Thursday, February 3, 2011

It isn't the Lack of "DEMOCRACY" you fool, it's Chronic UNEMPLOYMENT. Solution is Economic Growth through Targeted Development, Education and Employable Skills: "The Youth Unemployment Bomb"

 
February 03, 2011

In Tunisia, the young people who helped bring down a dictator are called hittistes -- French-Arabic slang for those who lean against the wall. Their counterparts in Egypt, who on Feb. 1 forced President Hosni Mubarak to say he won't seek reelection, are the shabab atileen, unemployed youths. The hittistes and shabab have brothers and sisters across the globe. In Britain, they are NEETs -- "not in education, employment, or training." In Japan, they are freeters: an amalgam of the English word freelance and the German word Arbeiter, or worker. Spaniards call them mileuristas, meaning they earn no more than 1,000 euros a month. In the U.S., they're "boomerang" kids who move back home after college because they can't find work. Even fast-growing China, where labor shortages are more common than surpluses, has its "ant tribe" -- recent college graduates who crowd together in cheap flats on the fringes of big cities because they can't find well-paying work.

In each of these nations, an economy that can't generate enough jobs to absorb its young people has created a lost generation of the disaffected, unemployed, or underemployed -- including growing numbers of recent college graduates for whom the post-crash economy has little to offer. Tunisia's Jasmine Revolution was not the first time these alienated men and women have made themselves heard. Last year, British students outraged by proposed tuition increases -- at a moment when a college education is no guarantee of prosperity -- attacked the Conservative Party's headquarters in London and pummeled a limousine carrying Prince Charles and his wife, Camilla Bowles. Scuffles with police have repeatedly broken out at student demonstrations across Continental Europe. And last March in Oakland, Calif., students protesting tuition hikes walked onto Interstate 880, shutting it down for an hour in both directions.

More common is the quiet desperation of a generation in "waithood," suspended short of fully employed adulthood. At 26, Sandy Brown of Brooklyn, N.Y., is a college graduate and a mother of two who hasn't worked in seven months. "I used to be a manager at a Duane Reade (drugstore) in Manhattan, but they laid me off. I've looked for work everywhere and I can't find nothing," she says. "It's like I got my diploma for nothing."

While the details differ from one nation to the next, the common element is failure -- not just of young people to find a place in society, but of society itself to harness the energy, intelligence, and enthusiasm of the next generation. Here's what makes it extra-worrisome: The world is aging. In many countries the young are being crushed by a gerontocracy of older workers who appear determined to cling to the better jobs as long as possible and then, when they do retire, demand impossibly rich private and public pensions that the younger generation will be forced to shoulder.

In short, the fissure between young and old is deepening. "The older generations have eaten the future of the younger ones," former Italian Prime Minister Giuliano Amato told Corriere della Sera. In Britain, Employment Minister Chris Grayling has called chronic unemployment a "ticking time bomb." Jeffrey A. Joerres, chief executive officer of Manpower (NYSE:MAN - News), a temporary-services firm with offices in 82 countries and territories, adds, "Youth unemployment will clearly be the epidemic of this next decade unless we get on it right away. You can't throw in the towel on this."

The highest rates of youth unemployment are found in the Middle East and North Africa, at roughly 24 percent each, according to the International Labor Organization. Most of the rest of the world is in the high teens -- except for South and East Asia, the only regions with single--digit youth unemployment. Young people are nearly three times as likely as adults to be unemployed.

Last year the ILO caught a glimmer of hope. Poring over the data from 56 countries, researchers estimated that the number of unemployed 15- to 24-year-olds in those nations fell in 2010 by about 2 million, to just under 78 million. "At first we thought this was a good thing," says Steven Kapsos, an ILO economist. "It looked like youth were faring better in the labor market. But then what we started to realize was that labor force participation rates were plunging. Young people were just dropping out."

Youth unemployment is tempting to dismiss. The young tend to have fewer obligations, after all, and plenty of time to save for retirement. They have the health and strength to enjoy their leisure. "I spend many hours a day playing soccer with my friends," says Musa Salhi, an 18-year-old Madrid resident who studied to be an electrician but hasn't worked in over a year. Even as fighters on horses and camels galloped through Cairo's Liberation Square on Feb. 2 and the U.N. estimated that 300 people had died in a week of clashes, the world's investors continued to perceive the consequences as largely local. The Standard & Poor's 500-stock index rose 1 percent in the week following the first mass protests on Jan. 25. Crude oil prices rose less than 4 percent over the period.

But the failure to launch has serious consequences for society -- as Egypt's Mubarak and Tunisia's overthrown President, Zine al-Abidine Ben Ali, discovered. So did Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, who in 2009 dispatched baton-wielding police against youths protesting his disputed reelection. "Educated youth have been in the vanguard of rebellions against authority certainly since the French Revolution and in some cases even earlier," says Jack A. Goldstone, a sociologist at George Mason University School of Public Policy. In December the French government released a report on the -nation's Sensitive Urban Zones, also known as banlieues, which said that the young men in the neighborhoods find it "extremely difficult" to integrate into the economic mainstream. The heavily Muslim banlieues exploded into rioting in 2005; last year a series of violent attacks there brought police face to face with youths brandishing AK-47s.

A demographic bulge is contributing to the tensions in North Africa and the Middle East, where people aged 15-29 make up the largest share of the population ever, according to multiple demographic sources. The Egyptian pyramid that matters now is the one representing the population's age structure -- wide at the young bottom, narrow at the old top. Fifteen- to 29-year-olds account for 34 percent of the population in Iran, 30 percent in Jordan, and 29 percent in Egypt and Morocco. (The U.S. figure is 21 percent.) That share will shrink because the baby boom of two decades ago was followed by a baby bust. For now, though, it's corrosive.

In a nation with a healthy economy, a burst of new talent on the scene spurs growth. But the sclerotic and autocratic states of the Middle East are ill-equipped to take advantage of this demographic dividend. Sitting at the fringes of a protest in Cairo's Liberation Square on Jan. 29 and wearing a bright yellow head scarf, Soad Mohammed Ali says she hasn't found work since graduating from Cairo University with a law degree -- nearly 10 years ago. She says the only offer of government work she has received is cleaning jobs at $40 a month. At age 30, Ali says, "I am old now."

For the young jobless, enforced leisure can be agony. Musa Salhi, the Spanish soccer player, says, "I feel bored all the time, especially in the mornings. My parents really need and want me to start working." In Belfast, Northern Ireland, 19-year-old Declan Ma--guire says he applied for 15 jobs in the past three weeks and heard nothing back. "I would consider emigrating, but I don't even have the money to do that. It is so demoralizing."

For decades, Mubarak coped with Egypt's youth unemployment problem by expanding college enrollments. That strategy couldn't last forever. This past March, scholars Ragui Assaad and Samantha Constant of the Middle East Youth Initiative, a venture of Brookings Institution and the Dubai School of Government, put it bluntly: "In Egypt, educated young people who spend years searching for formal employment, mostly in the public sector, are now forgoing this prospect as the supply of government jobs dries up. Formal private sector employment -- quite limited in the first place -- is not growing fast enough. Hence, young people are left with either precarious informal wage employment or expected to simply create a job for themselves in Egypt's vast informal economy."

Mubarak gave no sign of knowing how explosive the situation was, but his ministers did state repeatedly that Egypt needed rapid growth to soak up new job--seekers. The country started getting some things right in 2004, when Mubarak appointed a business--minded government under Prime Minister Ahmed Nazif. The nation lowered corporate taxes and import tariffs, privatized telecom, and expanded exports. The economy grew 7 percent annually from 2006 through 2008, dipped below 5 percent in 2009, and was on track for over 5 percent growth this past year, according to the International Monetary Fund.

That was good and bad. While growth is essential for easing social tensions in the long term, it can exacerbate them in the short term in a country such as Egypt. That's because, former Finance Minister Youssef Boutros-Ghali told BusinessWeek several years ago, the first fruits of growth go to those who are -already wealthy.

The lack of democracy in Egypt and elsewhere in the Middle East -- Israel being the exception -- makes -matters worse. Goldstone, of George Mason, says Mubarak is running afoul of the "paradox of autocracy," a phrase coined by the late University of California at San Diego sociologist Timothy L. McDaniel. "Any authoritarian ruler who wants to modernize his country has to educate the workforce," Goldstone says. "But when you educate the workforce you also create people who are not so willing to follow authority. Thus you create this threat of rebellion and disorder." Democracies are "much better at managing large numbers of highly educated people," Goldstone notes. Spain's youth unemployment is even higher than Egypt's, but young Spaniards aren't trying to overthrow the government.

Even so, rich democracies ignore youth unemployment at their peril. In the 34 industrialized nations in the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, at least 16.7 million young people are not employed, in school, or in training, and about 10 million of those aren't even looking, the OECD said in December 2010. In the most-developed nations, the job market has split between high-paying jobs that many workers aren't qualified for and low-paying jobs that they can't live on, says Harry J. Holzer, a public policy professor at Georgetown University and co-author of a new book, Where Are All the Good Jobs Going?

Many of the jobs that once paid good wages to high school graduates have been automated or outsourced.
The spike in youth unemployment should ease in the West as the after-effects of the 2008 financial crisis diminish. Eventually, growth will resume in the U.S., Europe, Japan, and other nations. The retirement of the baby boomers will increase demand for younger workers. "I believe the tables will turn. Employers will be lining up" for younger workers, says Philip J. Jennings, general secretary of UNI Global Union, an international federation of labor unions with 20 million members.

That's cold comfort to the young people who are out of work now. The short term has become distressingly long. Although the recession ended in the summer of 2009, youth unemployment remains near its cyclical peak. In the U.S., 18 percent of 16- to 24-year-olds were unemployed in December 2010, according to the Labor Dept., a year and a half after the recession technically ended. For blacks of the same age it was 27 percent. What keeps the numbers from being even higher is that many teens have simply given up. Some are sitting on couches. Others are in school, which can be a dead end itself. The percentage of American 16- to 19-year-olds who are employed has fallen to below 26 percent, a record low.

What's more, when jobs do come back, employers might choose to reach past today's unemployed, who may appear to be damaged goods, and pick from the next crop of fresh-faced grads. Starting one's career during a recession can have long-term negative consequences. Lisa B. Kahn, an economist at the Yale School of Management, estimates that for white, male college students in the U.S., a 1 percentage point increase in the unemployment rate at the time of graduation causes an initial wage loss of 6 percent to 7 percent -- and even after 15 years the recession graduates earn about 2.5 percent less than they would have if they had not come out of school during a downturn. There's a psychological impact as well. "Individuals growing up during recessions tend to believe that success in life depends more on luck than on effort, support more government redistribution, but are less confident in public institutions," conclude Paola Giuliano of UCLA's Anderson School of Management and Antonio Spilimbergo of the International Monetary Fund in a 2009 study. Downturns, the study suggests, breed self-doubting liberals.

The coincidence of protests in Egypt and record youth unemployment elsewhere has caught the attention of the world's most powerful capitalists and -diplomats. At this year's World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerland, held while Cairo was in chaos, the hallways buzzed with can-do talk about improving -employment opportunities for the young. Even before the latest whiff of grapeshot, the U.N. declared the year beginning last August as the International Year of Youth. In December the Blackstone Group (NYSE:BX - News) and CNBC held a conference in London with top experts to discuss solutions to youth unemployment. Companies from AT&T (NYSE:T - News) to Accenture (NYSE:ACN - News) to Siemens (NYSE:SI - News) are working on ways to prepare high school and college students for the working world.

The only surefire cure for youth unemployment, however, is strong, sustained economic growth that generates so much demand for labor that employers have no choice but to hire the young. Economists have been breaking their teeth on that goal for decades. "If we knew how to get growth right we'd win the Nobel Prize," says Wendy Cunningham, a specialist in youth development at the World Bank in Washington.

In the absence of a growth panacea, economists have been working on microscale solutions, such as training programs to smooth the transition from school to work. No magic bullets there yet, either. "We seem to lack a creativity about how to address the issue. I can't point any fingers because I certainly don't have the answers," says Sara Elder, an economist at the ILO in Geneva.

One reason answers are so scarce is that rigorous measurement of antipoverty programs became widespread only in the past decade, thanks in part to the influence of economists such as Esther Duflo and Abhijit Banerjee of the Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab, based at Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Serious analysis requires tools such as randomized trials and control groups that most bureaucrats and do-gooders don't know. And measuring long-term impact takes a decade or more.

One finding that has emerged is that more education is not always better. What matters is matching the skills of the workforce to the skills that employers demand. In Iran, where the percentage of people aged 15 and over with postsecondary degrees has soared from 2.5 percent to 10.5 percent over the past 20 years, the education system has become "a giant diploma mill," says Djavad Salehi-Isfahani, an economist at Virginia Tech. Egypt and Tunisia are headed in that direction; in 1990, only about 2 percent of their people aged 15 and over had post-secondary degrees, but by 2010 the ratios were up to 6.7 percent for Tunisia and 6 percent for Egypt, according to Harvard University's Center for International Development.

The extra schooling didn't help. Much of the anger that boiled over in the two nations, in fact, came from college graduates who couldn't put their degrees to work. Typical is Saad Mohammed, 25, a 2010 graduate of Cairo's venerable Al-Azhar University, interviewed in Liberation Square between protests. He feels betrayed that he has been unable to find work in his chosen field, "origins of religion." Mohammed hopes that "a new government will give me a job in a religious charity." The mismatch is worst for young women in the Middle East, who are getting as much advanced education as men but have far fewer job opportunities.
China, too, has produced more college diplomas than it can make use of. The number of graduates has quintupled in the past decade, and "the Chinese economy has just not been able to create that many jobs for high-skilled labor," says Anke Schrader, a researcher in Beijing at The Conference Board's China Center for Economics and Business. Manpower says that according to its analysis of the Chinese labor market, newly minted technical-school graduates are earning as much or more than new university graduates, with monthly pay of 2,000 to 4,000 renminbi a month, and in some cases 6,000 renminbi, vs. 2,000 to 2,500 for the university grads. (Monthly pay of 2,000 renminbi equals $3,600 a year at market exchange rates.)

In the U.S. and much of Europe, the problem is just the opposite of the Arab world's: not too much college education but too little. According to a study by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development, less-educated youth are 4.6 times as likely to be unemployed as more-educated youth in the U.S. -- a measure of the potency of knowledge in a knowledge economy. That means that the U.S. has fallen off the top of the world league table for college graduation rates at the worst possible moment. As of 2008, only 60 percent of students in American four-year schools had managed to graduate within six years, according to the National Center for Education Statistics.

Even in technologically sophisticated nations such as the U.S., college isn't for everyone. But traditional vocational programs, though popular, are not the best solution for youth unemployment, according to effectiveness research conducted by the World Bank. Cunningham, who has a PhD in labor economics and has worked in youth development at the bank since 2000, says vocational programs "often are set up without a good understanding of the demands in the labor market and become obsolete very quickly. They have staff that stay on and on. They don't have the money to update their technology."

More successful are programs that are tightly linked with employers. The Jvenes (Spanish for youths) programs in several Latin American nations require that an employer sign a document promising to take their graduates as interns, and they teach life skills alongside technical ones. Employers range from bakeries to clothing manufacturers to computer repair shops. The question, says Cunningham, is whether the Jvenes programs can be scaled up from hundreds of participants to hundreds of thousands.

These days there's a newfound appreciation for an ancient work arrangement, the apprenticeship, because it greases the transition from learning to doing. Germany and Austria experienced milder youth unemployment in the global downturn partly because of blue-collar apprenticeship programs, says Stefano Scarpetta, deputy director of the directorate of -employment, labor, and social affairs at the OECD in Paris. Last year, the International Labor Organization says, Germany's youth unemployment rate was 13.9 percent, compared with a Europe-wide average of 21.2 percent and 21 percent in the U.S.

In an update on the apprentice idea, countries such as the Netherlands encourage university students to gain work experience while enrolled. Scarpetta says 70 percent of Dutch youth ages 20-24 are getting some work experience. By contrast in Italy and Portugal only about 10 percent work while in school. The Netherlands' youth unemployment rate is just 11.2 percent.

Something similar is catching on in the U.S. AT&T, with almost 270,000 employees and an annual training budget of nearly $250 million, is trying to smooth high school students' transition to work with a program called Job Shadow that exposes students to the realities of employment. Insight into the minds of American teenagers has made AT&T executives realize the magnitude of the challenge. "I had three students shadowing me a while ago -- juniors in high school," says Charlene F. Lake, AT&T's chief sustainability officer. "When I asked them what they wanted to do after high school, two of them hadn't thought about it. One girl said she'd like to teach and expressed surprise that she needed more education to do that. She didn't even realize she had to go to college."

For many young people who lack work experience, structure is the key. "You need to have rules and regulations," says Executive Director Mary B. Mulvihill of the Grace Institute in New York, which offers tuition-free training in personal and office skills to help "under-served" women become self-sufficient. "You need to say, 'If you do this, look how your life is going to change.' If it's more loosey-goosey, I don't think it works."

If the purpose is to create jobs, as opposed to just filling them, loosey-goosey may be exactly what's needed. Entrepreneurship -- with all its guesswork and improvisation -- could be the most underexploited means of reducing youth unemployment. In 2008 the University of Miami started an entrepreneurship program called Launch Pad inside its career center to send the message that starting your own company is a valid career option, not just a class to take.

Since then, University of Miami students and recent grads have launched 45 companies. Coral Morphologic collects and raises corals for sale to aquarium owners. Sinha Astronautics has conceived of a space plane for launching satellites into low-earth orbit. Audimated, a music website, allows fans to make money by promoting their favorite indie artists. The man who launched Launch Pad is William S. Green, senior vice-provost and dean of undergraduate education. "Young people are interested in managing their own lives and are a little bit cautious about big corporations," he says. "This has become the largest single student activity on campus."

After Miami's entrepreneurship initiative caught the eye of Stephen A. Schwarzman, the billionaire head of private equity firm Blackstone Group, the Blackstone Charitable Foundation last year launched a similar program in southeastern Michigan with Wayne State University and Walsh College. On Jan. 31, as President Barack Obama announced his Startup America initiative at the White House, Blackstone said it would expand what it also calls LaunchPad to five more cities, as yet unnamed, devoting $50 million over five years. Schwarzman, buttonholed at the World Economic Forum in Davos, said Blackstone "started getting focused on this area when it became clear that (government efforts) were not in our judgment going to lead to significant declines in unemployment."

To free-market economists, one solution to youth unemployment is simple: Clear away the government-imposed obstacles to hiring young people. They blame high minimum wages, for instance, for discouraging companies from hiring promising young people who haven't had a chance to accumulate the knowledge or experience to justify being paid even the minimum wage. Following that counsel, most European countries, where minimum wages are high relative to average pay, have lower minimums for young workers. (The evidence is that high minimum wages do exclude some young people, while benefiting others by raising their pay.) Likewise, too-strong protections for the permanent workforce can hurt young people because they aren't similarly protected and bear the brunt of downsizing in hard times, the ILO warned in a 2009 report.

Right or wrong, the free-market argument hasn't carried the day: Britain and New Zealand actually raised their minimum wages during the global downturn. And the argument for the negative effect of worker protections hasn't convinced Austria and Germany, which have strong employment regulation and yet have had healthier job markets in the past two years than countries such as the U.S. with fewer worker protections. Thea Lee, deputy chief of staff at the AFL-CIO, argues that unions can't be blamed for high youth unemployment: "Business likes to have workers with no power, no rights, no protections."

That's a bit harsh. After all, company executives are squeezed too, and hiring neophytes is costly. Joerres, the Manpower chief, blames the faster pace. "Businesses did more training when the life cycle of their products and employees was longer," he says. "Now if the life cycle of your product is 18 months and it takes 12 months to bring your employee up to speed, you lose."

Chronic youth unemployment may not be fixable. But there's evidence it can be reduced through the concerted efforts of government, labor, business, education, and young people themselves. Luckily the soil is fertile: All over the world, the hittistes and shabab atileen, NEETs and freeters and boomerang kids are hungry for a chance to thrive. Says John Studzinski, senior managing director at Blackstone Group: "To a certain extent, all you can do with youth employment is plant seeds."

36 comments:

Ananda-USA said...

Education raises expectations and less tolerance for mindless authority and corruption.

Patriotic leaders must remain sensitive to the needs of their people.

The current GOSL is correct: the focus should be rapid economic growth promoted by development of national infrastructure, and improvement of the education and employable skills of the work force.

An important LIFE SKILL for workers of the future is knowledge and experience in creating and running a PROFITABLE SMALL BUSINESS.

There is nothing more uplifting and enfranchising than making a living from one's own business, rather than becoming an employee of someone else.

Business ownership PROMOTES GOOD CITIZENSHIP by giving each person a productive stake in the nation.

Economic Growth notwithstanding, let the GOSL TAKE NOTE of the upheavals SWEEPING THE GLOBE and RE-DEDICATE itself to CORRUPTION-FREE BROAD-BASED PATRIOTIC GOVERNANCE in the best interest of the average and ordinary citizen of Sri Lanka.

Ananda-USA said...

FALSE ALLEGATIONS!

Where is the PROOF that they were attacked, or that if attacked, the attackers were Sri Lanka Nany personnel?

These could be LTTE terrorists operating from Tamil Nadu trying to PIT India against Sri Lanka!

We need PROOF, not UNSUBSTANTIATED ALLEGATIONS!

................
Indian fishermen allege Sri Lanka Navy attacked them again

ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Feb 07, Colombo: Another group of Indian fishermen have lodged complaints with Indian officials that Sri Lanka Naval personnel attacked them while they were in the Indian waters.

Three fishermen from Rameswaram have been injured when Sri Lanka Navy men allegedly pushed them into the sea and ransacked their boat around midnight Saturday Indian media reports said.

A group of fishermen in ten country boats had reportedly anchored their boats in the sea and were fishing in Indian waters when the alleged incident took place.

The fishermen had complained that Sri Lankan Navy personnel cut off the anchor ropes and assaulted them with their guns. They had alleged that the navy men pushed them into the sea and threw their fishing nets into the waters.

Indian Foreign Secretary Mrs. Nirupama Rao visited Colombo last month to voice India's concerns over the alleged attacks on Indian fishermen by Sri Lanka Navy after two fishermen were allegedly killed by the Navy personnel within a fortnight.

India strongly condemned the killing and said that the use of force cannot be justified under any circumstances.

India asked Sri Lanka to fully investigate the incidents that led to the deaths of the two Indian fishermen in the waters between the two countries.

Sri Lanka denied that its Navy was involved in any of the attacks and hinted at the possibility of a third party instigating the attacks to disrupt the bilateral relations between the two countries.

The Sri Lankan government said it is committed to ascertaining the facts behind the incidents with their own inquiries and requested for additional information from India on the alleged killings.

Ananda-USA said...

JAYAWEWA .. Sri Lanka!

...............
Sri Lanka beat West Indies in third ODI to clinch the series

ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Feb 06, Colombo: Sri Lanka beat West Indies by 26 runs in the third match today at the SSC grounds in Colombo to clinch the three-match One Day International (ODI) series 2-0.

After the visitors won the toss and put the hosts to bat, Sri Lanka posted a formidable target of 278 for West Indies to chase with a 75 from Kumar Sangakkara and 44 from Mahela Jayawardena. Angelo Mathews scored an unbeaten 36 from the end to bring up the score.

In reply West Indies scored 251 in 49 overs. Dilhara Fernando removed Chris Gayle in the opening ball and Thisara Perera has claimed the wicket of Adrian Barath for no runs. Ajantha Mendis took 4-46 proving his worth as a dangerous spinner.

Sri Lanka won the second ODI to lead the series 1-0. The first ODI was washed away by the rains without allowing Sri Lanka to play its innings.

Sri Lanka rested bowlers Lasith Malinga, Muttiah Muralitharan, and Nuwan Kulasekara and substituted with Dilhara Fernando, Ajantha Mendis, and Thisara Perera.

Kumar Sangakkara gets the honor of Man of the match and Upul Tharanga is and Man of the series.

Sri Lanka is going into the World Cup as a favorite team to repeat their 1996 performance. Sri Lanka, along with India and Bangladesh is hosting the cricket mega event from February 19 through April 2.

Ananda-USA said...

Time for Lankan lions to roar again

By Gaurav Gupta
TimesOfIndia
February 7, 2011

If there is one team that you will find most people hedging their bets on, apart from India, to lift the glittering World Cup trophy on April 2 in Mumbai, it's Sri Lanka. The reason isn't just related to familiar conditions or the fact that like India, they too will be backed vociferously by a large crowd while playing most of their games at home.

This team, even without a colossus like Sanath Jayasuriya, is still a very formidable unit. The explosive Tillakaratne Dilshan seems an apt replacement. The man who plays the scoop shot - where the ball is hit right behind the wicketkeeper - so well that it has now come to be know as 'Dilscoop,' can destroy any attack.

While Dilshan is still a notch below Jayasuriya when it comes to big hitting, he can be pretty unconventional in his stroke making and that can cause a severe headache to the fielding side, especially in the power plays. Giving Dilshan company will be Upul Tharanga, who has been in and out of the side for a while now but would be eager to seal his spot once and for all.

There's another big similarity that the Lankans share with India this time. While MS Dhoni & Co want to do it for Sachin Tendulkar, Kumar Sangakkara & Co would love to scale the summit for Muttiah Muralitharan, Sri Lanka's most loved cricketer.
Muralitharan will be quitting the game after the Cup, and would be itching to repeat the success of 1996. Though not the same force as he was back then, his arm now much weakened after all those years of toil, Murali would still be dangerous on his day. In case any team chasing a big total under lights at Colombo runs into him, good luck to them!

The key to Murali and Lanka's dreams, though, will lie with his bowling colleague Lasith Malinga and the bats of the two mainstays in the middle-order, Sangakkara and former skipper Mahela Jayawardene. Who can forget Malinga's four-in-four feat against the Proteas in a game during the 2007 World Cup? The blonde-haired slinger can spear in yorkers at rocket pace, especially at death.

After Wasim Akram and Waqar Younis, perhaps Malinga is the first bowler against whom a batsman would be better advised to guard their toes rather than stumps!

Ananda-USA said...

Time for Lankan lions to roar again

.......continued..........
Like Dhoni, Sangakkara is a fine leader, good wicketkeeper and a very good batsman. Jayawardene can hold the middle-order wonderfully well and finish a game perfectly, all through a pleasing style of batsmanship. Both stalwarts were part of teams that went to the semis in 2003 and the final in 2007, and would be keen to go one better this time.

The one player which Sri Lanka have discovered much to their delight is a USP which every team looks for - a genuine all-rounder. Angelo Mathews, who fits that definition comfortably.
Mathews has a batting strike rate of 80.92, and can take wickets with his tidy line too. Playing his first Cup, the youngster would love to start with a bang. Thilan Samaraweera (batsman), Chamara Kapugedera (batsman), Nuwan Kulasekara (pace bowler) and Rangana Herath (left-arm spinner) are all more than useful players capable of winning matches from tight situations.

There's another ace up Lanka's sleeve, which many teams still haven't sorted out. Mystery bowler Ajantha Mendis could be unleashed any moment, and his carrom balls, though not as mystifying as they seemed to be initially, can still cause a lot of damage.
There's another area where the Lankans score over their fellow subcontinental rivals -fielding. They can pull of those miraculous catches and run outs that make the ultimate difference.

So can the Lankans do it again? The last time the Cup came here, they did it. 15 years back, they had a batting line-up to die for, which could chase down any total. They were bolstered by the innovative idea to open with the out-and-out attacking pair of Jayasuriya and Romesh Kaluwitharana, and the added motivation of beating the Aussies, who refused to travel to their country for security reasons, in the final.

This time, they have little to prove, having established themselves as a solid cricket nation. Though the batting isn't as good as it was in '96, the bowling is by far better. Perhaps, the way the Lankans beat Australia in an ODI series Down Under last year, gives a good idea of what this team can achieve. Anything less than semis should be a major disappointment for this classy line-up. Even Jayasuriya would agree!

A look at Lanka's previous performances in the World Cup:

1975: They lost all three games seeming as hopeless as India.
1979: They created a big upset, beating India by 38 runs.
1983: They lost five of their six games.
1987: They lost all six of their matches. In one game, West Indies scored 360 against them, with Viv Richards getting 181.
1992: They won twice and lost five ties, but the wins-against Zimbabwe chasing 313, and against a powerful South Africa, were both good.
1996: Under Arjuna Ranatunga, a fired up Sri Lanka won the World Cup, beating Australia in the final. They innovated by opening with attacking batsmen to hit jackpot.
1999: In English conditions, they just weren't the same.
2003: Though upset by Kenya, they reached the semis losing to Australia.
2007: Reached the final before being undone by Adam Gilchrist's blitz. In the semis, skipper Mahela Jayawardene hit a superb hundred against New Zealand. Malinga's four wickets in four balls against South Africa also stood out.

Ananda-USA said...

Time for Lankan lions to roar again

.......continued..........
Like Dhoni, Sangakkara is a fine leader, good wicketkeeper and a very good batsman. Jayawardene can hold the middle-order wonderfully well and finish a game perfectly, all through a pleasing style of batsmanship. Both stalwarts were part of teams that went to the semis in 2003 and the final in 2007, and would be keen to go one better this time.

The one player which Sri Lanka have discovered much to their delight is a USP which every team looks for - a genuine all-rounder. Angelo Mathews, who fits that definition comfortably.
Mathews has a batting strike rate of 80.92, and can take wickets with his tidy line too. Playing his first Cup, the youngster would love to start with a bang. Thilan Samaraweera (batsman), Chamara Kapugedera (batsman), Nuwan Kulasekara (pace bowler) and Rangana Herath (left-arm spinner) are all more than useful players capable of winning matches from tight situations.

There's another ace up Lanka's sleeve, which many teams still haven't sorted out. Mystery bowler Ajantha Mendis could be unleashed any moment, and his carrom balls, though not as mystifying as they seemed to be initially, can still cause a lot of damage.
There's another area where the Lankans score over their fellow subcontinental rivals -fielding. They can pull of those miraculous catches and run outs that make the ultimate difference.

So can the Lankans do it again? The last time the Cup came here, they did it. 15 years back, they had a batting line-up to die for, which could chase down any total. They were bolstered by the innovative idea to open with the out-and-out attacking pair of Jayasuriya and Romesh Kaluwitharana, and the added motivation of beating the Aussies, who refused to travel to their country for security reasons, in the final.

This time, they have little to prove, having established themselves as a solid cricket nation. Though the batting isn't as good as it was in '96, the bowling is by far better. Perhaps, the way the Lankans beat Australia in an ODI series Down Under last year, gives a good idea of what this team can achieve. Anything less than semis should be a major disappointment for this classy line-up. Even Jayasuriya would agree!

A look at Lanka's previous performances in the World Cup:

1975: They lost all three games seeming as hopeless as India.
1979: They created a big upset, beating India by 38 runs.
1983: They lost five of their six games.
1987: They lost all six of their matches. In one game, West Indies scored 360 against them, with Viv Richards getting 181.
1992: They won twice and lost five ties, but the wins-against Zimbabwe chasing 313, and against a powerful South Africa, were both good.
1996: Under Arjuna Ranatunga, a fired up Sri Lanka won the World Cup, beating Australia in the final. They innovated by opening with attacking batsmen to hit jackpot.
1999: In English conditions, they just weren't the same.
2003: Though upset by Kenya, they reached the semis losing to Australia.
2007: Reached the final before being undone by Adam Gilchrist's blitz. In the semis, skipper Mahela Jayawardene hit a superb hundred against New Zealand. Malinga's four wickets in four balls against South Africa also stood out.

Ananda-USA said...

Tamil Eelamist Terrorist TRAITORS in Canada posing as defenders of "democracy" WAIL on Sri Lanka's Independence day!

So they should, for they have forsaken their motherland, and will NEVER BE ABLE TO SET FOOT in Sri Lanka again!

They have TOO MANY CRIMES COMMITTED AGAINST the People of Sri Lanka to answer for.

When TERRORISTS come bearing "democracy" on their heads, SHUT THE GATES and MAN THE BATTLEMENTS!

.................
Tamil diaspora marks Sri Lanka independence day as black day

Toronto, Feb 5 (IANS) The Tamil diaspora in Canada marked Sri Lanka's independence day Friday as a 'black day' by wearing black badges.

'We join the Tamils back home in marking this day as a black day. The Tamil diaspora all over the world is mourning this day as a black day,'' said David Poopalapillai, national spokesperson for the Canadian Tamil Congress (CTC).

'There will never be justice for Tamil under the current fascist regime in Colombo. Though 200,000 Tamils have been released from camps, there is no rehabilitation. These 200,000 people have become street people, with nowhere to go. Over 30,000 are still languishing in government camps,'' he said.

The Tamil spokesperson said even Sinhalese were getting fed up with President Mahinda Rajapaksa and 'very soon, they will rise up against his dictatorial regime as people have done in Egypt against Hosni Mubarak. Sri Lanka's abysmal human rights will succumb to people's thirst for freedom and justice.'

A separate Canadian Tamil Congress statement said, 'Despite claims of a democratic, peaceful country, authoritarian rule is cementing its power in Sri Lanka. As the world witnesses the eradication of ruthless dictators in places like Tunisia, Egypt and Yemen, Sri Lanka is following an opposite path.''

Since the end of the armed conflict with the LTTE, the Sri Lankan regime has curtailed basic civil and political rights and crushed human rights of its citizens, the statement said.

Alleging large-scale abductions of citizens voicing opposition to President Rajapaksa by his para-military forces, the statement said, 'Sri Lanka has failed to account to the international community for war crimes committed during the last phase of the war. It has failed to cooperate with the United Nations War Crimes panel appointed to investigate war crimes in Sri Lanka.

'The Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission appointed by President Rajapaksa, intended to investigate itself, has failed to make any meaningful inroads into resolving the long- standing and underlying grievances of the minority communities in Sri Lanka.''

Canada is home to the largest Sri Lankan Tamil diaspora of over 300,000 people, followed by Britain with about 300,000.

'The decision to mark February 4 as a black day has been taken unanimously by the Tamil diaspora all over the world,'' said Poopalapillai.

Ananda-USA said...

Don’t be misled by unscrupulous elements

By Ananth PALAKIDNAR
SundayObserver.lk
February 06, 2011

Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa said that expatriate Tamils living abroad should look way forward in the reconstructing and development process in the country instead of being misled by unscrupulous elements which are trying to destabilise the peaceful atmosphere in the country.

He was speaking to a sixteen-member Tamil diaspora delegation from Germany, Australia, USA, Canada and the UK last week. He discussed with them post-conflict rehabilitation and reconstruction activities in the North and the East.

The diaspora delegation was here at the invitation of the Non Governmental Organisation NERDO to study the progress in the areas hit by terrorist activities in the North and the East, sources said.

The diaspora delegation which met the Defence Secretary said that it was impressed with the ongoing rehabilitation as well as the development activities in the North and the East.

Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa told the diaspora delegation that the Government was more focused on reconstructing the North and the East making the region economically vibrant.

He said more interaction with regard to development activities should come from the Tamil diaspora to silence the disruptive elements abroad. The diaspora delegation also met Foreign Secretary Romesh Jayasinghe and discussed issues with regard to their cooperation with the Lankan Foreign missions abroad. The Foreign Secretary emphasised the need to involve Tamil expatriates in the reconstruction process in the North and the East.

He also briefed them about the detainees released following rehabilitation. The Foreign Secretary said around 6,000 detainees out of 11,600 from the North and the East have been sent back to their parents.

He said that 300,000 Internally Displaced Persons (IDPs) remained soon after the conflict ended and within a short spell except 17,000 the remaining have been released. Prior to the meetings in Colombo, the Tamil diaspora delegation also visited Kilinochchi, Oddusuddan and several areas in the Jaffna Peninsula.

They met members of the Jaffna Civil Society, University students and the Jaffna Security Forces Commander Maj. Gen. Mahinda Hathurusinghe.

The delegation also received first-hand information on the rehabilitation and resettlement process currently under way in the North, the sources said.

Ananda-USA said...

GET RID OF Provincial Councils; they are Unnecessary Bureaucratic Overhead!

Administrative Units should be no bigger than Districts. Parliamentary Elections to elect Members of Parliaments is sufficient Franchise for citizens.

Get useful work out of MPs by empowering them.

Provincial councils only create threats to the central government from separatist forces, and subject citizens to unnecessary layers of taxes and red tape.

Dismantle Provincial Councils COMPLETELY!


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Sri Lanka to amend Provincial Council Act

ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Feb 06, Colombo: Sri Lanka government has decided to hold the next Provincial Council election under electorates and to amend the 1988 Provincial Council Act within a few months to enable the elections.

For this, the Provincial Council electorates are to be demarcated. Sinhala daily The Lankadeepa reported quoting government spokesman that the population, ethnic demography, area and the level of development would be considered when demarcating the Provincial Council electorates.

An electorate demarcation commission is to be appointed following the amendment of the Provincial Council Act.

The elections for the Eastern Provincial Council are to be held in 2013 under the new system, the newspaper reported.

Ananda-USA said...

Railways are very efficient means of trans[porting goods and people.

Can they also serve as Centers of Economic Growth without impacting the transport function?

Food for thought!


...............
Sri Lanka Railways to develop railway stations as commercial centers

ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Feb 06, Colombo: Sri Lanka Ministry of Transport has obtained cabinet approval for developing 11 railway stations as commercial centers.

Planning Director of Sri Lanka Railways Wijaya Samarasinghe has told media that these railway stations are along the Southern coastal line from Colombo to Panadura.

He said that development is to be handled by the Ministry of Transport together with the Presidential Secretariat and the Strategic Enterprise Management Authority.

The railway stations that are to be developed are Colombo Fort, Slave Island, Colpetty, Bambalapitiya, Wellawatte, Dehiwala, Angulana, Ratmalana, Moratuwa, and Panadura.

Ananda-USA said...

300,000 acres of paddy cultivations totally destroyed by floods in Sri Lanka

ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Feb 07, Colombo: Sri Lanka Minister of Agrarian Services and Wildlife S.M. Chandrasena says that 300,000 acres of paddy cultivations were completely destroyed due to recent floods.

Floods submerged 500,000 acres of paddy fields, damaged 458 big and small scale reservoirs, broke around 1,000 irrigation canals and bunds, the Minister said.

Commissioner General of Agrarian Services Ravindra Hewavitharana said the 158 tanks in Anuradhapura District were damaged due to the torrential rains experienced last month. Renovation work on all damaged reservoirs and canals will commence after the flood waters recede, he said.

Nine Agrarian Services Centers and seven fertilizer warehouses are also among the damaged property, he said.

However, Minister of Agriculture Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena told media that no scarcity of rice will be experienced by the country although floods hit the paddy cultivation hard. He said the country has buffer rice stocks sufficient for eight months.

Ananda-USA said...

AT LAST! A STABLE MECHANISM for VERIFYING and ADDRESSING future "Fishermen" issues as we had advocated at this Forum.

...............
"No Complicity" of Sri Lankan Navy in fishermen attacks, Peiris tells Indian FM

ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Feb 07, Thimphu: There is 'no complicity' on the part of the Sri Lankan Navy in the deaths of Indian fishermen, Sri Lanka's External Affairs Minister Prof. G. L. Peiris has told his Indian counterpart S.M. Krishna today.

Prof. Peiris has said that based on the information available to the Sri Lankan government its Navy was not responsible for the attacks when Indian minister conveyed his government's deep concerns over killing of its fishermen allegedly by Sri Lankan Navy.

"There were satellite pictures which indicated that there was "no complicity" on the part of Sri Lankan Navy," Peiris had told Krishna when the two met for 30 minutes on the sidelines of the SAARC foreign ministers meeting in Thimphu Monday.

However, the Minister Peiris has asserted the Indian minister that Sri Lanka will however open to any evidence India may present on the incidents and conduct thorough investigations into the allegations.

India has already furnished some evidence and may hand over more as they become available from the Tamil Nadu authorities.

Minister Peiris has said that the two countries need to work together to find a sensible and pragmatic solution that lasts and not deal with the matters on an ad hoc basis.

"I think a multi-pronged approach that has been conceived by two governments will yield a sensible, pragmatic solution which will endure," Peiris has told the media following the meeting.

"For the future what is needed is stable mechanism rather than addressing these matters on ad hoc basis... After the incident has occurred, there is certainly a need for stable mechanism to address the problem and to ensure that these incidents do not recur," Indian media quoted Prof. Peiris as saying.

During meeting, the two ministers have agreed to convene the Joint Working Group early to discuss the fishermen issue.

During the Indian Foreign Secretary Mrs. Nirupama Rao's visit to Colombo last month both sides agreed that the use of force cannot be justified under any circumstances.

Ananda-USA said...

GERMANY Wakes Up!

Throw the LTTE monsters in PRISON, and Throw away the KEYS!

Every Day, in Every Way Decent People ALL OVER THE WORLD are GETTING RID of these Monsters!

..................
Germany indicts Sri Lanka Tamil spokesman on terrorism charges

February 7, 2011

Karlsruhe, Germany - A spokesman in Germany for the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) has been indicted on terrorism charges, federal justice authorities said Monday in Karlsruhe.

Agilan W, who now holds German citizenship, was arrested in November and indicted on January 24.

Prosecutors said he was spokesman in Germany for the Tamil Coordination Commitee, a front for the LTTE, from 2004 to the end of 2009 and oversaw its public relations. Three other leaders of an alleged LTTE front were earlier arrested and indicted.

No date was given for the 35-year-old's trial on a charge of membership in a foreign terrorist organization and breaching German export laws.

That charge relates to his allegedly purchasing equipment worth 370,000 euros (500,000 dollars) from group funds to outfit LTTE fighters and sent this gear to Sri Lanka.

The LTTE fought from its formation in 1976 till its early 2009 defeat for a secession by north and east Sri Lanka.

The European Union declared the LTTE a terrorist group in June 2007. Germany indicted three other activists in the TCC, Vijikanendra V S, Sasitharan M and Koneswaran T in August.

Under German reporting restrictions, first names only are given.

Ananda-USA said...

Political Ambitions for NERDO?

Better not promote Communal Politics in Lanka, KP!

...............
KP doesn’t seek political recognition

By Shamindra Ferdinando
Island.lk
February 6, 2011

Government says ex-LTTE leader’s NGO a key element in a national strategy to attract Diaspora support for post-war recovery efforts

S. Pathmanathan aka ‘KP’, described as LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran’s successor, says his North-East Rehabilitation and Development Organisation (NERDO) will not seek political recognition.

Addressing a cross section of people during a three-day tour of Kilinochchi and Jaffna beginning Jan. 28, Secretary of the NERDO assured supporters that he had no political ambitions. He said that NERDO would only engage in humanitarian work with the support extended by the Tamil Diaspora.

‘KP’ was accompanied by several members of the Diaspora, who had been once supportive of the LTTE’s war against the Sri Lanka State. During their tour, they had an opportunity to meet widows of a section of LTTE cadres killed in combat following the opening of a NERDO office at Kilinochchi.

The delegation visited Anbu Illam –an orphanage, which was being built at Oddusuddan, east of A9. The delegation met those who had been recently resettled in the Oddusudan area.

They met a cross section of civilians in Jaffna on Jan 30, with the first meeting held at the Jaffna MPCS (Multi-purpose Cooperative Society). Pathmanathan told people that his only concern was how to improve the living conditions of the war affected.

Pathamanathan stressed the need for providing the best possible education to the people of the North and the East.

Pathmanathan and his associates also visited to NERDO branch in Parithithuri, where they met another group of war affected people.

An authoritative official told The Island that ‘KP’ was still in ‘protective custody’ of the government in spite of his being given the opportunity to engage in humanitarian work. According to him, NERDO had been set up in keeping with a national strategy to deal with some of those post-war issues, particularly in relation to Tamil Diaspora. The official dismissed the possibility of registering NERDO as a political party or bringing in ‘KP’ into politics.

In an exclusive interview with The Island in last August, KP, one-time LTTE top gun in charge of overseas operations, including procurement of weapons, said that he wasn’t interested in politics at all.

Government sources said that NERDO would continue its efforts to harness Diaspora support to provide relief to the ordinary civilians affected by the war and thousands of LTTE families. Sources said that the other priority was the post-rehabilitation support to LTTE cadres, who were being gradually released.

The Island learns that ‘KP’ was given access to those who were being rehabilitated.

Ananda-USA said...

LUDICROUS!

Former terrorists and collaborators who committed and funded war crimes in Sri Lanka for over 30 years, now pose as WAILING INNOCENT VICTIMS!

That is why Sri Lanka must SEEK OUT pursue war crimes CHARGES against these people, and seek their extradition to Sri Lanka to be PROSECUTED for their crimes.

Failure to do so will only allow them to DEFAME, DEMONIZE and PARTITION Sri Lanka without any challenge to their own very well established culpability!

It is PUSH BACK TIME! Why are we STILL WAITING?


................
Tamil Diaspora and LTTE sympathizers trying to bring resolution against Sri Lanka at UNHRC sessions, PM says

ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Feb 08, Colombo: Sri Lankan Prime Minister D.M. Jayaratne has said the government has been informed of a plan by the Tamil Diaspora and LTTE sympathizers in Europe to raise allegations of war crimes against the country.

Speaking during the debate on the extension of emergency regulations in parliament today, Jayaratne has said the war crimes allegations against Sri Lanka are to be raised at the United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) in Geneva.

According to the Premier, these groups are canvassing the support of politicians in Europe to get the resolution included in the agenda of the UNHRC sessions in March.

Jayaratne has also said the government is drafting new legislation to provide for a political solution to the ethnic issue.

Ananda-USA said...

What!

Are CANADIANS complaining about their NATIONAL DUTY to accept and maintain these FAKE REFUGEES in the style they have become accustomed to in CANADA?

Come! Come! O Canada, No one said a BLEEDING HEART and a GULLIBLE MIND is inexpensive to maintain!


.................
Tamil boat costs taxpayers at least $25 million

By BRIAN LILLEY, Parliamentary Bureau
February , 2011

OTTAWA — The arrival of the MV Sun Sea off the coast of British Columbia last August has cost Canadians at least $25 million, so far.

The ship arrived in Canadian waters in mid-August after a three-month journey from Thailand. The ship brought 492 ethnic Tamils from Sri Lanka to Canada claiming refugee status.

The government released supplementary spending estimates Tuesday morning that show the arrival of the MV Sun Sea had the biggest impact on the budget of the Canada Border Services Agency (CBSA). The agency has asked for $22 million to pay for "incremental costs relating to the mass migrant arrival of the MV Sun Sea.”

The RCMP has also had to spend a small fortune because of the ship's arrival. The estimates show the Mounties want $2.1 million to cover their expenses.

A further $908,000 is allotted to the Immigration and Refugee Board hearings that have been ongoing since the ship arrived.

The spending estimates don't include the cost of health care the federal government provided for the refugee claimants or a reported $2 million spent to provide legal services for the passengers.

Stephen Harper's government, which claimed the ship had ties to the terrorist Tamil Tiger group, responded to the Sun Sea with Bill C-49. The bill proposes several changes to the immigration and refugee act, including penalties for refugees who arrive in Canada aboard a ship such as the Sun Sea.

Opposition parties have all said they oppose the bill, in particular sections that would allow those who arrive on such ships to be detained for up to one year while their identity and their refugee cases are settled. The government claims the changes would stop others from taking advantage of Canada’s immigration system. The Liberals, Bloc and NDP all claim the changes are unfair and unconstitutional.

Some passengers from the Sun Sea have been released, but others remain in custody.

Ananda-USA said...

JAYAWEWA ...Sri Lanka Maniyeni!

.................
The 63rd anniversary of Sri Lanka's Independence Day

ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

New York's Asia Society Reverberates to the Rhythms of Kandyan Drums

Feb 09, NY-USA, The Permanent Mission of Sri Lanka to the United Nations hosted a well attended Concert and Reception at the prestigious Asia Society for the diplomatic community, senior UN personnel and members of the business and social elite of New York to mark the 63rd anniversary of Sri Lanka's Independence. Over 120 Permanent Missions were represented at the event. The guests were treated to a memorable evening of classical music, jazz and traditional Sri Lankan dance by Sri Lanka’s own artistes.

Maestro Rohan de Silva was at the piano with Ms. Sujeeva Hapugalle, Paul Metzke enthralled the audience with the guitar and Ms. Yolande Bavan, the perennial jazz favorite, kept their toes tapping. The Chitrasena dance group from Sri Lanka, flown in courtesy SriLankan Airlines, enraptured the audience with throbbing Kandyan drums and Kohomba Kankari for the first time.

While the Asia Society audience was regaled to an incomparable treat in music and dance, a confident nation itself is reaching forward to a period of expanded freedom and expedited growth following the end of the conflict in 2009.

As President Mahinda Rajapaksa said in his Independence Day message “We must set right the errors of both past and present in this march towards greater freedom, won through divisions, which leads to the loss of freedom for us all. Therefore, building a united Sri Lanka is the best means by which freedom can be secured and given more meaning. We must have the same commitment to building a united nation as we had in defending our country.” Foreign Minister Professor G.L. Peiris said “With the advent of a durable peace after the successful elimination of terrorism in Sri Lanka, our principal focus has been on steering the nation on the right course to achieve accelerated social and economic development across the country, which would benefit people from all parts of the country.”

Dr. Palitha Kohona, the Permanent Representative of Sri Lanka to the United Nations stated in his message that “Those Sri Lankans who live overseas have a seminal contribution to make as the nation forges ahead. We must continue to convey the best possible image of Sri Lanka internationally and help to build bridges and foster understanding – Bridges among ourselves and to the international community. United, we must embrace the world.”

The occasion was graced by the presence of permanent representatives and deputy permanent representatives of over 120 countries, including, India, Russia, Turkey, United Kingdom, United States, The Ireland, Serbia, Spain, Syria, Cuba, Fiji, Australia, Mongolia, Rumania, Hungary, Kenya, Nigeria, Ghana, Israel, Bosnia, Slovania, Qatar and Brazil.

Ananda-USA said...

Twenty-eight Fallen women soldiers commemorated

DailyNews.lk
February 09, 2011


Twenty-eight women soldiers who sacrificed their lives for the country were commemorated and their next of kin received mementos from Army Chief of Staff Maj Gen Daya Ratnayake at the 15th anniversary celebrations of the Sri Lanka Ex-Army Women's Association held at the Mahanama College Hall recently.

Female military officers whose husbands were killed in the battlefield namely Major General Indira Wijeratne, Major Niroshani Fernando and Lt Col Kumudini Mutaliff were also honoured.

Lali Kobbekaduwa, the wife of late General Denzil Kobbekaduwa was honoured representing all other war heroes. A drama titled Duwe Numbai based on Vihara Maha Devi's character was staged.

Parliamentarian Dr Malini Fonseka was the Chief Guest.

Ananda-USA said...

To those who question the need to PERMANENTLY maintain a strong Sri Lanka Defense Force we say ... LEARN FROM THESE MISTAKES OF OUR RECENT PAST!

INCREASE the permanent cadre of the SLDF to 500,000, AND create a 3 million strong National Guard comprising every adult capable of bearing arms.

Sustain the SLDF by deploying them in National Development activities. Let SERVICE in the SLDF and the National Guard be an HONOURED Red Badge of Courage having a TANGIBLE BENEFIT to those who serve, and have served!

MAINTAIN the Nation on a PERMANENT STATE of READINESS TO FIGHT that will give pause to its biggest enemies.

DETERRENCE .. DETERRENCE is the Key!

NEVER AGAIN allow Sri Lanka to be DEFENCELESS to be ravished at will by all!


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Massacre of 600 police: SLA couldn’t have saved them – Retired SLA officer says

By Shamindra Ferdinando
Island.lk
February 08, 2011

The Army couldn’t have come to the rescue of the besieged police deployed in the Eastern Province at the outset of the eelam war II in June 1990 even if the top brass had wanted to go on the offensive, a retired army officer says.

Speaking on the condition of anonymity, the official, who had been stationed in the East, says the Army hadn’t been equipped to face an emergency at that time. "In fact, we were outgunned in the Ampara and Batticaloa sectors and didn’t have the wherewithal to defend detachments," he said, asserting the absence of air support during the first few hours of the LTTE assault gave the enemy the upper hand.

The officer who had been at the forefront of ground operations at an earlier stage of the conflict, was responding to retired SSP Tassie Seneviratne’s recent oral and written submissions to the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC). Seneviratne while flaying the then President Ranasinghe Premadasa for throwing away the lives over 600 police personnel to appease the LTTE, asserted their lives could have been saved if the military had intervened.

Responding to a query, the ex-infantry officer said that in the Batticaloa District, the army had less than 600 personnel deployed at five detachments at Kiran, Kalawanchikudy, Kallady, Wellaweli and Kalmunai along the coast. The strength of the army in the Batticaloa District had been less than a fully fledged infantry battalion, he said adding troops lacked ammunition to go on the offensive.

After surrounding police stations in the East, an LTTE cadre identified as Mohan, an old Royalist, had phoned the army detachment at Kiran and ordered the senior officer present to surrender immediately. "The Kiran detachment was the gateway to the Thoppigala jungles," the source said. In spite of being outnumbered, the army held the Kiran detachment until reinforcements reached on the eighth day of the battle.

The LTTE obviously believed that it could force the entire police and military contingents in the Ampara and Batticaloa sectors to surrender and then concentrate all its firepower on Trincomalee, thereby bringing the entire East under its control, perhaps within a week.

The ex-army officer said that ASP Ivan Boteju had strongly opposed a government move to surrender to the LTTE in a bid to work out a fresh ceasefire with the group. But the then chief government negotiator Minister A. C. S. Hameed had reiterated President Premadasa’s determination to go ahead with the peace process in spite of LTTE provocations. Some of the senior military officers in charge of troops in the East had been evasive and sidestepped what the ex-official called the touchy issue of their response to the LTTE provocation.

Ananda-USA said...

Massacre of 600 police: SLA couldn’t have saved them – Retired SLA officer says

................
Sources said that SLAF choppers hadn’t been able to join the battle immediately as the top brass needed political approval to mount guns on them. Sources said that the government had directed the SLAF not to mount guns following representations by the LTTE. The LTTE had said that the sight of ‘armed’ choppers disturbed the Tamil speaking people in the North and East, sources said.

"When compared with the SLAFs fire-power today, we didn’t have necessary air support at that time. There were a few Italian built Sia Marchettis (small attack aircraft) and some Bells. Kfirs, MiG 27s, F7s and Mi 24s joined later," sources said. For want of artillery support in the eastern theatre coupled with the absence of air power gave the LTTE an advantage over government troops, which hadn’t been engaged in ground operations since Operation Liberation, the first large scale combined security forces operation in May-June 1987, sources said.

Sources said that those in power at that time had conveniently forgotten that the army had been confined to barracks for three years, while the LTTE was in a constant state of readiness due to its engagements with the IPKF and the so-called Tamil National Army (TNA) trained and equipped by India before the IPKF withdrew in March 1990.

Anton Balasingham and his Australian –born wife Adele arrived in Colombo on April 26, 1989 to pave the way for direct talks between the LTTE and the Sri Lankan government. Fighting erupted on June 11, 1990.

Within weeks of the outbreak of fighting, the ill-equipped army lost control of a long stretch of A9 north of Vavuniya up to Elephant Pass. The road remained under LTTE control until the first week of January 2009.

Ananda-USA said...

Slain LTTE leader's mother passes away in Sri Lanka

ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Feb 20, Colombo: Parvathi Velupillai, the mother of the slain leader of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) Velupillai Prabhakaran, has passed away on Sunday morning after a lengthy illness, local media reported.

Reportedly the Sri Lanka Army has confirmed that she passed away early morning in a Jaffna hospital.

Mrs. Parvathi was brought to India from Malaysia for treatment in April last year but India denied her entry on the basis she was a threat to national security.

Later, with the intervention of the Tamil Nadu government she was offered conditional visa to admit into a hospital in Chennai. However, she deferred her visit to India and remained in Sri Lanka.

Her husband, a retired public servant, passed away in January 2010. Her youngest son Prabhakaran was killed by state security forces on May 18, 2009. She has another daughter and a son who live abroad.

Ananda-USA said...

Hooray for the SLN!

It is about time this poaching by Tamil Nadu fishermen .. previously accustomed to aiding the LTTE .. were denied access to fishing in Sri Lanka waters.

However, every such encounter should be video recorded and the location established beyond all doubt by GPS and other means.

Failure to do so will only play into the hands of the Tamil separatists operating from Tamil Nadu.

An MOU between the Indian and Sri Lankan Govts is in the offing to formalize these approaches and prevent misunderstandings between the two countries.


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Lankan navy stops 2,400 fishermen

HindustanTimes.com
Rameswaram,
February 20, 2011

About 2400 fishermen, who put out to sea from here in 600 mechanised boats, were allegedly stopped in mid-sea off this coastal town by the Sri Lankan Navy on Sunday morning and asked to return.

President of local fishermen’s association Yesu Raja told reporters here that the Sri Lankan Naval men, who came in four boats warned them at “gunpoint” to return while they were fishing between Dhanushkodi and Katchatheevu and that they had crossed the International Maritime Boundary Line.

The navymen also cautioned the fishermen not to come to the area in future for fishing, he alleged.

Yesu Raja sought the help of the coast guard to identify the boundary line.

Ananda-USA said...

Why do the TN Fishermen feel "betrayed"?

Is it because they thought they would be welcomed as in the days of LTTE supremacy when fishing in Sri Lanka waters by the LTTE supporters from TN was viewed merely as "sticking it to the Sri Lanka Government"?

Should not the Sri Lankan Tamil fishermen protect their own livlihoods and the "Sri Lankan national interest" as Sri Lankan citizens when they resist poaching by foreigners irrespective of their "Tamil" umbilical cord that Karunanidhi brags about?

Whatever the truth is, civilian fishermen should not be making "arrests" .. that is the role of law enforcement officials.

The SL Govt should take note of this and warn these Sri Lankan fishermen to avoid taking action that could precipitate international conflicts.

The fishermen should merely video record the incidents including location information, and provide that evidence to Sri Lankan authorities.


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'Betrayal' by Sri Lankan Tamil fishermen haunts them

By P. V. Srividya

The 136 Indian fishermen, held captive by the Sri Lankan fishermen for alleged breach of boundary and later remanded to judicial custody early this week in Sri Lanka, reached the port premises here on Saturday.

For scores of fisherfolk who had gathered there, it was a mixed feeling of relief and ‘betrayal,' the latter towards Sri Lankan Tamil fisherfolk, who allegedly perpetrated the attacks.

“We are unable to fathom the action of Sri Lankan Tamil fishermen,” Kandasamy, who was among those captured, told The Hindu.

Early this week, the first spate of attacks and capture of Indian fisherfolk was reported. The Sri Lankan fisherfolk were then on the fourth day of a strike, calling upon the Sri Lankan government to “act against Indian fishermen,” for breach of territorial waters and exploitation of their share of marine wealth, according to Kandasamy.

When no action was forthcoming, the Sri Lankan fisherfolk resorted to attacks, with alleged logistical support from Sri Lankan Navy.

The fishermen from the State alleged that the attacks by Sri Lankan fisherfolk were “instigated” by the Sri Lankan Navy to “mask its operations” against Indian fishermen.

“When we were taken to Vadamaraachi fishing habitation in Jaffna, the navy, army and police were already there, awaiting our arrival,” said Shakthivel.

The released fisherfolk include 24 from Jagadhapattinam in Pudukottai, 11 from Karaikal, 95 from Nagapattinam and 6 from Rameswaram. Of the 25 boats brought to safety, boats from Jagadhapattinam in Pudukottai district suffered considerable damage. Most of them had their glass panes broken.

Further, fisherfolk alleged losses following the seizure of their catch and gadgets such as GPS and mobile phones and nets. According to them, the attacks took place well within international waters.

Ananda-USA said...

Jaffna fishermen make fervent appeal: Ensure livelihood of Northern fishermen

SundayObserver.lk
by Ananth PALAKIDNAR
February 20, 2011

In the backdrop of the government releasing 130 South Indian fishermen on Friday, the chairperson of the Jaffna Fishermen’s Federation S. Thavaratnam and his deputy A. Emiliyampillai have highlighted the plight of the Northern fisherfolk and called upon the governments of both countries to ensure their livelihood.

Thavaratnam told the Sunday Observer that the Jaffna fisherfolk had suffered immensely due to terrorism which dragged on for three decades in the Peninsula and the country at large.

“The hardships we had faced in the North had driven us to the brink of famine and death.

“With the end of the dark era two years ago, the restrictions that prevailed in the seas around the Jaffna peninsula have now been relaxed and the fisherfolk are gradually stabilising themselves with their fishing activities in the Northern seas.

Therefore, at this juncture the encroachment of any foreign fishing craft into Sri Lanka’s territorial waters should not be tolerated as it would affect the livelihood of thousands of fishermen in the Jaffna peninsula,” Thavaratnam said.

Commenting on Indian fishermen encroaching into Sri Lanka’s territorial waters, he said, that they were not against the South Indian fishermen and added that when Indian fishermen encroach on our seas with their powerful fishing trawlers, all our resources in the seas including the shells were netted on a vast scale.

”Therefore, our fishermen are adversely affected and nothing is left for them to fish in the Northern waters, he said.

He said the South Indian fishing vessels could be seen from a distance of 10-20 kilometres from the shores in Jaffna. “The South Indian vessels come in hundreds and net sea food worth around Indian Rs. 600,000 in our waters.

Their trawlers with huge nets have almost a clean sweep on the sea bed,” Thavaratnam said. He said that he makes a humble request to the Indian government on behalf of the fishermen of Jaffna to ensure that South Indian fishermen do not hamper the livelihood of local fishermen by encroaching into the fishing areas of the Jaffna fisherfolk.

Deputy Chairman of the Jaffna Fishermen’s Federation and Chairman of the Vadamarachchi Fishermen’s Association A. Emiliyampillai told the Sunday Observer that the Jaffna fisherfolk consists of around 100,000 comprising 22,000 families.

“With the dawn of peace in Jaffna we had barely anything for our survival. Unlike others, the fisherfolk had been affected adversely in the peninsula. However, with the restrictions being relaxed in the seas since the early last year, we are gradually beginning to rebuild our lives with our limited resources such as boats and fishing nets.

The Indian trawlers which encroach into our waters not only net the sea food, but they also damage our nets worth several lakhs of rupees on a big scale,” he said.

Emiliyampillai was one of the members in the delegation of the Jaffna fishermen which had toured Tamil Nadu to resolve the issue with regard to fishing in the Northern waters. “We had several rounds of talks with the South Indian fisherfolk in Tiruchchirapalli. Despite the conditions agreed upon it’s a pity to see South Indian fishermen encroaching regularly in our territorial waters”, he said.

He said that the maritime boundaries between the two countries should be clearly demarcated and it should be made easier for both sides to identify their areas in the seas.

Meanwhile a report from Jaffna said that the Indian Consul General based in Jaffna attempted to interfere with the court decision.

Point Pedro Magistrate also stated on such attempt in open Court.

However, the Jaffna based Indian Consul General denied the allegation and said that he did not make any attempt of meddling with the judicial decisions.

Ananda-USA said...

Disappointed Chinese investors return with another investment after quitting Mirigama Zone

By Bandula Sirimanna
SundayTimes.lk
February 20, 2011

A group of Chinese investors who abandoned a special economic zone outside Colombo which it was setting up exclusively for Chinese investments, returned to Sri Lanka this week with other plans including investments in trading.

Executive President of China Huichen Investment Holdings Ltd Ron Huang told the Business Times in an interview in Colombo that his company will venture into new areas of business in the island after deciding to abandon the dedicated Chinese Special Economic Zone (SEZ) project at Mirigama, the focus of a series of exclusive articles in this newspaper.

Disclosing details of these plans, he noted that the company plans to build a massive shopping Mall with a Convention hall and apartment housing complex near the Katunayake International Airport, using modern architectural techniques used in the Netherlands for floating house buildings near lakes and lagoons.

Negotiations are underway to purchase a 157-acre land near the airport for this project, he revealed. Huichen Investment Holdings will invest in tourist resort projects and commodity trading including tea. It will also purchase a tea factory in Sri Lanka, Mr Ron said.

He revealed that the preliminary agreement to set up the Mirigama zone was signed by the previous management of the company, headed by former Chairman Huichen Investment Wang Yu Ping.
Since then the management has changed and the new board of directors found that the site was not suitable for an industrial location due to poor condition of roads and other infrastructure facilities. It is also opposed to environmental pollution and will not encourage industrial ventures harmful for environment, another issue that cropped up at the site.

A sum of $2 million was spent by the former management on basic infrastructure development at Mirigama which included cutting of coconut trees and clearing of the land. Explaining further the reasons for pulling out from Mirigama, Mr Ron said the former chairman made an attempt to bring some Chinese investors to set up industries but was unsuccessful. Another negative was transport difficulties with the site located faraway from the city of Colombo.

Now Huichen Investment Holdings is shifting its attention to other areas of investment and continuing what it calls ‘friendly relations and maintaining its goodwill with Sri Lanka’. “We love Sri Lanka and its people and we want to be friendly with them always without causing any damage to their environment,” Mr Ron added.

The group is a major buyer of Sri Lankan tea from HVA Holdings (Pvt) Ltd and is engaged in promoting and selling Sri Lankan tea in China since 2009. It also imports coconut fibre and coir from the island. “We don’t want to harm these relations and we came back with the plan of establishing a sister city of Fujiang in Quan Zhou province in Gampaha, to create international understanding and goodwill. The Sister Cities Program promotes world peace in an individual level and encourages citizens to better understand community, by contrasting their way of life with another culture,” he said.

Ananda-USA said...

SLAF grants permission for flying unmanned model planes and aircraft

ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Feb 19, Colombo: The Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF) has once again granted permission to launch and fly unmanned model planes and aircrafts.

The SLAF has currently permitted the launching of such aircraft in the area surrounding the air force base in Katunayake.

Flying unmanned model planes and aircraft was banned during the period of war as it was considered a threat to national security.

The SLAF is shortly expected to permit the launching of unmanned model planes and aircraft in other areas as well.

Ananda-USA said...

Sri Lanka and India considering a MOU on fishing

ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Feb 20, Colombo: Sri Lanka Minister of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources Rajitha Senarathna says that discussions are underway between India and Sri Lanka to settle the dispute in relation to fishing in the adjoining maritime waters of the two countries.

The Minister says he is in a dialogue with his Indian counterpart and the problem will be resolved amicably.

Accordingly, a memorandum of understanding is to be signed between the two countries soon regarding fishing in the waters between the two countries.

Often, the authorities of the two countries arrest each other's fishermen under the charges of poaching in their waters when they cross the International Maritime Boundary Line (IMBL). The fishermen often say that they were unaware of being in the other's territorial waters.

Recent arrests of the Indian poachers by Sri Lankan fishermen sparked a wave of protests in India and Sri Lanka, under pressure from India, released the fishermen later and handed them over to the Indian Coast Guard.

Sri Lankan Tamil fishermen whose livelihoods are threatened by the Indian fisherman stealing Sri Lanka's aquatic resources have taken action to round up the poachers and hand them over to the Sri Lankan police.

India meanwhile is mulling to adopt a new mobile communication method to alert the fishermen when they cross the IMBL.

According to a report in The Hindu a committee chaired by Vice Admiral B. R. Rao, the Chief Hydrographer to the Government of India, is exploring at least three ways to send out a signal to fishermen on high seas alerting imminent crossing of the IMBL.

Both India and Sri Lanka have noted that the Joint Statement on Fishing Arrangements of 26th October 2008, which had put in place practical arrangements to deal with bona fide fishermen crossing the International Maritime Boundary Line (IMBL), had led to a decrease in incidents.

The two countries during a recent meeting between Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa and India's Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao agreed on the need to discuss arrangement

Ananda-USA said...

Indian Coast Guard hands over 21 Sri Lankan fishermen to the Sri Lanka Navy

ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Feb 19, Colombo: Indian officials have handed over 21 Sri Lankan fishermen who were in Indian custody to the Sri Lanka Navy Saturday.

The hand-over of the Sri Lankan fishermen with their 5 trawlers took place at the Indo-Lanka Maritime border this afternoon.

The 21 Sri Lankan fishermen were arrested when they had entered into Indian waters. Their release comes soon after the Sri Lankan authorities released 136 Indian fishermen who were arrested within a period of one week.

Continuing the fishermen's woes on both sides however, the Indian Navy on Friday detained four Sri Lankan fishermen from Jaffna and seized a fiberglass boat for entering into Indian waters, media reports said.

Ananda-USA said...

I disagree!

Norway is one country with which Sri Lanka should not have ANY diplomatic relations!

This is the nation that colluded with the LTTE to partition Sri Lanka in two, and assisted the LTTE with funds, diplomatic support, and prohibited civilian/military equipment in pursuit of their economic, political and evangelical religious agenda in Sri Lanka.


Those who forget the past are condemned to repeat it.

THROW THE BUMS OUT, I say! don't let them set foot in Sri Lanka!


................
Ambassador focuses on building bridges with Norway in Feb. 4 speech

Island.lk
February 19, 2011

Sri Lanka’s Ambassador to Norway, Mr. Rodney Perera, focused on three areas where Sri Lanka and Norway was strengthening ties in a National Day speech made at a February 4 reception he hosted in Oslo. The areas of focus were political relations, economic corporation, cultural and educational exchanges and the Diaspora. A large number of people of Lankan descent lived in Noway. The Ambassador noted that a few months ago there had been what he called "a historic meeting in New York between President Mahinda Rajapakse and Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg of Norway.

While diplomatic channels in both countries were scheduling a discussion at the UN between their Heads of Government, the Ambassador said that he had the opportunity of meeting Prime Minister Stoltenberg.

``I explained to him why Sri Lanka was eager to have the proposed meeting and stated that both he and President Rajapaksa were elected as the leaders of the two countries in 2005 and re-elected by the respective voters a few years thereafter. While Norway had been involved closely in Sri Lanka for many years, the two democratically elected leaders had not met at all.

``So I appealed to the Prime Minister to initiate a bilateral dialogue by meeting up with my president so that further constructive engagements at other levels could be set in motion. He responded that he was hoping to meet the Sri Lankan leader and be more familiar on Sri Lanka and wished for both countries to explore ways and means of a bilateral engagement based on areas of mutually beneficial cooperation that would serve the interests of the peoples of the two countries.’’

At the meeting that took place in New York along the margins of the UN General Assembly, the Norwegian leader said that his country is willing to invest in the social and economic spheres in Sri Lanka. Our President mentioned that the government of Norway also has the opportunity to be involved in development projects taking place in all provinces in the island.

On the Diaspora the ambassador said that the vibrant Sri Lankan community throughout Norway nowadays has a calendar full of events, celebrating all events related to our religious and cultural heritage. Then there are several sporting events including cricket tournaments that bring together people from all denominations.

Sri Lankans in Norway are committed to maintaining their own language, cultural and religious traditions. There are Sinhala and Tamil schools teaching the next generations of youth. There is a Hindu temple in Oslo.

He said he was very happy to announce that the Tisarana Buddhist Association is now just weeks away from the long overdue noble task of setting up a Sri Lankan Buddhist Temple in Norway. This is a monumental event considering this year marks the 2600th anniversary of the Lord Buddha attaining enlightenment.

Ananda-USA said...

During elections: Conspirators manipulate prices, says President

Suraj A Bandara and Indika POLKOTUWA
DalyNews.lk
February 19, 2011

President Mahinda Rajapaksa noted that conspiratorial forces come to the arena during elections and create fabricated price hikes in commodities to mislead the public.

“We should get together to defeat these unpatriotic forces,” he said.

“These organized conspirators made futile efforts during the last Presidential Election by creating a rice shortage in the country. They managed to increase a kilo of rice to Rs 120. But people gave me a massive mandate and elected me President despite these sinister attempts,” President Rajapaksa said.

He observed these views during an awareness campaign for Kandy district SLFP candidates contesting the upcoming Local Governmental elections at the President’s House yesterday. The President said the price of commodities is decreasing and it will see a further reduction in the coming days.

President Rajapaksa said that even green leaves were imported in the past and this Government always worked for the benefit of the local farmer. “We will strengthen local farmers rather than foreign farmers,” he said.

The President urged the people to defeat groups engaged in mud slinging to gain political mileage.

Prime Minister D M Jayaratne and Central Province Chief Minister Sarath Ekanayake also addressed the meeting. Media Minister Keheliya Rambukwella, Justice Minister Rauf Hakeem, Trade Minister Johnston Fernando and Sports Minister Mahindananda Alutgamage also participated.

Ananda-USA said...

Planet could be 'unrecognizable' by 2050, experts say

February 20, 2011

WASHINGTON (AFP) – A growing, more affluent population competing for ever scarcer resources could make for an "unrecognizable" world by 2050, researchers warned at a major US science conference Sunday.

The United Nations has predicted the global population will reach seven billion this year, and climb to nine billion by 2050, "with almost all of the growth occurring in poor countries, particularly Africa and South Asia," said John Bongaarts of the non-profit Population Council.

To feed all those mouths, "we will need to produce as much food in the next 40 years as we have in the last 8,000," said Jason Clay of the World Wildlife Fund at the annual meeting of the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS).

"By 2050 we will not have a planet left that is recognizable" if current trends continue, Clay said.

The swelling population will exacerbate problems, such as resource depletion, said John Casterline, director of the Initiative in Population Research at Ohio State University.

But incomes are also expected to rise over the next 40 years -- tripling globally and quintupling in developing nations -- and add more strain to global food supplies.

People tend to move up the food chain as their incomes rise, consuming more meat than they might have when they made less money, the experts said.

It takes around seven pounds (3.4 kilograms) of grain to produce a pound of meat, and around three to four pounds of grain to produce a pound of cheese or eggs, experts told AFP.

"More people, more money, more consumption, but the same planet," Clay told AFP, urging scientists and governments to start making changes now to how food is produced.

Population experts, meanwhile, called for more funding for family planning programs to help control the growth in the number of humans, especially in developing nations.

"For 20 years, there's been very little investment in family planning, but there's a return of interest now, partly because of the environmental factors like global warming and food prices," said Bongaarts.

"We want to minimize population growth, and the only viable way to do that is through more effective family planning," said Casterline.

Ananda-USA said...

Are the Norwegians finally turning on their pet Tiger terrorists?

Nah! I don't believe it!

...............
Tamil man indicted for Sri Lankan murders

Island.lk
February 23, 2011

Norwegian police have arrested and indicted a Tamil worker on suspicion of killing of three people for the Tamil Tigers.

The man, arrested last January, stands accused of killing three persons on behalf of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) during a conflict in Sri Lanka. The first victim was a police officer killed in 2004. The other two were members of a rival Tamil group, murdered in May 2006, according to Norwegian news agency the foreigner

According to Per Zimmer, police lawyer at Kripos (Norwegian Criminal Police), the Tamil man is thought to have connections with the LTTE, and it is believed the organization contracted him.

"We are investigating the matter on the basis he has had a role in the LTTE, and that he has carried out killings on its behalf," Mr Zimmer tells Aftenposten, refusing to reveal the individual’s rank on the grounds it forms part of the police inquiry.

The 34-year-old has been preliminarily indicted under Section 233 of the Norwegian Penal Code section, which states murders committed abroad can also be tried when the alleged offender lives in Norway. He has been working as a cleaner in Norway since 2007 since his application for asylum was rejected.

As Sri Lankan authorities have not asked for the man’s extradition until now, the trial will be held in Norway.

"We are obliged to pursue serious crimes committed abroad, thus preventing Norway from becoming a safe haven with amnesty for criminals. There are many Tamils who have been granted residence here, and we find it natural to look at this group as well", says Per Zimmer.

The accused alleges he is not guilty, claiming the Tamil Tigers put him under duress by threatening to kill his family.

Ananda-USA said...

Special Zone for Sri Lanka's heavy Industry

ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Feb 24, Colombo: Sri Lanka cabinet of ministers granted approval today to establish a special Zone for Heavy Industry at Sampur in Trincomalee in a land extent of 97 Sq km, reported the Government Information Department.

The zone is to possess an area with terminal facilities that are needed for the heavy industries.

Mitchell Consortium, a multi-national consortium from Australia with partners from Brazil and also from Sri Lanka has made an unsolicited proposal to locate a Zone which includes Coke Plant, Iron Ore Palletizing Plant, Manufacturing Plant and Machinery, Sugar Refinery etc., said the Government Information Department.

On a proposal submitted by President Mahinda Rajapaksa, cabinet granted approval for the Consortium to conduct feasibility studies and submit their reports to the government.

Investment for Phase I of the project will be US $700 million.

Ananda-USA said...

Good! But, these mini-hydro plants are rather large capacity of 2MW each on average.

In addition, micro-hydropower plants (1 - 50kW) should also be allowed under appropriate environmental impact regulation.

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Small hydropower projects perform well: National grid gets 175mw

Another 119mw to be added.

By Indunil HEWAGE
DailyNews.lk
February 25, 2011

Small Mini hydropower industry in Sri Lanka announced yesterday the connection of 175 megawatts to Sri Lanka national grid. Hence, 4.5 percent of the country’s electricity requirements can be supplied from the hydropower industry while saving Rs 10 billion each year from country’s foreign exchange bill.


Minister Patali Champika Ranawaka addressing the Media

It is targeted to feed 350 megawatts from hydropower to the national grid within the next decade.

Addressing a ceremony held in Colombo yesterday Power and Energy Minister Patali Champika Ranawaka said 83 hydropower plants that are operational in the country adds 175 megawatts to the national grid and another 60 mini hydro plants are to be commissioned in the country by adding another 119 megawatts to the entire national grid in the future.

National Renewable Energy Authority has also called tenders inviting eligible investors to set up additional 176 mini hydro plants with 333 megawatts.

The present maximum electricity capacity in Sri Lanka is estimated 2,000 megawatts and it is estimated that it would reach up to 7,000 megawatts in 2030. The present maximum electricity capacity in the world reaches 13 terawatts and it is predicted to reach 30 terawatts in 2030.

Small Hydropower Developers Association Vice President Probodha Sumanasekera said that out of all renewable energy technologies small hydropower retains the most amount of investment within the country with an over 60 percent local contribution possible. However industry is faced with many challenges.

“There are more than 300 megawatts more of small hydropower projects which can be developed within the next five years. However most of these projects are high cost, low yield projects and we request the relevant authorities higher tariffs to justify the investments,” Sumanasekera said.

Sri Lankan engineers have also engaged in building mini hydropower projects in remote areas in Asia and Africa by exporting Sri Lankan expertise and technology to the world.

Ananda-USA said...

In other words, the GOSL is telling the EU: "We don't want ANY TRADE BENEFITS that empower you to INTERFERE in NATIONAL SECURITY and INTERNAL POLITICS of our country!"

Bravo .. Sri Lanka!


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Sri Lanka is not interested in renewing GSP+ with EU

ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

Feb 25, Colombo: Sri Lanka has told a visiting European Union delegation that it does not want to renegotiate the withdrawn GSP+ tariff concession and it is a "closed book".

Addressing a press conference Friday, Jean Lambert, the leader of the visiting European Sri Lankan inter- parliamentary delegation said from talks with Sri Lankan government officials they understand the government is no longer intending to renew the GSP+ trade deal.

"Our understanding from what the government is telling us is that for (the government) this is a closed book - it does not intend to put in a further application for GSP Plus," Ms. Lambert said at the media briefing.

Lambert said the government instead had asked to develop a relationship on a fresh basis and asked for EU support for small and medium enterprises and training in skills development and marketing.

"The government now hopes to look toward small and medium enterprise development with the EU- move on from the GSP+ issue and develop a better relationship," she added.

The European Union, citing Sri Lanka's failure to meet human rights conventions relevant for benefits under the scheme, suspended the Generalized System of Preferences (GSP) plus tariff concession for Sri Lanka that provided tax free access to European markets for the country's products, especially for garment exports in August 2010.

The seven-member delegation which toured many parts in the island expressed satisfaction in Sri Lanka's achievements with post-war development programs, especially in education and healthcare.

The delegation commended the government's initiatives to resettle the displaced people in the Northern and Eastern provinces while pointing out the need to focus more attention to enhance the sources of revenue of the people in the North and to develop the agricultural sector.

Lambert said the government has properly pointed out its need to resolve ethnic problems by appointing the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission.

Although the delegation is impressed by the pace of resettlement and reconstruction in the North, the EU still has concerns regarding the human rights situation, good governance, and detention of Tamil rebels and resettlement of people displaced by war, Lambert said.

The delegation also met with the Speaker of Parliament Chamal Rajapaksa and Economic Development Minister Basil Rajapaksa, with other government leaders, opposition politicians, and civil society representatives.

The delegation pledged European Union's continuing assistance to Sri Lanka for its development programs.

Ananda-USA said...

Bloggers,

A new article has been posted. Please shift over to it. Thanks!