Country will be reopened after all above 30 are vaccinated – Bandula

July 25th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

All Sri Lankans over the age of 30 will be vaccinated by September, according to Minister Bandula Gunawardena.

Minister of Trade stated that the country will be reopened after that vaccination milestone.

He mentioned this speaking at the opening of the new Sathosa branch in Bulathsinhala today (July 25).

By September, we will be the country where all people over the age of 30 have completed the vaccination. After the vaccination, this country will be open.”

The Minister also spoke on the prices of face masks.

As schools are scheduled to reopen next week, we hope to discuss with manufacturers and further reduce the price of a face mask. Now a face mask sells at Rs 14.”

Coronavirus: 45 more COVID-19 related fatalities reported

July 25th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

The Ministry of Health reports that another 1,190 persons have tested positive for coronavirus today (July 25).

All new cases are associated with the New Year Covid-19 cluster.

This brings the total number of COVID-19 cases confirmed in the country thus far to 296,516.

Presently 24,860 infected patients are being treated at hospitals and treatment centers across the island.

The number of total recoveries has reached 267,602.

Meanwhile, Sri Lanka has registered 45 more COVID-19 related fatalities on Saturday (July 24).

The new development has pushed the official death toll from the virus outbreak in Sri Lanka to 4,099.

According to the data released by the Department of Government Information, the latest victims confirmed today include 23 males and 22 females.

One of them is aged below 30 years, seven victims are between 30-59 years and the remaining 37 are aged 60 and above.

Daily coronavirus case tally at 1,656

July 25th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

The Epidemiology Unit of the Health Ministry reports that another 446 persons have tested positive for COVID-19 in Sri Lanka, moving the daily total of new cases to 1,656.

This brings the total number of confirmed cases of coronavirus reported in the country to 296,962.

As many as 267,602 recoveries and 4,099 deaths have been confirmed in Sri Lanka since the outbreak of the pandemic.

The Epidemiology Unit’s data showed that 25,306 active cases are currently under medical care.

Laggala farmers allege drop in harvest (Video)

July 25th, 2021

Courtesy Hiru News

Farmers alleged that the paddy harvest has dropped significantly this Yala season.

They complained that the problem has arisen due to the cultivation of seeds provided by the Agrarian Services Department.

Farmers in areas such as Laggala and Wilgamuwa in the Matale District are currently harvesting paddy during the Yala season, and their yields have dropped significantly this year.

They stated that they cultivated a variety of seeds distributed by the Agrarian Services Department.

Farmers also alleged that the crop has been severely damaged due to worms, caterpillars, mites and other insects.

Farmers in Wilgamuwa and Laggala areas have been using organic fertilizer this year.

But farmers stated that they have not been made aware of how to get a successful harvest.

Whither Tamil Politics ?

July 24th, 2021

Prof. N.A.de S. Amaratunga  DSc

TNA leader R.Sampanthan has called for a re-merger of Northern and Eastern Provinces and he has said that the problems Tamils face cannot be solved without the two provinces coming together. Moreover he has raised the matter with the American Ambassador Ms. Teplitz. The Tamil leader may have fired a salvo against the moves made by some nationalist groups campaigning for the abolition of the 13th Amendment which is being discussed at present by the committee assigned with the task of making a new constitution. He knows the impossibility of any governing political party granting such a demand. Even the ‘yahapalana’ regime which was  hand in glove with the TNA could not accede to TNA demands though they attempted to bring in a federal constitution. The ‘yahapalanists’ paid the price for their folly.

Tamil politics had made the decision to chart a different course and radically deviate from the main sociopolitical stream from the time of independence though there were times of  convergence and cooperation albeit of short duration. Independence and universal franchise had driven a wedge between Sinhala and Tamil leaders which was rather unfortunate for they were together  in the struggle for independence. Tamil politicians enjoyed parity of political power and suddenly they realized that their privileged position was in danger due to universal franchise which would make them a minority in the parliament. They could not reconcile with the fact that they were representatives of a minority community. What is most unfortunate is that they could not see the opportunities that were there for them to play a vital role in the development of the whole country.  The mistake the Tamil leaders committed at that time was to abandon the opportunity that was available to jointly participate in the central government and contribute to the development of not only the Tamils but also the whole country and instead choose the narrow parochial path of communal politics. This blunder has continued to plague the country and even caused the birth of terrorism and a bloody war. Power sharing at the centre by all the communities could have been a reality, ending the so called ethnic problem, if not for that grave blunder. 

The present sociopolitical chasm between the different communities had its beginnings in those early times and successive Tamil leaders have contributed to its widening instead of making an effort to achieve reconciliation. Muslim leaders had taken a page out of Tamil separatism and this has led to the emergence of Islamic terrorism too in the country. Leaders of communal politics such as SJV, Amirthalingam, Ashrof, Sampanthan, Wigneshvaran and others had adopted communal politics as their political philosophy and this had caused an intractable communal problem in Sri Lanka. Instead of advocating a common ownership for the whole country they started to carve out territories with no regard to the historical fact that a certain community had developed a civilization on this land and therefore have a claim to the entirety of it. The fact that the evidence of that civilization is strewn all over this land is of no consequence to the Tamil politicians. On the contrary every effort is made to distort this history. Could such leaders contribute towards reconciliation.

For Tamil political leaders communal harmony is an anathema. They need disharmony to create issues and slogans for their political survival. Knowing very well that no major political party could afford to grant their demands without committing political suicide these Tamil leaders continue their demands mainly to keep the fires of discord burning in the hearts of communities which would ensure their political survival. Sampanthan asking for the merger of the North and East has to be viewed in that background. American Ambassador too would welcome such signs of communal discord. They would not want to see communal harmony being achieved in Sri Lanka. That would not fit their grand designs for the country and this region. This is why they helped the LTTE to develop into the most ruthless terrorist organization in the world. The Tamil separatist agenda suits the imperialist’s geopolitical agenda very well. And they are holding the poor Tamil people at ransom in the pursuit of their dastardly agendas.

It is time Tamil leaders thought about this country. The game of political expedience they engage in will not help the Tamil people. Attempt to distort history is childish to say the least. The aim here is to create in the minds of ordinary Tamils that they have been denied their heritage, their lands and their culture. A discontented frustrated people would serve the purpose of the Tamil politicians as well as the imperialists. A permanently destabilized country which is the aim of the imperialists would not help the Tamils. Tamil leaders must realize the futility of pursuing this kind of political philosophy.

Tamil intellectuals often talk about a Tamil Course and  Tamil struggle that have been continuing since independence. The nature of this problem has never been defined in clear terms. If they describe it in terms of the need for self determination of the Tamils the counter argument would be that more than 50% of the Tamils live outside the North and the East. They cannot talk about issues concerning language, religion, education, employment, culture or infra structure for all of that have been resolved and Tamils are equal if not better off compared to Sinhalese. But the discourse on the Tamil problem continues in vague abstract terms which attempts to portray the Tamils as an oppressed group of people. This is an attempt to keep the Tamil people in a perpetual state of discontent. Yet this discourse is incomplete unless it contends with the rupture that occurred at the time of independence referred to above and convincingly show that that was not the origin of the Tamil problem. But the discourse studiously avoids any reference to those historical beginnings of the Tamil problem.

However the solution to the problem may lie in that historical error and the missed opportunities discussed above. The failure of the then Tamil leadership to face up to reality and decide on a political arrangement for power sharing at the centre has led to the creation of a situation that could be amplified by separatists into a huge problem. If leaders like Ponnambalam Ramanathan didn’t commit the mistake of misrepresenting historical facts about Tamil habitation on this land and their role in its civilization there would not have been such a Tamil problem. They should have sought political inclusiveness for Tamils at that time not by asking for 50% representation or a separate state for Tamils but by negotiating an arrangement that fits the magnitude of the problem. Instead the Tamil history in the country was blown up to fit their separatist agenda. This historical error has remained to plague the country. 

At least now after so much blood and tears the Tamil leadership must make an attempt to correct that historical error. They must realize the grave injustice they commit against their own community. They must know the immense benefits that would accrue to the Tamils if there is communal harmony. In the areas of economy, trade and commerce there could be greater inter communal activity bringing much profit to Tamils. All communities could participate without harboured acrimony in economic, social and cultural activities to a much greater degree. Such endevours would be more successful if there is unity and harmony.

If instead the Tamil leaders continue to make demands like Mr. Sampanthan  it would only cause feelings of bitterness on both sides of the divide. Extremism begets extremism. Sinhalese will close rank like they did in 2019 and will not allow minority politics to hold the country to ransom. They must think of the future of the Tamils and try to build a country conducive for communal harmony. A merger of North and East would create pockets of minorities who in their own country would feel second class. Instead a central power sharing mechanism could be worked out for the good of everybody. Peripheral administration could be facilitated by creating a system of District Councils which could reflect the ethnic composition more accurately and which will not create minorities within a devolved unit. Time is opportune for such a course of action as a new constitution is being constructed. If this opportunity is missed it would be a repetition of the mistake Tamil leaders committed at the time of independence.

Prof. N.A.de S. Amaratunga  DSc

ERASING THE EELAM VICTORY Part 20 C12

July 24th, 2021

KAMALIKA PIERIS

(Continued from C11)

UN CONVENTION AGAINST TORTURE (2017)

Sri Lanka ratified the UN Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment (UNCAT) Convention in January 1994 and incorporated the Convention into Sri Lankan law by enacting the ‘Convention against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment Act, No. 22 of 1994’, more commonly referred to as the ‘Convention against Torture Act’ (CAT ACT). 

In the UN Convention against Torture, the act of torture is a separate criminal office.  The Convention restricts its application only to police and armed forces and other forces of the state. Others like LTTE are exempt from the provisions of this Act. Which means this Convention is intended only to control the armed forces and not on terrorists.

 the  Convention provided for  a UN Committee against Torture made up of representatives of member states, set up to investigate allegations of torture in member states. All member states are required to co-operate in the investigations of the committee. The Convention specifically states that “No exceptional circumstances whatsoever, whether a state of war or a threat of war, internal political instability or any other public emergency, may be cited in mitigation of any violations”.

This Convention gave its  member countries the power to arrest former or serving state officers suspected of committing torture which took place in another member state. This means that officers of the state will be hunted by the governments of foreign countries but terrorists will not, observed critics.

The Sri Lanka Act was better than the UN Convention, said analysts. It made torture a separate non-bailable criminal offence punishable with a prison sentence of between 7 to 10 years and a fine. Most importantly, its application was not restricted to officers of the state but to citizens of Sri Lanka and non-citizens who are within the jurisdiction of Sri Lanka. The Act also provides for extradition of a foreigner suspected of committing torture to his own country or another country asking for his extradition.  But these provisions were already in operation in the Sri Lankan legal system even before the Sri Lanka Act.

The UN prepared a second document, Optional Protocol of the International Convention against Torture” which became effective in June 2006. Yahapalana government signed this on 14 November 2017. The decision was implemented soon afterward on 5 December and would come into force from 4 January 2018.

The Optional Protocol declared that a UN Subcommittee of the Committee against Torture would be established. The members of this Subcommittee will serve not as representatives of their countries but in their individual capacity to ensure independence. Members of this Subcommittee will visit member states and make recommendations to the relevant governments. The Subcommittee must pay regular visits to places of torture, and make confidential reports.

The Protocol stated that the Sub Committee has the right to choose the places it wants to visit and the persons it wants to interview.  Objections to a visit to a particular place of detention may be made only on urgent and compelling grounds and that can only be temporary. The existence of a state of emergency cannot be used as an objection. Persons and organization must be free to communicate with the Sub Committee. The state must not prevent this. The state must also not retaliate against these groups for having communicated information to the Subcommittee, whether true or false.

Member states are obliged to give the Sub-committee access to places of detention and provide unrestricted access to all information concerning the number of persons deprived of their liberty and places of detention, and unrestricted access to all information referring to the treatment of those persons, as well as their conditions of detention; as well as the opportunity to have their private interviews without witnesses, as well as with any other persons who the Sub-committee believes may provide information.

Under the Optional Protocol, each member state is also expected to set up at the domestic level one or more national preventive mechanisms. The state must            guarantee the independence of these mechanisms” and their staff. The national mechanisms are to have unrestricted access to places of detention and information and exercise all the powers the international Subcommittee is entitled to.

The UN Sub Committee will maintain direct, and if necessary confidential, contact with the national preventive mechanisms and offer them training and technical assistance. The national mechanisms must be given unrestricted contacts with the Subcommittee, to send it information and to meet with it and no sanctions can be applied to anybody who provides information, whether true or false to the national mechanism.

A special fund   set up within the Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights of the UN   finances the activities of the Subcommittee of the Committee on Torture. This special fund is financed through ‘voluntary contributions’ made by governments, intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations.  It is western governments that provide funding to UN bodies for particular projects. One can see the opportunity provided for physical intrusion by outsiders through the provision of funds into activities of a country, commented Bandu de Silva.

Thus by acceding to this Optional Protocol, what we have done is to agree to give a body functioning under the Office of the UN Human Rights Commissioner unrestricted access to all places of detention in Sri Lanka and to provide them with all such information regardless of the situation prevailing in the country and to set up local mechanisms which can maintain direct links with the international Subcommittee and feed information to foreign parties without any restriction, said Chandraprema.

Previous attempts to bring in foreign judges, investigators and prosecutors fell by the wayside due to stiff public opposition. The attempt to use the Office of Missing Persons as an entry point also failed. The provision that would have given the OMP unrestricted power to enter into agreements with foreign parties    was dropped also due to public opposition. Now the government has signed this Optional Protocol to give their foreign masters an opportunity to intervene directly in Sri Lanka.

Yahapalana government has, through this action   given foreign powers the opportunity to intervene directly in Sri Lanka’s internal affairs. This shows that if these foreign powers are unable to get in through the front door, they will enter through a window or even a chink in the roof, said Chandraprema. The question is whether we need foreign parties nosing around in Sri Lanka and maintaining fifth columns in this country.   (Continued in C12.)

ERASING THE EELAM VICTORY Part 20 C11

July 24th, 2021

KAMALIKA PIERIS

 (Continued from C10)

OFFICE OF MISSING PERSONS   (2016)

The Office of Missing Persons Act was passed in Parliament on 12.8.16, during the rule of the Yahapalana puppet government. It was rushed through Parliament ignoring objections. It went through all three readings within 40 minutes. The Bill was not referred to Supreme Court.  

The Joint Opposition refused to accept OMP Bill as properly passed.  They said Parliament had not followed proper procedures in adopting it.  It was passed against the Standing Orders of Parliament. Only a Bill passed in accordance with the Standing Orders could be accepted as a proper piece of legislation.  Also, a Bill cannot be deemed to have been passed when more than half of the MPs were standing on the floor of the House. Even government MPs were not in their seats.

Nowhere in Asia has a mechanism such as this OMP been set up, said Dayan Jayatilleke. The only OMPs set up so far were for persons missing under military juntas in Latin America also where there were agreements between guerilla movements and their governments. Sri Lanka, on the other hand, was a democratic state with a democratically elected government, whose legitimate army fought a war within its borders against a secessionist group and won an outright victory.  

But Yahapalana went ahead and the Office of Missing Persons was put in place. The Office of Missing Persons is no Office’, said critics. It is a fully fledged quasi judicial body just one step away from a fully fledged war crimes tribunal. The ‘Missing Persons’ had to be connected with

armed conflict, political unrest and civil disturbances. Therefore the ‘Missing Persons’ would be those missing in the northern and eastern provinces only.

The OMP would operate entirely outside the state justice system. OMP can arrive at ‘findings’ relating to serious crimes like abduction and murder without any of the safeguards availed to suspects in ordinary courts, said critics. The OMP has extensive powers to compel the giving of testimony and production of documents and other material.

The Evidence Ordinance will not apply. The OMP can admit as evidence statements which contravene the Evidence Ordinance or considered inadmissible in civil or criminal proceedings. This is most dangerous, said critics. OMP can receive complaints from just anybody. Without safeguards of the Evidence Ordinance, a ‘case’ can be built up against   a person by the OMP and he can be removed from the armed forces.

The Right to Information Act and Official Secrets Act will also not apply to the work of the OMP. Right to Information Act has been excluded so that people could give information without fear, said supporters of the OMP. This is necessary because the OMP is a mechanism designed to discover the truth of a missing person’s fate and not act as a prosecutorial or judicial body. However, only information that is communicated in confidence will be excluded from the provisions of the RTI Act. All other information will be subject to the Right to Information.

Any    unreliable organization can make a complaint, false statements included, without having or face any consequences, responded critics. They can admit any kind of evidence in building up a story against a person, and that story could cause serious damage to that person’s reputation and career.

OMP can operate in complete secrecy. OMP can initiate an inquiry on the basis of a complaint, which is then kept secret. This means that people can charge each other in secret.

No court, not even the Supreme Court can order any officer of the OMP to submit to its courts any material communicated to him in confidence. Not even Supreme Court of Sri Lanka can penetrate this fog of secrecy, remarked critics.   

OMP can summon any person in Sri Lanka before it.  Anyone who fails or refuses to cooperate with the OMP may be punished for contempt of court.” OMP’s power to charge contempt of court is equal to that of the Appeal Court.

All government bodies, including the armed forces and intelligence services are mandatorily required to give fullest cooperation to OMP.  All local authorities rank below the OMP.

OMP can establish committees, division or units for the administration of the OMP and can delegate its power to them.  OMP officers have been conferred immunity.  They are above the law.  OMP officers can, without warrant, at any time of day or night, enter any premises, including sensitive military installation and seize any documents or object they require for investigations.  Documents supposedly seized from military organization can be circulated all over the world.

OMP   is allowed to   bring in foreign personnel   and OMP can appoint foreigners as officers and staff of the OMP.  Critics pointed out that the members of the OMP can delegate the work to others who need not be even Sri Lankans.

The OMP can raise funds from national or international sources. They can receive foreign funding directly. OMP has the power to enter into agreements on any subject with any foreign government, NGO or any other institution, including UN agencies like OHCHR. Since these UN organizations have been taken over by the west through funding, the OMP will be operated by the West. OMP can have agreements with LTTE as well, observed critics.

The members of the OMP must statutorily have experience in investigating Human Rights Law (HR) and International Human Rights Law (IHL) and they need not be citizens of Sri Lanka. This means that the appointees can be representatives of western funded NGOs or those who have worked with western sponsored international war crimes tribunals, said analysts. These officers can be foreigners.

If a missing person is found, the OMP need not announce the fact. If that person so wishes he can remain missing, though he may be hale and hearty and living abroad, observed critics.  Unless he agrees, his relatives will not be informed either.

Many of those listed missing during the war could have obtained new identities courtesy of foreign governments, observed Gotabhaya Rajapaksa. Foreign governments including Australia had refused to assist Sri Lanka in its attempts to locate missing persons now living overseas under new identities. Thousands have received new identities, especially in Europe.

Maxwell Paranagama said that his Commission had received 16,000 complaints regarding wartime disappearances and was inquiring into them when the present government terminated the proceedings of the Commission. Some foreign funded NGOs resented investigations undertaken by the Commission.

Paranagama said some of those declared as missing here were living abroad. “Unfortunately, foreign governments have declined to help our investigations by making available lists of those Sri Lankans living there as refugees or given citizenship,” Paranagama said, adding that four of those reported missing had been jailed in the Maldives. “We were able to speak to them over the phone.

Kamal Gunaratne    was also critical.  This is absurd he said. Anyone can just come and complain that their son or family member is missing.  OMP is just accepting complaints. The names of those giving evidence are kept secret. You need to ascertain the accuracy of these claims. How can we issue death certificates   without knowing what happened.

 If we are to issue death certificates or compensation then it has to be established without doubt that the person concerned is really dead. That cannot be done by this OMP. If we issue a death certificate, and later that person is found, this whole process will become a joke, continued Kamal.

The motives of the present OMP can be questioned, concluded Kamal Gunaratne .The OMP has been going to people’s houses and getting them to come forward and say that their loved ones are missing.

The Chairman of the OMP stated in 2020 in an interview,   over the last two years, we have built up the institution, including recruitment of staff, building technical capacity, developing a temporary database, collating information and establishing a Victims’ and Witnesses’ Protection Unit and an Investigations and Tracing Unit .

 OMP was now   busily at work, said the Chairman. There are ongoing individual investigations which are at different stages. Depending on the facts of each case, the OMP is required begin an investigation at different points.

 In some cases, an investigation has begun with a complaint from a family member regarding a missing or disappeared loved one. In another scenario, the OMP has, in keeping with its mandate, intervened in cases because unidentified human remains have been discovered and they may belong to victims of disappearances.

Under the OMP Act, it has the authority to intervene and observe inquiries into human remains before a Magistrate’s Court. OMP has also provided financial and technical support in the Mannar mass graves investigation.   (Continued in C12)

ටෝකියෝ ඔලිම්පික් ක්‍රීඩා සැණකෙළියේ සමාරම්භයට අමාත්‍ය නාමල් රාජපක්ෂ මහතා එක්වෙයි.

July 24th, 2021

තරුණ හා ක්‍රීඩා අමාත්‍යංශය, ඩිජිටල් තාක්ෂණ හා ව්‍යවසාය සංවර්ධන රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍යංශය.

‘‘හැඟීම් මගින් එක්සත්භාවයට‘‘ යනුවෙන් මෙවර තේමාව රැගත් ලෝක ක්‍රීඩාවේ විශිෂ්ටතම හා අසිරිමත්ම ක්‍රීඩා සැණකෙළිය වන ඔලිම්පික් ක්‍රීඩා උළෙල 32 වැනි වරට සකුරා මල් පිපෙන ජපානයේ ටෝකියෝ ජාතික ක්‍රීඩාංගණය කේන්ද්‍රකරගනිමින් අද (23) දින ශ්‍රී ලංකා වේලාවෙන් ප.ව.04.30ට  (ජපානයේ වේලාවෙන් රාත්‍රී 08.00ට) විචිත්‍රවත් සමාරම්භක උත්සවයක් ද සමගින් ආරම්භ විය.

විශේෂ ආරාධිතයකු ලෙසින් 2020 ටෝකියෝ ඔලිම්පික් උළෙලට සහභාගී වූ තරුණ හා ක්‍රීඩා අමාත්‍ය නාමල් රාජපක්ෂ මහතා මව්බිම වෙනුවෙන් පදක්කම් සඳහා ඉහළම දස්කම් දැක්වීමට ශ්‍රී ලංකා කණ්ඩායම දිරිගන්වමින් සමාරම්භක උළෙලට එක්වීය.

මෙවර 2020 ඔලිම්පික් සමාරම්භක උළෙලේදී  ශ්‍රී ලංකා ධජය රැගෙන යාමේ වගකීම දරමින් ජූඩෝ ක්‍රීඩක චාමර ධර්මවර්ධන සහ ජිම්නාස්ටික් ක්‍රීඩිකා මිල්කා ද සිල්වා  අභිමානයෙන් යුතුව ශ්‍රී ලංකා ධජය රැගෙන පෙරමුණේ ගමන්ගත්හ. 

වසර 04කට වරක් පැවැත්වෙන මෙම තරගාවලිය ඉකුත් වසරේ පැවැත්වීමට සැලසුම්කර  තිබූවත් ගෝලීය වශයෙන් ලෝකයම වෙලාගත් කොරෝනා වසංගත තත්ත්වය හේතුවෙන් 2020 ඔලිම්පික් උළෙල වසරකින් කල්දැමීමට ඔලිම්පික් බලධාරින්ට සිදුවිය.

ආසියාවේ ප්‍රමුඛයා වෙමින්  දෙවැනි වරටත් ඔලිම්පික් ක්‍රීඩා උළෙලක සත්කාරකත්වය හිමිකරගත් ජපානය, වසරකින් කල් දැමූ ඔලිම්පික් උළෙල මෙවර දැඩි සෞඛ්‍ය නීති රීති අනුගමනය කරමින් පවත්වයි.

ඒ අනුව, 2020 ටෝකියෝ ඔලිම්පික් උළෙලේ සමාරම්භය රාජ්‍ය නායකයින් 15 දෙනෙකු සහ සම්භාවනීය අමුත්තන් දහසකට සීමාකරමින් ඉතා විචිත්‍රවත් අන්දමින් සනිටුහන් කිරීමට ටෝකියෝ ඔලිම්පික් සංවිධායකයින් සමත්විය.

2020 ගිම්හාන ඔලිම්පික් උළෙල ප්‍රේක්ෂකයන්ගේ සහභාගිත්වයෙන් තොරව පැවැත්වීමට ටෝකියෝ ඔලිම්පික් බලධාරින් කටයුතු යොදා ඇත්තේ දැඩි සෞඛ්‍ය ආරක්ෂිත ක්‍රියාමාර්ගවලට අනුගතවෙමින් ජෛව ආරක්ෂිත බුබළක් යටතේ ලොව පුරා ක්‍රීඩක ක්‍රීඩිකාවන් සහභාගි වන බැවිනි.

ලෝකයේ රටවල් 200කට අධික සංඛ්‍යාවකින් ක්‍රීඩක ක්‍රීඩිකාවෝ 11,000කට අධික පිරිසක් ක්‍රීඩා 46ක් වෙනුවෙන් තරග ඉසව් 339ක් යටතේ පදක්කම් අරභයා මෙවර 2020 ටෝකියෝ ඔලිම්පික් උළ‍ෙලේ තරග බිමට ඇතුළත්ව සිටිති.

මෙවර ඔලිම්පික් තරගාවලියේදී මව්බිම නියෝජනය කරමින් සහභාගි වන ක්‍රීඩක ක්‍රීඩිකාවන්ට සිය ඔලිම්පික් පදක්කම් සිහිනය ජයගෙන ශ්‍රී ලංකා නාමය ලොව හමුවේ තැබීමට හැකිවේවා‘යි ක්‍රීඩා අමාත්‍යතුමන් ඇතුළු තරුණ හා ක්‍රීඩා අමාත්‍යංශයේ සුබ පැතුම් එක්කරන්නෙමු.

මාධ්‍ය ඒකකය,

තරුණ හා ක්‍රීඩා අමාත්‍යංශය, ඩිජිටල් තාක්ෂණ හා ව්‍යවසාය සංවර්ධන රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍යංශය.

දොරින් දොරට කප්රුක් – ඉපලෝගම පොල් පැළ බෙදා දීම

July 24th, 2021

තිසර සමල් – අනුරාධපුර

පොල් පැළ ලක්ෂ 40 ක් දිවයින පුරා සිටුවීමේ ” දොරින් දොරට කප්රුක ” ජාතික වැඩසටහන යටතේ ඉපලෝගම  ගොවිජන සේවා කාර්යාලයේදී  පොල් පැළ බෙදා දීම  රාජ්‍යය අමාත්‍යය දුමින්ද දිසානායක මහතාගේ ප්‍රධානත්වයෙන් සිදු කෙරිණි.

 ” දොරින් දොරට කප්රුක ” ජාතික  වැඩසටහන මගින් ගෙඩි මිලියන 2800 ක් පමණ වන වාර්ෂික පොල් අස්වැන්න ගෙඩි මිලියන 3600 ක් දක්වා වර්ධනය කර ගැනීමේ ඉලක්කයයි.

මෙම අවස්ථාවට ශ්‍රී ලංකා නිදහස් පක්ෂ මිහින්තලය ආසන සංවිධායක, හිටපු පළාත් සභා අමාත්‍යය  සරත් ඉලංගසිංහ මහතා, ඉපලෝගම  ප්‍රාදේශීය සභා මන්ත්‍රීවරුන් ඇතුළු ප්‍රාදේශීය දේශපාලඥයින් හා රාජ්‍යය නිළධාරීන්, ලංකා පොස්පේට් රාජ්‍යය සමාගමේ හිටපු සභාපති උපාලි අනුරාධ දිසානායක මහතා ඇතුළු ප්‍රදේශවාසීන් සහභාගී වූහ.

අධ්‍යාපනයේ කොත ලූ වල කොතලාවල පනත

July 24th, 2021

මතුගම සෙනෙවිරුවන්

අතීත කථාව –

රයිගම රාජධානි සමයේ දී වර්තමාන බණ්ඩාරගම අසල වැව් රාශියක් ඉඳි විය.රජුගේ මාළිගය පිහිටි භූමියේ පිහිටි පොකුණකට පිරිසිඳු ජලය ගෙන ඒමේ අවශ්‍යතාවයක් ඇති විය. මේ යුගයේ දී මාළිගයට නුදුරින් අසු නාවන පොකුණ නමින් තවත් තැනක් විය.ඒ අසල දාගැබක් ද විය. වරක් මේ දාගැබේ කොත අතුරුදහන් විය.පසුව අසුනාවන පොකුණේ තිබී මේ කොත සම්බ වී යැයි පැවසේ. කොත හොරකම් කිරීම භුතයෙකු විසින් කළ වැඩක් ලෙසට මිනිසුන් විසින් විශ්වාසයක් විය. පසුව මේ පොකුණ කොතලූ වල නමින් ද පසු කාලීනව කොතලාවල වැව ලෙසටද හඳුන්වා ඇත.උයන් වත්ත වැව ලෙසට ද ව්‍යවහාර වේ. මේ ප්‍ර දේශයේ සිටි බණ්ඩාර පවුල් වලට පසුකාලීනව කොතලාවල නාමය ඈඳුණ අතර යටත් විජිත සමයේ සිටි ප්‍රසිද්ධ චරිතයක් වූයේ ජොන් ලයනල් කොතලාවල යි. ඔහුගේ පුත්‍රයා වූ ජෙනරල් ජොන් කොතලාවල මේ රටේ තුන්වන අග්‍රාමාතයවරයා වූ අතර කුරුණැගල පාර්ලිමේන්තු පදවිය දිගු කාලයක් හොබවන ලද්දේය. මින්නේරිය ව්‍යාපාරය ඇරඹූණේ මෙතුමා අතිනි පේරාදෙණිය විශ්ව විද්‍යාලය ඇරඹුනේ ද මෙතුමා අතිනි.ඔහුගේ අභාවයට පෙර අක්කර 48 කින් යුතු සිය නිවස වූ කඳවල වලව්ව ත්‍රිවිධ හාමුදාව උදෙසා ආරක්ෂක විද්‍යා ඇකඩමියක්  පවත්වා ගෙන යෑමට  පවරා දුන්නේය

යටත් විජිත සමයෙන් පසු ලංකාවේ මෑත කාලීන අධ්‍යපන ධාරාව ආරම්භ කරනුයේ භික්ෂූන් වහන්සේලා විසිනි. 1869 දී දොඩන්දූව සහ පාණදුරයෙන් ඇරඹුණ මේ පාසල් බෞද්ධ පාසල් ලෙසට හැඳින්වුණි.කර්නල් ඔල්කට් පැමිණි පසු ස්වාමීන් වහන්සේලා සමග එක්ව පරමවිඥානාර්ථ සමාගම ඇති කර ඒ මගින් රට පුරා ඉස්කෝල පද්ධතියක් ඇති කරන ලදී. නැවතත් පිරිවෙන් අධ්‍යාපනය ආරම්භ කිරීමට භික්ෂූන් වහන්සේලා ඉදිරිපත් වූයේද මේ කාලවකවානුව තුළය.  රත්මලානේ පරමධම්ම චේතිය පිරිවෙන විද්‍යෙදය පිරිවෙන විද්‍යාලංකාර පිරිවෙන මෙන්ම දොඩන්දූව කුමාර කන්ද පීරිවෙන එහි මුල් පෙලේ විය.නිදහස් අධ්‍යපන ක්‍රමය ස්ථාපිත වූ පසු කන්නන්ගර මහතා මෙරට තිබූ බෞද්ධ පාසල් රාශියක් දියුණු කිරීමට අත දෙමින් ඒවා මධ්‍ය මහා විද්‍යාල හා බැඳුණු පාසල් බවට පත් කරන ලද්දේය.අනතුරුව 1959 දී විද්‍යෙදය පිරිවෙන සහ විද්‍යාලංකාර පිරිවෙන විශ්ව විද්‍යාලයක් බවට පත් කිරීමට බණ්ඩාරනායක මහතා කටයුතු කලේය.විදුදය ජයවර්ධන පුර විශ්ව විද්‍යාලය බවටත් විද්‍යාලංකාරය කැළණිය විශ්ව විද්‍යාලය බවටත් පත් වූයේය. ජයවර්ධන පුර විශ්ව වීද්‍යාලය දැනට පිහිටා තිබෙන භූමිය පූජ්‍ය වැලිවියේ සෝරත නාහිමියන් ගේ ඉල්ලීම පිරීද  උන්වහන්සේගේ ශිෂ්‍ය පැලියානේ සුනේත්‍රා දේවී පිරිවෙනේ පූජ්‍ය මැදගොඩ සුමනතිස්ස හිමියන් විසින් පරිත්‍යාග කරන ලද්දකි.පිරිවෙන්  විශ්ව විද්‍යාල බවට පත් වන අතර 1962 දී පාසල් රජයට පවරා ගත් කල්හි පෙර පැවති  බෞද්ධ පාසල් සියල්ල ද රජයයට අයත් කර ගන්නා ලදී.

වර්තමාන කතාව –

      ජෙනරල් ජෝන් කොතලාවල මහතා බලාපොරොත්තු වූයේ ආරක්ෂක අංශ සාමාජිකයන් සඳහා උසස් අධ්‍යාපනයක් ලබා දීමටයි. 1981 වර්ෂයේ දී කොතලාවල ආරක්ෂක විද්‍යාපීඨය බිහි වන්නේ ඒ අනුවයි.

ඉන්පසු 1988 දී මෙම ආරක්ෂක විද්‍යා පීඨයේ සහතික පිළිගැනෙන මට්ටමින් සංශෝධනය වන අතර 2007 දී එම ඇකඩමිය විශ්ව විද්‍යාලයක් බවට පත් කිරීමට කටයුතු යොදා ඇත.. ඉන් පසුව ආරක්ෂක අංශ වල සාමාජිකයන් පමණක් නොව මුදල් ගෙවා ඉගෙනුම ලැබිය හැකි සිවිල් පුරවැසියන්ටද එම ස්ථානය විවෘත කරන ලදී.එය සිදු වූයේ වෙනත් පෞද්ගලික වෛද්‍ය පීඨ වලින් පිටවෙන සිසුන්ට මෙම විශ්වවිද්‍යාලය ට අනුබද්ධ වන ආකාරයටයි.මෙම තීරණයෙන් පසුව ආරක්ෂක අංශ සාමාජිකයන් පමණක් නොව   විශ්ව විද්‍යාල වරම් ලැබූ සිසුන් ද ඇතුලත් වීමට ඉඩ හරින ලදී.මුදල් ගෙවා ඉගෙන ගැනීමට කැමති සිසුන්ට විදෙස් වලට නොයා මෙහි ඉගෙන ගැනීමට අවස්ථාව සැලසීම එහි අරමුණ විය. 2018 දී යහ පාලන රජය කාලයේ මෙම කොතලාවල පනත නැවත අලුතින් ඉදිරිපත් කරන ලදී.එහි අරමුණ වන්නට ඇත්තේ ඒ වන විට ජනප්‍රිය මට්ටමේ තිබෙන පෞද්ගලික විශ්ව විද්‍යාල බල ගැන්වීමයි. එම පනතම නැවත වර්තමාන රජය විසින්ද දැන් පාර්ලිමේන්තුවට ඉදිරිපත් කර ඇත.මෙම පනතේ තිබෙන සුවිශේෂය නම් විශ්ව විදයාල ප්‍රතිපාදන කොමිෂන් සභාවේ බල සීමාවෙන් එපිට පැවැත්මට තිබෙන හැකියාවයි. 1981 දී ඇකඩමියක් ලෙසට ස්ථාපනය වන විට. එය ආරක්ෂක අංශය යටතේ තිබුණද විශ්ව විද්‍යාලයක් බවට පත්වන විට  පත්‍රිපාදන කොමිසමට යටත් විය යුතුය.නමුත් අලුත් පනතින් මේ ව්‍යුහය වෙනස් වෙයි.දෙවැන්න නම් මෙම කොතලාවල විශ්ව විද්‍යාලය පදනම් කරගෙන රට පුරා පෞද්ගිලක විශ්ව විද්‍යාල බිහි කර ගැනීමට තිබෙන ඉඩ කඩයි.ඒ සමගම ජාත්‍යන්තර විශ්ව විද්‍යාල සමග ඒකාබද්ධ වීමට තිබෙන අවස්ථාද පුලුල් වන බව මෙහි සඳහන්ය. එවිට ශරියා නීතිය ඉගැන්වෙන හිස්බුල්ලගේ පූනානි විශ්වවිද්‍යාලයද මේ යටතට ගත හැකි වනවා පමණක් නොව ශරියා නීතිය තිබෙන අරාබි රටවල් සමග ඒකාබද්ධ වීමටද අවස්ථාව සැලසේ.

     කොතලාවල ආරක්ෂක විශ්ව විද්‍යාලය මෙවැනි තත්වයකට පත් කිරීම එක් අකින් කොතලාවල මහතා අභිබවා යන්නකි.අනෙක් අතින් පවතින රාජ්‍ය විශ්ව විද්‍යාල බිඳ වැටීමට ඉඩ සලස්වා වෙනත් පෞද්ගලික අධ්‍යාපන ධාරාවක් බලවත් කිරීමට ගන්නා උත්සාහයකි.  පෙර දැක්වූ පුරිදි මෙරට විශ්ව විද්‍යාල පද්ධතිය පමණක් නොව පාසල් පද්ධතියද නිරිමාණය කරලීමට මෙරට භික්ෂූන් වහන්සේලා දැක්වූ දායකත්වය සුවිශේෂීය. උන් වහන්සේලා ගේ කැපවීම අති මහත්ය. මෙම පාසල් සහ පිරිවෙන රජයට පවරා දීමට කටයුතු කරන ලද්දේ පූජනීය හැඟිමකින් යයි කිව හැකිය.මෙම බෞද්ධ අධ්‍යාපන  ආයතන ස්ථූපයක කොතක් වැනිව ගෞරවනීය හැඟිමක් ජනිත කරවූ  පද්ධතියකි .එහිදී පන්සල් වල පැවති ඉඩකඩම් රාශියක්  රජය සතු කරමින් කළ කැපකිරීම රජයේ වගකිමක් බවට පත් විය. කෝට්ටේ රජ මහ විහාරය සතුව තිබෙන ඉඩම ආනන්ද ශාස්ත්‍රාලයට පවරා දුන් පසු එය රජය සතු වීම උදාහරණයකි.එම භූමියේ පැරණි සීමා මාලකය පවා අදද දක්නට ලැබේ.

    කොතලාවල විශ්ව විද්‍යාලයේ පාලකයන් මෙන්ම මෙම ආයතනයට සිසුන් ඇතුලත් කළ දෙමාපියන්ද නගන එක් තර්කයක් ඇත. එනම් රාජ්‍ය විශ්ව විද්‍යාල වල තිබෙන විනය පිරිහීමයි.එය සැබෑවකි. මේ රටේ රාජය විසින් මෙහයවා පවත්වාගෙන ගිය බොහෝ ආයතන වල විනය පිරිහුණි. පක්ෂ දේශපාලනය එයට ප්‍රමුඛ හේතුවයි.ලංගම වැනි ආයතන මෙන්ම සමූපකාරයද ඒ තත්වයේ ලා පෙන්විය හැකිය.ඇතැම් ආයතන බංකොලාත් වන්නට ඉඩ හැර වසා දැමුණි. ඇතැම් ආයතන විකුණා දැමින.1977 න් පසු ඇති වූ විවෘත ආර්ථික සංකල්ප වල තිබුණු අතිශය පෞද්ගලික කාරණා මත රාජ්‍ය මැදිහත් වීම ක්‍රමයෙන් අඩපණ කර ඇත.

 බටහිර ලෝකයට පමණක් නොව අද පෙරදිග අතැම් රාජ්‍යයන්ටත් අධ්‍යාපනය කර්මාන්තයකි. රාජ්‍ය මැදිහත් වීම මත හෝ පෞද්ගලික ප්‍රාග්ධනය මත අධ්‍යාපනය විකිණීම සිදු වෙයි. නමුත් අපගේ සංස්කෘතිය තුළ අධ්‍යාපනය යනු සුපිරිසුදු ක්‍රියාවලියකි. ඒ මගින් දෙන දැනුම මිළ කළ නොහැකිය.එය පූජනීය වූ තරමට රටේ අභිමානවත් පරපුරක් බිහි කරන්ට හේතු වේ. විශ්ව විද්‍යාලයකින් පිට වන්නා රටේ සංස්කෘතිය ස්පර්ශ කරන ස්වාධීන පුද්ගලයෙකු විය යුතුය.ඔහුගේ වගකීම රට වෙනුවෙනි.එසේම මේ විද්වතුන් අතලොස්ස විසින් රටට ස්වාධීන ප්‍රතිපත්තියක් සකස් කර දිය යුතුය.එසේම මග පෙන්වීම් කල යුතුය. දේශපාලකයන් වෙනුවෙන් විද්වතුන් බිහි කිරීමේ ක්‍රියාවලිය මෙරට විශ්ව විද්‍යාල තුළ ආරම්භ කිරීම නිසා රට පිරිහී ඇත. හමුදා විනයක් යටතේ විද්වතුන් බිහි කිරීමද එයට දෙවනි නොවේ. මෙරට බෞද්ධ අධ්‍යාපනය විසින් දායාද කරන ලද පූජනීය වූ උසස් අධ්‍යාපන ආයතන රැක ගැනීම සියලු දෙනගේම යුතුකමක් වන්නේ එහෙයිනි.කොතලාවල පනත ඉවත් කිරීමට බල කළ යුත්තේ මේ කරුණු සැලකිල්ලට ගෙනය.

මතුගම සෙනෙවිරුවන්

නිදහස් අධ්‍යාපනය තුළ තොරතුරු සැගවීම නවතමු

July 24th, 2021

මාධ්‍ය අංශය, වෛද්‍ය තිලක පද්මා සුබසිංහ අනුස්මරණ නීති අධ්‍යයන වැඩසටහන,

(නිදහස් අධ්‍යාපනය තුළ තොරතුරු සැගවීම නවතමු…2021 ජූලි 06 හැන්සාඩ් වාර්තාවේ ඇති ජනමත විචාරණයක් නියම කළ කොරෝනා පනතේ ශ්‍රේෂ්ඨාධිකරණ තීරණය සිංහල භාෂාවෙන් ලබාගෙන නිදහස් අධ්‍යාපනයට, රටේ ස්වාධීනත්වයට, ආගමික නිදහසට, ජනතා පරමාධිපත්‍යයට, ඩිජිටල් නෛතික නිදහසට වන බලපෑම කියවමු…)

ශ්‍රේෂ්ඨාධිකරණය ජනමත විචාරණයක් නියම කළ ආණ්ඩුක්‍රම ව්‍යවස්ථාවට පටහැනි වගන්ති 7ක් ඇති කොරෝනා පනතට ලබා දුන් ශ්‍රේෂ්ඨාධිකරණ තීරණය සිංහල භාෂාවෙන් ලබා දී පොදු ජන අයිතිය රකින්න…!
එම නඩුවේ පෙත්සම්කරුගෙන් පාර්ලිමේන්තුවට ඉල්ලීමක්…

කොරෝනා පනත් කෙටුම්පත ආණ්ඩුක්‍රම ව්‍යවස්ථාව උල්ලංඝනය කරන බව ශ්‍රේෂ්ඨාධිකරණය තීරණය කර ඇති බව කියවා ගත හැක්කේ ඉංග්‍රීසි දන්නා අයට පමණද?

එකී පනත් කෙටුම්පතේ ශ්‍රේෂ්ඨාධිකරණ තීරණය සම්බන්ධයෙන් සිංහල භාෂාවෙන් ඉතා කෙටි පැහැදිලි කිරීමක් කතානායකවරයා 2021 ජූලි 06 දින පාර්ලිමේන්තුවේදී කළ නමුත්, ශ්‍රේෂ්ඨාධිකරණ තීරණය සිංහල භාෂාවෙන් පාර්ලිමේන්තු හැන්සාඩ් වාර්තාවට ඇතුලත් කර නැති අතර එය ඉංගරීසි භාෂාවෙන් පමණක් ඇතුලත් කර ඇත.

මෙය ආණ්ඩුක්‍රම ව්‍යවස්ථාවේ 3 4, 9 ව්‍යවස්ථා සහ ආණ්ඩුක්‍රම ව්‍යවස්ථාවේ III සහ IV පරිච්චේදවලට පටහැනි අතර 2006 අංක 12 දරන තොරතුරු දැනගැනීමේ අයිතිවාසිකම් පිළිබඳ පනතටද පටහැනි වේ.

සිංහල භාෂාවෙන්ද එම තීරණය පාර්ලිමේන්තු හැන්සාඩ් වාර්තාවට ඇතුල් කළහොත් බහුතර ජනතාවටද එය කියවාගත හැකියි. ඒ සම්බන්ධයෙන් අවබෝධය ලැබිය හැකිය.

ඉංග්‍රීසි භාෂාව වැරදි ලෙස යොදාගෙන නීති විරෝධි වැඩ කරන කිහිප දෙනෙක් විසින් ජනතාවට සිංහල භාෂාවෙන් තොරතුරු ලබා නොදී සිදුකරන වැරදි ක්‍රියාදාමයන් පාලනය කිරීමට ජනතාවගේ පරමාධිපත්‍යයට වැදගත් වන ශ්‍රේස්ඨාධිකරණ තීන්දු සහ තීරණ සිංහල භාෂාවෙන් ලබා දීම පාර්ලිමේන්තුවේ යුතුකමකි, වගකීමකි.

පාර්ලිමේන්තුවේ හැන්සාඩ් වාර්තාව ඉංග්‍රීසි භාෂාව දන්නා අයගේ මුදලින් පමණක් මුද්‍රණය කරන වාර්තාවක් නොවේ. එය පොදු ජනතාවගේ මුදලින් මුද්‍රණය කරන වාර්තාවකි.

කොරෝනා පනත් කෙටුම්පතේ ශ්‍රේෂ්ඨාධිකරණ තීරණය සිංහල භාෂාවෙන්ද හැන්සාඩ් වාර්තාවට ඇතුලත් කරන ලෙස එම නඩුවේ පෙත්සම්කරු පාර්ලිමේන්තුවෙන් ඉල්ලා ඇත්තේ පොදු ජනතාවගේ තොරතුරු දැනගැනීමේ අයිතිවාසිකම් රැකීම සඳහාය.

ජනතාවගේ තොරතුරු දැනගැනීමේ අයිතිවාසිකම් ආරක්ෂා කිරීම පාර්ලිමේන්තුව සහ එහි මන්ත්‍රීවරුන් ගේ යුතුකමකි.

ආණඩුක්‍රම ව්‍යවස්ථාව උල්ලංඝනය කරන වගන්ති 7ක් ඇති කොරෝනා පනත් කෙටුම්පතේ ශ්‍රේෂ්ඨාධිකරණ තීරණය 2021.07.06 දින පාර්ලිමේන්තු හැන්සාඩ් වාර්තාවේ ඉංග්‍රීසි භාෂාවෙන් පනණක් පළ කර ඇති අතර එය බහුතර ජනතාවට කියවීම සඳහා සිංහල භාෂාවෙන් ලබා දෙනු ඇති බව අපේක්ෂා කරමු.

නිදහස් අධ්‍යාපනය තුළ තොරතුරු සැගවීම 
නතර කිරීමටත්, කොරෝනා පනතෙන් නිදහස් අධ්‍යාපනයට, රටේ ස්වාධීනත්වයට, ආගමික නිදහසට, ජනතා පරමාධිපත්‍යයට, ඩිජිටල් නෛතික නිදහසට වන බලපෑම කියවීමටත් ඉහත ශ්‍රේෂ්ඨාධිකරණ තීරණය සිංහල භාෂාවෙන් ලබා ගැනීම වැදගත් වේ.

පාර්ලිමේන්තුවෙන් ඉල්ලා ඇති එම ඉල්ලීමේ පිටපත් ජනාධිපති ලේකම්, පාර්ලිමේන්තුවේ මහ ලේකම්, අධිකරණ අමාත්‍යාංශයේ ලේකම්, රාජ්‍ය භාෂා කොමිෂන් සභාවේ ලේකම් රාජ්‍ය භාෂා කොමසාරිස් සහ නීතිපති වෙතද යොමු කර ඇත. ඉල්ලීම පහත දැක්වේ.

මාධ්‍ය අංශය, වෛද්‍ය තිලක පද්මා සුබසිංහ අනුස්මරණ නීති අධ්‍යයන වැඩසටහන, දුරකථන 0342256066, 0712063394, 0786016161

WHO BURNT THE JAFFNA LIBRARY?

July 24th, 2021

Excerpted from SDIG (Retd.) Edward Gunawardena’s memoirs Courtesy The Island

The burning of the Jaffna public library in 1981 is not only a controversial subject, it is a sensitive one. Much has been written on it mainly for propaganda purposes and political advantage. It is significant that nobody who was a witness to the incident or was even present in Jaffna at the time of the incident has written anything on the subject.

Having kept mum for three decades, except once in 2006 when I was compelled to come out with the truth when an admirer of Anton Balasingham, writing to a Sri Lankan newspaper, alleged that I was responsible for the burning of the library, I decided that I should write particularly to dispel the untruths clouding this event; of what I witnessed, what I came to know of and the deductions and conclusions I arrived at particularly with my training and experience as an intelligence officer. I will elaborate this later in this chapter.

I thought the best way to make a start on this all important narrative is to present the reader with a reminder of the common perceptions regarding the burning of the library that existed in the eighties and even prevails to the present day. An article on the subject that appeared in a Sri Lankan newspaper in 2008 projecting the common perceptions in a nutshell provided me with a suitable platform to commence this effort.

‘Burning Memories’

A journalist named Aboorvan Prabanjana (I don’t know whether this was a real name or a pseudonym) writing on ‘Tamil Matters’ in the Sunday Lakbima of October 16. 2008, has opened his article titled, ‘Burning Memories’, thus: The burning of the Jaffna library in 1981 is an event that has left indelible imprints in the minds of Sri Lankan Tamils. It marked the destruction of the intellectual heritage preserved down the ages by the Jaffna community. It is now an open secret that the crime was plotted and perpetrated by the politicians of the then ruling party”.

This article written twenty 27 years after the event has been meant primarily to draw attention to a documentary film entitled ‘Burning Memories’ directed by one S. Someetharan. Among other things this article alleges:

a)

Mobs brought to Jaffna from the southern part of the country allegedly led by a prominent politician of the then ruling party who was active during the campaign for the District Development Council elections of 1981, created a frenetic situation in Jaffna. The mobs were reportedly aided by the police. They set fire to several important buildings in the Jaffna town including the public library”.

b)

President Ranasinghe Premadasa who in a public speech hinted about the culprits responsible for the wanton act, speaking at a Muslim College in Puttalam in October 1991, in the aftermath of the impeachment against him sponsored by the UNP dissidents Lalith Athulatmudali and Gamini Dissanayake, reportedly said,

During the District Development Council elections in 1981, some of our party members took people from other parts to the North, created havoc and disrupted the elections in the North. If you wish to find out who burnt the priceless collection of books in the Jaffna library you have only to look at the faces of those opposing us”.

The above assertions of Prabanjana, to me who was an eye witness to the happenings in Jaffna including the library going up in flames, are baseless and unsubstantiated. The present generation has been fed on writings of this nature and made to believe that mobs, politicians and police officers were the culprits. All these assertions have to be critically looked at without bias to arrive at any reasonable conclusion as to Who burnt the Jaffna library”.

In the penultimate paragraph of Prabanjana’s article he has made an observation on the formal opening of the renovated library, an observation that will become increasingly significant as we go along. The narrator of Someetharan’s documentary has stated that the renovated library began to function without any formal opening as opposition grew to the Government’s and Municipal Council’s willingness to declare open the library”.

But Prabanjana, wittingly or unwittingly adds, There is however another version of this story relating to the canceled opening ceremony which the documentary fails to mention. Many a ‘Dalit’ activist has pointed out that the move to declare open the library faced strong opposition because the event was to be headed by the then Jaffna Mayor Sellan Kanthaiyah who was from an oppressed caste. It is said that those who belonged to the dominant caste in Jaffna could not tolerate the public library being declared open under the chairmanship of a ‘low caste’ man”,

The question that comes to my mind and should to any prudent person is: if the dominant caste in Jaffna (vellala) could not tolerate a ‘low caste’ man opening the renovated library, with what restraint would the ‘low caste’ non vellala community have for decades tolerated the existence of the library which was symbolic of the intellectual and social superiority of the vellalas? Did they bide their time and wait for an opportune moment to destroy this symbolic edifice of the Hindu aristocracy? It was the oppressed non vellala castes that comprised the bulk of the Prabahakaran led LTTE.

To this LTTE with its unquestionable caste foundation the destruction of the intellectual heritage preserved down the ages”, was of little or no consequence. In fact it was not too long ago that the library was the exclusive preserve of the Vellalas. There is reason to believe that Prabahakaran and his young followers imbued with Marxist thinking would have viewed the public library symbolic of the establishment — the intellectually and socially superior elite Hindu vellala aristocracy. This was indeed a major stumbling block to the forward march of ‘the boys’. They certainly could not have had any qualms even of destroying this symbol if it were to give a turbo-boost to their ambitions.

The Beginnings of LTTE Terrorism

The lies and dubious assertions – all of which can be countered by facts – repeated over and over again even in our not so prestigious parliament, by individuals who pose as intellectuals interested in the so-called ethnic question and by mercenary NGO’s have come to be believed without question. The propagandists of the LTTE undoubtedly got maximum mileage out of the burning of the library as people in Sri Lanka and abroad had been made to believe that it was the work of Sinhalese politicians, police officers and goons.

More importantly, the present generation believes or has been made to believe that the LTTE’s quest for a separate state of Eelam through a war characterized by terrorism was motivated solely by acts such as the burning of the library and the anti-tamil riots of 1983.

If I were to recount briefly from memory, sporadic acts of terrorism began to emerge particularly with the promulgation of the Republican Constitution of 1972. As far back as May 1972 attempts were made by militant youths to topple a key high-tension electricity tower and also kidnap the children of a Tamil cabinet minister, Chelliah Kumarasuriyar.

Organized Terrorism

Organized Terrorism began to emerge by the mid-seventies. Alfred Duraiappah was personally assassinated by Prabahakaran. Police officers including retired officers and police informants began to be brutally killed. Robberies of banks, co-operatives, petrol filling stations and even passenger bus collections had become the order of the day.

Before the end of the seventies the LTTE had advanced to become a well-knit terrorist outfit that was seeking world attention. The meticulous planning that went into the explosion of the Air Ceylon Avro aircraft on Sept. 7, 1978 showed that the ‘boys’ had come of age. Fortunately the plan misfired. The explosion that was planned to take place over the Galle Face Green when the ceremonies connected with the promulgation of the new constitution were taking place, in fact occurred before the Avro took off from Ratmalana. Had it exploded as planned it would certainly have hit the world headlines like the Lockerbie crash.

Another sensational act of terrorism in the same year, in April if I remember right, was the brutal killing after much torture of IP Bastiampillai, SI Perampalam, PS Balasingham and PCD Siriwardena at Murunkan. The first information was of four decomposing bodies received by the Intelligence Services Division (ISD) of the Police of which I was the Director at the time.

It was about this time, 1979 to be more precise, when I was the Director of Intelligence that I accompanied Brigadier ‘Bull’ Weeratunga to Jaffna. His mandate from President Jayewardene was ‘to eliminate terrorism from the peninsula’. But the militant youths who began to be hunted down fled to India where they continued their training by Indian and the PLO experts on terrorism. By 1981 most of the trained youths had returned to commit murders and robberies with impunity. Their ranks were also beginning to swell, with more youth enamored by the adventurous nature of the movement, joining it.

It was in this atmosphere that the government decided to hold the District Development Council (DDC) elections. The Jayewardene government believed that the strengthening of the state’s hold over the peninsula by holding elections and having a democratic peripheral administration would help to break the back of the Tigers. To the latter, who by then not only had the backing of India, but had announced to the world of their existence as a formidable group of ‘freedom fighters,’ it provided a challenge of a different nature.

Anton Balasingham who by then was firmly in the saddle as the mentor of Prabahakaran was to tell the ‘boys’ that under no circumstances should the government of J.R. Jayewardene be allowed to take political control of Jaffna. The Indira Gandhi government that had strained relations with JR was also interested in ensuring that the central government did not have control over Jaffna. India wished for a manipulable power set-up in the North of Sri Lanka. Indian intelligence, (RAW) – Research and Analysis Wing – had been given the task of disrupting the DDC elections. I shall later recall an incident where I had an encounter with a RAW agent during the elections in Jaffna.

Reaching maturity

It is indeed significant that when the eighties commenced the separatist movement of the Tigers had reached a high degree of maturity. Splinter groups had been eliminated and Prabahakaran who had built up an image as a strong and dynamic leader had become the supreme commander. Uma Maheswaran who believed that a separate state could be achieved by resorting to urban guerilla tactics had lost his appeal.

Prabahakaran firmly believed that a well planned multi-pronged approach was required. He had realized the need for a sound theoretical base that would appeal to the youth, the importance of the collection of funds and getting the support of the western world where there were Tamils in influential positions in many cities. Above all he was determined to make the world know that the LTTE had launched a liberation struggle for the oppressed Tamil people.

The shrewd Prabahakaran also realized that to win the sympathy of the West he had to demonstrate an affinity with the Catholic faith. By indirectly portraying the Vellalas as the protectors of the Hindu tradition he had successfully won over the Catholic bishops to his cause. Dr. Anthonypillai Stanislaus Balasingham, a Catholic Marxist theoretician married to an Australian radical had become

Prabahakaran’s main propaganda organizer. Pamphlets craftily authored by Balasingham even with a map demarcating the boundaries of the proposed Eelaam were being circulated in all western capitals. These were freely available even in Pettah, Wellawatta and Wattala.

Balasingham who authored a book entitled, Towards a Socialist Eelaam”, was also a member of the Communist Party of Britain. A keen student of world terrorist movements he had hardened himself as a brutal strategist not opposed to the killing of non — Christians for the furtherance of the movement he represented. Had he not died before the war ended in 2009, perhaps he would have successfully used his clout with powerful elements in Europe, America and Canada or even Australia to provide safe passage out of the country for Prabahakaran, Nadesan and others.

Importance of stability for Lanka’s economic recovery

July 24th, 2021

By Sugeeswara Senadhira/Daily News Courtesy NewsIn.Asia

Colombo, July 23: For steady progress and economic development of a country the two most important requirements are peace and political stability. Any uncertainty on the duration of a government adversely affects its policy implementation process as Sri Lanka witnessed many times during its post-independence history of seven decades, especially during the last ‘Yahapalana’ government.

Hence, the people of the country can heave a sigh of relief over Monday’s announcement by President Gotabaya Rajapaksa that he intends to contest and win the next Presidential Election. Speaking to media heads and publishers he said that in addition to the remaining three years of his tenure he has got another five years to implement his policies, clearly underlining his fullest confidence in winning the next Presidential Election in 2024.

Whatever the system of government – Monarchy, Executive Presidency, Prime Minister-headed Westminster system or a single-party regime – developing countries made rapid economic progress under strong rulers who had ensured stability of the government. Singapore, South Korea, Vietnam and Malaysia are such examples in Asia.

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa is yet to complete the second year of his government. Two years is not at all a long period in history. For a nation, it is only a fraction of time. However, for the new government, with long term plans for five years, the first two-year period was important. In that short span of time, the government commenced implementation of long-term development programs and significant achievements were made, despite the overwhelming economic challenges and unprecedented health problems that surfaced.

The government of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa succeeded in laying a solid foundation for the implementation of policies as envisaged in his Election Manifesto ‘Saubhagyaye Dekma’ or ‘Vistas of Prosperity and Splendor’.

The President’s biggest victory is his ability to give the people a sense of security and peace. The massive campaign to curb crime and drug smuggling and the steps taken to strengthen the law and order machinery have given people a sense of assurance and a feeling of security. There is confidence in the abilities of the police, ably assisted by the Security Forces, to maintain law and order. The people now feel that they could engage in their day-to-day activities without any fear. This was achieved in the first year in office.

Then came the unprecedented COVID-19 pandemic. Against this massive challenge the health sector is cooperating fully with the Security Forces and Police and has succeeded in containing the first two waves of the pandemic in a remarkable manner.

Despite the alarming magnitude of the third wave, the government succeeded in bringing it to a manageable level by its most-ambitious accelerated vaccination exercise. President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, with his methodical approach to problem-solving, deployed the Armed Forces to assist the health sector, thus ably supplementing the stretched health staff with disciplined soldiers to take over quarantine work as well as the planned vaccination program.

However, the spread was rapid in the third wave and the infected patients taking treatment in hospitals currently are a little over 20,000 and the number of deaths has crossed 3,800. Despite this alarming situation, the country can take pride in its robust public health service. Though the numbers were high and the virus stretched the health sector beyond its limits, this sector bravely batted on to get the situation under control. Initially a section of the people criticized the deployment of the Armed Forces. However, over the months, they acknowledged the positive role played by the Tri- Forces and the police.

Addressing the Buddhist Advisory Council last Friday, the President expressed confidence that all vaccines received since the arrival of the first batch of AstraZeneca vaccines on January 28, and the district-level vaccination programs implemented across the country will pave the way to completing the administration of two doses for persons who are over the age of 30 before the end of August.

It is also expected to complete the vaccination drive in Kandy District before the Dalada Perahera. The President pointed out that the World Health Organization (WHO) has commended the vaccination process in Sri Lanka. Sri Lanka has become one of the leading countries in South Asia in vaccination. The Maha Sangha commended the President and the government for their efforts to control COVID-19 from the outset.

One of the most significant steps taken by President Gotabaya Rajapaksa was to uplift the poorest of the poor families in the country by recruiting 100,000 unemployed youth from poor families in the most under-developed regions in the country. The selected youth were assigned to public sector offices to fill existing vacancies of unskilled workers. Thus 100,000 poorest of the poor families were assured of a monthly income, uplifting them to a higher step on the social ladder. At the same time, the unskilled youths were given an opportunity to learn skills so they would be equipped with capabilities for upward mobility.

Simultaneously, under the graduate employment scheme, more than 60,000 unemployed graduates were given employment. The recruited graduates are being provided with skills training for public sector employment.

In the Education sector alone several new programs were launched in the last year. They include upgrading 1,000 schools to National Level Schools, ensuring university admission for every student who qualifies at the GCE A/L Examination and a program to provide vocational training coupled with proficiency in the English language and Information Technology to those who do not qualify to pursue higher education.

Furthermore, nursing and teacher training diploma courses have been upgraded to degree level by elevating those institutes as fully-fledged universities.

The decision taken by President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to cut down unduly high salaries of some heads of institutions was highly appreciated by the people. One such example was the reduction of the salary of the Telecom Chairman from Rs. 2 million to Rs. 200,000. The government also gave instructions to follow the procurement procedures in a transparent manner and to halt unnecessary expenses for festivals at State Institutions.

The President displayed his strength to take decisions in the long-term interests of the country and the people, though some decisions brought an element of short-term unpopularity. His decision to ban chemical fertilizers came in for heavy criticism from some quarters. Despite that, he vowed not to change the decision taken in the interest of the health of the future generations. When he explained to the farmers’ representatives the measures to be taken by the government to promote the use of organic fertilizers, many district farmers’ representatives of 1.1 million farmers across the island, urged the President not to reverse the steps taken to use organic fertilizer.

The farmers’ representatives highlighted that it was their absolute duty and responsibility to return to the traditional farming methods and provide the people with a non-toxic healthy diet. They added that the citizenry will be grateful to the President for his decision to nourish a healthy next generation for Sri Lanka. The farmers’ representatives assured President Rajapaksa that all the farmers in the country would support the President in overcoming the challenge of going for agriculture based on organic fertilizer, as a team, for the benefit of all people in Sri Lanka, just like the country once faced the challenge of concluding the war against terrorism.

The President pointed out that this was not a sudden decision and this initiative was launched to fulfill a promise made in his ‘Vistas of Prosperity and Splendour’ policy statement, as the Presidential candidate. The previous governments on a number of occasions have tried to convert to organic agriculture. However, the President said that the reasons for their failure would be studied and the new program will be implemented rectifying those errors. Some people try to point this out as a reverse journey. But the President emphasized that the use of organic fertilizers, which is a new trend in the entire world, would take the country on a new path of agrarian economy.

President Rajapaksa selected the meeting with media heads for the important announcement of his intention to stand for a second term, perhaps because of his belief that as the Fourth Estate, the media has the responsibility of disseminating accurate and balanced information of the development policies and activities of the government which has embarked on a new journey towards prosperity.

More child labour claims against Bathiudeen family come to light…

July 24th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

COVID death toll moves up with 52 new victims

July 24th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Sri Lanka has registered 52 more COVID-19 related fatalities confirmed by the Director-General of Health Services on Friday (July 24).

The new development has pushed the official death toll from the virus outbreak in Sri Lanka to 4,054.

According to the data released by the Department of Government Information, the latest victims confirmed today include 26 males and 26 females.

Reportedly, among the victims are one male aged below 30 years, 12 victims aged between 30-59 years and 39 others aged 60 and above.

Sri Lanka records 1,737 coronavirus cases in total today

July 24th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

A total of 517 more people tested positive for COVID-19 today (July 24), bringing the daily count of positive cases reached 1,737.

According to the Government Information Department, 1,707 new cases reported today have been associated with the New Year cluster. Meanwhile, the remaining 30 were identified as arrivals from foreign countries.

The new development has brought Sri Lanka’s confirmed coronavirus cases tally to 294,850.

As per official data, as many as 266,665 patients who were infected with the virus have regained health so far while 24,183 are still under medical care at selected hospitals and treatment centres across the country.

The death toll from coronavirus now stands at 4,054.

The Chinese ‘Debt Trap’ Is a Myth – The narrative wrongfully portrays both Beijing and the developing countries it deals with.

July 23rd, 2021

By Deborah Brautigam and Meg Rithmire Courtesy The Atlantic

China, we are told, inveigles poorer countries into taking out loan after loan to build expensive infrastructure that they can’t afford and that will yield few benefits, all with the end goal of Beijing eventually taking control of these assets from its struggling borrowers. As states around the world pile on debt to combat the coronavirus pandemic and bolster flagging economies, fears of such possible seizures have only amplified.

Seen this way, China’s internationalization—as laid out in programs such as the Belt and Road Initiative—is not simply a pursuit of geopolitical influence but also, in some tellings, a weapon. Once a country is weighed down by Chinese loans, like a hapless gambler who borrows from the Mafia, it is Beijing’s puppet and in danger of losing a limb.

The prime example of this is the Sri Lankan port of Hambantota. As the story goes, Beijing pushed Sri Lanka into borrowing money from Chinese banks to pay for the project, which had no prospect of commercial success. Onerous terms and feeble revenues eventually pushed Sri Lanka into default, at which point Beijing demanded the port as collateral, forcing the Sri Lankan government to surrender control to a Chinese firm.

The Trump administration pointed to Hambantota to warn of China’s strategic use of debt: In 2018, former Vice President Mike Pence called it debt-trap diplomacy”—a phrase he used through the last days of the administration—and evidence of China’s military ambitions. Last year, erstwhile Attorney General William Barr raised the case to argue that Beijing is loading poor countries up with debt, refusing to renegotiate terms, and then taking control of the infrastructure itself.”

As Michael Ondaatje, one of Sri Lanka’s greatest chroniclers, once said, In Sri Lanka a well-told lie is worth a thousand facts.” And the debt-trap narrative is just that: a lie, and a powerful one.

Read: What happens when China leads the world

Our research shows that Chinese banks are willing to restructure the terms of existing loans and have never actually seized an asset from any country, much less the port of Hambantota. A Chinese company’s acquisition of a majority stake in the port was a cautionary tale, but it’s not the one we’ve often heard. With a new administration in Washington, the truth about the widely, perhaps willfully, misunderstood case of Hambantota Port is long overdue.

The city of Hambantota lies at the southern tip of Sri Lanka, a few nautical miles from the busy Indian Ocean shipping lane that accounts for nearly all of the ocean-borne trade between Asia and Europe, and more than 80 percent of ocean-borne global trade. When a Chinese firm snagged the contract to build the city’s port, it was stepping into an ongoing Western competition, though one the United States had largely abandoned.

It was the Canadian International Development Agency—not China—that financed Canada’s leading engineering and construction firm, SNC-Lavalin, to carry out a feasibility study for the port. We obtained more than 1,000 pages of documents detailing this effort through a Freedom of Information Act request. The study, concluded in 2003, confirmed that building the port at Hambantota was feasible, and supporting documents show that the Canadians’ greatest fear was losing the project to European competitors. SNC-Lavalin recommended that it be undertaken through a joint-venture agreement between the Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) and a private consortium” on a build-own-operate-transfer basis, a type of project in which a single company receives a contract to undertake all the steps required to get such a port up and running, and then gets to operate it when it is.

The Canadian project failed to move forward, mostly because of the vicissitudes of Sri Lankan politics. But the plan to build a port in Hambantota gained traction during the rule of the Rajapaksas—Mahinda Rajapaksa, who served as president from 2005 through 2015, and his brother Gotabaya, the current president and former minister of defense—who grew up in Hambantota. They promised to bring big ships to the region, a call that gained urgency after the devastating 2004 tsunami pulverized Sri Lanka’s coast and the local economy.

We reviewed a second feasibility report, produced in 2006 by the Danish engineering firm Ramboll, that made similar recommendations to the plans put forward by SNC-Lavalin, arguing that an initial phase of the project should allow for the transport of non-containerized cargo—oil, cars, grain—to start bringing in revenue, before expanding the port to be able to handle the traffic and storage of traditional containers. By then, the port in the capital city of Colombo, a hundred miles away and consistently one of the world’s busiest, had just expanded and was already pushing capacity. The Colombo port, however, was smack in the middle of the city, while Hambantota had a hinterland, meaning it offered greater potential for expansion and development.

Read: The undoing of China’s economic miracle

To look at a map of the Indian Ocean region at the time was to see opportunity and expanding middle classes everywhere. Families in India and across Africa were demanding more consumer goods from China. Countries such as Vietnam were growing rapidly and would need more natural resources. To justify its existence, the port in Hambantota would have to secure only a fraction of the cargo that went through Singapore, the world’s busiest transshipment port.

Armed with the Ramboll report, Sri Lanka’s government approached the United States and India; both countries said no. But a Chinese construction firm, China Harbor Group, had learned about Colombo’s hopes, and lobbied hard for the project. China Eximbank agreed to fund it, and China Harbor won the contract.

This was in 2007, six years before Xi Jinping introduced the Belt and Road Initiative. Sri Lanka was still in the last, and bloodiest, phase of its long civil war, and the world was on the verge of a financial crisis. The details are important: China Eximbank offered a $307 million, 15-year commercial loan with a four-year grace period, offering Sri Lanka a choice between a 6.3 percent fixed interest rate or one that would rise or fall depending on LIBOR, a floating rate. Colombo chose the former, conscious that global interest rates were trending higher during the negotiations and hoping to lock in what it thought would be favorable terms. Phase I of the port project was completed on schedule within three years.

For a conflict-torn country that struggled to generate tax revenue, the terms of the loan seemed reasonable. As Saliya Wickramasuriya, the former chairman of the SLPA, told us, To get commercial loans as large as $300 million during the war was not easy.” That same year, Sri Lanka also issued its first international bond, with an interest rate of 8.25 percent. Both decisions would come back to haunt the government.

Finally, in 2009, after decades of violence, Sri Lanka’s civil war came to an end. Buoyed by the victory, the government embarked on a debt-financed push to build and improve the country’s infrastructure. Annual economic growth rates climbed to 6 percent, but Sri Lanka’s debt burden soared as well.

In Hambantota, instead of waiting for phase 1 of the port to generate revenue as the Ramboll team had recommended, Mahinda Rajapaksa pushed ahead with phase 2, transforming Hambantota into a container port. In 2012, Sri Lanka borrowed another $757 million from China Eximbank, this time at a reduced, post-financial-crisis interest rate of 2 percent. Rajapaksa took the liberty of naming the port after himself.

By 2014, Hambantota was losing money. Realizing that they needed more experienced operators, the SLPA signed an agreement with China Harbor and China Merchants Group to have them jointly develop and operate the new port for 35 years. China Merchants was already operating a new terminal in the port in Colombo, and China Harbor had invested $1.4 billion in Colombo Port City, a lucrative real-estate project involving land reclamation. But while the lawyers drew up the contracts, a political upheaval was taking shape.

Rajapaksa called a surprise election for January 2015 and in the final months of the campaign, his own health minister, Maithripala Sirisena, decided to challenge him. Like opposition candidates in Malaysia, the Maldives, and Zambia, the incumbent’s financial relations with China and allegations of corruption made for potent campaign fodder. To the country’s shock, and perhaps his own, Sirisena won.

Steep payments on international sovereign bonds, which comprised nearly 40 percent of the country’s external debt, put Sirisena’s government in dire fiscal straits almost immediately. When Sirisena took office, Sri Lanka owed more to Japan, the World Bank, and the Asian Development Bank than to China. Of the $4.5 billion in debt service Sri Lanka would pay in 2017, only 5 percent was because of Hambantota. The Central Bank governors under both Rajapaksa and Sirisena do not agree on much, but they both told us that Hambantota, and Chinese finance in general, was not the source of the country’s financial distress.

There was also never a default. Colombo arranged a bailout from the International Monetary Fund, and decided to raise much-needed dollars by leasing out the underperforming Hambantota Port to an experienced company—just as the Canadians had recommended. There was not an open tender, and the only two bids came from China Merchants and China Harbor; Sri Lanka chose China Merchants, making it the majority shareholder with a 99-year lease, and used the $1.12 billion cash infusion to bolster its foreign reserves, not to pay off China Eximbank.

Read: How Xi Jinping blew it

Before the port episode, Sri Lanka could sink into the Indian Ocean and most of the Western world wouldn’t notice,” Subhashini Abeysinghe, research director at Verité Research, an independent Colombo-based think tank, told us. Suddenly, the island nation featured prominently in foreign-policy speeches in Washington. Pence voiced worry that Hambantota could become a forward military base” for China.

Yet Hambantota’s location is strategic only from a business perspective: The port is cut into the coast to avoid the Indian Ocean’s heavy swells, and its narrow channel allows only one ship to enter or exit at a time, typically with the aid of a tugboat. In the event of a military conflict, naval vessels stationed there would be proverbial fish in a barrel.

The notion of debt-trap diplomacy” casts China as a conniving creditor and countries such as Sri Lanka as its credulous victims. On a closer look, however, the situation is far more complex. China’s march outward, like its domestic development, is probing and experimental, a learning process marked by frequent adjustment. After the construction of the port in Hambantota, for example, Chinese firms and banks learned that strongmen fall and that they’d better have strategies for dealing with political risk. They’re now developing these strategies, getting better at discerning business opportunities and withdrawing where they know they can’t win. Still, American leaders and thinkers from both sides of the aisle give speeches about China’s modern-day colonialism.”

Over the past 20 years, Chinese firms have learned a lot about how to play in an international construction business that remains dominated by Europe: Whereas China has 27 firms among the top 100 global contractors, up from nine in 2000, Europe has 37, down from 41. The U.S. has seven, compared to 19 two decades ago.

Chinese firms are not the only companies to benefit from Chinese-financed projects. Perhaps no country was more alarmed by Hambantota than India, the regional giant that several times rebuffed Sri Lanka’s appeals for investment, aid, and equity partnerships. Yet an Indian-led business, Meghraj, joined the U.K.-based engineering firm Atkins Limited in an international consortium to write the long-term plan for Hambantota Port and for the development of a new business zone. The French firms Bolloré and CMA-CGM have partnered with China Merchants and China Harbor in port developments in Nigeria, Cameroon, and elsewhere.

The other side of the debt-trap myth involves debtor countries. Places such as Sri Lanka—or, for that matter, Kenya, Zambia, or Malaysia—are no stranger to geopolitical games. And they’re irked by American views that they’ve been so easily swindled. As one Malaysian politician remarked to us, speaking on condition of anonymity to discuss how Chinese finance featured in that country’s political drama, Can’t the U.S. State Department tell the difference between campaign rhetoric that our opponents are slaves to China and actually being slaves to China?”

The events that led to a Chinese company’s acquisition of a majority stake in a Sri Lankan port reveal a great deal about how our world is changing. China and other countries are becoming more sophisticated in bargaining with one another. And it would be a shame if the U.S. fails to learn alongside them.Deborah Brautigam is Bernard L. Schwartz Professor of International Political Economy at the School of Advanced International Studies at Johns Hopkins University

Protecting whose privileges are more important in a democratic society. Is it those of Politicians or citizens?

July 23rd, 2021

Dr.Sudath Gunasekara. Mahanuwara,

The answer is very simple and straight. That is the privileges and rights of the citizen are above the politicians. The purpose of founding a State is for the protection of the natural rights of people, in the society. In a modern democracy sovereignty is in the people. Politicians are elected by the people to make legislation and run the government in order to carry out its programmes and policies to fulfill the aspirations of the people. As such citizens are the masters. To that extent politicians in theory are servants of the people and not masters as the politicians in our country think. Therefore in a democratic society politician cannot have special privileges over and above those of the masters and calling to stop detention of MPs for alleged criminal offences and protection of their privileges is unrealistic and unethical. Treating politicians like any other citizen under law will clean up the Parliament of this type of criminal elements and make it the supreme legislature of the country, as its conventional definition stands, sans criminals and rogues.

Allowing such undesirable elements to remain in Parliament seriously infringes on the rights of the people and as such to give special privileges to members of Parliament or in any other political institution as Ranil calls for is undemocratic, unethical and illegal. It is particularly so with regard to anti-social politicians who are in jail  for convicted offenses or remanded for alleged crimes, like Rishard Badurdeen and Ranjan Ramanayaka or any other. In reality the MP ship of such politicians should be first, terminated immediately and second they should be debarred from entering politics or holding any public post in future by removing their civil rights for life. Such action will clear the political stable for future generations.

But sadly the situation gradually changed after 1956. It got worsened after 1977, that opened the door for all sort of politicians like Ranil Wickramasinha, Ravi Karaunanayaka, Malik Samarawikrama Mervin Silva, Rishard Badurdeen, Hakeem, Hisbulla, Wignesvaran,  Rajita Senaratna, Duminda Silva, Champika Ranawaka, to name a few noted characters and many others who claim for more privileges, in addition to all unlimited princely packages like enhanced salaries,  many other allowances even for attending Parliament and enormous fringe benefits such as Pensions after five years for them and their spouses and five more family members as Private Secretary, Coordinating Sect, Public relation Officer, and Media Officer given by JR to these looters, appointed violating all recruitment procedures  to public service. Most of these people come to politics to make money with Government contracts, Permits for timber, sand, rubble, liquor bars, filling stations and government jobs. In addition they get luxury official vehicles and duty free Vehicle permits once in three years (They all sell these permits for 20,30 40 millions although they are meant to be used for official duties in their jobs. You can add to these privileges which I have not included.

 In addition to the 196 puppet MPP who are said to have been elected on a district basis on proportional representation basis with another political gimmick called the preference vote. None of these 196 represents any electorate. As such today people don’t have an MP of their own. Furthermore these District MPP are people nominated by the Party leadership, often parachute’s from outside the electorate who don’t have even their vote in the District. None of the MPs represents a given electorate, Sometime even people from far corners of the Island are also nominated. For example a person from Hambantota can contest a seat in Kurunegala or even Anuradhapura. In addition there are also 29 so-called National list nominees of the party leaders provided by the Constitution to accommodate their henchmen, family members, class mates, friends and people who contribute to their party funds. Most of them end up as powerful Cabinet Ministers. The funniest thing about them is they are not representatives of the people. You can just imagine how representative democracy operates in this country.

 It is for this bunch of fake representative , who don’t represent any given area or a seat or people, Ranil is asking for more privileges as if the present overflowing privileges are not enough. Just think as to how the mind of this politician who had been the PM in  this country for several times often by accident and above all who has played the leading role in two Central Bank robberies in this country by overriding the president poor Sirisena in  2015 and 2016.

 Once these privileges are given to these looters it is not going to stop there. It is like giving a razor to a monkey. It will trickle down to Provincial Council and Pradesiya Sabha Council levels as well. That is nearly another 15,000 politicians or more, are bleeding the national coffers with no service to the people or the country for the money spent. They are maintained only to collect the vote for those who go to Parliament.

 As such a country that was at the peak of prosperity in 1948 is already at rock bottom, of chronic poverty and debt being only second to Afghanistan, a land locked barren desert. Where are we being driven blindfolded by these politicians together with an overloaded public service (1 public servant for every 16 people and I politician for every 2235 men who together consume 85 % of the national tax income. This country has the highest per capita politicians and public servants in the world.

 To my knowledge no country in the world provides such enormous privileges and facilities to their politicians or public servants like this.

This situation was quite different in the early days. Because politicians at that time were of a different class and a different breed. Luxuries of Colombo life were not something new to them as they were well to do people in their electorates who got in to politics mostly for prestige. Unlike the present day politicians they never asked for new vehicles, big salaries or allowances or official quarters in Colombo.  For example even in early 1960s the allowance (Note it was not a salary) of an MP was R 500, a junior Minister was 750 and a Minister got only 1000. Only the Governor General Prime Minister and the Chief justice had official cars. At that time no politician or state officer was given official vehicles. They were given a loan to purchase a vehicle. No driver, no fuel. For official travelling they were paid a mileage allowance. In fact most of the politicians either came in their own vehicles or by train to attend Parliament. Just to mention few names, (which I give below) who have left behind a name and an indelible mark in history for work they did for the country and their electorates under that system. They all represented a particular electorate unlike today. 

D.S Senanayaka, C.W.W.Kannangara. S.w.R.D. Bandaranayaka, Wilmot  A. Perera. R.G.Senanayaka. H.B Rambukwella (Disava)  Mrs Sirimavo Bndaranayaka, D.A.Rajapaksa, R.Premadasa, T.B ilangaratna, Hector Kobbekaduwa, M.B.W.Mediwaka, M.D Banda, H.B.Wanninayaka, I.M.R.Iriyagolla, Philip Gunawardhana, C.P. De  Silva, Maitiipala Senanayaka, Lalith Atulat mudali and Gamini Disanayaka. Of the present day politicians the only name I would include in this list is Mahinda Rajapasa, for three things he did namely, defeating the 30 year old LTTE,  terrorism, the countrywide first class carpeted road network (after Governor Henry Ward 1865 who did the main road network all over the Island) and Sanda Hiru   Seya at  Anuradhapura, are few such names worth mentioning. All these people have left their own indelible mark in their service to the country and the people. But all others were only mere passengers on board in the respective Governments.

But in our system inherited from the West operating in the post-independent political culture, particularly after 1977 it had been just the opposite. Here in this country people’s sovereignty ends immediately after an election. Once the politicians are elected they become the masters. Thereafter they become Mantriituma and Amathi tuma mostly alienated from the voters for five years, overnight. We all know what happens there after, until the next election. All privileges and the control over state resources and public servants are at their command to serve their personal agendas. The real masters, the people, suffer at the other end   with spiraling cost of living, poverty and social disabilities due to absence of good governance by their elected representatives, most of them migrate to Colombo or the nearby towns and most of their time they live in Colombo after the elections enjoying the luxuries of modern life including educating their children in big schools, only day dreams for the voters.

The people who get disgusted with the politicians get another bunch of rouges elected expecting a change for betterment in their hopes and expectations But the new set always become worse than the predecessors. The vicious circle goes on and on. It never ends. This is what really happened in this country since 1948. This is the Sri Lankan political culture.

It is in this appalling and ridiculous backdrop Ranil is now crying for more privileges for the 226 in the Parliament

I am compelled to ask this question from the public as Ranil Wickramasinha, who has called for protecting the privilege of Members of Parliament as former Prime Minister who has ruined the age old UNP presently in Parliament as the National list MP accorded to him by his followers as a gift for burying the 74 year old UNP and not for any service he has rendered to this country or the people as a politician who has enjoyed the privileges of Prime minister, even by accident, for five short spells.

In his speech in Parliament under reference he has referred to the British constitutional theorist Thomas Erskyne May’s seminal work on parliamentary procedure. Wickremesinghe said: Erskyne May has said attempts to influence members in their conduct by threat is a breach of parliamentary privilege. So this is intimidation of a member which violates the privilege of the house. Where did Erskyne May, in his wisdom, advised the Parliament to keep criminals and rogues in Parliament with impunity. Can Ranil give at least one such instant? Did he know that Kyne’s venerated thesis that was considered the ‘Sumnum Bonum of liberal economic policy immediately after the second World war period it was later (as early as 1958)   heavily contradicted by John Kenneth Galbraith in 1958 in his classic The Affluent Society”

Isn’t it a tragedy for a Sri Lankan politician to quote from a British constitutional theorist of 1940s to substantiate his argument without being able to quote from a native authority who shined as a national leader during its 2500 years of glorious history? His quotation clearly demonstrates the poverty of present day leaders on their own heritage and the servility and colonial mentality these Kalusuddhas still carry in their empty heads.  Isn’t this poverty of philosophy that ails the heads of our politicians, the biggest tragedy why we cannot advance as a new Nation while countries like Korea, Singapore (an Island port city only 25,000 reclaimed land from the sea) and Israel a virtual desert who were lagging behind us as shanties, when we were the second developed nation in Asia by 1948 now have become economic giants within few decades since 1960 s. As for me I put the entire blame on our visionless and unpatriotic politicians who are supposed to have mishandled this nation for this tragedy.

Open Letter seeking clarification: Yasmin Sooka & EU Funding for ITJP-Sri Lanka via Foundation for Human Rights South Africa

July 23rd, 2021

Shenali D Waduge

16 July 2021
Ms. Fiona Knab-Lunny
European Commission
MEMBER OF CABINET
+32 (0) 2 29 60220
Email: fiona.knab-lunny@ec.europa.eu 
cc: cab-borrell-fontelles-contact@ec.europa.eu 

Dear Ms. Fiona Knab-Lunny

Open Letter seeking clarification: Yasmin Sooka & EU Funding for ITJP-Sri Lanka via Foundation for Human Rights South Africa

This email letter is to seek clarification and appropriate action by you with regard to Yasmin Sooka former Executive Director of Foundation for Human Rights who via this EU-Funded entity created for the people of South Africa, was administering an entity called International Truth & Justice Project-Sri Lanka and issuing more reports against Sri Lanka than the work she was paid to do by EU for FHR-South Africa. 

The primary question is did EU sanction Yasmin Sooka to create ITJP-Sri Lanka under FHR-South Africa? If so, can you explain why an EU funded project for South Africa should plug a project that is anti-Sri Lanka? Sri Lanka & South Africa are located in two different continents.

Yasmin Sooka was an EU employee in 2001 & became the Executive Director of the Foundation for Human Rights South Africa (formed by EU-South African Govt in 1996)

The Foundation is funded by EU & Belgium & receives funding from Ireland CARE, UN bodies & even American Foundation. The foundation’s scope of work is SOUTH AFRICA not Sri Lanka.

Her position as Executive Director of FHR-South Africa ended in September 2019 but her position as Director ITJP-SL continues – is she still being paid by EU via FHR & why?

How can a EU funded South African human rights project administer another project (International Truth & Justice Project-Sri Lanka since 2014) that has nothing to do with South Africa or South Africans? 

If EU is funding human rights initiatives in South Africa via the Foundation for Human Rights who allowed ITJP to be administered through the Foundation for Human Rights? 

If the EU paid for Sooka to function as Executive Director of FHR did the EU also pay for her to function as Director ITJPSL within the FHR? 

Is this funding approved by EU tax payers? (2 salaries?)

Was EU funding for FHR-South Africa, used for ITJP-Sri Lanka with or without EU knowledge by Yasmin Sooka? 

Is the EU aware that Yasmin Sooka is/was Executive Director of FHR while also being head of ITJP-SL?  http://www.itjpsl.com

If EU is not funding ITJP(SL) which is administered within FHR why is EU allowing ITJP-SL to be administered through FHR-South Africa? 

https://www.fhr-mirror.org.za/?ccm_paging_p_b2194=3

https://itjpsl.com

Though Sooka relinquished duties as Executive Director of FHR in September 2019, the ITJPSL reports on Sri Lanka has only increased. Is FHR really involved in South Africa or churning reports against Sri Lanka via ITJPSL?

From 2014-2021 (7 years), the ITJPSL and Sooka has issued a record breaking 164 reports on Sri Lanka in English, Tamil & Sinhalese. How many reports has she issued on South Africa? South Africans should start counting!

What is the connection with EU funded FHR & ITJP(SL) Sri Lanka?  

https://www.fhr.org.za(put a search for the name ITJPSL on Foundation for Human Rightswebsite – all that appears is sorry, but nothing matched your search items”)  

If FHR website does not mention ITJPSL – how can ITJP-SL on its website claim that it is being administered by FHR & its Executive Director Sooka? 

(pl note that since 2021 the ITJPSL introduction has been changed. Below a screen shot of previous introduction is given as proof)

As per Sigrid Rausing Trust website from 2014 to March 2019 the Sigrid Rausing Trust has given £471,500 to ITJP (Sri Lanka) and a further £300,000 from 1stApril 2019 to 2020. But the Trust’s NewsStories from 2013 to 2020 does not cover a single story on Sri Lanka.   

Highlighting some of her biased & controversial reports via ITJP-SL

·     ITJP-SL 2014 report gave 40 selected cases most of whom were former LTTE illegal combatants seeking asylum in UK. This report was funded by the British Foreign Office through the Bar Human Rights Committee of England & Wales.

·     In June 2018 Yasmin Sooka & ITJP-SL submitted a list of 351 missing persons to the Office of Missing Persons Sri Lanka (inspite of Sooka & ITJP claiming 40000-200,000 dead/missing in Sri Lanka’s conflict) 

Her association with other anti-Sri Lanka campaigns 

·     Advisory Council Member of Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace & Justice along with anti-SL documentary maker Callum MaCrae of Channel 4 UK. 

·     2013 – she was a guest speaker at Global Tamil Forum (proscribed as LTTE front by the Government of Sri Lanka in April 2014). She was introduced as ‘comrade’. 

·     2013 – Yasmin Sooka called upon Commonwealth Heads of Government to boycott CHOGM in Sri Lanka & praised Canada for boycotting. This is not how a public figure presumably unbiased conducts herself.

·     2014 – Yasmin Sooka joined a petition (2ndsignatory) by Sri Lanka Campaign for Peace & Justice http://dbsjeyaraj.com/dbsj/archives/28557

·     2014 – Yasmon Sooka endorsed another report against Sri Lanka http://cja.org/downloads/Crimes%20Against%20Humanity%20in%20Sri%20Lanka_s%20Northern%20Province.pdf

·     2014 March – Yasmin Sooka writes an article to the Mail & Guardian about ‘White Vans” – she has never even landed in Sri Lanka but she cannot name anyone who she claims to have ‘disappeared’ http://mg.co.za/article/2014-03-31-sri-lanka-living-in-fear-of-the-white-vans.

ITJPSL had to make an apology to Brig. Ravindra Dias for wrongfully using his picture claiming it to be Maj. Gen. Suresh Salley, the Director of State Intelligence Service. Maj. Gen. Suresh Salley is taking legal action against Sooka separately!

To cover up this embarrassment, her outfit is now targeting patriotic diaspora groups and singling out individuals figuring prominently to safeguard the sovereignty of Sri Lanka. 

As a public figure and the manner Yasmin Sooka has been issuing reports against Sri Lanka without even visiting Sri Lanka, we have every right to raise questions as to why she is so particular about only Sri Lanka over & above every other country in the world, including the countries she serves as Member of Truth Commissions etc. We find this concern” for Sri Lanka by her very puzzling and her actions questionable. She became involved with Sri Lanka in 2010 as one of former UNSG Ban Ki Moon’s personally selected 3 panel members for his personally commissioned report on Sri Lanka after the conflict ended in 2009. This report was leaked to the public in 2011 and in 2013 became referred to as a ‘comrade’ by a pro-LTTE Group designated and banned as a LTTE front in 2014. 

Be that as it may, the EU funds global initiatives using EU tax payers money. It is appropriate for the Ministers in charge to see if funds sent by EU for social initiatives in South Africa have been used against Sri Lanka as well as answer how the FHR-South Africa funded by EU can operate an entity called ITJP-SL of which Sooka is head when FHR-South Africa website has no records of ITJP-SL or links to it. 

Can you please be kind enough to respond to any of the questions raised, or in the least commence an inquiry to ascertain the validity of the questions posed to you in this mail. We find it very strange that an international public figure who has never been to Sri Lanka and was involved with Sri Lanka only after 2010, could hate Sri Lanka so much to use her position in a manner that citizens of Sri Lanka find hurtful in view of the conclusions she promotes internationally using her public office. 

Therefore, we would like the EU to make clear of the links between FHR-South Africa & ITJP-Sri Lanka an explanation as to why EU would fund ITJP-SL within the FHR-SA and why FHR-SA does not carry any mention or link to ITJP-SL in its records/website yet ITJP-SL claims it is administered via FHR-SA with Yasmin Sooka functioning as Executive Director of FHR from 2001-2019(Sept) and Director of ITJP-SL from 2014 to present (based on the reports)

Thanking you

Shenali D Waduge

Sri Lanka 

ERASING THE EELAM VICTORY Part 20 C14

July 23rd, 2021

KAMALIKA PIERIS

(Continued from C13)

MUTUAL ASSISTANCE IN CRIMINAL MATTERS ACT,  (2018)

In May 2018, the government gazetted sweeping amendments to the Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Act, No. 25 of 2002.  This amendment  became Act no 24 of 2018.

CA Chandraprema has commented at length on the Bill..The purpose of the original Act, said Chandraprema, was to facilitate the provision of mutual assistance from foreign countries in the location of witnesses or suspects, the service of documents on such persons, the examination of witnesses, the obtaining of evidence, the execution of requests for search and seizure, the temporary transfer of persons in custody to appear as a witness, facilitation of the personal appearance of witnesses, the location of the proceeds of any criminal activity, and mutual enforcement of orders for the forfeiture or freezing of property, etc.

Requests for assistance were to be made to the ‘Central Authority’ in Sri Lanka by the appropriate authorities in the countries that come under the ambit of this Act.The Secretary to the Ministry of Justice was to be the ‘Central Authority’ for the purposes of that Act. The Central Authority is also enjoined to ensure prompt action in respect of all requests from abroad and to have a dedicated unit to maintain a proper system to manage incoming and outgoing requests.

 The original Act applied only to specified Commonwealth countries and non-Commonwealth countries which have signed the relevant agreements with Sri Lanka  but the  2018 amendments extend the scope of the Act to all countries that have signed any international convention relating to a criminal matter to which Sri Lanka has become a party.  Furthermore, while the original Act applied only to States, the amendments  bring  in international organizations as well.

The amending Bill seeks to lay the country completely open to all foreign states and organizations, when it comes to granting  assistance in investigations and judicial proceedings, connected with criminal matters,  observed Chandraprema.

This Bill  also seeks to make documentary evidence obtained in a foreign country admissible in a judicial proceeding. And to make admissible evidence led from a foreign country through video conferencing technology.

 Another new feature in the amending Bill is that the Central Authority in Sri Lanka (the Secretary to the Ministry of Justice) can authorize any other officer not below the rank of a Senior Assistant Secretary, to act on his behalf and the Central Authority can also designate ‘competent authorities’ (which can be a law enforcement authority) who will process information to requests as directed by the Central Authority.

 Requests can also be forwarded by electronic means directly to the relevant competent authority through the appropriate authority of a foreign country or organization. The competent authority is then obliged to immediately proceed to implement the request after forwarding a copy of the relevant request to the Central Authority.

The Central Authority and the officers holding delegated authority from him including the competent authorities are to maintain strict confidentiality with regard to requests made under this Act. If confidentiality cannot be upheld, the appropriate authority of a specified country or specified organization will be informed and this foreign body will then determine whether the request should nevertheless be executed.

Any person who fails to comply with this confidentiality requirement commits an offence and the High Court of the Province can impose a fine on that person ranging from a minimum of Rs. 100,000 to a maximum of Rs. 5 million. The Right to Information law will therefore, not apply to anything done under this amended Act.

These sweeping amendments to the 2002 Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Act are being brought in a specific context. This government has already established the Office of Missing Persons Act No: 5 of 2018 and Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearances Act.

It is in that context that we have to view the changes contemplated to the Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Act, No. 25 of 2002. On the one hand the number of foreign countries coming within the ambit of the original Act has been expanded to include every country that is a party to an international Convention relating to mutual assistance in criminal matters, to which Sri Lanka has become a party – which automatically includes the countries in the  International Convention for the Prevention of Enforced Disappearances.

Furthermore, the amendment will make the Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Act, applicable to organizations associated with combating international crime as well  and this will automatically  take Sri Lanka to the International Criminal Court.

The  actions stipulated in  the International Convention for the Prevention of Enforced Disappearances cannot  be implemented without the facilities that are created through the proposed amendment to the Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Act, No. 25 of 2002.

In view of the dangers posed by this proposed amendment to the 2002 Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Act, several petitioners including Admiral Sarath Weerasekera and Ven. Maduruoye Dhammissara ,went before the Supreme Court asking for a determination that the Bill before Parliament was unconstitutional.

 One of the provisions in the proposed amendment which engaged the attention of the Supreme Court was Clause 5(3) which stipulated that when requests are forwarded by foreign nations or organizations by electronic means directly to the relevant competent authority, the latter is mandatorily required to immediately proceed to implement the request. (The word used was ‘shall; which denotes a mandatory requirement).

The Supreme Court observed that Section 6 of the original Act of 2002 obliges the Central Authority to refuse a request if it violates the Constitution, but that no such restrictions have been put in place to regulate the conduct of the Competent Authority who is to be appointed by the Central Authority under the terms of the proposed amendment.

The SC observed that this omission carries significant constitutional implications because Clause 5 (3) of the Bill makes it mandatory for the Competent Authority to directly receive and immediately proceed to implement requests from overseas and furthermore, this is given further impetus by Clause 5 (4) of the Bill which only requires the Competent Authority to inform the Central Authority by forwarding a copy of the relevant request before he responds to it. Therefore, the SC determined that Clause 5(3) is inconsistent with Article 12 (1) of the Constitution which guarantees that all persons are equal before the law and are entitled to the equal protection of the law. The SC held that it is imperative that the Competent Authority have the power under Section 6 of the original Act to refuse a request. This would enable both the Competent Authority and the Central Authority to filter requests.

The SC also made a reference to Clause 5B in the proposed amendment which went as follows: “Nothing in this Act shall prevent the Central Authority from directing a competent authority to spontaneously transmit the information requested relating to a criminal matter to an appropriate authority of a specified country or specified organization on the assurance of reciprocity and on such conditions as may be necessary for the purposes of confidentiality.”

In this regard, the SC held that to the extent that clause 5B sets an exception to the normal process, there must be a corresponding justification or a circumstance which warrants the invocation of clause 5B. The clause in its present form permits digression from the normal process in an ad hoc manner and thereby violates Article 12 (1) of the Constitution. The SC stated that if Clause 5B is amended reserving it as a response to exigencies, this inconsistency would cease to exist.

The question that we have to ask ourselves is where we stand now after the Supreme Court determination on the Bill to amend the Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Act, No. 25 of 2002.  With the SC determination on the proposed amendment to the Mutual Assistance in Criminal Matters Act, No. 25 of 2002 which will enable it to be passed with suitable amendments, we see that the Yahapalana government’s war crimes project is now ready for take-off.

 If there was opposition to having foreign judges to hear war crimes cases, that problem has been solved by having a mechanism whereby members of the armed forces can be tried overseas and even if the person concerned is living in Sri Lanka where he can be requested by a foreign country to stand trial in that country. The only way to prevent what the government has been angling for is through political action concluded Chandraprema.  ( end of Section 20C  , series continues)

ERASING THE EELAM VICTORY Part 20 C13

July 23rd, 2021

KAMALIKA PIERIS

 (continued from C12)

UN CONVENTION ON ENFORCED DISAPPEARANCES (2018)

Sri Lanka signed the UN International Convention for the Protection of all Persons from Enforced Disappearances (ICPPED) in December 2015 and in March 2018 passed a Bill to incorporate its provisions into Sri Lanka law. The Bill was passed, without amendments, amidst disturbances from the Joint Opposition.

The bill was withdrawn twice by the government, due to protests from the Maha Sangha and the Joint Opposition. They observed that all matters that relate to an enforced disappearance,   such as abduction, illegal confinement, murder and the illegal disposal of dead bodies  are adequately covered by the Penal Code and the existing criminal law in Sri Lanka. 

Many countries have kept away from this Convention altogether, because of its intrusive nature, observed critics,  Australia, Britain, Canada, China, Russia and Pakistan and United States have not signed this Convention. Denmark, Finland, Ireland, India, Norway and Sweden signed but never ratified it.  Sri Lanka was therefore signing a convention which other countries, including  countries which  sponsored resolutions against us in the UNHRC, had refused to sign, observed  critics.

In Sri Lanka however,   ambassadors of several EU nations had been present at the meeting held in December 2016, to finalize the new Bill. Ambassadors of France, European Union, Netherlands, Germany, Italy, Romania and the British High Commissioner had been present.

Critics point out that the proposed law is an attempt to subject our armed forces to an international court by rephrasing ‘war crimes’ as ‘disappearances’. The use of the word ‘disappearances’ makes this look like an attempt to trace missing persons. But the purpose of this Bill is not to trace missing persons but to hunt down and prosecute those who won the war. Any state which has signed this Convention can get a Sri Lankan extradited to their country and try him in court.

 The only ‘disappeared’ persons, whose cases will be dealt with under this proposed law, will be those of the LTTE. LTTE combatants who have either died in battle or fled overseas continue to be labeled as having ‘disappeared’. The armed forces have already categorized the thousands of soldiers who disappeared as ‘assumed to be dead’.

Article 2 of the Convention makes it applicable only to State Actors which means that this is aimed only at the armed forces and terrorist movements like the LTTE are expressly excluded. No action will be taken by any foreign country against LTTE, because ICPPED does not have any provision to include non-State actors within its ambit. Not only are Non-state actors, like the LTTE expressly excluded from this legislation, they are protected as well. This Bill is designed to protect future terrorists said critics.

Under Article 10 of the ICPPED any person suspected of causing enforced disappearances can be arrested in the home state or any other member state, regardless of whether there is an extradition treaty or not.

After the arrest, the individual concerned can under Article 11 be a) prosecuted in that country b) extradited to another country) or handed over to an international criminal tribunal.  if that foreign country happens to be a member of the International Criminal Court, then the person charged can be handed over to the ICC. This means that now no one can say that Sri Lanka cannot be handed over to the ICC simply because it has not signed the Rome Statute.

Articles 10, 11 and 13 of the Convention read together with Clauses 8 and 21 of the  Sri Lanka Act means that foreign countries which are members of the International Convention will have complete jurisdiction over Sri Lankans who are alleged to have been involved in causing enforced disappearances in Sri Lanka.

Clauses 20(1) & (2) of this Bill read together with Clause 14 confirms that  this law will have retrospective effect, which means it can be used for the Eelam war. Within three months of a person becoming aware that he has still not received news of what happened to someone 10 or even 20 years ago, that person can make an application to the High Court under Clause 20, asking for relief.

To charge a person abroad, it is necessary to extradite him, and for this, laws are necessary.  Sri Lanka has its Extradition Act No. 8 of 1977. Therefore Clause 23of the Enforced Disappearance Act   says the provisions of this Act shall have effect notwithstanding anything to the contrary in any other written law and accordingly in the event of any inconsistency or conflict between the provisions of this Act and such other written law, the provisions of this Act shall prevail.” 

This means this Act will override all other written law  and the Extradition Act No. 8 of 1977 becomes ineffective.  The right of a Sri Lankan to move court against extradition is taken away. The safeguards, afforded to Sri Lankans, in case foreign governments sought their extradition are now removed.

Article 32 of the Convention (which the Sri Lankan government has accepted by a separate declaration) enables any member State to complain to the 10-member ‘Committee on Enforced Disappearances’ in Geneva that Sri Lanka is not fulfilling her obligations under this Convention and the Committee can investigate such complaints.

This means that foreign countries which are members of the ICPPED will have complete jurisdiction over Sri Lankans who are alleged to have carried out enforced disappearances in Sri Lanka. This Bill gives foreign countries complete and untrammeled criminal jurisdiction over Sri Lankans in relation to the offence of ‘enforced disappearances’.

Critics observed that anyone can be extradited to another state on a mere accusation. Such accusations could originate in Sri Lanka or elsewhere. The Bill has no provision for any formal procedures  that should be followed within Sri Lanka or outside, not even a preliminary investigation, except for what the Minister in charge of the subject decides. The lack of any formal procedures to establish the credibility of the accusation prior to extradition presents ample opportunities for victimization.

Ladduwahetty saw many weaknesses in the Bill. This Bill   contains articles that contradict each other, he said. Also provisions in the Bill violate the Constitution of Sri Lanka. The Constitution permits arresting and locking up people   during an emergency, but the Bill does not.  Constitution does not permit retrospective legislation.  The Bill is   retrospective. since the Bill contradicts the Constitution of Sri Lanka, either the Bill has to be revised, or the Constitution has to be amended.  

Since provisions in the ICPPED also violate provisions in the Constitution of Sri Lanka, the Government should be asked explain why it signed the UN Convention on Disappearances. Further under provisions of Article 33 (f) the President does not have the authority to sign and ratify this UN Convention, concluded Ladduwahetty.

People confuse the Bill on the Office of Missing Persons with the Bill on Enforced Disappearances. The OMP Act is nowhere near as dangerous as the Enforced Disappearance Act. The OMP Act is only a very specific instance of a “missing person”. A person could be “missing” for a variety of reasons, but an “enforced disappearance” is carried out by agents of the State. It is on account of this very difference that there are 2 separate Acts. (continued in C14)

‘’ROLE OF AMBASSIES AND CONSULATES IN PROMOTING EXPORTS AND INVESTMENTS’’

July 23rd, 2021

Sarath Wijesinghe former Ambassador to UAE and Israel and President Ambassador’s Forum

Knowledge and competence of an Ambassador

Ambassadors and Consuls are those nominated by the country of origin to the host country by the head of the country to represent the Head and the country and the nation, for matters specifically expected by the representatives with enormous responsibility thrust upon by the Nation. Ambassador is a diplomat and the official envoy of a nation and the head of the state, who represents the state and the head of the state usually accredited to another sovereign state or to an international organization. Embassies are headed by Ambassadors and High Commissioners with enormous responsibilities on internal and international political and economic responsibilities mainly on promoting the good will and foreign policy other state politics and economy of the state. The candidates chosen are of the highest quality and education standers and competence to engage in diplomatic duties, such as meeting foreign leaders, Negotiate the agreements and treatises, Monitor International situations, Direct the foreign service staff, oversee foreign aid and business projects,engage and entertain visitors and many other conventional and traditional duties expected by an ambassador during the tenure of the office. Appointment of the Ambassador is the prerogative and responsibility of the head of the state, who will bear responsibility of the conduct and competence, approved by the High Post Committee of the Parliament consisting of a group of selected members of the Parliament of the competence which is rarely rejected or contested. Ambassadors should be extremely learned on the practice and conventions guided by such as the Vienna Convention and relevant treatises. Foreign policy officials may be conversant with the diplomatic process and the others selected from and out of the learned, professionals or academics will be given a brief training and expected to study by themselves. A main criteria and a requirement for an Ambassador in a commonwealth country such as Sri Lanka being an educated nation with citizens is a good commented of English language and academic excellence with high competence on written and spoken English to go through and academic or impromptu speech before audiences. Ambassadors are normally resident in the host country or supervise the neighbouring countries for convenience and the Consulates are managed by diplomats, officers in the trade Ministry, or other appointees appointed to deal with specific duties mainly on trade commerce and connected matters. Some Counsel Generals are paid by the Ministry of Foreign Affairs or the Ministry of trade and in some cases they hold honorary positions for specific duties. The head of the state has the sole prerogative on the appointment of Ambassadors at his wish and generally advised by the Minister of foreign affairs which is a practice and not mandatory. Ambassadors appointed are to be of highest education qualifications of an area of discipline, and learned on foreign policy and relations and competence in spoken and written language in main languages accepted by the United Nations, preferable English Language well-mannered with excellent backgrounds in professional academic or educational standards. Today the nations have given highest priority to economic diplomacy through the state outlets including embassies and consulate offices. There is trade war and influences of world economic powers on smaller nations to align themselves to their click as the word economic powers have grouped together such as G7 and many other ways. In this context the Ambassadors and Consul Generals have a pivot role in promoting the respective states with the network of outlets worldwide using diplomatic skills and influences. In that context the economic role of the Ambassador is numerous. The privileges and responsibilities have to be developed communicated and utilized to the advantage of the country they represent. It is a part of the mandate to develop people to people contacts and take steps on economic promotion. Exploiting for FDI, investment opportunities and export promotions are to be campaigned with the help of the assigned and tamed staff on commercial dealings. Business Promotions during the global Economic Shift on activisms of China, Brazil, India, Russia, and South Africa despite the shifts of the traditional west and the world effects of the corona pandemic which has shaken the world over looking for new avenues.

Diplomacy

The term diplomacy refers to dealings with other states on trade economy culture environment human rights strategies, s advantages and many other areas this is generally led by the leader of the state with the foreign minister and the embassies around the world. In some countries the foreign minister is entrusted with the work personally handled by the head of the estate. Some countries the head handles in person. State deal with the rest of the countries via foreign ministers, the Ambassadors and embassies. Ambassadors have adopted a similar method in running the Embassies and performing duties with other Embassies and host countries including the business communities Chambers of Commerce and Trade Organizations. Today the Foreign Ministry of a country performs a pivotal role on economic development and therefore will go beyond traditional diplomacy in dealing with the member states. Countries have given highest priority to Economic Trade investment and business resulting in an amalgamation of economic and traditional diplomacy in the interaction between states. With the advent of modern developments in technology and communication, states have been brought closer than ever where news and information is imparted in seconds breaking all traditional barriers. Trade war has replaced traditional wars as the priority of any modern nation is promotion of trade, commerce and other sectors such as agriculture and hi-tech innovations. Economic Diplomacy is a form of diplomacy to utilize the full spectrum of economic facts and realities in a State to achieve success in international goals in foreign policy which is an extension of national policy and interest. This includes all policy issues and economic activities in the private and public sector which in turn concerns economic policy issues. In UAE the heads of business Chambers have been elevated to the positions of Ambassadors and the State is patronizing the business community. Sri Lanka have an Embassy in Abu – Dhabi rich in oil, and the consulate in Dubai the business commercial and tourist canters with large number of Asian and African labor force.

Her Highness ‘Sheikha Lubna’ (Minister of Foreign Trade) personally led the powerful forty member trade delegation to Sri Lanka,

 Initiated by then Ambassador in UAE, with a strong delegation of over forty and in return to Sri Lanka with similar assignments and goodwill. This trend was followed by the initiation of the Embassy and Ambassador to invite the President of Sri Lanka to UAE for the Energy Summit and bilateral discussions which are duties and responsibilities of the Embassy and the Ambassador. The Israeli Chambers made a number of trade missions to Sri Lanka and a rousing welcome was given to the Sri Lankan Head of State concentrating on trade and commerce in addition to traditional diplomacy having had a series of serious discussions with then Prime Minister Mr ‘Nethinharue’. The visit was initiated by the embassy and Ambassador of Israel especially to exchange the innovations and knowledge of the agricultural and other innovations with strengthening bilateral relations. Ambassadors in EU ware actively canvassing Sri Lankan Government on business avenues and facilities. Even the Ambassadors in world powers such as USA, UK, France, China Germany and other major powers have given targets to the Ambassadors for mega projects on aviation, Infrastructure and development schemes for projects. All the states in the world family has given top priority to economic progress through economic diplomacy process. Economic policies are formulated and implemented with the guidance and direction of the Ambassadors with the Foreign Ministry/Minister for development and to obtain resources, funds and business which is a competitive factor and a science today. Economic policy is independent on the foreign policy of the country and should generally be consistent irrespective of the change of governments. In India governments will change but not the foreign and economic policies. This is the case in many parts of the world and it is time we follow suit in our own interest. State craft in economic diplomacy by the term diplomacy refers to dealings with other states on Trade, War, Economy, Culture, Environment, Human Rights, Strategic advantages and many other areas. This is generally led by the leader of the State with the Foreign Minister and the Embassies around the world. In some countries the Foreign Minister is entrusted with the work personally handled by the head of the state. Some countries the head handles it in person and some through the Foreign Minister depending on the trust and the relationship with the head of the state and respective ministers.

Embassies and Consulates

States deal with the rest of the world via the Foreign Ministries, the Ambassadors and Embassies. Ambassadors have adopted a unique  methods in running the Embassies and performing duties with other Embassies and host countries including the business communities Chambers of Commerce and Trade Organizations traditionally on and with the advice of the respective Foreign Ministries and head of states , which gives an impact of the country and the future on investments and exports. Today the Foreign Ministry of a country performs a pivotal role on economic development and therefore will go beyond traditional diplomacy in dealing with the member states on trade commerce including exports and investments. Sri Lanka has 50 Embassies and 103 consulates in the network dealing with the rest of the world. Countries have given highest priority to Economic Trade investment and business resulting in an amalgamation of economic and traditional diplomacy in the interaction between states. With the advent of modern developments in technology and communication, states have been brought closer than ever where news and information is imparted in seconds breaking all traditional barriers. Trade war has replaced traditional wars as the priority of any modern nation is promotion of trade, commerce and other sectors such as agriculture and hi-tech innovations. Diplomatic missions spread worldwide as EU319, China 276, USA273, France 267, japan 247, Russia 282,UK 205,and Sri Lanka 67 of the states indicate the diplomatic network and connections which is linked to economy and foreign relations, UN acting in the middle playing an important an pivotal role as the world organization actively involved  with the states via IMF,WTO, and other subsidiary organizations linked and supervised via the Vienna Convention and diplomatic relations of 1961,with links with  the 1815 initiative. International Relations is relations with states with each other and with international organizations and groups with the basis of and connected to diplomacy and diplomatic relations with and among states, which are a set of formal legal institutions now consisting of over 190 nation states which are sovereign based on the UN Charter, with political and economic entities full of economic and political nationalism toward themselves.

Promoting investments and exports

The main and pivot roles expected by the Embassies and Consulates of respective states are, promoting the policies and businesses of respective nations, the trade policies exports and investments as the main outlets of the state. Whether this is adequately done in Sri Lanka by the network of Sri Lankan Ambassadors and Counsel Generals is a moot issue, but we find many Embassies worldwide small or large stationed in Sri Lanka works hard in promoting their policies and businesses in promoting their respective nations. Though we are not aware and known the allegations of a leading lady ambassador in a most powerful country approaching the Oil Minister in influencing a mega deal, we are aware these things are happening in Sri Lanka discreetly and openly canvassing their respective countries that we have not heard of on our Ambassadors and Counsel Generals worldwide which is not a satisfactory situation. In the circumstances steps taken by the International Chamber of Commerce in Sri Lanka in partnership with Sri Lanka- China Business Counsel of the Ceylon Chamber of Commerce, Colombo stock Exchange, European Chamber of Commerce of Sri Lanka, and the daily Financial Times in organizing a webinar to discuss the role of Embassies and Consulates in promoting exports and Investments on 31str of July 2021, from04.PM – 06.00 PM (SL time) and will live casted via ICCL Facebook TV CH.20on Peo – TV is on the right direction salutary and encouraging indeed.

The Keynote address to the webinar to be delivered by Ambassador Robert Blake, – currently US Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian affairs from 2009-2013, while presentations to be delivered by Mr Crispin Conroy AM Ambassador/Permanent observer to the United nations at Geneva and Representative to  the World Trade Organization at ICC, with  PENALIATS Mr Rohitha Bogollagama – former Minister of Foreign Affairs in  Sri Lanka, H.E Saroja Sirisena – High Commissioner of Sri Lanka to United  Kingdom, – H.E  Shashikala Premawardena High commissioner of Sri Lanka to Singapore, – H.E.Riaz Hamimidullah Ambassador of Bangladesh to the Netherlands  – H.E Dr Palitha Kohona, – Mr Bernadrd Goonatilaka a former Secretory to Foreign Ministry of Sri Lanka , – H.E Saroja Sirisena –  High Commissioner of Sri Lanka to the  United Kingdom, H.E.Shashikla Premewardena  – High Commissioner of Singapore, H.E.Riaz Hamidullah Ambassador of Bangaladesh to the Netherlands ,H.E Dr Palitha Kohona Ambassador of Sri Lanka in the Peoples Rebublic of China – Mr Sarath Wijesinghe President’s Counsel and former Ambassador to UAE and Israel, President Ambassador’s Forum Mr  Lasiri Mendis Former Ambassador to Austria, Mr Sanjaya Mohattala Chairman Board of Investments Sri Lanka, Mr Rajive Bandarneika CEO Colombo Exchange Mr Laxman Hulugalle  Counsel General to Sydney Australia, Dr Jurgen Morhard Consulate General German Consulate General Mumbai India, Dr Prakesh Pandey first Secetary Economic and Commercial Indian High Commission of Sri Lanka, – Mr Li Guangjun Economic and Commercial Consular Embassy of Peoples Republic of China with  Moderators Mr Buddhitha K Atauda former Ambassador to Netherlands France and Spain Mr Dinesh Weerakoody, and Mr Nister Cassim. Webinar is open to those who register themselves in advance which will cater the diplomats, academics, students, and those interested in foreign policy and foreign relations.

ERASING THE EELAM VICTORY Part 20 C10

July 23rd, 2021

KAMALIKA PIERIS

The war cry” for war crimes came from the west which is smarting from the defeat of the LTTE in Eelam war IV. This   essay looks at the various measures used to bring the Sri Lanka army before a war crimes tribunal.

The International Criminal Court  is the   sole  international tribune for war crimes but it is not possible to shoot Sri Lanka straight in, because Sri Lanka   has not signed the Rome Statute. So the west turned to the UNHRC.                                                         

UN Human Rights Commission (UNHRC) and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) charged that war crimes had been committed in the Eelam war and that war tribunals were needed.  However, the UNHRC and OHCHR   do not have the authority to set up war tribunals. The only UN body that can send Sri Lanka   to an international war crimes tribunal is the UN Security Council. Security Council refused to do so when approached by USA in 2015.  

The only other way for the west to get   war crimes charges through, against Sri Lanka was to get it done internally. West has no way of instituting such an inquiry except by getting it done internally, said analysts, by getting the Sri Lanka government to set up a war crimes inquiry   as in Sierra Leone, Cambodia and Lebanon. Sri Lanka however, said bluntly that no war crimes were committed during the Eelam War and they were not going to hold a war crimes inquiry.

HYBRID COURTS

UNHRC then recommended that Sri Lanka cooperate voluntarily with the UN to set up a hybrid war crimes tribunal.  Hybrid courts are composed of both foreign and domestic judges, and the cases are conducted by local and foreign lawyers using both international and national law. 

Hybrid courts have functioned in Kosovo, Timor Leste, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Sierra Leone, Cambodia, Burundi, and Lebanon. Sri Lanka is not comparable to any of these countries, observed critics, contemptuously. The local judiciary could handle this matter, outside judges were not needed.  In any case, what is the significance of having foreign investigators and judges. Are the judgments pronounced by such foreign judges more valid”, than those pronounced by Sri Lankan judges, critics asked.

Hybrid courts have now lost credibility, said critics. The hybrid court in Cambodia  (2003)  delivered only three convictions after 14 years of effort  and the  costs  exceeded USD 200 million.  Hybrid courts  cost too much for the host country  alone.  They are generally funded, managed and run by Western countries and cater to Western interests.  

Hybrid courts undermined the domestic judicial system, wherever they have been established, observed  critics.  Evidence rules are lower than those in the  national legal systems and life sentences can be handed down on little evidence.

U.S. Senator Patrick Leahy, of the    US  Senate Judiciary Committee, speaking on Sri Lanka at the U.S. Senate, in June 9, 2015 strongly recommended a  hybrid  court.  Human Rights Watch,  campaigned  in 2016 for a hybrid court  where the majority of judges were foreign. HRW also wanted an international chief prosecutor.

There was support in Sri Lanka too for a Hybrid Court. The Tamil separatists wanted a   Hybrid court. They said the local judges are not to be trusted . Jehan Perera said the  Tamil civilians (victims”) are demanding an international or hybrid system of courts with  foreign judges as they  do not trust  local courts.  J.C. Weliamuna,  former head of Transparency International said   the Sri Lanka judiciary lacked the capacity to investigate system crimes.   Also  that the  international community could not be expected to have faith in our judiciary since we ourselves have no faith in it.  

Neville Ladduwahetty pointed out   that the local legal system is  perfectly capable of hearing war crimes cases. Cases involving military personnel can  also be investigated and tried within the military court system, as is the practice in many other countries, especially those whose forces are involved in active military duties.  

UNIVERSAL  JURISDICTION.

 The UNHCR Resolutions on Sri Lanka recommended Universal Jurisdiction. Zeid al Hussein,  UNHCHR asked for this twice in one UN  session.

The doctrine of universal jurisdiction allows the law courts of one country to  try persons  of another nationality, who have committed war crimes in another country, provided there is evidence or reasonable ground for the suspicion of guilt . Many countries do not permit their nationals to be extradited  for this purpose. Therefore some countries  allow Universal jurisdiction  in absentia.

 The Economist” reported in  2021 that the number of universal jurisdiction cases is rising. There have been 815 cases from 2008-2017. At least 16 countries have heard cases.  There were 71 completed cases,  mostly with convictions,  40% African, 25% Middle East, 20% Europe and 8%  Asia.

Ladduwahetty writing in 2021  pointed out that thought universal jurisdiction  is accepted  in the case of international armed conflicts (Protocol I),   there is  still no  decision on whether it applies to non-international conflicts as in Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka takes the position that there is no possibility of universal jurisdiction in the Eelam war, because there is no case. No self-respecting court anywhere in the world will entertain these charges, said Sarath Weerasekera . Cases already filed under universal jurisdiction against a number of our commanders  failed, because, the allegations simply do not pass basic evidence standards. Also the accusers are politically motivated.

Allowing our war veterans to be tried in other countries for alleged crimes committed here is worse than being tried by an international criminal tribunal. An international criminal tribunal is a multilateral body whereas a single country is a different matter altogether, said Chandraprema.

SPECIAL PROSECUTOR

 It appears that in 2017   Prime Minister Ranil Wickremasinghe  has given a personal assurance to Ben Emmerson, UN Special Rapporteur on Human Rights and Countering Terrorism, that the Government would set up an Office of the Special Prosecutor to bring criminal charges against those involved  in  war crimes during the Eelam War. Emmerson reported this at a media conference. This information was also posted on a UN website and re-posted on Groundviews.

The wording of the written statement clearly presupposes that “serious atrocities” were committed by both sides, meaning by the Sri Lankan armed forces as well. Since the Tigers are either dead,  in jail, in self-exile, rehabilitated and released , this means the only target that’s left standing is Sri Lankan military, observed  Dayan Jayatilleke.   ( Continued in C11)

නුතන ගුරුවරයා

July 23rd, 2021

චන්ද්‍රසේන පණ්ඩිතගේ විසිනි

අපි නුතන ගුරුවරුන්ගේ වැඩ වර්ජන දුටුවෙමු. ඔවුන්ගේ පෙලපාලිද දුටුවෙමු. මේ හැමදෙනාම ඉල්ලන්නේ මිට අවුරුදු 24කට පෙර  එවකට පැවතී රජයක් ඔවුන්ට දෙනවායි පොරොන්දුවූ දෙයක් ඉල්ලාගෙනය. ඔවුන්ට මේ පොරොන්දුව දී ඇත්තේ 1997දී මෙරට පැවතී රජය විසින්ය.එම රජයේ අගමැති සිරිමා බණ්ඩාරනායක මැතිනිය හෙබවූ අතර ජනාධිපතිවරිය වුයේ චන්ද්‍රිකා කුමාරතුංග මැතිනියයි. මේ ගුරු සංගම් පවසන ආකාරයට තමන්ට එදා පොරොන්දුවූ දේ එම රජයන් ලබාදී නොමැත.

සාමාන්‍යන්  පොරොන්දුවූ දෙයක් දීම පැහර හරිනවා නම්, එම රජය නිත්‍යානුකුල ලියවිල්ලක් මගින් පොරොන්දුවුවා නම්ද  කලයුත්තේ, ඊට එරෙහිව නිත්‍යානුකුල ක්‍රියාමාර්ගයක් ගැනීමයි. මේ ගුරු සංගම් එම රජයට එරෙහිව කිසිදු නීතිමය පියවරක් නොගෙන සිටීම තුලින් එහි සාමාජිකයන්ගේ මුලික අයිතිවාසිකම් කඩකර ඇත. මෙය බරපතල වරදකි. මේ වරදකල ගුරු සංගම් නිලධාරි මණ්ඩලයම පලවා හැරීමට ඒ සාමාජිකයින් එම වකවානුවේදීම සිදුකල යුතු කාර්යක්ව තිබුණි.

දැන් බලන විට මේ ගුරු සංගම් පවසන කරුණු සත්‍යනම්, එදා රජයත් වරදක් කර ඇත. එදා ගුරු සංගමය ඊට එරෙහිව නීතිමය පියවර නොගැනීම හේතුවෙන් ගුරු සංගමයද වරදක් කර ඇත. එම වරද කල නිලධාරි මණ්ඩලය පලවා නොහැර සිටීමෙන් එහි සාමාජිකයින්ද වරදක් කර ඇත.

ඊට පසු බලය ලබාගත් රනිල් වික්‍රමසිංහ මහතාගෙන් ගුරු සංගම් වලට කිසිදු පොරොන්දුවක් ලැබී ඇති බවක් කිසිම සඳහනක් නැත. නමුත් චන්ද්‍රිකා-සිරිමා රජයෙන් පොරොන්දුවුදේ, චන්ද්‍රිකා-රනිල් රජය ගුරුවරුන්ට ලබාදීමට පොරොන්දුවී නැත. නමුත් ගුරු සංගමයද එම රජයටවත් එරෙහිව නීති මගින් කටයුතු කිරීමට පියවරද ගෙන  නැත. දැන්  පෙනෙන්නේ,,චන්ද්‍රිකා-සිරිමා රජය කඩකළ පොරොන්දුවට එරෙහිව ගුරු සංගමයට චන්ද්‍රිකා-රනිල් රජයට එරෙහිව නඩු පැවරිය හැකිද යන්නයි.

දැන් පැහැදිලි වන්නේ, චන්ද්‍රිකා-සිරිමා රජය ගුරු සංගම්වලට දුන් පොරොන්දුවත් දියාරු වී  යාම එදා ආරම්භාවී ඇති බවයි.  එසේම, එදා එම රජයට එරෙහිව නිත්‍යානුකුලව කටයුතු කල හැකිව තිබු තත්වයත් ආණ්ඩු මාරුවීමත් සමගම දියාරු වීමට පටන් ගත් බවත් දිස්වේ.,එදා කල යුතු දේ නොකිරීම තුලින් ගුරු සංගමයක් ලෙස සිය වගකීම පැහැර හැරිම දිගටම කිරීම නිසා, .එම ගුරුවරුන්ට හිමිවිය යුතු දෙයක් තිබුනා නම් එය ඔවුන්ට අහිමි කර ඇත.

මීළඟට බලයට පත්වුයේ, චන්ද්‍රිකා-මහින්ද රජයකි.එහි ජනතා විමුක්ති පෙරමුණද ප්‍රබල ඇමති දුර 8කම් දැරුවද පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රීවරු 41ක බලයක් හිමිව තිබුනද මේ කියන ගුරු වැටුප් ප්‍රශ්නය විසදීමට එම රජයවත්, ලංකා ගුරු සංගමයටවත් කිසිදු උවමනාවක් නොතිබිණි. ඔවුන් මේ කියන කාරණය සත්‍ය නම්, මෙය විසදා ගැනීමට තිබුන හොඳම අවස්තාව වූ ජනතා විමුක්ති පෙරමුණද අමාත්‍ය ධුර හෙබවූ එම රජයෙන් ඉටු කර නොගැනීමෙන් අද පෙළපාලි යන හැම දෙනාම සිය වගකීම ඉටුකර නැති බව පැවසීමට සිදුවේ.

මීළඟට බලයට පැමිණියේ මහින්ද රාජපක්ෂ මහතා ජනාධිපති බලතල හෙබවූ රජයයි. එම රජය සමග සම්බන්ධ වී රටේ ප්‍රශ්න විසදීමට දායක වෙන ලෙස ඉතා බැගෑපත්ව මහින්ද රාජපක්ෂ මහතා ජනතා විමුක්ති පෙරමුණෙන් ඉල්ලිවද එය නොතකා විපක්ෂගතවී, මේ ඇති කියන ගුරු වැටුප් ගැටලුව විසදීමට දායක වීමට තිබු තවත් අවස්තාවක මග හරියේද අද පෙළපාලිවල යන ජනතා විමුක්ති පෙරමුණයි. ඒ වකවානුවේද මේ කියන ගුරු සංගම් කිසිම ආකාරයෙන් මෙවැනි ගැටලුවක් විසඳීමට ඇති සේයාවක්වත් නැත්තා සේ පසුවිය.

2015දී බලයට පත් යහපාලන ආණ්ඩුව බලයට පත් කිරීමට ලංකා ගුරු සංගමයද, ජනතා විමුක්ති පෙරමුණද විශාල දායකත්වයක් ලබා දෙන ලදී. ඔය කියන ගැටලුව විසදීමට අවශ්‍යම  ගැටලුවක් නම් ඔවුන්ට ඉතා පහසුවෙන් විසඳා ගත හැකිව තිබුනේ එදාය. එදා තිබුනේ අමුතුම ආකාරයේ ඔවුන්ගේමවූ  ආණ්ඩුවකි. ආණ්ඩුවත් ඔවුන්ගේම විය.විපක්ෂයත් ඔවුන්ගේම විය ඔය ආණ්ඩු-විපක්ෂ සුසංයෝගී රජය ගොඩනැගුවේද ලංකා ගුරු සංගමයේ,හා ජනතා විමුක්ති පෙරමුණේද විශාල සහයෝගයකිනි. නමුත් එම වකවානුවේ නොවිසදගත් මේ ඔවුන් කියන 1997 පොරොන්දු වූවායයි කියන ගුරු වැටුප් ප්‍රවර්ධනය ගැටලුව 2019දී බලය ලබාගත් ගෝඨාභය රාජපක්ෂ රජය පෙළීමට අවියක් සේ යොදාගෙන ඇත.

දැන් අපි කතාකර පෙන්නාදීමට යන්නේ සම්පුර්ණයෙන්ම වෙන්ත දෙයකි. ඔබ බලන්න මේ පෙළපාලි යන ගුරුවරුන් දෙස ඔවුන් අතර වයස 30-45 දක්වා වූ තරුණ පිරිසක් සිටින බව ඔබට දැක ගත හැක. වයස අඩුම එක්කෙනා අවුරුදු 20 ලෙසද වැඩිම එක්කෙනා වයස 45 ලෙසද ගනිමු. එලෙස ගත් කල මේ පෙළපාලි යන වයස අවුරුදු 30 තරුණයා 1997දී, අවුරුදු 6ක දරු පටියෙක්ව අම්මාගේ අතේ එල්ලී, පාසල් යන දරුවෙකි. ලංකා ගුරු සංගමය කියන විදිය සත්‍ය නම්, මොහුට උගැන්වූ ගුරුවරයා තම වැටුප් වර්ධකය ඉල්ලා සටන් වදින අතරම, එය ලබාගැනීමට වැඩ වර්ජන නොකර මේ අද වැඩවර්ජනය කරන එදා පොඩි කොල්ලාට උගන්වා ඇත. 1997 වැටුප් වර්ධක ලැබීමට එදා සටන් කල් ගුරුවරු අද සේවයේ ඇත්තේ ස්වල්පයකි. ඒ වෙනුවට එදා වයස අවුරුදු 6යේ කොල්ලා අද ගුරුවරයෙක්ව තමන් වයස 6 අවදියේ සිටම්වූ වැටුප් වර්ධකයක් සම්බන්ධව දොඩවමින් වැඩ වර්ජනයක නිරත වේ, එදා මේ කොලුපැටියාට වැඩ වර්ජනය නොකරමින් ඉගැන්වූ ඒ ගුරුවරයාට අයත් වැටුප් වර්ධකය ඉල්ලා සටන් වදී.. මොවුන් සියල්ලෝම මුසිලයින් නොවන්නේදැයි සිතා බලන්න.ගුත්තිලයින් නිහතමානිව විශ්‍රාම සුවයෙන් පසුවේ. වරද වන්නේ ගුත්තිලයින් සියල්ලක්ම නිර්මාණය කර ඇත්තේ රටට ජාතියට වැඩක් නැති මුසිලයින් වීමයි. 

මෙවර ඇසළ පුර පසළොස්වක පොහෝ දින යොවුන් ශීල සමාධි ජාතික වැඩසටහන බෙල්ලන්විල රජ මහා විහාරස්ථානයේදී.

July 23rd, 2021

තරුණ හා ක්‍රීඩා අමාත්‍යංශය, ඩිජිටල් තාක්ෂණ හා ව්‍යවසාය සංවර්ධන රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍යංශය

තරුණ හා ක්‍රීඩා අමාත්‍ය නාමල් රාජපක්ෂ මහතාගේ උදාර සංකල්පයක් අනුව ක්‍රියාත්මක යොවුන් ශීල සමාධි ජාතික වැඩසටහන් මාලාවේ හත්වැනි වැඩසටහන මෙවර ඇසළ පුර පසළොස්වක පොහොය යෙදුණු අද (23) දින බෙල්ලන්විල රජ මහා විහාරස්ථානයේදී පැවත්විණි.

තරුණ පරපුර සුගතිගාමී කරවීම පෙරදැරි කරගනිමින් රට පුරා සියලු විහාරස්ථානවල සෑම පසොළොස්වක පොහොය දිනකදී ම තරුණ තරුණියන් ශීල සමාධියෙහි පිහිටුවීම හා දාන ශීල භාවනා වැඩසටහන්වලට යොමු කිරීම යොවුන් ශීල සමාධි  ජාතික වැඩසටහනේ අභිමතාර්ථයයි.

ඒ අනුව, තරුණ පිරිස සිල් සමාදන් කරවීම හා තෙරුවන් වන්දනාව අද පෙරවරු 06.00ට බෙල්ලන්විල රාජ මහා විහාරාධිකාරි ශාස්ත්‍රපති බොරලැස්ගමුවේ පේමරතන හිමියන්ගේ මූලිකත්වයෙන් පැවැත්විණි.

පෙ.ව.06.30 සිට පෙ.ව.07.00 දක්වා බෙල්ලන්විල රාජ මහා විහාරාධිපති, කඩුගන්නාව පාරමිතා ජාත්‍යන්තර භාවනා මධ්‍යස්ථානයේ නිර්මාතෘ හා සිංගප්පූරුවේ ප්‍රධාන සංඝ නායක, අතිපූජ්‍ය ආචාර්ය බෙල්ලන්විල ධම්මරතන හිමියන් විසින් පොහෝ දින අනුශාසනාව සිදුකළහ.

අනතුරුව පෙ.ව.08.00 සිට පෙ.ව. 08.50 දක්වා ගෞරවාර්හ ආචාර්ය බෙල්ලන්විල ධම්මරතන හිමි සහ ගෞරවාර්හ මහාචාර්ය මැදවච්චියේ ධම්මජෝති යන හිමිවරුන්ගේ ප්‍රධානත්වයෙන් ධර්ම සාකච්ඡාව පැවැත් වූහ.  මෙම ධර්ම සාකච්ඡාව මහාචාර්ය ආරියපාල පෙරේරා මැතිතුමන්ගේ මෙහෙයවීමෙන් පැවත්වුණු අතර, මහාචාර්ය චන්දිම විජේබණ්ඩාර මැතිතුමන් ද ඊට සහභාගී විය.

ඉන් අනතුරුව පෙ.ව.09.00 සිට පෙ.ව. 10.00 දක්වා සිල් සමාදන් වූ පිරිසට අරලියගහ මන්දිරයේ සිට විසුරුවා හරින ලද ධර්ම දේශනාවට සවන්දීමේ අවස්ථාව හිමිවිය.

දිවුල්පිටිය ශ්‍රී බෝධිරාජාරාමාධිපති ගෞරවාර්හ ශ්‍රාස්ත්‍රපති ඕකන්දයායේ බුද්ධසිරි හිමියන් විසින් පෙ.ව. 11.00 ට සිල් සමාදන් වූ පිරිස සමග බුද්ධ පූජාව තැබුහ.

ප.ව.01.15 සිට ප.ව. 02.15 දක්වා සාරනාත් බෞද්ධ මධ්‍යස්ථානාධිපති, ගෞරවාර්හ තලාවේගම සද්ධාතිලක ස්වාමීන්ද්‍රයන් වහන්සේ විසින් භාවනා වැඩසටහන පැවැත්වූහ.

ප.ව.03.00 සිට ප.ව. 04.00 දක්වා ධර්ම සංග්‍රහය ඇසුරින් දහම් පැන විසඳුම් හරහා සිල් සමාදන් වූ පිරිස සමග එක්ව ධර්ම ගැටලු හා පිළිතුරු පිළිබඳ සාකච්ඡා කිරීම ගෞරවාර්හ ආචාර්ය බෙල්ලන්විල ධම්මරතන හිමි විසින් සිදුකළහ.  රාජ්‍ය සේවා බෞද්ධ සංගමයේ සභාපති එම්.බී.කේ. දිසානායක මැතිතුමන් සහභාගි විය.

ප.ව.04.00 සිට 05.00 දක්වා ඉංග්‍රිසි මාධ්‍යයෙන් ධර්ම දේශනය රත්මලාන පරමධම්මචේතිය  පරිවේණාධිපති, ගෞරවාර්හ ආචාර්ය මාඉටිපේ විමලසාර නායක හිමිපාණන් විසින් සිදුකළහ.

ප.ව.05.00 සිට 05.30 දක්වා සිල් සමාදන් වූ පිරිස දම්සක්පැවතුම් සූත්‍ර දේශනාවට සවන්දීමේ අවස්ථාවත් හිමි විය.

ප.ව.05. 30 සිට 06.00 දක්වා වූ ආශිර්වාද අධිෂ්ඨාන පුජාවෙන් අනතුරුව මෙවර ඇසළ පුර පසළොස්වක පොහෝ දිනය නිමිත්තෙන් බෙල්ලන්විල රජ මහා විහාරයේ පැවති යොවුන් ශීල සමාධි ජාතික වැඩසටහන නිමාවට පත්විය.

මෙවර බෙල්ලන්විල රජ මහා විහාරයේ පැවති යොවුන් ශීල සමාධි ජාතික වැඩසටහන දැහැමි සමාජයකට මං පෙත් විවර කිරීමේ අදිටනින් සියලුම කොවිඩ් – 19 මාර්ගෝපදේශවලට සහ පවතින සංචරණ සීමාවලට යටත්ව පැවත්විණි.

මෙම යොවුන් ශීල සමාධි ජාතික වැඩසටහන බුද්ධශාසන හා ආගමික කටයුතු අමාත්‍යාංශයේ උපදේශකත්වය, තරුණ හා ක්‍රීඩා අමාත්‍යාංශයේ ජාතික තරුණ සේවා සභාවේ මෙහෙයවීමෙන්  රාජ්‍ය සේවා බෞද්ධ සංගමයේ සම්බන්ධීකරණය ඇතිව ජාතික වෙළඳ හා ව්‍යවසායකත්ව සම්මේලනයේ ක්‍රියාකාරී දායකත්වයයෙන් සහ පහන්සිත් පදනමේ සහය අනුග්‍රහය ඇතිව යොවුන් ශීල සමාධි පදනමේ සංවිධායකත්වයෙන් සිදු විය.

මාධ්‍ය ඒකකය,

තරුණ හා ක්‍රීඩා අමාත්‍යංශය, ඩිජිටල් තාක්ෂණ හා ව්‍යවසාය සංවර්ධන රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍යංශය

අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමා “අමාදම් සිසිලස” 212වැන්නට එක්වෙයි

July 23rd, 2021

අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මාධ්‍ය අංශය

සෑම පුන් පොහෝ දිනකම ගරු අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය මහින්ද රාජපක්ෂ මහතාගේ සංකල්පයකට අනුව පවත්වන අමාදම් සිසිලස” ධර්ම දේශනා මාලාවේ 212 වැන්න ඇසළ  පුන් පොහොය යෙදෙන අද (23) දිනයේ නුවරඑළිය අගමැති මැදුරේදී පැවැත්විණි.

පළමුව අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමා මල් ,පහන්, සුවඳ දුම් පූජාකර අනතුරුව ධර්ම දේශනාව සඳහා වැඩම කළ අනුරාධපුර ශ්‍රී සම්බුද්ධ ජයන්ති විහාරයේ විහාරාධිපති, සමස්ත ලංකා ශාසනාරක්ෂක බලමණ්ඩලයේ උප සභාපති , අනුරාධපුර දිස්ත්‍රික් ශාසනාරක්ෂක මණ්ඩලයේ  සභාපති , උතුරු හා උතුරු මධ්‍යම දෙපළාතේ ප්‍රධාන සංඝ නායක පණ්ඩිත නුගේතැන්නේ පඤ්ඤානන්ද නාහිමියන්ට දැහැත් වට්ටියක් පූජා කරමින් ධර්ම දේශනාවට ආරාධනා කළේය.

ප්‍රඥාවන්ත දැහැමි ජන සමාජයක් උදෙසා බුදු දහමේ සිසිලස බෙදාදීමේ අරමුණ පෙරදැරිව සෑම පුන් පොහෝ දිනකම  අමාදම් සිසිලස” ධර්ම දේශනා මාලාව පැවැත්වේ.

මෙම ධර්ම දේශනා මාලාව බාධක ,කම්කටොලු සහ  ජීවිත තර්ජන මැද අග්‍රාමාත්‍යතුමා සහ අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය ආර්යාව විසින් අඛණ්ඩව පවත්වාගෙන පැමිණි බව දේශකයානන් වහන්සේ ධර්මදේශනාව ආරම්භයේදීම කරුණු පෙන්වා දුන්හ.

“ඔබතුමා මේ රටේ රාජ්‍ය පාලකයා වශයෙන් මේ රටේ අසරණ දුක්විදින අප්‍රමාණ මිනිසුන්ගේ සියලු දුක්ඛ  දෝමනස්සයන් දරාගෙන මේ රටේ කාටවත් හිතන්න බැරි තරම් මහා විශාල පරිවර්තන යුගයක් ආරම්භ කරලා අදත් ඒ යුගයේ අරුණාලෝකය විඳින වකවානුවක ලෝකයම වසංගත තත්ත්වයකින් වෙළාගෙන තිබෙන කාල වකවානුවක  මේ රටේ ජනතාවගේ ජීවිත බේරා ගැනීමට දිවා රාත්‍රී දෙකේම අතිගරු ජනාධිපතිතුමාත් සමඟ අත්වැල් බැඳගෙන කරන උත්කෘෂ්ඨ සේවය මේ  ඉතිහාසයේ කිසිදිනෙක  නොමැකෙන සේවාවක්.

 ඒ වගේම තමයි අපි දන්නවා විපත් ඇතිවන සෑම කාලයකදීම  ඔබතුමා තමයි ඒ හැමදේකටම මුහුණ දුන්නේ. තිස්  අවුරුද්දක් කාටවත් අවසන් කරන්න බැරිවුණු යුද්ධය සාර්ථකව අවුරුදු තුනයි මාස ගණනකින්  ඔබතුමා නිමාවට පත්කළා. ඒවගේම තමයි කාටවත් හිතාගන්න බැරි තරම් සංවර්ධන යුගයක්, අපිට හීනයක්ව තිබුණ ඔය අධිවේගී මාර්ග ඒ වගේම ගුවන්තොටුපොළවල්, වරායවල් වගේම මේ රටේ දුප්පත් අසරණ මිනිස්සුන් වෙනුවෙන් කරපු මහා උත්කෘෂ්ඨ සේවය  සදා අනුස්මරණීය  මහා උත්තුංග සේවාවක්” යැයි නුගේතැන්නේ පඤ්ඤානන්ද නාහිමියෝ සිහිපත් කළහ.

සෞඛ්‍ය මාර්ගෝපදේශයන්ට අනුව පැවති අමාදම් සිසිලස” 212 ධර්ම දේශනාව ශ්‍රවණය කිරීමට අග්‍රාමාත්‍ය ආර්යා ශිරන්ති රාජපක්ෂ මහත්මිය, අමාත්‍ය සී.බී.රත්නායක, රාජ්‍ය අමාත්‍ය සිරිපාල ගම්ලත්, නුවරඑළිය දිස්ත්‍රික් ලේකම් නන්දන ගලබඩ මහත්වරු  ඇතුළු සීමිත පිරිසක් එක්ව සිටියහ.

New UK scheme aims to drive trade with Sri Lanka and boost jobs and growth

July 23rd, 2021

Courtesy NewsIn.Asia

Colombo, July 23 (newsin.asia): The UK Government launched a consultation on new trading rules on July 19. The UK Developing Countries Trading Scheme (DCTS) is a major opportunity to grow free and fair trade with 70 qualifying countries including Sri Lanka.

The proposed scheme will mean more opportunity and less bureaucracy. This includes improvements such as lower tariffs and simpler rules of origin requirements for countries exporting to the UK, allowing countries to diversify their exports and grow their economies, the British High Commission said in a release.

The British High Commissioner in Sri Lanka H.E. Sarah Hulton said: The proposed DCTS scheme signals the UK’s appetite to promote global free and fair trade, as well as demonstrating our commitment to Sri Lanka, by enabling Sri Lankan businesses to access the UK market more easily. Bilateral trade between the UK and Sri Lanka stood at GBP1.2 billion in 2020, and there is room for growth.  I encourage people here in Sri Lanka to contribute to this important consultation, which is open to all”.

The consultation on the UK’s new scheme runs for eight weeks and seeks the view of all sectors of society, including businesses, the public, civil society groups, consumers, associations, partner governments and any other interested stakeholders. Currently the UK operates a similar scheme rolled over from the EU, but as an independent trading nation can now take a simpler, more generous, pro-growth approach to trading with developing countries.

The UK’s International Trade Secretary Liz Truss said: Trade fundamentally empowers people and has done more than any single policy in history to lift millions of people around the world out of poverty. Now the UK is an independent trading nation we have a huge opportunity do things differently, taking a more liberal, pro-trade approach that leads to growth and opportunity. Countries like Bangladesh and Vietnam have proven it’s possible to trade your way to better living standards, and our new Developing Countries Trading Scheme will help others do the same.”

Responses to the consultation can be given via GOV.UK until the closing date of 12 September 2021.

Additional Points:

             The UK Developing Countries Trading Scheme will apply to 47 countries in the Least Developed Country Framework (LDCF) and 23 additional countries classified by the World Bank as low-income and lower-middle-income countries. Other low-income and lower-middle-income countries are not included in the scheme because they benefit from preferential terms offered by free trade agreements with the UK.

•             Bangladesh and Vietnam reported changes in poverty are based on the international poverty line of $1.90 and $3.20 respectively per person, per day in 2011 Purchasing Power Parity dollars.

•             Growth in exports to the UK reported for Bangladesh and Vietnam are in nominal terms.

•             Sources of statistics: ONS UK trade in goods and services, non-seasonally adjusted, Q4 2020; World Bank World Development Indicators, May 2021; World Bank Macro Poverty Outlook: April 2021; World Bank Bangladesh: Reducing Poverty and Sharing Prosperity” (published 2018).

The consultation will offer respondents the opportunity to provide views on:

•             Simplifying rules of origin requirements for least developed countries;

•             Reducing tariffs for low income and lower middle-income countries;

•             Amendments to the approach to goods graduation, which suspends preferential rates on particular goods from certain countries on the basis of their competitiveness;

•             Amendments to the conditions and reporting requirements that enable a low-income or lower-middle-income country to benefit from more generous provisions through the values-based incentivised arrangement;

•             and simplifying the conditions that could lead to variation or suspension of preferences for any beneficiary country.

ජෝෂප් ස්ටාලින් ත‍්‍රස්තවාදියෙක්.. ඔප්පු කරන සාක්‍ෂි TIDයට..

July 23rd, 2021

උපුටා ගැන්ම ලංකා සී නිව්ස්

ලංකා ගුරු සංගමයේ ප්‍රධාන ලේකම් ජෝසප් ස්ටාලින් මහතා මෙරට පැවති යුද්ධය අවසාන කාලයේදි ඊට බාධා කළ පුද්ගලයකු බව පාර්ලිමේන්තු මන්ත්‍රී මධුර විතානගේ මහතා සඳහන් කරයි.

එවන් සිදුවීම් කිහිපයක් පිළිබඳ තොරතුරු තමන්ට ලැබී ඇති බවත් එම තොරතුරු ත්‍රස්ත විමර්ශන අංශයට ලබාදීමට කටයුතු කරන බවත් මන්ත්‍රීවරයා පැවසීය.

යුද සමයේ දී රටේ ආරක්ෂාවට යොදවා තිබූ මාර්ග බාධක ඉවත් කරන්නැයි ජෝසප් ස්ටාලින් පැවසූ බවත් එනිසා ඔහු හැඳින්විය හැක්කේ ත්‍රස්තවාදියෙකු ලෙස බවත් මන්ත්‍රීවරයා තවදුරටත් කීය.

වර්තමානයේදී ද ඔහු සිදුකරන්නේ සිසු දරුවන් හා ගුරුවරුන් බිල්ලට ගනිමින් ත්‍රස්තවාදී ක්‍රියාවක් යැයි ද පැවසූ මන්ත්‍රීවරයා සිසු දරුවන්ට හෝ ගුරුවරුන්ට ඔහු ආදරය කරන කෙනෙකු නොවන බවද සඳහන් කළේය.

කොළඹ පැවති මාධ්‍ය හමුවකදී මන්ත‍්‍රීවරයා මෙම අදහස් පල කරන ලදී.

SL in further trouble as more Delta variant cases reported from 14 areas

July 23rd, 2021

Sheain Fernandopulle Courtesy The Daily Mirror

Sri Lanka has recorded 30 more fresh cases of the Delta variant in 14 areas in the country, the Health Ministry said.

The patients have been identified in areas such as Kotte, Kolonnawa, Angoda, Nawagamuwa, Mahabage, Katunayaka, Negombo, Ratmalana, Beruwala, Galle, Matara, Dambulla, Vavuniya and Mullaithivu.

Accordingly, this takes total number of cases of the delta variant to 68.

Though total number of cases is at 68, there may be more such cases which are undetected in the community,” Deputy Director-General of Health Services Dr Hemantha Herath told Daily Mirror.

“What should be done is to strictly adhere to health practices. It is apparent that many more cases of Delta variant would be found in future too,” he added.

The first case of Delta variant was detected in Aramaya place in the Dematagoda area on June 21. 

Sri Lanka’s COVID death toll crosses 4,000

July 23rd, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Sri Lanka’s COVID-19 death toll surpassed the grim milestone of 4,000 today (July 23) with 43 more victims confirmed by the Director-General of Health Services.

According to official data, new fatalities have moved the total to 4,002.

Data released by the Department of Government Information showed that the latest victims confirmed today include 26 males and 17 females.

Among the victims are 08 people aged between 30-59 years and 35 others aged 60 and above.


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