Category Archives: life stories

The Deceptive Tranquillity surrounding Sri Lankan Independence: ‘The Jewel of the East yet has its Flaws’

Harshan Kumarasingham, Heidelberg Papers No 92, June 2013,  courtesy of Dept of Political Science, SudAsien Institut, Heidelberg Universitat [1]

This article investigates the period before Sri Lanka was engulfed by civil war and ethnic strife and how things changed so rapidly following colonial rule.  Sri Lanka’s independence was seen as a model to be followed in the decolonisation of the British Empire due to the island’s peace, prosperity, indigenous leadership and its preference for British institutions.  However, behind this façade the years surrounding Sri Lankan independence also saw the foundations for the vicious civil war that has dominated all recent coverage of this Indian Ocean state.  This article assesses how warning signs were misread or ignored and how early political decisions in this era forged the beginnings of the future problems ahead. [2]

Keywords: Sri Lanka, Decolonisation, British Empire, Communalism, Ethnic Conflict Continue reading

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Assassins at Large: The Rajiv Gandhi KILL of 1991

Rajiv Ghandhi-Haribabu Camera8Rajiv Ghandhi-Haribabu Camera9

I- “Jayalalitha to release Rajiv Gandhi killers,” by S. Venkat Narayan, courtesy of Island February 19, 2014,

NEW DELHI, February 19: Twenty-three years after they were jailed, the Tamil  Nadu Government headed by Chief Minister Jayaram Jayalalitha today decided to  set free within three days all the seven convicts in the Rajiv Gandhi  assassination case after the Indian Supreme Court commuted the death penalty of  three of them to life sentence. Besides Santhan, Murugan, the husband of Nalini, Perarivalan, who earned a  major reprieve from the Supreme Court yesterday which spared them from gallows,  Nalini, Robert Pious, Jayakumar and Ravichan-dran will walk out from prison. Four of the men who will be set free are Sri Lankan Tamils. They are: Murugan,  Santhan, Robert Payas and V Jayakumar. Continue reading

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Cash-Strapped? Not on your Life! Tamils of Nandikadal Last Redoubt had loads strapped to their bodies

 reporting speech by AJ Cabraal  to Foreign Correspondents Association   — The Island, 20 February 2014, where the title reads “Last stages of War: Tamils moved with billions of rupees strapped to their  bodies – Cabraal

Currency notes to the tune of billions of rupees, most of which were soiled  as a result of being tied to the bodies of Northern Tamils who were forced to  move about with the LTTE during the last stages of the war, had been deposited  with state banks during May 2009, the Central Bank Governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal  revealed yesterday.

07--SRI_LANKA_Profughi_Tamil_2009(600_x_387)Addressing the Foreign Correspondents Association, after its members had  visited the Bank’s Currency Museum, Cabraal said that two days after the conflict had concluded, he and his officials along with staff of  the Bank of Ceylon and Peoples Bank, visited the refugee camps in the  North. “Initially the Tamils were reluctant to deposit their monies with us,  since they did not know where it would go. But once we identified ourselves, the  notes flowed in. It ran into billions of rupees. Containers had to be used to  collect and transport them to the respective banks.” Continue reading

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Political Conflict in South Asia: An Incisive Overview

18 February 2014 (2)K. M . de Silva reviewing Gerald H. Peiris: Political Conflict in South AsiaUniversity of Peradeniya Press, Kandy, Sri Lanka, 2013, pp. i-vi; 1-251

Professor G. H. Peiris has grappled with several difficult themes and in working the essence of these, as he saw them into an outstanding monograph, he has made an important contribution to scholarship.  In writing on political conflict in South Asia he has produced, a study of a political system that has evolved mostly under British rule from the eighteenth century to the middle of the twentieth century when the transfer of power from the British to indigenous hands took place.  Naturally this monograph includes a survey of territories that formed what was called the Raj or the British Raj: there are also parts of the British empire located in South Asia, like Ceylon (now Sri Lanka), and other even smaller states such as the Maldives that were not part of the Raj, but were linked to formally or informally.  There were other territories close to the Raj, for example, the Kingdom of Nepal (now the Republic of Nepal).  The last time a Sri Lankan, indeed a South Asian, scholar attempted a survey of a range of territories in South Asia as varied as those in Professor Peiris’s monograph was the late Stanley J. Tambiah with his Leveling Crowds: Ethnonationalist Conflicts and Collective Violence in South Asia, published by the University of California Press, Berkeley and Los Angeles in 1996. Continue reading

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Revelations: Edward Snowden, Hero or Villain?

 BBC Panel Discussion:Spying and Surveillance: The Snowden Files” … requiring 48 minutes of patient listening to a wide-ranging discussion which also provides insights on the manner in which the media today reports on distant conflicts in churnalism style. SNOWDEN

 PARTICIPANTS

Anne McElvoy: a British journalist for The Economist and Evening Standard, and a broadcaster

Luke Harding: a foreign correspondent working for The Guardian

Annette Dittert:  ARD German TV’s foreign correspondent in the UK.

Alain de Botton: a Swiss/British writer, philosopher, television presenter and entrepreneur, resident in the United Kingdom

Sir David Omand: previously a serving officer in GCHQ – the British intelligence agency responsible for providing signals intelligence (SIGINT) Continue reading

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Pitfalls in Counting the Dead during the Final Phase of Eelam War IV

Gerald H. Peiris, courtesy of Colombo Telegraph where a range of blog comments will be found…. https://www.colombotelegraph.com/index.php/encountering-death-counts-in-the-final-phase-of-the-eelam-war 

85a-february_09_vanni_04 TamilNet 8 Feb 200988b-daru 35from Darusman report

Contents

1. PreambleCross-Section   of Estimates Computation Methods

 2                     

2.

4

3.

7

3.1. ‘Population Change Method’: Applications

8

3.2. ‘Injury-to-Death Ratio Method’: Applications

10

3.3. ‘Sporadic Information Method’: Sample of   Applications

16

3.3.1. University Teachers for Human Rights – Jaffna 16
3.3.2. UNSG- Panel of Experts on Accountability in Sri   Lanka 20
3.3.3. Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission 21
3.3.4. Michael Roberts 24
3.4. ‘Satellite Imagery Interpretation Method’:   Applications

24

3.5. ‘Census Method’: Applications

26

3.5.1.     Government of Sri Lanka                                                             26
4. Endnotes

28

5. Main References

30

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Great Men live to regret their inventions: the Kalashnikov

Quintus De Zylva

ALBERT EINSTEIN reflecting on his role in the development of the atomic bomb said “ If only I had known, I should have become a watchmaker”!

AK 47 AND KALSHNIKOV Continue reading

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The Burghers in Sri Lanka: A Hunt for Photographs

 The VOC heritage in Sri Lanka: The Dutch Burghers of Ceylon 1640 -2015

 I. An Appeal from Nina Van Dort:

Dear Burghers,  …….. Our team members will be in Melbourne from the 13th – 20th February 2014, Australia for 8 days collecting images. We are staying with Roger and Norreen Wright who are so kind to put up with us .Once again the team would like to ask your kind assistance , as we are on the look-out for more images which will be presented  at the 2015 Burgher Heritage  Exhibition in Amsterdam.

Since we equipped with a camera, scanner and gadgets, we have the capacity to scan photographs at your homes if desirable and/or feasible.  Kindly   spread the word around.  My contact address is ninavandort@live.com.

NINA VAN D ORT Nina is in black 4th from right as you face the pic Continue reading

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Homely Warmth. Basking in Sri Lanka yet again — our 11th visit

Bryan and Joy Atkinson

This would be our eleventh visit to Serendipity and a new adventure was awaiting us, our Guide from our very first visit and now a family friend of long standing, Rohana would as usual be waiting for us at the Airport as he has on every occasion, however he had not informed us that a new levy had been imposed on all visitors who now have to pay $35.00 US upon entry, we only learned of this after standing in the passport queue for some time. Continue reading

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Australia’s Emergence: Western civilisation’s legacy has a dark side

Riaz Hassan,  Sociology, Flinders University, Adelaide …. from http://theconversation.com/curriculum-review-western-civilisations-legacy-has-a-dark-side-22082 – where revealing blog comments can be located.

The push is currently on for Australia’s national curriculum to place more emphasis on the history of Western civilisation and its values. But if we accept that the purpose of such an education is to achieve a proper and fuller appreciation of this legacy and its role in the making of the modern world (and Australia), we cannot ignore the many significant elements of its dark side.

ABORIGINAL GENOCIDE  Western civilisation and history have a darker side of genocide and land dispossession: a history that is often ignored. Wikimedia Commons

Core Values: It is commonplace to hear that Judeo-Christian values are the core of Western civilisation. But, ironically, destroying Jewish religious idols was key to historical anti-Semitism in Christian European societies. Jews were accused of various kinds of conspiracies and evil designs. Continue reading

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