ගංවතුරෙන් පාඩම්

June 3rd, 2017

නලින් ද සිල්වා

 ආපදා තත්වය කාලගුණ විද්‍යා දෙපාර්තමේන්තුව කී විධියට නොවූවත් ක්‍රමයෙන් පහව යනවා. දැන් ඇත්තේ සාමාන්‍ය මෝසම. ඒ ගැන කාලගුණ විද්‍යා දෙපාර්තමේන්තුවට යමක් කියන්න පුළුවන්. කාලගුණ විද්‍යා දෙපාර්තමේන්තුවට කියන්න බැරි අසාමාන්‍ය දේ. ඒවාට පදනම්වන කරුණු නිව්ටන්ට හසුවන්නේ නැහැ. තව කොපමණ ඊනියා දියුණු උපකරණ කාලගුණ විද්‍යා දෙපාර්තමේන්තුවට ගෙනත් දුන්නත් ඔවුන්ට නිව්ටන්ට හසු නොවන කරුණු ගැන කියන්න බැහැ. දෙවියන් භූතයන් නිව්ටන්ගේ සමීකරණවලට අහුවෙන්නෙ නැහැ. පංචෙන්ද්‍රිය ගෝචර නොවන කිසිවක් නිව්ටන්ගෙ විද්‍යාවෙ උපකරණවලට හසු වන්නේ නැහැ. ඇතැමුන් හිතන්නෙ මේ කරුණු තවමත් බටහිර විද්‍යාව හොයා ගෙන නැහැ කියලා. ඒ බටහිර විද්‍යාව ගැන විශ්වාසය නිසා කියන දෙයක්. බටහිර විද්‍යාවට කවද හරි නිවන තේරුම් ගන්න පුළුවන් වෙයි ද? එහෙම වුණොත් විද්‍යාඥයන් නිවන් දකීවි ද? 

බටහිර විද්‍යාවට ගුරුත්වාකර්ෂණයවත් හසු වන්නෙ නැහැ. ඊනියා ගුරුත්වකර්ෂණය යොදා ගෙන තේරුම් ගන්නේ යැයි කියන පංචෙන්ද්‍රිිය ගෝචර දේ පමණක් ඒ උපකරණවලට හසු වෙනවා. ඒත් ඒ ගුරුත්වාකර්ෂණය නො වෙයි. ඊනියා ගුරුත්වාකර්ෂණය සෘජුව හසු වන උපකරණයක් ගැන මෙරට සිටින ඊනියා විද්‍යාඥයකුට කියන්න පුළුවන් ද?  අර පිටි මුට්ට කර තියාගෙන යැමට කතා කරන කැනඩාවේ පාසල් ගුරුවරයාට හරි ඔහුගෙ ගුරුවරයාට හරි ගුරුත්වාකර්ෂණය තමන්ගෙ මොකක් හරි ඉන්ද්‍රියකට දැනිලා තියෙනවා ද? ගුරුත්වාකර්ෂණ බලයත් (ක්‍ෂෙත්‍රයත්), අනෙක් ක්‍ෂෙත්‍රත් , වෙනත් ප්‍රවාදත් බටහිර විද්‍යාඥයන්ගෙ යම් තරමකට හරි ගිය හිතළු පමණයි. හරි ගිය කියන එකෙන් කියැවෙන්නෙ නැහැ හරි කියලා. බටහිර විද්‍යාඥයන් මේ හිතළු වෙනස් කරනවා. 

ඒ කොහොම වුණත් ගංවතුර ආපදාවෙන් බොහෝ කරුණු හෙළි වුණා. අපේ රටේ ප්‍රාදේශීය ව හා සාමූහික ව කෙරෙන  කටයුතු යම් ප්‍රමාණයකට කඩා වැටිලා. ඒ කියමන ගැන කාටදෝ බොහොම කේන්ති ගිහිල්ලා තිබුණා. ඔහු අසා තිබුණා හමුදාව කළ වැඩ පෙණුනේ නැද්ද කියලා. හමුදාව පමණක් නොවෙයි විද්‍යුත් මාධ්‍ය ද කළ වැඩ දැක්කා. ඒ සියල්ල මධ්‍යගත ව කෙරුණු දේ. මාධ්‍යට පුළුවන් කම තිබුණෙ බොහෝ විට තමන්ට ජනතාව ගෙනැවිත් දුන් භාණ්ඩ ප්‍රාදේශීය මධ්‍යස්ථාවලට දෙන්න. ඇතැම් තැන්වල කෙළින් ම විපතට පත්වූවන්ටත් භාණ්ඩ ලබා දුන්නා. මාධ්‍ය ඒ සියල්ල කෙළේ මනුෂ්‍යත්වය නිසා පමණක් නො වෙයි. ඔවුනොවුන් අතර තරගයක් ද තිබුණා. ප්‍රසිද්ධියක් ද ලැබුණා. ඒ කොහොම වුණත් කළ දේ හොඳයි. මාධ්‍ය බටහිර විද්‍යාවට දක්වන මානුෂිකත්වය සිංහල වෙදකමට දක්වන්නෙ නැහැ. මහවිලච්චියේ වකුගඩු රෝගීන්ට සිංහල වෙද මහතකු ප්‍රතිකාර කිරීම ගැන ඔවුන් කිසිම ප්‍රසිද්ධියක් දුන්නෙ නැහැ. ඔවුන් ඒ වෙදමහතාගෙන් ඉල්ලා සිටියේ රෝගීන් සුව වූ බවට බටහිර වෛද්‍ය සහතික!

සිංහල වෙදකම රැකීමට විද්‍යුත් මාධ්‍ය කරන සේවය කුමක් ද? ගංවතුර උවදුරට පත් වූවන්ට ප්‍රතිකාර කිරීමට සිංහල වෙදමහතුන්ගේ සහාය ලබා නොගන්නේ ඒ වෙදකම ගැන විශ්වාසයක් නැති කම නිසා නො වේ ද? එහෙත් රජයේ වෛද්‍ය නිලධාරීන්ගේ සංගමයේ ඇතැමුන් පෞද්ගලික ව අදෘශ්‍යමාන ප්‍රාණීන්ගෙන් ප්‍රතිකාර ලබා ගන්නවා. ඔවුන් සමාජයට ඒ බව කියන්නේ නැහැ. පෞද්ගලික ව කුමක් විශ්වාස කළත් සමාජයීය ව බටහිර විද්‍යාවේ හා යුදෙව් ක්‍රිස්තියානි සංස්කෘතික ආධිපත්‍යයට සියල්ලන් ම පාහේ යටවෙනවා. 

හමුදාවට කා සමගවත් කිසිම තරගයක් තිබුණේ නැහැ. හමුදාවට ප්‍රසිද්ධියක් ලැබුණෙත් නැහැ. හමුදාව ප්‍රසිද්ධිය ලබා ගත්තෙත් නැහැ. කොටින්ට එරෙහිව කරන ලද මානුෂීය මෙහෙයුමේ දීත් ප්‍රසිද්ධියක් ලැබුණේ නැහැ. දැන් මේ ආණ්ඩුව යටතේ ගෞරවයක් ලැබෙන්නේත් නැහැ. ඔවුන් සැමරීමටවත් මේ් නිවට ආණ්ඩුවේ ඇමතිවරුන් අවසර දෙන්නේ නැහැ. හමුදාවට දෙමළ ත්‍රස්තවාදය පරාජය කිරීම ගැන අවසානයේ දී ලැබුණේ හා ලැබෙන්නේ සිර දඬුවම්. මෙහි දී හමුදාව කියන්නෙ නාවික, ගුවන් හා සිවිල් ආරක්‍ෂක බලකායත් එක්ක. අවසානයේ දී ගංවතුර උවදුරේ දී බර වැඩ සියල්ල ම පාහේ කෙරුණේ රණවිරුවන් අතින්. ජීවිත ගණනාවක් ම ගලවා ගැනීමට ඔවුන්ට හැකි වුණා. 

ඒ එක පැත්තක්. පීඩාවට පත් ජනයාට රජයේ පාසල්වල නවාතැන් ලැබුණා. එයට අමතර ව පන්සල්වල ද නවාතැන් ලැබුණා. පන්සල්වල ලැගුම් ගත්තේ සිංහල බෞද්ධයන් පමණක් නො වෙයි. ජනවර්ගවලට අයත් උදවියත් පන්සල්වල හිටියා. ආණ්ඩුවේ ඊනියා සංහිඳියාව වෙනුවෙන් බෞද්ධයන්ට පහර දීමට ඔවුනුත් බටහිරයනුත් බටහිරයන්ගෙන් නඩත්තු වන්නවුනුත් එකතු වන නමුත් පන්සල්වල දැක හත හැකි වූ සංහිඳියාව වෙනත් කොහේවත් දැක ගන්න පුළුවන් ද? මේ සිංහල බෞද්ධකමයි. හැමෝගෙන් ම බැට කන සිංහල බෞද්ධකමයි. 

ජනතාව ආධාර ගෙනැවිත් දුන්නේත් සිංහල බෞද්ධ සංස්කෘතික පදනම නිසයි. ප්‍රාදේශිකත්වය හා සාමූහිතකත්වය තරමක් කඩා වැටී ඇති නමුත් සිංහල බෞද්ධ මානුෂිකත්වය නැති වී ගොස් නැහැ. අපට තවමත් ශක්තියක් සපයන්නේ මේ සිංහල බෞද්ධ මානුෂිකත්වය මගිනුයි. ත්‍රස්තවාදයට එරෙහිව කළ සටන්වල දී ද මේ මානුෂිකත්වය දැක ගන්න පුළුවන් වුණා. එය එසේ නො වේ යැයි කියන්නේ බටහිරයන් හා ඔවුන්ගේ ගැත්තන් ඇතුළු නිවටයන්. ඔවුන් තම නිවටකම හා කෘරබව සිංහල බෞද්ධයන් මත පටවන්න හදනවා. මේ අයත් විද්‍යුත් මාධ්‍යත් කියන්නේ මට නම් මානුෂිකත්වයක් නැති බවයි.

දේශපාලනඥයන් ගැන අමුතුවෙන් කියන්න ඕන නැහැ. ඔවුන් ගංවතුරේ බෝට්ටු පදිමින් මනාප එකතු කළා. මට නිච්චියක් නැහැ විපක්‍ෂ නායක සම්බන්ධන් ගංවතුර ආපදා ගැන ප්‍රකාශයක් කළ බවට. ප්‍රකාශයක් කළත් දෙමළ ජාතික සංධානය සක්‍රිය ව යමක් කෙළේ නැහැ. ඒ ඔවුන්ට අදාළ ප්‍රදේශවල මනාප නැති නිසා ද? නැත්නම් වෙනත් කරුණු නිසා ද? කොහොමටත් විපක්‍ෂ නායක රටට ම විපක්‍ෂ නායක බව ඔහුට අමතක වෙනවා. අගමැතිටත් වැඩි යමක් කරන්න බැරි වුණා. ඔහු සෞඛ්‍ය හේතුන් මත නිව්යෝක් ගිය බවයි කියැවෙන්නේ. අගමැති ආපසු පැමිණ ආර්ථිකය ගැන කතාව අරඹාවි. එයින් සිදුවන්නේ අප ඇඹරීම පමණයි. චම්පකට නම් මේ සියල්ලට හේතුව අධිවේගී මාර්ගය. ඔහු අප කී පරිදි ම තම මාර්ගය දිගේ අධිවේගයෙන් එ ජා පෙරමුණට ගිහින්. ඔහුටත් මහින්ද අමතක කරන්න බැහැ. ඒ හොඳට නො වෙයි.

මෙරට තවමත් යම්තම් හරි ගැටගසා ගන්නේ සිංහල බෞද්ධකම නිසයි. සිංහල බුද්ධාගම නිසයි. සිංහල බුද්ධාගම විනාශ කිරීමට  බටහිරයන් හා ඉන්දියාව පමණක් නොව චීනයත් උත්සාහ ගන්නවා. චීන ගැත්තන් මෙරට යක්‍ෂ ජනතාව අමතක කරන්න හදනවා. යක්‍ෂ සංස්කෘතියෙන් රටට වෙච්ච දෙයක් නැති බව කියනවා. අපි පසුව යක්‍ෂයන් ගැන කතා කරමු. සිංහල බුද්ධාගමේ යක්‍ෂ සංස්කෘතික ලක්‍ෂණ තිබෙනවා. ඒ නොවන්නට සිංහල බුද්ධාගමත් නැහැ. ගංවතුර ආධාරත් නැහැ. නිව්ටන්ට තේරුම් ගන්නට බැරි ගංවතුර තේරුම් ගන්නත් බැහැ.  

නලින් ද සිල්වා

2017 ජූනි 03  

Post-deluge: Forget Megapolis. Focus on Relief, Restoration and Rebuilding

June 3rd, 2017

by Rajan Philips Courtesy The Island


The flood havoc has proved to be far worse than anyone could have imagined. The death and missing toll is now past 300. That includes nearly 50 school children. Kids who like to have fun running in the rain have instead perished in the floods. The list goes on, making finger pointing meaningless. The government invariably is getting the flak, as it must, for by its own admission the ministry in charge of disaster relief was not prepared for this disaster. And the minister in charge was out of the country attending an international conference on disaster. How more disastrous can you get in your public relations? Timing never comes right for this government. The Prime Minister’s pre-arranged medical trip to America could not have come in a worse week. And the President too pre-occupied for ceremonies looked glum while swearing in the second-tier of ministers who were all trying hard to appear smiling. That was Part Two of the cabinet reshuffle.

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Disasters are no blessings, in disguise or otherwise. But the period after a disaster provides the opportunity to get right things that went wrong; and to stop going ahead with initiatives with identifiable externalities, whose intended results are uncertain, and whose unintended results could be harmful. The 2004 tsunami disaster presented Sri Lanka the proverbial ‘tabula rasa’ (clean slate) for a fresh start, as the late Fr. Dalton Forbes, the Oblate priest and professor at the Catholic National Seminary in Ampitiya, wrote at that time in a beautiful articulation of the religious understanding of the hand of God and the resourcefulness of humans. The ‘clean slate’, Fr. Forbes had in mind, was for a new political chapter. It was not to be for whatever slate there was, was quickly broken up by the political tom-tom (PTOM) beaters of the day.

Focus on basics, not fantasies

The 2017 flood disaster, to my mind, presents the opportunity for a physical makeover of the country’s landscape and infrastructure, and through the most rational method of doing it to have positive political consequences at the national, provincial and local levels. But it is an opportunity that the present government is not motivated or equipped to seize on its own. Instead, it must be dragged, kicking and screaming, by public opinion and pressure to do what is basic and necessary and not something that is idiosyncratic and farfetched. After the flood affected people are, as far as possible, relieved of their immediate difficulties, the government’s focus must be on basic rebuilding and restoration and not Megapolis fantasies.

It is not necessary to abandon the idea of urbanizing the Western Province. Rather, the idea of state sponsored urbanization must be thought through more thoroughly and its implementation must be systematically broken into phases in terms of time and locations – i.e. spread over manageable time and undertaken in consultation with the different municipalities where developments will occur. Further, against the backdrop of the Meetotamulla garbage mountain and with the experience of the recent drought and current flood crises, urban development in the Western Province and elsewhere must proceed from the ground-up, and not top-down from the deceptively glittering heights of condo-towers.

There is no point building towers for banking or luxury living without checking infrastructure capacities to provide water and sanitary services, address drainage impacts, manage garbage collection and disposal, meet energy requirements, and accommodate traffic and parking. Addressing drainage systematically and consistently could no longer be ignored in the wake of the current disaster. Even the most elaborate drainage system could be overwhelmed by a massive downpour. But at least you will have some control over the runoff instead of having water levels rising everywhere.

There are also economic and social concerns in the rapid development of apartments and condominiums in Colombo and Greater Colombo areas. Remarkably, the Governor of the Central Bank has raised concerns about the over-heating of the apartment building sector, its credit-squeezing effects, and its potential bubble-risks. Remarkably, as well, a major ‘development industry player’ has reportedly ‘rebuffed’ the Governor’s concerns. In mature market societies, market leaders (except the Trumps of the world, who on Thursday brought upon himself universal ridicule, withdrawing America from the Paris Climate Change Accord, along with Syria and Nicaragua) do not usually ‘cross words’ with their Central Banks but take Banks’ opinions for their cautionary worth. Not so in societies, where political connections matter more than market fundamentals for business success. Specific to Sri Lanka, what should be of concern is not only the danger of real estate speculation but also the broader social relevance of an over-heated residential market in Colombo.

Put another way, the Colombo, or greater Colombo, condominium market is out of bounds to the vast majority of people living in Colombo, or the Western Province. The Colombo market is also sustained by a disproportionately large share of national resources to provide the services the new developments will require. The Port City development, or whatever it is fancifully called now, is a case in point, and a huge one at that. As far as resource allocation goes, allocating resources to service Colombo condominiums comes at the expense of the rest of the country. As I have said many times in this column no government worthy has responded to the JVP leader’s very pertinent question, that I paraphrase again: if the government thinks Sri Lanka desperately needs a financial centre, why not build it in the old Fort? That would be economically more responsible and environmentally sustainable than the Port City project.

But WHAT does Sri Lanka desperately need? That is the real question in the wake of the flood disaster and the drought disaster that preceded it, not to mention the huge hangover from the war disaster? How would a financial centre in Colombo help the needs of the country? Bear in mind, Sri Lanka is neither Singapore nor Dubai, socially, culturally, or politically. And there is no economic certainty that, globally or regionally, a third financial centre between Singapore and Dubai is needed or would be viable, and that Sri Lanka is the god-chosen location for it. What the country desperately needs is to heed the warnings of recurring natural disasters and return to addressing its basic infrastructure, hard and soft. That would also make a good deal of economic sense. How is it to be done?

Devolution by validation

It is not only the Western Province that requires urbanization, but also other provinces that need urban services for their cities and towns. More importantly, all the provinces need proactive and preventive measures for dealing with drought, floods and landslides. There is enough information about flood-risk river basins and locations prone to landslides. The NBRA puts out notices of warning about potentially landslide locations. But how is the general public supposed to act on these warnings? And what is the likelihood that everyone gets these warnings, or the weather forecasts announced by the Meteorological Department.

There was some exasperated ministerial musing that the Meteorological Department might as well be closed because no one is heeding its warnings. The answer is not in closing national institutions some of which came into being long before our cabinet ministers were born. The answer is in increasing their effectiveness by establishing institutional connections between the national, provincial and local levels of government.

For example, the national government would take the lead in designing and implementing flood protection measures on flood-risk river basins, while their maintenance and upkeep are best left to provincial officials. All three levels of government will need to be involved in mapping out floodplain and landslide areas, and in regulating and controlling development activities in those locations. It would make rational sense to adopt similarly hierarchical and co-ordinated approaches in providing urban services – from water and sanitary, to drainage, garbage and road building.

This is how things were, albeit in somewhat rudimentary form, during the last years of colonial rule and the first years of independence. What has got derailed since must be put back on track now. The political consequence of involving the three levels government in basic rebuilding and restoration would simply be the experiential validation of the provincial and local levels of government. Such experiential validation may prove to be more successful in silencing the critics of devolution than all the attempts to achieve devolution through constitutional texts. A purely constitutional exercise, without corresponding practical validation, almost always favours its detractors rather than its proponents.

Can Executive Presidency be abolished without a referendum?

June 3rd, 2017

by C.A.Chandraprema Courtesy The Island

* No provision relating to president entrenched under Article 83
*Referendum required not by Constitution but by SC interpretation


The constitution making process has been hamstrung by the insistence of the SLFP faction in the government that any constitutional reform would have to done without a referendum. According to the book ‘Yuga Peraliya’ written about the campaign to defeat the Rajapaksas by JHU activist Asoka Abegunawardene, this proviso was deliberately introduced into Maithripala Sirisena’s manifesto so that it could be used later to prevent the abolition of the executive presidency. That was the extent of the duplicity that was practiced on the people of this country by the people who claimed to be ushering in ‘good governance’. The two key constitutional pledges given by the yahapalana camp was the abolition of the executive presidency and electoral reform. Neither of these have materialized yet. It is said that the draft of a constitution is being prepared, but what legitimacy will a new constitution have if it neither abolishes the executive presidential system nor changes the electoral system?

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It would appear that what stands in the way of abolishing the executive presidency without a referendum is not the letter of the constitution but the interpretation thereof. The original draft of the 19th Amendment did try to invest the prime minister with significant powers which would effectively have transferred executive power to the premier and the cabinet but the Supreme Court determined that a referendum would be necessary if certain provisions in the constitution were to be changed in the manner proposed. The Articles in the constitution that would need to be amended to do away with the executive presidency would be 4, 30, 31, 32, 39, 40, 43, 44, 45, 46 and 94 and so on. None of these Articles are among the entrenched provisions in the constitution which cannot be changed without a two thirds majority in parliament as well as a referendum in terms of Article 83.

It may be pointed out that Article 83(b) does mention article 30(2) among the entrenched provisions and this needs an explanation. Article 30(2) is as follows:

“30(2) The President of the Republic shall be elected by the People, and shall hold office for a term of five years.”

What Article 83(b) says about Article 30(2) is as follows:

“83(b) a Bill for the amendment or for the repeal and replacement of or which is inconsistent with the provisions of paragraph (2) of Article 30 or of, paragraph (2) of Article 62 which would extend the term of office of the President, or the duration of Parliament, as the case may be, to over six years, shall become law if the number of votes cast in favour thereof amounts to not less than two-thirds of the whole number of Members (including those not present), is approved by the People at a Referendum and a certificate is endorsed thereon by the President in accordance with Article 80.”

Thus we see that the constitution itself indicates very clearly that the part of Article 30(2) that is entrenched is only the part that relates to the six year term of office of the President. What Article 83(b) means in relation to Article 30(2) is that the President’s term of office cannot be extended beyond six years without a two thirds majority in parliament as well as a referendum. The entrenched part is only that which restricts the presidential term of office to a maximum of six years. Furthermore, it should be noted that the entrenchment under Article 83(b) will apply to Article 30(2) only if the term of office was going to be extended beyond six years. If the term of office of the President was to be were to be reduced, the entrenchment under Article 83(b) will not apply to Article 30(2).

The trickiest part

This is why it was possible to reduce the term of office of the president from six to five years through the 19th Amendment with just a two thirds majority in parliament, without a referendum. Thus it is clear that the whole of Article 30(2) was not entrenched. It follows logically therefore, that the part of Article 30(2) which says that ‘The President of the Republic shall be elected by the People’ is also not entrenched and can be changed with just a two thirds majority in parliament, without a referendum. The trickiest part in abolishing the executive presidency without a referendum would be Article 4, not because it is an entrenched Article but because certain changes to it has been deemed by the Supreme Court in the past to impinge on Article 3 which is an entrenched Article. The Sections of Article 4 that would need to be amended to abolish the Executive Presidency would be 4(b) and 4(e) which are as follows:

“4. The Sovereignty of the People shall be exercised and enjoyed in the following manner :-

(b) the executive power of the People including the defence of Sri Lanka, shall be exercised by the President of the Republic elected by the People;

(e) the franchise shall be exercisable at the election of the President of the Republic and of the Members of Parliament, and at every Referendum by every citizen who has attained the age of eighteen years, and who being qualified to be an elector as hereinafter provided, has his name entered in the register of electors.”

Of this, what would need to be amended would be firstly 4(b) which says that ‘the executive power of the People including the defence of Sri Lanka, shall be exercised by the President of the Republic elected by the People’ and secondly article 4(e) which says that ‘the franchise shall be exercisable at the election of the President of the Republic’. (Article 30(2) will also have to be changed accordingly.) Speaking of Article 4 of the constitution, Chief Justice S. Sharvananda observed in his 1987 determination on the constitutionality of the 13th Amendment that:

“The Constitution expressly specifies the Articles which are entrenched, Article 4 is not one of those Articles. The legislative history of the 1978 Constitution shows that Article 4 was deliberately omitted from the list of entrenched articles. The report of the Parliamentary Select Committee on the revision of the Constitution published on 22.6.1978 discloses that the Committee recommended the entrenchment of Articles 1-4, 9, 10, 11, 30(2), 62(2) and 83 (para.9 of the Report). The Bill for the repeal and replacement of the 1972 Constitution (published in the Gazette of 14.7.78) included Article 4 in the category of entrenched Articles. However, when the Bill was passed, Parliament omitted Article 4 from the list of entrenched provisions. That omission must be presumed to have been deliberate, especially as Article 6, 7 and 8 were added to the list.”

“In our view, Article 4 sets out the agencies or instruments for the exercise of the sovereignty of the People, referred to in the entrenched Article 3. It is always open to change the agency or instrument by amending Article 4, provided such amendment has no prejudicial impact on the sovereignty of the People. Article 4(a) prescribes that the legislative power of the People shall be exercised by Parliament, consisting of the elected representatives of the People and by the People at a Referendum”. Article 4(a) can be amended to provide for another legislative body consisting of elected representatives, so long as such amendment does not affect Articles 2 and 3.”

“Similarly, an amendment to Article 4(b) can be enacted by providing for the exercise of the executive power of the People by a President and a Vice President elected by the People. However, to the extent that a principle contained in Article 4 is contained or is a necessary corollary or concomitant of Article 3, a constitutional amendment inconsistent with such principle will require a Referendum in terms of Article 83, not because Article 4 is entrenched, but because it may impinge on Article 3. In our view, Article 4 is not independently entrenched but can be amended by a two third majority, since it is only, complementary to Article 3, provided such amendment does not impinge on Article 3. So long as the sovereignty of the People is preserved as required by article 3, the precise manner of the exercise of the sovereignty and the institutions for such exercise are not. Fundamental Article 4 does not define or demarcate the sovereignty of the People. It merely provides one form and manner of exercise of that sovereignty. A change in the institution for the exercise of legislative or executive power incidental to that sovereignty cannot ipso facto impinge on that sovereignty”.

Articles 3 and 4 were discussed in the determination given by Chief Justice K.Sripavan in 2015 with regard to the 19th Amendment where he stated that “It has to be borne in mind that the sovereign people have chosen not to entrench Article 4, therefore it is clear that not all violations of article 4 will result in the violation of Article 3.”

Article 4(b) goes as follows:

“4(b) the executive power of the People, including the defence of Sri Lanka, shall be exercised by the President of the Republic elected by the People”.

The original 19th Amendment Bill did seek to amend article 4(b) as follows so that the President would have to exercise executive power in the manner prescribed by the constitution:

“4(b) the executive power of the People, including the defence of Sri Lanka, shall be exercised, in the manner hereinafter provided, by the President of the Republic elected by the People;”

The part that was added to article 4(b) was ‘in the manner hereinafter provided’. Chief Justice Sripavan’s determination on the 19th Amendment did not say anything about the proposed amendment to Article 4(b). It was with regard to the amendments suggested to Articles 42, 43 and 44 that the Supreme Court decided that a referendum was necessary in addition to a two thirds majority in parliament. The amendments proposed in the original 19th Amendment Bill to Articles 42, 43 and 44 and highlighted by the Supreme Court went as follows:

“42(3) The Prime Minister shall be the head of the Cabinet of Ministers.”

“43.(1) The Prime Minister shall determine the number of Ministers of the Cabinet of Ministers, and the Ministries and the assignment of subjects and functions to such Ministers.”

“43(3) The Prime Minister may at anytime change the assignment of subjects and functions and recommend to the President changes in the composition of the Cabinet of Ministers. Such changes shall not affect the continuity of the Cabinet of Ministers and the continuity of its responsibility to Parliament.”

“44(2) The Prime Minister shall determine the subjects and functions which are to be assigned to Ministers appointed under paragraph (1), and the Ministries, if any, which are to be in charge of, such Ministers.”

“44(3) The Prime Minister may at anytime change any assignment made under paragraph (2) of this Article.”

“44(5) At the request of the Prime Minister, any Minister of the Cabinet of Ministers may, with the concurrence of the Prime Minister, by Notification published in the Gazette, delegate to any Minister who is not a member of the Cabinet of Ministers, any power or duty pertaining to any subject or function assigned to him or her, or any power or duty conferred or imposed on him or her by any written law, and it shall be lawful for such other Minister to exercise and perform any power or duty delegated to him or her under this paragraph notwithstanding anything to the contrary in the written law by which that power or duty is conferred or imposed on such Minister of the Cabinet of Ministers.”

Why the original

19A draft failed

In relation to these proposed changes, Chief Justice Sripavan observed in his determination on the 19th Amendment, that “if the Prime Minister seeks to exercise the powers referred to above, then the Prime Minister would be exercising such powers which are reposed by the people to be exercised by the Executive, namely the President and not the Prime Minister. In reality the executive power would be exercised by the Prime Minister from below and does not in fact constitute a power coming from the above from the President.” And further that; “permitting the Prime Minister to exercise executive power in relation to the six paragraphs referred to above had to be struck down as being in excess of authority and violative of Article 3.”

This reference to the powers sought to be exercised by the Prime Minister being in violation of Article 3 of the constitution obviously refers to the fact that the according to the existing Article 4(b) as well as the amendment thereto proposed in the original 19th Amendment Bill that was examined by the Supreme Court, the President is elected by the people and for the power exercised by an elected President to be given to the Prime Minister would violate  Article 3 which states that the sovereignty of the people includes the franchise. Article 3 goes as follows:

” 3. In the Republic of Sri Lanka sovereignty is in the people and is inalienable. Sovereignty includes the powers of government, fundamental rights and the franchise.”

It will be noticed that the original 19th Amendment Bill did not seek to change the provision in Article 4(b) which says that the President will be elected by the people. If the President is not elected by the people, then the changes sought in the 19th Amendment draft Bill through clauses 42(3), 43 and 44 would not violate article 3. For the people to cease directly electing the President, Article 4(b) and Article 30(2) of the constitution will have to be amended. As pointed out earlier, Article 4 is not an entrenched provision of the constitution and it should be possible to amend 4(b) with a two thirds majority in parliament without a referendum. Furthermore as we pointed out earlier, the part of article 30(2) which says that the President is elected by the people is not entrenched either.

It will be interesting to study in retrospect whether the original 19th Amendment Bill failed to get clearance from the Supreme Court because it did not seek to change constitutional provisions like Article 4(b) and 30(2) so that the President would no longer be elected by the people. Entrenched Article 3 only states that “In the Republic of Sri Lanka sovereignty is in the people and is inalienable. Sovereignty includes the powers of government, fundamental rights and the franchise.” As justice Sharvananda said in his determination on the 13th Amendment, Article 4 sets out the ‘agencies or instruments’ for the exercise of the sovereignty of the People. And ‘It is always open to change the agency or instrument by amending Article 4, provided such amendment has no prejudicial impact on the sovereignty of the people.’ The sovereignty of the people cannot possibly be prejudiced if executive power is transferred to the cabinet of ministers appointed from among the elected representatives in parliament.

It should be noted that from the inception of the 1978 Constitution, Article 42 stated that “The President shall be responsible to Parliament for the due exercise, performance and discharge of his powers, duties and functions under the Constitution and any written law, including the law for the time being relating to public security.” After the 19th Amendment, this very same provision was brought in again as Article 33A of the Constitution without changing a word or a comma from the old Article 42. That was part of the yahapalana sleight of hand to show that it was they who made the President responsible to parliament! In any event the fact is that from the inception of the 1978 Constitution to this day, the President who is elected by the people was required by the Constitution to be responsible to Parliament. Hence any Amendment that seeks to rearrange Article 4 in such a manner that a Parliamentary executive would be given the main role in running the government cannot possibly be construed as violating Article 3 especially if the President ceases to be elected directly by the people.

At this point, the question will arise whether any change in the arrangement whereby the President of the Republic is elected directly by the people will impinge on the franchise which is a part of entrenched Article 3. That however cannot happen because according to Article 3, the franchise is only one component of the sovereignty of the people the other two being ‘the powers of the government’ and ‘fundamental rights’. The constitutional provision that governs the exact manner in which the sovereignty of the people is exercised is Article 4 which is not entrenched and can be amended with just a two thirds majority in Parliament, without a referendum.

There is no entrenched provision in the present constitution which says that the President has to be elected directly by the people. All the provisions that refer to an elected President including Article 30(2) can be changed with a two thirds majority in Parliament. Former Chief Justice S. Sharvananda stated very clearly in his determination on the constitutionality of the 13th Amendment that Article 4 had been deliberately kept out of the list of entrenched provisions. If so the intention of the framers of the constitution was to leave it open for Article 4 to be amended with a two thirds majority without a referendum. However if any amendment made to Article 4 is always deemed to violate Article 3, that would be tantamount to entrenching an Article which was never meant to be entrenched and the intentions of the framers of the constitution would be defeated.

Disaster wake up calls

June 3rd, 2017

Island Editorial

The Rip Van Winkles of our times are now waking up from their long slumber. Megapolis Minister Champika Ranawaka went on record on Friday saying prosecutions will begin this week against owners of unauthorized structures along the Wellawatte canal banks, one of which collapsed recently killing four and injuring more than 20. Disaster Management Minister Anura Priyadarshana Yapa also went on record the same day that anybody building on landslide prone slopes would be prosecuted. Nobody will quarrel with Yapa’s assessment that “if we don’t stop this madness, we are going to end up with a bigger disaster very soon.” All that is well and good. But what is the government going to do about those who permitted such buildings in the first place? Many of them, no doubt for consideration, allowed such construction with scant regard for the rules and regulations governing building. Not only the bribe givers, but also the bribe takers must be punished.

Surely the Colombo Municipal authorities would have been aware that the canal bank reservations have been encroached upon. It may be claimed that many of these buildings have not got the necessary Certificates of Conformity (COC). In that case, how was it possible for them to be occupied? It is common knowledge that not only the Colombo Municipal Council, but also local authorities in large urban centers elsewhere and indeed the lesser local bodies are corrupt and adept at bending rules and regulations that have been devised with good reason for the common weal. Anything can be done if the right palm is oiled, we all know. Despite promises of dealing such rampant corruption, nobody is talking about bringing those responsible for regulatory failures to account. It is time that this aspect of the matter is also examined.

At a news briefing in Colombo on Friday, Ranawaka revealed some telling figures. The UDA had lodged cases against 4,000 illegal buildings presumably in Colombo. Prosecutions will be launched this week against owners of 18 buildings, including high-rise apartments sitting atop canal bank reservations, in Wellawatte and Dehiwela. The owner of the reception hall that collapsed was arrested and is now before court. Quite apart from encroachment into any reservation, the construction also would have been substandard. Otherwise how could it tumble down with scarcely any warning; or were telltale signs ignored? People too often compromise safety for reason of cutting costs. That is true not only of individuals but also of governments too. Ranawaka alleged last week that the much vaunted Southern Expressway was partly responsible for flood havoc in the Galle and Matara districts saying that it effectively acted as a 150 kilometer dam across several rivers in the south-west and the south.

We report in a front page story today that officials are saying that parts of the expressway, which is undoubtedly a huge boon to motorists traveling south, should have been built as an elevated highway to allow rain water to drain from the eastern side to the west. The less costly option of building a bund with insufficient culverts and bridges to deal with exceptional flow was resorted to and we all know what happened. Parts of the expressway were submerged and sections had to be closed. Many exits including the one at Matara went under several feet of water “making the expressway quite useless,” the report said. It is true that the intensity of the rainfall was exceptional. It is also true that ours is not a country able to afford the various protective measures that are necessary to guard against all eventualities. But questions are now being asked about how effective the environmental impact assessment that preceded the building of the southern expressway has been. If something goes wrong, the same questions will be asked about reclaiming the land on which the Colombo Port City will stand. These too are matters that deserve examination. We are a notoriously reactive country. The garbage dump had to collapse before a serious effort of finding a solution to Colombo’s waste disposal began. Whether we are on the way to finding that solution is still not in the public domain. So also the recent floods and landslides that were preceded by previous floods and landslides. Acts of God, no doubt, are unstoppable. But human agency can minimize their impact.

Wisdom always dawns ex post facto. Now that we have been hit by the floods and landslides a lot of wise words are being spoken; added to that there is finger pointing galore. Minister Yapa has been pilloried in the social media for not returning to the country from Mexico where he was talking about disasters. There is no escaping the reality that development schemes like dams, reservoirs, highways, power stations and what have you entail environmental cost. Cost benefit analyses must be carefully worked out before we proceed with grandiose schemes. Columnist Rajan Philips writing in this page says that systems that prevailed during the latter part of the colonial administration and early days of Independence were decidedly superior to what prevails today. This despite the huge expansion, both of officialdom and institutions, which has been this country’s lot in recent decades. Apart from the corruption, we can no longer take pride in the capacity and commitment of our public services. This sadly applies most to the leadership and the bloated political establishment more concerned about its own welfare and benefits than that of the country.

The president has been praised for stopping the import of luxury vehicles for his ministers and officials, obscenely continuing in the teeth of public opinion, at least till the end of this year, after the floods hit. But why were they approved in the first instance? There are enough vehicles in the government pool to serve the needs of both the political and bureaucratic establishments. But profligacy has for too long been the name of the game and the leadership has been sadly incapable of applying the brakes. How could it, when it too is not slow in ladling the gravy to its own plate. Our leaders would do well reading and digesting Philips and Sanjana Hattotuwa who has also commented on the same subject today.

CUSTOMS, INLAND REVENUE, CENTRAL BANK AND YAHAPALANA  

June 2nd, 2017

KAMALIKA PIERIS

Yahapalana is revising several Acts of Parliament which are of critical importance to the economy. It is clear that these Acts were marked out for revision at the start itself, as a part of the Yahapalana regime change. The purpose is to weaken these departments.

The Ministry of Finance is drafting a new Customs Ordinance, under the direction of the Prime Minister, on the flimsy grounds that the existing Act is ‘old’. Customs officers stated that the  Customs Ordinance has worked well all these years. The law had changed periodically, over time, through amendments  and numerous court cases and was perfectly up to date. Any changes should be made every carefully.

Customs trade unions objected to the repeal of the existing Customs Ordinance. The Ministry is trying to amend the Customs Ordinance in secret, to weaken the powers of Customs officials,  they charged. All Ceylon Customs Services Union said the changes were intended to help ‘racketeers’. The existing Act had become a headache for racketeers and smugglers and those who wished to avoid paying taxes.  Fraudsters and racketeers could engage in frauds without any fear if the Act was changed.

Their protests were ignored. The new Act was drafted   by a three member committee, which included a Customs official of  80 years, who had left twenty years ago, and a lawyer who was the UNP organizer for Balapitiya and had appeared in Customs cases often against the Customs officers. This has led to the charge that the new Customs Act is drafted by lawyers who had appeared for customs racketeers and that Customs Ordinance was to be replaced with a new one to accommodate these racketeers. None of the stakeholders, such as importers, exporters, customs unions,  had been consulted.

Customs officers were not shown the new draft  and Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake  had not given them an appointment to discuss the matter. .Customs officers had made three requests for appointments. Customs officers rarely engage in trade union work. They are well placed and well looked after, noted observers. But in this case, due to the gravity of the matter, Customs officers took trade union action.

They ‘walked out’ in protest in February 2016. Nothing happened. So in September 2016, eight Customs Unions engaged in a two day work to rule. They also staged a protest outside the Customs Headquarters. We have been asking the Minister of Finance for an appointment to discuss the new Customs Ordinance since January 2016 but he has refused to meet us. We have also asked them to give an official document on the new proposals so that we too can discuss them and have our inputs heard, but that too has been refused. We have once again asked for a meeting with Minister Karunanayake to discuss the new bill, they said in September 2016.

The Minister was eventually  compelled to provide a copy of the draft law and schedule a meeting with the Customs officers. The draft initially given to them was ‘only a cut and paste document of bits and pieces from foreign customs laws.’ The real draft must have been shown to them thereafter. We are told that Customs officers vehemently objected to the proposed Customs Act, when they saw it.  They said that it would help business tycoons while reducing the powers of Customs Officers”. Customs officers wanted the Act amended in the manner suggested by the Customs officials. But the Finance Ministry was not willing to do so. Customs officers charged that the government for acting in a dictatorial manner.

Customs officers had three other complaints. They  said the government had set up an illegal unit called ‘Revenue efficiency and investment unit’ at a cost of Rs 10 million . They wanted this removed as there were already mechanisms in place for malpractices. They also protested over the appointment  of Finance Ministry officials to oversee the functions of custom officers.  It was reported that the government had decided to recall retired customs officers as well. Thirdly, they said the government was planning to appoint a regulatory body to control four high income generating government departments, Customs, Excise, Valuation and Inland Revenue. Customs trade unions said in January 2017, that they will intensify their protest campaign against the draft bill and vowed to defeat it by exerting maximum pressure in the  near future.

The Central Bank of Sri Lanka is a semi autonomous body responsible for the conduct of monetary policy in Sri Lanka. It also has wide supervisory powers over the financial system and management of the public debt of Sri Lanka.  As soon as Yahapalana government came in, the Central Bank was taken away from the Finance Ministry and brought under the Prime Minister. There were objections  but the change was made.

In 2017, Yahapalana put forward three proposals relating to functions carried out by the Central Bank . There would be three new units. First, a Consumer Financial Protection Authority (CFPA) which would control non-bank institutions including finance companies.  Secondly, an independent Debt Office, to be set up at the Finance Ministry for transactions in government securities. This could then be extended  to other instruments including corporate debt security. Thirdly, a National Payment Platform (NPP) to be managed and controlled by ICTA  would be set up outside the Central Bank.

These proposals have come under strong criticism from various quarters including the Central Bank’s own officials  as measures intended to dilute the power of the Central Bank. Managing debt is one of the primary functions of the Central Bank. Taking away debt management from Central Bank means taking away most of its function, they said.

Assessing the solvency levels of banking and financial institutions  and overseeing national payments were also functions of the Central Bank. These two functions are preserves of the Monetary Board, assigned to it by law, to be implemented through its operational arm, the Central Bank. Prime Minister Ranil Wickremasinghe however, said the Central Bank’s task is to raise money to pay the loans, settling the debt could be done by a separate office.

The new proposals were intended to take away the powers of the Monetary Board and the Central Bank, said critics. Central Bank authorities warned that this new move would put monetary management into a chaotic situation.  the Finance Minister was trying to interfere with the responsibilities of the Monetary Board of the Central Bank charged critics.  According to the constitution, only Parliament shall have full control of Public Finance.

The government announced in its 2017 Budget that it would set up National Payment Platform (NPP) to be managed and controlled by ICTA. The National Payment Platform is intended to facilitate persons, businesses and government to make peer-to-peer payments, including fund transfers and online payments for goods and services, using computing devices, including mobile devices,” it will facilitate all government and private sector online/electronic transactions.   The government intended to use ICTA to break the monopoly of the Central Bank and hand the national payment system was over to the private sector, said critics.

Around  September 2016,  ICTA    awarded the  contract to develop the new payment platform,   to Transact Lanka ,a mobile payment and fund transfer service, without following due tender procedures. Transact Lanka was granted permission to operate the Lanka Government Payment service Web Portal to enable citizens to make cash  based payments for all government payments.

Central Bank officials  opposed  this. A Central Bank official said ‘this is dangerous stuff. No country allows a payments gateway internally to be managed by private parties. . The payment system is the responsibility of the Monetary Board of the Central Bank”, The NPP must be designed and handled by the Monetary Board of the Central Bank.”The reason is that, when we make an electronic payment we should be satisfied that the payment we make reaches the person or institution we intended to, say an account in Nigeria .

Treasury and private sector experts did not think  ICTA could deliver this project.   ICTA’s implementing and monitoring capacity to oversee the National Payment Platform (NPP) was doubtful, they said.  instead ICTA might jeopardize the National Payment Platform. In November 2016  they observed that ICTA had not yet produced any tangible results.

UPFA’s Bandula Gunawardene  filed a  Fundamental Rights violation petition regarding the ICTA managed National Payment Platform. According to  the constitution it is Parliament that has full control of over public finance, he stated. ‘To steal people’s money, they are eying to privatize this institution,” he said.

The Central Bank already has an advanced digital payment system, known as Real Time Gross Settlement System or RTGS, owned and operated by the Central Bank. This has safeguards to mitigate risks involved in payments. The necessary audit trails to prevent frauds are there. Central Bank   also has its ‘Lanka Clear’ agency for clearing cheques and operating a nationwide payment system. . ‘Lanka Clear’ is operated by banks under the supervision and part ownership of the Central Bank. It has  upgraded and modernized its service and is in the process of introducing a system of sharing the  Automated Teller Machines of  the banks.

‘Lanka Clear’s national payment system, ‘LankaPay’   is fully secured, highly confidential and trustworthy, said Bank sources. There is nothing wrong with it. The Central Bank has invested sufficiently in  its digital infrastructure   and has staff capable of performing these functions effectively and efficiently. LankaClear was the first department  in Sri Lanka to obtain the  certification of Payment Card Industry Data Security Standard (PCI-DSS), version 3.2. This certification is at the ‘zenith of international data security standards in the payment card industry.’

LankaClear is the best-placed agency for operating a national payments system, say experts. Monetary Board on behalf of the Central Bank should be asked to set up a national payment system in collaboration with Lanka Clear. ICTA can provide the necessary technical expertise to  LankaClear.

Yahapalana government also  had other proposals aimed at weakening the Central Bank. The government was  planning to set up new units under the Finance Ministry to oversee  other functions of the Central Bank, including the printing of currency notes. Several departments in the Central Bank, such as Department of exchange control, the EPF,  the Central Bank Staff training college and the public debt department,   will go to independent agencies.

An advisory group to assess the solvency levels of banking and financial institutions would be formed within the Finance Ministry. Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake had suggested the appointment of an ‘outsider’ as Central Bank Deputy Governor. Traditionally it is a senior bank officer based on seniority and experience. Never before has the functions of the Central Bank been undermined by a Finance Minister in this manner, said critics. Nor has the role of the Central Bank been compromised as much as  now, they said. What is the purpose of a Central Bank when its departments are handed over to private companies, they asked.

Central Bank governor Coomaraswamy  said that an independent Central Bank was necessary in a country. Nimal Sanderatne observed that the independence of a Central Bank is vital for a country’s economic stability. Economies that have performed well are those who have strong, independence Central Banks.  A strong Central Bank can make a sound assessment of the economy, give sound advice and take corrective action to curb inflation. ‘It is of vital importance that all sections of the community protests against any moves to undermine the independence of the Central Bank.’

Yahapalana  made a promise at January 2015 Presidential elections, that it would present a National Audit Bill to Parliament, if elected. The National Audit Bill would help to control public sector corruption. The Bill would be   part of its 100 day programme.  However, the matter is still under discussion and  the final Bill has not yet been drafted. the government is not satisfied with the Bill.

the Finance Ministry wants amendments to the National Audit Bill. The government had initially wanted to do away with or amend about 20 out of 57 sections in the draft Bill. ‘Even at the third round of discussions, they appointed committees, and the Bill is being changed,’  said critics  in May 2017.’ There is no reason for amending the original Bill. It was drafted by a top level committee headed by the Auditor General, they said.

The original National Audit Bill has been greatly diluted, said critics. The amendments  go against the very purpose the Bill. Several key clauses of the Bill have been removed  making it ineffective. It  will not yield the desired results. The   Auditor General’s Department said  that there was no point in making further representations to the government. The subject has gone beyond their control. Everything has been messed up, I don’t think there will be a good Audit Act or Audit Service Commission, now,”  officials said.

The Bill has been repeatedly examined for ways and means of reducing the powers of the Auditor General. The Auditor General’s powers have been curtailed. He does not have  the power to appoint officers or formulate salary structures. Certain amendments bring the Auditor General under the authority of Audit Service Commission( ASC). The Auditor General can order a surcharge to recover losses incurred by bad decisions of public officials but the power to do so has been given to the Audit Service Commission.

Critics said that  the  ASC is expected to assist the Auditor General in administrative work, promotions, recruitment, and financial matters only. Auditor General should not be under the ASC. The draft National Audit Bill  also violates the Constitution. Therefore when it appears as a Gazette notification, people will probably go to Supreme Court against, saying the Bill was a violation of the Constitution.

The next target of the Yahapalana government  was the Inland Revenue, popularly known as ‘Income Tax’. When the IMF granted an USD 1.5 billion Extended Loan Facility to Sri Lanka in 2016, one of the conditions under which the grant was made was that Sri Lanka must revise its tax policy.

The IMF   said the new Act should broaden the tax base by removing excess tax incentives, modernize rules related to cross-border transactions to address base erosion and combat tax avoidance, reduce complexity through an improved principles-based drafting style and strengthen and clarify existing powers of the Inland Revenue Department to improve enforcement”.

Yahapalana was ordered to introduce a new Inland Revenue Act, otherwise IMF will withhold its   loan.  Yahapalana had no choice in the matter. Since there was no real need for a new Act, the government did not ask the Inland Revenue Department to draft a new tax law. They asked the IMF to prepare the new Act.

IMF readily did so. A team of IMF experts collected information on current revenue collection procedure and implementation of existing tax laws from the Inland Revenue Department (IRD).  Senior Inland Revenue Department officers say they were  not informed  but Commissioner-General of Inland Revenue says. The IMF team agreed with us to a certain extent on the proposals we made”.

The draft Inland Revenue Act for Sri Lanka  provided by the IMF was not an original one. It was based on what IMF had prepared for Ghana. Instead of drafting a new law to suit Sri Lanka, IMF has simply taken, word for word, the tax law of Ghana.  The proposed bill is in fact a carbon copy of Ghana’s Act  they said contemptuously. IMF has merely foisted Ghana’s tax law on us. If the objective was to modernize the law, they should have looked at Singapore or Malaysia.

The  IMF income tax included certain new  provisions. A person will be taxed on all income regardless of source and whether or not foreign income earned is brought into Sri Lanka. Chargeable income of a person for a year of assessment includes the total of the assessable income from employment, business or investment less the total amount of deduction allowed. The chargeable income shall be determined from each source separately.

In the case of business income, a gift received in respect of the business and a gain from the realization of capital assets will be taxed. In the case of investment income, a gain from the realization of an investment asset, winnings from lottery and a gift received in respect of the investment would be taxed. Interest paid to an individual is no longer exempted from tax. Interest or dividend paid to a member or a holder of an approved unit trust or mutual fund is taxed at 1 per cent where the holder is an individual otherwise is 8 per cent.

There are some good aspects in the proposed law said the Commissioner-General of Inland Revenue.  Except for this lone statement, the proposed Tax Bill has run into stiff opposition  from tax officials and experts. The move to replace the existing law,  was  a retrograde step that’s bound to create confusion and impinge on the overall revenue collection mechanism,  they said.

The new Act had been prepared without any knowledge of Sri Lankan businesses or the taxation culture which has been in operation for over 75 years, tax officials said. The new law attempts to fundamentally change the sources of income, method of calculating the taxable income, claiming deductions, assessment procedure and the administrative provisions, they charged. The proposed Act ignores the more important sections on tax law imposition and recovery and gives undue emphasis to less important sections, which have little relevance to the economy.  The proposal to separate the functions of the Department to two divisions namely, administration and tax collection will bring ‘dire consequences.’ The terminology used in the draft has no relation to the present Act either.

What was  purpose of replacing the present Inland Revenue Act, they queried. Why makde changes in a sector that generates enormous tax revenue for the government. If the government wishes to increase tax collection,  it should plug the loopholes in the law that leads to tax avoidance or evasion and make the IR department a more efficient tax collection body. The solution is not to abolish the existing Act which was in force for over a century and replace it with a new law , which, in any case, will not guarantee a higher collection of tax revenue,

There is no guarantee that the proposed Act will increase revenue, said  experts. it does not add any new  income sources to the existing revenue sources and instead of plugging the existing loopholes, the new Act  adds new  loopholes due to the brevity of the drafting  The IMF  faced time constraints in drafting the new legislation.  Instead of increasing revenue collection, the new Act would reduce it  since tax payers as well as revenue officers  will  lack an understanding of the law at least in the short to medium term.

The Inland Revenue Commissioners Association  severely criticized the proposed new Act and said its enactment would affect at least 80 percent of the new Revenue Administration and Management Information System (RAMSIS) now in  operation. RAMSIS   was programmed on the current Inland Revenue Act and any changes to the Act would make RAMSIS redundant.

RAMSIS was introduced in 2012  to  develop the automation of the Department of Inland Revenue with the ultimate objective of integrating the automated systems of the Inland Revenue Department, Sri Lanka Customs and Ministry of Planning to optimize revenue and fiscal efficiency and accountability. RAMSIS would also connect with 26 other government agencies in order to make it easier for tax payers to pay their taxes online and for the IRD to monitor and track tax payments. Services such as registration, returns, tax payments, appeals, collections, cancellation, directions, and clearances would go through the system which could collect over 95 percent of the total tax revenue The second and last phase of RAMSIS was expected to be completed by October  2017.

We are now reaping the benefits of RAMSIS, said the tax officers. We have managed to increase revenue collection of the Economic Service Charge by 16 percent, VAT by 187 percent, NBT by 157 percent and the personal and company income tax by 113 percent. To replace RAMSIS at this point would be a colossal waste of money and effort. It will cause many unforeseen consequences, inconvenience the people and confuse tax administration”. We cannot make the structural changes the IMF needs but  we could  instead make revisions to the existing Act, they added.

When drafting an Inland Revenue Act the basic structure and the principles of imposition, payment and recovery must be maintained,   said officials. But the  new IMF law departs from the very foundation and fabric of the existing Act. Further, the proposed Act is not consistent with the existing law and until the transition period ends, two regimes of law will exist side by side.  For example, taxation of finance leasing will change dramatically and until existing leasing agreements expire, two regimes will continue, creating confusion and making administration difficult. Such a  drastic change  in the Inland Revenue law will create problems said tax  experts.

Tax law  is   always difficult and  complicated, said tax experts. There are no uncomplicated tax laws, anywhere in the world,  because taxation itself is inherently complicated, and it’s not everybody who can understand it. Tax officers will  need at least four to five years to study and understand the new IMF tax law.

Any new tax law takes at least 10 years to settle down. ‘Till then people will interpret it the way they want as nobody will know the correct definition of the new law.’  The  judicial precedence, interpretations, practices and principles relating to income tax established over almost a century  will become redundant.   “The wealth of knowledge acquired over the past  decades by the Inland Revenue Department, judicial system, practitioners and tax payers will be lost overnight”.  This could result in heavy revenue loss to the government during the interim period. Who will take care of the loss of revenue during this period, critics asked.

Tax  experts say  the  existing   Inland Revenue Act No 10 of 2006, has more depth, better drafting than the new Act. And most parts of it are consistent with international best practices. Drastic changes  were not necessary  and there was no reason to ‘kick out the whole Act’. If tax reform was needed,  the existing Act could have been revised. Weak provisions can be redrafted, repugnant sections could be removed,  sections that were unclear  could be re-written    and subsequent legislation incorporated into the body of the  Act. Any unnecessary tax incentives  could be removed and the tax base increased. Positive sections in the  IMF Act, especially on transfer pricing, international tax and advance rulings could be added.

The organizations affected by the new Act  have  reacted strongly. Representatives of the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Sri Lanka, Ceylon Chamber of Commerce and industry practitioners met the Prime Minister and Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake in April 2017. ‘We wanted certain amendments incorporated. It was with great difficulty that we managed to get something in, not everything’ , they said.

Inland Revenue Department trade unions were, in April 2017,  discussing  the action that they would take against the enactment of the new Bill. These unions were critical of the bill being moved too quickly with too little deliberation. It is therefore likely that the new income tax legislation would     paralyze tax collection countrywide, due to likely trade union action .

Sand from the Philippines and Indonesia

June 2nd, 2017

Garvin Karunaratne Former Government Agent, Matara

It is reported in the past Sunday Times  that we are getting sand from overseas as far as the Philippines and Indonesia.(Sunday Times)

I wonder why.

We have ample resources of sand. Having worked in over half the Districts in Sri Lanka and having done islandwide circuits over the entire terrain of the island for over five years, I am of the opinion that we do have enough and more of sand. In attending to endless tasks in rural and agricultural development, fertilizer distribution, minor irrigation and the administration of two districts, I have travelled by car, and trudged on footpaths on all types of terrain. At times I was criticised for drawing travelling claims above my salary.

I am therefore puzzled to realise why we have to get sand from abroad, incurring our borrowed foreign exchange.

A few years ago on my trip to Mahiyangana I met endless lorries hauling sand. I really wondered why. I was certain that it was not necessary because sand is everywhere on the shores of our endless rivers.

We are a country that is blessed with ample rainfall, the problem is that we do not know how to handle the gift of water that Mother Nature has bequeathed to us..

Dealing in sand is also  a lucrative trade. A decade ago I noticed sand packing going on at night in a number of empty lands in Nugegoda. By dusk four lorry loads roll in and two or three specialist workmen get involved in unloading. They unload only four loads and re pack them into five lorries. The workmen had mastered the art of shovelling sand in a manner that  creates an extra lorry load.  They work at least four to five hours a night. They have created an extra load. Having covered and supervised rice milling and paddy handling for long I am aware that  there is a method of packing more rice or paddy into a bushel. It depends on the manner in which the rice or paddy is poured in.. An extra lorry load is a fanciful earning. I am also certain that ferrying sand from Mahiyangana and Manampitiya has created a few millionaires.

To get back to sand from overseas. Our sand is in various places on river beds and river beaches and  nature determines the site. The Kelani Ganga, Maha Oya, the Mahaweli and all rivers are apt at this task and it is up to us to find out the spots and extract the amount of sand that will not create a problem for the environment. The officials the Divisional Secretaries and the Grama Nilasdharis will know the spots.  The Executive Engineers have also to come in. THis is a difficult task but something that can be done.

The foreign debt that will pile up when we have to pay for sand from overseas is also an important aspect. At the moment we are a bankrupt country, where we are unable to service our loans and we have to resort to borrow at high interest.  This has proved an easy task as the IMF though talking tough is ever ready to give us a clean bill of health which enables us to find loans. The fact that we get further into debt is forgotten. This is the rotten economic policy that the IMF foisted on our country in 1978, which we yet follow as detailed in my latest book: How the IMF Sabotaged Third World Development (Kindle). Till 1977 Sri Lanka was developing- managing with our incomes- We were not an indebted country in 1977.

Buying sand from overseas is not necessary. What is required is to put our house in order and find the sand within our country..

Garvin Karunaratne

Former Government Agent, Matara

5 th June 2017

සූරියවැවේ සිංහ කුසලානය

June 2nd, 2017

වරුණ චන්ද්‍රකීර්ති

ජාත්‍යන්තර බෙරවාදන සහ වෙස්මුහුණු උත්සවයක් පැවැත්වීමෙන් අපේ සංස්කෘතික උරුමයන් ඉස්මතු කරවීමටත් ඒ හරහා විශාල ප්‍රමාණයකට ජීවනෝපාය මාර්ග උදාකරගැනීමටත් අවස්ථාවක් සළස්වලා දෙන්න පුළුවන් කියලා මෙයට පෙර ලියූ ලිපියෙන් කිව්වා. ඒක හුදෙක් ම ප්‍රාථමික මට්ටමේ යෝජනාවක් විතරයි. ඒක ඇත්තක් කරගන්න කළ යුතු වැඩ විශාල ප්‍රමාණයක් තියෙනවා. කලින් ලිපියකින් කියපු විදිහට උගතුන් සංවිධානගත වෙන්න ඕන මේ විදිහේ යෝජනා ක්‍රියාවට නැංවීමට උවමනා කරන ප්‍රායෝගික සැලැසුම් හදන්න. ඉතින් මේ වගේ වැඩ වෙනුවෙන් කළ යුතු බිම් මට්ටමේ අධ්‍යයන කටයුතු සෑහෙන ප්‍රමාණයකුත් තියෙනවා. මූලික ව කෙරෙන අධ්‍යයනයකින් මේ කාර්යයට දායක කරගන්න පුළුවන් මිනිස්සු, සංවිධාන, ආයතන මොනවා ද කියලා හොයාගන්න ඕන. දැන් කාට හරි අහන්න පුළුවන් ඒ වගේ වැඩට ඕන සල්ලි දෙන්නේ කවුද කියලා. ඒ ගැන වදවෙන්න ඕනකමක් නෑ. විශ්වවිද්‍යාල ගුරුවරුන්ට පුළුවන් මේ විදිහේ කටයුතු ක්‍ෂේත්‍ර අධ්‍යයන කටයුතු විදිහට තමන් ගේ ශිෂ්‍යයන්ට පවරන්න. විවිධාකාර පැවැරීම් සම්පූර්ණ කරලා දෙන එක ශිෂ්‍යයන් ගේ අධ්‍යාපන කටයුතුවලට ම අදාළ කාර්යයක්.

පළමු උපාධි සඳහා කරන පැවැරීම්වලට අමතරව ශාස්ත්‍රපති උපාධි, ආචාර්ය උපාධි වෙනුවෙන් කරන පර්යේෂණවලටත් මේ වගේ වැඩ පාදක කරගන්න පුළුවන්. පැවැරුම් කරන්න ඕන, පර්යේෂණ කරන්න ඕන වාර්තා ලියලා, නිබන්ධන ලියලා කොහේ හරි මුල්ලකට දාන්න නෙවෙයි. ඒ වැඩවලින් තමන්ට, සමාජයට යමක් ලැබෙන්න ඕන. ඉතින් මෙයට පෙර ලිපියෙන් කරපු යෝජනාවට – ඒ කියන්නේ ජාත්‍යන්තර බෙරවාදන හා වෙස්මුහුණු උත්සවයක් පැවැත්වීම හා සම්බන්ධ යෝජනාවට අදාළ මූලික අධ්‍යයන කටයුතු කරන්න ශිෂ්‍ය ශිෂ්‍යාවන් දහදෙනකුට වුනත් පුළුවන්. විවිධ ක්‍ෂේත්‍ර ආවරණය කෙරෙන විදිහට මේ අයව යොදවන්න ගුරුවරු දැනගන්න ඕන.

මේ ලේඛකයාට හිතෙන විදිහට ප්‍රදේශයේ විහාරස්ථාන, ග්‍රාමීය මට්ටමේ සංවිධාන, ග්‍රාම නිලධාරී හා සංවර්ධන නිලධාරී කාර්යාල, ප්‍රාදේශීය ලේකම් කාර්යාල, ප්‍රාදේශීය හා නගර සභා, ප්‍රදේශයේ පොලිස් ස්ථාන, ව්‍යාපාරික සංගම් වගේ ආයතන මේ වැඩේටට අදාළයි. ඊ ළඟට ප්‍රදේශයේ සිතියම් විධිමත් විදිහට සකසාගන්න ඕන. ප්‍රදේශයේ තිබෙන සම්පත් විධිමත් ව හඳුනාගැනීමත් කරන්න ඕන. වැදගත් ම දේ තමයි ප්‍රශ්න ඇති නොවෙන විදිහට මේ වැඩේ කරන්නේ කොහොම ද කියලා හොයලා බලන එක. අදාළ ප්‍රදේශයේ ඉන්න මිනිස්සුන් ගේ සමාජ සංස්කෘතික ඕන එපාකම් අමතක කරලා මේක කරන්න හැදුවොත් තමයි ප්‍රශ්න ඇතිවෙන්නේ. ඉතින් මේ හැම දෙයක් ගැන ම හොඳින් හොයලා බලන්න ඕන.

කරන්න ඕන මූලික ම දේ තමයි මේ වගේ අරමුණක් වෙනුවෙන් දැන උගත් පිරිස් සංවිධානගත වීම. මේ වගේ වැඩ තනියෙන් කරන්න බෑ. අදාළ ආරම්භක කටයුතු සඳහා යම් මුදලක් අවශ්‍ය වෙනවා නම් මේ විදිහේ වැඩකින් සෘජු ප්‍රතිලාභ ලබන්න පුළුවන් සංචාරක හා හෝටල් ක්‍ෂේත්‍රයේ අයගෙන් උදව් උපකාර ඉල්ලගන්නත් පුළුවන්. ඒත් ඒ මිනිස්සු වුනත් මුදලක් වියදම් කරන්න ඉදිරිපත්වෙන්නේ ප්‍රායෝගික යමක් කරන්න සූදානම් බව ක්‍රියාවෙන් ම පෙන්නුවොත් විතරයි. අනික් වැදගත් ම කාරණේ තමයි තම තමන් ගේ දේශපාලන පක්‍ෂපාතකම් මේ වගේ වැඩකට පටලවා නොගෙන ඉන්න එක. මේ ලේඛකයා ලියන ලිපිවල දී කිසි ම දේශපාලන පක්‍ෂයකට හෝයියා කියලාවත්, තවත් පක්‍ෂයකට බැන වැදිලාවත් නෑ. මේ දේශපාලන කාකොටාගැනිල්ල ඔළුවේ තියාගෙන කරන්න පුළුවන් දෙයක් නෑ.

අනෙක් වැදගත් කාරණය තමයි විවිධ ක්‍ෂේත්‍රවල උගතුන් ගේ එකතුවීමක් අවශ්‍ය බව තේරුම්ගැනීම. සමාජ, ආර්ථික, මූල්‍ය, ව්‍යාපාරික, කළමනාකරණ වගේ ක්‍ෂේත්‍රවල අයට විතරක් නෙවෙයි චිත්‍ර, නැටුම්, සංගීත, සිනමා වගේ ප්‍රසාංගික කලා ක්‍ෂේත්‍රවල අයටත් මේ වෙනුවෙන් කළයුතු වැඩ සෑහෙන ප්‍රමාණයක් තියෙනවා. ඉතින් ඒ හැම ක්‍ෂේත්‍රයක ම දැනුමක් තියෙන අය සංවිධානගත වුනොත් විතරයි මේ වැඩේ කරන්න පුළුවන් වෙන්නේ. කලින් ලිපියකින් කියපු විදිහට මේ ආකාරයෙන් සංවිධානගත වීම අපේ අයට ආගන්තුක දෙයක් නෙවෙයි. අපේ මිනිස්සු කොහොමත් සංවිධාන හදාගන්න දක්‍ෂයි. ඉතින් ඒ හැකියාවෙන් ප්‍රයෝජන ගන්නවා මිසක් ආණ්ඩුව මුල්වෙලා මේවා කරයි කියලා බලාගෙන ඉන්න හොඳ නෑ. ආණ්ඩුව මුල්වුනොත් මේවා කෙරෙන්නේ නිලධාරි තන්ත්‍රයක් හරහා. ඒක ප්‍රායෝගික දෙයක් නොවන බව අපි අත්දැකීමෙන් ම දන්නවා. ඉතින් ආණ්ඩු දිහා බලාගෙන කන්නලව් කරන සෙල්ලමෙන් අපි ඈත්වෙන්න ඕන.

මේ ලිපිය ලියන්නේ ජාත්‍යන්තර බෙරවාදන හා වෙස්මුහුණු උත්සවය සංවිධානය කරගැනීමට කළ යුතු දේ ගැන ම කියන්න නම් නෙවෙයි. මේ කියන්න හදන්නේ තවත් හීනයක් ගැන. හැබැයි මේ වගේ හීන ගැන ම කියා කියා ඉන්න අදහසක් මේ ලේඛකයාට නෑ. සිහින නොදකින ජාතිය ලොවැ නො නඟී” කියලා ලියපු හින්දා තමන් දැකපු, දකින හීනයක් දෙකක් ගැන කියන එක යුතුකමක් කියලා මේ ලේඛකයා හිතනවා. ඉතින් මේ කරන්නෙත් ඒ යුතුකම ඉටුකිරීමක්. ඒ හින්දා වැඩි වැල්වටාරම් කියන්නේ නැතිව කෙළින් ම වැඩේට බහින්නම්.

හම්බන්තොට දිස්ත්‍රික්කයට අයිති සූරියවැවේ පිට්ටනියක් හදලා තියෙනවා. මේක හදලා තියෙන්නේ ක්‍රිකට් ගහන්න. ඒත් දැන් කාලයක් තිස්සේ ඒක අතහැරලා දාලා. ඒකට සුදු අලියෙක් කියලාත් කියනවා. කොළඹත් නුවර, ගාල්ල වගේ ප්‍රධාන නගරවලත් ක්‍රිකට් ගැහුවාට අපේ සමාජයට මේ බෝල සෙල්ලම ඇතුළුවෙලා අවුරුදු 35 ක් 36 ක් විතර ඇති. අපේ රටට ටෙස්ට් ක්‍රිකට් වරම් ලැබෙන්න කලින් අපේ ගම්වල මිනිස්සුන්ට මේ සෙල්ලම ගැන දැනුමක් අවබෝධයක් තිබුණේ නෑ. ටෙස්ට් වරම් ලැබීමත්, රූපවාහිනිය ලැබීමත් සිද්දවුනේ එක කාලෙක. ඉතින් කොහොම කොහොම හරි මේ සෙල්ලම අපේ මිනිස්සු අතර පැතිරුනා. කාලයක් ඇබ්බැහියක් තරමට ම ක්‍රිකට් බැලිල්ල නැගලා ගියත් දැන් ඒ ගැන උනන්දුවෙන අය ටිකක් අඩුයි. කීයක් ගහලා ද, විකට් කීයක් කැඩිලා ද වගේ විස්තර ටිකක් එහෙන් මෙහෙන් දැනගන්නවා ඇරෙන්න රූපවාහින දිහා කට ඇරගෙන බලාගෙන ඉන්න අය, රේඩියෝව කණේ ගහගෙන ඉන්න අය ටිකෙන් ටික අඩුවෙලා ගිහිල්ලා.

ඒත් ඉතින් අපේ මොකක් හරි පිට්ටනියක මොකක් හරි ලොකු තරඟයක් තියෙන වෙලාවට බලන්න යන පිරිසකුත් නැතුවා නෙවෙයි. ඉතින් සූරියවැවේ ක්‍රිකට් ගැහුවොත් බලන්න යන අය නෑ කියන්න බෑ. ඒත් මේ බැලිල්ලෙන් ඒ පැත්තේ මිනිස්සුන්ට, පොදුවේ ගත්තම රටට එච්චර ප්‍රතිලාභයක් – ඒ කියන්නේ ආර්ථික ප්‍රතිලාභයක් අත්වෙයි කියලා හිතන්න අමාරුයි. අපේ කොල්ලෝ සද්දේ දාගෙන සූරියවැවට ගිහිල්ලා රටකජු ගොට්ටක්, බඩ ඉරිඟු කරලක්, වඩයක් කාලා අඩියකුත් ගහලා ආපහු ගෙදර යයි. ඊට පස්සේ ආයෙත් සූරියවැව ආලපාලු වෙලා යයි. ඉතින් මේ සම්පතින් වෙනත් වැඩක් ගන්න බැරි ද? මීට වඩා ආදායමක් මේකෙන් උපද්දවා ගන්න බැරි ද? මේ විස්තරකරන්න හදන්නේ මේ සිතුවිල්ල මුල් කරගෙන දැකපු හීනයක්.

ඒ හීනය තමයි සූරියවැව පිට්ටනිය පාපන්දු ගහන්න යොදාගන්න එක. අපේ පාපන්දු ගැහිල්ල බොහොම පහළ මට්ටමක තියෙන හින්දා මේ වගේ යෝජනාවක් කරන එකේ තේරුම මොකක්ද කියලා බොහෝ දෙනෙක්ට හිතෙන්න පුළුවන්. මේ කියන්නේ සූරියවැවේ අපි පාපන්දු ගහන්න ඕන කියන එක නෙවෙයි. මේ කියන්නේ සූරියවැවේ ජාත්‍යන්තර පාපන්දු තරගාවලියක් සංවිධානය කරන්න පුළුවන් කියන එකයි. මේකට කණ්ඩායමක් විදිහට අපි සහභාගීවෙන්න ඕන නෑ. එහෙම නම් මේකට සහභාගී කරගන්න පුළුවන් කවුද?

මේකට සහභාගීවෙන්න කියලා ආසියානු කලාපයේ පාපන්දු ක්‍රීඩාවේ යෙදෙන කණ්ඩායම් පහකට හයකට ආරාධනාකරන්න පුළුවන්. මේ කියන්නේ ආසියානු පාපන්දු කුසලානයට සහභාගී වෙන සියළුම රටවල් ගැන නෙවෙයි. ඒ වගේ ලොකු තරගාවලියක් සංවිධානය කිරීමේ හයියක් අපිට නෑ. ඒත් කලාපයේ ඉන්න ප්‍රධාන පෙළේ රටවල් කිහිපයක් මේ වැඩේට සම්බන්ධ කරගන්න අපිට පුළුවන් කියලා මේ ලේඛකයාට හිතෙනවා. මොන රටවල් ගැන ද මේ කියන්නේ?

ජපානය, දකුණු කොරියාව, චීනය, සෞදි අරාබිය සහ ඉරානය. මෙන්න මේ රටවල් පහ ගැනයි මේ ලේඛකයා හිතන්නේ. ජපානය අවස්ථා හතරක දී ආසියානු පාපන්දු කුසලානය දිනාගෙන තියෙනවා. සෞදි අරාබියත් ඉරානයත් අවස්ථා තුනක දී ඒ හපන්කම කරලා තියෙනවා. දකුණු කොරියාව අවස්ථා දෙකක දී ආසියානු කුසලානය දිනාගෙන තියෙනවා. අවස්ථා දෙකක දී අනුශූරතාව දිනාගන්න චීනය සමත්වෙලා තියෙනවා. ඓතිහාසික, සමාජ සංස්කෘතික හා දේශපාලනික හේතු හින්දා ජපානය – චීනය අතරත්, ජපානය – දකුණු කොරියාව අතරත්, චීනය – දකුණු කොරියාව අතරත් අරියාදුකම් තියෙනවා. සෞදි අරාබිය හා ඉරානය අතරත් එහෙමයි. ඉතින් මේ අය එකිනෙකාට එරෙහිව පාපන්දුවෙන් තරග කරනවා කියන්නේ ඒවා වටේ ප්‍රේක්‍ෂකයන් විශාල පිරිසක් ආකර්ශනය කරගන්නවා කියන එකයි. මේ අයට අපේ සිංහ කුසලානය වෙනුවෙන් තරග වදින්න අවස්ථාවක් ලබාදෙන්න පුළුවන්. ඒ වගේ වැඩකින් උපයන්න පුළුවන් ආදායම ගැන අමුතුවෙන් විස්තරකරන්න ඕන නෑ.

දැන් ගැටලුව වෙන්නේ මේ වගේ තරගාවලියකට මේ මිනිස්සුන්ව ගෙන්නගන්නේ කොහොම ද කියන එකයි. මේ රටවල් පහත් එක්ක ම අපේ හොඳ සම්බන්ධකම් තියෙනවා. එහෙම තියෙන බව අපේ හැම ආණ්ඩුවක් ම කියනවා. ඉතින් රාජතාන්ත්‍රික මට්ටමින් මේ ගැන සාකච්ඡාකරන්න බැරිකමක් නෑ. රාජ්‍ය නායක මට්ටමින් වුනත් කතාකරලා බලන්න පුළුවන්. ජපානය, දකුණු කොරියාව එකඟවුනොත් චීනයට එකඟ නො වී ඉන්න පුළුවන්කමක් නෑ. ඉරානය එකඟවුනොත් සෞදි අරාබියට එකඟ නො වී ඉන්න පුළුවන්කමක් නෑ. ඒ අය අතර තියෙන අරියාදුවලින් වැඩක්ගැනීමේ හැකියාවක් අපිට තියෙන්න ඕන.

ඉතින් මේ වගේ වැඩකින් සෙත සැලසෙන්නේ සූරියවැව වටේ ඉන්න මිනිස්සුන්ට විතරක් නෙවෙයි. තවත් සුදු අලියෙක් කියලා හංවඩු ගහලා තියෙන මත්තල ගුවන්තොටුපලට වුනත් මේ වැඩෙන් වැඩක් වෙයි. ගුවන්තොටුපල, වරාය හදපු පමණින් ඒවා සල්ලි උපද්දවන්නේ නෑ. ඒ වටා මේ වගේ වැඩ කරන්න අපිට පුළුවන්වෙන්න ඕන. සිංහ කුසලානය පිළිබඳ මේ අදහස ඒකට එක පිළියමක් විතරයි.

මේ ලියපු ලිපි දෙකෙන් හඳුන්වලා දුන්නේ රස්සා උපදවන්න පුළුවන් වැඩ දෙකක්. මේවායින් උපදින්නේ සංචාරක අංශයේ, හෝටල් අංශයේ රැකියා විතරක් නෙවෙයි. ආහාර පාන, ඇඳුම් පැළඳුම් වගේ නිපැයුම් බොහෝමයකට වෙළෙඳපොළක් හොයාගන්නත් ඒ එක්කම පුළුවන් වෙනවා. බෙරවාදන හා වෙස්මුහුණු උත්සවයේත්, සිංහ කුසලානයේත් මාධ්‍ය විකාශන අයිතිය විකිණීමෙන්, වෙළෙඳ දැන්වීම් වගේ දේවල්වලින් උපයන්න පුළුවන් ආදායමත් අතිවිශාලයි. මේ වගේ කටයුතු පවත්වන්න පුළුවන් අවුරුද්දට එක වතාවක් විතරයි තමයි. ඒ වතාවක් සතියකට – වැඩි ම වුනොත් දවස් දහයකට සීමාවෙයි. ඒත් ඒ හරහා උපදවන දේ ඒ දවස් කීපයට සීමාවෙන්නේ නෑ.

විවේචනයට දක්‍ෂ අපේ සමහරු කියන්න පුළුවන් මේවා නිකම් ඇස් බැන්දුම් වැඩ කියලා. ඒත් රටකට, ඒ රටේ මිනිස්සුන්ට ආදායම් උපදවාගන්න පුළුවන් ගොවිකම්, කර්මාන්ත නිමැවුම් ආදියෙන් විතරක් නම් නෙවෙයි. කෙරෙන ගොවිකම්වලට, හදන නිමැවුම්වලට වෙළෙඳපොළක් ඇතිකරන විදිහ ගැනත් අපි හිතන්න ඕන. ඉතින් මේ වගේ වැඩවලින් ඒ අවස්ථා ඇති කරගන්න පුළුවන්. හැබැයි මේකෙන් කියන්නේ නෑ අපි මේ වගේ දේවල් විතරක් කර කර ඉන්න ඕන කියලා. වෙන වෙන දේ කරන අතර මේ වගේ දේ ගැනත් අවධානය යොමු කරලා මේවා කෙරෙන තැනට වැඩයොදන්න පුළුවන් නම් හරි.

ඒත් හීනෙන් අලි දැකපු අය ගැන මිසක් සිංහයෝ දැකපු අය ගැන අහලා තියෙනවා ද?

වරුණ චන්ද්‍රකීර්ති෴

Sri Lanka approves solar-wind hybrid plant

June 2nd, 2017

modernpowersystems.com

The Sri Lankan government has approved a proposal to develop a large-scale wind-solar hybrid power plant in the north of the country.

The plans comprise the construction of 240 MW of wind energy capacity and 800 MW of solar capacity in three phases. The project is in line with government policy to increase the amount of renewable energy capacity operating on the country’s network, the government said in a statement.

The Sri Lanka Sustainable Energy Authority (SLEA), part of the Ministry of Power and Renewable Energy, has identified the Pooneryn area in northern Sri Lanka as being suitable for wind and solar power development.

Sri Lanka’s government last year unveiled proposals to expand its renewable energy capacity to 972 MW by 2020, up from the current level of 442 MW. As part of the Long-term Generation Expansion Plan, installed renewable energy capacity in 2034 is expected to reach 1897 MW, with wind energy being the dominant technology.

SLFP is weakened –Prasanna

June 2nd, 2017

By Denagama Dhammika Ranaweera Courtesy Ceylon Today

Convener of the Joint Opposition, MP Prasanna Ranatunge, in an interview with Ceylon Today says as a member of the SLFP, he sent a letter to the President regarding how he should prepare himself to strengthen the SLFP.

Following are Excerpts:

? Is it true that you sent a letter to the President? What did you expect to accomplish?

A: It has to do with what is happening in the country today. As a member of the SLFP I wanted to inform the President about the situation prevailing in the country. I also pointed out what steps he could take to strengthen the SLFP.

? Did you receive any response from him?

A: Not yet.

? Were the leaders of the Joint Opposition aware that you sent the letter?

A: No. It is a private letter. I wrote it as a member of the SLFP.

? If you do receive a response, what will be your next step?

A: The President of the country is officially the Chairman of the Party. If he informs me that he received the letter I will know that he will read it. He is the one who has to decide what should be done next. As the Joint Opposition, we have an understanding of the situation prevailing in the country. Then, as a member of the SLFP I have great sadness regarding the fate of the SLFP. The Alliance led by the SLFP had 2/3 power in Parliament. Today that situation has changed. The SLFP has weakened. An effort is being made to build up this party with a group of ‘yes men.’ We have to ask whether by trying to do that they are going to give back the administrative power to the UNP.

? Who are these yes men in the SLFP?

A: Everybody knows who they are. It can be understood from those who are around the President.

? If the President breaks up the Unity Government with the UNP, is the Joint Opposition ready to form a government?

A: What is important is what should happen with good intention. Today, the people of this country and members of the SLFP have a big problem. It was Mahinda Rajapaksa who obtained the most number of SLFP votes in 2015. Then it was with the support of the UNP, JVP and the Tamil Alliance that the common candidate was put forward. During the election he said he will not favour any party. However, subsequently, a certain group used scheming strategies and established a separate central committee. Then a person whom we did not vote for was appointed as the leader of this pack. It was injustice done to the voter. Why do members of the SLFP still accept Mahinda? Why do they reject Maithri? As the former General Secretary of the SLFP and the present Chairman, he should understand this fact and with good intention show an interest in the party. Bandaranaike, it should be thought, left the UNP because he could not agree with those policies. Therefore, he should think about respectfully rejecting the UNP and how to build up the SLFP.

? Even now the Joint Opposition is being invited to join the SLFP isnt that so?

A: One day they invite us. Then on another day they go and join the UNP Conference. When it is stated that the UNP will form a government, they applaud that. Therefore, the problem exists as to whether we are being invited with good intentions?

? Is the Joint Opposition inviting them with good intentions?

A: Yes. We have pointed out our facts logically about what has to be done to protect the SLFP.

? It is said the Joint Opposition has deals with the President, and that is how several Electoral Organizer posts have been protected. How true is this?

A: If there were deals, Organizer posts would not have been abolished. In order to gradually destroy the SLFP they are removing popular individuals and appointing a group of ‘yes men.’ It is because we do not engage in deals that we were deprived of our Organizer Posts. We openly criticize this government and the President.

? The Joint Opposition tells the Attorney General, the Secretary General of Parliament and the Speaker that they will submit no-confidence motions. Is this a way of making no-confidence motions worthless?

A: Even though we have 56 Members of Parliament, we were not granted even the Opposition Leader’s post in Parliament. When they allow the JVP, which has six members, one and a half hours to speak in Parliament they permit us only twenty or thirty minutes. The Tamil National Alliance is given two hours. Then we do not have time to speak about the problems of the people.

When such a thing is happening, we can take time and speak about it. At the same time, we can reveal their illegal doings.

? Did the battle to obtain power in provincial councils, launched by the Joint Opposition, become lifeless?

A: What we are asking is that once the tenures of the North Central, East and Sabaragamuwa Provincial Councils end, to have the elections in September, properly. Then the people of the country will determine what to do.

? Do you have a plan to show a majority in the provincial councils and to acquire power?

A: You saw how the Chief Ministers in Uva and North-Central Provinces changed. Now that law no longer exists. However, none of these people can undermine people’s opinion.

? Did the Joint Opposition provide suggestions for the new Constitution?

A: We handed them over to the Constitution Committee in writing. We state our stance very clearly. The country should be unitary.

We are of the view that the clauses on Buddhism cannot be changed. However, those who are attempting to bring in a new Constitution have not yet handed over their suggestions. They say they will bring in a new Constitution but keep postponing it.

? Some members of the Joint Opposition talked about hoisting black flags during Narendra Modis visit. Why could it not be done?

A: It was not a decision made in general by the Joint Opposition. What Wimal Weerawansa suggested was that we should object to Modi coming. Even though he said that, he would not have planned it. According to what we understood, Modi was not a Buddhist. Modi came and spoke to his people in the estates upcountry, because these things were happening that we were against Modi. He expressed his views as if the Central Province was one of their colonies. He said houses will be built for all the estate workers.

? But, Mahinda Rajapaksa too met Modi?

A: It is all politics and diplomacy. We do not want to engage in politics by being angry with India. Meeting Modi was a good trend.

It was India, Europe, America and Canada who worked towards ousting Mahinda. Today India has provided an opportunity for discussions.

? What is the view of the Joint Opposition regarding the statement made by the Prime Minister that discussions should be held once again with party leaders, in order to hold local government elections?

A: What we say is not to engage in tricks to postpone the election but to conduct the election. If there were shortcomings in the previous government, isn’t two and a half years sufficient to correct them?

The government knows that if the election is held they will be defeated. It is an act that is being carried out in Parliament. The JVP is also involved in this.

? The Joint Opposition criticizes this government. What is your view on obtaining the GSP Plus tax relief?

A: If, by receiving GSP this country can be made into a paradise, money will flow into the hands of the people in a few months’ time. Businessmen will be granted concessions. It will be possible to talk at length about how this country would become a paradise in six months time.

? Certain members of the Joint Opposition say that SLFP Ministers are holding discussions with the JO about leaving the government. Is that true?

A: The leadership of the party has not given permission for them to discuss officially with us. If such discussions commence, we have to obtain permission from our Leader Mahinda Rajapaksa. What is talked about when we meet at weddings and funerals are not discussions.

? The government is planning to curb racism. There is an accusation that the Joint Opposition is spreading racism and trying to capture power?

A: Even the government has accepted the fact that the Police are not carrying out their duties lawfully. The Police have become henchmen of the government. There is an Inspector General of Police who bends the law. He betrays the Police. He acted together with Rajitha and Champika then to create differences among the Muslims in order to defeat Mahinda Rajapaksa. Then Champika, Nishantha Warnasinghe and others stood up on behalf of the Bodu Bala Sena. Rajitha stood up on behalf of the Muslim people.

During the Beruwala incident both these persons accused Mahinda. They talk about racism and differences in religion. Then we have the suspicion whether these are the same people who worked towards defeating Mahinda who are providing leadership to these things. In the future, there will be a Referendum. One attempt is to separate Muslims who are gathering around Mahinda now. The other is that emergency will be brought and the election will be postponed. They are allowing these problems to aggravate and say that they are acting against racism. However, there is no room for racism or religious differences within our politics.

? The Joint Opposition must have an opinion on the re-shuffle as well?

A: This is a joke. It was a small change of heads. Institutions were not changed. What should be done is that those who committed wrongs should not commit further wrongs but should be removed. The person who ruined the country’s economy was given a chance to go abroad and ruin the country. The person who betrayed Sri Lanka was given an opportunity to ruin the country.

? Your brothers ministerial post also changed?

A: He was against selling the Port. They thought that he would become a nuisance if they wanted to sell the port. Previously the Port City was removed.

? There are Court cases filed against you. What is the position of those?

A: When legal action was filed I was told there were a number of accusations. However, now what exists is one regarding scolding and threatening and a few other accusations. I trust the judiciary. Justice will be meted out there.

? What are the future plans of the Joint Opposition?

A: I can tell you certain things. Other things I cannot divulge. After the May Day we thought of raising political awareness at village level.

? Will you have to wait for a few more Poya days until the Joint Opposition forms a government?

A: We are in no hurry to form a government. When the opinion of the people in the country is being built up democratically, the people of this country will chase away this government. Even though there is no terrorism, Ministers travel with large security contingents because they are afraid that the people in the South will assault them.

? Is there an attempt to appoint MP Pavithra Wanniarachchi as the Chief Minister of the Sabaragamuwa Province?

A: Several parliamentarians will resign to contest elections. There is room for those who want to go.

? As a former Chief Minister, do you also have such an idea?

A: Let’s wait and see what will happen.

Buddhism Versus Islam: Clash Of Civilisations In South And South-East Asia?

June 2nd, 2017

Ananth Krishna  Courtesy swarajyamag.com

The Buddhist and the Islamic worlds seem to be increasingly in conflict in south and south-east Asia. In Myanmar and Sri Lanka, Buddhist nationalist organisations are in open conflict with Muslims; in Thailand, Islamist insurgency has resurrected itself in the Patani region; In Indonesia, tensions between the Muslim majority and Buddhist minority have surged.

The conflicts between the Muslims and Buddhists in the region represent a clear faultline between two cultures, as theorised in Samuel Huntington’s Clash of Civilizations. As Islamic invasions made their way towards the east, the repression and persecution that came in their wake ransacked Buddhist temples, destroyed the famous Nalanda University, as well as the Mahabodhi temple in Bodhgaya, Bihar. Other regions in this part of Asia like Sri Lanka, Burma and Thailand were spared from this brute force of the Islamist invasions.

In Indonesia, Islam made its entry only in the 13th century through traders. The province of Aceh served as an entry point for Muslim traders, and through them, their religion slowly spread to the rest of the archipelago. By the beginning of the 19th century, there were only a few pockets of Buddhist or Hindu influence left in Indonesia.

From a historical standpoint, the clash between Buddhists and Muslims seems to be a continuing conflict. What is new, however, is the militant response that Theravada Buddhism has had against Islamism.

Myanmar

In Myanmar, for example, a self-styled militant monk, Ashin Wirathu, has given shape to a 969 Movement” to Safeguard the country from Islam”. The figure 969 is meant to be numerological opposite to the Islamic 786 by local Buddhist beliefs . In that country, Buddhist nationalists voice their concerns regarding the fast-changing demography of the Rakhine state, which is also at the centre of the Rohingya refugee crisis. The Buddhist nationalists believe that if not checked, the Rakhine Buddhists of the state would be overrun by Rohingyas.

The current conflict can be traced back to the late 1940s, when Muhammad Ali Jinnah refused to include the Rohingya-dominated Buthidaung and Maungdaw regions in east Pakistan, even when encouraged by Rohingyas themselves. In response, a Mujahideen movement was born against the Burmese government. The insurgency, which faded out by the late 1970s, was replaced by less violent but a more political Rohingya movement starting in the 1990s which was encouraged by the overseas Rohingya community. This aimed at creating a separate Rohang state.

This series of events, combined with the destruction of the Bamiyan Buddhist statues, the anti-Islamist opinions post 9/11, and the 969 Movement have all led up to the conflict reaching a crescendo.

The Buddhist response, however, was repressed in the early 2000s, with Ashin Wirathu being jailed in 2003, only to be released nine years later in 2012, with a host of other political prisoners. Since his release, Wirathu has been able to capture the national and international imagination (TIME magazine featured him on their cover, as the Militant Monk”).

Thailand

Thailand, much like Myanmar, has a long history in dealing with Islamist violence. In South Thailand region, the Malaya inhabitants used to pay tribute to the Siamese kings despite being ethnic Malay Muslims themselves. The region was incorporated into the Thai Siamese Kingdom through the Anglo-Siamese Treaty of 1909. Originally, Patani enjoyed autonomy for itself but this changed after the constitutional reforms of 1932. This was followed by a process of ‘Thaification’ which resulted in repression of the local Jawi language and culture. After the Second World War, influenced by Nasserism, a Patani nationalist movement grew, which recast itself into a militant separatist movement by the beginning of the 21st century.

The insurgents targeted and continue to target local Buddhist businessmen, monks and pork vendors, but avoid a direct conflict with the some 60,000 Thai troops in the region. Buddhist monks are specially on their radar as they are seen as the symbols of the Thai government.

Unlike Myanmar, where Buddhist nationalists are at the forefront of an anti-Islamist campaign, in Thailand the mantle is taken up by the state, with Buddhist monks becoming increasingly reticent.

Mirroring the tension between Buddhists and Muslims in other south-east Asian nations, Islamists in Indonesia too have targeted Buddhist temples, allegedly in retaliation to the treatment of Rohingyas in Myanmar. The values of religious harmony in Indonesia are now increasingly under threat.

In Malaysia, (where Islam is the state religion), the pan-Malaysian Islamic Party has been promoting Islamism. Islamic law is already in force in some conservative parts of the country, and Buddhist religious activities are already restricted.

Sri Lanka

The history of conflict between Buddhism and Islam in Sri Lanka is however unlike that of the countries mentioned above. Having been under the strife of Tamil separatism till recently, Buddhist nationalists in that island nation have entered into a conflict with Muslims only recently. The Sinhalese-Buddhist nationalist Bodu Bela Sena (BBS) has similar aims to that of the 969 Movement in Myanmar, and is led by (the now absconding) Galagoda Aththe Gnanasara. Sectarian strife has increased in Sri Lanka over the course of the last few years, with riots in 2014, and recent incidents of violence against mosques and Muslim-owned businesses. During this period, the BBS was successful in getting the halal certification system abolished in the country.

Gnanasara alleges that Buddhist heritage sites are being destroyed by Muslim settlers, and declares his fight to be against Islamic radicalisation, much like Wirathu in Myanmar.

Thus in a Buddhist and transnational anti-Islamist effort, the 969 and the BBS movements struck up a pact in 2014 during a meeting in Colombo.

While the immediate sources of conflict in south and south-east Asia between Buddhists and Muslims are local and have their own histories, some Buddhists are now adopting a coordinated counter-approach to what they perceive as growing Islamic fundamentalism in their countries.

https://swarajyamag.com/world/buddhism-versus-islam-clash-of-civilisations-in-south-and-south-east-asia

Warfare and Mental Health

June 2nd, 2017

by Dr Ruwan M Jayatunge

The question is not whether PTSD is real and serious. It’s a devastating mental illness. The question is how many veterans have PTSD, and clearly our goal should be to try to address the veterans’ needs and help them deal with their problems and move on in life.

Chet Edwards

War is an institutionalized violence that has intrinsic unique elements. It is a man made disaster, which is multi-dimensional. War can be   individual as well as a collective form of trauma.  Wars represent a mental health emergency. Mental health is the springboard of thinking and communication skills, learning, emotional growth, resilience, and self-esteem. War trauma can change the parameters of mental health towards the negative side.  The circumstances of the armed conflict can produce a range of emotional and behavioural stress reactions among soldiers and civilians.

In a war situation, combat stress is an inevitable factor. Combat stress is a specific stress factor that can affect the mental and physical health. It is a form of psychological pathology that is resulted from traumatic exposure to battle events. Combat in most cases involved with fear, despair, shock and anxiety. Combat stress is the result of internal and external stresses.

Combat stresses do not come from the enemy action alone. Some stresses are generated from the soldiers own unit leaders and mission demands. Combat stress symptoms and reactions interfere with mission performance. Battle stress affects both the combatants as well as civilians especially living in the war zone.  War disrupts the existing social structure. The major impact of war includes disintegration of psychological wellbeing. It create a specific calamity sub-culture and often generates vicious cycles that echo even after the war.

War trauma

War can produce incredible acts of heroism and courage and it can produce intense fear and chaos. War trauma is a horrendous experience. As Hanscom (2001) points out war trauma refers to an experience that meets the definition of trauma as described in the DSM IV under PTSD that results from exposure to war conditions. War trauma may also occur and persist within the affected society in the aftermath of war. War trauma survivors may exhibit substance abuse, mistrust in social institutions, flashbacks, suicidal thoughts, antisocial behaviour, and problem with peers.  Their typical responses include sleep disturbances, somatic complaints, anxiety, withdrawal and isolation. The war trauma gives rise to complicated, sometimes uncanny alterations of consciousness and personality. War trauma can alter one’s view of life permanently.

The long term effects

War is a multi-layered, multi-factorial phenomenon that can have long lasting affects on the physical and mental wellbeing of the soldiers. Soldiers bear disproportionate consequences of armed conflict. Therefore, equal damage is not seen among the combatants. They sustain physical and mental damage   that are not commonly seen in civilian populations. Ailments such as depression, adjustment disorders, somatoform disorders post-traumatic stress disorders, remain under treated legacies of many soldiers.  In-depth interviews with veterans reveal that their experiences have impacted their personal and family life. As a result of combat trauma, mental health problems, alcohol and drug abuse, physical and sexual violence, child abuse and family disharmony are found among the combatants.

Combat- related PTSD

The circumstances of war can produce a range of emotional, psychological and behavioural stress reactions among the soldiers and officers that can lead to a condition known as combat related PTSD. Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) is described in the DSM4 (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders) as the development of characteristic symptoms following exposure to an extreme traumatic stressor. PTSD is marked by symptoms of re-experiencing, avoidance and arousal, was officially delineated in 1980 as a clinical diagnosis within the category of mental disorders.

Combat experiences are often traumatic and it can cause catastrophic stressors outside the range of usual human experience. These events include actual or threatened death or serious injury or threat to soldier’s physical integrity or witnessing an event that involves death, injury, or a threat to the physical integrity of another soldier. The person’s response to the event must involve intense fear, defenselessness or horror.

Combat- related PTSD is not restricted to the combat experienced veterans. Those who spent time in war zones and were surrounded by death or were put in to life threatening situations may also suffer from PTSD. In the Kulka et al.(1990) study the prevalence of current PTSD for Vietnam veterans was 15% among all veterans. In Sri Lanka, this figure could be 12% or more than that.

Stress factors experienced by the combatants:

1) Physical Stressors

Environmental

Heat, cold

Vibration, noise, blast

Poison, chemicals, radiation

Infectious agents / disease

Bright light, darkness

Skin irritants

2) Physiological stressors

Strenuous work

Sleep debt

Dehydration

Malnutrition

Illness or injury

3) Cognitive stressors

Uncertainty

Deprivation

Unpredictability

4) Emotional stressors

 Fear and anxiety

 Anger & rage producing frustration

 Boredom

 Homesickness

 Interpersonal feelings

Battle Fatigue

Battle Fatigue is a military term used to categorize a range of behaviours resulting from the stress of battle, which decrease the combatant’s fighting efficiency. The term “Battle Fatigue” was introduced after World War II and the experts point out that 5%-15% of battle fatigue casualties fail to improve sufficiently to return to duty in the combat zone. The most common signs include, slowing of the reaction time, slowness of thought, difficulty prioritizing, difficulty initiating routine tasks, preoccupation with minor issues and familiar tasks, indecision and lack of concentration, loss of initiative with fatigue and exhaustion.

Combat shock

Soldiers can go into a state of traumatic shock after exposure to vigorous stress. Shock is a sudden and often intense disturbance and emotional state that may leave soldiers feeling stunned or dazed. The initial traumatic event must have involved actual or threatened death or serious injury or a threat to the physical integrity of self or another person, and the person must have felt fear, helplessness or horror. During the event or immediately after soldiers usually experience numbing, detachment, derealization, depersonalization or dissociative amnesia. As the initial shock subsides, reactions vary from one soldier to another.

War trauma and civilians  

In a military conflict, the first casualties are always the innocent civilians and it is the naked truth of an armed conflict. Nearly 85% of victims killed in WWI were combatants (Graves, 2003). However, “today, some 90% of all people killed in wars are innocent, civilian women and children” (Ehrenreich, 1997; Kolb-Angelbeck, 2000, cited in Graves, 2003, p. 203). In a war today, heavy artillery shelling and aerial bombings take place and because of high tech warfare, innocent civilians suffer.

The Northern conflict in Sri Lanka has led to tens of thousands of people fleeing their native villages. Some families had left to avoid LTTE child forcible recruitments. Many houses in the conflict zone are now in ruins.  Some civilians perished in cross- fires.

Stanley Krippner and Teresa M. McIntyre highlight the psychological impact of war trauma on civilians. They point out that psychological and emotional injuries may be the most enduring effects of war, yet historically they may be the least addressed in terms of rebuilding a society and preventing future violence.

War dislocates the social fabric affecting livelihoods.  According to Professor Daya Somasundaram disasters have an effect not only on individuals but also on their family, extended family, group, community, village and wider society. The civilians of the North and South faced the disturbing effects of the war.

The civilians exposed to war were traumatized in different ways. The effects have longer-lasting consequences than destruction itself. Sometimes unintentionally, parents inflict their psychological baggage on their children and it leads to a vicious cycle of trauma. On most occasions, the impact of war and extreme stress on civilian populations has caused numerous personality changes in them. Psychological responses to these phenomena were expressed as social aggression, alcoholism, family discord, child abuse, self-harm and suicides.

The psychophysical effects

The psychophysical effects of combat have been recorded since the early days of human civilization. From the time of Homer’s ancient story of the battle between the Trojans and the Greeks (1200 BC), military personnel have been confronted by the trauma of war. According to historians, Saul the King of Israel (11th century BC) had abnormal behaviour with inclination towards violence. On one occasion, he went into a brutal rage and tried to kill his son Jonathan.

Alexander the Great (356 BC – 323 BC), who had conquered a large portion of the known world in that era, suffered from combat fatigue. When his forces came near the Indus river, Alexander’s forces were exhausted and refused to march further.

Emperor Ashoka (304 BC- 232 BC) of India experienced a depressive reaction soon after the Kalinga War, after witnessing deaths and destruction. He felt disheartened for his military actions and completely renounced violence and embraced Buddhism.

The Roman Empire, which lasted from 27 BC to 1453, was filled with battle stress. A countless number of soldiers and civilians experienced a great deal of combat related stresses during this time period. Once archeologists discovered an ancient bunker in the Britannic Islands, which was used by the Roman soldiers. They found frescoes that portrayed the isolation, nostalgia, uncertainty, and fear experienced by the soldiers.

The Great Oriental Conqueror Tamerlane (1336- 1405) was highly affected by war stress and demonstrated aggressive and sadistic behaviour. He was fond of building pyramids of human skulls. Once he made a giant pyramid after a war which contained some 40,000 skulls. The prophet Nostradamus named Napoleon Bonaparte an Anti Christ. Napoleon’s forces invaded many parts in Europe and North Africa.   His Moscow invasion in 1812 caused heavy damage to the French forces. The French army had to face a cold Russian winter, famine and General Kutuzov’s cannon fire. After his disastrous retreat, Napoleon was sent into exile. He escaped from the island of Elba and engaged in the so- called Hundred Day War.  Finally, Napoleon Bonaparte was defeated by the Duke of Wellington – the Leopard of England. Napoleon went into post combat depression and died in the island of St Helena in 1821 while in exile.

During the US Civil War Dr Mendez Da Costa evaluated 300 soldiers referred to him for a syndrome that he called Irritable Heart. This syndrome was characterized by shortness of breath, palpitations, burning chest pain, fatigability, headache, diarrhoea, dizziness and disturbed sleep.  This condition was later called Da Costa Syndrome. (a syndrome is a group of symptoms that occur together and that are characteristic of a disease or condition).

At the beginning of the World War one  the Effort Syndrome was frequently attributed to cardiac hypertrophy caused by heavy marching , packs compressing the chest. The Effort syndrome was considered to be a  psychoneurosis and not a medical disease. In 1938 Soley and Shock claimed that hyperventilation was responsible for the symptoms of Effort Syndrome.

Until the World War 1 (1914-1918), psychological consequences of war trauma  were considered merely manifestations of poor discipline and cowardice and often the victims were severely punished. Some military records of the WW1 indicate that a considerable number of shell shocked soldiers were given the FP -1 or the Field Punishment Number One.  FP -1 involved the offender being attached to a fixed object for up to two hours a day and for a period up to three months, often put in place within range of enemy shellfire. Dr Charles Myer suspected the psychological factors associated with shell shock.

The Nobel Prize Laureate Ernest Hemingway served in the Lincoln Brigade during the Spanish Civil War that erupted in 1936.  Hemingway saw the horrendous war trauma in Spain and that inspired him to write his famous novel ‘Farewell to Arms’.  Anyhow, in later years Ernest Hemingway experienced depression and took his own life. According to the Military Psychiatrist Dr William Pike, half of the Spanish Civil War veterans suffered from severe combat- related stress. At one point, Dr William Pike treated 28 shell-shocked men who were hiding in a wine cellar.

During World War 2 (1939-1945), battle stress was classified as Operational Fatigue or War Neurosis.  Chronic Fatigue Syndrome was evident during World War 2 and most of the symptoms had a somatic nature. It has been estimated that 10% of US servicemen developed combat exhaustion in WW2.  The military authorities were not very empathetic towards war stressed sufferers and on one occasion General George S. Patton slapped and verbally abused Pvt Paul G. Bennet and Pvt Charles H. Kuhl, who experienced battle fatigue.

The term Section Eight was used to identify the victims of psychological effects of war trauma in the Korean War, which continued from 1950 to 1953. Psychiatric evacuations were considerably reduced during the Korean War due to the praiseworthy work of Dr Albert Glass. However in a recent study done by Dr Malcolm Sim and colleagues of Centre for Occupational and Environmental Health, Department of Epidemiology and Preventive Medicine, Monash University, Melbourne, Victoria,they found anxiety, post-traumatic stress disorder and depression in Korean War veterans 50 years after the war.

In 1965, United States sent troops into South Vietnam to help fight communist guerrillas. US troops fought in hostile territory facing sudden ambushes and booby trap mines. US forces faced defeat and were forced to withdraw from Vietnam in 1975. During the Vietnam War, 2.8 million US servicemen served in Southeast Asia, mainly in Vietnam, and almost one million were exposed to active combat. By the end of the war over 50,000 Vietnam veterans were diagnosed with Combat- related Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. PTSD has been found in 15% of 500,000 men who were in Vietnam.  It is said 20,000 veterans committed suicide in the war’s aftermath.

In 1979 on December 25th, the Soviet Union sent forces to Afghanistan. By 1986, about 118,000 Soviet troops and 50,000 Afghan Government troops were facing perhaps 130,000 Mujahideen guerrillas. Following the conflict over one million Afghans died and the Soviet army lost 14,427 combatants. When Mikhail Gorbachev became the Soviet leader in 1985, he was keen in getting Soviet troops out of Afghanistan. The Soviet withdrawal was completed in February 1989.  Although the Soviet health authorities did not comment on psychological casualties of the Afghan war, there were significant numbers of PTSD victims in the Red Army who fought in Afghanistan. Since PTSD was not recognized in the Soviet Union of that era, the Afghan veterans did not receive proper psychological and psychiatric treatment. Many veterans are still hounded.

The Persian Gulf War (2 August 1990 – 28 February 1991), also known as the First Gulf War was conducted by the Coalition Forces to free Kuwait from Iraqi forces, led by Saddam Hussein. The number of Coalition wounded in combat seems to have been 776, including 458 Americans. Iraq sustained between 20,000 and 35,000 fatalities. The Gulf War Syndrome was evident during the Persian Gulf War and many returning Coalition solders reported illnesses such as headaches, memory loss, fatigue, sleep disorders, intestinal ailments, and unusual loss of hearing. Nearly 150,000 veterans have showed symptoms of Gulf War illness.

According to Toomey R and  Kang HK, Karlinsky  ( “Mental health of US Gulf War Veterans 10 Years After the war”,  British Journal of Psychiatry 2007),  found that deployment in the Gulf War was associated with increased levels of mental disorders, psychological symptoms, and a lower quality of life – beginning during the war and persisting at a lower rate 10 years later. Around 700,000 US military personnel were deployed to the Middle East during the 1991 Persian Gulf War. These veterans reported greater psychological symptoms immediately after the war than veterans who were not sent to the Gulf. Ten years later, these cases of depression and non-PTSD anxiety disorders remained significantly more prevalent among the deployed compared with non-deployed veterans. PTSD was over three times more prevalent among deployed veterans.

The War in Afghanistan is an ongoing armed conflict which began on October 7, 2001 and the Second Gulf War, also known as the Iraq War, is an ongoing military campaign, which began on March 20, 2003, with the invasion of Iraq by a multinational force led by troops from the United States and the United Kingdom. There  are massive military campaigns in the present day. These conflicts have produced a large number of psychological casualties. The researchers say nearly 20 percent of military service members who have returned from Iraq and Afghanistan, 300,000 in all, report symptoms of PTSD or major depression. According to a 2005 VA study of 168,528 Iraqi veterans, 20 percent were diagnosed with psychological disorders, including 1,641 with PTSD.

The Sri Lankan conflict, which lasted for nearly three decades, had generated a large number of combatants, members of the LTTE and civilians affected by war trauma, especially PTSD.  Most of these war stressors were not diagnosed sufficiently, and they are not receiving adequate treatment.  Therefore, war stress can affect Sri Lankan society for a long time. To minimize the psychological damage to society, effective measures must be implemented.

ක්‍රිස්තියානිය රාජ්‍යාගම වීම

June 2nd, 2017

 නලින් ද සිල්වා

බුද්ධාගම රකින බවට ගිවිසුමකින් පොරොන්දු වූයේ ඉංගිරිසින්. ඔවුන් 1815 සිංහල ඉංගිරිසි ගිවිසුමෙන් පොරොන්දු වූ ප්‍රධාන කරුණු දෙක වූයේ බුද්ධාගම හා දේවාගම (සිංහල බුද්ධාගම) රැකීම හා සිංහල නීතියට අනුව රට කරවීම. ගිවිසුමේ තිබුණු වචන නිශ්චිත ව නොකීවත් ඉංගිරිසින් එවැන්නක් සිංහල නායකයන්ට ද භික්‍ෂූන් වහන්සේට ද පොරොන්දු වුණා. එහෙත් 1817 දී ම ඉංගිරිසින් ගිවිසුම කඩා දැම්මා. 1840 වන විට මේ වගන්ති දෙක ම ඉතිහාසයට එක් වී අවසන්. 1848 වන විට ටොරිංටන් ආණ්ඩුකාරයා හාමුදුරුවරුන්ට වෙඩි තියන තත්වයට පැමිණ සිටියා.

1815 ට පෙර එවැනි වගන්ති තිබුණේ නැහැ. එයින් කියැවෙන්නේ 1815ට පෙර සිංහල රජවරුන් බුද්ධාගම නොරැකි බවවත් බුද්ධාගමට ප්‍රමුඛස්ථානය නොදුන් බවවත් නො වෙයි. අලිඛිත ගැමුණු ව්‍යවස්ථාවට අනුව ඒ සියල්ල ඉටු වුණා. එකල මෙරට රජ වීමට නම් බෝධිසත්වයකු විය යුතු ය යන අදහස තිබුණා. මෙරට අග්බෝ රජවරුන් ම ගණනාවක් සිටියා. නායක්කාර රජවරු ද සිංහල බෞද්ධ රජවරු. ඔවුන්ගේ රාජ්‍යය සිංහල රාජ්‍යය. එය වාංශික රාජ්‍යයක් නො වුණා. නායක්කාර රජවරු ද බෞද්ධ වූවා. ඔවුන් සියමෙන් උපසම්පදාව ගෙන ඒමට කටයුතු කළා.

ඉංගිරිසින්ට එකී වගන්ති දෙක ගිවිසුමට ඇතුළත් කිරීමට සිංහල නායකයන් බල කරන්න ඇති. එයට එක් හේතුවක් වන්නට ඇත්තේ ඉංගිරිසින් කෙරෙහි වූ අවිශ්වාසය. ඉංගිරිසින් ඒ වන විටත් සිංහල නායකයන් රවටා තිබුණා. ඇහැළෙපොළ නිළමෙට රජකම දෙන්න පොරොන්දු වී සිටි නමුත් ඉංගිරිසින් පොරොන්දුව ඉටු කෙළේ නැහැ. ඩොයිලි සහ ඔහුගේ නිලධාරීන් විසින් සිංහල නායකයන්, එනම් උඩරට නිළමෙලා රවටනු ලැබුවා. ඒ වගන්ති දෙක ගිවිසුමට ඇතුල් කිරීමට සිංහල නායකයන් වග බලා ගන්න ඇති. එහෙත් එයින් වැඩක් වුණේ නැහැ. ඉංගිරිසින් ඔවුන්ගේ මහාත්මා ගුණ ලක්‍ෂණ අනුව ගිවිසුම කඩා දැම්මා.

1840 පමණ සිට 1972 දක්වා මෙරට රාජ්‍යාගම වූයේ ඇංග්ලිකන් ක්‍රිස්තියානි. එංගලන්ත සභාව (අද ලංකා සභාව) මෙරට බලවත් ම ආගමික ආයතනය වූවා. අප බොහෝ දෙනකුට එය අමතක වෙනවා. 1815 ගිවිසුමෙන් පසු මෙරට රාජ්‍ය නායකයා වූයේ එංගලන්තයේ රජු (රැජන). ඉංගිරිසි රජු ඇංග්ලිකන් ක්‍රිස්තියානි සභාවේ නායකයා හා ඒ ආගමෙහි ආරක්‍ෂකයා. 1815 ගිවිසුමෙන් සිද්ධ වූ එක් කරුණක් වූයේ එකී රාජ්‍යාගමික තත්වය ඇංග්ලිකින් ක්‍රිස්තියානියට හිමි නො වීමයි . ඒ ගිවිසුමට එංගලන්තයේ දැඩි විරුද්ධත්වයක් පැන නැංගා. එහෙත් බ්‍රවුන්රිග් හා ඩොයිලි දැන සිටි කරුණ නම් ඒ වගන්ති දෙක නැතිව ඉංගිරිසින්ට කන්ද උඩරට යටත් කර ගැනීමට නොහැකි බවයි.

බ්‍රවුන්රිග් ගිවිසුමට අත්සන් කළ නමුත් ඉංගිරිසින් සිතා සිටියේ ඒ වගන්ති ඉවත ලා තම නීතිය අනුව ඇංග්ලිකන් ක්‍රිස්තියානිය රටේ රාජ්‍යාගම ලෙස තබා ගනිමින් රට පාලනය කිරීමට. ඔවුන් මෙරට පාසල් පද්ධතිය ඇති කෙළේ ම ඇංග්ලිකන් ක්‍රිස්තියානිය රටේ රාජ්‍යාගම ලෙස පවත්වා ගෙන යෑමට. පාසල් පද්ධතියේ ප්‍රධාන පරීක්‍ෂක (අද නම් අධ්‍යාපන අධ්‍යක්‍ෂ ජෙනරාල්) වූයේ මෙරට ඇංග්ලිකන් සභාවේ ප්‍රධාන පූජක තැන. 1840 පමණ වන විට ඉංගිරිසින්ට හැකි වුණා 1815 ගිවිසුම කඩා ඇංග්ලිකන් ක්‍රිස්තියානිය මෙරට රාජ්‍යාගම බවට පත් කිරීමට. මෙරට කතෝලික සභාවත් ඇංග්ලිකන් සභාවට ආධාර කළා. මෙරට සිංහල හා දෙමළ ප්‍රභූන් ඇංග්ලිකන් ක්‍රිස්තියානි වූවා. සේනනායකලා, බණ්ඩාරනායකලා, ජයවර්ධනලා, වික්‍රමසිංහලා  පමණක් නොව රාමනාදන්ලා ද, චෙල්වනායගම්ලා ද, විග්නේස්වරන්ලා ද ඇංග්ලිකන් ක්‍රිස්තියානි  සම්භවයක් ඇති අය.

 බණ්ඩාරනායක මැතිණිය එක් අතකින් කෙළේ ඇංග්ලිකන් ක්‍රිස්තියානි ආගමේ රාජ්‍යාගමික තත්වය නැති කිරීමයි. 1972 වන තෙක් මෙරට රාජ්‍ය නායකයා ඇංග්ලිකන් ක්‍රිස්තියානි ආගමේ නායකයා ද ආරක්‍ෂකයා ද වූ එංගලන්තයේ රජු. මෙරට අග්‍රාණ්ඩුකාරයා ඉංගිරිසි රජුගේ නියෝජිතයා වූවා පමණයි. සෝල්බරි ජෙනිංග්ස් ව්‍යවස්ථාවෙන් ද එංගලන්තයේ රජු මෙරට රාජ්‍ය නායකයා ලෙස පිළිගැණුනා. ඒ සමග ව්‍යවස්ථාවේ නැති වුවත් 1948න් පසුවත් මෙරට රාජ්‍යාගම වූයේ ඇංග්ලිකන් ක්‍රිස්තියානි ආගම. බණ්ඩාරනායක මැතිණිය 1972 ව්‍යවස්ථාවෙන් ඒ තත්වය නැති කළා. එහෙත් බුද්ධාගම රාජ්‍යාගම කෙළේ නැහැ. දැන් ලංකාවේ රාජ්‍යාගමක් නැහැ. ඒ වෙනුවට බුද්ධාගමට ප්‍රමුඛස්ථානය දෙන බවට වගන්තියක් තියෙනවා.

 ඇංග්ලිකන් ක්‍රිස්තියානිය මෙරට රාජ්‍යාගම ව පවතින කාලයේ පමණක් නොව ඉන් පසුවත් සිංහල බෞද්ධයන් සිංහල බුද්ධාගමෙන් ඈතට ගියා. අද මෙරට බොහෝ විට දක්නට ඇත්තේ ඕල්කට් බෞද්ධයන්. මේ සම්බන්ධයෙන් මා ලියා ඇති ලිපි වටහා නොගෙන ඉංගිරිසියෙන් ලියන ඇතැමුන් ඕල්කට් බුද්ධාගම ගොම්බ්‍රිච් – ගණනාථ ඔබේසේකර අච්චුවේ ප්‍රොතෙස්තන්ත බුද්ධාගමක් බවට පත් කිරීමට වැයම් කරනවා. ඕල්කට් බුද්ධාගම ප්‍රොතෙස්තන්ත බුද්ධාගම නම් මට ඕල්කට් බුද්ධාගම නමින් අලුත් සංකල්පයක් අවශ්‍ය වන්නේ නැහැ. ප්‍රොතෙස්තන්ත බුද්ධාගම යන්න ගණනාථ ඔබේසේකර ඇංග්ලිකන් ක්‍රිස්තියානි ආගමෙන් ගත් තවත් ප්‍රොතෙස්තන්ත සංකල්පයක් පමණයි. එය ඔහුගේ නිර්මාණයක්වත් නො වෙයි. ඔහුට මෙරට අනෙක් ඊනියා බුද්ධිමතුන්ට මෙන් ම සංකල්ප නිර්මාණය කරන්න බැහැ.  අනෙක් අතට ඇතැමුන් කියන ආකාරයට මෙන් නොව ගුණදාස අමරසේකර ඕල්කට් බුද්ධාගමක් ගැන සංකල්පීය ව යමක් ප්‍රකාශ කර නැහැ.

 බුද්ධාගමට ප්‍රමුඛස්ථානය දීම යන්නෙන් අදහස් කළ යුත්තේ සිංහල බුද්ධාගමට ප්‍රමුඛස්ථානය දීමයි. ඕල්කට් බූද්ධාගමේ සිංහල යන්න නැහැ. ඕල්කට් බුද්ධාගම ජාත්‍යන්තර බුද්ධාගමක්. පඬියකු අහන්න පුළුවන් බුද්ධාගමට සිංහල කමක් තියෙන්න පුළුවන් ද කියලා. ඔවුන්ට අනුව බුද්ධාගම ජාත්‍යන්තර ආගමක්. මේ ජාත්‍යන්තර බුද්ධාගම අද වන විට බටහිර (ප්‍රතිචීන) බුද්ධාගමක් බවට පත් වෙලා. ඒ පඬියන්ගේ ද බුද්ධාගම. එය ගැමුණු රජුගේ බුද්ධාගම නො වෙයි.

 අද ඇංග්ලිකන් ක්‍රිස්තියානි සංස්කෘතියේ රනිල් වික්‍රමසිංහ සූදානම් වන්නේ ඕල්කට් බුද්ධාගමටවත් ප්‍රමුඛස්ථානය නො දීමටයි. රනිල් හා මැතෝදිස්ත භක්තියකු වූ සුමන්තිරන්ට අවශ්‍ය වචන හරඹයකින් ඒකීය බව පමණක් නොව බුද්ධාගමට ප්‍රමුඛස්ථානය දීමත් නැති කිරීමට. එවිට ඉබේට ම නැවතත් ඇංග්ලිකන් ක්‍රිස්තියානි ආගම මෙරට නිල වශයෙන් නොවුණත් රාජ්‍යාගම වෙනවා. රනිල් ඉවත් කිරීම අද දවසේ ප්‍රධාන කාර්යය බවට පත්වීමට එයත් හේතුවක්. එහෙත් දේශපාලනඥයන් මෙහි දී අප රවටනවා. ඔවුන් රනිල් ඉවත් කරන්නේ නැහැ.

 

 නලින් ද සිල්වා

 2017 ජූනි 02  

 

Amnesty Report : America has no moral right to point fingers at any country

June 2nd, 2017

Shenali D Waduge

A 44 page report by Amnesty International declares that the US Government gave $1.3billion worth of arms to ISIS in 2016. This comes in the backdrop of Hillary Clinton admitting that the US created Al Qaeda. . $4 trillion dollars later has been spent on this bogus War-on-Terror/Humanitarian-R2P so far.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dqn0bm4E9yw. Both entities are supposed to be targets of the US War on Terror. How does that make sense when the US is allegedly arming, training and even funding these terror movements which are killing even American soldiers? Today, the US Government has become a laughing stock on world stage. On the one hand their envoys are producing the red card to other countries of the world tutoring them on law & order, human rights, good governance and democracy while in reality US has the world’s worst record sheet. US or its officials do not have any moral right to be condemning or ordering any country without addressing America’s crimes and illegalities first. The Nobel Peace Committee must seriously evaluate Obama’s Nobel Peace prize!

Millions killed by US since 1945

It is said that since 1945 America’s crusade of ‘delivering democracy’ entrenched in “The Plan for a New American Century” (PNAC) has resulted in the deaths of 20 to 30milion lives and uses nomenclatures like Doctrine of Humanitarian Warfare, “right to protect” (R2P), William Blum says since 1945 the US has bombed 23 nations.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/united-states-war-crimes/5561468

Illegal invasions

A few of these illegal operations include Korea (1943-1953), Indonesia (1958-1965) where CIA armed, trained and equipped rebels and ousted leader Sukarno to bring dictator Suharto to power. Documents at George Washington University’s National Security Archive confirmed how effectively the Indonesian army used the U.S.-prepared hit list against the Indonesian communist party in 1965-66. From September 8, 1945 to present over 37,000 US troops are positioned at 100 installations. Vietnam (1954-1965) where US began CIA-directed internal sabotage operations setting up puppet Ngo Dinh Diem brought to Vietnam from US as ‘our’ political leader. 

US President Reagan sent 5000 US troops to Grenada on 25 Oct 1983 to assist ‘law & order’ despite UN Security Council disapproval. Between 1988-90 when Panama’s Noriega was indicted for money laundering & drug trafficking President Bush Snr ordered 10,000 US troops already stationed in Panama to support a US-recognized government which UK and France also supported. The invasion was again overruling UN General Assembly resolution.

If ‘invasion’ means the seizure of territory by a military force from a government of another country regardless of motivation or justification as claimed by Lance Janda, a military historian at Cameron University in Oklahoma, the US military incursions upon Kuwait, Iraq in 1991, Afghanistan in 2001, UN-backed US led intervention of Somalia in 1992, sending US troops to reinstall Jean-Bertrand Aristide in 1994/5 in Haiti, Bosnia & Kosovo interventions in 1990s with NATO, the 2011 UN approved NATO campaign to oust Gaddafi in Libya qualifies as ‘invasions’.

The 1999 Kosovo conflict became the first humanitarian war using NATO to bomb Serbia based on a non-existent genocide. US went to the extent of even substituting the uncooperative UN Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali with the subservient NATO shill, Kofi Annan (Luciana Bohne)

That Kosovo precedent has paved the way for incursions upon sovereign nations Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Mali, Nigeria, Somalia, Kenya, Ukraine, Yemen and now it is slowly galvanizing towards Asia.

Senator Thom Tillis says US has interfered in 81 elections while the CIA’s list of covert operations is shocking to say the least https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VSmBhj8tmoU&feature=em-subs_digest-vrecs

US military deployment                                                                             

Currently there are said to be over 150,000 US troops stationed in 150 countries under the Status of Forces Agreement. There are approximately 30,000 U.S. troops stationed on Okinawa, Japan since 1960 along with 20,000 family members and civilian government employees.

US troops are stationed in Saudi Arabia, Columbia, Bolivia, Peru, Uganda, Niger, Mali to name a few.

Claiming to be targeting Al Qaeda & ISIS (which now emerges are being funded by the US) airstrikes have been carried out in Sudan, Kenya, Tanzania and in Yemen.

There are as many as 180,000 private military contractors currently believed to be in Iraq, and thousands more in Afghanistan.

Yet, the US envoys preach to Sri Lanka about reducing Sri Lanka’s military presence in its own country!

US troops immune from prosecution

The United States reportedly has an agreement with the Afghan government immunizing US contractors from prosecution by Afghanistan. To date, very few private contractors, including private security personnel, have been prosecuted for criminal offenses in Iraq, although allegations of criminal acts are widespread.

While US drafts resolutions against other countries in the UN, US makes sure none of its crimes ever goes to any international arbitration. The United States government has consistently opposed an international court that could hold US military and political leaders to a uniform global standard of justice.

Even US peace keeping troops are immune from prosecution by the ICC.

US troop rapes

A book by historian Miriam Gebhardt claims 190,000 rapes were committed by US troops in WW 2.

The 124-page report, Booted: Lack of Recourse for Wrongfully Discharged US Military Rape Survivors,” found that many rape victims suffering from trauma were unfairly discharged for a “personality disorder” or other mental health condition that makes them ineligible for benefits.

 https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gQZO8v0B3Qc

https://www.hrw.org/news/2016/05/19/us-raped-military-then-punished

“a female US soldier today is 180 times more likely to be sexually assaulted by a fellow soldier than killed by an enemy”, stated by U.S. California Representative Jane Harmon, March 8, 2010, and Representative Loretta Sanchez, April 2013.

Official U.S. Department of Defence figures reveal, that over 3,000 reported sexual assault cases in 2010 alone, estimates that only 20% of these reported incidents have gone to trial, and only 10% lead to conviction. A report commissioned by then-Defence Secretary Leon Panetta put the actual annual number at 19,000 or more, amounting to 1 in 20 women. Pentagon estimates that the numbers for female sexual assault cases have further risen by 35% since 2010, from 19,300 service members believed to be victims that year to 26,000 in 2012. The DoD estimates that approximately 19,000 service members every year—over 50 per day—are raped, sexually assaulted or harassed. Soldiers are more likely to be sexually assaulted by their own comrades than to be killed or wounded by hostile forces. https://www.asafeworldforwomen.org/global-news/n-america/usa/4925-sexual-assault-in-military.html

Do American envoys not know of these statistics and criminal details and do they not realize that people are actually laughing at America when their envoys act like mother superiors!

US ‘collateral damage’ murders

US war ‘mistakes’ are put down as collateral damage. Recall U.S. bombing of a Doctors Without Borders hospital in Afghanistan. The commander of U.S. forces there, Gen. John Campbell, said the hospital in the northern city of Kunduz had been struck accidentally.

More than 864,000 tons of bombs were dropped during Operation Rolling Thunder alone (Vietnam)

On February 13, 1991, during the first Gulf War, U.S. planes bombed a shelter in the Amiriyah neighborhood of Baghdad, Iraq, killing 408 civilians.

During the Kosovo war, NATO planes fired on a train of refugees fleeing the conflict — 73 people were killed. The ‘mistake’ was acknowledged as “mistakenly dropped a bomb on a civilian vehicle.”

Also in 1999 five U.S. guided bombs hit the Chinese embassy in Belgrade, killing three Chinese reporters. President Bill Clinton apologized for the bombing, saying it was accidental.

In 2010 – two U.S. aircraft attacked a wedding party in central Uruzgan province, killing 48 people.

On 15 October 2010 to kill one man US fired missiles that killed 128 people, 13 of them children in Pakistan.

http://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2016/10/15/us-must-answer-war-crimes-in-middle-east.html 

US drone killings

According to Airwars, a British monitoring group, alleged civilian casualties linked to U.S. strikes in Syria and Iraq have soared to 1,472 in March 2017. In March 2016, 196 civilians were reported killed.

US war crimes and violation of Geneva Conventions

http://www.kropfpolisci.com/international.law.mandel.pdf

How America Gets Away with Murder: Illegal Wars, Collateral Damage and Crimes Against Humanity by Michael Mandel covers the illegal war on Iraq in 2003, invading a nation despite no evidence of weapons of mass destruction and neither had Iraq even threatened the US or its Allies to justify self-defense. Such a war of aggression was an international crime for which Bush, Rumsfeld, Powell, General Franks, Susan Rice, Tony Blair, Jack Straw et all are guilty for the murder of thousands of people, grievous injuries to thousands more

THE international criminal court’s chief prosecutor Fatou Bensouda’s office says “Members of US armed forces appear to have subjected at least 61 detained persons to torture, cruel treatment, outrages upon personal dignity on the territory of Afghanistan between 1 May 2003 and 31 December 2014,” The response by the US State Dept was “The United States is deeply committed to complying with the law of war, and we have a robust national system of investigation and accountability that more than meets international standards,” (Elizabeth Trudeau) However US is not a member of the ICC. 

US prisoner abuse came to light with Abu Ghraib prison for captured Iraqis from 2003 to 2006. Graphic photos depicting guards abusing detainees emerge in 2003. The prison held as many as 3,800 detainees. Maj. Gen. Antonio Taguba’s report covered these abuses.

§  Punching, slapping, and kicking detainees; jumping on their naked feet.

§  Videotaping and photographing naked male and female detainees.

§  Forcibly arranging detainees in various sexually explicit positions for photographing.

§  Forcing detainees to remove their clothing and keeping them naked for several days at a time.

§  Forcing naked male detainees to wear women’s underwear.

§  Forcing groups of male detainees to masturbate themselves while being photographed and videotaped.

§  Arranging naked male detainees in a pile and then jumping on them.

§  Positioning a naked detainee on a box, with a sandbag on his head, and attaching wires to his fingers, toes, and penis to simulate electric torture.

§  Writing “I am a Rapest (sic)” on the leg of a detainee accused of rape, and then photographing him naked.

§  Placing a dog chain or strap around a naked detainee’s neck and having a female soldier pose for a picture.

§  A male MP guard having sex with a female detainee.

§  Using military working dogs (without muzzles) to intimidate and frighten detainees, and in at least one case biting and severely injuring a detainee.

§  Taking photographs of dead Iraqi detainees.

 US fake propaganda

The Bureau of Investigative Journalism reported that PR firm, Bell Pottinger was tasked to produce fake Al Qaeda propaganda films and received $540m between May 2007 and December 2011. According to former video editor Martin Wells of Bell Pottinger, these videos were planted during raids and shown. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/us-government-pentagon-fake-al-qaeda-propganda-videos-a7348371.html

The US Government through statements by the envoys or through numerous NGOs that it funds chides countries about treating its minorities. This is the same country that carried out a wave of unconstitutional raids that affected as many as 1.8 million people in late 1920s and 1930s (Mexican repatriation)

Excerpts from book The American Lie: Government by the People and Other Political Fables By Benjamin Ginsberg


 

The military destabilization of sovereign states has led to the forceful surrender of sovereignty to secure globalization through trade pacts beneficial to Western corporates only to usher global neoliberalism and to secure the world’s economic power under their complete control. All of America’s military/humanitarian interventions have not produced a single success story. Instead, death, destruction, chaos, anarchy, tidal waves of refugees, displaced have arisen.

While FBI is accusing Russians of interfering in US elections – the US is believed to have interfered in at least 45 elections http://www.vocativ.com/388500/election-interference-us-45-countries/ and attempted to overthrow at least 50 democratically elected leaders while William Blum’s Masterlist of US regime changes is shocking http://www.globalresearch.ca/overthrowing-other-peoples-governments-the-master-list-of-u-s-regime-changes/5400829  Sri Lanka needs to be added to the list

Too often US envoys jump to make statements following melodrama by human rights activists funded by US interest groups but when US drones kill civilian it’s a case of ‘we are investigating’ ‘sorry’ or chapter is simply closed as ‘collateral damage’.

The lists of international and even domestic violations by the US Governments benchmarked against the high moral ground public and government officials make are too long to list. However, what is shocking is that neither the US Government nor its envoys feel any shame to preach knowing the scale of the crimes committed by their governments, troops and intelligence outfits covertly and overtly.

The US envoys should not throw stones from glass houses.

Shenali D Waduge

http://www.globalresearch.ca/obama-raises-american-hypocrisy-to-a-higher-level/24019

http://www.salon.com/2016/08/02/the_hypocrisy_of_american_exceptionalism_missing_the_big_picture_of_the_dncs_alleged_election_meddling/

Open Letter to US Envoy in Sri Lanka: America has no moral right to point fingers at any country

June 2nd, 2017

Shenali Waduge

A 44 page report by Amnesty International declares that the US Government gave $1.3billion worth of arms to ISIS in 2016. This comes in the backdrop of Hillary Clinton admitting that the US created Al Qaeda https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Dqn0bm4E9yw. Both entities are supposed to be targets of the US War on Terror. How does that make sense when the US is allegedly arming, training and even funding these terror movements which are killing American soldiers too? Today, the US Government has become a laughing stock on world stage. On the one hand their envoys are producing the red card to other countries of the world tutoring them on law & order, human rights, good governance and democracy while in reality US has the world’s worst record sheet and US or its officials have any moral right to be commending or ordering any country without addressing America’s crimes and illegalities. $4 trillion dollars later has been spent on this bogus War-on-Terror/Humanitarian-R2P

It is said that since 1945 America’s crusade of ‘delivering democracy’ entrenched in the The Plan for a New American Century” (PNAC) has resulted in the deaths of 20 to 30milion lives and uses nomenclatures like Doctrine of Humanitarian Warfare, right to protect” (R2P), William Blum says since 1945 the US has bombed 23 nations.

http://www.globalresearch.ca/united-states-war-crimes/5561468

Korea:1943-1953

Indonesia: (1958-1965) – CIA armed, trained and equipped rebels and ousted Sukarno and brought Dictator Suharto to power. Documents at George Washington University’s National Security Archive confirmed how effectively the Indonesian army used the U.S.-prepared hit list against the Indonesian communist party in 1965-66.

Vietnam: (1954-1965) U.S. began CIA-directed internal sabotage operations against the Vietnamese while setting up the puppet Ngo Dinh Diem (brought to Vietnam from the U.S.) as our” political leader.

The 1999 Kosovo conflict became the first humanitarian war using NATO to bomb Serbia based on a non-existent genocide. US went to the extent of even substituting the uncooperative UN Secretary General Boutros Boutros-Ghali with the subservient NATO shill, Kofi Annan (Luciana Bohne)

That Kosovo precedent has paved the way for incursions upon sovereign nations Afghanistan, Iraq, Libya, Syria, Mali, Nigeria, Somalia, Kenya, Ukraine, Yemen and now it is slowly galvanizing towards Asia. military destabilization of sovereign states has led to the forceful surrender of sovereignty to secure globalization through trade pacts beneficial to Western corporates only to usher global neoliberalism and to secure the world’s economic power under their complete control. All of America’s military/humanitarian interventions have not produced a single success story. Instead, death, destruction, chaos, anarchy, tidal waves of refugees, displaced have arisen.

If the ISIS is supposed to be the enemy and US troops are being sent to defeat this enemy, why is the US government giving arms to the enemy? Did President Obama not say I will not hesitate to take action against ISIL in Syria as well as Iraq” and incidentally even he was surprised why he was recipient of the Nobel PEACE prize!!!

http://www.kropfpolisci.com/international.law.mandel.pdf

How America Gets Away with Murder: Illegal Wars, Collateral Damage and Crimes Against Humanity by Michael Mandel covers the illegal war on Iraq in 2003, invading a nation despite no evidence of weapons of mass destruction and neither had Iraq even threatened the US or its Allies to justify self-defense. Such a war of aggression was an international crime for which Bush, Rumsfeld, Powell, General Franks, Susan Rice, Tony Blair, Jack Straw et all are guilty for the murder of thousands of people, grievous injuries to thousands more

 

The Bureau of Investigative Journalism reported that PR firm, Bell Pottinger was tasked to produce fake Al Qaeda propaganda films and received $540m between May 2007 and December 2011. According to former video editor Martin Wells of Bell Pottinger, these videos were planted during raids and shown. http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/us-government-pentagon-fake-al-qaeda-propganda-videos-a7348371.html

The US Government through statements by the envoys or through numerous NGOs that it funds chides countries about treating its minorities. This is the same country that carried out a wave of unconstitutional raids that affected as many as 1.8 million people in late 1920s and 1930s (Mexican repatriation)

http://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2016/10/15/us-must-answer-war-crimes-in-middle-east.html

http://www.strategic-culture.org/news/2016/10/15/us-must-answer-war-crimes-in-middle-east.html

MANAGING THE ECONOMY, RAJAPAKSA VERSUS YAHAPALANA

June 1st, 2017

KAMALIKA PIERIS

We have inherited a heavy national debt, said Yahapalana. The country had a debt of SLR 9000 billion (USD 60 billion) when Yahapalana took over, said President Sirisena. Yahapalana had inherited a Rs. 482,940 million foreign debt burden which has to be settled before 2016 said Prime Minister Ranil Wickremasinghe.    We are saddled with USD 1900 million in loans, he added on another occasion,  and that excludes the loans obtained by state institutions during the Rajapakse administration. Rajapakse government took loans for white elephant projects such as an airport and a deep sea port. Both continue to incur heavy losses, Debt servicing now consumes three-quarters of the budget,  said Yahapalana in March 2017.

When the new government came to power in 2015, many hidden details pertaining to those loans came to light, said Ranil Wickremasinghe. The previous government never informed Parliament of the loans it had taken  nor were they included in records. We found that loans taken by public institutions, amounting to 960.8 billion, were not included in the public debt system.  CPC had taken Rs. 365 billion, Ports Authority Rs. 260 billion, SriLankan Airlines Rs. 212 billion, the list is too long, he said. The Sri Lanka Transport Board had not sent Rs. 13 billion it should have sent to the EPF and ETF. Departments and Ministries owed further Rs. 58.4 billion, of which Rs. 24 billion was owed by the Highways Ministry.

Opponents of Yahapalana reply that under Yahapalana the foreign debt has increased from Rs. 3113 billion in 2014 to Rs. 4,070 billion at end of September 2016. During the same period, domestic debt too has increased from Rs.4, 278 bn. to Rs .4, 959 billion. Yahapalana had said that Sri Lanka Airlines had incurred a   3.5 billion liability, experts said that Sri Lanka Airlines simply could not have incurred such a large liability.

Mahinda Rajapakse replied Yahapalana .He said that the debt inherited by Yahapalana was an accumulated debt stretching from the time of President J.R. Jayawardene in the 1970s. He pointed out that all governments borrow and the current government inherits the debt. His government had only borrowed between 1.4 billion USD to 2.4 billion from 2008 to 2014. These were not excessive amounts that could not be met.  The amount of debt a country can take on depends on its ability to pay back the loans as they become due. Whenever we took out loans they were done in carefully planned manner which is why we never had to contend with an unmanageable pilling up of debt.. His government was able to reduce the loan percentage, year by year.

Rajapaksa said the present government blamed him for obtaining unbearable loans, but they obtained more loans during last two years than his government had borrowed during its 10 years. Since January 2015 the present government has been on a reckless borrowing spree.    We did not get indebted like this even during the war. The Yahapalana government is taking on debt much faster than it is retiring the existing debts. Also Yahapalana is using these loans as a cover to borrow more and more. Rajapaksa said unlike Yahapalana his government did not take loans for consumption. He used loans to launch mega development projects, which could be used for decades. They can be seen all over the country. We finished the war and developed the country.

Nivard Cabraal, Former Governor of the Central Bank has issued a statement comparing the economy then and now. Economic growth 2010 to 2014 was average 6.8 % now it has dropped to 4.8%, he said. GDP in 2014 was a robust USD 80 billion up from USD 24 billion in 2005. Now it is USD 82.3 Billion and is getting less in 2016. Foreign reserves were at USD 8208million in 2014, up from USD 2735 million in 2005.  In 2015 it fell to USD1161 million and crashed to a mere USD 450 million in 2016. Foreign investment in Treasury Bills and Bonds was around USD 3 billion in 2014.  These investments are now only 5.5% of the total, from the earlier 11.4%. International credit rating as per Fitch was ‘positive” in 2016 and is now downgraded to B+ and ‘negative’.

Cabraal said that according to official economic data published after 2015, the previous administration transformed the 2005 US$ 24 billion Sri Lankan economy to a US$ 80 billion economy by 2014, while enhancing the GDP per capita from US$ 1,242 to US$ 3,853. Economic growth for the six years, 2009 to 2014, averaged an unprecedented 6.5% per annum.  Inflation was controlled at mid-single digits for six years from 2008 to 2014. The debt situation as indicated by the Debt to GDP ratio which was dangerously high at 91% in 2005 was skillfully managed and reduced to 70% by 2014, even while a massive infrastructure development programme was implemented.

Foreign reserves increased from US$ 2,735 million at end of 2005 to US$ 8,208 million by end of 2014, continued Cabraal. The Balance of Payments recorded a massive surplus of US$ 1,369 million in 2014. From 2006 to 2014, the rupee was maintained at stable levels, with the average depreciation of the rupee during this period being the lowest-ever since the liberalization of the economy in 1977.By end  of 2014, interest rates of all Government Securities from three months to 30 years had stabilized between 5.5% and 9.5%.

The country’s credit rating and economic outlook had improved significantly, during the Rajapakse government and foreign investors invested confidently in Sri Lankan stocks and government securities, said Cabraal. Foreign Direct Investment recorded significant growth and reached USD 1,616 million in 2014, its highest-ever in history. Overall, the economy progressed smoothly through the severe global economic, financial, oil and food crises, as well as across the major terrorist conflict and a possible bank failure. As a consequence, external and internal shocks did not penetrate into the economy, and people did not suffer any adverse effects of these mega challenges.

In contrast to this, under the current administration, economic growth has been woefully weak, and inflation has started to rise, said Cabraal. The debt to GDP ratio has escalated sharply to 76% by end 2015, and is likely to exceed 82% at the end of 2016, according to analysts. Infrastructure development has been minimal. Foreign reserves have plummeted to USD 5,453 million by end January 2017.

Cabraal went on to say, the rupee is depreciating rapidly, while the 2015 BOP deficit of US$ 1,489 million was the worst-ever in the country’s history. Interest rates have almost doubled in the last two years, adding a massive burden to the government finances. Foreign investors have pulled out more than USD 2.5 billion from government securities, with the stampede to exit continuing. The country’s credit rating and outlook has been downgraded. FDI has crashed to around USD 400 million in 2016. The stock market is in a serious downward slide, and hundreds of billions of rupees has been wiped out from the market capitalization.  In the meantime, unbearable fiscal and other burdens are heaped on the people, the private sector and the economy almost daily, even while the economy is being rocked with mega scams, scandals and losses.

Mahinda Rajapakse returned to the debate. “When we built the Hambantota Harbour they called it the biggest ever swimming pool. They said that there the Mattala airport was of no use and stored paddy in it. When we introduced a proper way of removing garbage and cleaned the environs of Colombo they called it just eyewash.

We increased the landmass of the country by 450 acres and they shouted that we were handing over the country to China. “We got the loans to develop the country and paid them. We somehow found money and completed work. We never spent time complaining of the commissions and omissions of our predecessors, Rajapakse said.

“Politicians of this government go all over the country lamenting that I obtained massive loans and landed the country in a debt trap, continued Rajapakse. Anyone can see what I did with the loans we obtained. You can go all over the country you will see the roads, bridges, harbor and airports. But what about the loans obtained by this government? Can anyone see anything it has done so far with the loans they obtained?”

For the last two years Yahapalana government has drawn twice the amount we obtained as loans but it has not started a single development project.  They are only opening the projects that we started. Worse, the development projects we initiated have now come to a standstill. .Thousands has lost their jobs.  An ICT road map was prepared years ago, nothing has been done thereafter. Observers agreed with Rajapakse .Yahapalana is only completing Rajapakse’s programme of work’ they said.  Many development projects started by the Rajapakse government have been stopped.

The reason for the economic problems now is because the Yahapalana government gave a salary hike, against all economic reasoning, as an election handout, to win the August   2015 general election. No previous government had taken such liberties with public finances for political purposes, continued Rajapakse.  “Today, people are suffering. They are struggling to survive as the government has slapped all sorts of taxes on them. They cannot bear the cost of living which is rising daily.

Rajapaksa also observed that earlier governments had established special economic zones without causing unnecessary complications.  Rajapakse had   planned to give the Chinese only 750 acres for an industrial park in Hambantota but Yahapalana government was going to part with 15,000 acres. Rajapakse had told the Chinese Ambassador, that he was against handing over Hambantota‘s agricultural land to China.

‘China should first use the 4,800 acres available for investment near the port, before looking for land elsewhere. The disruption caused to the people of the area will be immense if 15,000 acres of land were to be acquired for this purpose. The government should fill the free port with investments first before opening more zones,” said Rajapakse. In a Twitter Q&A, Rajapakse said that the Chinese themselves are concerned about how the project will be implemented, but did not elaborate further.

Milton Rajaratne compared the economic performance of the Rajapakse and Yahapalana governments, using the Central Bank Annual Reports of 2014, 2015 and 2016. Out of the 30 key economic indicators reported by the Central Bank in its Annual Report for 2016, only two are marginally satisfactory. The other 28 economic indicators are unsatisfactory compared to the Rajapaksa government of 2014.  The two satisfactory indicators are,   increase of government revenue due to new taxes, higher rates and collection efficiency. This is countered by the increase in government expenditure. The other satisfactory factor is the marginal decrease in the overall deficit which brings happiness to the IMF more than to anyone else.

On the negative side, Yahapalana has produced less in 2016 compared to 2015.  Per capita income has dropped in 2016 compared to 2015. Yahapalana government has increasingly resorted to local and foreign loans during the two year administration and pushed the debt burden of the country from 71.3% to 79.3%. Official reserves have declined to a dangerous level, the equivalent to imports of 3.7 months from 5.1 months in 2014. Due to decline in exports income the debt service ratio has also increased from 20.8% to 25%.The trade deficit has soared from US$ 8.3 billion to US$ 9.1 billion between the periods. The largely depreciated rupee has not been an incentive for the exporters and thus exports earnings has also decreased to US$10.3 billion from US$11.1 billion in 2014, continued Rajaratne.

Share market indices reflect the business environment created by the Yahapalana government. The All Share Price Index has significantly dropped from 7,299 units to 6,228 units casting doubt over investment in the capital market. The value of shares traded during this two year period also has been slashed by almost a half and non-national net purchase from SLR 21.2 billion to SLR 0.3 billion indicating less trust on the capital market and dwindling foreign exchange inflow.

Yahapalana economy has failed in many ways, concluded Rajaratne. It has failed in increasing income, promotion of exports, curtailing imports, curbing inflation, interest rates and lending rates, generating employment, increasing domestic savings and investment, attracting FDI and foreign share capital, developing capital market, controlling government debt and expenditure and many more. Those who ousted Rajapakse strongly believed that UNP has better economic knowhow and expected rapid economic development through which more employment and income would be generated. The UNP governments in the past did so.  Yahapalana has failed absolutely in bringing about the positive economic change since January 8, 2015. According to the food wholesalers in Pettah, there was a 40% drop in sales of this April compared to the previous April, Rajaratne said.

Was there a Jaffna Kingdom?

June 1st, 2017

Garvin Karunaratne

HLD Mahindapala  in his Paper, How Many Homelands do the Jaffna Tamils need, quotes Historian Arsaratne who states that there was a Jaffna kingdom in 1325. This is incorrect. The evidence is that when the Portuguese did attack Jaffna the king of Kandy who ruled entire Sri Lanka sent his army headed by Mudliyar Atapattu to fight the invader. The enclosed Paper by Shenali  Waduge is factually correct.   I am sorry though I studied Ceylon History I have now marched on to other areas of study. Thanks to Shanali Waduge for her informative Paper which follows.

In actual fact when the Portuguese came to Ceylon, they invaded Jaffna

  • Jaffna was a kinglet subject to the Kandyan Kingdom: Military expedition under Mudaliar Attapattu despatched by Kandyan King Senerath to defend Jaffna Tamils from Portuguese conquest in 1619 is further evidence

Jaffna was a kinglet subject to the Kandyan Kingdom: Military expedition under Mudaliar Attapattu despatched by Kandyan King Senerath to defend Jaffna Tamils from Portuguese conquest in 1619 is further evidence

Why would the Kandyan King Senarath dispatch a military expeditionary force under Mudaliar Attapattu to defend the Tamils against the Portuguese in 1619 AD? The answer is simple. The Jaffna province was a kinglet and tributary of the Kandyan Kingdom. Just as the Centre would rush in if Chief Minister Wigneswaran lands into a spot of bother, likewise King Senarath wanted to safeguard part of his kingdom and sent Mudaliyar Attapattu with some 10,000 Sinhala troops. It is also no different to the Senadhinayaka ordering the Sri Lanka Military to defeat the terrorist LTTE and the country’s soldiers saved close to 300,000 Tamils.

Father Fernao de Qeuyroz’s treatise ‘Conquest of Ceylon’ records that the King sent an army of 10,000 men under the command of Mudaliyar Atapattu to Jaffna. Unfortunately, the King’s expeditionary force lost the battle due to the overwhelming superiority of weapons that the Portuguese commanded and Attapattu himself together with 5000 troops of the King also perished. This was the last battle for the defense of Jaffna before it fell to European powers and it was fought not by a Tamil army but by a Sinhalese one and much Sinhalese blood was shed for it after the Tamil kingdom had capitulated to the Europeans”.

Queyroz’s book also states:

‘As long as Rajapure (Anuradhapura) was the capital of Ceylon, the whole island was subject to one King”

Queyroz records that when the Portuguese first arrived in Sinhale in 1505  there were 15 ‘kinglets’ subject to the King of Kotte among whom the ‘kinglet of Jaffnapatao was one. That the head of the Kinglets were known as the Emperor and there was only one Emperor in Sinhale and whenever the Portuguese or Dutch referred to Emperor it was to the ruler of the entire country. Another example to deny the separate Tamil homeland myth.

The 15 kinglets were Denavake, Valave, Putelao, Mantota, Tanagama, Muliauali, Triquilimale, Cutiar, Batecalou, Paneva, Vintena, Orupula, Mature, Candea and Jaffnapatao and Kingdom of Cota makes it 16. None of these were ‘independent’ or totally autonomous with sovereign rights or being governed  ‘separately’ and nullifies unfounded calls claiming any independent homeland ever existed.

Sending troops to Jaffna to defend and protect Tamils from a Portuguese invasion of territory under the overall jurisdiction of the Kandyan Kingdom gives numerous other messages.

When the Portuguese under Fellippe de Oliveria were attacking Tamils in the North in 1619 AD, the King of Kandy Senerath did not sit silent or behave like a Nero. He sent his troops immediately headed by Mudaliyar Attapattu who sacrificed his life in a bold attempt to save the lives of Tamils just like close to 30,000 Sri Lankan Troops in the current era made the supreme sacrifice to save the nation from terrorism. The King of Kandy sent his men to fight the Portuguese invasion of Jaffna because the North was part of the King’s Kingdom just like Sri Lanka’s Senadhinayaka did in 2009.

What were the consequences of the defeat of the Sinhala Army under Mudaliar Attapattu sent by King Senerath to protect the Tamils of Jaffna from the Portuguese?

Portuguese Inquisition in Jaffna

It resulted in an extension of the brutal and inhumane Portuguese Inquisition into Jaffna. The Portuguese Inquisition was already in full swing in both Goa and the Western Coastal areas of Portuguese Ceylon. Fellippe de Oliveria, the Portuguese conqueror of Jaffna, destroyed 500 Buddhist and Hindu temples in the Jaffna province. Fellippe de Oliveria punished all those who practiced anything non -Christian. This is the fundamental basis of the Catholic Inquisition. Punish all those who are different by religion or thought and practiced another faith. Homogeneity was compulsory. No room for pluralism. The respect for the human rights of the Tamil Hindus was honoured in the breach by the Catholic Portuguese.

The Society of Jesus (Jesuits) – a Roman Catholic missionary group, constructed nearly 30 Catholic churches by vandalizing and demolishing Hindu temples. Oliveria introduced compulsory proselytizing – a basic feature of the Catholic Inquisition. Franciscan Friars converted more than 6000 Tamils to Christianity (Prof. Endagama)

The Buddhist Sinhalese looked after the minority Tamils in the past in areas under their control with full respect for the religious rights of the Tamil Hindus. In contrast the Catholic Portuguese forced their religion down the throats of others who subscribed to another set of religious beliefs.

Magnanimity of King Senerath

The Sinhalese came to the rescue of the Muslims as well. When Muslims who were treated as aliens and non – citizen traders and were being hounded and killed by the Portuguese almost at every turn, it was the Sinhala Buddhist King Senerath who again came to their rescue in 1626. The King not only gave them shelter but even provided means of livelihood. The King of Kandy settled some 4000 Muslims in Batticaloa because the East of Sri Lanka was an integral part of the Kandyan Kingdom. 

Had the Buddhist King Senerath not given protection and shelter to the Muslims fleeing the Portuguese controlled areas of the country by admitting them to the Kandyan Kingdom, what would have been the plight of the local Muslims?

The track record of the Portuguese and Spanish in South America and Africa is horrific. They destroyed wholesale the ancient Civilizations of the Incas, Aztecs, and Mayans. Hundreds of thousands of innocent people were massacred in cold blood. Muslims in Ceylon may have been subject to a genocide or annihilation by the Portuguese given what the Portuguese did to the Muslims in Goa. All Muslim males above 16 years of age were killed and all the Muslim women ( known as White Muslims) were captured and enslaved as mistresses or concubines of Portuguese soldiers.

What the Germans did to the Jews in World War Two is known as the ”Final Solution of the Jewish Question” (in German Endlö-sung der Judenfrage”).

This is nothing new when one examines European conquest and treatment of black, brown and yellow people during the last 500 years.

Human Rights Discourse – Hypocrisy of the West

Preaching Human Rights today by the very same colonial countries is just a smokescreen to conceal their dark past of genocide of native people, mass murder and crimes against humanity.

It was only in 1815 that the Muslims in Sri Lanka were first officially allowed to own land and property in Sri Lanka. Muslims as part of the Sri Lankan polity officially began to be counted from 1815 onwards only because prior to that they were designated as aliens and treated like foreigners, intruders or persona non grata.   Neither the Portuguese nor the Dutch gave them any recognition given the historical enmity of Christians towards Muslims that developed during the Crusades. This enmity continues in various degrees even today.

Donald Trumps diatribes against Muslims in USA constitute the latest manifestation of this perennial conflict between these two Abrahamic religions.

Moreover, the Portuguese & Dutch records referred to Tamils as Malabar (coming from India’s Malabar coast) and this changed only in 1911 when the British introduced for the first time the term ‘Ceylon Tamils’ under the influence of Ponnambalam Arunachchalam then Registrar General who compiled the National Census Report in 1911. 

Therefore Tamil politicians can only refer to period after 1911 refering to themselves as Ceylon Tamils because prior to that Tamils were known as those that had originated from South India. Is this why the Eelam campaign which originally kick started in Tamil Nadu was re – launched and rebranded in Sri Lanka boosted by the TULF/ITAK resolutions and forced upon Sri Lanka via the Indo – Lanka Accord of 1987?

We have given a few more examples to demolish the Tamil homeland myth and to showcase that while there were kingdoms or rather kinglets none of these were running separately as sovereign nations or independently of the whole country. At no point in time have parts of Sri Lanka functioned independently or separately other than when Portuguese and Dutch were ruling parts of Sri Lanka while the rest came under the Sinhala Emperor.It also reiterates a reminder to those drafting the constitution to be mindful of not including any clauses that changes this long standing status quo.

Shenali D. Waduge

 

ගං  වතුර හා දෙවියෝ 

June 1st, 2017

 දෙවියෝ වැඩ ඉන්නේ අපි හදන දේවාල වල නොවෙය ,ඒ දෙවියන්ගේම විමානවල , අපට අවශ්‍ය වුනා දෙවියන්ට පින්දෙන්නයන්න තැනක් ඒ හින්දා අපි දේවාල හැදුවා දෙවියෝ තමන්ගේ විමානවල සිට ඒ දේවාල අබියස අපි පින්දෙන හැටි බලනවා ඒ පින් ගන්නවා පින් දෙන  අ  යට ආශීර්වාද කරනවා .  ඉතින් ගංවතුරට ඒ දෙවියෝ කොටුවෙන්නේ නැහැ .කවුදෝ කෙනෙක් සමන් දෙවියෝ ගං  වතුරට කොටුවුනා කියල අපහාසයෙන් කතා කළා සමන් දේවාලේ වතුරට කොටු වුනාම                           .මෝඝ පුරුශයා නෙනි, අපි හදන බුදු පිළිම වුනත් ගං  වතුරට යටවෙනවා බාමියන් බුදු පිළිම වාගේ බෝ ර, ඩයිනමයිට් වලට  කුඩුවෙනවා .දැක්කද මානා භරණ  චය්ත්‍යය තුල තැන්පත් කර තිබු බුදු පිළිමයත්  චය්ත්ත්ය කඩා වැටෙන කොට  උඩ  තෙර පීමට අහු වෙලා  තැලී තිබුන හැටි .සෝමදේව  නම්වූ ”මිහිපිට වැඩවසන දෙවියා ”’එය සීරුවෙන් ගත්  හැටි මෝඝ පුරුෂයෝ දකින්න නැතුව ඇති’මේකෙන් මම කියන්නේ අපි හදන බුදු පිළිම තලුනත් කුඩු වුනත් වතුරට අහුවුනත් බුදු හාමුදුරුවෝ  එහෙමම මය කියන එකය් .එතුමන්ගේ ගුණ  නැතිවෙන්නේ නැහැ 

                                          ඉතින් නිකම්    පඬියෝ  වෙන්න  කට කැඩිච්චි කතා කියල නුගත් කම පෙන්නන්න  එපා .දැක්කද  තෙවරප්පෙරුමටත්  ගංවතුර අනාතයෝ පින් දුන්නා තමන්ට සලකුනිසා .තෙවරා  .. කොය් තරම් සතුටු වෙන්න ඇද්ද එකෙන් මීට පස්සේ එයා හතරවරක් පෙරාපු කෙනෙක් වෙන්නත් පුළුවන්  ( හතරවරන්  එහෙම නොවෙය _).දෙවියෝ සතුටු වෙන්නේ තමන් පෙර භාවයන් වල කරපු පුණ්‍ය කර්මයන් වාගේ පුණ්‍ය කර්මයන් කරන  අ ය දැකල .බටහිර විද්‍යා දෙය්යෝ පස්සෙම ගිහින් කාමසුකල්ලිකානු  යෝගයේ  අවලම්  විදිහට  හැසිරෙන අ යට සමයක් දෘෂ්ටික දෙවියෝ කැමති නැහැ .  අවාසනාවකට   උගත් යය කියන 95% කම එහෙම  අ ය ..ගෙරිමස් ගඳ ගහන  කුණු කසල පිරුන තැන්වලට දෙවියෝ වඩි න්නේ නැහැයහපාලනෙට පෙර කොච්චර කොළඹ අසිරිය වින්දද  ලස්සන නිසාම . දැන් බල්ලෙක්වත් බලන්නේ නැහැ කොළඹ දිහා ඒවගේ තමය දෙවියොත්. පවුකාරයන් ඉන්න දිහාවෙන් එතුමන් ලා ඈ ත් වෙනවාආධ්‍යාත්මික ගුණවගාව වැඩි තැන සිරියාවය් ලස්සනය් .

       මෝඝ පුරුෂයිනි     දෙවියෝ   සහ ”දෙවියන්වහන්සේත් ”’ අතර වෙනසක් තියෙනවා      මැවුම්කාර  පුද්ගලයා සහ  පංච නියාම  ධර්ම වෙනස් .   මැවුම් කාරයා දැන්   ඩිසය් නර්  කරලා ”’. මංගල වගේ    ඩි සය්නර් ”’ කෙනෙක්  නම් වැඩක් නැහැ කාටවත් . විශේෂයෙන් ගැහැණියට නම් . ගැහැණිය මැ ව්වෙත් පස්සෙනේ නොවැදගත් නිසා …. ඉතින් දෙවියන්වහන්සේගේ ම  පිහිටය්   මෝඝ පුරුෂයන්ට …..  

The Buddhist World lacks an effective mechanism to help save a Buddhist Nation in Danger

June 1st, 2017

Courtesy: Buddhist Channel

 Colombo, Sri Lanka — The crisis facing the Buddhist world is neither a decline in religious conviction nor an apprehension that truth underpinned by rational argument and new scientific discoveries will one day overtake and outstrip the core teachings of its founder which is a perennial fear bordering on despondency that characterizes several other competing religions, but the lack of an effective institutional mechanism that can lend support when a Buddhist institution, Buddhist community or even a pre-dominant Buddhist nation is in danger.

We see the lack of substantial networks of support driving threatened Buddhist nations or Buddhist communities into a sense of despair and hopelessness at times of an emergency. Traditional Buddhist countries such as Thailand, Myanmar, Sri Lanka, Cambodia and Laos are now under severe pressure to distance themselves from extending state patronage to Buddhism and erase their Buddhist country identity and embrace a secular identity with no such pressure being applied to countries in other parts of the world such as the Middle East or the Catholic belt of Europe.

Despite a 2500 year old history that makes Buddhism one of the oldest religions in the world, a worldwide presence that makes it a global religion, and a way of life grounded in wisdom and compassion that attracts the envy of other civilizations, Buddhism still retains its biggest constraint i.e. lack of effective protections. It is a historical fact that Buddhism has lost more territory and space in Asia, its traditional homeland, in the last one thousand years than any other religion. It is also a hard fact that this process is on going with no sign of abatement and no effective measures developed to counter it.

Buddhism’s biggest appeal of being an eternally passive, non – confrontational, peace loving religion that lacks a central place to direct its affairs in the international arena unlike in the case of say the Vatican (sovereign state enjoying both temporal and spiritual power) or the World Council of Churches ( powerful and well – funded with influence reaching to four corners of the world) or the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (promoting Muslim solidarity in economic, social, and political affairs), has become Buddhism’s Achilles’ heel. Its organizational bases are relatively powerless when compared to the aforesaid entities. For example, the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) is the second largest inter-governmental organization after the United Nations which has a membership of 57 states spread over four continents. The Organization is the collective voice of the Muslim world and committed to safeguard and protect the interests of the Muslim world. It has its headquarters in Saudi Arabia.

Rising Challenges to Buddhism

The issue of rising challenges to Buddhism to the extent of undermining its very existence as the pre-dominant religion of a nation, hardly merits much attention in discussions of International Buddhist Organisations, International Buddhist Conferences, or among National Governments in countries with predominant Buddhist populations and corresponding state and constitutional obligations to protect and foster Buddhism.

Traditional Buddhist countries now find themselves force fed with ideas that are foreign to Asia, that had been given birth primarily in a Western setting and related to the interplay of dynamics of European societies but are nevertheless required to be uncritically accepted and transplanted in Asian societies without due consideration being given to the social tensions that would be generated in transplanting such ideas. To de-link state patronage to Buddhism is one such pressure brought on by various religious interests that during the heyday of colonialism enjoyed exclusive patronage from colonial rulers.

The solidarity that countries in Buddhist Asia showed towards each other in the distant past i.e. pre – colonial era, has greatly evaporated or become non – existent. The sense of kinship of being fellow travelers in a spiritual journey overarched by Buddhist precepts and bonded by common religious beliefs and foundations no longer act as a reference point to summon or render assistance even between Buddhist peoples based in neighbouring countries at times of need.

Recent events, for example, attacks on Buddhist Temples in Bangladesh or the crisis in Myanmar hardly drew concerted attention or action in other Buddhist countries in the form of assisting our co – religionists facing an existential plight.

Areas of growing concern

1) Religious conversions

Countries preserving Indian Civilizational religions e.g. Buddhism, Hinduism, Jainism etc. are seen as soft and easy targets for manipulation and religious conversion of their people, and in turn replacement of centuries old traditional culture with new cultures subservient to foreign interests. The resulting change in religious demography brings pressure on the State to disassociate itself with Buddhist values that underpin the stability of the society, legal framework and moral direction of the country.

2) Mass Media

The mainstream Mass Media in the English language in pre-dominant Buddhist countries which act as the window to the world hardly makes any contribution towards creating any Buddhist public opinion or provide a voice reflecting Buddhist concerns. Instead it acts as a group largely hostile to the creation of any such Buddhist opinion and thereby sacrificing the interests of the wider majority of the country’s people. One hardly reads newspaper editorials in support of a Buddhist cause. Instead Buddhists find themselves repeatedly fed with a regular and steady diet of lectures on ‘human rights’, ‘rule of law’ ‘democracy’ non – violence’ ‘peace and reconciliation’ despite no such intransigence on their part at a major level.

There appears to be a calculated move to place Buddhists, metaphorically speaking, in the ‘dock’, make Buddhists feel guilty of alleged crimes or misconduct and then extract more and more concessions totally out of proportion to what Buddhists enjoy as a religious minority in non – Buddhist countries.

3) Status of Buddhism as an official religion

Reciprocity is the norm that governs diplomacy or grant of religious concessions. Buddhism hardly enjoys official status as a religion in Europe or in the Middle East. Freedom of religion is honoured in the breach when it comes to acceptance of Buddhism as an official religion in these parts of the world. In Europe only Russia and Austria recognize Buddhism as an official religion.

4) Hidden Agenda of ‘Secularism’

The proponents of secularism in Sri Lanka like in India are those clearly bent on repudiating the civilisational ethos of this country. Their main objective is to marginalize Buddhism from the public – political and social – life. In the West we find that secularism had stood for rationalism, universalism and humanism. In Asia, secularism is being used as a smokescreen and a shield to push Indian civilizational religions such as Buddhism and Hinduism away from the centre stage and replace them with religions and ideologies that were introduced much later in time to these lands.

In pre-colonial Sri Lanka there was never any conflict between the State and organized religion. It is essentially a European phenomenon. What we are now faced with is an increasing challenge to an ancient, indigenous Buddhist civilisation which is gentle, accommodative and pacifist by later introduced religious cultures that have a track record of intolerance and violence and close association with colonialism and a self-declared objective of world conquest. They use the language of human rights and freedom of religion but their goals are very much political and predatory. They support the country’s adversaries in the international arena to engage in the game of finger – pointing, naming and shaming our leaders and people. It is also a battle for the moral conscience of Sri Lanka which our people and rulers have worked so hard relentlessly to keep over many centuries as an expression of our indigenous religious beliefs and outlook.

League of Buddhist Nations

During the last five hundred years or so, since the beginning of the western colonial era, the governance and steering of the world was very much in the hands of powerful western nations using their mono religio- cultural framework as terms of reference in policy making and implementation of policy. That era is now drawing to a close. Sino – Indic civilizations will take over from euro-centric civilizations. The question is not whether but when. The old world will give rise to a new world and revert to Asia its traditional leadership role of the world.

Buddhism is well – integrated and deep seated in both the Chinese and Indian cultures. To the Buddhists in Asia the challenge is to develop new structures and institutions that reflect current realities. It would be feasible for countries with pre-dominant Buddhist populations to consider developing closer ties with each other in the spheres of economic, cultural, and trade and investment. The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) provides a role model for the Buddhist world to adopt and establish at summit level an equivalent body to give voice and make representations on behalf of the Buddhists.

Buddhist heritage countries such as China, Japan, Korea, Thailand, Myanmar, Vietnam, Taiwan, Cambodia, Laos, Bhutan, Nepal, and Sri Lanka among others should engage in increasing close cooperation in international affairs and regularly meet like the European Union or the OIC in the form of a League of Buddhist Nations. Sri Lanka as a traditional Buddhist country with the longest continuing Buddhist history in the world is eminently well qualified to take an initiative in this direction.

Buddhist Television Channel on par with BBC, CNN and Al – Jazeera

The Buddhist voice is relatively speaking largely unheard in the international arena. Buddhist nations which are embattled or threatened by more powerful vested interests have to rely on International news agencies or foreign Television Channels such as BBC, CNN or Al – Jazeera which have different policy objectives and are largely unsympathetic or sometimes even prejudiced towards the Buddhist cause, to air their position. This is an unsatisfactory situation. The time has come for the Buddhist world to seriously consider the inauguration of a Buddhist Television Channel on par with the aforesaid major TV Channels.

Courtesy: Buddhist Channel
Image Source: http://www.fireflydaily.com

http://www.vifindia.org/article/2017/may/27/the-crisis-facing-the-buddhist-world

Courtesy: Vivekananda International Foundation

See also 

The Buddhist International

UNDV 2017 – Some critical observations

https://www.facebook.com/439612382876396/videos/vb.439612382876396/771138636390434/?type=2&theater

http://buddhistinternational.org/2017/05/buddhist-international-view-on-undv-2017-colombo/

ANGELOW MATHEWS SICK AGAIN-CRICKET FANS ARE SICK OF IT!

June 1st, 2017

By M D P DISSANAYAKE

It is being reported that Sri Lankan Skipper Angelow Mathews is suffering from a calf injury.  Sports injuries are a common phenomenon, in international arena the players who are not 100 per cent fit had been sidelined for extended periods of time.

Sri Lankan cricket rankings are currently rated poor, in ODI rankings, the Champion Trophy is a golden opportunity to lift our standings.  With a Leader who is constantly on sick   list, it does not provide motivation for the rest of the team members.

Views had been expressed in the past to allow sufficient time for Angelow to be fully fit, but the selectors have ignored the calls for unknown reasons.  The management of players is an essential requirement and even the use of rotational systems have been used in other countries.

Time left for the stand in Skipper Upul Tharanga is limited.   We wish him courage and enhanced leadership skills to take Sri Lanka to the next level.

Will Sri Lanka be robbed of its oil and other mineral resources in the north and east?

June 1st, 2017

By Rohana R. Wasala

When prospecting for petroleum in Sri Lanka began more than forty years ago at the initiative of the government, we were silently jubilant at the promise of a comfortable petrodollar-rich future for the country, which enhanced the general euphoria experienced in the wake of the adoption of the republican constitution in 1972. However, the Russian engineers who conducted the search at Pesalai in Mannar failed to find any oil. The grandiose project was abandoned, and the matter forgotten after a few laughs at jokes about certain fake samples of oil  claimed to have been extracted from the area aimed at convincing an increasingly sceptical public. Ironically, though unconnected with the search for oil, separatist terrorism erupted from the north and east which we had originally hoped would be a source of unprecedented prosperity; terrorist violence devastated the country for thirty long years. We have just emerged from that dark phase of our history to be happily greeted by the news that Sri Lanka possesses substantial oil reserves. This naturally revives our hope of a bright future; a decisive reversal of our fortunes appears to be in the offing.

The initial attempts four decades ago at finding oil drew a blank probably because of the inadequacy of the prospecting technology adopted at that time. The situation today is different. We now enjoy the advantages of highly advanced modern technology in the matter. The many geological surveys and seismic tests carried out with the help of foreign organizations have revealed  the existence of exploitable deposits of petroleum and gas in parts of the northern, eastern and southern regions of the island, both onshore and offshore.  The major portion of the oil resources is reported to be concentrated in the area above an imaginary line joining Chilaw and Trincomalee, i.e. the north.

The coincidence of the elimination of separatist violence and the discovery of oil augurs well for the country. But the way ahead is not without risks. It is strewn with international landmines of political manipulation and interventionist pressure, which demands an extremely high level of political acumen and courage, and a selfless commitment to consensus building, on the part of our national leaders for Sri Lanka to remain whole. This is something that even a cursory glance at the oil-dominated twentieth-century global power (im)balance among nations will be sufficient to convince us of.

All countries depend on cheap oil for their economic development, and demand unrestricted access to it. This makes oil a strategic asset” in the hands of powerful countries that are involved in the general scramble for a share of it.

The United States of America (USA), the European Union (EU) and China are the biggest consumers of oil (25.9%, 19.1%, and 6% of the world’s oil respectively). Their contributions to the global oil supply are as follows: USA – 10.7%, EU – 4.3%, and China – 4.4%. They may be identified as the main players in the global oil rush. Their partners in this oil game” are the generally less industrialized oil producing nations.

From the very beginning Britain and America have been engaged in political and colonial manoeuvring for the sake of cheap oil. The quest for oil in the Middle East started when Iran struck oil in its Masjed Soleiman oil field in 1908. Iran was a part of the British Empire then. While Britain had no oil of its own Iran and the Middle East had an abundance of it. The British wasted no time in contriving strategies to help themselves to the vast oil resources found there. The Anglo-Iranian Oil Company (AIOC) was founded in 1909 to exploit the oil resources of Iran. The British devised a clever arrangement called concessions”. This was based on the complementary relationship between the two countries: Iran owned the oil, but had no technical know-how that would enable them to extract, refine, store, and sell it; neither did Iran have a market for the oil; on the other hand, Britain had no oil, but needed it very much. Britain also possessed the technological expertise necessary for extracting and refining the oil. Foreign companies vied with each other for concessions across the Middle East. Under the concessions arrangement the owner of the oil fields or the host” country (eg. Iran) was paid a concession” on the output. The bigger the output the bigger the concession. In other words the more oil the foreign companies extracted and sold, the more money the owner countries got.

Decades later (in 1951) Iran, under  the democratically elected Prime Minister Dr Muhammad Mossadeq, nationalized the Anglo-Iranian Oil Company in order to retain the oil profits within the country. The US and Britain were strongly opposed to the move. They responded by causing the ouster of Dr Mossadeq through a coup, and installed in power Shah Mohammad Reza Pahlavi in 1953. The nationalized British oil interests were returned to British control; similarly the American oil concessions were retained by eight private oil companies which were given 40% of the Iranian oil industry. (Is someone whispering in my ear, Old habits die hard”?)

Saudi Arabia ( created in 1935 under the auspices of Britain and named after Ibn Saud its ruler) possesses 25% of the world’s oil reserves. It is the only oil superpower” in the world. In 1945 President Roosevelt met Ibn Saud on US cruiser Quincy in the Suez canal to sign an agreement in terms of which the US pledged to support Saudi Arabia  militarily in return for access to its oil through their Arab-American Oil Company (ARAMCO). The USA exploited this relationship to develop its economy and build its military strength over the next half a century. When the Americans waged war on Iraq at the beginning of the 1990’s they used Saudi Arabia as their base.  That special relationship still remains intact, as was demonstrated by US president Donald Trump’s visit there recently (May 21, 2017).

Iraq has the second largest proven oil reserves in the world next to Saudi Arabia. The western involvement in the country’s affairs led to a devastating war against it on rather dubious grounds (as it is being revealed now), and UN embargoes, etc with genocidal consequences on the innocent Iraqi citizens, primarily because of the American thirst for cheap oil. Organizations such as the Global Policy Forum (GPF) maintain that Iraq’s oil is the central feature of the political landscape”. According to the GPF, under US influence the 2005 constitution of Iraq has been made to contain language that generates a major role for foreign companies”.

Venezuela is said to have 77.2 billion barrels of proven oil resources – the largest in the western hemisphere. It nationalized its oil industry in 1975-76. Former president Hugo Chavez rejected the privatizing policies of his predecessors. His attempts to renegotiate a sixty year old royalty payments agreement with    Philips Petroleum and Exxonmobil (both large oil companies) did not endear him to the Americans. Under these agreements the corporations had to pay taxes  as low as 01% of the tens of billions of dollars in revenues. Hugo Chavez’s heroism is now history.

Of course, western hegemony in the oil world has not been unchallenged. Venezuela pioneered the idea of establishing the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC) in 1949, approaching Iran, Gabon, Libya, Kuwait and Saudi Arabia. But the OPEC was set up in 1960 when the US imposed import quotas on Venezuelan and Persian Gulf oil to support the Canadian and Mexican oil industries. Antagonized by American bias towards Israel, the OPEC exercised its power by imposing an oil embargo against the US and Western Europe in 1973.

China, taken as an individual country, is the second largest consumer of oil. About five years ago it used to import 30% of its oil. This figure was forecast to double by 2020, which will see China in much more desperate need of oil. Discovery of oil in Sri Lanka will naturally further endear her to China.

The Chinese obtain 10% of their oil from Sudan. The economically poor Sudan was riven by civil conflict between the Christian and animist south and the Islamist north. The Sudanese government was accused of evicting the civilians of the  southern Darfur region from land they had occupied for generations, and even of massacring them in its determination to clear the area for oil extraction. When the UN wanted to condemn Sudan over these allegations, China provided it diplomatic protection. China  made massive investments in Sudan in addition  to delivering oil revenues and supplying arms to be used in its more than twenty year old civil war. Washington blacklisted Sudan as a state supporter of terrorism, and US companies were not permitted to do business there, which provided a wonderful opportunity for the Chinese.

With the economic and military strength gained from its oil dealings with China, Sudan was able to stand up to the Sudan People’s Liberation Army (SPLA). The SPLA  threatened to expel the Chinese from Sudan if they came to power for the support the latter were giving to the Sudanese government. Today, China is Sudan’s biggest trade partner. China Sudan relations are quite robust.

To date Sri Lanka has  only been a relatively  insignificant customer in the global oil market. Some day soon, however, we’ll be among the producing nations. The new position will be economically advantageous to us, no doubt. But it will also expose us to international political and diplomatic manoeuvring. It is obvious that Sri Lanka is getting sucked into a vortex of geopolitical and economic cold war among global and regional superpowers. Probably the country’s victimization in this context under the current pusillanimous political leadership is already a reality?

UNHRC resolutions violate Sri Lanka’s sovereignty

June 1st, 2017

By Neville Ladduwahetty Courtesy The Island

The UNHRC Resolution A/HRC/34/L.1 of 15 March 2017 “requests the Government of Sri Lanka to implement fully the measures identified by the Council in its resolution 30/1 that are outstanding”. While the language in the 2017 Resolution was a “request”, the language in the 2015 Resolution was stated as: “encourages the Government of Sri Lanka to implement the recommendations contained therein when implementing measures for truth-seeking, justice, reparations and guarantees of non-recurrence”.

It was the 2015 Resolution which “encouraged” the Government of Sri Lanka to implement the provisions in the Resolution that was co-sponsored by the Government. By doing so the Government undertook to implement provisions imposed on Sri Lanka by an external agency. The very act of co-sponsoring means that the original prescription for Reconciliation had been developed outside Sri Lanka. It further confirms that it was NOT the People of Sri Lanka who self-determined how they were to bring about reconciliation,because it was not a product of the “powers of government”, an integral component of Sovereignty enshrined in Article 3 of the Constitution. This is thus a violation of the Peoples’ sovereignty as explained herein.

Despite the use of language such as “requests the Government of Sri Lanka”, or “encourages the Government of Sri Lanka”, the implementation of the provisions of both Resolutionsshould be treated with the seriousness expected if dire consequences are to be avoided. If instead, they are treated casually, the consequences Sri Lanka would have to face woulddepend on the individual or collective mood of the 47-member Human Rights Council.

PROVISIONS of RESOLUTION 30/1 that IMPACT on SOVEREIGNTY

Article 3 of the Constitution of Sri Lanka states:

“In the Republic of Sri Lanka sovereignty is in the People and is inalienable. Sovereignty includes the powers of government, fundamental rights and the franchise”.

It is under “powers of government” that the Government would be implementing provisions of Resolution 30/1. It is under “powers of government” that sovereign States exercise their right of self-determination. “By virtue of that right they freely determine their political status and freely pursue their economic, social and cultural development” (Article 1 of Covenant on Economic, Social, Cultural Rights and Covenant on Civil and Political Rights and other international instruments).

The right of self-determination to address issues relating to reconciliation, accountability and human rights in keeping with Sri Lanka’sown social and cultural values as assured by the above covenant is denied to the Government of Sri Lanka by the UN Resolutions A/HRC/34/L.1 and A/HRC/30/L.29 for the following reasons:

1. Paragraph 4 of Resolution 34/L.1 states:

“Requests the Office of the High Commissioner to continue to assess progress on the implementation of ITS (emphasis added) recommendations and other relevant processes relating to reconciliation, accountability and human rights in Sri Lanka…”.

Paragraph 1 of Resolution 30/L.29 states:

“Takes note with appreciation of the oral update presented by the United Nations High Commissioner to the Human Rights Council at its twenty-seventh session, the report of the Office of the High Commissioner on promoting reconciliation and accountability in Sri Lanka (A/HRC/30/61) and its investigation on Sri Lanka requested by the Human Rights Council in its resolution 25/1 (A/HRC/30/CRP.2.), including its findings and conclusions, and encourages the Government of Sri Lanka to implement the recommendations contained therein when implementing measures for truth-seeking, justice, reparations and guarantees of non-recurrence”(emphasis added).

The paragraphs that follow elaborate on the recommendations that need to be implemented by the Government of Sri Lanka. The recommendations in the report of the High Commissioner and its investigation on Sri Lanka requested by the Human Rights Council therefore become a prescription initiated by the UNHRC to achieve reconciliation, accountability etc. This is a violation of the sovereignty of the People of Sri Lanka to which the Preamble to the Resolution reaffirmed stating “its commitment to the sovereignty, independence unity and territorial integrity of Sri Lanka”. It is therefore made clear that it is not the People of Sri Lanka who developed the mechanisms to achieve reconciliation, accountability etc. Consequently, what the Government is expected to implement are a set of recommendations imposed on Sri Lanka. This is a violation of Sri Lanka’s sovereignty which includes the right of self-determination that All Peoples of sovereign States are entitled to.

The “DECLARATION ON PRINCIPLES OF INTERNATIONAL LAW CONCERNING FRIENDLY RELATIONS AND CO-OPERATION AMONG STATES IN ACCORDANCE WITH THE CHARTER OF THE UNITED NATIONS’ states under “The principle of equal rights and self-determination of peoples” as follows:

“By virtue of the principle of equal rights and self-determination of peoples enshrined in the Charter, all peoples have the right freely to determine, WITHOUT EXTERNAL INTERFERENCE, (emphasis added) their political status and to pursue their economic, social and cultural development, and every State has the duty to respect this right in accordance with the provisions of the Charter”.

CO-SPONSORING the RESOLUTION

The act of co-sponsoring the Resolution commits the SL Government to implement provisions in the Resolution. Some of these provisions may require revisions to the Constitution while others may require amending existing laws. Consequently, some provisions may require special majorities such as 2/3 approval of Parliament and approval of the People at a referendum, while others may require either 2/3 approval of Parliament or simple Parliamentary majorities.

For instance, paragraph 4 requires the Government “to give each mechanism the freedom to obtain financial, material and technical assistance from international partner” ; paragraph 6 requires “participation in a Sri Lankan judicial mechanism, including the special council’soffice, Commonwealth and other foreign judges, defence lawyers and authorized prosecutors and investigators”; paragraph 7 requires “the Government of Sri Lanka to reform its domestic law to ensure… trial and punishment of those most responsible for the full range of crimes under general principles of law recognized by the community of nations”; paragraph 8 requires “Sri Lanka to introduce effective security sector reforms”; paragraph 12 requires “review of Public Security Ordinance Act”; and paragraph 16 requires the “Government to ensure that all Provincial Councils are able to operate effectively in accordance with the thirteenth amendment”.

The Government has realized of late that the “participation” of foreign judges, defence lawyers and authorized prosecutors and investigators would require the special majority of 2/3 approval by Parliament and approval of the People at a referendum. In consequence of this requirement, the Government has declared that only local judges would be engaged in the judicial processes. Despite this declaration of the Government, the language in the Resolutions remains unaltered. Another instance that would require special majorities relate to how the functioning of Provincial Councils are to be made “effective”, since attempts to abolish the existing Presidential system would severely derogate the powers of the Governor to the point of making the position redundant. This would seriously dismantle the unitary character of the State. Furthermore, whether other provisions require special majorities or not, may not have been explored.

Whatever the case may be, the implementation of these provisions would require either 2/3 approval by Parliament or simple Parliamentary majorities. All this is yet to be done. In the meantime, the fact that the Government has co-sponsored the Resolution means it has undertaken to implement provisions imposed externally on Sri Lanka in violation of its Sovereignty which includes the right of self-determination by the People.

CONCLUSION

Whether the Government addresses the implementation of the provisions in Resolutions A/HRC/34/L.1 and A/HRC/30/L.29 individually or collectively, the fact remains that by co-sponsoring the Resolution the Government has become a party to implement recommendations imposed externally on Sri Lanka that violatethe sovereignty of the People,the bedrock of which is the right of self-determination to develop its own mechanisms to address reconciliation, accountability and human rights, in keeping with its social and cultural parameters.

The imposition by the UNHRC violates the sovereignty of the People of Sri Lanka because it has denied the right of the People of Sri Lanka to determine for themselves through their “powers of government” mechanisms that would be in keeping with their own cultural and social values such as restorative justice to achieve reconciliation. By co-sponsoring the Resolutions the Government has become a party to violating the People’s right of self-determination because it is only the sovereign People of a sovereign State that has the right to exercise the right of self-determination. Therefore, the Government is obligated to follow the constitutionally defined procedures prior to proceeding with implementation of the provisions in the Resolutions.

A determination as to whether or not both Resolutions violate the sovereignty of the People has to be made by the Supreme Court. Such a determination could be precipitated by filing a petition by a Public Interest Group on grounds that there is an imminent infringement by executive action of the fundamental right of the People to self-determine a mechanism to address reconciliation. If the determination is that UNHRC Resolutions violate the sovereignty of the People, the Government would be constitutionally required to seek a 2/3 approval of Parliament and approval of the People at a referendum to implement the provisions in the Resolutions.

A serious omission on the part of successive Governments and Commissions appointed to address accountability is that no attempt was made to claim the sovereign right of Sri Lanka to determine for itself the appropriate mechanisms to address reconciliation, because at the end of the day the greatest beneficiaries of reconciliation are the Sri Lankan people themselves. Clearly, such a self-determination should be based on restorative justice because it resonates not only with Sri Lanka’s core values but also those of a common humanity, and not on retributive justiceas is imposed by the UNHRC, and is based on accountability and punitive measures that perpetuate bitterness between winners and losers

How to mitigate landslides, floods and resulting devastations by rehabilitating and restoring the upper watersheds; A point of view.

May 31st, 2017

Sudath Gunasekara 

31.5.2017

The immediate cause of all these disasters is rain. But we all know we cannot stop it. No can we control it either. But certainly we can control and mitigate these disasters by visionary thinking, proper planning and good management.

The most important cause of this calamity as I see it is the land degradation on the upper watersheds. What we witness today is the cumulative results of centuries old land degradation on the upper watersheds caused by large scale removal of the forest cover and indiscriminate and inappropriate new land use practices on the hills by the British for coffee and tea plantations.

Kelani Valley Railway Commission 1894

The earliest concrete evidence of the impact of large scale deforestation on the upper watersheds and colonial land policies on land degradation, earth slips, downstream siltation and heavy floods is found in the Report of the Kelani Valley Railway Commission 1894. In his evidence before the Commission F Lewis an Assistant Conservator of Forests observed that ‘at one time the Kelani river could be made use for rafting of woos, I have had the frequent occasion to use of it; but this is now, year by year becoming more difficult owing to the large sand deposits in long sweeps down the bed of the river. The increase area of land in tea is distinctly the cause for this silting of the river, is a fact that I presume will not be disputed.

The Kelani river (90 miles) was obviously navigable up to the rapids above Yatiyantota (which is about 50 miles from the sea) before the advent of the plantation agriculture, and this sand problem in the river was cited as one of the major reasons for the opening up of the Kelani Valley Railway.

Besides many reports of Commissions and Committees of inquiry appointed by the Government from time to time, repeatedly stressed the damage caused by opening of land for plantations (Eg XL11 of 1905,X11 of 1921 and 111 of 1931) Besides landslides and large scale land degradation have also been  other  disastrous results of deforestation. Its effects on the physical stability of the Islands geographical Heartland, damage done to human life and the economy over the years was enormous. For example the landslides of 1986 claimed some 51 lives and affected 100,000 families The 1989 landslides claim 300 lives and the damage to economic infrastructure was around Rs. 2800 million (Perera 1992) The report on Kotmale landslides and the adjoining river catchments (Sessional paper XV11 of 1954 by Mac Largan Corrie has been described as the most comprehensive report on Lands slides in Sri Lanka by Madduma Bandara.

Plantation Agriculture involved the complete removal of the natural forest cover that protected the central hills for millions of years from the major parts of the upper watersheds. Out of about 13,110 km2  in the hill country (that is 20% of the total area of the Island) today less than 158,000 ha are left as natural forests (NRSR 1991) In other words almost over 80 % of natural forests on the central watersheds has been removed for plantations by the British.

During the pre-colonial times the whole hill country with the exception of few settlement pockets in the river valleys below was fully covered and well protected by natural forests

In addition to deforestation, new land use practices introduced by the British that followed indiscriminately without any understanding of or regard to the disastrous outcomes that would result owing to steep slopes, heavy rainfall and degraded lands on the central highland of this country in opening up of plantations also aggravated earth slips, siltation and heavy floods in downstream areas, causing heavy economic and social losses.

Therefore as a first step, perhaps as the most important, I suggest that we restore the original forest cover on the central watersheds by banning all cultivation above a given contour, say for example 5000 ft above msl and declaring them as strict natural reserves, like in the olden days. This will increase the perennial river flow providing sufficient water for the dry zone tanks even for three seasons , enhance the islands hydroelectricity potential,  arrest land degradation, restore physical stability of the watersheds, improve the ecological balance, minimize earth slips and mitigate downstream silting and floods.

This should be immediately followed by a sustainable land use policy for land below 5000 ft as well. It could be tea or mixed plantations promoting the Kandyan garden type model that is considered to be the next best to the natural forests in protecting the land degradation by minimizing erosion.

This   upper watershed restoration has to be followed by a comprehensive plan of action in the downstream areas to protect the river banks by banning illicit buildings along river reservations, widening physical         bottlenecks like in the case of Kaluganga and regular removal of sand bars at the mouths of main rivers.

However, none of these steps can find a permanent solution to earth slips and heavy floods until and unless we rehabilitate and restore the physical stability of the upper watersheds to their original conditions by restoring the original forest cover.

Sri Lanka Request for Flood Relief

May 31st, 2017

Asoka Weerasinghe Kings Grove Crescent . Gloucester . Ontario . K1J 6G1 . Canada

29 May 2017

Rt. Hon. Maithripala Sirisena

President of Sri Lanka

Presidential Secretariat

Galle Face

Colombo 1

Sri Lanka

Sir:

I have just received by e-mail a  Request for Flood Relief Assistance to Sri Lanka  from our High Commission in Ottawa.

Yesterday,I felt morally generous when I participated in a flower auction at the Buddhist Monastery, Hilda Jayewardenaramaya in Ottawa, in the presence of our Acting High Commissioner.  He was witness to this event when our generous devotees collected a handsome quantity of Canadian dollars for the Sri Lanka’s Flood Relief efforts.

I want to share my observation about the Press Release that I received from the Mission..  There was an omission of a pertinent sentence or two that would have encouraged more expatriates to open their wallets to help the victims of this unfortunate natural disaster which your Government had no control of.

However, I wished you gave me the opportunity to read  some words showing the proof of your government’s genuine sincerity like –

To kick start and join you all in your generous participation, I am glad to announce that all our parliamentarians have donated this month’s bonus of Rs100,000 to the Flood Relief Assistance.  In addition I, as your President, have ordered that the Rupees 1.1 Billion that has been requested to purchase 32 brand new luxury vehicles for the use of Ministers and Deputy Minister to be approved and allocated to the Flood Relief Assistance Fund.”

Sir, will you go ahead and do it if you have not already acted on it, although I am not certain whether the MPs are receiving that bonus already which was requested for them by the Prime Minister as an incentive for the Ministers to participate in national development and work in their electorates a few months ago..

This honourable, honest and heart-crying action would certainly negate the words that I heard in February 2016, when I asked 24 gamme minissu in the coastal-west, south, hill country and the north-west, kohomadha appey aluth arnduwa?” The response was, almost a choral unison accompanied by a snicker Oya okkoma hora yakku, mahathaya.”  I sent you a letter about this pulse of the gamme minissu no sooner I returned to Ottawa.

Sincerely

Asoka Weerasinghe.(Mr.)

British TV cooking demonstrations would help home cooking or eating takeaways?

May 31st, 2017

Dr Hector Perera      London

I assume that TV cooking demonstrations would help the general public in many ways such as encouraging them to cook at home then saving energy wastage. There is no point of rushing from one to the other without a proper explanation or just talk something totally irreverent to cooking. In some cooking programmes there are a few people come to demonstrate their kind of cooking of different things. Sometimes there are two judges as well watching their progress. The contesters make so many mistakes while cooking various dishes such as cooking at high temperature then letting out too much cooking aroma and sometimes they let the cooking aroma catch fire for no reason. The cooking aroma sometimes contains inflammable vapours from the ingredients added to cook. It may be attractive to see something catching fire but does it help in cooking? Yes people like to see fireworks that is why they go and watch firework displays during New Year and Christmas. The so called judges witness these actions and reactions but they sometimes express an impressive facial expressions than saying something to the contestants about that kind of cooking.

It reminds our back home good old Kussi Amma” or kitchen servants who cook in extremely difficult conditions in firewood kitchens. They keep on stirring the curries constantly by opening the lids then keep on tasting them several times. Some of these British TV chefs are no better as they also lick the spoons by getting something while the food are allowed to cook. In firewood stoves the fire cannot be easily controlled but these gas and electric cookers have those facilities but the British TV chefs hardly make use of them. They put the fire at full pressure then some of the fire goes out of the base of the cooking vessel that means there is a wastage of energy. The fire that goes out of the base of the cooking vessel are lost due to radiation and that would not help in cooking but just warms the surrounding for no reason. In firewood kitchens energy cannot be easily controlled but gas and electric cookers they have these facilities but most of the times the British TV chefs ignore these facilities. The public watch these TV cooking programmes and they assume that must be the way to cook and perhaps try and follow them. One must witness these cooking programmes then you would assume that home cooking would be a tedious job. Who would like to shower with cooking aroma while cooking? Sometimes those contestants run in studio kitchen to get to the oven or get something from the fridge or freezer. One must realise kitchen is not a place to run about, there might be drops of oil, water or pieces of vegetables on the floor so they might slip on them. I treat the kitchen as a kind of chemistry laboratory. In a kitchen one deals with chemicals, all the food we eat and drink are nothing but chemicals so my comparison of kitchen to a chemistry laboratory should be correct. In a chemistry laboratory there is adequate ventilation to get rid of any chemical vapours and smells. In some of these TV kitchens one would witness that the place is full of cooking aroma and sometimes smoke from burning food. I assume the extractor fans are running all the time to get rid of those gases but still there are cooking fumes. Sometimes they do grill cooking of burghers and pieces of meat. Most of the times the contestants have to inhale that kind of air and who would argue that is healthy. Any burnt meat contains carcinogenic compounds and the people are aware of these things but still they happily eat them as they taste different. During the summer there are garden parties where they eat meat burnt on firewood or coal, just like our primitive human beings. There is a saying that good old habits cannot be totally forgotten so they still eat burnt meat.

Breathing problems

According to research findings, too long exposure to cooking aroma leads to respiratory and cardiovascular problems. In China some chefs suffer from these problems as they cook long periods of times by the method of sauteeing that means cooking on a very hot pan by tossing the food with a small amount of fat to cook the food very quickly. It browns the surface of the food and develops complex flavours and aromas while doing this process. The chefs invariably inhale these cooking aroma continuously for long periods of time leading to health problems.

Food are slow conductors of heat

All the food we eat are bad or slow conductors of heat that means they take time to cook but some of those TV chefs do not understand those scientific rules. Take a simple thing such as rice or pasta, they take a few minutes to cook at a moderate temperature. If cooking on a stainless steel cooking pan, they cook faster than cooking on a clay pot because stainless steel are better conductors of heat also they have a high thermal capacity than clay pots. Some cook in Aluminium pots but certain chemicals attack this kind of metals and very likely to get dissolved in them. Aluminium is an amphoteric metal that means it get attacked by acidic as well as by alkali chemicals. Eating even traces of Aluminium for a long periods of times might lead to Alkerzima or to forgetfulness.  In some restaurants and hotels they use Aluminium vessels as they are less heavy to handle than stainless steel cooking pans.

I got an official approval

I had several different TV cooking opportunities to demonstrate how to cook and save energy. I even demonstrated this scientific method of energy saving and smell avoiding cooking to The Sustainable Energy Authority in Sri Lanka. A whole team watched my work and accepted that my scientific method of cooking saves energy and stops any cooking aroma on the persons who cook. The Invention Commission added my work to their official web site and still can be found these work under Google search.

My method is scientific

Unlike some of these British TV chefs cooking, I apply science in cooking. One must understand some science in cooking otherwise there is no point of rushing from one to the other just like some British TV chefs. I keep my challenge still open for any so called energy saving experts or to any British TV chefs to step forward to disprove my scientific method of cooking. My method would certainly educate the public about cooking and even encourage them home cooking. How would the authorities who are responsible to broadcast these cooking programmes think that some of those chefs are cooking the correct way?

My challenge is still open

Why not those energy saving experts step forward to examine my method of cooking? If they proved my method is a scam then my challenged money would be given away. My work is based on science and some laws are more than 200 years are old. If I work on them, I cannot be wrong. If my work was good enough to four different TVs to broadcast in Sri Lanka why not the British TV give me a chance to demonstrate so they have the chance either to approve or disprove my scientific method of cooking. By the way please don’t think I am a professional chef. I became a secondary school chemistry teacher after completing BSc MSc PhD in synthetic organic chemistry. I got an official approved scientific method of energy and smell saving cooking technique and I would like to help the general public benefit. Every action has an equal and opposite reaction, I sure you all know what I mean. Your comments are welcomed perera6@hotmail.co.uk

SRI LANKA: A farmer killed by Police attached to the Central Anti-Vice Unit of Walana, Panadura and the Police Special Task Force

May 31st, 2017

ASIAN HUMAN RIGHTS COMMISSION – URGENT APPEALS PROGRAMME

Dear friends,

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) has received information concerning Mr. Jayalath Kandambige Chaminda (39), a resident of Meegahajandura, Bandagiriya in Hambantota District in Sri Lanka. He had been extra-judicially killed on 27 April 2017, by officers attached to the Central Anti-Vice Unit of Walana, Panadura and Police Special Task Force (STF). No investigation has been carried out, so it remains JUSTICE DENIED for the victim and his family. This case testifies to the extraordinary collapse of the Rule of Law in the country. The State policy of combating crime by killing suspects has allowed the Police to commit murder and enjoy impunity.

CASE NARRATIVE:

Following is information received by the Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) about Mr. Jayalath Kandambige Chaminda (39), a resident of Meegahajandura, Bandagiriya in Hambantota District. He is not married and living with his parents.

Chaminda was on his farm at Meegahajandura in Bandagiriya on 27 April 2017. While he was in a hut in the middle of the farm, several police officers came and arrested him. He was never told the reason for his arrest. Chaminda works in developing his farm in the daytime and lives there. Chaminda was known to all the villagers. He had the reputation as a supportive farmer in the heavily agricultural rural village. Chaminda cultivated several crops yearly including seasonal vegetables and permanent crops. Throughout the year as a farmer who is heavily engaged with agricultural work, Chaminda alternately lives on his farm or in his house-address above.

On 27th April police officers entered his farm, arrested him and quickly shot him inside the premises of his own farm. He was never informed of the reason for his arrest.

Later his relatives found out that the victim was arrested and killed by police officers attached to the Central Anti-Vice Unit of Walana, Panadura and Police Special Task Force (STF). They further stated that the police did not bother to verify Chaminda’s identity but shot him dead several minutes after his arrest. The police did not make use of an informant or a villager to prove that they were searching for Chaminda. Police officers took the life of an innocent man due to professional negligence and illegal behavior.

After the demise, the Police Headquarters issued a Communique stating that Chaminda was INJURED in an exchange of fire between him and the police. After he was shot, police arrested him and brought him to the Hambantota General Hospital for emergency treatment. He was DEAD on arrival.
In contrast to the first Communiqué, a second statement was issued. It said that Chaminda was injured as a result of an exchange of fire between him and the police, whose duty it was to arrest him. After being shot, he was admitted to the Hambantota General Hospital and SUCCUMBED to his injuries.

A further explanation was made by the Police. According to their officers, the deceased was arrested following information provided by a suspect who was arrested in connection with several robberies. The Police also suspected that Chaminda might have participated in the killing of a Police Sub-Inspector at Kurunegala on 16 November 2016. To his credit, the Inspector General of Police (IGP) ordered an immediate investigation into the suspicious circumstances of the death.

Chaminda’s relatives continue to maintain that he was illegally arrested and extra-judicially killed by the Police. Indications suggest that this is another bad example of the Sri Lankan Police System in action. It extra- judicially kills suspects, who are often innocent, in the guise of crime prevention. In the first four months of this year, the AHRC reported 2 extrajudicial killings carried out by the Sri Lanka police in two different parts of the country, in both instances the victims were died in police custody following arrests

The country still lives under the practice of extra-judicial killings. A suspect, once in the hands of law-enforcing officers, continues to be victimized or killed.

The prevention of crime is one of the paramount duties of any civilized State. According to the Constitution, law-enforcement authorities are bound to protect the right to life of its citizens. And these rights are enshrined in the Constitution. Sri Lanka is a country governed under a democratic framework. The Government is bound: to support the Judiciary, to carry out the Rule of Law and to protect the civil liberties of all citizens. Extra-judicial killings of citizens by police officers, has become an authoritarian norm!

Any confrontation in which a policeman kills a person should be investigated efficiently, and without delay. But, just look at this incident. The State has not shown any interest in investigating the killing or bringing the responsible officers before the Courts. No Major Commander has taken responsibility for the illegal actions of the Sri Lankan police under him. Who then, NOW, should be primarily responsible for killings perpetrated under their command? It is the decision-making Officers.

ADDITIONAL COMMENTS:

The Asian Human Rights Commission has reported numerous cases of arbitrary arrest, detention, torture and extrajudicial killings of citizens at the hands of the police. Under International and Local Law these are illegal actions. They have been taking place daily at police stations all over Sri Lanka. It is common knowledge that the Police use torture as an instrument to terrorize innocent people, harass the general public and instill fear. Presently, the Police are implementing a policy of ‘elimination with extreme persuasion’ or in plain language–murdering suspected criminals. They arrest and kill people without their ever being produced in a Court of Law.

Needless to say, there is a lack of protection for those lawyers willing to take up cases against abusive Police Officers and State Authorities. This means that the law continues to be employed as a tool by the authorities to CONTROL people. By undermining society’s respect for the Law and allowing impunity to go on unabated, a long-term, psychological and financial burden is placed on the shoulders of victims, their families and the general population.

SUGGESTED ACTION:

Please write to the authorities listed below expressing your concern about this case. Kindly request an immediate investigation into allegations of extra-judicial killings by the Police. Prosecution of those proven to be responsible under Criminal Law is imperative. The officers involved, in addition, should be subject to an internal investigation for breach of Police Departmental Orders (DOs). The AHRC will write a separate letter to the Special Rapporteur on Extra-judicial, Summary or Arbitrary Executions in this regard.

To support this case, please click here: http://www.urgentappeals.net/support.php?ua=AHRC-UAC-038-2017

DOUBLE STANDARDS IN HR

May 31st, 2017

Ranjith Soysa

Attn HON Thersa May .Prime Minister

We refer to you statement below and appreciate that you have provided the armed forces with additional protection in combating

the faceless terrorism indiscriminately killing civilians. BUT, we are at a loss to comprehend the British policy vis a vis Sri Lankan forces which

helped to get rid of the Tamil Tigers, the world’s most brutal terrorists who were responsible for killing over 100,000 Sri Lankans.

Your government is pursuing the Sri Lankan armed forces via biased UNHRC resolution. Is it because the British lives are more important than Sri Lankan civilian lives?

Our troops must know we are on their side, says Theresa May(British PM) as she insists

armed forces SHOULD NOT be hounded with ‘vexatious’ Human Rights Act claims on the battlefield 

Lawyers will no longer be able to chase British soldiers with ‘vexatious’ claims of human rights abuses,

Theresa May (pictured this morning) said as she told troops: ‘We are on your side.'”

Read full story

Our troops must know we are on their side, says Theresa May as she insists armed forces SHOULD NOT be hounded with ‘vexatious’ Human Rights Act claims on the battlefield

  • Human rights laws will be suspended on battlefield, May announces today  
  • It will finally end the industry of vexatious claims against British  troops
  • PM says it will give British troops the ‘confidence when they go out into combat for us that they are able to do what is necessary to keep us safe’

Lawyers will no longer be able to chase British soldiers with ‘vexatious’ claims of human rights abuses, Theresa May said today as she told troops: ‘We are on your side.’

She announced human rights laws will finally be suspended on the battlefield to end the industry of the claims.

The Prime Minister said it will give British troops the ‘confidence when they go out into combat for us that they are able to do what is necessary to keep us safe’.

The plans won an enthusiastic welcome from Conservative members as Defence Secretary Michael Fallon unveiled them at the party conference in Birmingham today.

Under the measures, the Government will free armed forces from two specific articles of the European Convention on Human Rights (ECHR) before sending them into battle.

These two – Article 2, the right to life, and Article 5, the right to liberty – have been exploited by lawyers to launch thousands of complaints against UK soldiers.

They have also been used as the basis for compensation claims against the British taxpayer.

Defending the move this morning, Mrs May said: ‘Our troops, our men and women of our armed forces go out there and put their lives on the line in order to defend us.

‘They do things that most people wouldn’t be willing to do in terms of that, in terms of going out and potentially paying the ultimate sacrifice for us.

Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3820659/At-justice-troops-Ministers-pledge-suspend-human-rights-laws-wartime-stop-soldiers-dragged-courts.html#ixzz4ihOHRpN8
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A Response to Manchester

May 31st, 2017

By A. Abdul Aziz.

According to media reports, ISIL claimed responsibility for the terrorist attack, in the great city of Manchester, England. We do not know for sure if so called Muslims committed this terrorist attack but we should condemn all terrorist attacks no matter who is responsible for them and those who believe in the power of prayer should pray for peace and justice. We must also pray for the victims and their families. Everyone though must also do their part to help stop these terrorist attacks from occurring in the first place.

While terrorism has no religion, unfortunately, this Manchester attack has probably taken us in the opposite direction than the direction we intend to be taking in order to counter extremism. President Trump gave an important speech in his recent visit to Saudi Arabia. Although, many praised his speech, the speech will result in more harm than good.

Saudi Arabia seems to be one of the world’s leading sponsors of terrorism. Evidence suggests that oil money is used to finance hate filled madrasahs (Islamic schools) all across the Muslim world. The Yemen conflict is yet another example of genocide committed by Saudi Arabia. Executions are regularly held to punish dissenters and atheists.  Furthermore, this speech took place at a summit where a historic $350b arms deal took place. America selling weapons to Saudi Arabia will only lead to more war in Yemen. Saudi Arabia has already killed thousands of innocent people in Yemen and because of this arms deal, it will only become worse.

His Holiness Hazrat Mirza Masroor Ahmad, the worldwide Supreme Head of the largest group of Muslims, the Ahmadiyya Muslim Community has repeatedly raised the issue of ISIL and its creation and the supply of weapons originating from Western countries. As His Holiness points out, preventing ISIL from acquiring these weapons is the key to fighting them. According to the Amnesty International, ISIL uses weapons that come from over 25 countries including Super Powers. Perhaps the weapons being sold to Saudi Arabia will never reach ISIL’s hands but if history has shown us anything, it is that they will.


The Trump administration is helping a vicious cycle of violence to continue that can be stopped if a change takes place from investing in weapons to investing in education in the Middle East. Trump conceded in his speech that terrorists do not worship God, they worship death.” Trump also said that 95% of the victims of terrorism are Muslim. These are promising signs that the more Trump learns about terrorism, the more his policies will shift towards pluralism and acceptance of Islam as a peaceful religion.

 

NO TEETH FOR PROPOSED DEVELOPMNET AGENCY  News Item Sunday Times

May 31st, 2017

Dr. Sarath Obeysekera

Agency for development was a brain child of the Prime Minister to bypass ministers who may  have some hidden agenda ,when they want to initiate development plans .We have come across such problem in Galle Harbour.During the last government a Saudi Investor obtained a portion of Galle Harbour to develop as a Yacht Building and Repair Yard .Whole process took three years due to to bureaucratic attitude of SLPA .Finally cabinet approved and AG too.When the land took over same government messed up with Musilm community and the investor bolted away .

Government changed and we approached SLPA for permission to re commence the  project .Submitted the bank gurantee and the SLPA did not allow us proceed .Politicians  intervened  and turned down our request ,They wanted to hand over the whole harbour to some Indians who had ulterior motives .Their plan was to build hotels inside the harbour in the pretext of Marina Development .We went Southern development minister who advised SLPA to allow us to recommence on the grounds that it is a marina related industry .Minister turned down and we went to CECM chaired by Prime Minster .PM clearly instructed the officers to allow us .Again Politics and a cricket playing clique turned down the instructions. Minister of Agency for Development  personally got involved but the minister refused.

Then Port Minister goes to cabinet and asks for permission to use Swiss Challenge method of awarding a  contract to the same Indian Company . Agency for development was  instructed to facilitate Swiss Challenge and nothing moved so far . SLPA officers claim that Indians are not capable for developing the project ,With Hambantota with plans for Chinese entry in Trinco for Indians ,there would have been a public outcry.

Now the Galle Port overgrown with grass and the buildings in pour area corroding SLPA id helopless .

Minister has been removed and new minister has come .Hopefully he will have better approach and Consult the Agency for Development to allow us to proceed .Galle Port would have been buzzling with business today if we could start few years back

South Asia & SAARC Nations under Indian geopolitical & economic hegemony.

May 30th, 2017

Shenali D Waduge

In 1985 the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation was initiated to unite India, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Bhutan, Bangladesh, Nepal & Maldives with Afghanistan joining in 2007. India’s 1.3billion populace plus the populations of the other 7 members made SAARC 1.6billion of which 77% live in India while India accounted for 75% of economic output. All these favoured India’s role of leader with expectation that India would raise its neighbours alongside its own development goals. However, even intra-regional trade has been just 4% and according to the World Bank, South Asia is one of the least integrated regions in the world. In 30 years, not only has SAARC failed to infuse regional cooperation, India has failed in its role of leading 7 SAARC nations.

The politics prevailing inside SAARC cannot be ignored in particular India’s foreign policy goals that aim to attain hegemonic position in South Asia and the application of Kautilyan principles in relations with neighbors.  Despite agreement that politics would not disrupt development in SAARC objectives, India has cancelled SAARC Summits 6 times.

In this regard, the writings of Isha Khan clearly states that the Indian intelligence RAW had been given a list of 7 countries (Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Nepal, Sikkim, Bhutan, Pakistan and Maldives) whom India considered its principle regional protagonists against whom covert operations were to be initiated to keep them destabilized and under the orbit of India. Therefore, it is imperative that India’s mutual dealings with every South Asian country cannot ignore these dynamics at play and questions whether India desires the development of these neighbors or would rather be satisfied to have these countries plagued with issues (often created by India) for which India can enter to offer its assistance.

What impedes relations and cooperation with India and its South Asian neighbors are the constant interference by India into their internal/domestic affairs, the border disputes, decisions that always has to favour India and the sheer might of India.

No regional cooperation can take place when the biggest member has hegemonic pursuits. India believes itself to be heir and successor of the British Empire. In fact, modern India came into being only after the British cobbled together independent territories and states into one single entity and christened it India.

The colonial link to India explains the psyche of dominance and self-centred mind-set regarding South Asian neighbour states to be considered as its satellite states and insisting they be subservient to India’s will. Has colonial imperialism turned into Indian imperialism?  

While India’s hegemonic designs do not change whatever party comes into power, the lack of policy and plans to counter and respond to India’s hegemonic designs by India’s neighbours have enabled India to dominate these countries without much resistance. Until and unless SAARC neighbors draw up counter measures they are unlikely to have any domestic or even international opportunities to develop beyond what India desires them to be.

Historical background of South Asia

South Asia is one of the four early stages where human civilization began dating back to Indus Valley (also called Harappan civilization) some 75,000 years ago.

South Asia has attracted explorers, traders and invaders from time immemorial – Mongols, Mughals and Turks used the land route but the greatest impact came with the arrival by European colonial invaders with the arrival of Portuguese explorer Vasco da Gama landing in Calicut (Kerala) in 1498, then the Dutch followed by the British East India Company

All South Asian countries are victims of and carry forward historical colonial baggage.

Why is India’s advice viewed as interference – India’s assistance, viewed as provocations, and India’s guidance viewed as domination? Here are the reasons why,

Bhutan

Area: total: 38,394 sq km

Population

  • 469,244 (1985)
  • 509,105 (1995)
  • 774,830 (2015) – World Bank

Bhutan is surrounded by India on 3 sides bordering Indian states – Sikkim, West Bengal, Assam, and Arunachal Pradesh. Bhutan is reliant on India for its transit & trade. 12% of Bhutanese live below the national poverty line.

Bhutan was not part of the princely states that Britain joined to create India. Bhutan came under British rule in 1865 with the Treaty of Sinchula which was replaced by the Treaty of Punakha in 1910. The Treaty confirmed Bhutan’s consent to obey the British Government and was effective till 1947 when Britain granted independence to India. Independent India, thereafter took over from the British as de facto protector of Bhutan.

A Treaty of Friendship was signed between India & Bhutan in 1949 formally accepting India to guide Bhutan’s external affairs which Britain had done previously. The Treaty was revised in 2007 giving Bhutan broader sovereignty. Modi’s first visit as PM was to Bhutan signalling what India felt about its neighbour.

India controls Bhutan’s whole oil consumption and nearly 90% of the country’s hydropower development. India still directly maintains 30% of Bhutan’s main road network. Bhutan’s electricity exports go exclusively to India. 77% of Bhutan’s imports are from India while 95% of Bhutan’s exports are to India. In 1999, Bhutan’s intra-SAARC exports was just 3.5%!

It is alleged that India regards Bhutans hydropower as a means of sourcing cheap electricity. India initially claimed 60% grant component and 40% loan which has been changed to 60-70% loan and higher interest.

India has also been accused of interfering in the internal affairs of Bhutan by influencing Bhutan’s elections in July 2013 with the withdrawal of cooking gas and kerosene subsidies sending prices soaring and affecting the government’s popularity. India’s action was to show its anger over Bhutan’s PM meeting the Chinese PM in Brazil!

At the other end Bhutan and China’s relations are strained as a result of 3 territorial disputes. The Jakarlung and Pasamlum valleys on the Bhutan-Chinese north-central border & the Doklam plateau in East Bhutan.

To India Doklam plateau is important because of the Chumbi Valley which overlooks the Silguri Corridor and is east of Indian defences in Sikkim.

Relations strained between India & Bhutan (even Nepal) following India’s decision to void oil Rs.500 and Rs.1000 notes as legal tender which impacted both countries in particular their natives working in India who were unable to convert the Indian currency to their own.

Nepal

Population

  • 16.1million (1985)
  • 20.5million (1995)
  • 28.5million (2015)

25.2% population lives below the national poverty line (WB – 2016)

Nepal shares a border of over 1850 kms with five Indian States,   Sikkim, West Bengal, Bihar, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand

The India-Nepal Treaty of Peace and Friendship of 1950 gives India immense influence over Nepal’s affairs, including defence and security matters

India and Nepal have a treaty of transit, which confers transit rights through each other’s territory through mutually agreed routes and modalities

India also remains Nepal’s largest source of foreign investment, accounting for 43.17% of the total foreign investments in Nepal.

Ever since the partition of the sub-continent, India has been openly meddling in Nepal’s internal affairs by contriving internal strife and conflicts with the aim to destabilize successive legitimate governments and prop up puppet regimes that would not go against India’s goals & objectives.

Nepals refusal to make changes to its constitution as per the wishes of India resulted in an economic blockade that denied access to food and essential goods through Indian borders to Nepal. Nepal believes this was an act of ‘disciplining Nepal’. Armed insurrections have been sponsored and abetted by Indian intelligence RAW and mitigating the situation was given to pro-Indian Nepali leaders to inadvertently involve India in any decision making. Claiming to use democratization process the Maoists were encouraged by RAW to rebel against legitimate Nepalese governments.   

It is also alleged that the Nepalese economy is totally controlled by the Indian money lenders, financers and business mafia details of which can be sourced from Shastra Dutta Pant’s RAW Machination in South Asia”.

Maldives

Population

  • 183,538 (1985)
  • 244,965 (1995)
  • 363,657 (2015)

2016 – 15% population lives below the national poverty line

300-400 armed Sri Lankan Tamil mercenaries (LTTE) stormed the capital of Maldives on 30 November 1988. Indian PM, Rajiv Gandhi immediately despatched 1600 combat troops and within hours the attack was quelled and hostages released. The possibility of the attack being staged by India was floated by western media who claimed India desired to promote itself to the role of regional police. That Tamil militants were originally trained in India and the mercenaries had set off from Sri Lanka’s Mannar & Kankasanthurai which were areas under complete control of the Indian Peace Keeping Force which was in Sri Lanka at the time makes this notion plausible.

Maldives relations with India became strained when Maldives cancelled an agreement signed with an Indian firm in 2010 to modernize the Ibrahim Nasir International Airport and the contract was awarded to China

In October 2015, Maldivian President Abdulla Yameen told the visiting Indian Foreign Minister Sushma Swaraj that his government would not be dictated to and India should refrain from interfering in Maldives domestic issues. However, in April 2016, Maldives signed 6 Agreements with India

Bangladesh

Population

  • 94.2million (1985)
  • 119.9million (1995)
  • 160million (2015)

Bangladesh is a country with an area of 147,570 square kilometers

2016 – 31.5% population live below the national poverty line (ADB)

The creation of RAW in the 1960s (Indias intelligence wing) was to create Bangladesh in 1971 (breaking up East Pakistan) using Bengali refugees as cover to set up Mukti Bahini. That was how India created Bangladesh. The aim of that creation was to have the newly created area under the subjugation of India culturally, ideologically and economically. The Treaty signed with India immediately after Bangladesh independence secured the right of the Indian Army to remain in Bangladesh and ensured Bangladesh did not have its own army and its foreign affairs was to be decided on consultation with Indian Foreign Ministry.

How far did this Treaty make Bangladesh independent if India was to decide Bangladesh’s foreign and defense policy and in turn Bangladesh had to open the floodgates to Indian goods?

Not stopping with the creation of Mukti Bahini RAW went on to create Shanti Bahini comprising Chittagong Hill Tracts Hindu and Buddhists tribesmen (the Chakmas) with intent to keep the Bangladeshi busy at its borders.  

Bangladesh’s imports from India in the year 2004-2005 are worth 2 billion dollars and exports to India, worth 100 million dollars.

Afghanistan

Population – 11.5million (1985) / 17.6million (1995) / 32million (2015)

Since December 1979, throughout Afghan War, KGB, KHAD (WAD) (former Afghan intelligence outfit) and RAW stepped up their efforts to concentrate on influencing and covert exploitation of the tribes on both sides of the Pakistan-Afghanistan border.

There was intimate co-ordination between the three intelligence agencies not only in Afghanistan but in destabilization of Pakistan through subversion and sabotage plan related to Afghan refugees and mujahideen, the tribal belt and inside Pakistan. They jointly organized spotting and recruitment of hostile tribesmen and their training in guerrilla warfare, infiltration, subversion, sabotage and establishment of saboteur force/terrorist organizations in the pro-Afghan tribes of Pakistan in order to carry out bomb explosions in Afghan refugee camps in NWFP and Baluchistan to threaten and pressurize them to return to Afghanistan.

They also carried out bomb blasts in populated areas deep inside Pakistan to create panic and hatred in the minds of locals against Afghan refugee mujahideen for pressurizing Pakistan to change its policies on Afghanistan.

Pakistan

Population – 94.78million (1985) / 126.7million (1995) /194.9million (2015)

India’s war with Pakistan in 1965 over Kashmir and dismemberment of Pakistan in 1971 and creation of Bangladesh are just two examples of the extent India will go to dictate its hegemonic designs.

India, always considers her main opponent in her expansionist doctrine to be Pakistan. India’s animosity towards Pakistan is psychologically and ideologically deep-rooted.

Raw considers Sindh as Pakistan’s soft under-belly. It has, therefore, made it the prime target for sabotage and subversion. RAW is involved in Balochistan as well. RAW has enrolled and extensive network of agents and anti-government elements. Agitations resulted in Sindh in 1983 leading to ethnic riots (the same took place in Sri Lanka the same year) RAW has deeply penetrated and cultivated dissidents and secessionists in the neighboring countries. These Indian agents are paid hardliners that peddle India’s needs and demands locally and give any government in power a hard time.

RAW is allegedly accused of confusing the ground situation in Kashmir as well to keep the world attention away from the gross human rights violations by India in India occupied Kashmir. For greater details of these manipulations please read ‘RAW global and regional ambitions’ edited by Rashid Ahmad Khan and Muhammad Saleem published by the Islamabad Policy Research Institute.

The RAW has become the perfect instrument to roll out the India Doctrine which is admirably fulfilling the task of destabalizing target states in South Asia. RAW has been successful in its objectives of making SAARC neighbour states weak simply because the 7 SAARC members have been kept busy tackling the problems that India has created without devising ways to counter and mitigate them.

Sri Lanka 

Population

15.84million (1985)

18.14million (1995)

20.7million (2015)

2016 – 6.7% population lives below the national poverty line

Sri Lanka as an island and despite the narrow stretch that divides Sri Lanka & India, Sri Lanka’s kings have succeeded to keep its independence despite over 17 invasions.

The import of slave labor from India by colonial rulers paved the way for the root cause of the separatis problem that turned into a terrorist problem after India secretly trained Sri Lankan Tamil youth, provided Tamil Nadu as safe haven for them and placed them under the tutelage of the Indian intelligence to destabalize Sri Lanka. The evidence of this is available from the Jain Commission report, the memoirs of IPKF generals, the envoy Dixit and statements and affidavits by Tamils and Indian leaders themselves.

The Tamil issue has provided the pretext for Indian interference in Sri Lanka, and a headache Sri Lanka cannot easily get rid of. The recent arrival of the Indian PM to address only a segment of populace, that too people who descend from those brought in by the colonials and who are not even regarded as citizens in India, was a symbolic gesture by India of how far it can bully a small nation. Dumping Indian products and forcing Sri Lanka to sign agreements virtually under duress like the 1987 Indo-Lanka Accord that even led to tweaking Sri Lanka’s constitution and allowing India to dictate who would use our strategic areas and assets has been part and parcel of India’s imperialistic policies towards its South Asian neighbours.

The Question is pure and simple. South Asia is just 7 countries. When India has been meddling and upsetting internal politics in these countries while even economically taking advantage of the trade agreements signed between India & each of the SAARC nations, can India seriously be considered as an aspiring superpower. The SAARC initiatives have all been failures yet India’s exports to these nations have spiralled while exports from the nations to India have been minimal and that too with a plethora of delays and barriers at India-end purely to show who is big brother. Can a country with such shallow mindset in its actions compete with China whose development agreements with other nations has been on a win-win formula? While it is the fault of the recipient nation if it fails to negotiate better terms which has been the case with most of South Asian neighbour countries including Sri Lanka, China has never resorted to interfering in its partner nations through covert programs.

Countries of SAARC need to seriously address these incursions before the interference spirals to levels the countries cannot control or mitigate and before Indian imperialism turns entire South Asia into an Indian Colony ruled by Delhi.

Shenali D Waduge

Additional reading

  1. Kadirgamar, ‘Securing South Asia’, Hindu, 29th December, 2003
  2. N. Dixit, Awaiting Indian Initiative”, Indian Express, 2nd January, 1996

India’s Role in South Asia Trade and Investment Integration – Asian Development Bank

How many homelands do the Jaffna Tamils need?

May 30th, 2017

H.L. D. Mahindapala

Scholarly narratives tracing the brief history of the Tamils agree that the itinerant migrants from S. India turned into an organic and  distinct entity of their own in Sri Lanka only after they decided to be permanent  settlers in the northern region in the 13th and 14th centuries. The establishment of an independent Tamil kingdom in Ceylon in the thirteenth century,” wrote historian S. Arasaratnam, is a landmark in history of the Ceylon Tamils. No doubt it was helped by the weakness of Sinhalese political power…….What we can say with certainty is that by 1325 the Tamil kingdom had come onto the historical scene.” (p.103 – 104 –  Ceylon, S. Arasaratnam, Prentice-Hall Inc., New Jersey, USA).

Prior to that the Tamil migrants drifted in and out of Sri Lanka as adventurers, traders, marauders, invaders, craftsmen, mercenaries, mostly for Sinhala kings, fishermen, explorers but never as permanent settlers with a commitment to make Sri Lanka their home. They always went back to their one and only homeland in S. India because they were instinctively drawn to  their roots. Even when they became  permanent settlers they were dependent primarily on the original S. Indian base that shaped their Tamil identity. The S. Indian umbilical cord was the sole source that sustained their spiritual, cultural and political needs. Their Freudian  urge to go into the womb in S. India was an innate part of their genetic makeup.

In short, when they left S. India they never abandoned their homeland. As legatees of the Dravidian cultural, spiritual and  historical heritage, which they carried religiously on their backs, they knew that they could never construct another homeland overseas to replace the original homeland they left behind. Any attempt to replicate the original homeland in foreign lands could only result in creating a fake-land” and  not a genuine homeland. In any case, like all migrants the S. Indians who crossed the Palk Straits  regarded Jaffna only as a transit lounge until they could return to their roots in the S. Indian  homeland  sooner or later.

  1. S. Sivakumaran, a Sri Lankan journalist, reflecting on his S. Indian roots, reveals his inner feelings when he said : Well, let me put it this way – as a Tamilian I felt proud to be in Tamilnadu. The Tamil consciousness reigns supreme there. Having lived in a cosmopolitan city like Colombo for over thirty years – most Sri Lankans are more westernized than most people in India – I’m used to the lack of an exclusively Tamil context. But in Tamilnadu – in Madras and other places – I could feel a cultural atmosphere springing from a Dravidian foundation…” (p.50 – Le Roy Robinson in Conversation with K.S. Sivakumaran on Aspects of Culture in Sri Lanka, Chamara Printers, Colombo 6, 1992). Mark you, he is writing this in 1992 and he is still yearning to go back to the Dravidian foundation” even after living in cosmopolitan Colombo.

The cultural affinities that attaches him inseparably to his Dravidian homeland is the common experience of all Tamil migrants. The indelible feelings of Tamil exiled from S. India is expressed emphatically by Sivakumaran writing  in 1992. Undoubtedly, the gravitational pull of the Jaffnaites to Tamil Nadu is stronger than those who had migrated to distant parts of the globe. Their proximity to Tamil Nadu makes it their home away from home. Obviously, this means that though the Jaffna Tamils claim their migrant settlement in the North of Sri Lanka to be their homeland they know, in their heart of hearts, that their one and only homeland is in S. India, the birthplace of all Tamils who migrated to other lands. All other overseas settlements lack not only the genuine spirit of a homeland but also the substance of a history which can transform the alien geography into a homeland. In fact, in India there is a sacredness attached to the homeland. For instance, the Brahmins, who came from the  head  of Brahma, according to  classical Hindu caste system, were forbidden to cross the seas. Only the low-castes, like the Vellalas who belonged to the Sudra  caste that came from the feet of Brahma, ventured out. Those who crossed the seas lost their Brahmanical status and Gandhi, for instance, had to be re-baptised to be admitted into Indian society.

Naturally, all Tamils who  migrated from S. India had the Dravidian foundation” tattooed in the back of their minds.It was permanently located in their memory as the dependable and homely backyard” – the first and last resort from which they could derive strength in  times of need. It was,above all, a historical haven to lift them up from the cultural desert in Jaffna. This apart, the Jaffna Tamils would know that there is a hollowness and a contradiction in claiming Jaffna as their homeland while sitting next door to their one and only homeland in Tamil Nadu. Those who claim Jaffna as their homeland, in addition to that of Tamil Nadu, are confused, with one leg planted in both territories. As seen  in the case of Sivakumaran, they are confused in their divided minds, not knowing whether they belong to Tamil Nadu or Jaffna. Their heart strings pulling strongly in the direction of a Dravidian homeland make them feel that they belong to Tamil Nadu primarily because of the glories of its history. Jaffna has nothing to offer in comparison to the monumental achievements of their ancestors in Tamil Nadu.  In fact, in revealing his  heart, Sivakumaran makes it clear that he is just not speaking at the end of a sentimental journey into his past. No. He was affirming that he was back in his ancestral homeland – the place where the Tamils originated and later fanned out to occupy various  parts of foreign lands. Sivakumaran’s experiences in Tamil Nadu comes out as if he had regained his paradise after living in exile in Jaffna. It is a natural and genuine feeling which the migrant Tamils cannot escape.

Once they  go back to their roots in Tamil Nadu the old atavistic feelings, buried deep within, rise to  bond  with  their homeland – a feeling that is  not evoked in the minds of Tamils returning to their domiciled homes in alien lands abroad. So if their hearts and minds are in Tamil Nadu and only their body is in Jaffna where is their  homeland? What is more, when they stare across the Palk Straits doesn’t it make a mockery of their claim to have two homelands, one sitting next to another on  the shores of the Indian Ocean? When the same people claim two homelands, one next another, won’t they be in two minds not knowing to which land they belong, particularly because all what they claim to be Tamil culture exist only in Tamil Nadu?

And this leads to a more serious question : If the autochthonous Tamils of Tamil Nadu have not being given a state of  their own to make it their homeland after reigning over great and independent kingdoms recorded in their glorious  history, on what basis can the migrant settlers in Jaffna, with a dubious and a Lilliputian history, claim to have a separate state of their own in Sri Lanka? This does not mean that the Tamils are incapable of creatively manufacturing history to claim a homeland wherever they are located, west, east, north or south. Not surprisingly, in 1983, the Tamils circulated a spurious claim in Australia saying that they were the first to greet Captain Cook, with thosai, vadai, poomalai and  nagasalam, when he first landed in Botany Bay in Sydney! Of course, no one  took it seriously, except some nutty Tamil fanatics. This claim was based on historian Manning  Clark’s theory  that the Veddahs of Sri Lanka were among the first wave of migrants to Australia. (p.1 Chapter 1, Short History of Australia, Manning Clark).

A critical look at the post-independent Sri Lanka will reveal that the mainstream political trajectory spiralled downward into violence, and finally to Nandikadal, because the Tamils, in their obsession with a history that exists only in their minds, refused to face the hard realities of their superficial past. Their sudden urge to establish a separate state forced them to create a history that warped the minds of the Tamils. The best they could produce as history was a hastily written political tract to boost the claims to a separate state in the Battekotte (Vadukoddai) Resolution. But a homeland needs a sacred and undisputed history. It can only come out of the hands of those who make history with their innate genius to transform a  land built in their own image. Their labour of love for the land leaves a proud legacy which their successors can call it their  own. For instance, the American created a unique culture which they could proudly claim to be their own. They surpassed the European culture from which they borrowed to make a new civilisation of their own. All civilisations are built on borrowings. The genius is in putting their indelible stamp of identity as they marched into history. So have the Tamils of Jaffna come anywhere near to a level which would qualify them to be that of innovative homemakers like those in Tamil Nadu or in Sri Lanka? Where is the genius in physically transporting  everything from S. India and transplanting them  in Jaffna? Besides, a homeland is made at home not overseas. Everything  in Jaffna was made across the Palk Straits. So where is their homeland?

Since the Tamils of Jaffna remained as mediocre copy cats, imitating the superior culture of Tamil Nadu, can they be considered to be innovative creators who laid the foundations for a homeland of  their own in Sri Lanka? Or should they be categorised as mere carters who transported readymade products from Tamil Nadu imagining that they were a part of their creative genius? Their best achievement was in transporting slaves from Malabar, or in denying the low-castes their basic rights even to walk in daylight. Under the fascist Vellala rulers Jaffna was turned into an abominable gulag divided into upper caste priviligentsia and the outcasts who were treated as sub-humans. Velupillai Prabhakaran who inherited this fascist Vellala culture took it to the extreme and eliminated all Tamils who refused to pay pooja to the sole representative of the Tamils.” As usual, it is the Sinhala south that had to  move in and save the Tamils from their  barbaric oppressors.

Jaffna was a haven for the Vellala upper-caste but a suffocating hell-hole for the oppressed low-castes. Even the upper-caste had to either go to S. India or to the Sinhala south to get a breath of fresh air and breathe easily. With nothing much to claim as their own contribution to the Tamil culture they invariably had to fall back on the history and culture of Tamil Nadu. Before the anti-Sinhala-Buddhist vitriolic was injected into Jaffna politics by G. G. Ponnambalam, the Jaffna aristocracy headed by Arunachalam and Ramanathan brothers, were invariably singing  the  praises of the ancient Sinhala-Buddhist culture. Those who know their history are aware that the brief history in the miniscule geography of the north is not a patch on the magnificent achievements of Tamil Nadu, or the Sinhala south.

It is the overwhelming Tamil Nadu culture that reigns supreme in their minds, as stated by Sivakumaran. His spiritual / mental / cultural affinities with Tamil Nadu culture reveal the underlying factors that go to make a Tamil. The Tamilness that he felt in Tamil Nadu is a unique force that is confined exclusively to its historical borders. The cultural atmosphere springing from a Dravidian foundation” could not be found in Jaffna. Sivakumaran’s confession makes  it clear that the pristine Tamilness that moved him in Tamil Nadu is missing in Jaffna. Though  he does not say it specifically, his statement acknowledges that his spiritual homeland is in Tamil Nadu.  Period. Jaffna, to all intents and purposes, is a mere arid geographical strip hanging like a tail from the main body of Tamil Nadu. It could not – and has not – produced the culture of Tamil Nadu which makes it the only homeland of the Tamils. Jaffna can be considered the first post of the Tamil migrants moving out to occupy foreign lands in the Tamil diaspora. Jaffna has been a homeland for the Tamil settlers only to establish a legal claim for a bit real estate from the Sinhalese.

Feeling the pervasive weight of Tamil cultural  heritage Sivakumaran asserted that he was proud to be a Tamilian in Tamil Nadu. That is natural and understandable. But  how many Tamil Naduans can look around Jaffna and feel proud of the Jaffna culture? What is there inspiring in the imitative and mediocre culture of Jaffna? In  contrast, take the case of an American who can justifiably take pride in the achievements of his/her homeland by putting the distinct stamp  of American identity on every inch of land and making it their own  from valley to mountain peak. Today the distinction between England and America is as wide as the Atlantic Ocean that keeps them  apart.  Winston Churchill who was sharp enough to notice the difference said that America and England are two countries divided by one language! Well, in comparison what is it  that the Jaffnaites have achieved on their own which the Tamil Naduans had not achieved? The Jaffnaites are still playing second fiddle to the Tamil Naduans and they feel that the Tamil Nadu Dravidians are still their superior masters. The Jaffnaites, however, take some  pride in preserving the purity of Tamil language. Apart from  this, both Tamil Naduans and Jaffnaites know that there can  only be one homeland and that is in Tamil Nadu and not in Jaffna. Tamils from Jaffna must be the only community in the world who claim to have two homelands in one ocean – one filled with the originals and the other filled with the flotsam and jetsam that went ashore as unintended consequences of accidental history.

The migrant Tamils who settled down overseas knew for certain that there could never be another homeland outside Tamil Nadu. As a result they were quite content, once they settled down in Sri Lanka, to be mere imitators basking  in the glory of the S. Indian culture. Surveying the past of the North, Arasaratnam wrote: No original artistic tradition grew   in Tamil Ceylon. Culturally, the Tamils looked upon their arts as part of the Dravidian tradition of south India.” (p.115 – Ibid). There was nothing noteworthy in the Jaffna Tamil culture. This  could be one reason why the  great cultural  savant of South Asia, Dr. Ananda Coomarasawamy, wrote his classic monograph on Medieval Sinhala Art. If there were any outstanding cultural achievements worth protecting he couldn’t have missed it because he came from Jaffna.

(To be continued)


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