovered seven ancient stone inscriptions, which can be dated back about 1,300 years. One of these stone inscriptions mentions a chaitya, halls of statues and Bodhi Mandapa as well as ruins of statues of the Buddha. Another stone inscription states ‘batha giri thisaha lene’, which means the cave of Ayushmath Giritissa Thera.” The most significant discovery was inside the cave. There was enough evidence there to come to the conclusion that this was indeed a site inhabited by pre-historic humans of this country.

The monks engaged in the excavation activities said the images found on the cave walls tell of the life of pre-historic humans.

“The images can be dated back to 12,000 years. We can assume that the images of animals are the ones that these pre-historic humans had hunted for food,” a monk said.

They have also found remains of various weapons, presumably used by the pre-historic humans for hunting.

Ven. Wimalakanthi Thera said, “This is a valuable archaeological site. We were able to find from one site evidence of ancient Buddhist worship as well as evidence of human settlement that goes as far as 12,000 years. With this evidence we can come to an idea how the pre-historic humans lived and hunted. We have already sent samples of these findings to an American Institute for carbon dating. Once we receive the report we will be able to publish the final findings by December.

According to Ven. Wimalakanthi Thera this is the first excavation of this scale that has been done in the Northern Province. “We have discovered weapons made of stone, some weapons made of animal bones and even small stone tools. Especially due to the absence of metal we can safely assume that these discoveries date back 12,000 years. Stone weapons are basically made up of kahanda and thiruvana. We also found two human bones. We believe that once carbon dating is finalized we can give an exact time frame to these findings.”

Analyzing evidence

At the moment, the monks are engaged in dating the stone weapons. Apart from that they are also analyzing pottery fragments, bricks and roofing tiles. “We have already completed reading the stone inscriptions. In one inscription it says that King Bhathikabhaya made a donation to the chaithya.”

It is also mentioned that there was a large aramaya in 300 BC, that is, subsequent to the arrival of Arhant Mahinda in the island.

“This is mentioned in seven stone inscriptions found in this site. We have also found Chaithya, Bodhighara, marble Buddha statues, monks’ rooms, and alms halls. Unfortunately, treasure hunters have destroyed most of these. Although the historical value of this site is undeniable, this place has been destroyed by these treasure hunters.”

Ven. Wimalakanthi Thera expressed gratitude top Mahopadyaya Professor Kanaththegoda Sadhdha Rathana Nayake Thera of the Anuradhapura Sri Lanka Bhikshu University for allowing them to carry out the excavation work.

If not for the devastating 30-year war, these discoveries would have been made much earlier. The war was the main reason why these places were destroyed. Now that evidence of pre-historic human settlements has been found in this remote village in Vavuniya, it can shed light on the evolutionary process of man from ape.


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