190 coronavirus cases reported within the day

April 7th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Sri Lanka on Wednesday (April 07) confirmed another 52 fresh cases of the novel coronavirus in the country as total infections detected within the day reached 190.

This brought the total number of Covid-19 confirmed in the country thus far to 93,993.

According to the Epidemiology Unit, 2,485 patients infected with the virus are currently under medical care at designated hospitals and treatment centers while total recoveries have reached 90,917. 

The death toll due to the Covid-19 pandemic in the country stands at 588.

World powers seek to bring US back into Iran nuclear deal

April 7th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Officials from five world powers began a new effort Tuesday to try to bring the United States back into the foundering 2015 nuclear deal they signed with Iran, a delicate diplomatic dance that needs to balance the concerns and interests of both Washington and Tehran.

The meeting in Vienna of envoys from Russia, China, Germany, France, Britain and Iran came as the U.S. was due to start its own indirect talks with Iran. It would be one of the first signs of tangible progress in efforts to return both nations to the accord, which restricted Iran’s nuclear program in return for relief from U.S. and international sanctions.

Following the closed meetings of the signatories to the deal, known as the Joint Comprehensive Plan of Action, Russia’s delegate, Mikhail Ulyanov, tweeted that the initial talks were successful.”

The restoration of JCPOA will not happen immediately. It will take some time. How long? Nobody knows,” he wrote. The most important thing after today’s meeting of the Joint Commission is that practical work towards achieving this goal has started.”

In 2018, then-President Donald Trump pulled the U.S. unilaterally out of the accord, opting for what he called a maximum-pressure campaign involving restored and additional American sanctions.

Since then, Iran has been steadily violating restrictions in the deal, like the amount of enriched uranium that it can stockpile and the purity to which it can be enriched. Tehran’s moves have been calculated to pressure the other nations in the deal to do more to offset crippling U.S. sanctions reimposed under Trump.

U.S. President Joe Biden, who was vice president under Barack Obama when the original deal was negotiated, has said he wants to bring the U.S. back into the JCPOA but that Iran must reverse its violations.

Iran argues that the U.S. violated the deal first with its withdrawal, so Washington has to take the first step by lifting sanctions.

Following the meeting in Vienna, Iranian state television quoted Iran’s negotiator, Abbas Araghchi, as reiterating that message during the opening round of talks.

Lifting U.S. sanctions is the first and the most necessary action for reviving the deal,” Araghchi was quoted as saying. Iran is fully ready to reverse its activities and return to complete implementation of the deal immediately after it is verified sanctions are lifted.”

At the meeting, participants agreed to establish two expert-level groups, one on the lifting of sanctions and one on nuclear issues, which were tasked to identify concrete measures to be taken by Washington and Tehran to restore full implementation of JCPOA,” Ulyanov tweeted.

They are to start work immediately, and report their conclusions to the main negotiators.

The ultimate goal of the deal is to prevent Iran from developing a nuclear bomb, something it insists it doesn’t want to do. Iran now has enough enriched uranium to make a bomb, but nowhere near the amount it had before the nuclear deal was signed.

In the latest announced violation, Behrouz Kamalvandi, a spokesman for Iran’s civilian nuclear program, said officials had begun mechanical testing of an IR-9 prototype centrifuge. That centrifuge would enrich uranium 50 times faster than the IR-1s allowed under the accord, he said, according to the semi-official ISNA news agency.

The clock is ticking on trying to get the U.S. back into the deal, with the goal of returning Iran to compliance, with a number of issues to consider.

In late February, Iran began restricting international inspections of its nuclear facilities, but under a last-minute deal worked out during a trip to Tehran by Rafael Grossi, the head of the Vienna-based U.N. atomic watchdog, some access was preserved.

Under the agreement, Iran will no longer share surveillance footage of its nuclear facilities with the IAEA but it has promised to preserve the tapes for three months. It will then hand them over to the IAEA if it is granted sanctions relief. Otherwise, Iran has vowed to erase the recordings, narrowing the window for a diplomatic breakthrough.

Iranian Foreign Minister Mohammad Javad Zarif in March also urged the U.S. to act quickly, noting that as his country’s June elections approach, Washington will find itself dealing with a government unable to make progress in the nuclear talks.

In addition, one of the JCPOA’s major so-called sunset clauses, a United Nations arms embargo on Iran, expired last year and others are set to expire in the coming years.

The small window for negotiation will make it even more difficult for the U.S. to try to bring new concerns into the deal, such as Iran’s regional influence and its ballistic missile program.

Though not taking part in the JCPOA talks, a U.S. delegation headed by the administration’s special envoy for Iran, Rob Malley was also in the Austrian capital.

State Department spokesman Ned Price said the delegation was there to hold talks structured around the working groups being formed by the Europeans.

Price said Monday the talks are a healthy step forward” but added that we don’t anticipate an early or immediate breakthrough, as these discussions, we fully expect, will be difficult.”

We don’t anticipate at present that there will be direct talks with Iran,” he said. Though of course we remain open to them. And so we’ll have to see how things go.”

White House press secretary Jen Psaki said Tuesday there was value to having U.S. diplomats on the ground in Vienna even though they won’t be in direct talks with Iran.

I think it’s important to convey to our partners … that we believe diplomacy is the best step forward,” Psaki said.

Zarif on Friday reiterated Iran’s position that no additional talks on the JCPOA are needed, since the deal and its parameters have already been negotiated.

No Iran-US meeting. Unnecessary,” he tweeted.

The JCPOA Joint Commission was expected to meet again Friday, and in the meantime, Enrique Mora, the European Union official who chaired the talks, said he would be reaching out individually to all sides.

As coordinator I will intensively separate contacts here in Vienna with all relevant parties, including U.S.,” he tweeted.

U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric, asked for Secretary-General Antonio Guterres’ reaction to the meetings, said: We welcome all of these efforts by the JCPOA participants … to hold constructive dialogue. We hope this is a first step in the right direction.”

Source: AP
-Agencies

Ajith Mannapperuma to fill Ranjan’s parliamentary seat rendered vacant?

April 7th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Former State Minister Ajith Mannapperuma, who contested the 2020 general election from Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB), is expected to fill the parliamentary seat of Ranjan Ramanayake which was rendered vacant.

He had come in fifth among the SJB contestants from Gampaha District, securing a total of 47,212 preferential votes in last year’s election.

Accordingly, Ajith Mannapperuma’s name will be gazetted after the District Returning Officer submits it to the Election Commission.

The Secretary-General of Parliament has notified the Chairman of the Elections Commission of a vacancy which occurred in the membership of the 9th parliament.

Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena informed the House of the Secretary-General’s move during the parliamentary session earlier today (April 07).

Making an announcement, the Speaker stated that the Ranjan Ramanyake ceased to be a Member of Parliament in terms of Article 66 D of the Constitution.

On April 05, the Court of Appeal rejected the writ application filed by the incarcerated Ramanayake seeking an interim order preventing the suspension of his seat in Parliament.

The Supreme Court, on January 12 this year, sentenced Ranjan Ramanayake to 04 years of rigorous imprisonment over a case of Contempt of Court.

E register; Consumer protection lacking for land owners.

April 7th, 2021

Kirthimala Gunasekera Senior Lawyer

Interesting informative article on ‘’DIGITALIZATION AND MODERNIZING TRADE BUSIENSS AND CONSUMERISM FOR THE CITIZEN’’ 4th April 2021 published in  Lanka Web .

 E Land registration will soon be operating the land registration system to secure ownership . However it  can be a source of ownership insecurity,  without consumer protection laws  The  risk involved  in the absence of  consumer protection laws  to protect owners was demonstrated in USA,  when New York News Paper prepared a forged deed to transfer the Empire State Building.   The forged document was registered in 90 minutes, the land registry had no laws to protect owners, therefore did not recognize that 102-story Art Deco skyscrape was being sold  to a new owner when the  information in the deed was  laughable: Original;  “King Kong” star Fay Wray  listed as a witness to the deed and the notary’s  name was a  bank robber’s name  Willie Sutton.  [ https://www.nydailynews.com/news/money/90-minutes-daily-news-steal-empire-state-building-article-1.353477]. .

  In modernization and introduction of  technology to land registries consumer protection law takes a leading role in many countries.  Professors of law have published many books on the subject.  It needs mention here that  professional practice and land registry laws  with  steadfast and  limitless laws and rules  for  identification of owners for consumer protection  has been the reason for the success  of E  registers in  Australia, New Zeeland, Singapore and UK . Where the law requires  thorough identification checks and strict requirements for witnessing documents before the execution of  transactions as given in this article .

In Sri Lanka attention was not given   to introduce the international laws that   protect owners  in an e register, even when land fraud is extremely pervasive. However we are fast moving to  introduce  technology to land registries.   

 The    E register commenced    scanning   the owners from an unreliable register   that commenced in 1864.  

Owners who have not checked the land registry after they had purchased lands or houses need to   check their ownership   status  in  land registries to be safe

A  quick fix solution scanning the names of owners from  the unreliable old register  which  1] is a non compulsory register —- where all the ownership rights of land owners are  not registered. 2] is  torn mutilated  as the register had not been revised since   1864. 3]  has fraudulent  entries,  according to the Registrar General  has 50% forged deeds .     (https://www.newsfirst.lk/2019/03/17/50-of-land-deeds-in-sri-lanka-forged-registrar-general/#:~:text=COLOMBO%20 (News%201st)%20%E2%80%93%20The,the%20country%20are%20also%20forged,  

  1] E register copies from a non compulsory register—— Registrar General in his letter dated 6.04.2016 to the Prime Minister’s   office   confirms that  that the registration of  deeds are not compulsory under the law governing registration.  He explained in his letter   that the old  register  is  not a conclusive register where all rights of owners are registered.  This   means the  e register will be  prepared from a   non comprehensive register   that will not have   all  rights of owners,  specifically rights to   life interest, lease hold interest, servitudes  agreements to sell  etc.  

Solution— it is important to immediately   make a public announcement  to all  owners to  register   all their deeds and land rights such that their rights will be included  in the E register.    If not the E register will exclude owners who have unregistered   ownership deeds , gifts, ,  life interest, lease hold interest, servitudes , agreements to sell  etc   

2] E register copies from a torn mutilated register   ——-Owners    have got misplaced   from  the old   register as the folios are  damaged and   mutilated  from 1864 .            [ Even lawyers have found that their helpless, their  ownership  had been  misplaced, and  the land registry informs  in writing that  folios are damaged ] This means that only owners whose folios are not damaged will be included in the E register.  

Solution — Public announcement is essential  for owners to immediately  make their  application under the Ordinance 18 of 1945 to reconstruct the damaged mutilated folios.   The Registrar   has power   under the   Ordinance 18 of 1945  to prepare and reconstruct the folios to  re instate  the names of owners. This should have been done before ,   scanning commenced to  prepare the e  register.  

3] E register will record forged deeds–. Are we only admiring the glory of technology as a duck gliding on water without seeing the paddling  underneath.  It needs mention here that all countries where the E register  is a success has enacted consumer protection laws [n  Australia, New Zeeland, Singapore and UK] .  The Registrars have  quasi-judicial powers to check owners’ identity before removing and replacing  owners  in the E   register, the  Registrar has the full power and authority to reject forged invalid deeds. 

In Sri Lanka the register has no such authority, present law is that  the Registrar is not responsible for the validity of deeds that are registered. [ Section 7 of the Registration of Documents Ordinance]   Therefore the owners registered have very little  protection as a forged deed can easily replace their  ownership.  According to the Registrar General old register from which the E register is scanning owners  has 50% forged deeds .     Registrar  states  that 50% of entries of the register from which the e register is prepared are forged (https://www.newsfirst.lk/2019/03/17/50-of-land-deeds-in-sri-lanka-forged-registrar-general/#:~:text=COLOMBO%20 (News%201st)%20%E2%80%93%20The,the%20country%20are%20also%20forged 

Consumer protection law recognised  internationally protect land owners and buyers from fraud  ———-

1]Block chain method [ very popular]  – The technology involves creating digital  verification recording system or a  digital file. Fingerprints of owners in a pedigree are saved together in groups into a block and then to a chain in registries. It is impossible to add new information fraudulently to the chain  of title of an owner.   The chain’s ability to secure data and history of land title is very successful to prevent fraud.

2]UK —Property Alert service for owner’s mobile , to receive updates whenever someone makes a search on their property’s title or attempts to make a change to its registration.

3]USA –A solution which is well suited to the modern digital age has been created by the introduction of Electronic Notary Journal of Official Acts (‘Enjoa’) by the National Notary Association (NNA) USA. They have  incorporated biometric technology into its new electronic identity-capturing database to provide secure and convenient electronic protection for documents and notaries., Enjoa   captures the thumbprints and digital photos of the owners.

4]Malaysia — Increasing cases of land fraud in Malaysia triggered an initiative t to seek responsible solutions to resolve the issue.  The Government  designed an electronic land administration system called e-Tanah in which the land registry embarked on a security system to prevent land fraud by affixing the thumb impressions of owners in addition to signatures. d. This system requires the owner of the property to physically present himself with his Mykad [ID card] and to place both thumbs on the biometric appliance available in the land office in order to verify his ownership. The biometric confirmation letter must be enclosed together with the instrument of transfer for registration in land registries

5]Bhoomi Project in India—-A similar biometric system has been introduced in India for the identification of owners. Bhoomi has computerized 20 million records of land ownership of 6.7million farmers. A farmer can check the status of their deeds being registered or  tampered with on a touch screen by getting authenticated access with his fingerprint, using biometric fingerprint scanners available in computer kiosks.

6] Manipur—Loucha  Pathap  which means rules governing the land” was inaugurated on 2nd July 2004.  Loucha   Pathap is the application software, indigenously developed by the National Informatics Center, Manipur for the purposeof the computerizationof land records. Through the use of the device the software and its content owners are protected against theft

7]   Australia

As in all countries e registration commenced in Australia  with consumer protection laws and organisations to manage the laws . Australian Registrars National Electronic Conveyancing Council (ARNECO) introduced model participation rules on 18th March 2014. Property Exchange Australia (PEXA) will remove the manual processes and paperwork associated with the exchange of property by allowing land registries, financial institutions and practitioners in an integrated system of transacting online. PEXA is aimed at providing benefits across the entire conveyancing industry, some of which include: Transparency – all parties can see completed stages of the settlement process and those which may be outstanding. Early fraud identification – lenders can identify early any potential fraud in the  process.

 Bim Saviya –

It was the intention of the   Government with the advice of the World Bank  to introduce a comprehensive register called the Bim Saviya register  to register owners of 12 million blocks of land which covers all owners government and private owners, before the commencement of the E register. [ however without local  legal consultation ]  The entire project failed .

Reasons for the failure after 20 years is   highlighted in the   Performance Report   of 2019  Report  states clearly   that it will take over 100 years to complete the Bim Saviya register . Vide report    [2019[https://www.parliament.lk/uploads/documents/paperspresented/performance-report-land-title-settlement-department-2019.pdf].

The law of Bim Saviya is  unsuitable for our country as the owners’  right to access court if the lands are affected by forgery or fraud have   been  taken away by this law. In lieu Government has agreed to compensate owners from an Assurance Fund .    

THE GENERAL ELECTION OF 1956 Part 9C

April 7th, 2021

KAMALIKA PIERIS

This video has many informative photographs and information on the life of Mr. S.W.R.D.Bandaranayeka  which are not found elsewhere,

Crucial interview of Foreign Minister Lavrov

April 6th, 2021

Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov’s interview given to Channel One’s Bolshaya Igra (Great Game) talk show, Moscow, April 1, 2021

Vyacheslav Nikonov: The word war” has been heard increasingly more often lately. US and NATO politicians, even more so the Ukrainian military, have no trouble saying it. Do you have more reasons to be concerned now than ever before?

Sergey Lavrov: Yes and no. On the one hand, the confrontation has hit bottom. On the other, deep down, there’s still hope that we are adults and understand the risks associated with escalating tensions further. However, our Western colleagues introduced the word war” into the diplomatic and international usage. The hybrid war unleashed by Russia” is a very popular description of what the West perceives as the main event in international life. I still believe that good judgment will prevail.

Vyacheslav Nikonov: Recently, the United States has ratcheted the degree of confrontation up to never-before-seen proportions. President Joe Biden said President Vladimir Putin is a killer.” We have recalled Russian Ambassador to the United States Anatoly Antonov.

Sergey Lavrov: He was invited for consultations.

Vyacheslav Nikonov: Hence, the question: How do we go about our relations now? How long will this pause last? When will Mr Antonov return to Washington?

Sergey Lavrov: What we heard President Biden say in his interview with ABC is outrageous and unprecedented. However, one should always see the real actions behind the rhetoric, and they began long before this interview back during the Barack Obama administration. They continued under the Trump administration, despite the fact that the 45th US President publicly spoke in favour of maintaining good relations with Russia, with which he was willing to get along,” but was not allowed to do so. I’m talking about the consistent degradation of the deterrent infrastructure in the military-political and strategic spheres.

The ABM Treaty has long since been dropped. President Putin has more than once mentioned how, in response to his remark that George W. Bush was making a mistake and there was no need to aggravate relations, the then US President said that it was not directed against Russia. Allegedly, we can take any steps that we deem necessary in response to the US withdrawing from the ABM Treaty. Allegedly, the Americans will not take these actions as directed against them, either. But then they started establishing anti-missile systems in Europe which is the third missile defence position area. It was announced that it was built exclusively with Iran in mind. Our attempts to agree on a transparency format received support during the visit to Moscow by US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice and US Secretary of Defence Robert Gates, but were later rejected. We now have a missile defence area in Europe. Nobody is saying that this is against Iran now. This is clearly being positioned as a global project designed to contain Russia and China. The same processes are underway in the Asia-Pacific region. No one is trying to pretend that this is being done against North Korea.

This is a global system designed to back US claims to absolute dominance, including in the military-strategic and nuclear spheres.

Dimitri Simes can also share his assessment of what is said and written in the United States on that account. A steadfast course has now been taken towards deploying intermediate and shorter-range missiles in the Asia-Pacific region.

The INF Treaty was discarded by the Americans on far-fetched pretexts. This was not our choice. In his special messages, President Vladimir Putin suggested agreeing, on a voluntary basis and even in the absence of the INF Treaty, on a mutual moratorium with corresponding verification measures in the Kaliningrad Region, where the Americans suspected our Iskander missiles of violating restrictions imposed by the now defunct treaty, and at US bases in Poland and Romania, where the MK-41 units are promoted by the manufacturer, Lockheed Martin, as dual-purpose equipment.

To reiterate, this rhetoric is outrageous and unacceptable. However, President Putin has reacted to it diplomatically and politely. Unfortunately, there was no response to our offer to talk live and to dot the dottable letters in the Russian and English alphabets. All of that has long since gone hand-in-hand with a material build-up in the confrontational infrastructure, which also includes the reckless eastward advance of NATO military facilities, the transformation of a rotational presence into a permanent presence on our borders, in the Baltic States, in Norway, and Poland. So everything is much more serious than mere rhetoric.

Vyacheslav Nikonov: When will Ambassador Antonov return to Washington?

Sergey Lavrov: It’s up to President Putin to decide. Ambassador Antonov is currently holding consultations at the Foreign Ministry. He has met with the members of the committees on international affairs at the State Duma and the Federation Council of the Federal Assembly. He has had conversations at the Presidential Executive Office as well.

It is important for us to analyse the current state of our relations, which did not get to this point overnight, and are not just because of this interview, but have been going this way for years now. The fact that inappropriate language was used during President Biden’s interview with ABC shows the urgency of conducting a comprehensive analysis. This does not mean that we have just been observers and have not drawn any conclusions over the past years. But now the time has come for generalisations.

Dimitri Simes: Now that I am in Moscow, after a year in Washington, I see a striking contrast between statements by the leaders of the two countries. I think you will agree that when officials in Washington talk about relations with Russia, their pattern is simple and understandable: Russia is an opponent.” Sometimes, Congressmen are more abrupt and call it an enemy.” However, political leaders from the administration still call it an opponent.” They allow cooperation with Russia on some issues that are important to the US, but generally it is emphasised that militarily Russia is the number one opponent,” while politically it is not just a country with objectionable views but a state that tries to spread authoritarian regimes throughout the world,” that opposes democracy” and undermines the foundations of the US as such.”

When I listen to you and President of Russia Vladimir Putin, I have the impression that in Moscow the picture is more complicated and has more nuances. Do you think the US is Russia’s opponent today?

Sergey Lavrov: I will not go into analysing the lexicon of opponent,” enemy,” competitor” or rival.” All these words are juggled in both official and unofficial statements. I read the other day that US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said that for all the differences with Russia and China, the US does not have anything against these countries. As for what the US is doing, it is simply promoting democracy” and upholding human rights.” I don’t know how seriously one can take this description of US policy towards Moscow and Beijing. However, if they are promoting democracy, practice must justify theory.

George W. Bush announced that democracy was established in Iraq in May 2003. Aboard an aircraft carrier, he declared that Iraq’s liberation from its totalitarian regime was completed and democracy was established in the country. There is no point in elaborating. It is enough to mention the toll of the US-unleashed war – hundreds of thousands of people. We should also remember that the rule” of the notorious Paul Bremer resulted in the birth of ISIS, which was rapidly joined by members of the Baath Party, employees of Saddam Hussein’s secret services, who had lost their jobs. They simply needed to provide for their families. ISIS emerged not because of ideological differences. Relying on US mistakes, the radicals actively used this fact. This is what democracy in Iraq is all about.

Democracy” in Libya was established by bombs, strikes and the murder of Muammar Gaddafi which was accompanied by Hillary Clinton’s cry of admiration. This is the result: Libya is a black hole; refugee flows bound for the north are creating problems for the EU that does not know what to do about them; illegal arms and terrorists are being smuggled through Libya to the south, bringing suffering to the Sahara-Sahel Region.

I do not wish to describe what the Americans feel towards the Russian Federation. If their statements about us being their opponent,” enemy,” rival” or competitor” are based on the desire to accuse us of the consequences of their reckless policy, we can hardly have a serious conversation with them.

Dmitri Simes: When officials in Washington, the Joseph Biden administration or Congress, call Russia an opponent and emphasise this, I think they would not agree that it is simply rhetoric. Nor would they agree that it is designed solely for domestic consumption. The Biden administration is saying that the US did not have a consistent policy towards Russia and that former US President Donald Trump let Russia do everything the Russian Government of Vladimir Putin wanted.” Now a new sheriff has come in and is willing to talk in a way he sees fit without paying much attention to how Moscow will interpret it; and if Moscow doesn’t like it, this is good. This is being done not to evoke discontent, of course, but to show that Russia is finally realising that it cannot behave like this anymore. Is there any chance that this new Biden administration policy will compel Russia to show some new flexibility?

Sergey Lavrov: The policy you mentioned, which is promoted in the forms we are now seeing, has no chance to succeed. This is nothing new: Joseph Biden has come in, started using sanctions against Russia, toughening rhetoric and in general exerting pressure all along the line. This has been going on for many years. The sanctions started with the Barack Obama administration and, historically, even earlier. Like many other restrictions, they have simply become hypertrophied and ideology-based starting in 2013, before the events in Ukraine.

Dimitri Simes: They will tell you, and you know this better than I do, that this policy has not been pursued sufficiently consistently, that it was not energetic enough, and that now they and their NATO allies will get down to dealing with Russia seriously so as to show us that we must change our behaviour fundamentally not just when it comes to foreign policy but also our domestic policy.

Sergey Lavrov: Dimitri, you are an experienced person, you know the United States better than Vyacheslav Nikonov or I do. What else can they do to us? Which of the analysts has decided to prove the practicability of any further pressure on Russia? How well do they know history? This question is for you.

Dimitri Simes: Mr Minister, you probably know that I am not a fervent supporter of the policy of the Biden administration.

Sergey Lavrov: I am asking you as an observer and an independent expert.

Dimitri Simes: In my opinion, the Biden administration still has a sufficient set of tools it can apply against Russia, including new sanctions, the promotion of NATO infrastructure in Europe, a more harmonised” pressure on Russia together with its allies, the advance of the US policy not closer to the traditional Old Europe (I am referring to Britain and especially to France and Germany) but to Poland, and lastly, the supply of lethal weapons to Ukraine. It is now believed in Washington that it is very important to show Russia that its current policy in Ukraine has no future and that unless Russia changes its behaviour it will pay a price.”

Sergey Lavrov: My views on the current developments range from an exercise in absurdity to a dangerous play with matches. You may know that it has become trendy to use examples from ordinary life to describe current developments. All of us played outdoors when we were children. Kids of different ages and with different kinds of family upbringing played in the same places. In fact, we all lived as one big family then. There were two or three bad boys on every street; they humiliated other kids, disciplined them, forced them to clean their boots and took their money, the few kopecks our mothers gave us to buy a pie or breakfast at school. Two, three or four years later, these small kids grew up and could fight back. We don’t even have to grow up. We do not want confrontation.

President Putin has said more than once, including after President Biden’s infamous interview with ABC that we are ready to work with the United States in the interests of our people and the interests of international security. If the United States is willing to endanger the interests of global stability and global – and so far peaceful – coexistence, I don’t think it will find many allies for this endeavour. It is true that the EU has quickly towed the line and pledged allegiance. I regard the statements made during the virtual EU summit with Joe Biden as unprecedented. I don’t remember ever hearing such oaths of allegiance before. The things they said publicly revealed their absolute ignorance of the history of the creation of the UN and many other events. I am sure that serious politicians – there are still some left in the United States – can see not just futility but also the absurdity of this policy. As far as I know, the other day 27 political organisations in the United States publicly urged the Biden administration to change the rhetoric and the essence of the US approach to relations with Russia.

Vyacheslav Nikonov: This is unlikely to happen. I believe that your example with tough guys” on every street is too mild. The United States has gone beyond the pale, let alone the street ethics, which have always been respected. We can see this happening in Ukraine. President Biden is one of those who created modern Ukraine, the Ukrainian policy and the war in Donbass. As I see it, he takes the situation very personally, and he will try to keep it in its current tense state. How dangerous is the situation in Ukraine in light of the ongoing US arms deliveries, the decisions adopted in the Verkhovna Rada on Tuesday, and the statements made by the Ukrainian military, who are openly speaking about a war?  Where do we stand on the Ukrainian front?

Sergey Lavrov: There is much speculation about the documents that the Rada passed and that President Zelensky signed. To what extent does this reflect real politics? Is it consistent with the objective of resolving President Zelensky’s domestic problem of declining ratings? I’m not sure what this is: a bluff or concrete plans. According to the information published in the media, the military, for the most part, is aware of the damage that any action to unleash a hot conflict might bring.

I very much hope this will not be fomented by the politicians, who, in turn, will be fomented by the US-led West. Once again, we see the truth as stated by many analysts and political scientists, including Zbigniew Brzezinski, being reaffirmed. They look at Ukraine from a geopolitical perspective: as a country that is close to Russia, Ukraine makes Russia a great state; without Ukraine, Russia does not have global significance. I leave this on the conscience of those who profess these ideas, their fairness and ability to appreciate modern Russia. Like President Vladimir Putin said not long ago; but these words are still relevant, – those who try to unleash a new war in Donbass will destroy Ukraine.

Vyacheslav Nikonov: The US and Western diplomacy have definitely accomplished one thing: they put Russia and China in one boat. Indeed, we have already become strategic partners in deeds not just in words. You have just come back from China. You go there more often than once a year, for sure. During this trip, was there anything new that you sensed from Chinese leadership, which has recently come under unprecedented and rude attacks from the Americans? How strong are the bonds that are being established between Russia and China? How high is the bar that we can or have already reached in our relationship?

Sergey Lavrov: Like Russians, the Chinese are a proud nation. They may be more patient historically. The Chinese nation’s national and genetic code is all about being focused on a historical future. They are never limited to 4 or 5- year electoral cycles. They look further: a big journey begins with a small step” and many other maxims coined by Chinese leaders go to show that they appreciate a goal that is not just on the horizon, but beyond the horizon. This also applies to reunifying Chinese lands – incrementally and without haste, but purposefully and persistently. Those who are talking with China and Russia without due respect or look down on us, or insult us are worthless politicians and strategists. If they do this to show how tough they are for the next parliamentary election in a couple of years, so be it.

Winston Churchill famously said that democracy is the worst form of government, except for all the others.” A big debate is underway about which one is more effective. The coronavirus infection has taken the debate up a notch. To what extent the Western democracies have shown themselves capable of opposing this absolute evil and to what extent countries with a centralised, strong and authoritarian” government have been successful. History will be the judge. We should wait to see the results.

We want to cooperate; we have never accused anyone of anything, or mounted a media campaign against anyone, even though we are being accused of doing this. As soon as President Putin announced the creation of a vaccine, he proposed establishing international cooperation. You do remember what was being said about Sputnik V. At first, they said that it was not true, and then that this was propaganda and the only purpose was to promote Russia’s political interests in the world. We can see the ripple effect of this. On March 30, Vladimir Putin held talks with German Chancellor Angela Merkel and French President Emmanuel Macron. We sensed a more realistic commitment to cooperate rather than try to engage in vaccine discrimination” or vaccine propaganda.”

Getting back to the heart of the matter, by and large, no one should be rude to other people. But what we see instead is a dialogue with a condescending tone towards great civilisations like Russia and China. We are being told what to do. If we want to say something, we are asked to leave them alone.” This was the case in Anchorage when the discussion came to human rights. Antony Blinken said that there were many violations in the United States, but the undercurrent was clear – they would sort it out themselves and are already doing so. However, in Xinjiang Uygur, Hong Kong and Tibet, to name a few, things should be approached differently. It’s not just about a lack of diplomatic skills. It runs much deeper. In China, I sensed that this patient nation, which always upholds its interests and shows a willingness to find a compromise, was put in a stalemate. The other day, China’s Foreign Ministry spokesperson made a relevant comment. I don’t remember that ever happening before.

With regard to whether we are being pushed into the arms of China or China is being pushed into our arms, everyone remembers Henry Kissinger’s words that the United States should have relations with China which are better than relations between China and Russia, and vice versa. He saw this historical process and knew which way it could go. Many are writing now that the United States is committing a huge strategic mistake making efforts against Russia and China at a time, thereby catalysing our rapprochement. Moscow and Beijing are not allying against anyone. During my visit to China, Foreign Minister Wang Yi and I adopted a Joint Statement on Certain Issues of Global Governance in Modern Conditions, where we emphasised the unacceptability of violating international law or substituting it by some secretly drafted rules, of interference in other countries’ internal affairs and, overall, everything that contradicts the UN Charter. There are no threats there. The documents signed by the leaders of Russia and China always emphasise the fact that bilateral strategic interaction and multifaceted partnership are not directed against anyone, but focus exclusively on the interests of our peoples and countries. They build on a clear-cut and objective foundation of overlapping interests. We look for a balance of interests, and there are many areas where it has been achieved and is being used for the benefit of all of us.

Vyacheslav Nikonov: Have you noticed any change in China’s position? It is clear that Beijing is in a very tight situation. How far is China willing to go in its confrontation with the United States? It is obvious that they are now responding harshly. Sanctions are being introduced against Beijing, so it responds with tough counter-sanctions, and not only against the United States, but also against its allies, who are also joining the sanctions. Europe has joined this confrontation. Are we prepared to synchronise our policies with China, for example, our counter-sanctions, as we did with Belarus? Do we have a common strategy to counter the increasing pressure from the so-called alliance of democracies?

Sergey Lavrov: There is a general strategy, and I just mentioned it. Along with the Statement signed during my visit to China, a comprehensive Leaders’ Statement was adopted last year. Now we are preparing the next document, which will be signed by Russian President Vladimir Putin and Chinese President Xi Jinping, and dedicated to the 20th anniversary of the Treaty on Neighborliness, Friendship and Cooperation. Our strategic treaty will be renewed.

These documents spell out our line of conduct. We are not planning, and will not plan, any schemes to retaliate for what they are doing to us. I do not think that we will synchronise our responses to any new sanction acts against China and Russia.

Our level of cooperation continues to grow qualitatively.

You mentioned military alliances. There is popular speculation out there that Russia and China might conclude a military alliance. First, one of the documents signed at the highest level underscored that our relations are not a military alliance, and we are not pursuing this goal. We regard NATO as an example of a military alliance in the traditional sense, and we know that we do not need such an alliance. NATO clearly breathed a sigh of relief after the Biden administration replaced Donald Trump. Everyone was happy to again have someone to tell them what to do. Emmanuel Macron still occasionally tries to vainly mention the EU’s strategic autonomy initiative, but no one else in Europe even wants to discuss it. It’s over, the boss is here.

That kind of alliance is a Cold War alliance. I would prefer thinking in terms of the modern era where multi-polarity is growing. In this sense, our relationship with China is completely different from that of a traditional military alliance. Maybe in a certain sense, it is an even closer bond.

Vyacheslav Nikonov: The alliance of democracies” will be created. This is obvious although fewer people in Russia still believe that it’s about democracy. In its election, its attitude towards freedom of the media and opportunities to express opposing views, the US has made it very clear that it has big problems with democracy. Europe also gives examples that compel us to doubt its efforts to promote a strong democratic project. After all, it still holds a position as a player under a big boss.

Vladimir Putin had a conversation with Emmanuel Macron and Angela Merkel via videoconference on March 30 of this year. Without Vladimir Zelensky, by the way. This is the Normandy format minus Ukraine, which resulted in a bitter response from Kiev.

They discussed a broad range of issues. Meanwhile, you have said more than once that our relations with the EU are frozen or absent altogether. Do you mean that we stay in contact or that contact is possible with individual EU members but not with the EU as a whole?

Sergey Lavrov: This is exactly the case, and this was also mentioned during the March 30 talks, and during Vladimir Putin’s conversation with President of the European Council Charles Michel. We are surprised that this assessment offends the EU. This is simply an objective fact.

It took years to develop relations between Moscow and the EU. By the time the state coup in Ukraine took place these relations included: summits twice a year; annual meetings of all members of the Russian Government with all members of the European Commission; about 17 sectoral dialogues on different issues, from energy to human rights; and four common spaces based on Russia-EU summit resolutions, each of which had its own roadmap.

We were holding talks on visa-free travel. It is indicative that the EU broke them off back in 2013, long before the crisis in Ukraine. As some of our colleagues told us, when it came to a decision on signing the proposed agreement, the aggressive Russophobic minority adamantly opposed it: Russia cannot receive visa-free travel status with the EU before Georgia, Ukraine and Moldova do. This is the entire background. What the EU did after that, braking all channels of systematic dialogue was a burst of emotion. They took it out on us because the putschists insulted the West by throwing out the document signed by Yanukovich and the opposition the day before, this despite the fact that Germany, France and Poland had endorsed this document. The first actions of the new authorities were to remove the Russian language from daily life and to expel Russians from Crimea. When Russian-speakers and Russians in Ukraine opposed this and asked to be left alone, a so-called anti-terrorist operation” was launched against them.

In effect, the EU imposed sanctions on us and broke off all communication channels because we raised our voice in defence of Russian citizens and ethnic Russians in Ukraine, Donbass and Crimea. We try to discuss issues with them when they start making claims against us. They probably understand this; I hope they are still seasoned politicians. But if they understand this but don’t want to consider it in their practical policy, it means that they are being charged with Russophobia or cannot do anything about the aggressive Russophobic minority in the EU.

Dimitri Simes: I believe when we talk about the EU, it’s important to look at what the EU is and to what extent it has changed compared to what it used to be and what it was supposed to be when it was founded. The EU was primarily designed as an organisation for economic cooperation.

No political component was even envisioned at the start. It was about the EU contributing to European economic integration. The possibility was even mentioned of Russia playing some associated role in that process. But then they said the EU should also have some common values. At first, the idea was that those common values were the cement of the EU itself. Then a new idea emerged in Warsaw that it would be nice for those European values ​​(since they are actually universal) to spread to other regions, as well as for Russia to respect them, or even to obey them. When I look at the EU’s approach to Ukraine, the conflict in Donbass and the demands to return Crimea to Kiev, it seems to me that the EU is becoming a missionary organisation. When you deal with crusaders, trying to reckon with them or appealing to their logic and conscience is probably useless. Do you not think that the EU has journeyed to a place where there are limited opportunities for partnership and great potential for confrontation? Or am I being too pessimistic?

Sergey Lavrov: No, I agree with you, absolutely. This is a missionary style – lecturing others while projecting superiority. It is important to see this tendency, as it has repeatedly brought Europe to trouble.

This is actually the case. Established as the Coal and Steel Community, then the European Economic Community – if you look at the EU now, look at their values, they are already attacking their own members like Poland and Hungary, just because these countries have somewhat different cultural and religious traditions. You said it originated in Poland. I actually forget who started this…

Dimitri Simes: I first heard it from Polish delegates at a conference.

Sergey Lavrov: Now Poland itself is facing the consequences of its ideas, only not outside the EU, but within the organisation.

When anyone tries to impose any values on Russia, ​​related, as they believe, to democracy and human rights, we have this very specific response: all universal values ​​are contained in the 1948 Universal Declaration of Human Rights that everyone signed. Any values invented now, which they try to impose on us or other countries, are not universal. They have not been agreed upon by the entire international community. Even inside the EU, look at those street protests! A couple of years ago, they had protests in France in defence of the traditional family, the concepts of mother,” father,” and children.” This lies deep. Playing with traditional values ​​is dangerous.

As to the EU once inviting Russia as an associate member, we never agreed to sign an association document. Now the same is being done with regard to the Eastern Partnership countries – Armenia, Ukraine, and Moldova. As for Russia’s relations with the EU, which Brussels destroyed, only one thing remained – the basic document on the terms of trade and investment. It was indeed the subject of negotiation between the Brussels Commission and the Russian Federation. This is a document that remains valid. We cooperate with individual countries, but not with the EU, because those were the terms agreed upon, and their practical implementation is going through bilateral channels. The only thing the EU is doing in this respect now is imposing sanctions and banning its members from fulfilling some parts of this agreement because they want to punish Russia.” That’s it, there are no other ties.

We are being told that we are deliberately derailing our relations (although the facts are simply outrageous), trying to shift our ties with Europe to bilateral channels, wanting to split up” the European Union. We don’t want to split anyone up. We always say that we are interested in a strong and independent European Union. But if the EU chooses a non-independent position in the international arena, as we just discussed, this is their right. We cannot do anything about it. We have always supported its independence and unity. But in the current situation, where Brussels broke off all relations, when certain European countries reach out to us (we have not tried to lure anyone) with proposals to talk, to visit any of the sides and discuss some promising projects in bilateral relations, how can we refuse our partners? It is quite unfair (even a shame) to try to present such meetings as part of a strategy to split up the EU. They have enough problems of their own that split them up.

Dimitri Simes: This is a philosophical issue in Russia’s relations with the EU. When the EU has imposed anti-China sanctions, China made a tough response. This was an unpleasant surprise for the EU and caused indignation. Meanwhile, Brussels does not expect such a response from Russia in the firm belief that Russia has no economic levers to oppose the EU. To my knowledge, Russia has not imposed any serious sanctions on the EU.

This is an interesting situation. Russia supplies Europe with 33 percent of its gas. The figures for oil are about the same. I think during all this time Russia has proved convincingly that it won’t use energy for political leverage in Europe. Understandably, Russia has been interested in this, especially when it comes to the completion of the Nord Stream 2 pipeline. It seems to me that certain people in Europe have forgotten that if Russia does not do something, it doesn’t mean that it cannot do it, or won’t be compelled to do it if the EU’s pressure on Russia crosses a line. Do you think this is possible in theory? Or does Russia completely rule out such actions?

Sergey Lavrov: You are saying (metaphorically) that they either have not read (which is most likely) or have forgotten the epic about Ilya Muromets who slept on the stove while nobody paid attention? This is not a threat. We will never use energy supplies or our oil and gas routes in Europe to this end. This is a position of principle regardless of anything else.

Dimitri Simes: Even of you are disconnected from SWIFT and everything else?

Sergey Lavrov: We will not do that. This is a position of principle for President of Russia Vladimir Putin. We will not create a situation where we force EU citizens freeze.” We will never do this. We have nothing in common with Kiev that shut down water supplies to Crimea and takes delight in it. This is a disgraceful position in the world arena. Frequently accusing us of using energy as an instrument of influence, as a weapon, the West keeps silence on what Kiev is doing with water supplies to Crimea. I believe the provision of basic needs on which the daily life of common citizens depends, should never be an object of sanctions.

Dimitri Simes: In this case, what do you mean by referring to the phenomenon” of Ilya Muromets?

Sergey Lavrov: It is possible to respond in different ways. We have always warned that we will be ready to respond. We will respond to any malicious actions against us but not necessarily in a symmetric manner. By the way, speaking about the impact of the sanctions on civilians, look what is taking place in Syria under the Caesar Act. My colleagues in Europe and, incidentally, in the region, whisper that they are horrified by the way this act has eliminated any opportunity to do business with Syria. The goal is clear – to stifle the Syrians to make them revolt and overthrow Bashar al-Assad.

Now a few words about our and China’s responses to the European sanctions. After all, China also avoided suspending economic activity. It simply imposed sanctions on a number of individuals and companies that held certain anti-China positions. We are doing basically the same.

Vyacheslav Nikonov: As we know, Ilya Muromets did not shut down oil and gas supplies. He used other methods that were often symmetrical. I think we also have a solid set of instruments.

Don’t we exaggerate the importance of the EU in the modern world? It has an identity and there are European values. I know this since I have dealt with European MPs and experts for many years.

However, I have the impression that there are two main values: the first one is the euro and the second is LGBT and 60 more letters that describe this notion linked with sexual identity, their presence, absence, or mix.

The EU is undergoing a crisis – Brexit. Britain has left the EU. The economic crisis is very bad. Probably, in Europe it is worse than elsewhere. The economy has dropped by up to 10 percent in many countries. The vaccine-related crisis has shown that Europe cannot counter the virus and adopt a common policy. These problems are emerging at all levels. It cannot draft a common economic policy, migration rules, and so on. Maybe, we are really paying too much attention to Europe? Maybe we can act without looking back at this falling” structure?

Sergey Lavrov: But where are we paying too much attention to Europe? We have a very simple position that President of Russia Vladimir Putin has set forth many times: we do not feel hurt. As we know, hurt people get the short end of the stick, or as we say in Russia, hurt people are made to carry water, something we are short of in Crimea. We will always be willing to revive our relations, practically to raise them from the ashes, but to do this we must know what the EU is interested in. We will not knock on a locked door. They are well aware of our proposals, just as the Americans know our proposals on strategic stability, cyber security and many other things. We have said to all of them: Our friends and colleagues, we are ready for this. We understand that you will have some reciprocal ideas but we have not yet heard them. As soon as you are ready, let’s sit down and discuss them, seeking a balance of interests.” Meanwhile, now we are being accused of neglecting policy on the EU, so I don’t think we are courting this alliance or exaggerating its importance. It determines its place in the world itself. We have already talked about this today.

As for European values, we have many ongoing debates. Some people need European price tags more than European values. They want to travel there for shopping, recreation, buy some property and return home. As I said, our common values lie in our history, the mutual influence of our cultures, literature, art and music. They are great.

Vyacheslav Nikonov: As for modern European culture and art, have they really…

Sergey Lavrov: I am referring to our historical roots.

Vyacheslav Nikonov: Because I think today’s Europe is pretty empty in terms of culture.

Sergey Lavrov: There are some funny songs; we can listen to them in the car sometimes.

Dimitri Simes: Speaking of relations with the United States, I would like to ask you a personal question because you lived and worked there for a long time when you were Russia’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations. Of course, you have also been dealing with the US as the Foreign Minister of the Russian Federation. I lived in the US for almost 50 years.

Sergey Lavrov: Why past tense?

Dimitri Simes: I am now in Moscow. When I look at the United States today, I have the impression that it is undergoing a cultural revolution. I think that if many people in the Joseph Biden administration or the Democrats in Congress are told this, they would not feel offended in any way. They will say that a cultural revolution is long overdue, that it is finally necessary to eradicate racism, give equal and not-so-equal prevailing opportunities to sexual orientation minorities because they were also discriminated against and to develop a true democracy that requires that all those who want to vote can vote. In practice, this means that millions of people will have an opportunity to vote without necessarily being US citizens at all. This is why the Democrats emphatically oppose a ban on voting on Sundays. As you know, there was never any voting in the US on Sundays. Sunday is called God’s day. The Democrats wanted Sunday elections so that buses could go to Afro-American churches and take people to the polling stations.

Vyacheslav Nikonov: Why take them by bus? They can vote by mail.

Dimitri Simes: Both options are available.

Sergey Lavrov: Why not put a ballot box right in a church?

Dimitri Simes: Exactly. Do you believe the United States is, in many respects, evolving into a different country and that this is not necessarily an irreversible process, though a momentous one? Also, would you agree that this process is not a purely American internal matter because it goes hand in hand with the emergence of a new revolutionary ideology that requires that American values spread around the world and that these American models should not be resisted as they are now in Russia and China? Can this lead to an existential conflict?

Sergey Lavrov: We will talk about this but, first, let me finish what I was saying about European culture. Here is, in my view, a telling illustration of the state of European culture today. If we talk about revolutions, including a cultural revolution, the Eurovision  contest speaks volumes.  What they are doing now to the Belarusians is repulsive. This is sheer censorship that goes like this: since we – nobody knows who exactly, some anonymous individuals – fancy that we heard some innuendoes in your song, we will not allow you to take part in the contest unless you have another song. But then the same fate befalls another Belarusian song. What does this have in common with art, culture or democracy?

As for a cultural revolution in the United States, I do feel that processes which deserve to be described like this are unfolding there. Everyone probably wants to eradicate racism and, as for us, we have never had any doubt regarding this. We were trailblazers behind the movement to secure equal rights for all people, regardless of the colour of their skin. However, we should beware that we do not slip into another extreme, the one we have observed during the Black Lives Matter events, and into aggression against white people, white US citizens.

The other day we marked an international day designated to increase awareness of this issue and UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres, speaking at a General Assembly meeting, said that the previous year had been a year of the most serious and numerous manifestations of white supremacy. I have asked to be given the full text of his speech, as I want to understand what specifically he had in mind. If this is about having a sense of a trend you talked about and the willingness to follow this trend, it is lamentable. This is still the United Nations Organisation and not a venue for promoting US concepts, some US trends.

As for why they need this, yes, they want to spread this to the rest of the world. They have a huge potential to achieve this goal. Hollywood has also started to change its rules, so that everything reflects the diversity of contemporary society, which is also a form of censorship, art control and the way of imposing some artificial restrictions and requirements on others. I have seen black actors perform in Shakespeare’s comedies. The only thing I do not know is when a white actor will play Othello. You see, this is nothing less than absurdity. Political correctness reduced to absurdity will lead to no good.

The other tool is social networks and internet platforms, as well as servers located in the United States. The US flatly refuses to discuss ways of either making internet governance more democratic or establishing common rules regulating social networks for the sake of avoiding the recurrence of the situation with TikTok and other social networks we encountered during the recent events in Russia, including the spread of abominable information, like personal abuse, pedophilia and many other things. We have already approached TikTok and other social networks about the need to establish elementary rules of respect and propriety but the Americans are unwilling to make these types of rules universal.

In Anchorage, US National Security Adviser Jake Sullivan and Secretary of State Antony Blinken lectured the Chinese on human rights, ethnic minorities and democracy in China. Indeed, Mr Blinken said they [in the US] also had to address certain issues in this field but they would do it on their own. During talks with the Americans – the same goes for the Europeans – as soon as you start offering to discuss ways of democratising international relations or the supremacy of law on an international scale, they invariably get away from the subject. They want to replace international law with their own rules, which have nothing in common with the supremacy of law globally, on a universal scale. I already talked about large-scale rallies in France in defence of traditional family values. It appears that to secure the rights of one group of people, the rights of another group have to be infringed upon. That is, promoting these values around the world is not an end in itself, but rather a tool for ensuring their dominance.

Dimitri Simes: Richard Nixon once told Nikita Khrushchev that there would be no true harmony or true partnership between the Soviet Union and America unless the Soviet Union stops spreading its ideology. And that was a big problem in the Brezhnev era, I must say, because they discussed a détente while at the same time supporting a continued international class struggle. As I see it, Leonid Brezhnev was doing it without much conviction. But now, things have turned the other way around. Now the collective West is eager to proliferate its ideology and values. And they seem to be doing so with far greater conviction and perseverance than the Soviet Union under Leonid Brezhnev ever tried. Does this pose a risk of collision?

Sergey Lavrov: Under Leonid Brezhnev, the Soviet Union saw no threat to its existence. One can argue whether that stance was far-sighted enough, but that is how it was. Today’s West senses a threat to its dominance. It is a fact. So all those wiggling moves, including the invention of some ‘rules’ – as in the rules-based international order, something the West has come up with to replace the UN Charter – they reflect precisely this tendency.

I agree that we have swapped positions, or rather the Soviet Union and the modern West have. I don’t think this will offend anyone since this is not a big secret. I spoke with Rex Tillerson when he was US Secretary of State. He is a thoughtful and experienced politician and diplomat. It was good to work with him. We disagreed on most things, but we always wanted to continue the dialogue to bring our positions just a little bit closer at least. When he first told me they were concerned about Russia’s interference in some elections, I said they had not proved anything to us yet, and all we heard was accusations. When they began to accuse us of interfering in their elections, we repeatedly proposed using the special channel we had for exchanging information about threats to information networks and organisations. They refused. We had repeatedly offered dialogue even before that, when Barack Obama was president, from October 2016 until Donald Trump’s inauguration in January 2017. They always refused.

I pointed out to Tillerson that they had in fact directly stipulated in legislation that the US State Department should spend $20 million a year to support Russian civil society and promote democracy. That was not even a suspicion on our part as they did it openly (for example, the Ukraine Support Act). There was nothing to prove – they just announced that they would interfere. He told me that was totally different. I asked him why, and he said because we promoted authoritarianism, and they spread democracy. That was it.

Dimitri Simes: And he said it with sincere conviction, didn’t he?

Sergey Lavrov: Yes.

Vyacheslav Nikonov: Mr Lavrov, naturally, this policy leads to a drastic polarisation. The polarisation of international relations is a dangerous thing. We remember the early 19th century, and the early 20th century. It always ended in wars. The Americans, losing their global dominance, will create (they have already announced this) a new ‘alliance of democracies.’ I mean create American and pro-American alliances, compelling everyone else to make their choice. This polarisation will increase. What will this mean for the world and for the alliances where Russia is a member? I mean BRICS (which I think they will try to split up), the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO), and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). How far can this go? How dangerous is it?

Sergey Lavrov: This is a deliberate policy and an extension of the agenda we are talking about – about the United States promoting democracy and spreading benefit. The Americans and Europe are very active (but the Americans are especially active) in Central Asia. They are trying to create their own formats such as C5+1. Russia is also part of a 5+1 format in Central Asia, in addition to the SCO, CIS, EAEU and CSTO – one that involves the foreign ministers of five Central Asian countries and your humble servant. That format is useful. True, the volume of economic ties that the US and the EU are now building with Central Asia is still incomparable with our economic interpenetration, but they are pursuing an unambiguous goal to weaken our ties with our allies and strategic partners in every possible way.

The numerous initiatives around the Afghan reconciliation and around the Indo-Pacific region envision Central Asia’s reorientation from its current vector to the South – to help rebuild Afghanistan and at the same time weaken its ties with the Russian Federation.

I could talk for a long time about the Indo-Pacific region and the Indo-Pacific concept. That multi-layered initiative is aimed at hindering China’s Belt and Road Initiative and limiting the Chinese influence in the region, creating constant irritants for that country. There have been some slips about creating an ‘Asian NATO.’ Although in the US interpretation the Indo-Pacific region is described as ‘free and open,’ the chances that positions will be worked out through an equal or open process there are slim. It is already obvious that it isn’t ‘open’. China has not been invited; rather, that country is declared a target for containment. We have not been invited either, which means the attitude to Russia is similar. I would say those are long-term trends. We are talking about this frankly with our neighbours and closest allies. I am confident that they understand all these threats. None of them even considers the possibility of anyone telling them who to talk or not talk to. It is their sovereign right to choose their partners.

The term ‘multi-vector’ has become semi-abusive, but we are not giving up the multi-vector approach. We are open to cooperation and friendship with everyone who is ready for relations based on equality, mutual respect, compromise and balance of interests. That our Western colleagues are clearly abusing this approach, especially in post-Soviet countries, is an obvious fact.

Vyacheslav Nikonov: Is it possible to avoid the actual military scenario in these circumstances? Isn’t it time to create an alliance of free countries given the role reversal that has taken place in the modern world? An alliance, perhaps, of genuine democracies that will oppose the ongoing all-out attack?

Sergey Lavrov: We will not get involved in this kind of political engineering. Russia is committed to the United Nations. When France and Germany put forward the effective multilateralism concept, we asked them what it meant. There was silence followed by joint articles written by the foreign ministers of France and Germany stating that the European Union is an example of effective multilateralism, and everyone needs to adapt to the European processes. Our question why the readily available and universal UN multilateral platform is not a good option remained unanswered. However, the answer is there, and we mentioned it more than once today. They are making up the rules that the international order is supposed to be based on.

Dimitri Simes: Mr Minister, we have taken up much of your time and we appreciate it. But we cannot let you go without asking you one more personal question. What is it like to be Russia’s Foreign Minister in this rapidly changing world?

You have worked in several completely different eras. When you were Russia’s Permanent Representative to the UN in New York, it was a period of Russia’s romantic infatuation” with the United States, though perhaps not quite on the terms that were beneficial for Russia. In the early 21st century, Russia was in search of partnerships. Well, then we got what we are witnessing now. How do you, a person who, in many ways, is the architect of this era, a witness and a participant of this process, find your work in this very complex role?

Sergey Lavrov: To put it short, I never get bored. That is if we are talking about the different eras in my career. We all lived in these eras, and we have seen these transitions. You asked me earlier whether the United States has changed. It has. A lot.

Dimitri Simes: Have you changed?

Sergey Lavrov: Probably. It’s not for me to say. A person perceives the environment as a constantly evolving process. People grow up, get smarter or dumber, but they have no way of seeing it.

Dimitri Simes: Do you think we have all become disappointed in many ways, but we have grown, too, as a result of these experiences, and, of course, in the first place, a person holding such positions as yours?

Sergey Lavrov: This is true, of course. How can this not influence the formation of a person? The personality never stops to evolve. It is something that lasts until the end of our lives. Those revolutionary developments had a strong influence on me. I believe the 9/11 attacks were the turning point in the American life. I was in Manhattan, in New York, at the time, and I felt that odour. I was having a hard time trying to make a phone call, because the phones went dead. Since then, New York has become a different city. This free city, living its own life around the clock and enjoying it, became wary and started looking over its shoulder to see if there was someone around who could hurt it.

This suspicion then spread deeply into American society. There were probably serious reasons for that. I have to commend the US intelligence services, because since then, apart from the Boston Marathon, which we had warned them about, there have been no other terrorist attacks. However, wariness and aloofness can still be felt. Perhaps, there are people who want to take advantage of this in order to do things that you just mentioned. If 11 million Americans become eligible to vote, welcome to the one-party system, Back in the USSR.

Vyacheslav Nikonov: Mr Lavrov, thank you very much for the interview. Now that we are within the historic walls of the Foreign Ministry’s Mansion on Spiridonovka, a place where history and great diplomacy were made, including the diplomacy of the great powers, I would like to wish us all the return of diplomacy. If it comes back, as President Vladimir Putin is conveying to President Joe Biden, in the form of a live-stream dialogue, then The Great Game will be at your service and at the service of the two presidents.

Sergey Lavrov: Thank you. President Biden has already said that diplomacy has returned to US foreign policy. Your dream has come true.

source: https://www.mid.ru/en/foreign_policy/news/-/asset_publisher/cKNonkJE02Bw/content/id/4662534

වෙ⁣ළද පොලේ විෂ පොල්තෙල්, නෑ කියන උන්ටම ඒව කවන්න ඕන.මේක මිනීමැරුමක් සම්බන්ධ උන් එල්ලල මරන්න

April 6th, 2021

Sri Lanka

Was Portuguese proselytization ruthless as portrayed?

April 6th, 2021

By P.K.Balachandran/Daily Mirror

James Emerson Tennent was Colonial Secretary in Ceylon from 1846 to 1850 and Acting Governor in April-May 1847. Tennent was not just an administrator, a Colonial master lording over obsequious natives. His keen eye and ear caught the nuances of the communities he was administering. His scholarship got him the Presidency of the Ceylon branch of the Royal Asiatic Society.

In Christianity in Ceylon” published in 1850, Tennent traces its encounters with, and the challenges it faced from, entrenched faiths like  Buddhism, Hinduism, Islam and demon worship and how it tried to overcome the odds. He also wrote on the Dutch attempt to root out Catholicism from Ceylon and the educational achievements of the American missions in Jaffna.

Contrary to the general belief that the Portuguese used violence to spread their religion in Ceylon, Tennent says: There is no proof that compulsion was resorted to by them for the extension of their own faith or violence employed for the extinction of national superstitions.” By national superstitions” he meant the other faiths.  

He then goes on to say: The probability is that the priests and missionaries of the Portuguese were content to pursue in Ceylon the same line of policy and adopt the same expedients for conversion which had already been found successful by their fellow laborers on the opposite continent of India.”

Both in India and Ceylon, the cultural tools used by the Catholic missionaries had proved to be more effective than coercion and violence. Another reason for the preference for cultural tools was that the Portuguese missionaries in India and Ceylon could not count on the support of the Portuguese State apparatus which was necessary to use coercive methods.

The amount of assistance from civil power, on which the Roman Catholic clergy could rely, did not ordinarily extend beyond the personal influence of the Captains-General at Colombo,” Tennent says and adds that if at all there was State assistance these were favors and partiality exhibited by successive Governors to all who were willing to conform to their religion.”

Conversions were facilitated by what, in his view, was a characteristic disposition of the Sinhalese to be obsequious” and pliant” to those in power. But when the use of power exceeded limits people resisted in a variety of ways.  The might of the State did not work to the advantage of the Dutch because what they got, in reality, were fake adherents who lapsed into Buddhism or Hinduism the moment Dutch rule weakened.

Tennent notes that adherence to Roman Catholicism was stronger as compared to Protestantism. Sinhalese Buddhists as well as Tamil Hindus found Roman Catholic forms of worship similar and congenial, making transition from one to the other or dual allegiance, much easier. On the contrary, the forms of worship in the Protestant churches, marked by stern simplicity”   were seen as being alien.  

As he put it: Buddhism, like the ceremonial of the church of Rome, has to some extent its pageantry and decorations,  its festivals and its fireworks, its processions, its perfumes, its images, its exhibition of relics, its sacred vestments and its treasures of  barbaric pearl and gold. It has its holy places and its pilgrimages in prosperity and health and votive offerings in calamity and disease.”

The priests of both are devoted to celibacy and poverty, to mortification and privation. Each worship has its prostrations and genuflections, its repetitions and invocations, in an ancient and to the multitude, in an unintelligible tongue. Both have their legends and miracles, their confidence in charms and in the assistance of guardian saints and protectors.”

St.Francis Xavier had converted numerous fishermen on the Tuticorin and Mannar coasts, but he also noted large scale apostasy. This forced Jesuits in India to think of attuning Christianity to the local culture. They saw value in external conformity to local customs and practices and a careful avoidance of any shock to their prejudices, religious and social.”

The transition of the Jesuits was quite brazen in Tamil Nadu. Jesuits assumed the character of Brahmans of a superior caste from the Western World; they took the Hindoo names, and conformed to the heathen customs of this haughty and exclusive race, producing in support of their pretensions, a deed forged in ancient characters, to show that the Brahmans of Rome were of much older date than the Brahmans of India, and descended from an equally direct line from Brahma himself.”

The Jesuits wore ‘Kavi’ or the orange robe and abjured animal food. They composed a Veda in which they insinuated Christian concepts in the phraseology of the Hindu sacred texts. They conducted pompous Ther orcart festivals with the image of Virgin Mary and the Savior.  This method secured multitudes of converts in South India and set the tone for Catholic missionary activity in Ceylon. Fr.Joseph Vaz’s success in Ceylon in defiance of Dutch power was due to his image of being a Hinduistic ascetic (Sanyasi) clothed in rags, walking barefoot and sleeping on the floor. In Jaffna, he was seen and respected as a Brahman mendicant (he was actually from a Brahmin family in Goa). When, in 1704, Pope Benedict XV banned this trend, the number of nominal converts declined in India, Tennent says.

Political Conversions

In Ceylon, the Portuguese scored a major success when they converted the Kings of Kotte and Kandy. But these conversions were for political gain and not for salvation, he asserts. The elite, and even commoners, converted following the conversion of the royals. Converts had much to gain by being on the side of the new rulers. Buddhist monks, who disapproved the conversions went away to Kandy, but they were not forced to leave. Further, the Portuguese allowed regular worship at the Kelani temple, which continued to attract pilgrims, Tennent points out.

Dutch Intolerance

The situation radically changed when the Dutch replaced the Portuguese and began to propagate Protestantism with State backing and military power. Forced mass conversion was the order of the day and the principal targets were the Roman Catholics. No wonder, when the British took over from the Dutch, Protestant Christianity virtually disappeared from the Sinhalese population. But this posed a major challenge to British Protestant missionaries. The natives could not be persuaded to listen to their addresses, and even after three years of discouragement, not one Singhalese had admitted his distrust in idolatry,” Tennent notes.

Resistance was particularly strong in the deep South. Despite the fact that Europeans had existed in Galle and Matara for 300 years, conversions were few. Buddhists would attend educational institutions set up by Missionaries and listen to the preaching, but very few would convert. Buddhist monks would invite missionaries to their temples for discussions, but change of heart was rare.

Nominal Conversions

Many conversions in Ceylon were nominal and did not mean total alienation from Buddhism. Buddhists did not see conversion as a radical departure from their religion as Buddhism believes that there are many paths to salvation. The Tamils, on the other hand, found it harder to convert even nominally, as they were under the influence of rigid Brahmanism which was hostile to other faiths.

Apostasy was less among Roman Catholics as compared to the Protestants. It was infinitely smaller among the Roman Catholics than among the professors of any other Church in Ceylon,” Tennent points out and quotes a Wesleyan missionary as saying that the Roman Catholic converts, were more detached from paganism, more regular in attendance at services and their conduct more consistent with the moral precepts of the Gospel.” Tennant attributes this quality to the cultural liberalism of the Catholic church in contrast to the cultural rigidity of the Protestant churches.

Stubborn Moors                   

The European colonists’ attempts to convert the Muslims met with total failure. The more respectable Mahomadans met the offer of the tract with a dignified refusal; the lower classes rejected it with contempt; and to the present day, no decided conversions from Islamism have ever been made in Ceylon,” Tennent notes. However, the Wesleyan mission reported a solitary conversion in the Fort area of Colombo in 1814. The Moor baptized was named Daniel Theophilus. 

වැලිමඩ ශ්‍රී ලංගම බස්ගාල පිහිටි ශ්‍රී ලංගම සතු ඉඩම වැලිමඩ ප්‍රාදේශීය සභාවට පවරා ගැනීමේ ක්‍රියාවලිය වැලැක්වීමට කඩිනමින් මැදිහත් වන ලෙස ඉල්ලා සිටීම.

April 6th, 2021

සමස්ත ලංකා ප්‍රවාහන සේවක සංගමය

ශ්‍රී ලංගම ගරු සභාපති,
කිංස්ලි රණවක මැතිතුමා,
ශ්‍රී ලංගම ප්‍රධාන කාර්යාලය,
නාරහේන්පිට,
කොළඹ 05.

ගරු සභාපති තුමණි,

වැලිමඩ ශ්‍රී ලංගම බස්ගාල පිහිටි ශ්‍රී ලංගම සතු ඉඩම වැලිමඩ ප්‍රාදේශීය සභාවට පවරා ගැනීමේ ක්‍රියාවලිය වැලැක්වීමට කඩිනමින් මැදිහත් වන ලෙස ඉල්ලා සිටීම.

වැලිමඩ ශ්‍රී ලංගම බස්ගාල පිහිටි ශ්‍රී ලංගම සතු ඉඩම අනාදිමත් කාලයක පටන් ශ්‍රී ලංගමයේ තනි අයිතිය හිමි ඉඩමකි. මෙම ඉඩම වැලිමඩ ප්‍රාදේශීය සභාවට පවරා ගැනීමේ ශ්‍රී ලංගම විරෝධී ක්‍රියාවලියක් මේ මොහොතේ සිදුවෙමින් පවතී. වැලිමඩ ප්‍රාදේශීය සභාවේ මහා සභාව මෙම ඉඩම ප්‍රාදේශීය සභාවක පවරා ගැනීම සඳහා මහා සභාව අනුමත කර ඇති බවට අප සංගමයට තොරතුරු ලැබී ඇත. එසේ වැලිමඩ ප්‍රාදේශීය සභාවේ මහා සභාව අනුමත කළත් එම ඉඩම ඔවුනට අයිති කර ගැනීමට කිසිසේත්ම හැකියාවක් නැත.

අප වෘතීය සමිතිය සේවාවක් කරනු ලබන ශ්‍රී ලංගමය සතු සීමිත ඉඩම් බාහිර ආයතන විසින් අත්පත් කර ගැනීමේ උත්සාහයට දැඩි විරෝධය පලකරනු ලබන අතර එම උත්සාහය වැලැක්වීම සඳහා ගතහැකි සෑම ක්‍රියාමාර්ගයක්ම ගැනීමට සූදානම්ය. ශ්‍රී ලංගම ශක්තිමත් කරන ක්‍රියාවලිය අනුමත කරන කිසිවෙකුට මෙම ඉඩම අන්සතු කිරීම කිසිසේත්ම අනුමත කළ නොහැක.

ගරු සභාපති තුමණි, මෙම ක්‍රියාවලිය පිළිබඳව කැප්පෙටිපොළ ශ්‍රී ලංගම ඩිපෝවේ සේවකයින් මේ මොහොතේ බලවත් නොසන්සුන් තාවයකට පත්වී ඇති අතර ඇතැම් විට වෘතීය ක්‍රියාමාර්ගයන් වලට යෑමට පවා බොහෝ දුරට ඉඩකඩ ඇත. එම නිසා ඔබතුමා මැදිහත් වී මෙම ක්‍රියාව වලක්වා වැලිමඩ ශ්‍රී ලංගම බස් ගාල පිහිටි ශ්‍රී ලංගම සතු ඉඩම ශ්‍රී ලංගමයටම යලි පවරා ගෙන එම ඉඩම ආරක්‍ෂා කර දීමට කඩිනමින් මැදිහත් වන ලෙස අප සංගමය ඔබතුමාගෙන් ගෞරවයෙන් ඉල්ලා සිටින්නෙමු.

ස්තූතියි.

මෙයට,
විශ්වාසී,
සේපාල ලියනගේ
ප්‍රධාන ලේකම්,
සමස්ත ලංකා ප්‍රවාහන සේවක සංගමය.

සම්බන්ධීකරණය071 5152319
Coordinating – +94 71 5152319


දැනුවත් වීම සඳහාපිටපත්:
1.
ශ්‍රී ලංගම ගරු විධායක නිලධාරී මහේෂ් මැතිතුමා
2.
ජා.වෘ... – සභාපති ලාල්කාන්ත මැතිතුමා
3.
ඌව පළාත් සභා ගරු ආණ්ඩුකාර තුමා
4.
ඌව පළාතේ පළාත් පාලන ගරු කොමසාරිස් තුමා
5.
දිස්ත්‍රික් පළාත් පාලන ගරු සහකාර කොමසාරිස් තුමා
 
බදුල්ල
6.
ශ්‍රී ලංගම ඌව ප්‍රාදේශීය කලාප ප්‍රධාන කළමණාකාර
සේවක සංගමය තුමා
7.
ගරු ඩිපෝ කළමණාකාරතුමාකැප්පෙටිපොල ඩිපෝව
8.
ශ්‍රී ලංගම සියලූම වෘතීය සමිති වෙත.

Removal of CJ Peiris unconstitutional: Justice Minister- Remedial measures promised

April 6th, 2021

By Saman Indrajith Courtesy The Island

Justice Minister Ali Sabry told Parliament yesterday that the process of removing Mohan Peiris from the post of Chief Justice in 2015 was illegal.

Answering a question raised by Matale District SLPP MP Pramitha Bandara Tennakoon, Minister Sabry said that he would take appropriate action after consulting Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa on the unconstitutional” removal of Chief Justice Peiris on Jan 28, 2015.

Minister Sabry said that a Chief Justice could be removed only after obtaining the majority support of Parliament.

He said that a Chief Justice could be removed only if there was evidence to back any allegations of misconduct, or on the grounds of incapacity.

Justice Minister Ali Sabry said that former Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake had been removed from her post in keeping with the Standing Orders of Parliament.

Sabry said that Bandaranayake’s removal had been challenged in court, which had ruled that the removal was consistent with the Constitution.

The Justice Minister said that Mohan Peiris had later been appointed to the post by then President Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Mohan Peiris was removed from his post in January 2015 by then President Maithripala Sirisena.

Ali Sabry said that the President could not remove the Chief Justice without the approval of Parliament, and therefore, the removal of Peiris from the post of CJ had been unconstitutional.

MP Tennakoon demanded to know whether a Secretary to the President could remove a Chief Justice by issuing a letter to that effect.

Minister Sabry said that a Chief Justice should be removed through a parliamentary process and added that a President could not effect such a removal arbitrarily.

The Parliament is empowered by the Constitution to decide on the removal of a judge of the Supreme Court of Appeal Court. The Standing Order in Parliament mentions the process that needs to be followed,” said the Justice Minister.

The removal of Mohan Peiris from the post of Chief Justice should be corrected, the minister said, adding that Peiris was a respectable justice in the country’s judicial history. 

Action will be taken to rectify Mohan Peiris removal

April 6th, 2021

YOHAN PERERA AND AJITH SIRIWARDANA Courtesy The Daily Mirror

The Justice Minister said he will seek the Prime Minister’s advice on the unlawful removal of one time Chief Justice Mohan Peiris from his post and rectify it

Action will be taken to rectify the removal of Mohan Peiris as the Chief justice in 2015 with the advice of Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, Minister of Justice Ali Sabry told Parliament yesterday.

Mr. Peiris was installed as the Chief Justice after the impeachment of then Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake on January 14, 2013. However, the Yahapalana government which took office in January 2015 restored Ms. Bandaranayake in the office on the basis that the due procedure had not been followed in the whole process at that time. Mr. Peiris lost the post accordingly.

At that time, then Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera said in a statement to the House that ,”Two years ago, on the night of Monday 14th January 2013, a large contingent of military personnel occupied the Supreme Court complex, and from the early hours of the following morning, the Supreme Court was cordoned off, and riot squads, barricades and water cannons put in place.all this and more to enable Mohan Peries to be driven into the Courts Complex through its exit” – the most appropriate entry for a fake judge. Outside the Court gates, lawyers who had challenged the illegal and immoral eviction of Chief Justice Shirani Bandaranayake lit candles in daylight. It was the beginning of darkness at noon.”

Present Justice Minister Sabry who was responding to an oral question raised by ruling party MP Pramitha Bandara Tennekoon said he will seek the Prime Minister’s advice on the unlawful removal of one time Chief Justice Mohan Peiris from his post and rectify it. 

Ringleaders behind Easter attacks identified: Sarath Weerasekara

April 6th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Naufer Mawlawi, who is currently in remand custody, has been identified as the ringleader of Easter Sunday terror attacks, says Minister of Public Security Sarath Weerasekara.

The minister’s remarks came during a special media briefing held this evening (April 06). The press conference was also attended by Minister of Mass Media Keheliya Rambukwella and State Minister of National Security Chamal Rajapaksa.

Naufer Mawlawi is allegedly the theoretician of the now-banned organization National Thowheed Jamaath.

According to Minister Weerasekara, Naufer Mawlawi was involved in bringing down the ideology of the Islamic State (IS) to Sri Lanka in 2014.

Naufer Mawlawi is also the person who brainwashed Zahran Hashim into following the IS ideology, the Public Security Minister said further.

In addition, Hajjul Akbar, who was taken into custody by the Terrorism Investigation Division (TID) on March 12, has also been identified as a ringleader of the coordinated bomb attack. He was arrested in the area of Dematagoda for promoting Wahhabism and Jihadist ideology in the country.

It was revealed that Hajjul Akbar had served as the chairman of Jamaat-e-Islami Organization for many years. The 60-year-old is also a close relative of one of the suspects who was taken into custody over the Buddhist statue vandalism incident in Mawanella.

Speaking further, the minister said a total of 32 suspects who are directly linked to the carnage have been identified and relevant evidence has already been submitted in order to file cases against them. However, investigations into the matter are moving forward, he added.

In the meantime, 75 suspects are currently held under detention orders while 211 are under remand custody in connection with the Easter Sunday terror attacks, Minister Weerasekara continued.

Coronavirus: 177 new cases reported within the day

April 6th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Ministry of Health on Tuesday (April 06) confirmed 82 more new cases of the COVID-19 in Sri Lanka as the daily cases count reached 177.

Among the newly-identified coronavirus patients are 19 individuals who arrived in Sri Lanka from overseas, the Department of Government Information said.

The new development has brought the total number of COVID-19 confirmed in the country thus far to 93,772.

According to the Epidemiology Unit, 2,476 patients infected with the virus are currently under medical care at designated hospitals and treatment centres.

Total recoveries from the virus infection have reached 90,708 while the death toll stands at 588.

Two new COVID fatalities from Bibila & Ampara

April 6th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Two more COVID-related deaths have been confirmed in Sri Lanka today (April 06), says the Ministry of Health.

This brings the country’s death toll from the pandemic to 588.

According to the Department of Government Information, one of the deceased is a 70-year-old man from Bibila area who passed away on Sunday (April 04). He was transferred to the Homagama Base Hospital after testing positive for the virus at the Bibila Base Hospital. The cause of death was recorded as acute kidney failure, blood poisoning and COVID pneumonia.

In the meantime, a 47-year-old man from Maha Oya in Ampara area fell victim to the virus on Monday (April 05). He was initially under medical care at the Apeksha Hospital where he tested positive for the virus. He was then moved to the Angoda Base Hospital. As per reports, he died of COVID pneumonia and acute leukemia. 

Estate workers will be paid Rs.1,000 from April onward – Minister

April 6th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Minister of Plantations, Ramesh Pathirana stated in Parliament today (06) that the government will give Rs. 1,000 salary to all estate workers from April.

He stated this while delivering a verbal response to a question put forward by MP Waruna Liyanage in parliament this morning. 

Thereby, Minister Pathirana said that all plantation companies are legally obliged to pay this Rs. 1,000 daily wage to the estate workers, the Government Information Department reported.

He said that for the first time in history, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has allocated Rs. 1.5 billion from the budget for plantation industries and export crops including tea, rubber, and coconut.

The Minister further stated that the government has taken steps to provide drought relief to all those who submitted applications to the Tea Small Holdings Development Authority last year.

AG summons Conservator-General of Forests over recent reports on forest destruction

April 6th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Attorney General Dappula de Livera has summoned the Conservator-General of Forests and other officials of the Forest Conservation Department to take into consideration and verify the recent media reports on forest destruction.

According to the Coordinating Officer of the Attorney General, State Counsel Nishara Jayaratne, the relevant meeting is expected to be held today (April 06).

Further, necessary directives on the matter will also be given to the officials of the Forest Conservation Department.

Cabinet nod to purchase 6 million more Sputnik V vaccine doses

April 6th, 2021

Courtesy Adaderana

Sri Lanka is planning to import 6 million more doses of Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine from Russia, says the Department of Government Information.

During its meeting held on Monday (April 05), the Cabinet of Ministers approved the proposal tabled by Health Minister Pavithra Wanniarachchi to order more of Sputnik V jabs to proceed with Sri Lanka’s inoculation drive.

The National Medical Regulatory Authority on March 04 approved the emergency use of Russia’s Sputnik V COVID-19 vaccine in Sri Lanka.

Later, on March 23, the Cabinet of Ministers gave the nod to purchase 7 million doses of Russia-made Sputnik V coronavirus vaccine for USD 69.65 million.

The purchase order was placed on the recommendation of the Cabinet-appointed Negotiation Committee.

According to the Government Information Department, each vaccine will be purchased for USD 9.95.

DESPITE CULTURAL INTEGRATION COMPOSING SUB-CULTURES IN OVERSEAS BY SRI LANKAN MIGRANTS

April 5th, 2021

BY EDWARD THEOPHILUS

Culture is defined by many focusing on the past civilization; however, the culture cannot strictly define its real complexity limiting to past matters, which were broader and connected to social, economic, political, religious, races, and many others, the evolution of civilization added many features to the culture and historical information provides that many conflicts between cultures had been incurred based on values and assents. This means that culture and values had a partnering relationship and the other vital fact on this matter was that values developed as a result of the evolution of culture. It can identify that the relationship between the culture and values was bark and tree in history that means anything dies both will die. People in any country have respect and attitudes toward the impregnable of the past cultures. The impression and evolution of past culture supported to build of new cultures based on past values.

It is quite difficult to identify that anyone has analyzed the relationship between cultures and modern laws, rules, regulations, and practices, and the legality of cultures.  When making a deep analysis of the relationship between culture and law it could be seen that cultural features have been converted to common law which consists of Roman Law for many common areas, judge-made laws, and legislation enacted by parliament throughout history. The other important point is that having cultural ceremonies have been recognized as a valid agreement in Sri Lanka by the Supreme Court. For example, a marriage ceremony held in a church or any other place recognizes as a valid agreement and this is the best example for indication recognition of culture as law in certain instances.

Even though common law in Sri Lanka is based on the collective culture that applies to all communities and when sub-cultural customs failed to integrate into the common law the concept of personal laws been originated in the legal system.  Sometimes in Sri Lanka and other countries could observe that cultural rules of sub-cultures contradict the law of common and in such a situation, personal laws must have originated could be assumed. Many Western countries refuse the cultural rules of sub-cultures and they dislike to incorporate with the law of the countries. For example, the marriage rule of the Muslim community rejects within the main legal framework of the country (the practice of divorce and the age of marriage, etc.)

It seems that the concept of personal laws violates the new concept of one country and one law for all that people in Sri Lanka cry to implement, in some instances, personal laws should justify the application in sub-cultures. For example, the law of Temples and Worshiping places could not be applied to Christian and Muslim communities.  Therefore, the comparison or identifying the relationship between the culture and law is an arduous task.   

The supplementary question ascends with the definition of culture is what are values?  Generally, values are described as good or bad things in life, and the general meaning of values seems to be forced humans to refrain from bad value practices and adhere to good value practice.  Values are an integral part of the culture, people accept or willing to continue cultural values if such values helpful in building a good society that is abiding by laws, respect, and many other matters in society.  It will promote the development of a rich culture. When it goes through the whole spectrum of views the culture defines as rules, regulations, customs, acceptances in the society based on values.   

In history, there were no restrictions for human or animal movements and people from one country to another had been moving for various purposes and the free movements of people had restricted by the power of tribes and laws of countries.  Even in the era of homo sapiens or before the power of tribes instrumented the restrictions for free movements and later physical restrictions converted laws and regulation against the movements.

Despite restrictions for human movements, many western countries have been allowed the immigration of people from other countries as such policy would be helpful for business development. The immigration policy of developed countries expects that the overseas-born people would be integrated into the domestic culture and as the result of this process one nation with uniform culture will be established in the western countries. This process is called the cultural integration of migrants.  For successfully cultural integration, Developed countries spend funds for helping migrants adapting for cultural integration, but it doesn’t mean that funding for cultural integration is for creating sub-cultures in the country. When it looks at the behavior of many Sri Lankan migrants overseas it is a reasonable question whether they are integrating into the main culture or attempting to create sub-cultures in developed countries.

Cultural integration while controlling the restriction of movements and animated movements of people for economic reasons. The movement of people or immigration of people had been encouraged in many Western countries such as Australia, America, Canada, and other European countries as the economic policy of such countries called for labor from outside to successfully implement economic plans.  It has created conflicts between existing people and new migrants and many people blotted out that they were migrants and God created the universe for people who have the right to enjoy and reasonably manage countries. Policymakers in many Western countries have to work within many restraints and the movement of people has become a severe issue.

The concept of cultural integration embellished in many developed countries to democratically allow the movements of people. What is meant by a sub-culture? It is making culture within the main cultural framework of people. Cultural integration has become an issue in developed countries as the purpose of many migrants has become a complicated question. There is no doubt that Sri Lankan migrants to developed countries have given priority to have good life and purposes such as educating children.  While working on these objectives of Sri Lankan migrants have gone back to the country when they were born country after the retirement is on the priority list.  In this situation, the purpose of creating sub-cultures is not difficult to understand, and this situation had been generally in human s since the era of homo sapiens.  The conflicts between attitudes and the environment abide by religious engagements. 

Many kids either born overseas or born in Sri Lanka have constraints in cultural integration or joining to the sub-culture mainly because they are living in between the cultural integration and the sub-culture. The major reason for this situation is the burdensome factors such as difficulty in formidable communication with each other and suspect to integration in common culture result of misinformation about it.

Is there any solution to this problem? The cultural conflict could be seen among other communities too, but they have successfully adapted to the situation and the main supportive factor was the use of language in the domestic environment and maintaining the value-laden society. Attitudes of many Sri Lankans bias towards making a meaningless posh society rather than agree with the reality.

The Geneva game and the 13th Amendment: a geographical analysis -Part- II-To: Expert Committee to draft a new constitution

April 5th, 2021

C. Wijeyawickrema, LL.B., Ph.D.

As already intimated to you [to Expert Committee] orally and in writing, we are willing to evolve a settlement within the framework of a united, undivided and indivisible country: yet based on the principle of internal self-determination resulting in maximum possible devolution.” -TNA leader Sampanthan (Island newspaper, March 21, 2021)

The Tamils of Sri Lanka are the indigenous people of Sri Lanka. They have continued to live in this Island for over 3000 year  North and East of Sri Lanka are our traditional Homelands for over 3000 years. To expropriate such lands amounts to the destruction of our community. The Indo Sri Lanka Accord 1987 recognized the North and East of Sri Lanka as the traditional homelands of the Tamils. Thus expropriation of our lands amount to genocide.”

Ex-CM-NP, Vigneshwaran’s Zoom Conference (Colombo Telegraph, March, 22, 2021)

Introduction

Sinhala politicians today are divided into two camps on the crucial issue of the fate of the PC system: (1) those who oppose  13-A and (2) those knowingly or stupidly fighting for the continuation of the 13-A trap, despite the clear evidence that it will balkanize the island sooner than later. During 1994-2000, Mrs. Chandrika tried it but lost because she was short of just 7 votes. A second Orumitthanadu attempt was made in 2019 by the yahapalana cabal, but president Sirisena bombed it, last minute.

Part I of this essay discussed the origin of the pro-13A lobby which has different and hidden agendas. One who climbed up the PC ladder asked recently, what are we going to do the massive PC staff if PC system is abolished. Most probably he has a son or a nephew ready to be sent to the PC political Montessori. Similarly, Tamils democratic rights is what American and Indian politicians project via the agitation for 13-A plus, but their real aim is to use  it to resurrect the MCC Trojan horse.

It is clear by now that a win-win situation between the Tamil separatist TNA lobby and the Sinhala Buddhists is not possible via the 13-A path. Therefore, the Expert Committee has to escape from this balkanization trap  by taking an alternative path. That path is the empowerment of people at village level, because by trying to satisfy  a genocide-talking TNA MP set, Jaffna’s people suffering  cannot be ended. If the expert committee members watch you tube clips by Arun Siddharthan, they will see how discrimination of low caste Tamils is rampant even within the Jaffna MC limits. 

In my written submissions, I have explained in detail the solution to this 13-A dilemma. Part II of  this essay considers the efforts made by Tamil separatists and Sinhala-Christian-Marxist black-whites such as Dayan Jayatilleka to dishonestly (knowing that 13-A plus theory is not stop Eelam demand) justify their 13-A claim, hooking it up now with USA-India geopolitical strategy, after the MCC Trojan horse debacle. America will never give up it is strategy even if it takes decades to reach the goal.

How can you unite by dividing!

After a long discussion about Sri Lanka’s 13-A  formula for peace between Prabakaran and GOSL, an American once asked one of my friends, How can you unite by dividing?” This <dividing> idea has a history going back to years 1923-1924, when Ponnambalam Arunachalam took a decision to create an international organization to protect and promote Tamilakkam (Tamilness), influenced by the Dravidasthan movement started in the Madras Presidency in 1917. The two laughable statements above by Sampanthan and Vigneshwaran are the latest version of this Tamilakkam idea. In the case of Sampanthan, the real purpose of inserting a principle of an internal self-determination cannot be camouflaged by words like- united, undivided, indivisible  country.

Why are Tamil separatists so afraid of the term, UNITARY Sri Lanka, if not a simple name like the Sinhale (land of Sihalayas like Italy, land of Italians) used prior to 1815? By getting Tamils to vote en masse to Sarath Fonseka in 2010, the TNA crowds lost any legal or moral basis to talk about a Tamil genocide in Sri Lanka. Thus, by its last minute letter appealing for an invitation to appear before the Expert Committee,  TNA got itself automatically uninvited by revealing its hidden agenda! This kind of game is anathema to 6.9 million voters who wanted one country-one law.

Vigneshwaran’s performance is no better in this regard, at his ‘historic’ Zoom conference. He thanked Sampanthan for conducting him in to Jaffna-TNA politics. The island of Sri Lanka in his book was originally a Tamil land. Then  he talked about, north and east of the island as the Tamil homeland for over 3000 years. For some mysterious reason/s, his original Tamil population moved to the limestone region of Jaffna and coastal strip of the eastern province! He has forgotten his previous story of a five Siva lingams brought down from India in pre-historic times to bless the entire island

One cannot justly and rationally handle or convince this kind of delusional minds. In 1958 prime minister SWRD identified this delusional mind of SJV Chelvanayagam, recorded in the Hansard (Vol. 31 (June 3, 1958) cols. 244-5). But about his story on the <expropriation of our land>, historian K. M. de Silva (The traditional homelands” of the Tamils, ICES, 1987) and geographer G. H. Peiris have separately published  objectively convincing facts and data relating to the myth of a Tamil homeland and the so called Sinhalization of that homeland. With colonial administrative data on Sinhala Purana Gam, professor Peiris has shown that nothing adverse had happened to Tamil settlements in the EP. The responsibility for killing of a futuristic <Tamil homeland> goes to the malaria mosquito.

Homeland is a tiger’s tail

SJVC’s son-in-law A. J Wilson, was honest in this regard. In his book about his father-in-law, (SJV Chelvanayagam and the crisis of Sri Lankan Tamil nationalism, 1947-77: a political biography, 1994). Wilson records how, after landing in Colombo via the South Indian church, SJVC had to invent a homeland story to carve out a larger land area for his Kosovo plan, (page 42) because Jaffna limestone region was not a viable piece of real estate. Ever since separatism-bent federalists  had to dig for anything written to keep this myth running. They could not get any help from Robert Knox. Instead, they thought the Hugh Cleghorn’s Minute dated June 1, 1799 would supply the desperately needed oxygen. Upon analysis it was found to be a stupid minute non-starter.

Then came Karthigesu Indrapala’s University of London doctoral thesis (1965, 1969) which went against the homeland myth. He could find  notable Tamil settlements only from about the  10th century A.D. Apparently, with Prabhakaran coming to the scene in a cruel manner he could find (dig) new evidence (2007 book) to change his previous research, which was challenged by independent critics (Justifying a change of heart: Indrapala’s evolution of an ethnic identity, Gaston Perera, Island, 2008/2/6).

With Christian influence on the Federal State Party waning and Prabakaran becoming history, Vigneswaran began developing a new front. Sunil Ariyaratna while hiding in Madras with Nanda Malini collected data on buried Buddhist ruins there and wrote a book titled, the Demala Bauddhaya. Vigneswaran capitalized on this and used it as a political tool for the homeland myth. Thus, the new version is Tamil Buddhists in the island became Siva Hindus overpowered later by Sinhala Buddhists! He says five Siva lingas were brought from South India to bless the island.

Suren Raghavan, ex- NP governor and now SLFP list MP, who says he is a Tamil Buddhist, has taken this a step further by blaming Sinhala Buddhist monks for not taking Buddhism to Tamils in Jaffna.

He cannot understand that, monks do not take Buddhism to places as if looking for herds of lambs. Federal State party hated Buddhist monks ‘roaming’ in Jaffna. Monks did not go to help Ambedkar to convert Dalits to Buddhism. They went to Europe and America because they were invited. Suren as the only Tamil Buddhist in the parliament, fails repeatedly to tell in Tamil to Vigneswaran and others that there was no Tamil genocide in Sri Lanka, then or now.

Unreasonableness

Tamil separatist ideology was based on unreasonable demands in 1921 or now in 2021. They are unjust, un-scientific and irrational propositions. For example, governor Manning, Arunachalam, other minoirites and Sinhala Christian black whites agreed then, to balance (control) the Sinhala majority in the legislative council by giving minorities collectively the needed numerical strength. At a later stage GG Ponnambalam did not want accept 45-55, instead of 50-50 formula. Small amount of money allocated for the preservation of Anuradhapura ruins was cited by Tamil leaders, before the Soulbury commission, as an example of discrimination against them by Donoughmore ministers.

Peasant colonization schemes aimed at helping villagers squeezed out of up-country tea estates were cited as Sinhalization of a Tamil homeland. All most all technical cadre in such projects were Tamil officers who knew little Sinhala to speak and who could not or did not help hard-working farmers. Take over of Trinco naval base from the British, nationalization of schools, nationalization of estates, all were hostile acts directed against Tamils. Any  Tamil leader who escaped from this separatist trap and joined with the Colombo government was branded as a Tamil traitor. Even GG Ponnambalam was one of them, who got chemical, cement and paper factories to Tamil areas.

No win-win situation

With regard to the recent Asath Saali episode, Sepal Amarasinghe pointed out an interesting game people play with freedom and human rights. In countries like Sri Lanka, there is a play between legal and illegal (what is allowed and not allowed). This is like the play (not too tight and not too loose) between two cogwheels. Wise men or crooks know how to operate (use words) within this play area, but sooner or later unwanted/unexpected words jump out of their mouth. This was what happened to Asaath Saali, Ranjan Ramanayaka and most recently to Vigneswaran who is now asked to appear before the CID.

What is clear from this collective Tamil separatist behavior is that the expert committee cannot try to create a WIN-WIN situation to both the TNA crowds and the Sinhala Buddhists using the 13-A path, which according to the Supreme Court a federal path. The expert committee ought to call as witnesses two Tamils. On one end is Tamara Kunananyakam, who says 13-A will divide the island into two ethnic states. She says as a Tamil she has found no discrimination against Tamils. The other end is Arun Siddharthan, a Tamil Che Guerra coming from two toddy-tapping caste grandfathers.

The prevention of social disabilities act was passed on April 13, 1957, to bring social and economic justice to non-vellala Tamils in Jaffna. In fact, fishing caste Prabakaran was a result of not implementing this law or sabotaging it by the Federal State Party TULF and TNA. Prabakaran was treated  like a paraya by the FP central committee (I was told this by a close relative of P when he was with me in Canada as a student). By exposing the game played by Vigneswaran, TNA, Gajendra Ponnambalam, Arun has begun an unexpected social revolution in Jaffna. The abject poverty in pockets in Jaffna landscape that he brings to light by you tube Video clips put to shame the Tamil politicians, NGOs and even the GOSL since 2010. Just like the PC system failed to make the South better place to live, 13-A will not help the Jaffna common man and woman. What are Tamil aspirations for  Sumanthiran and Vigneswaran living in Colombo 7 or Ponnablam  domiciled in London and for the low caste Tamils living within the Jaffna MC limits without water or toilets for 40 years!

Part III- Why geography is against 13-A

As the New Old Left turns 50…

April 5th, 2021

Malinda Seneviratne

Revolutionaries, self-styled or otherwise, are hard to imagine as old people, the exception of course being Fidel Castro. Castro grew old with a Cuban Revolution that has demonstrated surprising resilience. Che Guevara was effectively stilled, literally and metaphorically when he was just 39, ensuring iconic longevity — and the wild haired image with a star pinned on a beret is a symbol of resistance and, as is often the case, used to endorse and inspire things and processes that would have horrified the man. Daniel Ortega at 75 was a revolutionary leader who reinvented himself a few decades after the Sandinistas’ exit was effectively orchestrated by the USA in April 1990. He’s changed and so has the Sandinistas. Revolutionary is not an appropriate descriptive for either.

Rohana Wijeweera is seen as a rebel by some, naturally those who are associated with the party he led for 25 years, the Jonathan Vimukthi Peramuna (People’s Liberation Front), widely referred to by its Sinhala acronym, J.V.P. He led two insurrections and was incarcerated alive on November 13, 1989 in the Borella Cemetery during the UNP regime that held stewardship during the bloodiest period in post-Independence Sri Lanka. If he was alive today, he would be almost78. Imagination following the ‘ifs’ probably will not inspire comparison with Castro or Che. Not even Ortega, for the Nicaraguan actually helped overthrow a despotic regime and, as mentioned, succeeded in recapturing power, this time through an election.

Wijeweera did contest elections, but he is not remembered as a democrat. Neither he nor his party showed any success at elections during his leadership. In any event, as the leaders of what was called ‘The Old Left’ as well as people who are seen as ‘Left Intellectuals’ have pointed out, the 1971 insurrection was an adventure against a newly elected government whose policy prerogatives were antithetical to the world’s ‘Right.’ As such, although the JVP had the color and the word right, moment and act squarely placed it as a tool of the capitalist camp, it can be argued.

As for the second insurrection, the JVP targeted leaders and members of trade unions and political parties who, although they may have lost left credentials or rather revolutionary credentials, were by no means in the political right. That such individuals and groups, in the face of the JVP onslaught, ended up fighting alongside the ‘right’ is a different matter.

Anyway, this Monday marks the 50th anniversary of the first insurrection launched by the Wijeweera-led JVP. Of course that ‘moment’ was preceded by preparation and planning that was good enough to catch the United Front government led by the SLFP by surprise, but the entire adventure needs to be examined by the longer history that came before.  

Wijeweera belonged to what was called the Peking Wing of the Communist Party, formed after the USSR and China parted political/ideological ways. When Wijeweera broke away from the Peking Wing he was barely out of his teens. What he and others dubbed as ‘The Old Left’ were at the time seen as having lost much of its previous revolutionary zeal. Entering into pacts with the ‘centrist’ SLFP gave credence to this perception. There was, then, a palpable void in the left half of the political spectrum. Wijeweera and the JVP sought to fill it.

It’s easy to play referee after the fact. April 5, 1971 was inauspicious one could argue. The entire strategy of capturing police stations, kidnapping/assassinating the Prime Minister, securing control of the state radio station etc., describe a coup-attempt rather than a revolution. There was no mass movement to speak of. There wasn’t even anti-government sentiment of any significance.

Nevertheless, it was an important moment. As Prof Gamini Samaranayake in his book on the JVP pointed out, the adventure revealed important things: a) the state was weak or rather the security apparatus of the state was weak, and b) armed struggle was now an option for those who aspired to political power. Indeed these two ‘revelations’ may have given some ideas to those Tamil ‘nationalists’ who would end up launching an armed struggle against the state and would so believe that victory was possible that they would try their luck for thirty long years!  

Had ‘April 5’ not happened, would we have ever had an armed insurrection? If we did, would it have been different from April 1971 and 1988/89? That’s for those who enjoy speculation. Maybe some creative individual with an interest in politics and thinks of producing fiction based on alternative realities might try his/her hand at it. It would probably make entertaining reading.

The April 5 adventure ended in an inglorious defeat. Wijeweera himself was captured or, as some might claim, planned to be captured (a better option than being killed, as hundreds of his followers were). The captors did not know who he was until he himself confessed. He spilled the beans, so to speak, without being urged to do so.

The JVP, thereafter, abandoned the infantile strategy adopted in April 1971. The party dabbled in electoral politics for a while after J.R. Jayewardene’s UNP offered a general pardon that set Wijeweera free. Wijeweera and the JVP would focus mostly on attacking the SLFP thereafter. Others who were arrested opted go their individual ways. Some went back to books and ended up as academics (Jayadeva Uyangoda or ‘Oo Mahaththaya’, Gamini Keerawella and Gamini Samaranayake for example). Others took up journalism (Victor Ivan alias Podi Athula and Sunanda Deshapriya). A few joined mainstream political parties (e.g. Loku Athula). Many would end up in the NGO sector (Wasantha Dissanayake, Patrick Fernando and Sarath Fernando). Their political trajectories, then, have been varied.

The JVP is still around. For the record, the ‘Old Left’ is still around too, although not as visible as the JVP. We still have the CP (Moscow Wing) and LSSP, as well as their off-shoots. Individuals who wished to be politically active, either joined the SLFP or the UNP or else were politically associated with such parties, even if they didn’t actually contest elections.

The JVP still talks of Wijeweera but this has been infrequent. It’s nothing more than tokenism, even then. The party has politically aligned itself with the SLFP and the UNP at different times and as of now seems to have been captured by the gravitational forces of the latter to a point that it cannot extricate itself or rather, finds itself in a situation where extrication allows for political crumbs and nothing more. The Marxist rhetoric is gone. Red has been replaced by pink. There’s no talk of revolution.

The high point in the post-Wijeweera era was returning some 40 members to parliament at the 2004 elections in a coalition with the SLFP. However, the decision to leave the coalition (UPFA) seems to have been the beginning of a serious decline in political fortunes. It demonstrated, one can argue, the important role that Wimal Weerawansa played in the party’s resurgence after the annihilation of the late eighties. In more recent times, the party suffered a more serious split which had a significant impact on its revolutionary credentials. The party’s radicals broke ranks and formed the Frontline Socialist Party, led by Kumar Gunaratnam, younger brother of the much-loved student leader Ranjithan (captured, tortured and assassinated sometime in late 1989).

The JVP, led by Anura Kumara Dissanayake, has done better than the FSP in elections thereafter, but the split also saw the former losing considerable ground in the universities, the traditional homelands of recruitment if you will. The spark went out as well. There’s palpable blandness in the affairs of the party.  At the last general election the JVP could secure just 3% of the vote.

The JVP is old. Too old to call itself the ‘New Left’ (by comparing itself with the LSSP and CP). The FSP is ‘new’ but it poses as the ‘real JVP’ and as such is as old. There’s nothing fresh in their politics or the ideological positions they’ve taken. In fact one might even argue that now there’s no left in the country. It doesn’t mean everyone is in the right either. There’s ideological confusion or, as some might argue, ideology is no longer a factor in Sri Lankan politics. It’s just about power for the sake of power. That’s not new either, but in the past ideological pretension was apparent whereas now politics is more or less ideology-free. Of course this means that a largely exploitative system and those in advantageous positions within it are the default beneficiaries.

Can the JVP reinvent itself? I would say, unlikely. There’s a name. It’s a brand. It’s off-color. It is politically resolved to align with this or that party as dictated by the personal/political needs of the party’s leadership. His son Uvindu is planning to jump-start the party with a new political formation, but adding ‘Nava’ (new) doesn’t make for the shaving off of decades. Neither does it erase history. Its potential though remains to be assessed. Maybe a decade or two from now.

So, after 50 years, are we to say ‘we had our first taste of revolution or rather pretend-revolution and that’s it’? The future can unfold in many ways. A half a century is nothing in the history of the world. It’s still nothing in the history of humankind. Systems collapse. Individuals and parties seemingly indestructible, self-destruct or are shoved aside by forces they unwittingly unleash or in accordance with the evolution of all relevant political, economic, social, cultural and ecological factors.

People make their history, but not always in the circumstances of their choice. The JVP is part of history. They were in part creatures of circumstances and in part they altered circumstances. Left a mark but not exactly something that makes for heroic ballads. Time has passed. Economic factors have changed. Politics is different. This is a different century and a different country from ‘Ceylon’ and the JVP of 1971. 
The JVP is not a Marxist party and some may argue it never was, but Marx would say that a penchant for drawing inspiration from the past is not the way to go. One tends to borrow slogan and not substance that way.  

April 5, 1971. It came to pass. It was followed by April 6. The year was followed by 1972. Forty nine years have passed thereafter. A lot of water has flowed under the political bridge. Good to talk about on anniversary days so to speak. That’s about it though.

malindasenevi@gmail.com
[Malinda Seneviratne is the Director/CEO of the Hector Kobbekaduwa Agrarian Research and Training Institute. These are his personal views.]

Outcome of vote on Geneva ‘resolution’

April 5th, 2021

Palitha Mapatuna

A few days ago, in Geneva, a ‘resolution’ was introduced against Sri Lanka. 

Reports indicate that this ‘resolution’ was based on falsities and inaccuracies, involving non-disclosure of vital information (as an example, one reads of suppression of  ‘Gash reports’).

All this seems to constitute a perversion of what is called ‘human rights’ for political purposes of certain countries, thereby removing any moral value and legitimacy in this so called resolution. 

It also seems to raise the question whether any official who contributed to this type of ‘resolution’ is a fit and proper person to hold the specific office.

Outcome of vote                                                             

According to reports, out of 47 eligible countries, 22 had voted for this ‘resolution’, 11 against and 14 had abstained from voting for it.

Therefore, in truth, the majority of the 47, did not, in one way or another, provide its consent to this ‘resolution’, perhaps sensing its fakeness.

On the other hand, those who did provide consent seem to have done so without any sense of propriety or shame.

SEVEN HUNDREDTH DHAMMA CONFERENCE

April 5th, 2021

Shripal Nishshanka Fernando

Sabbadanam dhammadanam jinati
sabbarasam dhammaraso jinati
sabbaratim dhammarati jinati
tanhakkhayo sabbadukkham jinati.

The gift of the Dhamma excels all gifts; the taste of the Dhamma excels all tastes; delight in the Dhamma excels all delights. The eradication of Craving (i.e., attainment of arahatship) overcomes all ills (samsara dukkha).

The seven hundredth Dhamma conference which will be held in this weekend on Saturday the 10th evening at 7:00 pm EST and Sri Lankan time on Sunday the 11th at 4:30 am and it can be joined and participated by Dhamma loving people all around the world.

There had been 699 Dhamma conference programs held so far and hundreds of participants have obtained immeasurable knowledge by this noble program.  Dr. Sisira K. Amarasinghe living in Chicago USA has been the patron of this conference right through out and it is a weekly program which happens at 7 pm EST every Saturday.

Conference details are as follows:

Participants using Telephones:

1. Dial the USA conference bridge number ( +1-805-309-2350)when dialing from USA, Canada or any other country.2. Enter the Conference ID (“9120699”) followed by # when prompted
Participants using Skype:
1. Dial +99051000000481 using Skype’s Call Phones feature [Please note that this call is totally free!  You do NOT need Skype callout credits to make this call]
2. Enter the Conference ID (“9120699”) followed by # on the Skype Dial Pad when prompted.  [Please note that if you are using Skype V 4.0.0.0 or later, the Conference ID needs to be entered on the dial pad that appears right next to the Skype volume control bar, and not on call phones keypad.  In later versions of Skype, you may find that you need to select “Show Dial Pad” option on the “Call” menu tab that appears on top of the Skype window, in order for Dial Pad to be visible]

Participant Commands:
*6 – Unmute/Mute your own line so other people can/can’t hear you talking (toggle on/off)

[Please contact Dr. Sisira Amarasinghe on phone # +1-864-674-7472 or via Skype instant text messaging (Skype ID: skamarasinghe) right away if you experience any connection problems while joining the conference.  He may not be able to answer Skype voice calls while the conference is in progress.

Please mark your calendar for this precious program and kindly spread this news among your Dhamma friends.

CARDINAL MALCOLM RANJITH’S EXPLOSIVE ANGER AGAINST FORMER PRESIDENT MAITHREEPALA SIRISENA

April 5th, 2021

By M D P DISSANAYAKE

Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith has already judged and found  that the former President of Sri Lanka Mr Maithreepala Sirisena guilty for the crimes committed on Good Friday in Sri Lanka.  He has thus surpassed the King Kekille of yesteryears.  By his explosive speech at St Anthony;s Church  at ,Kochchikade, Kotahena, he blasted the former President based on  privilege information ( the full text of the Presidential Commission Report), using downtrodden abusive language in the Church premises.

The Presidential Commission is a fact finding mission.  In addition, a  Parliamentary Select Committee concluded its findings, the Cardinal was dead silent at that time. The CID investigations are still in progress.    The Attorney General is yet to make indictments before Courts.

As a consequence of these outbursts, it is imperative to  List His Eminence Albert Malcolm Ranjith Patabendige Don as a key witness during court proceedings for cross examination. Link: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F0ZSQIJsVbU

බෞද්ධ ජනරජ ප්‍රවාදය – 13 වැනි කොටස ​- පක්‍ෂ ක්‍රමයේ සීමා

April 5th, 2021

ආචාර්ය වරුණ චන්ද්‍රකීර්ති

බෞද්ධ ජනරජයේ පරමාධිපත්‍යය බලයට සාමූහික අයිතිය අයත්වන බවත් එයට මූලික තැනක් හිමිවන බවත් මෙම ලිපි පෙළින් අපි අවධාරණය කළෙමු. පක්‍ෂ ක්‍රමය ඔස්සේ ක්‍රියාත්මක වන්නේ ද එක්තරා ආකාරයක සාමූහික අයිතියකි. තව ද පවත්නා ක්‍රමයේ සිට වෙනත් පරමාදර්ශයකට රට ගෙන යෑමේ දී එය අනුක්‍රමිකව සිදුකිරීම ද අත්‍යවශ්‍ය කටයුත්තකි. එසේ නොමැතිව, එක්වර ම කරනු ලබන මහා වෙනස්කම් හේතුවෙන් සමාජය තුළ අනවශ්‍ය ගැටුම් නිර්මාණය විය හැකිය.

කෙසේ වුව ද, පක්‍ෂ ක්‍රමයට සියල්ල යටත්කිරීම බෞද්ධ ප්‍රජාතන්ත්‍රවාදය යටතේ සිදුකළ නොහැකිය. එහෙයින් යම් පාලනයකට යටත්ව පක්‍ෂ ක්‍රමයට ඉඩදිය යුතු බව අපි වටහාගත යුතු වෙමු. මේ සඳහා අනුගමනය කළ හැකි පාලන උපක්‍රම මොනවා ද? මෙම ලිපියෙන් අපි ඒ ගැන විමසා බලමු.

විධායකය තෝරාපත් කරගැනීමට සහ එය කාර්යක්‍ෂම අයුරින් මෙහෙයවීමට අදාළ කාර්යයන්ට පමණක් පක්‍ෂ ක්‍රමය යොදාගැනීම මේ අරභයා යොදාගත හැකි මූලික ම උපක්‍රමයයි. ජනතාවගේ උපදේශන බලතල, ජනතාවගේ ව්‍යවස්ථාදායක බලතල සහ ජනතාවගේ අධිකරණ බලතල මෙහෙයවීම සඳහා පක්‍ෂ ක්‍රමය උපයෝගී කර නොගැනෙයි. එහෙයින් බෞද්ධ ජනරජයේ උත්තරීතර උපදේශක සභාව, ජාතික ව්‍යවස්ථාදායක සභාව සහ අධිකරණය නිර්පාක්‍ෂික ආයතන ලෙසින් ක්‍රියාත්මක වෙයි. මෙ ලෙසින් පක්‍ෂ ක්‍රමය විධායකයට පමණක් අදාළ කරගැනීමෙන් එය සීමා කළ හැකිය.

ඒ අනුව, ජනරජයේ ජනාධිපතිවරයා, ජාතික විධායක සභාව, රාජ්‍ය මන්ත්‍රණ සභාව සහ කෝරළ සභාවල සභාපතිවරු පමණක් පක්‍ෂ ක්‍රමය අනුව තෝරාපත් කර ගැනෙයි. (රාජ්‍ය මන්ත්‍රණ සභාව යනු ව්‍යවස්ථාදායක සභාවක් නොවන බව අපි මෙහි දී නැවතත් අවධාරණය කරමු. විධායකයේ කටයුතු විමර්ශනය, රාජ්‍ය අයවැය සම්මත කිරීම, දෝෂාභියෝග සහ විශ්වාසභංග යෝජනා ගෙන ඒම යනාදියට එහි කාර්යයන් සීමාවෙයි). උක්ත තනතුරුවලට ජනතා නියෝජිතයන් පත් කරගැනීම සඳහා පමණක් පක්‍ෂ ක්‍රමය යොදා ගැනෙයි.

එයට අමතරව ජනතා නියෝජිතත්වය සඳහා තරගකිරීමට අවශ්‍ය මූලික සුදුසුකම් පැනැවීමෙන් ද අනවශ්‍ය විදිහට පක්‍ෂ බිහිවීම සීමා කළ හැකිය. ගම් සභාව මුළුමනින්ම ද කෝරළ සභාවේ සභාපති හැර අනෙකුත් තනතුරු ද නිර්පාක්‍ෂික ක්‍රමය අනුව තෝරාපත් කරනු ලබන බව කලින් ලිපිවලින් අපි පැහැදිළි කළෙමු. ගම් සභා සාමාජිකයන් ගම් මට්ටමේ දී පවත්වනු ලබන සෘජු නිලවරණවලින් ද කෝරළ සභා සාමාජිකයන් ගම් සභා සභිකයන් අතරින් ද තෝරාපත් කර ගැනෙයි. එහෙයින් එකී ආයතන නිර්පාක්‍ෂික ඒවා වෙයි. පක්‍ෂ ක්‍රමය මෙම ආයතනවල පාලනයට නතු කෙරෙන්නේ එම සභාවල සාමාජිකයන් ඡන්දය ලබාදෙන ප්‍රාථමික මැතිවරණ පැවැත්වීමෙනි.

මෙය කළ හැක්කේ කෙ ලෙසින් ද?

යම් පක්‍ෂයක අපේක්‍ෂකයකු කෝරළ සභාවේ සභාපති ධුරයට තරගකිරීමට අපේක්‍ෂා කරන්නේ නම් ඔහු හෝ ඇය මුලින් ම එම සභාවට අයත් ගම් සභා සාමාජිකයන් ඡන්දදායකයන් වශයෙන් කටයුතු කරන ප්‍රාථමික නිලවරණයකට සහභාගී විය යුත්තේ ය. මෙම ප්‍රාථමික නිලවරණයේ දී කෝරළ සභාවට අයත් ගම් සභා අඩකින් හෝ එයට වැඩි ප්‍රමාණයකින් හෝ ඡන්ද තුනෙන් එකක් හෝ එයට වැඩි ප්‍රමාණයක් හෝ වෙන වෙනම ලබාගන්නා අපේක්‍ෂකයෝ පමණක් අවසාන මැතිවරණයට සහභාගීවීමට සුදුසුකම් ලබති. ඒ අනුව කෝරළ සභා මට්ටමින් අවසාන මැතිවරණයට සහභාගී විය හැකි උපරිම පක්‍ෂ ප්‍රමාණය හයකට සීමාවෙයි. කෙසේ වුව ද, ප්‍රායෝගික තත්ත්වයන් තුළ මෙම ප්‍රමාණය දෙකක් හෝ තුනක් වීමේ වැඩි ඉඩක් වෙයි.

ජනාධිපතිවරණය සඳහා ද මෙම ප්‍රාථමික මැතිවරණ ක්‍රමය අදාළ කරගත හැකිය. එහි දී ඡන්දදායකයින් වශයෙන් කටයුතු කරන්නේ දිවයිනේ සියළුම කෝරළ සභාවල සාමාජිකයන් ය. එම ප්‍රාථමික නිලවරණයේ දී කෝරළ සභා අඩකින් හෝ එයට වැඩි ප්‍රමාණයකින් හෝ ඡන්ද තුනෙන් එකක් හෝ එයට වැඩි ප්‍රමාණයක් හෝ වෙන වෙනම ලබාගන්නා අපේක්‍ෂකයෝ පමණක් ජනාධිපතිවරණය සඳහා සහභාගීවීමට සුදුසුකම් ලබති. ප්‍රායෝගික තත්ත්වයන් තුළ මෙ ලෙස සුදුසුකම් ලබන පක්‍ෂ ප්‍රමාණය ද දෙකක් හෝ තුනක් වීමේ වැඩි ඉඩක් වෙයි.

දේශපාලනික වශයෙන් සංවිධානය වීමට ජනතාවට තිබෙන සාමූහික අයිතිය මෙම ක්‍රමය තුළින් ආරක්‍ෂා කෙරෙන අතර සීමාවක් නොමැති අයුරින් ජනතාව බෙදා වෙන්වීම වළක්වයි. මැතිවරණවලට සහභාගීවීමේ වරම ජනතා පදනමක් ඇති පක්‍ෂවලට පමණක් හිමිවෙයි. මැතිවරණයකට සහභාගීවීමට යම් පක්‍ෂයක් අපේක්‍ෂා කරන්නේ නම් ඒ සඳහා කළ යුතු මූලික ම කාර්යය වනුයේ තමන්ගේ ජන පදනම වර්ධනය කරගැනීම ය. කෝරළ මට්ටමින් මෙය සිදුකිරීම අපහසු කාර්යයක් නොවේ. මෙ ලෙස කෝරළ මට්ටමින් ශක්තිමත් වන පක්‍ෂයකට අවසානයේ දී ජනාධිපතිවරණයට ද සහභාගී විය හැකිය.

නායකයන් කිහිප දෙනකු විසින් මෙහෙයවනු ලබන දේශපාලන පක්‍ෂ මෙම ක්‍රමය යටතේ වඩාත් ප්‍රජාතන්ත්‍රවාදී වනු නිසැකය. මේ අනුව ජනතාවගේ බලය තහවුරු කෙරෙන ප්‍රජාතන්ත්‍රවාදයක් බෞද්ධ ජනරජය තුළ ස්ථාපිත වනු ඇත්තේ ය.

ආචාර්ය වරුණ චන්ද්‍රකීර්ති

Unclear. Untold. Unfair. Untenable

April 5th, 2021

MALINDA SENEVIRATN​E

Unclear. Untold. Unfair. These are words that one can reasonably expect in any decent conversation or review of the recent UN Human Rights Council resolution on/against Sri Lanka. However, such dismal descriptives are applicable to other matters, institutions and processes as well.

Just the other day, those words were uttered at the launch of Dr Prasanna Cooray book ‘Politics of a Rainforest: Battles To Save Sinharaja,’ L. J. Mendis Wickramasinghe is a Sri Lankan herpetologist, taxonomist, naturalist, wildlife photographer, framed his observations with that telling end-note.

The book contains much information on the subject. Mendis Wickramasinghe’s thoughts as well as those expressed by others offered insights rich in detail and nuance. The picture that emerged was worrisome and not only on account of the horror stories of deforestation doing the rounds, which, by the way, are marked as much by fact as hyperbole.

What is most worrisome is the dimensions of ignorance demonstrated by commentators, the officials, politicians, self-righteous, the horror-stricken and the loud objectors. There’s also the inevitable cash-in attempts motivated by political capital to be secured. Such efforts are not unusual and typically are the bread and butter of people whose interest in ecological matters are subservient to political designs.

Of course the hue and cry even if politically motivated do have a positive impact. They draw attention to things that do warrant investigation, even if one were conservative. There’s a downside to it as well — the ill-willed only need to debunk the rhetoricians in order for the issue to be discredited.

Two things get dismissed: the enormity of the problem and the complexity. The first gets pooh-poohed The second get’s little or no play at all. Both outcomes can have seriously negative impacts.  

Complexity. This is a word that all nature-lovers, officials, politicians and even citizens who are less invested in things ecological (compared to other concerns) should take into account. Mendis Wickramasinghe interjected an interesting example. In a word (or name), Meemure.

Meemure. Say it. Close your eyes and say it. It’s like someone humming a melody. Now think ‘Meemure.’ You will remember all you’ve heard of the name and the place. Idyllic. Dreamy. Mysterious. You can pick one of many adjectives. It’s a yanna hithena thanak (a place you want to visit).

Meemure. You might remember the name as one of the weekly ‘stops’ in the President’s Game Samaga Pilisandara (Conversation with the village(rs)) program. During that visit some villagers had requested the president to permit them to cultivate cardamom.  On the face of it, a reasonable request considering that people in the area have harvested cardamon from the surrounding forests for centuries, i.e. until the possible dangers were noted, studied, policy recommendations submitted and laws enacted to stop the practice.

The problem is simple. That Meemure of, say, twenty years ago, is no longer the Meemure that you will encounter today. Those who are ignorant of changes that have taken place might argue that the villagers always had a symbiotic relationship with the jungle. They harvested various things but without compromising regenerative capacities, without felling trees, without facilitating any decline in biodiversity and so on. Then. Not any more.

Today, the notion of the innocent villager robbed of a lifestyle where livelihood was made in part by an engagement with the forest is a convenient cover. There’s a difference between someone picking cardamom growing wild to flavor a meal and someone growing cardamom for commercial purposes. The latter type can and do abuse opportunities offered to the former in good faith.

Today, there’s no juggery that’s not sugar-made. Today, if a villager falls seriously ill (at the ‘wrong’ time of the day), he/she might die on the way to the hospital because of the sheer traffic — it’s now a tourist destination, not an idyllic village. Of course there’s good and bad in these ‘developments.’ Some villagers have and continue to prosper. Some lament. In any event, it’s a different Meemure that’s out there. Well, it is a different country too. The economic system has undergone a lot of transformation. Profit is a powerful driver that can obliterate other factors. The needs-of-the- here-and-now constitute a powerful objector to sustainable lifestyles and of course all those other things flagged by ecologists, nature-lovers, econazis and of course those who use ‘ecology’ as a convenient armor in petty and narrow political battles.

Meemure, moreover, could be a metaphor for what’s happening in many parts of the country, especially when it comes to sensitive ecologies. Only the scientists truly know what’s what about such things. Indeed, anyone who truly loves nature will take the time to learn the science or seek the views of the scientists. Others are essentially dabblers. Dabblers can harm, knowingly or unknowingly.

As Mendis-Wickramasinghe pointed out, most who go to Sinharaja, for example, might want to see a bear, an elephant or a leopard. No bears, he said. There are some leopards, he said. Maybe elephant-sightings too. For that, he said, you would have to spend a long time there. More importantly, he showed pictures of all kinds of creatures that those who look for ‘the big guys’ would most certainly miss. He spoke of what damage can be caused by ignorance of complex phenomenon and processes, for things are connected in numerous ways. If you don’t see the complexity, your response, even with the best of intentions, could engender monumental disasters.

And here’s something else he said. Mendis-Wickramasinghe offered that we have a very narrow notion of ‘diversity’. We limit it to ethnicity and religion. How about the hundreds of indigenous species of fauna and flora, he posed. How about history? How about effective land-use options? How about impact on climate? How about, yes, the people, in these ‘Meemures’ and elsewhere?

Meemure. Yanna hithena thanak, that it is. Is it an inna hithena thanak (a place you want to remain), though? Think about it.

Things are unclear. Untold. Unfair. Certain things are even untenable. These are words that those who talk of development as being antithetical to the environment and even those who do not cut it that way rarely appreciate.

malindasenevi@gmail.com
[Malinda Seneviratne is the Director/CEO of the Hector Kobbekaduwa Agrarian Research and Training Institute. These are his personal views.]

Gotabaya regime comes under multiple pressures

April 5th, 2021

By P.K.Balachandran/Daily Express

Colombo, April 5: The Gotabaya Rajapaksa Presidency, which is in its second year, is facing multiple problems, both domestic and external, economic as well as political. 

Divisions have arisen in the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) and also with alliance partners. There is difficulty in kick-starting the economy derailed by the COVID-19 pandemic, mainly due to flaws in the decision making and implementing apparatuses. The external debt repayment issue is looming in the horizon.

And last, but not the least, there is pressure from the UN Human Rights Council (UNHRC) on war time and post-war accountability issues with the Council getting authorization for the setting up of a mechanism to collect data on alleged war crimes and rights violations after the war. 

The government is under pressure from India (and also the UNHRC) to hold the Provincial Council (PC) elections, not held since 2018. India insists that the 13 th. Amendment (13A) of the constitution which had set up the semi-autonomous, elected Provincial Councils, should not be repealed. The leadership is divided on the issue of PC elections and also on retaining the 13A.   

President Gotabaya is against devolution power, especially as envisaged by the 13A. Sri Lanka will not allow other countries to achieve their geopolitical needs by introducing separatism under the guise of power devolution in the island nation”, he told a village audience recently.   

Nationalist and Sinhala-majoritarian hardliners, who claim to be the architects of the SLPP’s victory in the November 2019 and August 2020, elections, strongly back the President on this issue. But Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa and SLPP organizer Basil Rajapaksa look at Provincial Councils with devolved power as a useful political institution. They are keen on holding elections to the Councils.

Nevertheless, considering the opposition to the Provincial Councils and to holding elections to them now, Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa has sought a parliamentary committee to go into the system under which they could be held. This issue has been pending for long. In 2018 parliament rejected the electorate de-limitation report submitted by the Delimitation Commission.

According to official sources, Provincial Council polls, if held at all, are unlikely before the end of 2021. Doubts about their being held at all have mounted since a section of Buddhist monks demanded that they should not be held before government delivers on its election promise to give a new constitution for the country. The new constitution is  expected to be centralized and Sinhala-majoritarian in character to accord with the SLPP’s voter base. But that will run into trouble with the Tamil minority.

The 11 parties which are in alliance with the SLPP are now restive complaining that the SLPP leadership does not take them into confidence before taking decisions. Their target is the SLPP organizer Basil Rajapaksa. They plan to meet President Gotabaya to apprise him of their grievances. They have decided to display their autonomy by holding  May Day programs separately this year.

Due to COVID-19 triggered restrictions, the total number of jobs in the economy contracted by 160,996 in the first quarter of 2020. Overall, in  2020, unemployment had increased from 48% to 6% according to one estimate.  With tourism still curbed and the Middle East labor market being down, there is no immediate relief in sight as regards jobs. While agriculture has revived, the industrial and service sectors are sluggish with government reluctant to relax pandemic time restrictions. Sri Lanka has about US$3.5 billion foreign currency denominated debt to repay between March and December 2021.

To manage the challenge posed by the UNHRC, President Gotabaya has appointed a commission to go into alleged rights violations during the war and afterwards. Foreign Minister Dinesh Gunawardena has appealed to Tamil leaders and agitators to present their case before the commission and also utilize the existing Office of Missing Persons and the reparations office, instead of lobbying with the international community and the UNHRC.

But the Tamils say that they have no faith in Sri Lanka’s domestic mechanisms. In justification of this dim view, they cite Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa’s repeated plea that the missing persons” had all died in the conflict.

Meanwhile, pressure is mounting on the government to take action on the report of the Presidential Commission which went into the April 21, 2019 suicide bombings in which 260 persons, mostly Catholics, were killed. Government is dithering on this report as it would be difficult to punish many named in the commission’s report, including former President Maithripala Sirisena who is now an ally of the SLPP government.

Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith has threatened to launch an agitation if the masterminds behind the bombings by Islamic zealots were not found out and all those who aided the bombers were not punished. But government has to tread carefully in this matter because any reckless action or unjustified actions against Muslims will alienate Islamic countries like Pakistan which supported Sri Lanka in the UNHRC recently, braving Western pressure to vote for their anti-Sri Lankan resolution.

Naxal who executed Sukma attack was trained by LTTE in ambush tactics Read more

April 5th, 2021

Courtesy OneIndia

New Delhi, Apr 05: Preliminary investigations into the Sukma attack by the naxalites suggest that CPI (Maoist) leader Basava Raju led the execution.

Basava Raju alias Nambala Keshav Rao took over as the general secretary of the CPI (Maoist) and has been part of the naxal movement since the 1970s. The National Investigation Agency had announced a reward of Rs 1.5 million for any information on Raju who is 67 years old. He is an expert at using the AK-47 according to a Intelligence Bureau report of 2011.

In the year 1987, Basava Raju along with Ganapathy, Mallojoula Koteshwar Rao, Malla Raju Reddy among others underwent training by LTTE cadres in the forests of Bastar in ambush tactics. In 1992, he was elected as member of the central committee of the erstwhile Communist Party of India Marxist-Leninist People’s War. In 2004 when the CPI (Maoist) was formed, Basava Raju was made the secretary of the central military commission.

In an article published in the party’s People’s War, Raju had said that if they could mobilise the peasantry on a vast scale and militantly into an armed agrarian revolution to completely solve the land issue in the country, they would acquire the most essential basic condition and preconditions to defeat all their enemies and complete the New Democratic Revolution.

Basava Raju’s primary areas of operation have been in the forests of Chhattisgarh. He is also a member of the CPI (Maoist) central region bureau. He is a resident of the Jiyannapeta village in Srikakulam, Andhra Pradesh. He goes by the aliases Krishna, Vijay, D Narasimha Reddy and Narasimha. He studied at the Regional Engineering College, Warrangal.

Read more at: https://www.oneindia.com/india/naxal-who-executed-sukma-attack-was-trained-by-ltte-in-ambush-tactics-3240267.html

Myanmar Court sentences 12 SL fishers to jail

April 5th, 2021

Sulochana Ramiah Mohan (RP) 

A Myanmar court has sentenced 12 Sri Lankan fishermen to jail terms of three to five years on three charges.

The 10-crew members were imposed with a jail term of three years and six months with a fine of 20,000 kyats 

(Rs 2,800) each, while the fishing trawler drivers were charged with five years and six months jail term, with a fine of 200,000 kyats (Rs 28,300).

According to information received by Ceylon Today, the Court charged them for illegal entry into Myanmar waters, illegal fishing (without a fishing licence to fish in Myanmar territorial waters), and for not surrendering to the Navy Commander when spotted in the sea.

However, Ceylon Today learns that on 13 March, the Myanmar Court had issued a proposal for the deportation of the fishermen with a fine imposed, but the Government has not made use of the opportunity. The Ambassador posted to Myanmar has sent a Sri Lankan who is working there to resolve the problem, but it has failed, it is alleged. 

The fishermen were arrested in February 2021 and were languishing in the detention camp, urging the Government to rescue them. However, Ambassador to Myanmar, Prof. Nalin de Silva had formally requested diplomatic intervention to obtain the release of them amidst the political upheaval in the country. Also, Foreign Affairs Secretary, Admiral Prof. Jayanath Colombage earlier told Ceylon Today they were working on negotiating the release of the fishermen.

It seems the delay in settling the matter has resulted in the Court sentencing them to prison.

It is said, the Myanmar Embassy in Sri Lanka has sent a letter to the Ministry of Religion and Cultural Affairs of Myanmar to get them released and the proposal supplement for the repatriation of Sri Lankan fishermen. 

While working on the matter, the Ambassador to Myanmar had lamented that he is unable to rescue the fishermen and he failed in his mission. When Ceylon Today asked him why he had to post such a note on Facebook, he said it was his personal note.

Don’t protect perpetrators through committees – Cardinal

April 5th, 2021

By Norman Palihawadana Courtesy The Island

Easter Sunday carnage

Archbishop of Colombo, Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith yesterday asked the government not to appoint any more committees to delay action against those responsible for the Easter Sunday attacks. He made this statement after visiting a number of churches in Colombo and the suburbs yesterday.

The Cardinal said that the government had time till 21 April to take action against the perpetrators of the attacks and Catholics will take to the streets if their request went unheeded.

We won’t be fooled again. Please, don’t try to mislead us. The Presidential Commission of Inquiry (PCoI) on Easter Sunday attacks took 18 months to submitted its report. There is no need to delay to act on its recommendations. If taking action, based on this report, is delayed further it is an indication that there is no law in this country.”

Cardinal Ranjith also criticised former President Maithripala Sirisena. The PCoI report clearly said that President Sirisena had prior warning of the imminent attacks, the Cardinal said.

He is still a political party leader. He wants to contest elections. I would like to ask him whether he has no shame. He went abroad ignoring prior warnings of the attacks. How can he go before the people again? The PCoI report says he is guilty. There is no need to delay taking legal action against him.”

The Cardinal added that the PCoI report also mentioned about a senior police officer, who is in now a SDIG in the Central Province. He urged the government to implement the recommendations of the report.

Meanwhile, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa vowed to take action against the perpetrators of the Easter attacks. Issuing a message, President Rajapaksa said that the sorrowful memory of pain and loss caused by this tragic incident had not faded away from the broken hearts of the suffering people even today.”

The President also said that the government would ensure that such tragedies will not recur.

Govt. ready to introduce new legislation to regulate int’l schools: Edu Minister

April 5th, 2021

Yohan Perera and Ajith Siriwardana Courtesy The Daily Mirror

The Government is ready to introduce new legislation to regulate international schools, Education Minister Professor G. L. Peiris told Parliament today.

Responding to an oral question raised by SJB MP Sumith Sanjaya Perera in the House, Professor Peiris said the Government is willing to have a dialogue with the Opposition and then draft legislation to this effect.

We have no legislation to regulate international schools in the country. There are 393 international schools in the country that are registered with the BOI (Board of Investment) and Registrar of Companies. They are not registered with the Ministry of Education. However we are willing to have a dialogue with the Opposition and introduce legislation to regulate these schools,” he said.

The Minister who responded to a question raised by MP Mujibur Rahaman earlier said the Government will take action against state-funded private schools which do not follow the circular issued by the Ministry of Education regarding enrolment of children for Grade I. 


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