Yearly Archives: 2012

A smile from Lanka – Suraiya smiles with Lanka

Jug Suraiya, 15 March 2012, courtesy of Times of India

The best gift we can bring back from a so-called ‘failed state’ is a SMILE    …..Smile  ….. Visiting Sri Lanka i noticed a peculiar expression on the face of almost all the people i  saw: Sinhalese and Tamil, Buddhist and Hindu, Christian and Muslim. It took me a while to figure out what this strange expression was: it was a smile.

You don’t see too many smiles in public in India, not even in the National Capital Region (NCR) where i live, and which is the pampered sarkari showcase of the country in terms of the civic amenities available to citizens. And if you don’t see smiles in the privileged precincts of the NCR where are you likely to see them? In the benighted and government-forsaken boonies? Continue reading

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Channel 4’s War Pornography – A Review by Indi CA

Indi Samarajiva, courtesy of The Nation, 18 March 2012

What really happened was the Sri Lanka’s forces rescued thousands of people who were cornered by the LTTE at gunpoint to protect from its impending defeat

Channel 4’s new doc is still malicious agitprop, wrapped around a seed of truth. People suffered and died, but Channel 4 – like Kony 2012 to a degree – is too quick to use that suffering to further a simplistic agenda. They completely ignore the history and context of Sri Lanka’s civil war and instead offer up war porn, strategically staged by the LTTE, proposing the decapitation of Sri Lanka’s elected government and military as a solution.
Summary: I think the Channel 4 doc is disingenuous – it takes human suffering the LTTE packaged to provoke an international response and basically does what the LTTE wanted, only 3 years later. While I think many of the abuses happened, and the government did lie about them, they happened within a proportional campaign (to end the war) and – due partly to international pressure – the government has acknowledged much of the suffering, notably in the LLRC report. Continue reading

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Sri Lankans without Borders pursue Reconciliation — in Toronto

An Invitation to Selected Personnel

Sri Lankans Without Borders (SLWB) is please to invite you to attend Reconciliation I’Mpossible? A Grassroots Perspective for an opportunity to learn about the growing, youth-led social movement in Sri Lanka to bring about meaningful reconciliation and to discuss how the Diaspora too can play a positive role in this. With the end of the decades long civil war, there still exists painful memories of Sri Lankas past as well as concerns about its future. Not only did the war bring about suffering, mass displacement, and fear in the country, it also polarized the communities in Sri Lanka as well as overseas. With all that has happened, there are mixed feelings revolving around the possibility of reconciliation. This event hopes to bring out these perspectives so that these conversations could start taking place amongst the communities. It will also provide an opportunity to hear about the grassroot work being done in Sri Lanka from organizations such as Sri Lanka Unites.
Guest speakers, Prashan De Visser and Christin Rajah of Sri Lanka Unites, will  discuss their experiences growing up in Sri Lanka and how they came together to form this inspiring social movement for meaningful reconciliation being led by youth in Sri Lanka.  For Canadians interested in learning more about what steps are being taken, at a grassroots level by individuals and organizations, to address the grievances and concerns of all Sri Lankans in the aftermath of the bloody civil conflict. Continue reading

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Tom Wright and WSJ on the Geneva Tussle

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Profound problems remain in Libya if the analysts are correct

Courtesy of IRIN news

One year after a popular uprising toppled its former dictator, Libya’s new transitional government has failed to provide coherent state leadership and control, analysts say. A continuing power struggle with hundreds of militias threatens Libya’s transition towards a secure and democratic state. In the absence of national institutions, rebels instrumental in overthrowing former leader Muammar Gaddafi now run everything from detention centres to hospitals, but have also engaged in fatal clashes and stand accused of human rights abuses. Continue reading

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Returning Tamils & IDPs: Indian investment in their housing

Courtesy of IRIN news

India’s government is set to undertake a multimillion dollar reconstruction of 49,000 houses for internally displaced people in former war zones in northern and eastern Sri Lanka, which almost doubles the number of homes under construction or completed for returnees.Indian and Sri Lankan leaders signed a memorandum of understanding in January 2012. The Indian government is finalizing its implementing partners and plans to begin construction by the middle of 2012.
“This project has captured the popular imagination and there is a lot of expectation on the ground here,” Anurag Srivastava, first secretary at India’s embassy in Sri Lanka, told IRIN. “Our initial pilot project to construct 1,000 houses is already in advanced stages of completion.”
The total projected cost is US$260 million, which would make it one of the Indian government’s largest humanitarian grants thus far. The UN Human Settlements Programme, UN-HABITAT, estimates 100,000 homes need to be repaired or rebuilt as the conflict-displaced return home.
As of 31 January, 16,400 permanent homes had been completed, with the construction or repair of [http://www.humanitarianinfo.org/srilanka_hpsl/Files/Situation%20Reports/Joint%20Humanitarian%20Update/LKRN058_JHERU_January_2012_Final.pdf ] another almost 10,000 under way or about to start.
Groups working on housing in the north include the Sri Lankan government, the UN, US-based Habitat for Humanity NGO, India-based SEED, UK-based Muslim Aid, Czech Republic-based People in Need NGO; and local groups Community Trust Fund, Youth for Christ and Sarvodaya.
Along the A9 highway running through the north, few homes or buildings escaped unscathed, as fighting between government forces and the defeated Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) intensified in the final months of the war, which ended in May 2009. The LTTE had been fighting for an independent Tamil homeland for more than two decades.
According to Srivastava, this project will be largely “owner-driven”, where the displaced build their own homes with technical assistance and support provided by community implementing partners. There are no out-of-pocket costs for the new homeowners. “We have a lot of hope for this project. Shelter is our main need. Some of us have been living in temporary shelters for over two years now,” said Koneshwari Veerasigham, 52, who has been in such a shelter in the northern town of Kilinochchi city since 2010. “To have a proper house is like a dream after all we went through during the war. We are very hopeful,” she said.

The construction of 49,000 houses for resettlement and rehabilitation of IDPs in Sri Lanka is part of the overall commitment to build 50,000 houses announced by India’s Prime Minister Manmohan Singh in June 2010.
By the end of January 2012, 456,000 people (138,000 families) displaced at various stages of the three-decade long conflict had returned to the Northern Province, the zone hardest hit by the conflict.

contributor/pt/mw[END] ***********

“Northern Muslims ousted by Prabhakaran left out of Indian 50,000  houses project” by Zacki Jabbar in Island, 17 Mrch 2012

Fifteen Muslim Ministers and parliamentarians including a UNP  MP, have petitioned the Indian High Commissioner Ashok K. Kantha, requesting him  to consider the nearly 100,000 Muslims who were driven out of the North by the  LTTE in October 1990, when allocating the 50,000 houses his government intends  building. The petitioners include Ministers A. H. M. Fowzie, Rauf Hakeem,  Rishard Bathiudeen and A. L. M. Athaulla, Deputy Ministers A. R. M. Cader,  Basheer Segudawood, Faizer Mustapha, Government MP’s Faizal Cassim, M. S.  Thowfeek, M. S. M. Aslam, M. B. Farook, A. H. M. Azwer, Unais Farook, H. M. M.  Harees and UNP MP Kabir Hashim.

The Muslims who were driven out of the North with short notice  by former LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran, have ever since been living in  temporary shelters in Puttalam and various parts of the country.

“If the displaced are not fully resettled in their places of  origin, it would endorse Prabhakaran’s will to completely erase the Muslim  community from the North,” they said while requesting that humanitarian  assistance be distributed without creating categories such as new and old IDPs.” The period of ethnic cleansing in question, was between October  20 and 31, 1990 and should be incorporated under the selection criteria score of  20 or with the group of IDP’s displaced after 2008, the petitioners noted.

“None of the Human Rights Agencies have been concerned about the  Northern Muslims rights. The UNHCR has differentiated the duration of  displacement and categorized them as new and old IDPs, against the Sri Lankan  governments declaration to treat everyone equally,” they said adding that the  decision to distribute NFRIs and shelter grants to only new IDP’s, has created  unrest among the Muslims who were displaced prior to 2008.

Responding to a call by President Mahinda Rajapaksa nearly  20,000 Muslim families registered themselves for the purpose of returning to  their original homes in the North, which they lost in 1990. Excluding them on  the basis of old and new IDP’s would cause a grave injustice, they petitioners  observed.

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Fundamentalisms Face-to-face as the Dhammadīpa concept is re-affirmed in Sri Lanka

Michael Roberts, 15 March 2012

There are many forces promoting the campaign to haul the Sri Lankan government – and implicitly Sri Lankan society – before the coals through a condemnatory resolution at the UNHCR sessions in Geneva this month. That big power interests (inclusive of their manifest double standards) power this drive is undoubted. That the Sri Lankan governmental agencies over the years 1977-2012 have much to answer for is also clear – though WHO should administer such a process of monitoring and/or accusation, and how practical & useful such a project would be, is far from clear in my mind.

Apart from Tamils seeking vengeance, in my reading it is equally evident that strands of secular fundamentalism centred in INGOs, Western political moralists and Tamil and Sri Lankan activists have also inspired such Continue reading

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England cricketers face political heat in Sri Lanka

SEE  http://cricketique.wordpress.com/2012/03/15/england-xi-face-warm-ups-as-well-as-political-heat-in-sri-lanka-two-items/

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A Documentary Film on the Construction of Peradeniya University

SEE http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=r5eRKGoTtHE&feature=related with the title THE MAKING OF PERADENIYA UNIVERSITY ………………as a contemporary don reflects on the passing out of another batch of graduates at its Convocation.

“Musings on the Pera Convocation” by  Amarakeerthi Liyanage in The Island, 14 March 2012

For those of us in the Sri Lankan academia happiness is  something rather fragile, but we enormously cherish whatever little happiness  that life offers us. As university academics the happiest moment of our life is  to see our students graduate. This year, we at Peradeniya are even happier that  they are graduating in time.

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India, Sri Lanka and the UNHRC

N. Sathiya Moorthy, Courtesy of the Observer Research Foundation,  www.orfonline.org 12 March 2012**

”The Centre will consider the prevailing situation in Sri Lanka and the overall relationship between India and its island-neighbour while formulating its stand on the US-backed resolution against Sri Lanka in the UNHRC,” The Hindu quoted External Affairs Minister S M Krishna as telling newsmen at the Chennai Airport, en route to Singapore. In this context, the newspaper had this to add on what Krishna said in this regard: ”The Centre will take into account the overall relationship between India and Sri Lanka while deciding whether or not to back the resolution when it comes up for consideration at the on-going UNHRC session in Geneva.”

Of course, there was an (implied) reference to Tamil Nadu Chief Minister Jayalalithaa writing twice in the past weeks to Prime Minister Manmonhan Singh on the UNHRC vote, and urging the Centre to vote for the resolution and against Sri Lanka. Other political party leaders in the State, starting with former DMK Chief Minister M Karunanidhi, have also spoken in similar vein. Union Ministers belonging to Prime Minister Manmohan Singh’s Congress have said that the Centre would take a decision that would be of help to the Tamils in Sri Lanka. V Narayanaswamy, Minister of State in the Prime Minister’s Office, was quoted as saying as much as what non-Congress leaders in Tamil Nadu have said, or demanded. So has State Congress president B S Gnanadesikan, since. Minister Krishna in his media interaction at Chennai, like his other Congress ministerial colleagues, listed out the India-aided facilities for the Tamils in that country. Continue reading

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