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Arugam Bay Wonders

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Lanka’s many wonders capture Daily News readers’ imagination

Rajmi Manatunga

For a small tropical island shadowed by the Indian subcontinent, Sri Lanka has many names, ‘Serendib’, ‘Pearl of the Indian Ocean’, ‘Ratnadeepa’ to state a few. All these terms denote the splendour and opulence one encounters in this country of ours, which was called the most beautiful land on Earth by Marco Polo.

The verity of that great traveller’s words, uttered centuries back, is confirmed by the number of coupons Daily News is receiving for the ‘Seven Wonders of Sri Lanka’ competition launched on May 26 to pick the most beautiful and amazing sites of our country.

The number of places nominated by over 4,000 readers who have sent us coupons during the last two weeks exceed 250, each significant, wonderful and invaluable to Mother Lanka in its own way.

They range from places reigning supreme on almost every Sri Lankan’s list of Wonders like Sigiriya, Sinharaja, Arugam Bay, to relatively less-well known sites like Wavulpana, Ussangoda, Kuchchaweli, and many a place you may be passing everyday without realising their worth like the BMICH, Independence Square, Galle Butterfly Bridge and the World Trade Centre. Who says Sri Lanka’s wonders are confined to the provinces ? We have a number of entries nominating places in the heart of ‘industrialised’ Colombo as wonders, including the Colombo Town Hall, Hamilton canal, Kayman’s Gate and Khan clock tower – Pettah.

Places of worship belonging to all faiths are also prominent in our lengthy list of wonders, with many readers giving preference to religious places like Kirinda temple, Ran Koth Viharaya, Dambulla rock temple, Thewatte Basilica church, Seenigama Devalaya, Thalawila church, Veherahena, Munneswaram kovil and Nallur temple. As announced earlier, the winners of the final draw will receive prizes worth over Rs. three million, the first prize being a brand new motor car.

The other prizes include an LG LCD Television, a Piaggio motor cycle, an Elba electric cooker, an LG fully-auto washing machine, an LG double-door refrigerator, an LG colour television, an LG home theatre system, an LG microwave oven and a LG DVD Player.

Only Daily News readers are eligible for this mega competition. It is not too late to send in your coupon. Do not forget to be specific in nominating your seven wonders and fill in the coupon in clear block capital letters.

source:
http://www.dailynews.lk/2008/06/13/news13.asp

Land Grab Minutes

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Arugam Bay Land Grab

Outrage at Arugam Bay

The Government of Sri Lanka has imposed a rule in Sri Lanka that no – one can rebuild homes within in a certain distance of the sea, beach. Sometimes rumour was that the distance was 100 meters other times the distance was to be 200 meters.

This has meant that nearly six months on people are still living in refugee camps. They are getting desperate to move back home. Home for many is on/near the beach because they are fishing people. However, in Arugam Bay they have other plans!
Current situation specific to Arugam Bay

On May 17th there was a meeting for Arugam Bay representatives. Participating were the Tourist Board Chairman Mr Udaya Nanayakkara with collegues, Harshna Navarante Sewelanka Foundation Chairman and colleagues. Plus representatives from the Fisheries, Tourism,Surfing, Women. They were seeking further insight as to the plans of the tourist board for the region.

This is a summary of the response from the Chairman of the Tourist Board as described in the minutes of the meeting. Brackets are my comments otherwise the points below are copied from the minutes of the meeting.

  1. I do not have any record of your tourism businesses. Legally you cannot prove that you had a tourism business because you are not registered with the boardA?a??A?
    (Even The Stardust is not considered legal even tough Per bought the land, the Stardust will be pulled down)
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  2. We are only providing support for the registered, licensed people under our scheme
  3. If you build any illegal structures the army and the police will come and remove them
  4. I will show you a plan of that was prepared by the tourism board. There is a red line to indicate the land that has been acquired by the tourism board
    (There has been no consultation with the local people on this)
  5. Tourism should not just benefit the Colombo-based big business ownersA?a??A?

    source:
    http://www.arugam-bay.org/01a_landgrab/landgrab.htm

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Going to A’bay, Again

So in a rare moment of total synergy I’m going to Arugambay tomorrow. O.k. it isn’t completely confirmed yet, but I’m trying my hand at this optimism thing people are always raving about. Lisa has to get back (since she now lives in A’bay) and her health insurance is paying for the trip (so free trip there, yeah). Then Lindsay and Jim are coming back to Colombo, so I can share the cost of getting back with them. Thus, I’m off. Lisa is at this moment (yes, 10 p.m. at night) confirming that we can actually leave at 5 a.m. tomorrow. I’m being positive that we are leaving then — I’ve already set my alarm.

This doesn’t completely make up for missing the trip to A’bay over Wesak, since that would have been a completely free ride, but it is close.

The point of this post is to avoid the frantic e-mails people send when there is a bombing and they don’t hear from me. I’ll be off-line for at least four days (maybe five). Yea

source:
http://expatwithelephants.blogspot.com/2008/06/going-to-abay-again.html

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Drunken monkeys on a spree

By Senaka De Silva

A group of angry monkeys raided Pusgollewa village in the Generic for imdur Kebitigollewa police area on Tuesday evening and created havoc in apparent retaliation for the killing of two monkeys by illicit liquor traders who provided their flesh to their customers.

Drunken

Wildlife officials said the monkeys who had noticed the hides of Cheap levothroid doses their kith and kin spread on a rock to dry, stormed the illegal liquor den, helped themselves to the liquor and overturned the liquor barrels.

Later in their drunken state they had raided houses in the village and destroyed pots and cooking utensils after eating any food that was available.

The occupants of those houses fled in fear of possible harm leaving the houses to the mercy of the monkeys. Some of the monkeys, in their drunken stupor are said to have fallen from trees they had climbed.

Wildlife officials rushed to the scene and chased away the monkeys into the nearby jungle by lighting fire crackers.

Kebitigollewa police and Wildlife officials are conducting inquiries to arrest the individuals who killed the monkeys.

source:
http://www.dailymirror.lk/DM_BLOG/Sections/frmNewsDetailView.aspx?ARTID=17569

EU never pin pointed to Sri Lanka

EU never pin pointed to Sri Lanka says EU high official

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The EU and Sri Lanka had very constructive discussions on various issues including GSP+ at the EU-Sri Lanka Joint Commission held in past two days. Deputy Director General for external Relations of EU Joao Aguiar Machado said the EU is the major development partner for Sri Lanka and both parties work together for a common goal.He said terrorism is a global issue but EU concerns on human right violations and media freedom of Sri Lanka. Addressing media in Colombo he said issues of the GSP+ is a matter before them. However EU has to renew the GSP+ scheme after its observations, he said.

\”We are not in a final stage, he commented.

He said the EU has serious concerns about Sri Lanka\’s human rights record and will withhold a 70 million-euro aid package unless it opens up.

The commission said the package was dependent on Sri Lanka removing barriers to humanitarian assistance, including resolving visa issues for Red Cross and U.N. workers in the country.

Full press statement of , Mr Joao Aguiar Machado, Deputy Director General for External Relations, European Commission

I have been in Sri Lanka to Co-chair the Joint Commission between the European Commission and the government of Sri Lanka A?A?A? this should be a regular event to review our relations. I am pleased we were able to have this meeting after a 4-year delay. I also held a number of bilateral meetings with government.

Relations between the European Commission and Sri Lanka are governed by a Cooperation Agreement from 1995. The EU and Sri Lanka have deep, long-standing relations, covering economic, trade, political and cultural matters. The EU is committed to maintaining these relations and I welcomed the opportunity provided by this visit for open and frank discussions.

The meetings were positive in helping to understand our mutual positions, to review the areas of cooperation that are working well and to identify areas where performance can improve.

We noted the advances made since the visit of the EU Troika here in March 2008, such as the beginnings of the democratic process in the east. We expressed our hope that the situation in the east can be further stabilised, including through disarming all paramilitary groups and control of terrorist activities. We also discussed the continued work of the APRC and expressed hope that its second proposal will be ambitious and supported. On the issue of terrorism, a parallel meeting is taking place today between government and the EU member states so I will not cover this here, except to say the EU condemns absolutely and unreservedly the terrorist attacks being committed by the LTTE.

The Government updated us on progress in preparing its application for GSP+. We explained the criteria that need to be fulfilled to be eligible to the GSP+ regime, namely the ratification and effective implementation of the 27 international conventions. We also reassured the government that no decision has been taken and that, when its starts, the assessment process will be fair and impartial. We encouraged Sri Lanka to take all the necessary steps to ensure its compliance so GSP+ can continue bring benefits to the country, in particular those people employed in the textile sector. We encouraged the Government to submit its outstanding reports to the relevant monitoring bodies as soon as possible.

We expressed our serious concerns with the human rights situation in Sri Lanka, as indicated by a wide range of sources including reports from United Nations rapporteurs as well as the statements by the multi-national International Group of Eminent Persons which recently decided to withdraw from Sri Lanka. We recalled the seriousness of the calls by the IIGEP and the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights, to the Government to deliver concrete results through considering their recommendations seriously, taking cases to court, and ensuring effective and independent human rights monitoring.

Our development and humanitarian aid was discussed. The Government welcomed our past aid and our continued support as one of Sri LankaA?A?A?s most constant and supportive donors. We reviewed progress on implementing our 148 million Euro of tsunami assistance, including the reconstruction of 160 kilometres of the road from Matara to Batticaloa with our partners the Roads Development Authority and ADB, our building 400 kilometres of road within Ampara, of building 3000 houses and so forth. We discussed the continued substantial support that we are providing to Sri Lanka, including the further 70 million Euro this year.

We emphasised however that there are increasing problems delivering this aid in Sri Lanka that need to be resolved. These included the unblocking visas for ICRC, UN and NGOs, improving access for implementing agencies including into the Vanni for emergency work, the need to stop taxation of NGOs for charitable humanitarian work, the need to improve security for agencies by stressing the positive role they play in Sri Lanka and the need to tackle the shortage and price distortions of the countryA?A?A?s bitumen monopoly that is threatening completion of all road projects in the country. We explained that failure to resolve these issues could make delivery of aid impossible which would effectively stop the projects we are funding and are hoping to fund. This is in neither the EUA?A?A?s nor Sri LankaA?A?A?s interest. The government stated that it is addressing some of these issues already such as on visas and promised to engage to find solutions on these other points. We welcome this and we will work with them.

In conclusion, these talks have been constructive. We agreed to hold the next EC-Sri Lanka Joint Commission meeting next year in Brussels.

source:
Buy generic propecia online cheap http://www.lankaeverything.com/vinews/srilanka/20080611131601.php

Seventh Wonder: Arugam Bay?

First weekly draw this week

The first weekly draw of ‘Seven Wonders of Sri Lanka’ the competition of the year launched by the Daily News will be held this week.

The winners of the weekly draw will be selected from among over 3,000 entries we have received so far from Daily News readers islandwide. The lucky winners of this first weekly draw will receive a host of prizes including mobile phones and stays at star-class hotels. All readers who have sent coupons in line with the competition rules will be eligible for the draw.

The ‘Seven Wonders of Sri Lanka’ competition was commenced to pick the seven most popular places in the country.

Among the most popular place in Sri Lanka, according to the nominations already received, are the Sri Dalada Maligawa, Sinharaja forest, Arugambay, Sigiriya and the Sri Pada.

The contest which is open only to ‘Daily News’ readers, features a large number prizes worth over Rs.three million in addition to the valuable prizes to be distributed by weekly draws. Readers can take part in the contest by sending in the seven places in Sri Lanka they consider to be the seven greatest wonders (in the order of their preference), written on coupons published on the Daily News from May 26.

A special feature of the contest is the ability of readers to increase their chances of winning by sending in as many coupons as possible.

The Seven Wonders voted for by the majority of readers will be declared the Seven Wonders of Sri Lanka, and the readers whose coupons get these Seven Wonders in correct order will receive the prizes.

The first prize of the contest ‘Seven Wonders of Sri Lanka’ will be a Geely motor car worth Rs.two million while the other prizes include an LG LCD Television, a Piaggio motor cycle, an Elba electric cooker, an LG fully-auto washing machine, an LG double-door refrigerator, an LG colour television, an LG home theatre system, an LG microwave oven and a LG DVD Player.

source:
http://www.dailynews.lk/2008/06/11/news14.asp Seroflo 125 price in india Etodolac 400 mg price

The Eastern Province gets going (or does it?)

By : Mirak RaheemSri Lankans have become used to the idea of elections every year, so the polls for the Eastern Provincial Council should have been just another routine exercise. Yet this was not the case in early May. These elections were being held for a provincial council that had not been constituted for more than a decade, in a province that had experienced large-scale fighting, destruction of neighbourhoods and public buildings, mass displacement and human-rights violations.

Provincial Councils were first established as a part of the 1987 Indo-Lanka Accord, and the north and east were merged in deference to the demand by Tamil nationalists. During the last two years, there have been dramatic changes on the ground. The north and east was de-merged following a 2006 Supreme Court order. The A?a??E?shadow warA?a??a?? between the security forces, the LTTE and other Tamil militant groups became a full-scale war, in breach of the 2002 Ceasefire Agreement. In the two years since the de-merger, the governmentA?a??a??s military takeover of the east was almost complete, paving the way for political consolidation.

On 10 May, elections were held in the three constituent districts of the Eastern Province A?a??a?? Ampara, Batticaloa and Trincomalee A?a??a?? amidst tight security, and observed by a number of election-monitoring groups. Some 982,751 registered voters had to choose from more than 18 political parties in order to elect 37 council members, one of whom would assume the post of chief minister. The governing alliance A?a??a?? the United PeopleA?a??a??s Freedom Alliance (UPFA), which included the breakaway group from the LTTE, the Tamil Makkal Viduthalai Pulikhal (TMVP) A?a??a?? won in seven of the ten polling divisions, with an overall majority of 52 percent and ultimately 20 of the seats. The opposition coalition, of the United National Party (UNP) and the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC), won some 42 percent of the vote and 15 seats. This left just two seats for other parties.

Before getting lost in the political implications of the victory, it could be useful to look at the popular response to the election. Altogether 65.8 percent of registered voters cast their ballot; in Sri Lanka, this turnout is not impressive. The question that civil-society leaders of Batticaloa asked when confronted by the local-government elections that were held in that district this March still stands: A?a??A?For whom are these elections?A?a??A?

High stakes, A?a??E?lowA?a??a?? turnout

Scepticism about the elections was reflected in the voter turnout, which was all the more unimpressive given the urgency with which the government and political parties treated the exercise. Of its massive cabinet of 108 ministers, the government sent many into the three districts, and was eventually accused of misusing government property, vehicles and employees for campaign work. The ministers were also accused of bringing in thugs from outside, who were reportedly involved in intimidation.

The leadership of the SLMC resigned from their parliamentary seats in order to contest the elections. While the main Tamil party from the north and east, the Tamil National Alliance, did not attempt to contest the poll, citing the security situation, this action is unlikely to de-legitimise the results, given the participation of all the other main political parties. But the fact of the matter is that each of these main parties had a point to prove. The government had to establish that it had the popular support of the people it had A?a??E?liberatedA?a??a??; the TMVPA?a??a??s political future depended on its ability to claim the chief-ministerial berth; the SLMC had to show that it carried the confidence of the Muslim community; and the UNP needed to confirm that it had the ability to win elections.

While there were no killings reported on election day A?a??a?? which is significant in a country where this has been a trend A?a??a?? there were various forms of violence and intimidation reported, particularly in Tamil and Muslim areas. The issue of violence and malfeasance is now being raised not just by the political parties, but also by the various election-monitoring groups, with some, such as the Centre for Monitoring Election Violence (CMEV), demanding a re-poll in certain areas. (On the other hand, a group of 17 international observers invited by the government claimed that they had witnessed a free and fair election.) The majority of reported violations were against the TMVP and other constituents of the UPFA. CMEV reported that in several polling stations in Tirukkovil, a largely Tamil area in Ampara, there was A?a??E?impersonationA?a??a??. Here, even children cast votes for the TMVP, using ballot cards that were being distributed in front of the polling station. In Kathankudy, a largely Muslim town in Batticaloa, groups gathered outside polling stations and attempted to distribute false ID cards, so that people could vote.

With the national and international election monitors having departed and political parties back to A?a??E?businessA?a??a??, violence was continuing as of deadline. Some of this is clearly election related. There have been attacks on the houses of candidates and their supporters, particularly in Batticaloa and Valaichennai. In others incidents, such as the shooting of two Sinhala policemen in Batticaloa town on 13 May, the reasons are unknown. There are now worries that these violations will simply become part of the wider human-rights crisis concentrated in the east and north.

While there is a serious need for the Election Commissioner to look into the violations in an independent manner, and conduct re-polling where necessary, the election results cannot be dismissed simply as the result of mass intimidation and fraud. It is conceivable that the political planks of the government and the TMVP did resonate with the electorate. For its part, the government initiated a number of development projects on the ground leading up to the elections, and may have convinced the constituents that supporting the ruling coalition would be the most effective method of securing funds to rebuild livelihoods and local economies. It is also possible that the governmentA?a??a??s evident openness towards appointing a chief minister from any community made it easier to campaign among the minorities. On the security front, of course, the government is on less sure footing, at least with regards to the Tamil community.

Communalism and

coexistence

The Eastern ProvinceA?a??a??s demography is a tight balance between the three main ethnic groups in Sri Lanka: the Sinhalese, here accounting for a quarter of the population; and the Tamils and Muslims, more or less equally making up the rest. That there is now a contest as to whether the Muslims have overtaken the Tamils as the majority community in the Eastern Province indicates the extreme level of ethnicisation in politics of the east.

It was clear at the outset that this election would be fought on communal lines. The election speeches of a number of the candidates directly addressed the fears of each ethnic group, rather than addressing the shared problems and hopes of the people. The two main alliances sought to present a multi-party grouping and pluralist candidate list, but the communal lines were already clearly drawn. The UNP-SLMC alliance put forward the SLMC leader, Rauf Hakeem, as it main candidate, and warned that electing a TMVP leader could threaten to split the country. But the alliance faced a major obstacle in encouraging Tamils to come forward to vote. Prominent Tamils were simply fearful of contesting against the TMVP.

To be cont.

Himal Southasi

source:
http://www.dailymirror.lk/DM_BLOG/Sections/frmNewsDetailView.aspx?ARTID=17527

Arms seized, Tigers nabbed in East search operation

Several suspected LTTE operatives in the East were rounded up and arms and ammunition hidden in the area recovered by the STF during search operations conducted in the Ampara and Batticaloa areas last week.

A Police Headquarters communique said officers of the Arugam Bay STF camp acting on a tip off by an informant recovered a live hand grenade from a fallow paddy field in Samanthurai.

It was defused and handed over to Pottuvil Police for further investigation.

Officers of the STF camps in Palugamam, Wellawali and Kalawaya in a joint search operation arrested two LTTE suspects named Kuruppiah Thangaraja and Somasundaram Raja and handed them over to the Kalawanchikudi police for interrogation. Officers of the Buy finpecia paypal Arugam Bay STF camp also arrested six persons suspected to be involved in terrorist activities and handed them over to the Pottuwil police for interrogation.

All six suspects Pathmanathan Pathmarasa, Inoka Akilan, Vinai Nagasrasa, Ramalingam Ravindran and Pathmanathan Padma Purendran were from Mannar.

Six suspects who had allegedly damaged public property near the Kaththankudy Hisbullah Cultural Centre were also arrested by the officers of the Ariyampadi STF camp and handed over to the Kaththankudi police for interrogation.

source:
http://www.dailynews.lk/2008/06/11/sec02.asp Rogaine sale walgreens

Has the LTTE returned to the East?

Voveran online calculator Two separate incidents involving the LTTE were reported from the recently liberated eastern Province over the weekend.In one incident ten persons who had been abducted in Pottuvil area by an unidentified gang were released on Saturday. They told police that they were abducted by the LTTE and detained in a camp.

Pottuvil police with the help of the security forces were conducting inquiries to trace the location of the camp.

In another incident a homeguard was abducted in Pulmoddai area allegedly by the LTTE when he was roaming in the jungle with five children to collect fruits.

The armed gang who detained the home guard ordered the children to bring 50 packets of rice to release him. However, the children who were frightened of going back to meet them, informed police.

Police said a search operation in the area to trace the whereabouts of the home guard and to track down the abductors was going on. A?A?A?A?SDS

source:
http://www.dailymirror.lk/DM_BLOG/Sections/frmNewsDetailView.aspx?ARTID=17163 Buy tegretol 200mg

Treehouse on the Lake

For you guys who wish to break the long journey to Arugam Bay:
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There is also a brand new house with a surrounding terrace available. Stay close with a local lovely family. They will offer you excellent and fresh srilankan or western food.

One night at the treehouse is about 1000 Rs. and a night in their just finished guesthouse 2000 Rs. (for a spacious room with double bed and mosquito net).

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A?A? Directions: Turn left at the last crossing just before Centauria Hotel. Turn right before the lake.

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NOTEBOOK OF A NOBODY

Civilian deaths are not acceptable under any circumstances
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Rajiva Wijesinha, Secretary-General of the Secretariat for Co-ordinating the Peace Process, has been extremely prompt with his lengthy response to this column of last week. This columnist had originally stated that the Peace Secretariat was in a state of denial with regard to civilian deaths. Wijesinha says that it is not true and that he would never try to justify civilian deaths. We will accept his word for that but the point made by this column still remains valid. Military operations began not long after the Mahinda Rajapaksa took office. Since then, hundreds of civilians have died. I trust Wijesinha will agree that only some of these have been by the LTTE; some by the Karuna/Pillaiyan Group and some by the security forces. Many of these were not caused by ground or aerial operations in the course of a battle but by deliberate targeting of the civilians. In several cases when the Government and the security forces are accused of causing civilian deaths both by UN and other international bodies and also by local human rights organisations, Wijesinha has been quick to “explain how they happened” (to use his own words). This column does not expect Wijesinha to issue statements on every violation of human rights and on every civilian death. But when he only issues statements A?a??E?explainingA?a??a?? civilian deaths in the course of military operations, is he not being selective? To this columnistA?a??a??s and, I am sure, to most independent observersA?a??a?? minds, this is not just an explanation but a justification. Is that not being in a state of denial?

Wijesinha will no doubt acknowledge that the LTTE has been responsible for hundreds of civilian deaths, as this column and other human rights organisations have accused them of. Would he also acknowledge that the security forces and the Karuna/Pillaiyan Group have also been accused of similar civilian deaths. (Wijesinha does not seem to like this columnA?a??a??s reference to this Karuna/Pillaiyan Group by this name A?a??a?? he prefers to call them TMVP, the name by which they are registered as a political party and with which the UPFA has signed an MoU. More about this later.)

Let us consider just a few well-known cases of civilian deaths : the killing of five students at Trincomalee in 2006, the 17 ACF aid workers at Mutur, the several civilians shot and killed in the churches at Pesalai and Allaipiddy (including five fishermen at Pesalai), ten farm labourers killed in Pottuvil, five students shot and killed at the Farm School in Vavuniya and the civilians (including schoolchildren) killed in claymore mine attacks at Periyamadhu, and Murikandy in the Vanni. Besides scores of individuals, including parliamentarians, clergypersons and ordinary citizens, have been abducted or extra-judicially killed or disappeared without a trace. Given his liberal antecedents, this columnist is prepared to accept WijesinhaA?a??a??s regret over these killings as being genuine. We are also prepared to accept his statement that he is engaged in A?a??E?positive activities in pursuit of peaceA?a??a??. But when he only issues statements “explaining” (or justifying) attacks on civilians, he is treading on vulnerable ground.

Conscription of underage children, Human Rights and TMVP

Wijesinha is certainly on very thin ground when he asserts that a high proportion of children in the custody of the Karuna/Pillaiyan Group have been released. This is not the view of independent observers in the Batticaloa District. Hundreds of children were taken away not only from IDP camps but from homes and schools as well. Under 50 have been released. This is certainly a token number meant to fool naA?A?ve folk; and Wijesinha is being incredibly naA?A?ve if he really believes what he has stated.

Wijesinha implies that ever since the TMVP was formed, the Karuna/Pillaiyan Group have turned over a new leaf. We hope he realises that the acronym TMVP stands for Thamil Makkal Viduthalai Puligal, which translated means Liberation Tigers of the Tamil People. Does not that by itself ring an alarm bell in Wijesinha and others who now sing praises of Pillaiyan? The people of the East have yet to see any change in the “liberated” East except a change in the label attached to their tormentors. Abductions and extra-judicial killings go on as before. What does Wijesinha have to say about the new extra-parliamentary tactic of abducting families and relatives of parliamentarians before crucial votes in Parliament? Wijesinha, given the nature of his work and the contacts he has, cannot be unaware that the ground situation for the people of the Batticaloa District has not changed one bit. They still live in fear of terrorism unleashed by both strands of Liberation Tigers but now more dangerously because one strand enjoys the backing and protection of the Government and the security forces.

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This columnist has no doubt that Wijesinha is committed to peace, to observance of human rights and the rule of law and to a just political settlement on the National Question. We have also no reason to doubt that he is engaging himself in A?a??E?positive activities in pursuit of peaceA?a??a??. This columnist has no intention of advising him on how to do his job. But we re-iterate that it will serve his cause better if he refrains from trying to defend the indefensible.

War and Journalistic Freedom

The Defence Secretary recently summoned some working journalists from state-owned newspapers and warned them about the reports they filed. He is reported to have told them that if they criticised the armed forces, the Government would not defend them if they were physically “attacked”. In a parallel development, the website of the Defence Ministry has reportedly referred to such media persons as “traitors”. We now have a clue as to the attackers of Keith Noyahr, though Mervyn de Silva was more open when he took on the Rupavahini editors.

War reporting is a delicate task. While the reporter may be privy to operational details, a responsible journalist will exercise some self-censorship. In the case of the current “war” in Sri Lanka, our journalists have shown discretion. If at all, they could be faulted for excessive self-censorship. Corruption, mismanagement and deliberate and unnecessary violation of human rights, even by the defence establishment and the security forces, needs to be exposed. Such exposes only help to win the war, by rooting out the corrupt and the incompetent from decision-making.

William Burchett was an Australian journalist who was in China as a correspondent of the London Daily Express. In 1945, he was the first foreign reporter to enter Hiroshima after the atomic bombing and filed his A?a??E?scoop of the centuryA?a??a?? in his report as a A?a??E?warning to the worldA?a??a?? that radiation poisoning was a reality in Hiroshima. His story was denied and a campaign launched to refute his claim. He was denounced as having fallen victim to enemy propaganda. Later, Burchett covered the Korean War. A US organisation claimed that the North Koreans had massacred all American prisoners. Within ten days, Burchett had filed pictures of US prisoners-ofA?a??a??war playing baseball and basketball and of a General, reported dead, playing chess with his guards. The Australian authorities had also reported a soldier killed in action. Burchett was able to report to the manA?a??a??s mother and to the Melbourne Sun that he was alive and well. For all his trouble, the Australian Government denied him a replacement Passport.

Despite the harassment he underwent at the hands of defence authorities, Burchett was quite clear about what was required in war journalism. He said: “Being discreet is obviously important but pretty much depends on what sort of field you are operating in, what sort of journalistic domain. If someone knew the date of the landing to open a second front during World War Two and they disclosed it, then they ought to be shot, because that would be risking the lives of tens of thousands of people. A lot of the journalists accredited to the allied side at the time had that date but nobody dared jeopardise the whole operation. ItA?a??a??s an extreme example but shows that while the job of the journalist is to get facts back to the public, exclusively if possible, there are limits.”

source:
http://www.island.lk/2008/06/07/features4.html

Fresh clashes in Kattankudi

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Communal violence disrupts relief efforts in the east

SRI LANKA: Communal violence disrupts relief efforts in the east

COLOMBO, 3 June 2008 (IRIN) – Communal clashes and ethnic tension between Tamils and Muslims have been disrupting humanitarian work in the eastern Batticaloa District of Sri Lanka since 22 May, UN and other relief workers said.

Two Tamils and five Muslims have been killed. Relief officials told IRIN they were reluctant to send staff into the field for fear of getting caught up in the violence.

“I have been unable to travel out since 22 May,” Rev Sylvester Sritharan, head of the Eastern Human Economic Development Centre, affiliated to the Catholic charity Caritas, told IRIN.

“No one wants to take the chance of getting on the road and being unable to turn back,” he said. “We can’t send out field staff, contractors, labourers, no one, we can’t take that chance.”

Humanitarian agencies are assisting 18,000 internally displaced people (IDPs) in the district and 124,000 former IDPs who have been resettled in their former villages since mid-2007, Thandie Mwape, head of the Batticaloa field office of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), told IRIN.

“They [relief organisations] have been engaged in relief work as well as helping the newly returned regain a sense of normalcy,” she said.

Relief and recovery efforts were disrupted for a week in late May, the Inter Agency Standing Committee (ISAC) reported in its 30 May situation update.

“Humanitarian operations were disrupted in the district between 22 and 28 May as a result of the clashes,” the report said. “As the southern route [from Batticaloa] through Kathankudi and the northern route through Eravur remained flash points during the week, with curfews imposed at times, most agencies limited their movements.”

“A week of tension”

A local Tamil working with an international agency was attacked by a mob on 26 May in Eravur town north of Batticaloa City, which is 300km east of the capital, Colombo, heightening agencies’ reluctance to send their staff into the field, Sritharan told IRIN.

“It was a week of tension and agencies restricted movement,” Mwape said. “Public life was also at a standstill with no transport and government and private offices closed.”

Clashes were triggered by the 22 May killing of two members of the Tamil Makkal Viduthalai Pullikal (TMVP), the prominent Tamil political party in the district, in Kathankudi, a Muslim majority town south of Batticaloa City.

“There is a history of tension between the two communities and the killings of the TMVP members added to it,” according to Mujeeb Rahaman, information officer of the Colombo-based Muslim Information Centre (MIC) rights group.

Two Muslims were killed on the same day in Kathankudi and another Muslim woman died during mob violence in Eravur on 26 May, according to police.

At least 300 Tamil families from Ariyampathi, a village near Eravur, sought shelter in schools and churches between 27 and 29 May, fearing reprisals, Sritharan said.

The situation was finally brought under control with the direct intervention of Sivanesathurai Chandrakanthan, alias Pillayan, the head of the TMVP and chief minister of the new Eastern Provincial Council.

Despite Chandrakanthan’s intervention, tensions rose again on 1 June after the body of a Muslim was recovered in Kathankudi.

On the morning of 2 June, residents of Eravur and Kathankudi remained indoors and public transport was limited, Sritharan told IRIN. Muslims in the two towns had also called for a general work shutdown to protest against the latest murder.
“Under conditions like this how can we take a chance to go out?” he asked.

“People are still scared and nervous, and rightly so,” MIC’s Rahaman told IRIN. “The killings have not stopped, that is where the fear is.”

UN officials in Batticaloa said that if the high-level discussions between the two communities continued, calm could be restored in Batticaloa.

“We hope that the dialogue continues,” OCHA’s Mwape said. “It will help to bring down the tension and restore trust between the communities, and hopefully enable us to get on with our relief and reconstruction activities.”

ap/bj/mw[END]

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The essence of life

Monday, 2 June 2008

The essence of life





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You don’t have to go away to ‘find’ anything, it’s already here within you, but the break from routine and giving yourself time does help. We fill our lives with so much ‘doing’ that we never have time to ‘be’. Various pursuits throughout my life have allowed me a glimpse of joy of presence A?a??a?? those moments when you are completely at peace within the moment, without thought, without mind-clutter, not dwelling on the past or worrying about a future that hasn’t happened.These moments spent wave-riding are just such a pursuit, but i’ve had moments dj’ing when for hours on end the records seem to choose themselves and everything ‘comes together’, privately listening to music can connect to the timeless as can sex, (some) drugs, yoga, dancing, the awe inspiring enjoyment of beauty…. These glimpses show us how we can be all the time, and that’s worth pursuing, it’s what humanity has called at different times and in different places God, Allah, Krishna, spirit, soul, holiness, enlightenment, the divine… More please!

A surf trip to tourist backwater like the East coast of Sri Lanka is a good place to contemplate such matters.The surf is good (not windblown) from sunrise til about 10am and then from about 5pm til dark at about 6.45pm leaving a lot of hours with nowt much to do. I’ve clocked up some serious hammock time and have been reading (amongst other things) the eminently sensible Eckhart Tolle who talks about this kind of stuff with such clarity and ease without any airy fairy California-isms that it’s hard to ignore. So this in combination with several glimpses of ‘Life’ a day through wave riding is a recipe for getting deep!

“Don’t think, Feel!” as the Karate Kid once said.

In summary:
1 dislocated thumb
1 sliced hand (by an oyster)
4 reef scrapes
67 Mosquito bites
10 Sand fly bites
4 jelly fish stings (3 mild, 1 electro-shock therapy)
6345 new freckles
1 sun-bleached mop of hair
2 hangovers
3 monkey raids
1 snapped fin
5 dings (1 severe)
280 waves ridden
87 games of shithead
4 books read
18 yoga sessions
15 new friends
12 blog posts
53 amazing meals
14 snoozes

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