Botham’s feat/feet from north to south for FOG and Lanka

Rex Clementine, in the Island, 16 August 2013

BEEFY BOTHAMNo Ashes contest passes by without the memory of Sir Ian Botham. About to be sacked as captain in 1981, Botham stepped down as England skipper in humiliation after collecting a pair in the Lord’s Test with England trailing 1-0. What happened afterwards is history as playing under Mike Brearly, Botham won England the Ashes singlehandedly 3-1. Knighted in 2007, Sir Ian has stepped up to support several charitable activities including his walks across Europe for Leukemia Research. Yesterday Sir Ian announced his latest walk from Killinochchi in the North to Seenigama in the South over eight days to support the Sri Lankan youth. Continue reading

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Indian wheels chug into Kilinochchi

KILI TRAIN 33 KILI TRAIN 44 Continue reading

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Arguments in Australia as irregular migrant flow becomes an election issue

Rowan Callick, in The Australian, 12 August 2013, where the title is “A Different Destination

callickTHE drama of this especially intense election campaign is being shadowed by a more bitter struggle being played out in the tropical zone to Australia’s north, on perilous seas and in remote islands. The characteristically bold – or impetuous – Kevin Rudd solution to the asylum-seeker dilemma initially shook up the opposition as much as it did the people-smugglers, threatening to prise away Tony Abbott’s popular grip on the issue, as intended.

146788-asylum-seeker-boatIt may not fully unravel by September 7, nor is it likely on present evidence to demonstrate sustained success by then, despite the claims of Immigration Minister Tony Burke that asylum-seekers in Indonesia now “realise that what they have paid for is no longer available to them”. About 1900 have arrived since Rudd’s Papua New Guinea-Nauru solution was struck, but numbers have moderated in recent days. Continue reading

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Lost and at sea: the asylum-seeker debate in Australia

Michael Roberts, courtesy of ASIA SENTINEL, 12 August 2013

Electoral politics have swamped the debate on irregular migrants, the “boat-people that is, in Australia. There is no change of consequence however. Rudd, Abbott, the Greens and Letters to the Editor continue to present (a) many of the old shibboleths and oversimplifications that have skewed discussions of this issue for years. The motifs peddled in most quarters are also directed by (b) misinformation, exaggeration and fabrication and (c) ideological blinkers.

ASIA SENTINEL from Asia Sentinel

A self-evident fact is often glossed over: migration in modern times, whether legal, humanitarian or irregular, is a complex phenomenon. Given the diverse lands from which migrants have headed for Australia it follows that one must attend to regional differentiation in speaking about this topic. Yet sweeping generalizations are continuously voiced – not only by politicians and human rights lawyers, but also by concerned citizens of compassionate heart and, on the other side, by intransigent Aussies on the Right. Continue reading

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Lanka Nesiah passes away: LANKA loses a perceptive scribe and ecumenical patriot

A Tribute in Colombo Telegraph, with title “No more Shanie column”

Lankanesan-NesiahColombo Telegraph is sad to announce the death yesterday (Aug. 11) in London of one its recent and most respected columnists, Lankanesan Nesiah. As a writer he used the pseudonym Shanie, a pseudonym derived from all six letters of his surname Nesiah, saying he did not wish to be “white-vanned.” His precision and the use of language through elegantly employed turns of phrase, were clearly from his father, Kunasekaram Nesiah. who was Head of the Department of Education at Peradeniya and, as a school boy at St. John’s, the proud recipient of the runner-up prize for essay writing in the British Empire. Continue reading

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Acid waterlevels in Weliweriya region: Knee-jerk reactions in closing a cutting edge-factory

Mevan Pieris, in The Island, 11 August 2011, which has the title Keeping Dipped Products Glove Factory Closed Seems a Huge Mistake and a National Disaster”

I have read with great concern and sorrow, the reports that have appeared in the news papers regarding the events that have led to the temporary closure of Dipped Products Plc factory at Weliweriya. This organization began as a joint venture between Hayleys Ltd and Richard Pieris & Co Ltd in the mid-1970s at Kottawa, to add value to raw rubber at a time when the latex based glove making industry of our country was in its infancy. The venture began to produce gloves for the export market without any foreign technologists assisting, and has since then, grown to be the world’s fifth largest producer of household & industrial rubber gloves, in the world. During this journey, Dipped Products Plc (DPL ) has expanded operations to Weliweriya and Hanwella, generating employment to many Sri Lankans and has made a major contribution towards earning a good image for Sri Lanka in the global market, as a centre of excellence in rubber glove production. DPL has even been able to set up factories in other parts of the world and can be considered to be one of the best examples of how Sri Lankans can by their own capabilities, with little or no assistance from foreigners, become a global giant. Needless to say, during this period DPL has taken enormous care not to damage the external environment. A very high standard of social responsibility has been displayed by this organization. I have very recently supervised an undergraduate research project of the waste water disposal system at DPL and write this article with first hand knowledge of DPL practices, in the fervent hope that it would contribute towards solving the prevailing problem of national importance. Continue reading

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Heavy traffic in Lanka … and a South African who likes a laugh

HEAVY TRAFFIC IN LANKA

Lungani Zama, courtesy of Daily News and Sunday Tribune

Everywhere you turn in Sri Lanka there is a cricket “match” on the go. They have an insatiable appetite for the game and the locals couldn’t wait for the opening ODI against South Africa played recently. In hindsight, I should have known better than to think that the sledging that the likes of Kumar Sangakarra and Co occasionally engage in is confined to the middle. Yours truly briefly joined an impromptu street game this week, and they certainly didn’t hold back in the slip cordon.

One bright spark told me that I used the same salon as Lasith Malinga – but shared a chef with the unmistakeable Arjuna Ranatunga! Suffice to say, he won’t be on my souvenir-receiving list. Continue reading

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August 9, 2013 · 11:52 pm

Create an enemy, target Muslims, sharpen animosities … To what end?

Mohamed Saleem, in the Island, 7 August 2013, where the title reads “Need an enemy? Target Muslims: Souring Buddhist-Muslim Relations”

2a-Moorman Tamby =213For months Sri Lanka has witnessed orchestrated anti-Muslim campaigns. Some Buddhist-clergy, self proclaimed saviours of true Buddhism, branding as Bodu Bala Sena, Sinhala Ravaya and Ravana Balakaya are instigating Buddhists, particularly the youth, into a state of frenzy that manifests in hate rhetoric against the Muslims, desecrating their belief systems and places for congregational worship. Stereotyping and targeting with the intent of causing social disharmony, although unacceptable in any cultured society, the anti-Muslim exuberance in this country is flourishing as the perpetrators feel encouraged to perform under the watchful eyes of the law enforcement agencies that have no qualms about Muslims being picked as targets. Continue reading

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Deep draft terminal at Colombo Port launched

Courtesy of Daily News, 8 August 2013

COLOMBO PORT -CONTAINER SHIPColombo’s new deep draft terminal constructed under the Colombo Port Expansion Project (CPEP) received its first container carrier, an 11,000 TEU Ultra Large Container Ship (ULCS) “MV CMA CGM PEGASUS” operated by CMA CGM, the world’s third largest container group and number one in France, on August 5. The vessel touched Colombo on its China-Europe leg, plying on its FAL3 (French Asia line) service. The first terminal of the CPEP, Colombo International Container Terminal (CICT) was constructed on a Built Own Transfer (BOT) agreement with a Public-Private-Partnership between the Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) and the China Merchants Holdings (International) Co., Ltd. (CMHI). Continue reading

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Queen Victoria rises again in Colombo

Courtesy of the Straits Times, 8 August 2013

Queen VIC 11A statue of Queen Victoria which was banished  from Sri Lanka’s presidential palace amid fears it brought bad luck will now be  spruced up for an upcoming Commonwealth summit. The 1897 statue of the former British monarch seated on a throne had been  banished from the palace a few years ago and dumped in the backyard of  Colombo’s museum. Museum superintendent Ranjith Hewage said the museum now planned to shift  the statue to a better location so that it faced the main road as well as a  public park, which was until recently named after her. “We will turn the statue from its present location to face the road,”  Hewage told AFP. “It will be done before the CHOGM (Commonwealth Heads of Government  Meeting).” Continue reading

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