Author Archives: thuppahi

About thuppahi

Sri Lankan and Australian nationality; student of Sri Lankan society and politics; sociology of cricket;

Tamil testimonies from 2009: UTHR versus LLRC

Darshanie Ratnawalli, in The Nation, 27 May 2012, where a different title was  used: “Hoole is not cool.”

“When you stare into the abyss the abyss stares back…..” — Friedrich Nietzsche

The testimonies of the hoards of civilians who recounted their NFZ experiences to the LLRC contradict the set of testimonies culled by Rajan Hoole and Co and included in the UTHR(J) special Report 34. It’s not a case of a lot of blind men trying to describe an elephant. The two batches of testimonies are plain irreconcilable. They do not complement but contradict each other on the most fundamental level.  Continue reading

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Filed under accountability, citizen journalism, life stories, LTTE, military strategy, politIcal discourse, Rajapaksa regime, reconciliation, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, Tamil civilians, Tamil Tiger fighters, truth as casualty of war, world events & processes

A return to the Mahavamsa era? The game of thrones

Indi Samarajiva, in The Nation, 27 May 2012

The Mahavamsa (a history of Sri Lanka) is full of conflicts between generals and kings. Usually, the more bloodthirsty and unscrupulous would win. Our current elected ruler Mahinda Rajapaksa has had his own general conflicts, namely with one Sarath Fonseka. In the old days, Fonseka would have staged a coup, as in literally try to cut Mahinda’s head off, and Mahinda would – if that failed – tie him to four elephants and split his parts asunder. Can’t do that anymore. Instead Fonseka ran for office and lost and Mahinda tossed him in jail. Now, however, Fonseka is out. Which is weird. Continue reading

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The Fonseka Saga: Who shall cast the next stone?

Captain Elmo Jayawardena

Elmo’s Covering Note: “Sarath Fonseka is out of jail. that is what matters. I do not know his politics – I do not know anybody’s politics as that has been the biggest sadness of our home land: POLITICS. I wrote this attached article in appreciation of General Fonseka and his contribution to win the war so that you and I can now live without the fearof bombs and such
Blue skies
Elmo

General Fonseka is out and free, ‘Hurrah for the Mary, hurrah for the lamb’ he sure is “shouting the battle cry of freedom” in the loudest voice and very rightly so. Of course there will be a hundred fathers who will now look to collect some borrowed credit for making the so-called ‘prodigal son’ walk out of the Welikada Jail to life and his loved ones. Yes, we all know the rank has been stripped and his name has been erased from all military records. He is no chalk mark on a black board that has been wiped out. He is The General and he shall always remain the General in the minds of the proletariat. The question now is what path he will take in the current political quagmire. Good luck to you General, I am no expert on politics but even in my naivety I am well aware that Paradise today is full of Cardboard Sandos, self promoted heroes and false prophets who for some unbelievable reason seem to be the flavour of the day. Continue reading

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Sanderatne reviews Kapi Kannangara’s book on caste and class transformations

Nimal Sanderatne in Sunday Times, 27 May 2012

A.P. Kannangara’s, A Survey of Social Change in an Imperial Regime, is a fascinating narrative of how different segments of society in British Ceylon responded to the changes in economic opportunities and administrative changes brought about by the British. It is an absorbing documentation of the caste and class transitions that occurred during British rule. The descriptions of these transitions and transformations of caste and social status are intriguing and captivating. Continue reading

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Domestic airports to straddle the island

Uditha Kumarasinghe in Sunday Observer, 27 May 2012**

The Civil Aviation Ministry has decided to set up two domestic airports in Kandy and Nuwara Eliya, as set out under the Mahinda Chinthana vision for the future to develop Sri Lanka as an aviation hub. Aviation Minister Piyankara Jayaratne had held discussions with Central Province Chief Minister Sarath Ekanayake and other Government officials to establish domestic airports in Kandy and Nuwara Eliya. A land in Kundasale has already been identified to set up the domestic airport in Kandy. Continue reading

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Hitchens in 2009 on the Tamil Cause … and its Fate under Pirapaharan

Christopher Hitchens, on 25 May 2009, in an article in SLATE entitled “The End of the Tamil Tigers. Insurgencies don’t always have history on their side” see http://www.slate.com/articles/news_and_politics/fighting_words/2009/05/the_end_of_the_tamil_tigers.html **

In the late fall of 1978, I was approached by a Sri Lankan Tamil rights group, which visited the office of the socialist weekly in London where I was then working and entreated me to pay a visit to their country. I say “their” country, though they actually referred to it as “Ceylon”: the British colonial name that continued to be the country’s name after independence in 1948. It was only changed in 1972. The word Lanka is simply the name for island in Sanskrit, and the prefix Sri has a connotation of holiness, and the alteration generally reflected the aspirations and preferences of the Sinhalese-speaking and Buddhist majority. So the difference in emphasis there was pretty large to begin with. Image carried in Slate with caption “Sri Lankan soldiers with the remains of what’s said to be Tamil Tiger leader Velupillai Prabhakaran” Continue reading

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Misreading and Distorting the Sri Lankan War, 2009-2012

Michael Roberts 25 May 2012

The recent UNHRC resolution sponsored by USA and directed at the government of Sri Lanka was the culmination of a campaign that began during the last stages of Eelam War IV. Since 2010 articulate circles in the West have been convinced that there had been “40,000 civilian deaths” during this phase. In contrast Rohan Gunaratna asserted that there were 1400 civilian deaths, of which 200 were inflicted by the LTTE. Both calculations are erroneous. Estimates provided by three moderate Tamils who have had regular access to the Tamil personnel who were on the ground indicate that the death toll, inclusive of Tamil Tiger personnel, was in the range 10,000 to 16,000, in circumstances where it was impossible to differentiate in all cases between those Tiger, those recently conscripted as auxiliaries and those truly civilian.

 Tamils streaming across Nandikadal Lagoon probably late April–Pic by AFP

It is towards the clarification of these specific circumstances and a criticism of the claims presented by a variety of human rights agencies, moral crusaders and media engines that this essay is directed. The campaign has been sustained by a mixture of lies and half-truths amidst truths, compounded further by a wilful blindness to the manner in which the LTTE utilised the Tamil populace in its domain as labour pool, protective shield and bargaining chip meant to induce a ”humanitarian intervention.” The massaging of death toll figures, therefore, is just one facet of a massive propaganda heist.

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Filed under accountability, atrocities, australian media, authoritarian regimes, Eelam, gordon weiss, historical interpretation, life stories, LTTE, mass conscription, military strategy, nationalism, news fabrication, NGOs, politIcal discourse, power politics, prabhakaran, propaganda, reconciliation, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, tamil refugees, Tamil Tiger fighters, truth as casualty of war, violence of language, war crimes, world events & processes

Duncan White wins gold medal in record time at 1950 Empire Games

SEE http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bwq8nH7N6hU

Duncan White of Sri Lanka (then called Ceylon)at the age of 32, honoured his newly independent country by following up his silver medal performance at the 1948 Olympics with this fine run of 52.5 seconds over the 440 Yards Hurdles,just 0.3 seconds outside the the world record .Silver went to John Holland of New Zealand an the bronze to Geoff Goodacre of Australia.

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My first day after returning to my very own paradise

Harold Gunatillake

This article is appropriate to be read by those expatriates the world over, aspiring and dreaming to return to their motherland, at least on a trial basis, to give it a go, thinking of those cherished by-gone memories, most of us experienced in our youth and after. This article may be perused by those happily settled in other countries, never to return types, but they will be wasting their precious time in reading this article, as inevitably will make wrong prejudiced impressions, perhaps due to   some bitter feelings of some  past episodes.

This article may not be beneficial for those intending to visit ‘The Paradise’ on a holiday, as they would return over-fed, enjoying the extravagant hospitalities of well-wishes, friends and relatives, over-feeding with the traditional unhealthy starchy food, such as fried rice, pittus, indiappans, godhas, Nasi Goren, and among others, not tasted perhaps since they left the ‘sinking ship’, in the sixties. Continue reading

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Jayantha Dhanapala criticises Sri Lanka’s suicidal diplomacy in UN corridors

Jayantha Dhanapala, reproduced from LMD with permission from its publisher Media Services (www.LMD.lk)  where it appeared under this title: Death of Sri Lankan diplomacy by suicide. This essay  was also reprinted in The Nation, on Sunday 20 May 2012, alongside another article by Dayan Jayatilaka which  essays a rebuttal of Dhanapala’s claims on some issues.

The death of Sri Lankan diplomacy by suicide took place in Geneva on March 22. For 64 years, it had served the country well despite the size of its professional cadre and persistent political meddling by all regimes. The link between suicidal diplomacy and political directions received from Colombo is becoming obvious after the adoption of the resolution with anti-US and anti-Indian statements and actions being leaked to the media.

A populist President is milking the Geneva debacle to such an extent that one wonders whether it was a deliberate act of hara-kiri. There has been a plethora of comment on the Geneva events ranging from vitriolic abuse of the West in general and the US in particular, anti-Indian sentiment, defiant xenophobia and jingoism to ‘I told you so’ comments and efforts to shift the blame to the luckless and reportedly divided Geneva delegation. Amidst this, a number of key factors have either been concealed or have not been apparent. Continue reading

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