Author Archives: thuppahi

About thuppahi

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

An Instance of Police Brutality and Sinhala Racism suffered recently by Alex Van Cuylenburg of Kohuwala

Alex Van Cuylenburg in Letter to Terrence Jayatilleke

“So I wanted to share [with you] what happened to me Friday night and Sri Lankan Police Brutality at the Kohuwala Police Station. I got home around 2 AM and standing outside my gate I was smoking a cigarette texting on my phone when a three wheeler showed up. Both the driver and passenger on my side were dressed in street clothes (tshirts, jeans, trousers and Bata slippers). At first I presumed that the three wheeler stopped thinking I was waiting for one. I was asked by the driver what I was doing which I ignored the question. Then the guy behind asked me the same thing. I thought I was about to get jumped. Then I noticed the third passenger was a policeman in uniform. They exited the vehicle and demanded me to give an explanation as to what I was doing claiming they were the police and one of them being the “OIC Crime”. I informed them that I was standing outside my gate and that it was my house. They said they suspected me as a burglar.

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Filed under accountability, life stories, racist thinking, sri lankan society, trauma

Porn Files Reveal Al-Qaeda Plan To Terrorize Europe

RT, courtesy of the Eurasia Review, 1 May 2012

News has emerged of a German police seizure of a large cache of Al-Qaeda’s internal documents disguised as pornography. They outline the terrorist network’s plans for possible attacks in Europe, including hijacking a cruise liner.

The documents were found by the German Federal Criminal Police in mid-March 2011 after they arrested a man called Maqsood Lodin. Investigators suspect that the Austrian received training in a terrorist camp in Pakistan and was planning to establish a sleeper cell in Germany. The man had several memory cards hidden in his clothes, when he was being detained. Among the files on them was a pornographic movie called “Kick Ass” and a file named “Sexy Tanja” the German newspaper Die Zeit reports.

The files, however, had a massive amount of data hidden under their apparent content. There were more than 100 documents apparently used by Al-Qaeda terrorists in their activities. Of particular interest to German investigators were three text files, which outline the network’s assessment of its past operations and plans for future attacks.

The documents’ author remains unknown, but it is probably someone from Al-Qaeda’s inner circle of leadership. They were penned between 2008 and 2009, the Germans believe, but are still of great value to law enforcement agencies today.

Apparently the leadership of the terrorist network is unhappy with its inability to perform a major attack in the West over recent years. The documents indicate that the case of Lodin and another man, Yusuf Ocak, who allegedly received the same training in the same camp and was returning to Europe with Lodin, is part of a strategy to change that.

They and many others were to form a number of sleeper cells in Europe which would be available for eventual attacks. Al-Qaeda envisioned a twofold action plan, with a number of small terrorist attacks launched one after another to distract law enforcers and keep them pre-occupied. While this happened, a large-scale operation would be in the works unnoticed by the authorities.

The documents, called “Future Works”, outline a number of possible ways a major terrorist attacks could be carried out. One idea is to seize a cruise liner, take the crew and passengers hostage and start shooting prisoners in front of cameras unless the terrorists’ demands are met. The approach is referred to as “taking jihad to the sea” in the roadmap.

The exact value the intelligence has in fighting against Al-Qaeda is yet to be seen. It does not state any dates or targets of possible attacks. Nevertheless it provides a unique insight into the internal workings of Al-Qaeda.

The cache may be as precious a piece of evidence as the archive of Osama Bin Laden, captured by US Navy SEALs after the raid on his compound a year ago. The US announced that it will publish some of that booty soon.

It is unlikely that Bin Laden’s fabled porn collection would be among the data made public, but the news indicates that it may have had a sinister purpose behind it.

Web Editor’s Notethis is May 1st not April 1st so i presume this is no joke!

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Osama’s compound rubble as metaphor for several strained relationships

Amanda Hodge, in The Australian, 2 May 2012 where it was presented under a different title

A FUNNY thing happened at the site where Osama bin Laden’s house once stood the other day. Three Chinese businessmen, arrested for entering the Abbottabad neighbourhood where the al-Qa’ida chief lived a life of secret mediocrity, tried to cut a deal with police to sell “genuine bin Laden rubble” over the internet.

The story is as notable for its slapstick value as it is for the fact that residents of Bilal Town can finally – after a year of fear and intrusion – see something to laugh about. Continue reading

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Filed under Afghanistan, Al Qaeda, american imperialism, australian media, fundamentalism, historical interpretation, life stories, military strategy, terrorism, world events & processes

Misleading Black & White Readings of the Thai Military in the West

John Blaxland in The Australian, 1 May 2012

POPULAR perception in the West often characterises the Thai military as being a totally self-serving and coup-prone organisation.  But, in reflecting on political developments in Southeast Asia, Western observers tend to follow the classic Western liberal tendency of painting complex situations in black-and-white terms. Invariably, there is more grey than most are prepared to concede.

So while many like to portray the Thai armed forces as looking for an excuse to seek more power, this does not seem to be the case. Following the disastrous and bloody events in the streets of Bangkok in May 1992, the military studiously avoided staging another coup for 14 years – a remarkably long period of time for Thailand.

When General Sonthi Boonyaratklin staged his bloodless coup on September 19, 2006, he and his colleagues suddenly realised why the army had avoided staging such coups for so long. Running the country was a lot harder in 2006 than it had been in the good old days of the Cold War. Continue reading

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Filed under australian media, authoritarian regimes, historical interpretation, politIcal discourse, world events & processes

Reopening Old Wounds in the Search for “Truth”

Padraig Colman, in the Island, April 2012, where the title was ” Human Rights Hypocrisy

My friends in the UK are asking me what is happening to Sri Lanka as they read about the Commons debate and the shenanigans in Geneva. This is what I told them.

On February 22 2012, the House of Commons witnessed one of its periodic orgies of self-righteousness. The Pecksniffery was ecumenical – opposition MPs eagerly lined up to offer their unsolicited support for the government line. The issue that united so many diverse humbugs was the human rights record of the Sri Lankan government. The debate was about whether an independent, international commission of inquiry should be established to investigate allegations of war crimes perpetrated at the conclusion of Sri Lanka’s armed conflict in 2009. Continue reading

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Filed under accountability, authoritarian regimes, democratic measures, life stories, LTTE, politIcal discourse, power politics, reconciliation, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, truth as casualty of war, violence of language, war crimes, world events & processes

Rohan Gunaratna evaluates Political Situation in the Maldives

Courtesy of Future Directions International, where the article appeared under a different title

Key Points:

  • High profile acts of terrorism, both in the Maldives and overseas, are likely, unless the government can arrest the rapid spread of extremist ideology and initiate a community engagement programme.
  • Increasing drug consumption is as challenging a problem as the spread of extremism.
  • The requirement for good governance and bi-partisan consensus-building and is imperative if lasting political stability is to be achieved.

 Summary: Mohammed Waheed Hassan, the new President of the Maldives since 7 February 2012, faces two grave challenges – the twin threats of extremism and drug trafficking.  Nonetheless, like his predecessor, the ousted Mohamed Nasheed, President Waheed also faces constraits in trying to resolve these national problems. For instance, Nasheed resigned when the Maldivian Police refused an order that was deemed illegal, and the Military did not carry out an order to disarm and ‘cut down’ the police, which paved the way for the then Vice President Waheed to assume office. Continue reading

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Filed under Indian Ocean politics, politIcal discourse, power politics, world events & processes

Soaring Immigration under Labour Party and Multi-cultural Britain

Julian Gavaghan in Daily Mail, April 2012 … where the article bore a different title:

The immigration boom under Labour led to the face of Britain changing faster than any major nation except Italy, a study by an Oxford University think tank revealed. During the five-year peak of the influx, the UK’s migrant population soared by 22 per cent – double the average of G8 countries, figures from the Migration Observatory show. Over the past two decades, Britain’s foreign-born population has increased from 3.8million – or 7 per cent of the total population – in 1993 to almost 7million, or 12 per cent per cent in 2010.

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Filed under communal relations, cultural transmission, immigration, world affairs

Islamophobia? Fears from the Right … and the Ground

I. “The truth about polygamy: A special investigation into how Muslim men are exploiting the benefits system in the UK,” by Sue Reid for the Daily Mail, September 2011

Ghulam is a taxi driver who lives in Blackburn, a once-booming textile town in Lancashire. He has a terrace house near his local mosque (one of 53 in the area), a silver Nissan car and a very complex private life. For, he has so many children that he struggles to remember their names, and five wives from various countries, including Yemen, Egypt, Turkey and his own birthplace, Pakistan. Ghulam’s latest bride is a shy 20-year-old called Hafeza. He brought her to Britain from Morocco, soon after his 45th birthday earlier this year. They married in an Islamic wedding ceremony called ‘the Nikah’ in her village in Morocco, with Hafeza’s pleased parents among the guests. Continue reading

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Remembrance not Victory

Lalin Fernando

In the hearts of our people there is a real desire to find something done now to find lasting expression of their feeling for those who gave their lives in the war.” Sir Percy Fitzpatrick (1919)

A  War Heroes week is held annually in May. This in Colombo includes a Victory Parade on Galle Face grounds in the morning and a Remembrance ceremony on the Parliamentary grounds in the evening. The latter are held nationwide too. However a victory parade would appear to be at cross purposes with SL’s attempts at national reconciliation and reintegration. It will call into question the purpose of a victory parade when the nation pays its respects to the fallen in what was virtually a civil war. It would then appear that the cost of the nearly 30 year  conflict  that left about 100,000 Sri Lankans dead, 300,000 IDPs in camps, stalled development , caused massive destruction everywhere and left the most affected conflict areas devastated, has been forgotten. Thankfully 3 years on there are less than 7,000 IDPs to be resettled, while as vouched for by the visiting Indian parliamentary delegation too, substantial infrastructure development has taken place in the North and East. Yet the ghosts of war could re surface and threaten the peace that was brought about by great sacrifice. Continue reading

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Filed under politIcal discourse, Rajapaksa regime, reconciliation, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, tolerance, world events & processes

Sri Lanka: Analysing the Role of Arts And Culture In Reconciliation

Iromi Dharmawardhane in Eurasia Review, 23 April 2012

War tears us apart. Needless to say, seeing and experiencing – or committing – violence and injustice every waking day, for long years of our life, will take an untold toll on our humanity. Thus, when war ends, the cessation of violence and fighting on the battlefields and regained physical security of person does not serve to extinguish the rage and pain searing through communities who have hitherto been devastated by experiences of death, abduction, torture, harassment, intimidation, destruction, and deprivation. The war may be in the past, but the hurt continues. The world having been only a place of insecurity, anxiety, fear, and agony for those directly affected by war, the government and the people of a conflict-affected nation must do everything to rebuild the lives of the victims of war and allow the time and space needed to heal their gaping wounds. FOR THE REST,  SEE http://www.eurasiareview.com/23042012-sri-lanka-the-role-of-arts-and-culture-in-reconciliation-analysis/

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Filed under atrocities, cultural transmission, politIcal discourse, population, reconciliation, rehabilitation, Sinhala-Tamil Relations, sri lankan society, Tamil migration, truth as casualty of war, world affairs