Friday, September 30, 2011

Ontario MP demands expulsion of SL from Commonwealth


Hon.Jim Carrigyanis MP of Ontario is urging Canada to ensure that Sri Lanka be expelled from Commonwealth for committing war crimes against her own people.He came out with this demand after seeing the Film "Killing Fields of Sri Lanka " by Channel 4 is the auditorium of Federal Parliament in Ottawa.

At the next commonwealth conference in Australia there will be direct confrontation between Canada and Sri Lanka-both amiable countries with long friendship upto now.

Jet News

You are on your own -Manmohan to Mahinda

Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has advised President Mahinda Rajapakse that in future,under no circumstances India will interfere in the affairs of Sri Lanka,in future.

In a cordial and warm discussion held between them in New York for over 1 1/2 hours,President Rajapakse explained the pressures from International community exerted on Sri Lanka.

Prime Minister indicated that Sri Lanka has to meet this directly and convince IC by taking suitable measures towards national problem

Delhi Govt is facing immense pressure from Congress and tamilnadu govt and have to meet these pressures as India is a Federal Govt with obligations to meet the wishes of state govts.

This means that as at present,Sri Lanka is in it's own towards IC,without India's backing.

Jet News

Wikileaks state that UN has satelite pictures showing destruction of refugee camps in the final days of war

U.S.Ambassador Robert Blake in his messages to the State Dept states that massive destruction with huge civilian casualties was known to UN as UN had obtained satelite pictures of final stages from May 6th onwards. He had urged US State Dept to inform Sri Lanka about this to deter them from breaching Geneva Conventions on war.

As UN failed to do so,calls for War crimes tribunal escalate now..

Jet News

‘Domestic politics shouldn’t be at Lanka’s expense’ Canada told at UNGA

By Shamindra Ferdinando

The government has accused Canada of appeasing the Tamil vote bank at the expense of Sri Lanka as diplomatic relations between the two countries hit a new low.

Authoritative sources told The Island that Canadian Foreign Minister John Baird had targeted Sri Lanka at the UNGA in New York on Sept. 26 following an abortive Canadian initiative to formalize during the September HRC Sessions in Geneva "an interactive dialogue on the LLRC process in Sri Lanka at the March 2012 Session of the HRC."

Responding to a query, sources said that Minister Baird had made his move in spite of having met External Affairs Minister Prof. G. L. Peiris in New York, where Baird revealed their decision to suspend the initiative for the time being. Sources said that to the dismay of the Sri Lankan delegation, Minister Baird had referred to the Sri Lankan issue on the floor of the UN.

Sri Lanka’s Permanent Representative at the UN Dr. Palitha Kohona expressed the government’s serious concern over the Canadian action. The former Foreign Secretary said: "In the UN, an organization comprising 193 countries subscribing to a range of social, economic and political philosophies, procedure and process are critically important to ensure good governance and prevent inter-governmental organizations such as the UN being abused for narrow domestic political advantage and selective application of principles. The rule based framework of the UN system, that we all value, must be safeguarded for the protection of all against such abuse."

The External Affairs Ministry told The Island that it would be grossly unfair on the part of those countries, which had accommodated large groups of Sri Lankan Tamils on their respective electoral registers, to undermine post-war Sri Lanka. "We shouldn’t be humiliated to pacify Sri Lankan Tamil voters," a senior official said. Those demanding an independent international inquiry in respect of accountability issues in Sri Lanka, had conveniently forgotten failures on their part, which gave the LTTE wherewithal to wage war.

An official with the State Intelligence Service (SIS) told The Island that the ongoing confrontation between the Sri Lankan government and some foreign governments had given LTTE front organizations, an opportunity to raise funds. Responding to a query, the official said that Canada, while attacking Sri Lanka was in the process of strengthening laws to block illegal immigrants, including Sri Lankans.

The official said that Sri Lanka appreciated ongoing efforts by Canada, Australia, UK et al to curb illegal migration. In fact, curbs on illegal migration could affect Diaspora plans, he said. "A lot will depend on their ability to sustain growth of the vote bank. Measures targeting illegal migration taken by foreign governments, particularly Australia are likely to weaken the Diaspora," he said.
island.lk

Editorial Island.lk

September 30, 2011, 6:55 pm
Why not admit Tigers to Commonwealth?

Foreign terror groups may consider themselves cat's whiskers as they outfox western intelligence outfits and carry out attacks, but they, in our book, cannot hold a candle to the Sri Lankan Tigers. Prabhakaran may have paid for his blunders with his dear life, but the surviving Tigers have proved that they are much smarter than he. The LTTE under Prabhakaran's command managed to control only a part of Sri Lanka––that too with great difficulty. The new leaders of the LTTE may not be able to gain a foothold in this country, but they are controlling the entire West, to all intents and purposes, if the way they have reduced the big western governments to pliable tools in their paws is anything to go by. Prabhakaran busted all his money on weapons and explosives to no avail, but they are investing LTTE funds wisely in western politicians and diplomats besides bartering the block votes they have built over the years for political favours.

It is a pity that al Qaeda keeps launching attacks on western interests and paying for them ‘with compound interest’. If it borrows a leaf out of the LTTE's book, cultivates western government bigwigs through lobbying groups, offer block votes to them in return for their services, it may be able to further its interests without firing a single shot.

Canada and Britain are stepping up their diplomatic offensive against Sri Lanka, we are told. They have reportedly gone so far as to move the Commonwealth against this country. They are still talking about the closing stages of Sri Lanka's war on terror. Why have they turned a blind eye to the benefits that have accrued to all Sri Lankans from the defeat of terrorism? Today, no one dies in terror strikes in this country. Public places are safe for all civilians. Time was when parents of the same family chose to travel separately so that their children would not be orphaned in case of a terror attack. Assassinations have come to an end. Extortion under the guise of taxation is a thing of the past in the North and the East. Teenagers no longer have to get married and produce children to avoid forcible conscription by the LTTE. Mainstream political parties can engage in political activity in the areas the LTTE once controlled. Most of all, children of the North and East are free to go to school without fear of being abducted on the way by LTTE child recruiters. While Prabhakaran was controlling those parts of the country, most parents did not send their children to school because of Prabhakaran’s child abductors on the prowl. This is how CNN described the plight of children in the North and the East (on Oct. 14, 2003):

It's a parent's worst nightmare: the peace process is faltering and Sri Lanka's Tamil Tiger rebels are recruiting again –– abducting unsuspecting children at the rate of nearly two a day. The UN agency for children's rights, UNICEF, says it received reports that 52 children were recruited in September. But the actual figure could be ten times higher as many parents fear the rebels and don't report when children are abducted, according to Father Harry Miller, 78, an American Jesuit priest who has made Batticaloa his home for the past fifty years.

Fr. Miller said of the LTTE child abductors: "It is like an ogre that descends from the hills in a while and takes children away."

The much dreaded ogre was laid to rest in May, 2009 and children and their parents now enjoy total freedom. Unfortunately, British Prime Minister David Cameron and his Canadian counterpart, Stephen Harper, are abusing the Commonwealth to persecute Sri Lanka for slaying that monster and to create conditions for its resurrection. The same is true of the other western governments and the UN, which is being manipulated to promote the cause of the LTTE rump still raising funds in the West in spite of a ban and utilising them to wage a diplomatic war against Sri Lanka.

It looks as if Sri Lanka had no alternative but to pull out of the Commonwealth and let Britain and Canada have the pleasure of offering that slot to the LTTE.


Has normalcy returned after lapse of Emergency?

In March 1971, the then Government of Mrs Sirimavo Bandaranaike declared, under the provisions of the Public Security Ordinance, a state of emergency. It was done in the light of a real threat that the government then faced of an armed insurrection, which in fact materialised a few weeks later. However, order was restored fairly quickly and within a few months, the citizens were able to resume normal life, In the latter part of 1987, the threat of another armed insurgency arose; this leading to the second southern insurrection. In the North and East, from the seventies onwards, there were sporadic acts of terrorism, robbery and murder. By the early nineties, this had led to a virtual breakdown of civilian administration with the armed militants in control of parts of the North and East.

The state of emergency, first declared in March 1971, however has continued to be in operation for over forty years until August 2011, except for two brief interludes in 1976 and 2002. The country was certainly not in a situation throughout these forty years where there was a threat to the lawful government and to the life and liberty of the citizens, the reasons for promulgating a state of emergency. In the whole of this period, it has been emergency regulations and regulations framed under the PTA that have superseded the normal laws pertaining to the life and liberty of the citizen.

Plea by the Civil Rights Movement

In December 1971, eight months after the first southern insurgency had been crushed, the Civil Rights Movement, wrote to Mrs Bandarainaike under the signatures of Professor Ediriweera Sarachchandra (Chairman), R K W Goonesekere (Vice Chairman), Regi Siriwardene (Secretary), Bishop Lakshman Wickremesinghe and the Ven Puhulwelle Wimalawansa Thero, urging a progressive relaxation of the emergency regulations. While recognising the need to have declared a state of emergency at the time it was done, they however pointed out that a democratic government, even when its own existence was imperilled, had certain obligations which it had to respect when resorting to emergency powers. It should ensure that the interference with normal rights and liberties was no greater in extent or no longer in duration than the exigencies of the situation actually required.

On 26th August this year, on the eve of the Sessions of the UN Human Rights Council and his visit to New York to attend the General Assembly, made a dramatic and well-publicised visit to Parliament where he announced that the State of Emergency would lapse by midnight of 30th August 2011. There was no one who did not welcome this announcement. The LTTE had been well and truly crushed over two years earlier; any monolithic outfit will collapse with the death of its authoritarian leader. There was now no threat the state from any insurgency. As President Rajapakse himself stated in Parliament: "I am satisfied with the fact there is now no need for emergency laws for the administrative activities of the country now....There have been no terrorist activities since the end of the conflict in May 2009. The country can function democratically under ordinary laws."

Gazettes replace Emergency Regulations

But the celebrations by the freedom-loving citizens of this country at this return to ‘democratic rule under ordinary laws’ was however to be short lived. On 29th August, the day before the emergency was to lapse, six Gazettes Extraordinary were issued. The first five of these were under the Prevention of Terrorism Act of 1979 introduced into the Statute Book by the J. R. Jayawardene Government. These gazettes basically were to restore the status quo ante in respect of the proscription of the LTTE and the Tamil Rehabilitation Organisation (which was linked to the LTTE) and the position of the detainees, remandees and surrendees. Admittedly the provisions of these gazettes are for a limited period; but, going by past history, such provisions have a way of being extended well beyond the original time-span declared. We know that there are some who have been detained for several years – even from long before the conflict ended in 2009. Despite the interim recommendations of the LLRC and the assurances given by the former Attorney General to the Courts, these unfortunate people remain without any charges being framed against them or being discharged. From time to time, media is leaked with statements that they are going to charged but nothing is in fact done.

The views expressed by the Civil Rights Movement in 1971 in respect of the then detainees are equally valid for today’s detainees: "Those (detainees) who have committed offences under the existing laws of the land, and against whom there is sufficient evidence to frame charges, should be brought to trial expeditiously. But we see no justification for the continued detention of young persons whose ‘involvement’ amounts to nothing more than activities which were perfectly lawful at the time, such as attending classes....Every day of continued detention, in our view, only aggravates the situation. Continued detention of such persons after it has been established and accepted that they are guilty of no crime can only embitter and alienate them, and inspire in them a justifiable sense of outrage. These feelings will be shared by their families, relatives and friends. One would think that from the government’s own point of view the encouragement of such feelings of sorrow, outrage, indignation and despair would constitute a surer danger to itself and to its stated aim of involving all of the people in a dedicated effort to overcome the economic crisis than any possible hazard that may arise from letting these young people go back to their families."

These feelings referred to in the CRM letter are very eloquently expressed by Jayatilleke de Silva, until recently the Editor of the state-owned Ceylon Daily News. On 29th August 1985 (ironically the same day sixteen years later when some of the emergency regulations that were to lapse were re-introduced under the PTA), de Silva (and some others) was arrested by the Police, detained and released without any charges three years and three months later. De Silva’s ‘crime’ was being a member of Samajawadi Janata Viyaparaya, a perfectly lawful political group that took a stand against the I R Jayewardene government then. He says various means, including the mass media was used to defame the suspects. Many concocted stories were planted in the media to create an adverse impression about the suspects in the public mind. The Daily News carried a lead story giving an elaborate plan allegedly worked out by the group to capture power. But as the Secretary of the group, it was news to de Silva. Although at the time of his writing, he was Editor at the Daily News, he writes: "Victims behind bars have no means to counter this hate propaganda. Media is a powerful instrument of oppression used by rulers to suppress dissent. Yet, compared to the days when I was in detention, media manipulation for purposes of repression has become more sophisticated and more venomous today.... Recalling what happened almost two decades ago, one could write dispassionately on one’s experience. Yet such writing cannot convey the physical and psychological impact of the PTA on its victims. The anxiety for oneself and for one’s family, the apprehensions about the fate of one’s colleagues, the despair and gloom enveloping one’s very soul, the fear of the next moment, the next day, the trauma and the entire gamut of debilitating factors have to be experienced to feel the full ferocity of the PTA. In other words, for a full comprehension of the PTA, its venom has to be tasted in person."

Calling out the Army

The sixth Gazette issued on 6th September is to call out the Army to maintain public order in all 24 districts of the country in terms of Part III.12 of Public Security Ordinance. The PSO was enacted by the State Council as the last piece of legislation under colonial rule. It remains in our statute book The relevant clause under which this Gazette No 1722/17 has been issued states that "where any circumstances endangering the public security in any area have arisen or are imminent and the President is of the opinion that the Police are inadequate to deal with such situation in that area, he may, by Order published in the Gazette, call out all or any of the members of all or any of the armed forces for the maintenance of public order in that area."

Now, it will be stretching our imagination to believe that circumstances have arisen or are imminent to endanger public order in any district, leave alone in all twenty-four districts. This therefore is clearly an abuse of the provisions of the Public Security Ordinance. It seems part of the policy of increasing militarisation of various aspects of civilian life. New entrant university students were given ‘military ‘ training (or was it indoctrination) in army camps. Now, with effect from 1st October, a newly set up security company under Secretary, Defence is being deployed to take over the security in all University campuses. Several academics have issued a public statement condemning this flagrant breach of university autonomy. It surprising (or is not surprising) that the UGC, whose members are all former academics, should have meekly complied with this direction in violation of all procedures laid down in the Universities Act. We also know that the military has been and continues to be used in many areas of the work of the Urban Development Authority, including, it is reported, in the eviction of the poor from Colombo.

These are not good prospects for the country to function democratically under ordinary laws, as President Rajapakse said that he was going to lead the country. In neighbouring India, Prime Minister Indira Gandhi in the nineteen seventies misused emergency powers to stifle dissent and persecute political opponents. She paid a heavy price, losing her own seat at the next General Election. Popularity is never permanent; public perceptions can change very quickly. President Rajapakse is too experienced and shrewd a politician not to understand that.
SHANIE
island.lk

UNP wants Kotte MC to account for Rs. 574 mn

by Zacki Jabbar

The UNP yesterday demonstrated opposite the Kotte Municipal Council, demanding that the last UPFA administration accounts for Rs.574 million, which the Auditor General himself had said could not be satisfactorily audited.

The UNP’s Kotte Campaign Manager Harsha de Silva, who led the protest, said that despite revealing the sorry state of affairs at the Kotte MC several weeks ago, those who had administered the Council over the last five years had conveniently ignored the fact that Rs 574 million or over 75 percent of the Kotte MC’s expenses in 1999, cannot be assessed because supporting vouchers were not provided.

"We protested today since the UPFA continues to remain silent, hoping that the people would forget about their misdeeds and maladministration," he said adding that the tax payers had a right to know how their monies had been spent.

De Silva said that when he had queried from the Auditor General H. A. Samaraweera about the 2009 Kotte MC accounts, which were tabled in parliament in July 2011, the AG had replied that Rs.574 million could not be satisfactorily vouched for, due to the non-rendition of the required information.

The AG had further explained that where proper accounting procedures are followed it would be certified as "a true and fair view" and if there were "problems but acceptable" a qualified statement or a sort of disclaimer was issued, but in the case of the Kotte MC, even a qualified opinion could not be given because the financial statements were so weak, he said.

De Silva said that numerous malpractices had taken place including the allocation of marshy land meant for water retention to contractors, who had built houses resulting in Kotte experiencing floods even during minor showers. There was a cloud even over the monies spent on maintenance and repairs to roads.
island.lk

India tells US, NATO:Don’t be in a hurry to pull out troops from Afghanistan

By S Venkat Narayan

Our Special Correspondent

NEW DELHI, September 30: India today cautioned the United States and NATO against withdrawing in a hurry their troops from Afghanistan because of the deteriorating security situation in the war-torn country.

Gradual withdrawal of the 140,000 troops from over 45 countries working for the US-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) should be under taken keeping in mind the ground realities and not just to meet any deadline, India’s Permanent Representative to the UN Hardeep Singh Puri said in New York today.

"For peace, stability and security in Afghanistan, it is imperative that the ongoing transition must be linked to the ground realities rather than rigid timetables. This, the international community in its hurry to withdraw from a combat role in Afghanistan, will ignore at its own peril," he warned.

(The US and NATO began troop withdrawals from Afghanistan in July this year, and expect to complete the process by early 2015. It is expected that the US will keep at least 25,000 of its troops on Afghan territory even afterwards to protect American interests. The ISAF has been training the Afghan National Army to take control of security of the country. It hopes to train 1,70,000 Afghan troops by the end of this year).

Pointing out that extremist groups continue to attack high-security targets and assassinate important political figures such as former president Burhanudin Rabbani, Puri said gains on the security front cannot be consolidated unless the international community is able to firmly deal with safe havens for terrorist groups outside Afghanistan’s borders.

He said the "syndicate of terrorism" including al-Qaida, LeT and other extremist groups operating from within and outside Afghan borders must be rooted out for stability in the country.

"For security and stabilisation of Afghanistan, it is important to isolate and root out the syndicate of terrorism which includes elements of the al-Qaida, Taliban, Laskar-e-Taiba and other terrorist and extremist groups operating from within and outside Afghanistan’s borders," Puri said.

"These groups are ideologically and operationally fused and their bonds have strengthened over the years," Puri said.

Citing the UN Secretary General’s report on Afghanistan, Puri said the average monthly number of security incidents this year is up 39 per cent as compared to the same period in 2010.

While the process of transition of security responsibilities to Afghan National Security Forces has commenced since July, 2011, it is "indeed worrisome that there has been no let up in terrorist violence."

These attacks point to a dangerous "osmosis of ideologies, ambitions, training and operations" among the syndicate of terrorism in the region with suicide terrorism as its main technique and targets not limited to Afghanistan, Puri added.

He reiterated India’s commitment to partnering with the government and people of Afghanistan in building a peaceful, stable, democratic and pluralistic nation.

"We support further strengthening of the Afghan National Security Forces. We fully support an Afghan-led inclusive and transparent process of reconciliation."

It must be accompanied by an inclusive political process and intra-Afghan dialogue" which includes renunciation of violence, cutting of ties to terrorist groups and protections of human rights, including the rights of women, he pointed out.

India is presently engaged in implementing a host of developmental projects worth over two billion dollars across Afghanistan.
island.lk

Conflict leads to revelation of party secrets: JVP Rebel Leader's aliases, subversive past exposed


Exclusive
September 30, 2011, 12:00 pm

By Saman Indrajith

The on-going clash between the current JVP leadership and its rival faction led by Premkumar Gunaratnam has led to the revelation of many a party secret such as the identities of its underground cadres, clandestine operational centres and safe houses.

Last week's assault by the Gunaratnam faction on a Somawansa loyalist at Madiwela exposed the location of a JVP safe house used by hardcore JVPers whose identities are not known even to some of the senior members of the party active in mainstream politics. Within hours of the clash, a posse of police intelligence personnel descended on the place, ascertained as much information as possible and took into custody all the computers the JVP leaders had used there.

Aliases of some underground cadres known only to the members belonging to the party's inner cells are no longer secrets, The Island learns. JVP founder leader Rohana Wijeweera introduced a system of assigning pseudonyms to senior party members and thus the JVP became known for faces without names and vice versa. Wijeweera's actual name was Patabendige Don Nandasiri Wijeweera. He adopted nom de guerre 'Rohana' as he was from the south. The incumbent leader Somawansa Amarasinghe has been known as Siri Aiya to the JVP's rank and file and the party General Secretary Tilvin Silva is called Aiya. Its parliamentary group leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake is known as Aravinda to the JVP membership. The media spokesman of the dissident group, Pubudu Jagoda, is known as Lasith. The Colombo District Leader of the party is known only as Marlon and only a very few JVPers know him as Ranjith Shantha. The leader of the JVP security wing G. Kularatne is known as Sarath.

The JVP leadership tussle has resulted in the aliases of the rebel leader Gunaratnam, details of some of his forged documents and his violent past being exposed. According to a dossier prepared by a State intelligence outfit on him based that information-seen by The Island-Gunaratnam, affectionately called Kumara Mahattaya by his loyalists who claim him to be the real leader of the JVP, has several aliases such as Daskon, Dayalal and Gunda. It was some senior members like Gunaratnam, Nandana Gunatilake (who has defected to the SLFP) and another known as Opatha Mahattaya, who helped revive the JVP after it was beheaded by the UNP government in 1989. Opatha Mahattaya, whose real name is Withanage Senadheera Gunatilake, has remained ever loyal to Kumar Mahattaya, working behind the scene. Somawansa Amarasinghe and several other members formed the party's public face for electoral purposes.

The Somawansa faction consists of the known faces of the party and commands the backing of the JVP trade union wing. The rebel group has secured the support of the JVP student wing, women's wing, education wing, propaganda wing and the security wing. Party sources claim that hundreds of fulltime hardcore members have sided with Gunaratnam. An influential group of 136 members known as the Bolshevik Party within the JVP has thrown its weight behind Kumara Mahattaya; it is all out to oust the incumbent leader and close associates.

Wijeweera designed the JVP with three levels. The top level consists of the national level leaders and the bottom one comprises leaders at the grassroots. There is a very strong middle level whose members work underground and remain anonymous. Their mission is to maintain a low profile and swing into action to rebuild the party in case of a military crackdown. They have ensured the survival of party despite its two abortive revolts. The size of the middle level is anybody's guess as the party does not maintain records of them for security reasons. This group is looked after by the party. These hardcore elements of the JVP have sided with Gunaratnam, according to party insiders.

island.lk

Sri Lanka News Debrief - 30.09.2011


All officers of Dompe police station withdrawn: the deceased youth was heard screaming "please don't kill me"

Lanka-e-News -30.Sep.2011, 11.30P.M.) The massive protest and attack launched by the public on the Dompe police station and which was set fire to over the alleged killing of a youth taken into its custody has calmed down now, according to reports reaching Lanka e news. The entire police force at the Dompe police station have been withdrawn , and it is now manned by the Army and the STF.

The officers of the CID who have arrived there on the instructions of the IGP are gathering information from the residents over the incident.

The residents have told the CID that the neighbors had heard the youth who died at about 11.00 p.m. in police custody screaming ‘please do not kill me’. Later the police had handed over the dead body to the Hospital stating that he died when attempting to escape from the jeep. Following the screaming of the youth , the residents had been watchful over the police action. The residents have also complained that on most days they hear such screams of those who are subject to brutal assaults of the police .



The report forwarded by the intelligence unit to the Defense Secretary had indicated that over a ten thousand people participated in the attack on the police today.

It might be recalled some years ago when two youths died in custody of the Angulana police , the residents rose against the police . Finally , the courts delivered death sentence on several police officers and the station OIC over the incident..

Major Gen. Shavendra Silva’s problems escalate:

Lanka-e-News -30.Sep.2011, 11.30P.M.) The Sri Lanka (SL) Deputy High Commissioner to the UN, Major General Shavendra Silva against whom a case has been filed in the USA, is left in the lurch without legal counsel being provided to him, reports say.

The Lawyers of the SL Govt. who give legal counsel to him say that nothing can be done , and the Diplomatic immunity cannot be take advantage of. Yet , the lawyers of the US had explained that , as the case has been filed in the civil court , his immunity has no relevance..

Irrespective of this controversy , the laws which are going to be implemented from tomorrow in SL to fine those who do not use the safety belt when driving are going to apply even to the Diplomats who are in SL . When this law is applied their diplomatic immunity cannot be taken advantage of. The case filed in US against Shavendra Silva is based on similar laws. That case had been filed under the civil laws , and Shavendra Silva had accepted the summons.

One of those claiming compensation is the wife of a LTTE leader of the East , Ramesh . She has based her claim on the channel 4 vide exposure. The videotape showed the soldiers of the regiment to which Shavendra Silva gave commands arresting Ramesh , and the defense Ministry later making a public report that Ramesh died in the LTTE engagements. The days indicated are contradictory . After Ramesh is taken into custody , it is the Commanding chief who is responsible for his death later. It is suspected that this videotape had been passed to the international scene by Saman Kumara of the State Rupavahini who is a close crony of Shavendra Silva.



The defense Secretary and the Govt. say that Ramesh is a terrorist leader who committed a number of murders including the killing of the Arantalawa Bhikkhu . But the question at issue is , no matter who the criminal is , if he is taken into custody , he must be brought before the law. He cannot be killed while in custody. In the circumstances Shavendra Silva is in deep trouble.. This case filed claiming compensation in the civil court had been well thought out after carefully probing as to how legal action shall be filed unaffected by his right to immunity. The legal personalities in US say , .the SL Govt. by just harping on the fact that Ramesh is a LTTE leader and committed murders , and thereby wasting time while trying to exploit even this grave turmoil of Shavendra Silva for its publicity purposes thereby deepening Silva’s predicament under the US laws.






When the several media Institutions to whom Shavendra Silva made requests to write in defense of him in respect of his case had passed the information to the Govt. The latter had however obstructed the media on this . This was another illustration of the Govt.’s condom theory application. During the war period , what Shavendra did was pampering the media covering the defense scene and making them write about him and boost his megalomaniac ambitions. The defense Secretary Gota had repulsed this by giving instructions to the media , “ do not up what Shavendra tells” .

A leading Lawyer residing in the US speaking to Lanka e news said, the Rajapakse regime by posting the commanding chiefs of the war period subsequently to High Commissions in problematic regions has committed two grave mistakes. One mistake is its action can provoke the Tamil population abroad and expose the Diplomat to the danger of sharp reactions of human rights activists as well as their hatred. An Army officer is most vulnerable to these risks. If the SL Govt. Diplomatic circles have acted intelligently nobody need to have walked into these problems. This is similar to a situation where the Govt . has made Shavendra walk into turbulence and trouble voluntarily, he noted.

The second mistake is , appointing officers who know only about war as High Commissioners . By this, grave damage can result to the country because these officers know next to nothing about foreign affairs . If the Govt. wished to give these officers a good holiday after the war , what it should have done was without compromising the country’s foreign affairs and image , sent these officers without giving publicity to some obscure place.

This Rajapakse regime has complicated the problem by sending the war Hero who won the war for them to jail and sending others on compulsory pension on the one hand , while on the other pampering and putting on pedestal a notorious LTTE leader who committed genocide openly . Now to aggravate the situation further it is scheming to wash its hands off giving wrong advice to an Army chief after driving him into a legal tangle, the leading Lawyer pointed out.

By 'Soldadu Unnehe'

Sri Lankan critics and path to reconciliation

The tenth anniversary of the shocking terrorist attack on the twin towers in New York was on September 11, 2011. The very next day ( September 12th ) I was sitting in a side-event of the Human Rights Council in Geneva listening to the ranting of the American Ambassadress to the United Nations in Geneva, A. Donahue, threatening Sri Lanka for the way it ended the terrorist war against the LTTE, a terrorist group banned by 32 nations, including USA.

During the time she was attacking Sri Lanka a question was running through my mind asking how this American Ambassadress could condemn the ending of the war against terrorism in Sri Lanka when President Obama violated international law by crossing the Pakistan border without the prior consent of Pakistan and killing Osama Bin Laden without giving him a fair trial.

I was reminded of cow-boy politics in the Wild West where the heavyweights with guns ride in and make their own laws according to their interests.

I suddenly realized that she was dictating terms to Sri Lanka. She was issuing a veiled threat when she said that if Sri Lanka failed to address the alleged violation during the last days of war by their domestic mechanism (LLRC) soon Sri Lanka will have to face the growing pressure from “the international community” to impose an international investigation.

Though the Sri Lankan government team was taken aback by the US representative’s statement, former Attorney General, Mohan Peris replied saying that Sri Lanka had established the LLRC and should be given time to address the issue. He also questioned the right of Amnesty International and other international agencies to prejudge the case even before the report of the LLRC was out.

China, Pakistan and a representative of Cuba have hailed the statement of Sri Lanka and the 17 minutes edited video of “Lies agreed upon” and they reiterated their support for Sri Lanka in future. This Video was a counter to the Channel 4 ‘ Sri Lankan killing field ‘ footage that was screened by Amnesty International for member countries during the last June session of UNHRC.

The AI report on Sri Lanka questioned the mandate, the composition and practice of LLRC. The argument of Amnesty International was Sri Lanka not capable of putting its own house in order.

Father Immanuel from Global Tamil Forum said he agreed that Channel 4 “Sri Lankan killing field” was not entirely true; similarly the Sri Lankan video ‘Lies Agreed upon” also was not true and truth lies in between . He also along with the other two individuals asked for international inquiry on the last days of the war fought between LTTE and Sri Lanka .He also accused Sri Lanka effectively for removing the emergency regulation August 31 and replaced it with the Prevention of Terrorism Act.

The Sri Lankan team brought Jaffna Government Agent Imelda Sukumar to explain the resettlement in Jaffna district and law and order situation in the Northern Province. She effectively presented the figures of resettlement and money spent on development in Jaffna. Even the Sri Lankan bogey “Grease Man”emerged in the UN session. Imelda Sukumar claimed these were petty criminals and the increase in gold price was because of the scare stories created about the “Grease Man”. However, the crime statistics are well on the way downward.

Sri Lanka was criticized by many quarters since the end of the war in May 2009 including Western nations, expatriate Tamils, local Tamil politicians and Tamil media relentlessly. This war was started by LTTE on July 21, 2006 at Mavil Aaru ,Eastern province and from March 2008 Tamil civilians were not only prevented from escaping the war zone but also forcibly dragged along as a human shield to protect the safety of LTTE leaders and their families. This inevitably caused civilian causalities when the LTTE turned No Fire Zones into fire zones by firing at the Army from behind the cover of civilian people.

Sri Lanka was also accused of setting up concentration camps in Vanni. I visited the so called concentration camps. Refugee camps are not pretty but what Sri Lankan government had done after the war benefited the Tamil IDPs in many ways. According to Minister Mahinda Samarasinghe, of the 294,000 IDPs all were settled in two years except for 7,000 people. I am not only depending on government statistics but also on the evidence of the people in Vanni who also told me that the living conditions were improving daily.

Most of the areas mined for nearly 30 years were removed and made safe for Tamils and only a limited area remains to be demined still. After thirty years, Emergency Regulations removed. High security zones have been reduced very significantly and many people have been resettled in those area.

Out of the surrendered 11,900 ex-LTTE combatants only 2753 are still detained and out of them soon 1683 will be released. This is a process comparably quicker than the release of JVP detainees after the ‘71 insurrection.

I travelled in Jaffna in July 2009 and found the petrol rice was 70% higher than in Colombo. When I travelled in May 2011 the prices had come down and the difference in the prices in Colombo and Jaffna was not more than a rupee or two.

The overall improvements in the living conditions of the people of Jaffna have convinced me that what Sri Lanka need is time and space to return to normalcy, as the good old days which are so dear and memorable to us. I believe Sri Lanka and Sri lankan people need to recover physically and psychologically from the effects of 30 years war, resolve its own problems and reconcile differences.

Threatening Sri Lanka with alleged war crime investigation by west will not speed up the process of reconciliation, especially Tamils who are yearning to pick the threads from what they left behind on their way to Nandikadal.

Noel Nadesan, reporting from Geneva

US envoy’s confidential report on JVP

United States Ambassador Patricia Butenis quoting Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) Leader Somawansa Amarasinghe has in a confidential 2009 cable to Washington said, “Mr. Amarasinghe described the JVP as a reformed Marxist party,

which stood for a united, multiethnic and multilingual Sri Lanka, with equality for all.”

Wikileaks website said Ms. Butenis in one of her latest cables had quoted Mr. Amarasinghe as saying that former army commander Sarath Fonseka was marginalized after the military defeat of the LTTE because he was in favor of reconciling with former LTTE members.Ms. Butenis met Mr. Amarasinghe and JVP MP Sunil Handunneththi on January 15, 2009. In that meeting they discussed the JVP’s version of a united, multiethnic, multilingual Sri Lanka; JVP’s support for Mr. Fonseka’s presidential candidacy; JVP’s support for a truth commission instead of a war crimes trial and JVP’s view of the involvement of the international community in Sri Lankan internal affairs.

According to the cable she has reported to Washington that, “Mr. Amarasinghe described the JVP as a reformed Marxist Party, with equality for all. He emphasized that they were not a nationalist party and believed strongly in multiparty democracy. The JVP was even in favor of a Tamil prime minister. The JVP also believed in developing power as far as possible, including allowing villages to decide on the allocation of funds.”

Regarding JVP support for Mr. Fonseka’s presidential campaign, Mr. Amarasinghe cited seven reasons; he was the only person who could defeat President Rajapaksa, JVP has never supported the current government, Mr. Fonseka was willing to eliminate the executive powers of the president, he was well respected by the people, he was very direct and he had a broad vision for the future of Sri Lanka.

Ms. Butenis has said, “Mr. Amarasinghe went on to add that Mr. Fonseka was marginalized after the military defeat of the LTTE because he was in favor of reconciling with former LTTE members. This convinced the JVP that Mr. Fonseka was committed to uniting the nation.”

Expressing their view on war crimes issue Mr. Amarasinghe said there were human rights violations in every war and with regard to the final year of the Sri Lankan war there were in fact far fewer human rights violations than ever before. In terms of moving forward, he favored the idea of a “truth and reconciliation commission,” not a war crimes trial.

Tamil war machine runs in the Netherlands

The Tamil community in the Netherlands (between 9,000 and 13,000 men) has been “largely annexed” by the Tamil Tigers to the violent conflict in Sri Lanka. Through extortion and sedition, a “climate of fear” has been shaped among Dutch Tamils.

This was the argument of Public Prosecutors (OM) Ward Ferdinandusse and Maartje Nieuwenhuis yesterday to The Hague court in a trial against five Tamils living in the Netherlands who were arrested in 2010.

According to the prosecutors, the suspects have been operating a base in the Netherlands for Sri Lanka’s Tamil Tigers (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, LTTE). The prosecution showed the defendants have overseen an international criminal and terrorist organisation involved in arson, bombings, murder, manslaughter and aggravated assault.

The chief suspect, 52-year-old Schagen resident Ramaschandran S. was the international accountant for the LTTE, said the prosecutors. He is suspected of sending couriers around the world with cash to buy weapons for the Tigers. The OM is seeking a 16 year prison sentence for his crimes. Ten year sentences were demanded for three other Dutch Tamil Tigers, as well as for the alleged leader of the Dutch branch, 46-year-old Srirangam R. from The Hague.

Since 1983, the Tamil Tigers have been fighting against the Sri Lankan army for control of an independent homeland in the north of the island. Because of the LTTE’s frequent attacks on civilian targets and their use of suicide bombers and child soldiers, the European Union has listed the group as a terrorist organisation. Two years ago, the Tigers were defeated by the Sri Lankan army. “But here in Europe, the LTTE is alive and well,” said Ferdinandusse.

He called it “shocking” that Tamil children in the Netherlands “from their youngest years are brainwashed with the violent ideology of the LTTE.” In the Netherlands, the Tigers have 20 classrooms where children are bombarded during the weekend with propaganda. They make pictures of bombs and grenades. “They are told from childhood that their future lies not in the Netherlands, but in an independent Tamil state and that suicide bombers are heroes.”

According to the Dutch prosecutors, the Tamil Tigers are busy raising funds for the conflict 8,500 kilometres away. In the Netherlands, they run organisations like the Tamil Youth Organisation and the Dutch Tamil Arts and Culture Organisation, which seek municipal subsidies. It is money that, according to the prosecutors, is used to lubricate the war machine. For example, the OM found that the municipality of Zeist financed a sporting day for the Tamils with 2,000 euros. The money ended up going to the LTTE.

The suspects also demanded war taxes for the Tamils in the Netherlands. But if they could not pay, their family in Sri Lanka was forbidden to visit and they could not travel to the island.

The suspects stoically listened to the indictment, which took all day yesterday. Ramachandran, who has lived in the Netherlands since 1985, sat motionless at the hearing, muscular arms folded across his chest. He allowed only a glance at images prosecutors showed on a screen in the courtroom. Among other things, they depicted recordings of marching Tamil child soldiers in Sri Lanka, an “inflammatory speech” commemorating a fallen comrade from defendant Srirangam in 2007 and a photograph of Ramachandran posing with LTTE founder, Velupillai Prabhakaran in Sri Lanka.

Prosecutors said the defendant’s attitude in court matches the descriptions of the charges against him.

According to Ferdinandusse, “the defendants lack regret, guilt or any opinion of the punishable character of their acts.” As he put it, they were “happy to point the finger at the alleged crimes of the Sri Lankan government, but lack self-reflection over their own crimes.”

The OM is seeking long prison sentences over suspicions the suspects will commit crimes again. “Given the conscious, ideological and stubborn character of the criminal acts of the suspects and their complete lack of guilt, we should fear they will be repeated.” (Source: Radio Netherlands Worldwide)

Crouching Tiger, Hidden Raj


Earlier this year, Raj Rajaratnam, founder of the Galleon Group hedge fund, was convicted of conspiracy and securities fraud in one of the biggest insider-trading cases in the history of Wall Street. But there was another reason the federal government was interested in Rajaratnam—his alleged financial support for Tamil separatists in Sri Lanka, whose cause is spearheaded by the ferocious Tamil Tiger terrorists. Vanity Fair’ s David Rose gets the untold story from a Tamil Tiger turned F.B.I. informant.

By David Rose

By Lakruwan Wanniarachchi/AFP/Getty Images; inset, by Shannon Stapleton/Reuters.

FRIENDS WITH BENEFITS Left, Convicted insider trader and former Galleon hedge-fund founder Raj Rajaratnam at the Manhattan Federal Courthouse in New York, in April 2011. Inset, members of Sri Lanka’s Tamil Tigers.
I n November 2002, the Doubletree hotel in Somerset, New Jersey, hosted a daylong gala: lunch, speeches, dinner, more speeches, and finally dancing. There were more than 400 guests, and they were all there to mark the 25th anniversary of the Ilankai Tamil Sangam, ostensibly a cultural and social organization. Many of its members supported the demand by Sri Lanka’s Tamil minority for an independent state, and although the Sangam was not avowedly militant, the flags and videos of the movement’s military wing, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (L.T.T.E.), were on display throughout the hall. The Tamil Tigers, as the group is known, were then in the 19th year of a civil war against the Sri Lankan government. Designated a terrorist organization by the U.S. State Department in 1997, the Tamil Tigers invented the suicide-bombing belt, a technology it exported to Hamas and al-Qaeda. The Tigers were responsible for hundreds of suicide attacks on buses, temples, and shopping malls, and for village massacres in which children were killed in front of their parents. In May 1991, the Tigers assassinated the former Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi. Two years later, they assassinated the Sri Lankan president, Ranasinghe Premadasa.

One of the distinguishing features of the Tamil Tigers is that the group was mostly financed from abroad by the large Tamil diaspora. Many of its donors were eminently respectable, and worked in America, Canada, Australia, and Europe in professions such as medicine and the law. And so at about seven p.m., it fell to a hospital anesthesiologist to introduce the Doubletree event’s star speaker, Raj Rajaratnam, a corpulent Tamil whose Galleon Group hedge fund had already made him the world’s richest Sri Lankan. His net worth would eventually reach a reported $1.8 billion.

Unbeknownst to Rajaratnam, his audience that night included an F.B.I. informant equipped with a concealed recording device. The informant, whom I will call by one of his nicknames, Rudra, would eventually make thousands of hours of clandestine recordings in the course of his 11-year undercover career, and the Department of Justice has used them as the basis of 20 successful criminal prosecutions. Rudra says his memory of what Rajaratnam said at the gala is clear, and it is supported by his former F.B.I. handlers, who heard the recordings when they were made. “He got up and, flanked by L.T.T.E. flags, he said, ‘Everyone must support the Tigers’ cause,’” Rudra recalls. “He mentioned the fact that his wife was an Indian Sikh [a minority group from which some had also mounted a terrorist campaign aimed at creating a separate state]. Rajaratnam said: ‘They’re terrorists. We’re terrorists. We are all freedom fighters.’ Everyone laughed. Then he added: ‘They’re our terrorists, and you all must support this struggle.’”

Rudra says that Rajaratnam sounded all the more persuasive because his own generosity was well established. For example, a few were aware within the Tamil community that Rajaratnam apparently had given the Tamil cause at least $1 million in recognition of the Tamil victory in 2000 over the Sri Lankan army at the strategic Elephant Pass, which controls access to Sri Lanka’s northern peninsula, where ethnic Tamils are concentrated. (John M. Dowd, a partner at the law firm of Akin Gump Strauss Hauer & Feld, which represents Raj Rajaratnam, said that Rajaratnam has never directly supported L.T.T.E. terrorism. He declined to answer specific questions from Vanity Fair, saying that he had nothing to add to the position already set out on behalf of his client in court filings.)

In May 2011, Raj Rajaratnam was convicted in New York on 14 counts of conspiracy and securities fraud in one of the biggest hedge-fund insider-trading cases in the history of Wall Street. The trial revealed how Rajaratnam developed a web of corrupt relationships and paid millions of dollars for insider tips that enabled him to beat the market time and again. But throughout the two-month hearing, prosecutors said nothing about one of the uses to which Rajaratnam allegedly put his criminally acquired fortune—funding Tamil terrorism.

Jay Kanetkar, who was Rudra’s main F.B.I. handler from 1999 until he left the bureau in June 2006, says that Rajaratnam’s alleged involvement with terrorism was a significant factor in why the F.B.I. and the Department of Justice went to such extraordinary lengths to nail him. “It was a conscious decision,” Kanetkar says, “to treat Raj the terrorist the way they treated Al Capone when they got him for tax evasion.”

T he money trail that leads to Rajaratnam begins in a federal prison in Buffalo, New York, early in 1999. Jay Kanetkar and an F.B.I. colleague, both with the Joint Terrorism Task Force in Newark, New Jersey, happened to be looking for a new case to work when they got a call from an agent in the Immigration and Naturalization Service named Kevin Ryan. He said that Rudra was coming to the end of a five-year prison term imposed for storing two kilograms of heroin in a suitcase at his home on Staten Island as part of a drug-smuggling operation organized by the Tamil Tigers to raise money. A Sri Lankan citizen, now he was due to be deported. That fact, Ryan suggested, might give the F.B.I. some leverage to persuade Rudra to become an informant. Rudra, whose mild, slightly bumbling exterior conceals an evident sangfroid, was then in his mid-thirties, and he readily agreed. Although he had been drawn into the Tamil Tiger orbit while studying in India, and had even met its murderous leader, Vellupillai Prabhakaran, he says now that his commitment to their cause had only ever been lukewarm. And he was angered by the group’s failure to check on his family while he was in prison. Rudra says, “So I decided: I’m going to bring them down.”

Soon after being recruited by the F.B.I., Rudra met one of the Tigers’ leading international fund-raisers, Vijayshanthar Patpanathan, also known as Chandru, who told him that Rajaratnam was a “high-level business guy” who played a critical role in funding the terrorist group. (Chandru was later convicted and jailed by a New York federal court for conspiring to provide material support to a foreign terrorist organization, as a result of information supplied by Rudra.) “Three years before that 2002 fund-raiser, Rajaratnam was identified by Rudra as a major source,” says Kanetkar. Rudra also told the F.B.I. that Raj’s father, Jesuthasan Rajaratnam, a wealthy financial manager in his own right, was another generous donor. Father and son had set up the Rajaratnam Family Foundation, to support charitable causes in Sri Lanka and elsewhere. But it was also a clandestine financial channel for the Tamil Tigers, recent court filings allege. (John M. Dowd, who represents Jesuthasan Rajaratnam as well as his son, Raj, had no comment on specific questions regarding the allegations, but he did say that neither man had ever directly supported the L.T.T.E.)

For Rudra, meeting Tiger operatives was not difficult: they were often on hand at social functions, such as those organized by the Sangam. The challenge for him and the F.B.I. was to build his credibility. The ruse his handlers devised was for Rudra to intimate that he had had contact with top Mafia figures in prison, and that through them he had access to corrupt U.S. officials. These, he suggested, could get things done for the Tamil Tigers—such as smuggle Tamils who lacked proper visas into the United States. Beginning in the fall of 2001, Chandru paid Rudra $6,000 a head in order to arrange safe passage at Newark International Airport for at least nine such individuals, whose entry was coordinated between the F.B.I. and the I.N.S. Rudra used his supposed “contacts” again, in April 2004, when Chandru told him that Father Gaspar Raj, a Catholic priest who was also a key Tamil Tiger member, had been detained by federal agents at Newark and was about to be deported. Rudra says: “I called Jay Kanetkar and said he should get him out, and he did.”




Continued (page 2 of 3)Prabhakaran ran the Tamil Tigers abroad on classic, cellular lines, with each group operating independently and unaware of the others’ activities. But Rudra’s standing rose so high that he became an exception, the trusted go-to guy for every Tiger cell in America. “I’ve seen the e-mails,” he says. “They thought I could do anything.” Eventually, he was working with four separate cells, which were variously attempting not only to raise money but to arrange supplies of weapons, including surface-to-air missiles. (The would-be arms smugglers were also arrested and convicted on the basis of Rudra’s testimony.) Meanwhile, says Kanetkar, “he had four concealed video cameras in his living room, plus two in the kitchen. We had every angle covered.” Every time Rudra spoke on the phone or met a contact, the conversation was recorded.

Occasionally there were hiccups, such as the time a recording device fell out of Rudra’s pocket in front of Chandru—“I told him it was a pager,” Rudra says. His reassurance must have worked, for in August 2003 he accompanied Chandru to Sri Lanka. There had been a cease-fire, and they were able to travel from the capital, Colombo, to Vanni, the fortress housing 300,000 people that the Tamil Tigers had built from scratch in the island’s northern jungles. Vanni had underground bunkers for advanced computers and communications equipment as well as two fully equipped subterranean hospitals. There Rudra met most of the Tamil Tigers’ senior leadership, wearing a concealed F.B.I. wire all the while.
By 2005, Rudra’s penetration of the Tigers’ network was so deep that the F.B.I. had acquired a comprehensive picture of the group’s fund-raising capability. Raj Rajaratnam’s name came up frequently. “On the recordings, he was spoken of in a reverential way, with all the kudos he got as a financial whizz,” says Kanetkar. “At the same time, he wasn’t a commoner, which is why it was hard for Rudra to get close to him. He was reserved for the big stuff.” For example, in September 2005, two Tamil Tiger members were duped by the F.B.I. In an attempt to have the Tigers removed from the government terrorism list, they agreed to pay $1 million to two “corrupt State Department officials” (in reality, F.B.I. agents) whom Rudra had introduced them to. The Tamils went straight from that meeting to Rajaratnam’s house, apparently to arrange to get the money, according to Rudra and Kanetkar.
“Rudra told us that the L.T.T.E. had given Raj a very large sum of money for him to invest in the Galleon fund,” says Kanetkar. “It was clear that the Tigers did have that kind of money. They were raising $1 million every time they held a function, and also going door to door—extorting people to pay thousands of dollars for the next wave of operations.” Kanetkar and his counterterrorist colleagues had been aware of evidence that Rajaratnam was using illegal insider information since 2001, when wiretaps caught an executive from the Intel Corporation offering him insider tips. The F.B.I. saw the two endeavors—terrorism and insider trading—as connected, says Kanetkar: “Money from insider trading was going into his pocket, and money from his pocket was going to the L.T.T.E.”
F or the Tamil Tigers, possibly the most damaging consequence of Rudra’s work undercover was the eventual closure by the authorities of the group’s main fund-raising “front” charities, not only in America but elsewhere, including Britain, where Rudra, accompanied by Kanetkar, shared his knowledge with the British Security Service, M.I.5. “This had a measurable impact on the course of the war,” says a former Department of Justice official. “It significantly weakened their capacity to fight.” The Tigers’ last stand came in April 2009, when the Sri Lankan army finally overran Vanni, killing not only Prabhakaran but, allegedly, thousands of noncombatants.
Of the Tamil front groups, the biggest was the Tamil Rehabilitation Organization (T.R.O.), which was active in 17 countries. Its assets were frozen by the U.S. Treasury in November 2007. Rudra’s secret recordings included detailed accounts by Tiger leaders of how money was transferred from the T.R.O. to the terrorist group itself, and in this case there is a copious documentary record of the role played by Rajaratnam. An affidavit filed in April 2007 by the F.B.I.’s special agent Louis Forella states that the banking records of “individual B”—Rajaratnam, according to court filings—show that “[he] wrote three checks totalling $1,000,000 between July and September 2000” that eventually made their way to a T.R.O. account in London, from which much of the money was later withdrawn in cash. The affidavit also cites letters from a later-convicted Tamil Tiger fund-raiser named Karunakaran Kandasamy about the need to fulfill Rajaratnam’s “long lasting desire” to meet Prabhakaran, describing the Galleon Group founder as “among the people who provide financial support for our struggle for freedom. . . . [He] has been working actively on the forefront.”
Court filings in a pending civil action against Rajaratnam, being brought by Tamil Tiger victims, more than 30 of their families cite a State Department cable dated October 2006 from James R. Moore, the deputy chief of the mission of the U.S. Embassy in Colombo, which was copied to the Treasury Department, the Department of Homeland Security, and the F.B.I. Moore described his dealings with Sri Lankan officials on Tamil Tiger financing, and quoted reports from the local central bank’s financial intelligence unit and the ministry of foreign affairs on the T.R.O. and its influx of funds from America (more than from any other country). “Of these remittances from the U.S., the [Rajaratnam] family is the largest private donor,” the cable said. In the period January 2003 to March 2006, according to one of the reports cited by Moore, the T.R.O. in Sri Lanka received nearly $10 million from its affiliate in America, a trend that was continuing, with $566,000 sent in the single month of August 2006. Overall, the Rajaratnam foundation was contributing more than 35 percent. The cable added: “These funds have been received from the T.R.O. office registered in Cumberland . . . Maryland, which is the entity that is presently being investigated by the U.S. authorities”—the investigation spearheaded by Rudra—“with regard to arms purchases for L.T.T.E.” When it finally shut the T.R.O. down, the U.S. Treasury stated that the organization had “facilitated L.T.T.E. procurement operations” including “the purchase of munitions, equipment, communication devices, and other technology.”
Tax and bank records confirm the scale of Rajaratnam’s support. In the course of 2003, he gave $5.05 million to his family foundation, which in turn passed on $5 million to the T.R.O. In June 2004, the court filings state, he gave another $1 million directly to the T.R.O. At the end of that year, the Indian Ocean tsunami devastated coastal Sri Lanka. Rajaratnam responded by setting up another charity, Tsunami Relief, Inc., which made appeals to the public and was administered by two of his staff at the Galleon Group headquarters, in New York. In all it raised more than $7 million. While money did go to the Sri Lankan government, nearly half of it was given to the T.R.O. in the U.S. and in Sri Lanka. (Court filings lodged on behalf of Raj Rajaratnam and his father say that while it is true that they gave large donations to the T.R.O., they were unaware that the T.R.O. was channeling money to the L.T.T.E.)
Rajaratnam gave few interviews before his arrest, in September 2009. But just a month before, he told a Sri Lankan business magazine that he was proud of his “humanitarian work in Sri Lanka,” saying that in the future, he would like to do more. (By this time, the Tigers had been defeated.) “I’m a firm believer that with success comes responsibility and the incredible power of possibility,” he said, “a responsibility to help those less fortunate and the possibility of actually succeeding in making a difference.” Rajaratnam’s criminal lawyers have told reporters he should receive a lenient sentence for his insider-trading crimes because of his charitable generosity. He is due to be sentenced on October 13.
Could Rajaratnam have genuinely confused charitable works with financial support for terrorism? The evidence suggests he knew exactly what he was doing. In 2001, on the Web site of the Tamil Sangam, the organization Rajaratnam addressed at the Doubletree, Rajaratnam’s father provided the research for statements that set out the association’s credo: “The L.T.T.E. is a freedom movement. Historically, freedom movements have been labelled as terrorist organizations by the oppressors. From George Washington to Mahatma Gandhi to Nelson Mandela, all freedom fighters have been called terrorists . . . . L.T.T.E. has not engaged in any killing that is not justifiable in the context of war.”




Continued (page 3 of 3)U
nderstandably, that’s not how Mike Elsner, the attorney from Charleston, South Carolina, whose law firm, Motley Rice, has filed a claim against Rajaratnam, his father, and the T.R.O., on behalf of Tamil Tiger victims, sees the matter. Insider trading is not exactly a victimless crime, but to work out who is doing the suffering involves calculations that verge on the hypothetical. Elsner’s clients, in contrast, suffered concretely and very directly. In his office he showed me a video compiled from interviews he had conducted in Sri Lanka. They’re heartbreaking. Parents—some of them, in Sri Lanka’s multicultural society, Tamil themselves—talk about losing their children in horrifying circumstances, such as the destruction of a high-school baseball team caught in a blast at a Colombo railway station, or a young couple blown up two months before their wedding, and who were buried in the clothes they never got to wear at the ceremony. “This is what Rajaratnam was paying for,” Elsner says. In the response filed to the victims’ lawsuit, Rajaratnam’s lawyers state that there is “no connection” between Rajaratnam’s donations to the T.R.O. and the harm suffered by the claimants, adding that there is no evidence he ever sponsored acts of violence.
Under U.S. law, you don’t have to prove that money a person gave to an entity that funded terrorism was actually spent on bombs and bullets: it’s enough to show that the recipient body did in fact use some of its funds for terrorist purposes. The suit, which was filed in federal court in New Jersey, has already cleared its initial legal hurdles, with the court accepting jurisdiction and upholding it as a claim for crimes against humanity. The suit is asking for damages of an unspecified amount. Rajaratnam will almost certainly go to prison as a result of his conviction in the Galleon case. If he ever gets out of jail, he may not still be so rich.

Sri Lanka governor demolishes British heritage in Jaffna

TamilNet, Thursday, 29 September 2011, 21:14 GMT]
Part of a landmark heritage complex at the Old Park in Jaffna, the residency buildings of the British Government Agents, dating back to the beginnings of British rule, was demolished overnight on Wednesday at the orders of the occupying Sri Lanka governor in Jaffna, Maj. Gen. G.A. Chandrasri, despite the SL Archaeology Department declaring it a heritage site, preventing any demolitions. The SL governor is already building a mansion for the occupying governors in that location at a cost of 100 million Rs, news sources in Jaffna said. Both SL President Rajapaksa and his governor give utmost importance to the symbolism in showing who are colonial masters now, by building a mansion for the SL president at the ‘King’s House’ inside the Dutch Fort and by building a governor’s mansion at the complex of the former British Residents.




On 2 September the SL Archaeology Department through a Gazette Notification has declared the location a heritage site and has ordered against any demolitions.

When demolition workers came to the site, the Sri Lanka Government Agent of Jaffna Ms. Imelda Sugumar informed relevant ministries and stopped the demolition for a while.

But during the night, the demolition squad of the Jaffna Municipality came again and razed down the structures to the foundation, leaving only a bathing tank called ‘Queen’s Bath’ that was part of the British residency.

The demolition work continued for the second day on Thursday and the tractors of the Municipality were engaged in removing the old building stones, Imelda Sugumar said.

Any litigations coming – if at all they come – are artfully passed on the Jaffna Municipality, even though the culprit was the occupying governor Chandrasri. The act took place overnight on the orders of the SL governor.

The Sri Lanka Government Agent openly accused that the SL governor was the one who ordered the Mayor, Mrs. Yogeswary Patkunam, to demolish the heritage building without caring for the SL Archaeology Department.

SL minister Douglas Devananda collaborating with Mahinda Rajapaksa, controls the Municipality.




The residential buildings and the Old Park location date back to the beginnings of British colonial rule in Jaffna.

When the British captured the territory of Jaffna Patnam in 1796 from the Dutch, the administrative headquarters of the British resident was shifted from the Dutch Fort to the Old Park locality in Chu’ndik-kuzhi, roughly 3 km south of the Fort. An early description of the residency could be found in the travelogue of James Cordiner, a chaplain who visited Jaffna along with the first English Governor of Ceylon in 1802.

The administrative headquarters became known as the Kachcheari – a word that has come into Eezham Tamil from the legacy of the English East India Company that initially ruled the territories in Ceylon until it became Crown Colony in 1802.

Kachcheari, which means an administrative or revenue centre, is originally an Urdu word of Moghal legacy that was taken up by the English East India Company. The early officials of the Company with Indian background introduced the term into the island. The term survived even though the officials with Indian background were withdrawn in 1799 after a rebellion against the corruption of the Company rule in 1797.

The Residency and a vast park developed around it, nearly in an area a square mile with very old trees, became a public property in mid 19th century, through a deed of a benevolent British Government Agent, Percival Dyke.

Dyke and his successor Twynam, who preferred to live in Jaffna even after retirement and died there, are still remembered in Jaffna for their benevolent acts.

According to the public property declaration of Dyke no building other than the residence of the Government Agent could be built in the park.

The locality became known as the Old Park, and was in public use for long. For instance, in Jaffna where it is difficult to find a forest of big trees, schools regularly choose the Old Park for the scout camps of school children.

But, the park became a centre for the occupying SL military during the war decades. During the war against the LTTE, the old buildings were destroyed in aerial bombing.

Sri Lanka’s occupying governor Chandrasri is now building a mansion in the Old Park at the cost of 100 million rupees, after cutting down many of the old trees.

He is keeping a contingent of SL Army in the park for his security.

The Governor’s mansion complex will also have residential quarters for other officials and the occupying Army. Hence, the park is now being cleared of trees and old structures.

Even the only remaining wooded area in Jaffna city is lost.

Chardrasri also plans to build a Buddhist stupa in the park and he was fleecing money from the NGOs for this purpose, some earlier news reports said.

Meanwhile, the Indian Government has plans to develop a museum at the old Kachcheari building on the side of the Old Park, news sources in Jaffna said.

The public in Jaffna who wish to see the Old Park as a heritage centre and a real public place are much angered at the defacement of heritage by the occupying governor and the symbol of colonialism he tries to construct.

The public are equally angry with today’s British and Dutch governments who are now part of the ‘International Community’ that design and allow ‘colonialism’ getting vigorously transferred into the hands of Colombo.

The Netherlands even funds Colombo in the symbolic process of converting the Dutch Fort in Jaffna as a seat of the occupying President of Sri Lanka.

The US Republican Congressman Steven Joseph Chabot, Chairman of the Congress Sub-committee on the Middle East and South Asia, was visiting Jaffna on the day the demolition took place.

The visiting US Congressman met the commander of the occupying Army, Maj. Gen. Hathurusinghe on Wednesday and discussed ‘development,’ according to the Defence website of occupying Sri Lanka.

Armed robberies escalate in SLA-deployed areas of North

TamilNet, Friday, 30 September 2011, 00:14 GMT]
Night robberies are on the increase in Sri Lanka Army deployed areas of the Jaffna peninsula and Vanni after the ‘grease devil’ episodes, civil sources in Jaffna told TamilNet Thursday. On Tuesday night, a group of armed men entered the house of 60-year-old Ponnaiah Balasingam and attacked him and his 24-year-old son Dinesh Balasingam, at Thirvaiyaa'ru in Ki'linochchi district. The attackers later robbed the house. The occupying Sri Lanka Army was heavily deployed in the area while the attack and the robbery were taking place. Meanwhile, medical staff at Jaffna hospital staged a one-hour token strike Wednesday against the recent attack on two doctors of the hospital at their residence in Kokkuvil. Normalcy remains disturbed in Jaffna as armed robberies were escalating in areas with heavy SLA presence.

The intruders were carrying guns, civil sources in Jaffna said alleging that the attackers were intelligence operatives of the Sri Lanka Army.

The attacks that targeted prominent people of the society had taken place amid heavy SL Army deployment.

At Thiruvaiyaa'ru, both the father and the son who sustained injuries Tuesday night, were taken to hospital one hour after the attackers had left the site.

At least two similar robberies have been reported in the area in the recent days, the sources in Ki'linochchi further said.


Sri Lanka gets flood rebuilding aid from Japan

Sept 30, 2011 (LBO) - Japan is helping Sri Lanka rebuild flood damaged roads and irrigation networks and strengthen capacity to cope with future disasters through a seven billion yen (9.0 billion rupee) project the country's aid agency said.
Japan International Co-operation Agency (JICA) which administers Japanese aid said a concessionary loan was agreement was signed with Sri Lanka's Treasury secretary P B Jayasundera.
The project will improve the mobility of people and farmers will be able to cultivate more land Akira Shimura, chief representative in Colombo of the JICA said in a statement.

The loan was in response to a May 2011 request from Sri Lanka for emergency flood reconstruction aid.


The emergency assistance also covers capacity development at Sri Lanka's disaster management, meteorology, irrigation and building research agencies, allowing them to better cope with future disasters

Zany scientists honored in alternative Nobels

NEW YORK, September 29, 2011 (AFP) - In the ultimate accolade for the world's mad scientists, spoof Nobel prizes were awarded Thursday for studies into beetle sex, yawning, the desperation of people dying to urinate, and other daffy investigations.
The annual Ig Nobel prizes, now in their 21st year, were given out at Harvard University in front of 1,200 spectators, with real Nobel Prize winners handing out the honors.
To win, scientists must "first make people laugh, and then make them think," according to the Ig Nobel ethos.

The biology prize -- often a good source of humor at the Igs -- went to Darryl Gwynne of Canada, Australia and the United States, and David Rentz of Australia, for their ground breaking paper titled: "Beetles on the Bottle: Male Buprestids Mistake Stubbis For Females."

Which to the layman translates as: beetles tragically attempting to mate with an Australian beer bottle.

Several prizes delved into the extremes of human behavior under stress.


Take, for example, the medicine prize, won by a Dutch-Belgian-Australian team with "Inhibitory spillover," a probe into the age-old challenge of needing to pee at a busy moment.
The team investigated why "people make better decisions about some kinds of things -- but worse decisions about other kinds of things, when they have a strong urge to urinate," the awards citation said.

Research into the psychology and physiology prizes must have been a great deal less stressful.

The former went to a University of Oslo professor who looked at "why, in everyday life, people sigh?"

The second concerned yawning in red-footed tortoises. For those who've been wondering, the British-Dutch-Hungarian-Austrian team has finally established that there is "no evidence of contagious yawning" in the creatures.

More physically demanding subjects bagged the physics and public safety prizes.

A French-Dutch group won the physics prize "for determining why discus throwers become dizzy and why hammer throwers don't."

John Senders of the University of Toronto sounded lucky to be alive to collect his public safety gong for studying the performance of a driver "on a major highway while a visor repeatedly flaps down over his face, blinding him."

At least Senders wasn't asked to test the "wasabi alarm." This invention was the subject of the chemistry prize given to a Japanese team who determined "the ideal density of airborne wasabi (pungent horseradish) to awaken sleeping people in case of fire."

The mathematics prize was awarded jointly to six academics who over the years have emphatically predicted the end of the world, and are still around to hear of their mock-honor. The citation thanks them "for teaching the world to be careful when making mathematical assumptions."

Of course, the last laugh might be on Ig Nobels, because one of those mathematics laureates still believes life will end on October 21 this year.

The peace prize was awarded to the mayor of Vilnius in Lithuania, who became so fed up with a parking violator that he took an armored personnel carrier and simply ran over the offending luxury car.

For anyone wondering how scientists can achieve so much, the literature prize at the Harvard ceremony could offer a clue.

John Perry of Stanford University was honored for his "Theory of Structured Procrastination" -- namely the technique of always working on something important, "using it as a way to avoid doing something that's even more important."

Maldives and Sri Lanka police bust bank card fraud: report

Sept 30, 2011 (LBO) - Police in Maldives and Sri Lanka have arrested five in an international fraud involving forged cash and credit cards related banks in New Zealand, Canada, Australia, China and France, a media report said.
Minivan News, a Maldives based online news service quoting police inspector Mohamed Riyaz said two Maldivian nationals were arrested in a Colombo casino in a joint operation with Sri Lanka's police.
One of the arrested had 250,090 Sri Lanka rupees, 4,845 Maldives Rufiyaa and 5,128 US dollars in his possession, the report said.


The second arrested was a partner in a movie shop in Maldives where equipment used to skim data and forged credit and debit cards were found, the report said.
Some forged cards resembled membership cards of the shop.

The report quoted police as saying they were probing possible connections to an international ring and the cards may have been used in other countries as well.

Sri Lanka hopes movies are ticket to better times

September 30, 2011 (AFP) - Once a location of choice for directors shooting World War II classics and big 1980s adventure films, Sri Lanka is hoping to make a comeback on the movie trail as it emerges from civil war.
Since the island's bloody conflict ended in May 2009, the government has been trying to promote a new image focusing on its elegant colonial buildings, tropical jungles and golden beaches.
Post-war ethnic reconciliation is still far from certain after the Tamil Tiger militants were brutally crushed, but there are signs that international studios are again looking to Sri Lanka as a film location.

"Midnight's Children", the screen adaptation by director Deepa Mehta of Salman Rushdie's 1981 Booker prize-winning novel, was completed in Sri Lanka earlier this year.

The project was shrouded in secrecy to avoid protests by religious groups angered by Rushdie's work, and future films will hope for an easier experience after shooting was suspended at one stage on government orders.

Sri Lanka's next major foreign film is tipped to be "Toomai of the Elephants", an adaptation of a story from Rudyard Kipling's "Jungle Book", starring former James Bond actor Pierce Brosnan and veteran Omar Sharif.

Filming is set to begin in January, and many local film professionals see it as a major chance to advertise Sri Lanka as a flexible and attractive film location.

"The post-war era has opened doors for more movies to be shot in Sri Lanka," Chandran Rutnam, a Sri Lankan film maker who wrote the "Toomai of the Elephants" script, told AFP.

"Safety and difficulty to get insurance to cover film productions in Sri Lanka were the biggest drawbacks during the war. People are now willing to invest in films here because we are cheaper than other Asian locations."

Rutnam knows better than anyone the island's potential as he has worked on more than 50 international projects over the decades.

He was a 16-year-old film hand on the multiple Oscar-winning "The Bridge on the River Kwai" (1957), directed by David Lean and starring Alec Guinness, which was filmed in a valley near the western town of Kitulgala.

Rutnam was also production manager alongside director Steven Spielberg on the 1984 blockbuster "Indiana Jones and the Temple of Doom". It was shot in and around the royal city of Kandy.

"We are encouraging foreign artists and film crews to shoot in our country to experience its beauty," Lakshman Yapa Abeywardene, deputy minister of economic development, told AFP.

"The whole country is now open for locations. We see this kind of work promotes our country as a tourist destination, promotes skills and helps local economic activity."

Abeywardene also said that foreign films would advertise "the vast development work the government has undertaken since the war ended" -- a claim that many ethnic-minority Tamils and civil rights groups dispute.

The northeast of the country -- where most Tamils live -- remains devastated by the fighting, and thousands of civilians in the area were killed by military shelling in the final months of the war according to a United Nations report.

The government denies any wrong-doing and has described demands for a UN inquiry as an attempt to drag Sri Lanka back into conflict instead of building on peace.

For Sri Lanka's film professionals, the arrival of a major new film project cannot come soon enough.

"The end of the war remains the huge plus-point for us to promote Sri Lankan locations among foreign film producers," P. Samaranayake, a consultant for the National Film Corporation, told AFP.

"As more film crews come here, we are hoping Sri Lanka will be among the top choice of destinations for the next Hollywood thriller.

"The island's production fraternity of more than 500 film professionals remained active during the war and they are ready and able."

Sri Lanka tea estates still making heavy losses

Sept 30, 2011 (LBO) - Tea estates in Sri Lanka's central hills have had no respite from a market downturn and continue to incur losses of 150 rupees a kilo owing to lower prices and crops, a broker said.
However, despite lower crops in recent months, an anticipated recovery in production in the last quarter could enable the island to match last year's record output, John Keells tea brokers said.
"With eight months of the year gone by, plantations have had no respite from the low crops and weak markets we have witnessed, particularly during the third quarter of 2011," they said in a report.

Although at recent sales, there has been a slight revival in prices particularly for the BOPFs grade with Russia showing good inquiry, price levels for the 'Below Best' and plainer teas continue to fall "well short" of current production cost, they said.

The situation has been made worse with low crop intakes from all three elevations owing to erratic weather.

Most estates in the high and medium elevations are run by plantations companies listed on the Colombo bourse.

"The present cost of production (in) most estates in the 'High Grown' sector in the past three months have been averaging above 450 rupees a kilo, whereas the sale averages have been in the region of 300 rupees, (with) losses of around 150 rupees per kilo and more," John Keells said.

Analysts said global commodity prices have been falling as the US dollar strengthened in recent weeks.

According to the Sri Lanka Tea Board, the August tea crop was eight percent lower than the same month last year with the high and medium elevations having shortfalls in excess of 20 percent.

"The reports that we have had from plantations suggest that even the September crop would fall short of last year’s harvest of 25 million kilos," the brokers said.

However, they said that despite the crop shortfall in the second half of 2011, Sri Lanka’s production to end-August is only marginally lower than the same period last year.


"Given a strong showing in the last quarter of the year, production could yet match up to last year's all-time record crop of 331 million kilos," the brokers said.

Indian PM Singh 'refuses holidays'

NEW DELHI, September 30, 2011 (AFP) - India's workaholic Prime Minister Manmohan Singh has not taken a holiday since he took the top job in 2004, according to a new in-depth profile published this week.
The 12,000-word study in current affairs journal The Caravan of 79-year-old Singh, under fire for a series of debilitating scandals in his second-term, said he shunned opportunities to get away and take a break.
Former media adviser Sanjaya Baru said the one-time economics professor had little interest in relaxation, recalling an official day-long visit to the popular tourist destination of Goa.

"I said to him, 'sir, it’s a weekend. Why don’t we stay Saturday night, spend Sunday morning on the beach and come back Sunday evening. You don’t miss a working day'.

"You know what he asked? ‘But what do I do there?’ Only Manmohan Singh could ask what he could do in Goa," Baru said.

Singh's daughter Daman Singh said she could recall her father taking only one vacation with the family in the last 40 years, a three-day visit to Nainital, a hill station 232 kilometres (144 miles) from New Delhi.

"As children we just assumed that’s the way all fathers are. He hasn’t changed at all," said the author, who is working on a book about her parents.

The report says Singh, hailed as the architect of India's economic liberalisation, sticks to his old austere habits, shunning fancy restaurants, expensive suits and luxury cars.

Singh's core appeal to voters as a capable and honest administrator in India's venal politics has taken a battering in the last year after a series of major corruption scandals.

While he is not personally implicated in them, he is accused by critics of failing to prevent the so-called 2G scam in which mobile phone licences were sold at rock-bottom prices in 2008.


The former telecom minister in Singh's administration, A. Raja, is awaiting trial on charges of fraud and corruption.

Sri Lanka launches web portal for tourist travel approvals

Sept 30, 2011 (LBO) - Sri Lanka's electronic tourist travel approval system will be effective from January 01, 2012 with a trial run starting from Saturday, October 01, officials said.
An online portal - www.eta.gov.lk - from which to apply for entry permits from Sri Lanka's department of immigration and emigration was officially launched Friday.
The present on-arrival visa system for tourists from 78 countries will be stopped in January except for nationals from Singapore and the Maldives which give visa on arrival facilities to Sri Lankan nationals.

Air and ship crew would continue to get 'visa on arrival' facilities at entry points. Diplomats and foreigners on official visits will be given free visas but must get prior approval through official government channels.

An "administration fee' will be charged for issuing the new electronic travel approvals, a statement said.

The online system will give free approvals during the trial run in parallel with the present system of visas being issued by the country's overseas embassies until January 01, 2012 when the electronic system comes into effect.


The border agency said applications have to be submitted in English but explanatory information would be given on the site in nine languages: English, Spanish, German, Japanese, Chinese, Arabic, Hindi and Russian.

Sri Lanka's Sampath Bank gets new MD

Sept 30, 2011 (LBO) -

Sri Lanka's Sampath Bank said deputy managing director M Y A Perera will take-over as managing director from January 01, 2012, as current managing director Harris Premaratne is leaving.
Sri Lanka's Daily FT newspaper said Premaratne will take over as the head of a new bank started by Sri Lanka's Cargills group.
Sampath closed at 218.10 rupees, down 70 cents.

Thursday, September 29, 2011

Chicken Curry Kerala Recipe


War crimes case:Beware!

I do agree with Major General Shavendra Silva (SS) that the case filed against him in the US courts will give him a good opportunity to put across to the world the army’s case and expose the LTTE and its rump as the real vicious villains who should be punished for all the atrocities they committed over the years. However there is a formidable downside to this case before the US court. It is my intention to point out some of the pitfall here.

The clever US lawyers may not give him the opportunity to state his case in open court. They will use all the legal stratagems at their disposal to prevent him turning tables on his accusers. At best they will stymie such an effort so that it will turn out to be a soft harangue at best. SS will need the best of legal advice to steer through the traps in the same way as he did bypass the landmines in Vanni.

This case will not be concluded within a few days. It will drag on for more days than expected. During that time Sri Lanka will be in the limelight capturing the headlines of the world media. Given that many western media are hostile to Sri Lanka, I would anticipate that they will churn out/manufacture news to discredit our country. Even an insignificant slip on the part of SS will be magnified and sensationalized beyond all expectations so as to project him as guilty of the charges. In short he will be put on trial separately by the media and pronounced guilty!

In the current case against medical doctor of singer Michael Jackson, I understand that videos were also displayed in court. If this is really permitted in the US courts, then concocted LTTE propagandist videos would also be shown in the case against SS. A mere verbal refutation of these may not be enough. Coupled with expert evaluation to expose those fabrications, SS should also be prepared to submit videos of LTTE’s horrid attacks on civilians.

There will be many out-of- court media circuses. He will surely need the help of western media savvy person/s to tackle the many loaded questions that will be thrown at him. Eventually what appears in the media might need disputation and refutation. A capable media person needs to be appointed to look after this very important side of this case.

Ideally the army, SS and the foreign office should get together a team for brain-storming sessions. This team should have a couple of lawyers conversant with US court procedures. They should do a "Problem Analysis" first and then a "Potential Problem Analysis". Utmost preparation is very necessary for this case. It is not only SS who is on trial, it is the whole country. Even if the accusers fail to get a conviction and damages, they will be quite satisfied if they could discredit the country and have it condemned in the court of world opinion. In omnia paratus (be prepared for anything.)

Durand Appuhamy Negombo

island.lk

A two-thirds majority won’t guarantee political stability –Wimal September 29, 2011, 10:19 pm

By Shamindra Ferdinando



NFF leader and Minister ofHousing Wimal Weerawansa says that those who have undermined the UPFA’s successful war against the LTTE, are now busy attacking the government on the economic front. In spite of its two-thirds majority in parliament, the government is vulnerable to a destabilization project spearheaded by some Western governments, he says.



Minister Weerawansa, addressing a gathering at the auditorium of the Ampara Divisional Secretariat early this week, at a function to provide housing assistance to some families living in that district, said those elements were disseminating rumours that the government was not capable of devleoping the country, though it had won the war.



Minister Weerawansa distributed funds amounting to Rs. 3 million among 50 families. One hundred and fifty families received title deeds.


island.lk

Canada, UK target SL on C’wealth front

By Shamindra Ferdinando

The Sri Lankan government yesterday (29) alleged that a small but influential section of the Commonwealth was carrying out an anti-Sri Lankan campaign ahead of the forthcoming Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Perth, Western Australia.

President Mahinda Rajapaksa is scheduled to attend CHOGM 2011 in late October 2011.

External Affairs Minister Prof. G. L. Peiris, while expressing serious concern over the move, stated that a disgraceful attempt was being made to manipulate the Commonwealth to undermine a member state. Prof. Peiris criticised two sets of proposals prepared by the Commonwealth Ministerial Action Group (CMAG) and the Eminent Persons Group (EPG) on the revamping of the association. Prof. Peiris was flanked by MP Sajin Vass Gunawardena and Foreign Secretary Karunathilake Amunugama.

Addressing the Colombo-based diplomatic community, Prof. Peiris said that among the proposals, nothing could be as bad as the move to appoint a Commonwealth Commissioner on Human Rights, Democracy and the Rule of Law. Prof. Peiris said that the majority of those at the annual Commonwealth Foreign Ministers Meeting had expressed concerns over the contentious issues.

The UK, Australia, Canada and New Zealand backed the controversial proposals. The move was made in the wake of Canadian Prime Minister Stephen Harper’s warning that he would boycott CHOGM 2013 in Sri Lankan unless the Rajapaksa government acted on accountability concerns.

Minister Peiris said that the Commonwealth had been sharply divided over the proposals made at the annual Commonwealth Foreign Ministers Meeting.

He pointed out the illogicality of another Canadian move to have a firm decision on an ‘interactive dialogue’ on the report of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission (LLRC) at the 19th Session of the Human Rights Council (HRC) scheduled for March 2012. Prof. Peiris said that Canada had wanted to decide on this issue at the on-going 18th Sessions of the HRC in Geneva even before the LLRC released its report. Calling the move a gross abuse of process, Prof. Peiris urged those sceptical about Sri Lanka’s intentions not to pre-judge.

Minister Peiris said that there could be more victims if Sri Lanka was allowed to be manipulated now. During a subsequent meeting between Canadian Foreign Minister and Prof. Peiris, the former had said that they postponed the move pending the release of the LLRC report.

Responding to a query by the Canadian HC Bruce Levy, Prof. Peiris assured that the LLRC report would be released by or before Nov. 15, 2011. He said that it would be a public document.

Minister Peiris asserted that the moves made targeting Sri Lanka by some Commonwealth members had been considered against the backdrop of a recent clandestine transmission of the controversial ‘Darusman report’ to UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and Human Rights Council.

island.lk