Sunday, June 26, 2011

Provoking, persecuting and pushing Sri Lanka: Enough!

By Dayan Jayatilleka

June 21, 2011 


Special Forces Combat soldiers ride in a parade during a war victory ceremony in Colombo May 27, 2011. Sri Lanka holds a military parade and memorial for fallen soldiers on Friday to mark the second anniversary of the defeat of the Tamil Tigers, which ended a quarter-century civil war in the Indian Ocean nation.

“Revolution is not a dinner party, not an essay, nor a painting, nor a piece of embroidery; it cannot be advanced softly, gradually, carefully, considerately, respectfully, politely, plainly and modestly”. – Mao Ze Dong

The matter is rather simple really. What do you do, or more correctly, what does a state do, and what does a leader at the helm of state affairs do, when faced with a situation of a heavily armed movement dedicated to dismembering the country through secession; a movement which has repeatedly resorted to terrorism; has repeatedly returned to war after episodes of ceasefires and negotiations with successive governments of two countries, has finally been outmanoeuvred and is cornered, trapped? What does a state do when such a movement, its cadres back in civilian clothes, has surrounded itself with and embedded itself in a population of civilians, many of whom had chosen to follow the secessionist army when it retreated from its citadel over a decade before and has been touted as a weapons trained militia? What does a state do when such an armed force has placed heavy guns and command centres amidst that populace and is firing those guns and mortars at the surrounding army? What does a state do when the strategy of the cornered terrorist army is to catalyse an externally induced ceasefire and live to fight another day? What does a state, especially a democratic republican state, do when the vast majority of its citizenry are urging a decisive finish to a decades-long plague of terrorism and when its armed forces are straining at the leash to defeat and destroy the beast which has been tormenting the state and generations of its citizenry?

Agree to yet another ceasefire and yet another round of talks, not based upon unconditional surrender – the only realistic option in the situation – but contingent on or resulting in the evacuation of the secessionist terrorist leadership? Or go in, as the Allies crashed into Berlin or Paul Kagame’s troops went into the civilian camps across the border?

When you go in, do you do so flailing about blindly, or while making the risky effort to breach the enemy defences and facilitate the exit of as many of the civilians as possible?

And once you’ve done so to the fullest extent possible, what do you do?  How do you deal with the efforts to breakout by the enemy; efforts which include the tactic of embedded suicide bombers in civilian clothes?

And when the final battles take place in the dark pre-dawn hours; a battle which does not entail a surgical strike by commandos against a lone enemy leader but with the elite praetorian guard of the cruellest of enemies; a battle which is fought not with pilotless Predator drones and Hellfire missiles but by foot soldiers who probably come from villages where night raids have left bodies and memories of huddled infants and breastfeeding mothers, against the backcloth of a long struggle which has reawakened historical anxieties of an existential sort, do you expect the final scene to be pretty? Revolution, said Mao, is not a dinner party. Still less is a secessionist war a dinner party. The Russian Bolsheviks led by those epitomes of Reason and modernity Lenin and Trotsky, sanctioned the physical elimination of the Tzar and his family (a ghastly act which Trotsky, the epitome of Western reason and modernity, justified and Bolshevism’s original sin, according to Reggie Siriwardena in the Lanka Guardian), the Italian partisans hanged Mussolini and his woman friend upon capture, elements of the Sri Lankan armed forces fed their co-ethnic and generational peer Rohana Wijeweera into the fire.  Not my idea of the ethics of violence, but who practised those ethics anyway, apart from Fidel, Che, the Cubans, the Nicaraguan Sandinistas and perhaps some Lusophone African liberation movements? These were exceptions and veritable saints by comparison with the normal practices and practitioners of war in History– History described by Hegel as a “slaughter bench”.

So what now?

Does anybody seriously expect a state, especially one that is sufficiently democratic at base to be responsive to public opinion, to open up the war and its closing stages, which are felt to be a liberating triumph by the overwhelmingly greater number of its citizens, to international scrutiny? Which state has done so, where and when, two years after a victorious war? Why should Sri Lanka be the first in line of a questionable doctrine, when it should be at the back of the queue if there is one?

This is not a matter of a nasty regime defending itself. Liberal democratic Spain, a member of the EU and NATO, filed a case against its most celebrated judge, Balthazar Garzon, who started universal jurisdiction rolling with his admirable decision of Augusto Pinochet, because Garzon sought to open up for possible accountability the crimes committed during the Spanish Civil War of the 1930s.

Each state and society decides on how, when and who by, the issues of accountability and impunity are settled. How can the UK, which let Augusto Pinochet go, and which took 38 years to issue its report into Bloody Sunday with no prosecutions having yet taken place, wag its finger at Sri Lanka on impunity?

Are those who argue that accountability is a pre-requisite for reconciliation and that an international or independent national inquiry is a prerequisite for accountability, seriously hold that an inquisition into the Sri Lankan armed forces will assist rather than wreck reconciliation? Who then will reconcile the rather large armed forces (with the stress on the adjective) with those who seek to or permit them to be placed in the dock for having risked life and limb to  liberate the country from one of the most violent militias the contemporary world has seen?

Who will reconcile the vast Sinhala peasantry with that element of urban society and its expatriate cousins, which wishes to put their sons in the dock at the behest of some foreigners or liberal legal doctrines? Who will reconcile an ancient nation which constitutes the vast mass of the island, with the former colonial powers that issue deadlines and ultimatums and a neighbouring landmass from which incursions took place throughout history, and now passes resolutions calling for economic blockades?

Did the pressure from the anti-Castro Cubans in Florida and the economic embargo by the USA lead to a softening within Cuba? Where in the world does a combination of such external pressures and outrageous demands, from historic invaders and occupiers, not lead to an internal hardening?

By which logic does anyone call for a risky lacerating inquiry in the name of reconciliation with a minority, when it the idea of penalising, persecuting and prosecuting a loved and socially rooted, army will incense the vast majority?  Who or which is more organic to the country: the armed forces or those who are calling for accountability hearings, so loudly, so aggressively and so soon after the war? Will Sri Lanka’s citizens heed the threatening calls of an ex-colonizer and occupier or the resolutions of the assembly of a neighbouring site of ancient incursions, or protect its elected government, a leadership of its democratic choice and a military consisting of its children?

What makes any intelligent person think that the people of this country will not defend from those deemed intervening outsiders and their local lackeys, those who defended the country—and do so ‘by any means necessary’? What could make an intelligent person think that the majority of Sri Lanka’s citizens do not see the Tiger flags and Tamil Eelam graphics (the map of the island with the North East differently coloured) in the photographs of the demonstrations and events taking place among the re-mobilised and revengeful elements of the Tamil Diaspora in the West? A literate people know that the Tiger is not a self-serving embellishment of the incumbent administration, but the old enemy propelling its front organisations and fellow travellers; its ‘useful idiots’, while straining to leverage the ex-colonial states against Sri Lanka and waiting to leap from beyond the oceans.

How can anyone seriously believe that inter-ethnic reconciliation will be possible, still less accelerated, by or in the aftermath of anything that smacks of victimising the popular armed forces? Accountability hearings AND devolution? Devolution AFTER accountability hearings? Is not the choice one of devolution OR accountability, under this or any other administration? Can any administration that accedes to a full-on accountability hearings, this present one or a successor, follow it up with liberal measures of ethnic compromise and reconciliation and hope to avoid a ferocious backlash? How long would a Wickramasinghe- Karunanayake-Samaraweera administration that moves on ‘accountability’ AND devolution (not to mention neoliberal economic reform) last? Is not an ‘accountability hearing into the closing stages of the war’ – as distinct from domestic inquiry into concrete instances of crimes involving aberrant armed forces personnel—precisely the single measure that will render radioactive any liberal interethnic compromise whatsoever?

How can any serious analyst draw parallels with South Africa’s Truth and Reconciliation process, when that was in the context of a negotiated transition from minority rule to majority rule and entailed for the most part, a re-telling of coercive transgressions by the minority against the majority? What would have been the mechanism and practice had the South African outcome been one of outright military victory by the majority forces?

How could a serious commentator draw parallels with the Serbian government handing over Milosevic and Mladic to The Hague? Serbia lost the war as conspicuously as Sri Lanka won it. Yugoslavia broke up or was broken up. Serbia was attracted by the EU option. Sri Lanka is in Asia, and in Asia, as the President of Slovenia (and political science scholar) Danilo Turk put it at a UNESCO Roundtable in Paris a few weeks ago, Westphalian sovereignty prevails. Henry Kissinger emphasised the same point in his new book ‘On China’.

An ancient nation, possibly one of the oldest on earth, with a long chronicled history, a unique language, specific religious denominational adherence and strong identity and consciousness, demographically well-positioned on an island in Asia; a nation which has beaten back a thirty year old ferocious suicide–terrorism and survived an external intervention, a nation with a fairly sizeable population and tough armed forces: does this look like a pushover, or a collective that’s going to bend over for six of the best from a former colonial schoolmaster?

Those doing the pushing see only the target, the incumbent regime, and perhaps the endgame, regime termination, but are poor students of history and politics and therefore do not have foresight or sense of direction. They are oblivious to pattern, process and trajectory, which is one of polarisation and radicalisation: of hardening. Instead of polarisation they may get regime shift or displacement, which ranges from intra regime displacement of the regime’s ‘centre of gravity’, to radical regime transformation.

Under extreme siege, or the collective perception of such, regimes recompose and mutate into or are displaced  and succeeded, not a by a neoliberal or liberal one so beloved by the West, the émigrés and urban civil society, but precisely by one that will be widely mandated to resist more resolutely: an organic, probably elected, Praetorianism or Caesarism. Is it inevitably, axiomatically, unsustainable and therefore bound to be but an interlude, however horribly Hobbesian? I don’t know, but one may ask Myanmar or Pakistan or imagine a fusion.

Sri Lanka’s cities were hit hardest by terrorist suicide bombings but its civil society is the least grateful to those who saved it. We didn’t save ourselves; we were saved by the Sinhala peasantry which sent its boys into the armed forces and bloody battle.

The best portrait of the Sinhalese peasant as protagonist came from the pen of Leonard Woolf, in The Village in the Jungle. Silindu –unforgettably portrayed by Joe Abeywickrema in Lester’s movie — slow, superstitious, is repeatedly pushed, prodded and pilfered by the slick Fernando and Ratemahattaya, until, like the water-buffalo, he finally perceives process and enemy and turns, game-changer in his grasp: a double-barrelled shotgun. This is what happened after the years of the CFA, the PTOMS and unilateral appeasement and national humiliation, facilitated by the intermediaries, the compradors, represented by Ranil’s UNP. The Silindu streak in the collective Sinhala spirit and psyche took it to the next level, pushing back right up to ‘the Day of the Guns’ (to quote a favourite American thinker, Mickey Spillane) at Nandikadal. Today, the ‘social media’ savvy civil society sympathisers of the Darusman Report and the Channel 4 spin are the inheritors and continuators of role of the Fernandos and the Ratemahayttayas, connected to the same colonial overlords.

It makes little sense to push such a nation into a corner – to the point of crystallisation of a determination to resist and recoil in the face of an existential threat of incursion into the inviolable and irreducible sovereign space.

True, the physical fate of Silindu and his family was a tragic one, but as the thirty year old Mervyn de Silva, my father, concluded in his Introduction to Leonard Woolf’s Diaries (1961), these poor rural Sinhala folk had “a far greater moral worth than the Fernandos and Ratemahattayas of this world”.

18 comments:

Ananda-USA said...

My Comment at GroundViews.org:

Bravo, Dayan … you said it like it is!

The eradication of the LTTE from Sri Lanka was indeed a victory of the Sri Lankan peasantry who girded their loins and sent their sons and daughters to battle for their motherland, their lives and their future.

These long suffering common people of Sri Lanka will not forget for generations to come who led them, who supported them, and who enabled them to save themselves.

No amount of hypocritical criticism and regime change machinations by former colonial masters seeking to reimpose their hegemony over the developing nations, or the racist global Tamil Eelamist movement striving to win through subterfuge in peace what they failed to win through violence in war, will change the perception of the common masses of Sri Lanka that this victory was to secure their lives, their place in the sun.

They will not yield, come hell or high water!

Ananda-USA said...

Chinese to build luxury port city off Galle Face

Govt gets US$ 700 million offer for 500-acres of sea land

By Bandula Sirimanna
SundatTimes.lk
June 26, 2011

China which has been increasingly involved in Sri Lanka’s economy, has secured another lucrative deal — creating a new 500-acre, port city on reclaimed land on the sea off the Galle Face Green. A top Government source, who declined to be named due to the sensitivity of the deal, said the government had agreed to the US$700 million offer from a Chinese investor. The offer has been channelled through Chinese authorities.

The securing of the investment was itself announced by Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) Chairman Priyath Wickrama at a public forum on shipping earlier this week in Colombo but he didn’t disclose the identity of the investor or the country of origin.
Army HQ being cleared for Shangri-La and CATIC. Pic by Mangala Weerasekera

China’s CATIC, essentially an aircraft manufacturer and parts supplier, has bought a 10-acre block of land adjoining the Shangri-La project at Galle Face for a hotel and shopping mall complex. Many other Chinese companies have secured lucrative Sri Lankan contracts for infrastructure and other projects including the harbours in Hambantota and Colombo, with the Government seen to be favouring Chinese entities over others.

Mr. Wickrama said the reclaimed land investment would be on a 99-year lease. But the Government official told the Sunday Times it would be an outright purchase and agreements for the landfill and construction of the new city would be signed soon in a project stretching up to 2014.

The official said the Government wanted to discontinue the practice of long leases of state land and sell them outright (like in the case of Shangri-La and CATIC) based on the valuation of the Chief Government Valuer.

The re-developed land would then be offered to other investors and the private sector, by the Chinese developer under the guidance of Government agencies which would be responsible for the entire design of the project.

The Sri Lanka Ports Authority will oversee the reclamation project which will be divided into three segments -- business, residential and leisure. A mini-golf course, a Formula One race track, a small yacht marina and areas for water sports will be created. The feasibility study and an environmental impact assessment conducted by the Sri Lanka Ports Authority and the Moratuwa University have been completed.

Port Authority officials said the Lanka Hydraulic Institute (LHI) had been entrusted with the task of providing hydrographic and modelling services. Construction work will be carried out under the supervision of the Urban Development Authority, the Colombo Municipality, relevant Ministries and the Archaeological Department.

The Galle Face reclamation project was first announced by President Mahinda Rajapaksa at the ruling UPFA’s May Day rally last year and subsequently drew protests and concern from environmentalists and residents.

Ananda-USA said...

President insists solution only through PSC

By Our Political Editor
SundatTimes.lk
June 26, 2011

The proposed Parliamentary Select Committee would determine whether the 13th Amendment should be part of a settlement for Tamil grievances, President Mahinda Rajapaksa, has re-iterated.

He told the main opposition United National Party’s co-deputy leader Karu Jayasuriya on Friday that this was the UPFA government’s official position. He said the government wanted Parliament to come out with a settlement endorsed by all political parties.

President Rajapaksa’s remarks came when he met Jayasuriya when the two leaders attended the Higher Ordination Ceremony of the Sri Lanka Amarapura Nikaya (including all its 22 sectors) at the Kandana, Walpola Sri Wimalaratanarama Vidya Nivasa Pirivena. Among others who graced the ceremony were Prime Minister D.M. Jayaratne and Economic Development Deputy Minister Lakshman Yapa Abeywardane who is Secretary of the Dayake Sabha (Lay Trustees).

On Friday evening, Jayasuriya conveyed the details of his meeting with the President to his leader Ranil Wickremesinghe who is scheduled to visit the United States next week. He told Mr. Wickremesinghe that President Rajapaksa had invited the UNP to take part in the proposed Parliamentary Select Committee. The UNP’s main policy making body, the Working Committee is expected to take a decision on its participation in the Select Committee.

President Rajapaksa is learnt to have told Mr. Jayasuriya that he had already conveyed to India the UPFA government’s position that a settlement of whatever Tamil grievances would be determined by a Parliamentary Select Committee represented by all political parties. He had told Mr. Jayasuriya the three member Indian delegation that visited Sri Lanka had been informed of this position. The delegation comprised National Security Advisor Shiv Shankar Menon, Foreign Secretary Nirupama Rao and Defence Secretary Pradeep Kumar.

The Sunday Times exclusively reported on June 3 that President Rajapaksa told the Indian delegation the government would not grant police or land powers to Provincial Councils. He told them the government was willing to discuss other subjects listed in the Concurrent List of the 13th Amendment to the Constitution. Such a discussion would now take place in the proposed Parliamentary Select Committee.

Ananda-USA said...

The TNA should get the following short reply:

1. NO devolution of political power to ANY Province, including the Northern and Eastern provinces, on an ETHNIC/COMMUNAL BASIS.

2. NO Police and Land powers for ANY province

3. NO devolution of power to ANY administrative entity/region of Sri Lanka on Communal bases.

4. NO Special privileges and/or benefits will be granted to ANY CITIZEN, or to ANY COMMUNITY that other citizens do not have.

5. ALL political power is vested in ALL in the people of Sri Lanka, and is exercised by them through their elected representatives in the National Parliament.

END OF STORY!


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Powers for North: TNA seeks written pledge

By Chris Kamalendran
SundayTimes.lk
June 26, 2011

The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) has demanded from the government a written pledge on devolution of powers explaining how much power it was ready to give to the Northern Province. The demand was made during talks with a government delegation aimed at finding a political solution to the issues in the Province.

TNA General Secretary Mavi Senadhiraja said the TNA delegation had told the government team the TNA had put forward 51 points and needed a written response. The government delegation informed the TNA it would also not be able to grant powers on coastal conservation and tax collection to the PC. Earlier the President had said he would not give police and land powers to the provinces.

During the talks, the TNA had declared that it was not agreeable to having a concurrent list where the Province and the central government have authority over certain subjects. Instead, the TNA wanted only two lists with powers to the province and the central government clearly defined. However the government delegation had not agreed to the proposal.

Government delegation member Rajiva Wijesinha said he could not comment on the talks and a joint statement would be issued. However no statement had been issued until last evening.
The next round of talks will be held on Wednesday.

Ananda-USA said...

My Comment at GroundView.org:

Puthinam,

Still pushing the notion that it was all “innocent Tamils” who were “held for years without being charged”, and claiming “in Sri Lanka ethnic minorities are still oppressed”?

Oh my, those who bombed thousands of innocents to bits, sliced and diced entire villages full of people in the dead of night as an ethnic cleansing tool, glorified and deployed suicide bombers against civilians as an acceptable method of war, kidnapped children routinely to serve as cannon fodder, executed hundreds of captured policemen and soldiers without pity … they must have Martians … not Tamils .. I suppose!

Ethnic minorities are not oppressed in Sri Lanka, as long as they abide by the laws of the land, and they laws of Sri Lanka do not dioscriminate against people by community. Tamilshave exactly the same rights as the majority Sinhalese. On the other hand, they will not have one iota of extra rights or special privileges that other citizens don’t have … so get over this notion that Tamils are entitled to some special treatment just because they are a minority, or because 60 million more Tamils live across the Palk Strait.

If you want to see real discrimination, go to Tamil Nadu, or to other parts of India, and see how people of lower castes are systematically disenfranchised and denied equal rights. Yet, it is Tamil Nadu and Indians in general, who preach to Sri Lanka about discrimination against Tamils … talk about the pot calling the kettle black! India tries to alleviate these inequities by slicing and dicing its people into communities, Scheduled castes and so forth, and allocating different benefits to each. That only exacerbates communal divisions and animosities as we all know. It is not by accident that more than 80% of Indians (more than 850 million) across a broad swathe of India are subject to Maoist/Naxalite terrorism. Instead, India should grant government assistance according to poverty and need, not according to membership in a community.

This is important for Sri Lanka, because it has not yet sunk into the Eelamist Tamil mind that Sri Lanka’s policy of governance is to recognize in law only ONE COMMUNITY, that of all Sri Lankan citizens, equal under the law. Sri Lanka does not wish to define and devolve power to separate communities by ethnicity, religion, language, sex and/or caste. When Eelamist Tamils moan that they are “oppressed” in Sri Lanka … what they really mean is that they want Sri Lanka to be segregated into Bantustans by ethnicity, and that they be given an Eelam which they may govern solely for the benefit of Tamils.

That will not happen in Sri Lanka … EVER … so get used to the notion of having to live in Sri Lanka as an ordinary citizen devoid of special privileges or exclusive regions for your own community.

All of Sri Lanka belongs to all of its people, to settle and live in wherever they please.

Ananda-USA said...

My Comment at GroundView.org

ordinary lankan,

Perception is clearly relative to the observer, and I am amazed that you are so negative in your outlook for Sri Lanka.

I was born 63 years ago in the year Sri Lanka became an independent nation. I have seen and experienced all the sorrows and joys of Mother Lanka since then.

Although Sri Lanka could have achieved much more in those years if she had been spared the Eelamist disease, I am proud of what Sri Lanka has accomplished in many areas such as education, elimination of caste and sex discrimination, healthcare, transportation, rural electrification, labor relations … the list goes on. Sri Lanka is a wonderland of social equity in comparison to our much balleyhooed neighbour: India. The wonder of it is that Sri Lanka managed to remain a parliamentary democracy, and continue to improve the lot of her people, while coping with a vicious civil war planted in our midst by foreign powers, that raged for three long decades, without disintegrating into another Somalia.

I have never been MORE OPTIMISTIC about Sri Lanka’s future than I am now. Much of that optimism stems from the very thing that seems to depress you: The emergence of a PATRIOTIC popularly elected government with a can-do attitude that is committed to transforming Sri Lanka into the Light of Asia, and the recognition of that by the vast majority of Sri Lanka’s people who have given their government their unswerving support.

I consider myself truly blessed to have lived to see my Resplendent Motherland reunified, and marching with confidence towards a glorious future under able and effective PATRIOTIC leadership, even as its incurable enemies wail uncontrollably worldwide, giving vent to their despair and frustration.

Jayawewa, Sri Lanka: Onwards as One Nation of One People sharing One Destiny!

Ananda-USA said...

‘Govt should take concrete measures against pro-LTTE propaganda’

By Suraj BANDARA
DailyNews.lk
June 27, 2011

Senior lecturer of University of Colombo Dr Ms Anees said the government should make a concerted effort to negate the adverse campaign launched by pro-LTTE elements against Sri Lanka.

She said the United Nations and other international organizations are working under the US agenda.

Sri Lankan diplomatic missions overseas should have prevented this type of fake programmes being telecast by Channel 4 against the Sri Lankan government and security forces, she said.

The government should launch an organized mechanism to counter misleading and inaccurate flow of information and campaigns carried out by pro-LTTE elements and the Diaspora at international level, otherwise more fictitious and fake documents may surface in the future too.

“The political power of the Diaspora is immense and they can influence foreign countries with their overwhelming manpower and financial power.

‘The political leadership of many western countries could be misled by the Diaspora. Channel 4 documentary was a good example of this international conspiracy, she added.

‘This is a real manifestation of neocolonialism, she said. UN and all other international organizations backed by western countries are puppets of the USA and they maintain a policy of crippling other minor countries which are struggling to reach development. Therefore, many accusations would come in the future on the pretext of human rights or war crimes, she said.

‘Though the war had ended two years ago our diplomatic missions had not been successful in convincing the international community on the real situation in Sri Lanka. Though local media had given extensive publicity to the real war situation no international media campaign was carried out to expose the real picture. Therefore, Diaspora after losing the war began their campaign and fabricated stories to make the international community LTTE sympathizers, she said.

‘Therefore an international experts committee should be appointed to query the authenticity of these footages and any Sri Lankan should not be included in the committee.

Since UN is no more an independent organization, a committee comprisesed of members from all neutral countries should be encouraged to probe the Channel 4 documentary.’

Ananda-USA said...

President Mahinda Rajapaksa echoes my sentiments on REFORMING the UN, or REPLACING it with an Alternative Organization (Union of Nations?).

Given the stranglehold of the Western CABAL of Neo-colonialists on the UN, replacing it may be easier than reforming it. Russia, China, India, Brazil, Indonesia, South Africa, and perhaps Turkey, should lead this effort.

Until then, the UN will continue to be a barrier to the economic progress and the national integrity of developing nations.

The UN as currently constituted has become an instrument of the Western CABAL for preserving their economic dominance through undermining and destabilizing developing nations to prevent them from shedding their assigned role as sources of cheap raw materials for the developed world.


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Sri Lanka calls to reform UN

BBC.com
June 27, 2011

Sri Lanka president Mahinda Rajapaksa called for reforms in the United Nations alongside other international institutions.

Addressing the 50th annual session of the Asian African Legal Consultative Organisation (AALCO) in Colombo President Rajapaksa said "we strongly support timely reform of the international financial architecture, with particular reference to revamping of the Bretton Woods institutions”.

“There must also be reform of the United Nations system on the basis of consensus among the international community in respect of all key issues", he said.


There must also be reform of the United Nations system on the basis of consensus among the international community in respect of all key issues

President Rajapaksa

President’s call came within days after the unanimous appointment of Secretary General Ban Ki Moon for another five year term.

The head of United Nations Human Rights Commission (UNHRC) has urged the UN to establish an international mechanism to monitor national investigations in Sri Lanka and undertake its own as necessary.

A panel appointed by UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said it found "credible allegations" of a wide range of serious violations of international law committed by both the Sri Lanka security forces and Tamil Tigers in the final stages of the conflict.

Golden Jubilee Session

Welcoming the decision by the AALCO to hold its golden jubilee session in Sri Lanka 'at a juncture where the country turned a new page on its history' President Rajapaksa said that Sri Lanka will never allow 'terrorism to raise its ugly head’.

He said that Sri Lanka will not bow to “the pressures to obstruct our country’s efforts to heal the wounds of the past and to bring together the entire nation through a process of reconciliation in keeping with the culture and aspirations of our people”.

AALCO was founded in 1956 by Seven Asian States, namely Burma (now Myanmar), Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), India, Indonesia, Iraq, Japan, and the United Arab Republic (now Arab Republic of Egypt and Syrian Arab Republic).

There are forty-seven countries comprising almost all the major States from Asia and Africa are presently the Members of the Organization.

Ananda-USA said...

The GOSL should investigate this and punish the culprits.

This could be a move by Eelamists to sow dissatisfaction among Tamils, and level fake charges against the Armed Forces.


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Ex-combatant killed in terrorist style in Northern Sri Lanka

ColomboPage News Desk, Sri Lanka.

June 27, Jaffna: Achchuveli police of Jaffna district of Sri Lanka are investigating a terrorist style killing of a 30-year-old man.

The body of the man was found hanging on a goal post of a football court in Puttur on June 26.

Investigations revealed that he was hanged after beaten to death. His motorcycle was parked near the body.

The victim was identified as Balachandran Sathkunaraja.

He was recently-released ex-cadre of the Tamil rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

Ananda-USA said...

My Comment at GroundViews.org

Bundoora,

Your comments, though addressed to DJ, are broad enough for me to chime in as well.

We all know Sri Lanka deserved better than what transpired in the last 63 years, but how come the Eelamists didn't see that at all? Not only did they not see that for their country, but they did not see that even for their own community ... destroying it while attempting to create a racist apartheid Tamils-only state in Lanka. These "saviours" reduced Tamils from the 2nd largest community in Sri Lanka to the 3rd largest ... that does not sound like success at all!

I hold Sri Lanka's leaders who did not militarily eradicate the LTTE very early, and did not have the smarts to develop international alliances to support it, for extending the conflict for 30 years. Listening to bleeding heart foreigners who had nothing to lose, losing heart at the first military reversal, failing to motivate and mobilize all resources, and every man and woman, to achieve that goal, they largely failed their country.

But in Sri Lanka, every dismal age produces heroic leaders to rescue the nation ... as the Rajapaksa clan and other leaders did in our age. Most patriotic Sri Lankans are eternally grateful to them for restoring peace, security and hope to our lives.

You claim that MR's lack of vision is responsible for the international criticism that Sri Lanka is enduring now. Nothing could be further from the truth. The very hypocrites who criticize Sri Lanka now, and pretend to be "human rights" advocates and "wailing victims", funded and supported LTTE murder and mayhem in Sri Lanka. Western politicians, bought and sold in bulk by the rump LTTE diaspora network, will do their puppet dances as long as the money keeps flowing. We know that this is but a small price to pay for our deliverance from LTTE terror. This too shall pass, and truth and justice will triumph in the end.

You point to hosting of events such as the Commonwealth Games and the Asia Africa Legal Consultative Organization (AALCO) as boondoggles by the Rajapaksas to extract illegal commissions. Again, you are blinded by your animosity: these are the means by which Sri Lanka builds her own network of regional and global allies for future diplomatic and political support, and international trade. The current GOSL, under MR's leadership, is not waiting for the day when we will urgently need allies, to develop the alliances. This, is yet another reason for my optimism about Sri Lanka's future: the quality, vision, energy persistence of her current leadership on the international stage. You ain't seen nothing yet!

Ananda-USA said...

My Comment at GroundViews.org:

.......continued......
Finally, a few words about the longevity of the Rajapaksa clan in politics. Do you really expect the people of Sri Lanka to dismiss the most effective leader and government that Sri Lanka has had since independence to placate and please Eelamists and foreign naysayers?

I don't think so. The American people elected Franklin Delano Roosevelt to the Presidency four times, because he was a supremely effective leader. His economic policies rescued the US from the Great Depression, and set it on the correct path to winning WWII. We Sri Lankans have just seen a GOSL eradicate by root, trunk, branch and leaf a terror that paralyzed the nation for three decades, fend off foreign powers eager to breathe life into that terror, and divide the country into ethnic Bantustans.

It found the funds and the means to wage that war, to rehabilitate the affected, and to develop national infrastructure (roads, bridges, ports, airports, power plants, hospitals, schools, .. the list goes on) on a scale hitherto not witnessed in Sri Lanka. No sane Sri Lankan would turn out a leadership like that ... they would be crazy to do so. It is not by accident that MR and the GOSL received landslide victories.

True, much remains to be done, but no Sri Lankans believe malcontented naysayers grinding their own axe at Sri Lanka's expense, refuting all factual achievements that none but the blind, deaf and dumb would deny.

Ananda-USA said...

Inaugural address by President Mahinda Rajapaksa at the 50th annual session of the Asian-African Legal Consultative Organization (AALCO).

Cinnamon Lakeside Hotel,
Colombo, Sri Lanka.
June 27, 2011


It is with the greatest pleasure that I inaugurate these proceedings of the Asian - African Legal Consultative Organization in Colombo this morning. The occasion is all the more significant because you have chosen Sri Lanka as the venue of your discussions which mark the 50th anniversary of the establishment of this body which has made a rich contribution to the development of the laws and legal systems of two continents in our time.

Your choice of Sri Lanka is especially appropriate, as my country turns a new and exciting page in her modern history. As you gather here today, we as a nation leave behind us the pain and anguish of a long-drawn-out conflict thrust upon us by one of the most ruthless terrorist organizations the world has known. With the sacrifice, prayers and blessings of all our citizens, irrespective of language, religion or cultural background, we have overcome the menace of terror and put our country on the fast track of economic and social development for the benefit of us all.

This is a change which touches every aspect of our national life. It requires re-vamping of our institutions in every sector. Not least of these is the law, its priorities, the values on which it is based, the procedures which are considered suitable for the pursuit of its aims, and the agencies through which it is applied for the well-being of the community.

There are several factors uppermost in our minds as we address the challenges that accompany the dawn of a stable and honourable peace.

The first among these is the need to protect our nation against a wide range of activities which groups closely linked to the merchants of terror, continue to engage in to the detriment of our country. Since the problem of terrorism is by no means restricted to Sri Lanka, but is of immediate relevance to many of the countries represented in this forum, you will no doubt rejoice that terrorist violence is, for us, a thing of the past, and we will never allow to raise its ugly head to be raised again within our shores. But it is to be remembered that their initiatives have now been transferred to the field of international action, and no stone is left unturned to apply every possible form of pressure to obstruct our country’s efforts to heal the wounds of the past and to bring together the entire nation through a process of reconciliation in keeping with the culture and aspirations of our people. This is why continuing vigilance at the international level, and resort to both domestic law and international law as a source of protection, are vitally important.

It is equally necessary to ensure that the opportunities which are now available to us, after many decades, are exploited to the full for the benefit of all our people without distinction. You will observe for yourselves during your stay in our country how rich and varied these opportunities are in such sectors as tourism, direct and portfolio investment and increase of trade. Our government has put in place an effective strategy to harness our nation’s resources at the optimal level, and this has called for fresh thinking with regard to legal concepts and procedures, in harmony with the far-reaching changes that are taking place around us in every sphere of society.

Release of the country’s inherent energy and the use of its unique human potential with strong political stability have resulted in the growth of our economy by more than 8%. This places us in the category of one of the most rapidly developing economies of Asia.

Ananda-USA said...

Inaugural address by President Mahinda Rajapaksa at the 50th annual session of the Asian-African Legal Consultative Organization (AALCO).

........continued 1.....
Remarkable as this achievement is, our government is determined to do more. I strongly believe that economic development must not be confined to mere statistics, far removed from the lives of the people. It must have a direct impact on their everyday experience, enriching and uplifting their lives. Throughout my political career, I have been convinced that the fruits of economic progress must trickle down to the grassroots level, by penetrating the rural hinterland.

With this objective in view, we have taken vigorous steps to transform not only our legal system and our legal culture but, even more importantly, the nation’s mindset to put timely emphasis on social equity and access to opportunity, particularly for those sections of the community which have been deprived of advantages in the past. I am legitimately proud of our achievements in the field of computer literacy which is no longer an exclusive privilege of urban schools but has significantly enhanced the prospects of gainful employment available to the rural youth of our country. During the last few years skills development, especially in the form of practical programmes of vocational training, have greatly strengthened social mobility, in terms of livelihoods and incomes.

This pre-occupation with social equity is certainly appropriate at the international level at this time. It is important to ensure that the major trends of economic policy in the developed world should not have a harmful effect on the well-being of developing countries. Dumping of commercial and industrial goods manufactured in developed countries imperils the economies of many of our countries, as indicated by the focus on anti-dumping and counter-vailing legislation in the vast majority of Asian and African nations represented here.

The use of substantial subsidies by Treasuries and Reserve Banks to support agricultural production in the developed world, and other forms of protect-tionism, cause serious distortion of the interplay of market forces. These measures reduce to a great extent, the ability of farmers in our countries to access international markets for their export products on an equitable basis. The dis-propor-tionate pollution of the environment by industrialized countries, and the resulting impact on global warming and climate change, cannot be remedied with any semblance of justice by imposing harsh restraints on developing countries, which are not the cause of this problem. The over-exposure of banks and the irresponsible use of financial instruments, especially with regard to the mortgage market, in the developed world, brought about financial volatility and instability of alarming proportions, which led to the weakening of the foundations of many of our economies.

Against this backdrop, we strongly support timely reform of the international financial architecture, with particular reference to re-vamping of the Bretton Woods institutions. There must also be reform of the United Nations system on the basis of consensus among the international community in respect of all the key issues.

Ananda-USA said...

Inaugural address by President Mahinda Rajapaksa at the 50th annual session of the Asian-African Legal Consultative Organization (AALCO).

......continued 2....
It is vital to ensure greater effectiveness with regard to regulatory mechanisms at the international level, in respect of issues which are of immediate concern to many of our countries in Asia and Africa. Money laundering, gun running, drug trafficking, people smuggling and economic crime in general – many of which have an intimate connection with international terrorism – continue to pose serious challenges, which call for a prompt and vigorous response by the international community. The consequences of piracy engage the attention of many of our countries, and action is urgently required to put in place, effective deterrents and, in particular, to address issues connected with retention of ransom money in the hands of perpetrators of crime – an area in which a wide gap in current international law and practice, is plainly visible.

Through the financial turbulence which threatened the world recently, my country steadfastly maintained an educational system which not only provides free education from kindergarten to university, but puts at the disposal of the student, all the facilities he needs during his educational career. We offer our people a healthcare system, which is acknowledged to be one of the best in Asia. Our record with regard to infant mortality and maternal health is without parallel in our geographical region. These attainments in respect of the quality of life have won recognition from the United Nations system.

In accelerating progress towards these goals, our government, faithful to the value system which finds expression in the Mahinda Chinthana setting out our cherished beliefs, has identified two areas as being of crucial importance.

One of these is the development of infrastructure. In the recent past, and especially after the advent of peace, I have accorded the highest priority to this area. No other government in our country’s history has made so substantial an investment in the highways and railroads sector. We have energetically implemented a cluster of projects in respect of irrigation, and power and energy. The most striking developments have been with regard to ports, harbours and airports. I am deeply conscious of the importance of connectivity, linking Sri Lanka with the world at large and making a reality of our vision of our country as a shipping and knowledge hub.

Parallel with this, we are making every effort to breathe new vigour and vitality into both the private and public sectors. We are actively engaged in facilitating enhanced investment and expansion of volumes of international trade by modernizing our systems and procedures applicable to customs, banking, the Board of Investment, the Export Development Board and the whole range of fiscal and monetary policy. The entire spectrum of commercial and industrial law is being reformed. This is supplemented by new thinking aimed at making the public sector more sensitive to the changes taking place around us and, therefore, a more effective instrument of service to our people.

Let me conclude with a thought that goes to the very root of my thinking on current issues. The law is the strongest instrument of social organization known to humankind, since the beginning of recorded history. The central purpose of the law is to achieve a balance between competing interests, to bring about harmony in the social order and, by doing so, to enable the full flowering of the human personality.

Ananda-USA said...

Inaugural address by President Mahinda Rajapaksa at the 50th annual session of the Asian-African Legal Consultative Organization (AALCO).

.......continued 3....
It is of the utmost importance to remind ourselves that these objectives need to be accomplished in accordance with the cultural traditions and value systems which are part of the experience of each society. The continents of Asia and Africa, which are the focus of the discussions you begin today, have nurtured over the centuries, some of the world’s greatest civilizations. It is crucial to insist, I believe, that the manner in which the laws and legal systems of our countries are restructured to serve the interests of our populations, and to ensure their security and wellbeing, must reflect the character of a home-grown and home-spun product. By all means, let us look at positive experiences elsewhere but, at the end of the day, a solution will be sustainable only if it caters for the aspirations of our own people.

I venture to suggest to the distinguished legal luminaries, whom I have the privilege to address today, that this is true of all the countries and cultures represented here.

This is my earnest message to you as I inaugurate, with eager anticipation, what I have no doubt, will be an immensely rewarding and fruitful discussion. I wish your deliberations every success.

May the Noble Triple Gem Bless you all.

Ananda-USA said...

My Comment at DBSJeyaraj.com:


Yes DBSJ, misappropriation of private land is indeed a crime. No one proposes to oust individuals illegally from their land.

But, settlement on legally purchased land, on crown land, or land acquired legally through the exercise of "eminent domain" powers for the public good, with compensation paid in full to the owners, is neither ILLEGAL, nor INAPPROPRIATE.

Some land belonging to my family was acquired by the government ... through eminent domain for road construction. We were paid compensation by the government. We would have preferred not to give up our land .. but it was for the public good ... and the process was legal ... so we accepted it.

I agree with Nimanta. Let ALL land in Sri Lanka be available for purchase and settlement by any community, or for national development for the public good.

In the South, in Colombo, Wellawatte, Mt. Lavinia and elsewhere, Tamil people purchase property and settle down. That is an entirely appropriate exercise of their rights as citizens. Let it be so for all communities, including Sinhalese and Muslims, in the North and the East as well. Let us not promote the discriminatory habit of hogging one's own cake while sharing the cakes of others.

Demographic homogenization of Sri Lanka will promote National Integration and intercommunity empathy, while preventing crystallization of communities into regionally separate racist aparthied Bantustans. It will promote communal harmony. Diversity of cultures will not be affected; cultural diversity still be preserved in its proper sphere: in the homes of individual families and in community organizations.

Demographic homogenization will also drive the final nail in the coffin of the Eelam Project ... R.I.P.! The GOSL should actively promote such activities that lead to Ethnic Integration.

Onwards, Sri Lankans ... towards One Nation of One People sharing One Destiny!

Ananda-USA said...

Bloggers,

I have posted a new main article.

Please shift over to there.

Thanks.

Ananda-USA said...

China makes nuclear power breakthrough

July 22, 2011

China said Friday it had hooked its first so-called "fourth generation" nuclear reactor to the grid, a breakthrough that could eventually reduce its reliance on uranium imports

The experimental fast-neutron reactor is the result of more than 20 years of research and could also help minimise radioactive waste from nuclear energy, the state-run China Institute of Atomic Energy (CIAE) said.

China is the ninth country to develop a fast-neutron reactor, which uses uranium 60 times more efficiently than a normal reactor, helping the country to reduce its reliance on imports of the mineral.

Beijing has stepped up investment in nuclear power in an effort to slash its world-leading carbon emissions and scale down the country's heavy reliance on coal, which accounts for 70 percent of its energy needs.

But China's uranium reserves are limited, and it will have to import increasingly large amounts as its civilian nuclear programme gathers speed.

China -- the world's second largest economy -- currently has 14 nuclear reactors and is building more than two dozen others. It aims to get 15 percent of its power from renewable sources by 2020.

According to the World Nuclear Association, it aims to increase nuclear power capacity to 80 gigawatts by 2020 from 10.8 gigawatts in 2010.

The fourth-generation reactor, located just outside Beijing, has a capacity of just 20 megawatts. Other recently launched nuclear reactors in China had a capacity of more than one gigawatt, or 1,000 megawatts.

The latest technological step comes after China succeeded in reprocessing spent nuclear fuel in an experimental reactor in the northwestern province of Gansu in January.

Authorities said this would help extend the lifespan of proven uranium deposits to 3,000 years from the current forecast of 50-70 years.

Beijing has also pledged to improve emergency procedures and construction standards at its nuclear power plants, after Japan's devastating earthquake and ensuing tsunami triggered an atomic crisis.