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Scotsmen & Mercy Corps

Executive pledges A?A?250,000 to aid the crisis in Darfur

HAMISH MACDONELL SCOTTISH POLITICAL EDITOR ( hmacdonell@scotsman.com)

THE new SNP government is expanding the reach and scope of the Executive’s international aid fund by committing A?A?250,000 to ease the plight of those suffering in Darfur in east Africa, it emerged yesterday.

Jack McConnell, the former First Minister, set up a fund of A?A?4.5 million for international development during his time in office, most of which was allocated to charities in Malawi, which is now twinned with Scotland.

Mr McConnell believed that the best way to make an impact was to concentrate much of the Executive’s very limited resources in one country.

Now, however, Alex Salmond has changed the emphasis. He has promised to double the size of the fund to A?A?9 million in the new spending round, which will be announced in November, and he has decided to spread the Executive’s resources more widely.

The decision to give A?A?250,000 to the Scottish Catholic International Aid Fund for its work in the crisis-hit region of Darfur is an example, both of the extra funds which the new Executive is committed to providing, but also the wider scope of its aid programme.

The Scottish Executive is limited to what it can do in international development and ministers have to be careful not to impinge on the remit of the much bigger Department for International Development in London, which co-ordinates Britain’s aid effort.

But the Darfur initiative falls within the remit of the Scottish Executive, principally because the money is going to a Scottish charity, not to the authorities in Darfur.

A spokeswoman for the Executive also confirmed that ministers in Edinburgh had been in close touch with Whitehall while drawing up this grant and that the International Development Department was “fully behind” the initiative.

Mary Cullen, the head of communications at SCIAF, said the money would be very well spent helping “the poorest of the poor”.

“It will go immediately to projects on the ground in Darfur to help keep people alive through what continues to be a complex and desperate crisis,” she said. “Together with the threat of violence, there is the very real risk of large scale fatalities from diseases such as cholera and malaria.

“The displaced population in Darfur now accounts for a staggering 2.1 million people, with the number of new arrivals going up all the time. Since January alone, 110,000 new people have fled to camps for protection, food and shelter.”

The war in the Darfur region of Sudan has been raging for four years and has left hundreds of thousands dead, either through the conflict itself or indirectly from starvation and drought. Announcing the cash, external affairs minister Linda Fabiani said the money would support more than 120,000 people in communities most affected by the violence and unrest in the south and west of the Sudanese province.

More than two million people are thought to have been displaced within Darfur and a further 235,000 have fled to neighbouring Chad.

Britain had allocated A?A?104 million since April, and the Executive is already contributing by supporting an educational project in south Sudan with a A?A?190,000 award.

Ms Fabiani said: “With the arrival of the rainy season, we are looking at immediate and practical solutions to support impoverished and displaced people.

“In an area where three quarters of the population are farmers, this money from the Scottish government will provide essential seeds, tools and training to allow people to begin planting to feed themselves and their families.”

Meanwhile, Mr Salmond is to try to raise Scotland’s profile on the international stage with a trip to Brussels this week when he will meet a number of senior European figures, including Peter Mandelson, the EU Trade Commissioner.

LATEST ROUND OF GRANTS

THE latest round of Executive grants for international development included many for Malawi and a small number for Scottish charities working in disaster areas.

The grants included:

A?a??A? A?A?250,000 to provide facilities and resources to train Malawians in tourism development.

A?a??A? A?A?137,000 to train people in the Mulanje region in Malawi to deal with and solve their own problems in health, nutrition and HIV/AIDS control.

A?a??A? A?A?70,000 to train specialist eye doctors for Saving Sight in Malawi.

A?a??A? A?A?222,000 on a project to provide reliable power supplies for health facilities in rural Malawi.

A?a??A? A?A?218,000 to help the Malawian growers of macadamia nuts to get their produce to markets.

A?a??A? A?A?185,000 for Mercy Corps Scotland in its work at Arugam Bay, Sri Lanka, helping the community to recover after the tsunami.

A?a??A? A?A?167,000 to fund Scottish volunteers to work with local NGOs in Sri Lanka on health and water projects in areas affected by the Tsunami.

A?a??A? A?A?100,000 – two awards of A?A?50,000, one to Oxfam and one to Mercy Corps Scotland – to help them in their work in Pakistan after the earthquake.

This article: http://news.scotsman.com/politics.cfm?id=1071902007

Last updated: 09-Jul-07 00:26 BST
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Comments Add your comment

1. AM2, Glasgow / 1:08am 10 Jul 2007

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SCIAF, their website says, “was set up by the Catholic Bishops of Scotland in 1965” and is “the official aid agency of the Catholic Church in Scotland”.Should the executive really be giving to a denominational charity?

Report as unsuitable

2. James, Dundee / 1:26am 10 Jul 2007
The Scottish Catholic International Aid Fund (Sciaf) has launched an appeal to raise funds for Darfur.Donations can be made via its website or through an emergency donation line on .

Perhaps as a Scottish rather than a UK based appeal is the rationale?

As you’re well aware AM2 the population of Darfur are almost exclusively Muslim.

Helping these people is a noble thing to do.

IT’S A DISGRACE THAT YOU RAISE THIS AS A SECTARIAN ISSUE.

It seems you just cant help yourself.

Report as unsuitable

3. AM2, Glasgow / 1:32am 10 Jul 2007
I’m certainly not criticising the aim of helping the people of Darfur. Neither am I raising a “sectarian issue”; that’s a straw man argument if ever I saw one! I’m raising a query about the appropriateness of public funds being given to a charity operated by a religious denomination. You see that as a “disgrace” only because, as we’ve seen before, you can’t tolerate anything that might be construed as criticism of the SNP.Report as unsuitable

4. Hebb, Scotia / 1:34am 10 Jul 2007
Oh for goodness sake AM2, give it a rest. Can you not see anything positive in what our new Scottish government does? You’ll be telling us next that SCIAF siphons off the aid money destined for the poor to fund militant Jesuit training camps preparing to overthrow what’s left of your beloved British Empire in Scotland.Come to think of it that’s not a bad idea. Maybe we could also institute a modern-day Scottish Inquisition to deal with the remnants of the heretical sect that is Unionism.

Report as unsuitable

5. James, Dundee / 1:41am 10 Jul 2007
#3 No I object not only as a Scot, but also as a Catholic. You are taking a cheap shot.There are certain aspects of SNP policy that I personally disagree with – but I’m on board with most of their manifesto.

I see nothing wrong with this charitable gesture.

Report as unsuitable

6. AM2, Glasgow / 1:47am 10 Jul 2007
#5 JamesI raised a perfectly reasonable procedural query, but now you’re raising an issue of race and religion. I’m certainly not going down that line with this.

Report as unsuitable

7. James, Dundee / 1:50am 10 Jul 2007
#6 The ice is particularly thin at this time of the year. Tread carefully! Report as unsuitable

8. AM2, Glasgow / 2:08am 10 Jul 2007
#7 JamesAs I said, I’m certainly not going down any such line.

Report as unsuitable

9. Buchanan, California / 4:44am 10 Jul 2007
AM2Have some respect for your Scottish Government
and also the the dire situation in Darfur.

Your continual whinging, glass half empty pessimissim is simply depressing in addition to boring.

I see you also criticized Alex Salmond’s nobel & voluntary donation of his salary to local charities.
Do you have something against charities now or is
it simply a brain dead reflex that you have in that
you read any article about SNP or Alex doing something positive so you just automatically criticize
like some Unionist automaton.

Any contribution by any means to help the situation
in Darfur is to be applauded. I suggest you get
out your cheque book and do some good, the
few seconds it takes to write the cheque in support
of Darfur will be time much better spend than the drivel you pen here.

Try and support your elected Scottish government’s efforts to serve the best interests of Scotland. They have no other agenda than that no matter what
conspiracy theories you might have.

Saor Alba

Report as unsuitable

10. Mercutio, Falkirk / 5:56am 10 Jul 2007
International aid /development is not a matter for the Scottish Executive, as with the previous administration this is political posturing.Report as unsuitable

11. Boy Wonder / 6:34am 10 Jul 2007
Everybody knows how antireligious I am, but even I would never criticise the work being done by any charitable aid to countries that are in dire need.For AM2 to do so is beyond the pale!

It doesn’t matter who is giving the aid in Darfur as long as they are getting every penny we can send to help alleviate the awful plight these people are in.

I’d hate to think that if it was us, people would stop to wonder who’s best placed to render the aid!

Report as unsuitable

12. ex katman 2, ex sudan / 7:37am 10 Jul 2007
Sadly the truth is ,you can throw all the money you like at these crisis countries but it will never reach the intended victims.If we have learnt anything from past episodes,it is that the money never reaches the poor intended people because of the corruption in all these countries.If you are of the opinion that if only a pitance gets through then thats ok,then you are only fuelling the corrupt govermentsReport as unsuitable

13. Dr Who / 8:00am 10 Jul 2007
Well despite AM2 taking this opportunity to bring his religous bigotry against Catholics, I have to say that I like the way the money is being targeted to actual the concrete goals of enabling the people of Darfur to improve its ability to solve their own problems with education. As an athiest I dont give a whatever to the Catholics using their already established infrastructure to administer these funds. There is little chance of the forces who continue this war getting their hands on these funds.Lets face one other point as well. If these people had massive OIL reserves there the US, UK, Australians would be there quick smart to stop the war and start to asset strip the country. We would have another Iraq on our hands.

Report as unsuitable

14. Nick_Byrne, Glasgow / 8:06am 10 Jul 2007
A?A?250,000 is not going to make much difference to the atrocities being committed in Darfur.I wasn’t aware the goverment was allowed to make donations to charities – as we’ve seen that leads to all manner of allegations.

Report as unsuitable

15. James Moore / 8:18am 10 Jul 2007
What a waste of money! This token gesture will not achieve anything! Report as unsuitable

16. paulr / 8:42am 10 Jul 2007
He would be better off giving the 250,000 to the tram scheme in edinburghReport as unsuitable

17. Arugambay, Arugam Bay / 8:54am 10 Jul 2007

Quote:
“A?a??A? A?A?185,000 for Mercy Corps Scotland in its work at Arugam Bay, Sri Lanka, helping the community to recover after the tsunami.”

I am a professional Brit. Expat living in Arugam Bay since 1977 – 30 years.
This Century me and my family never left the small village, including Boxing Day 2004 when we all learned to swim….so we tend know what is going on.
Let me assure you:
Mercy Corpse Inc. has indeed been ‘active’ around here, but they left a long time ago!
Further, they wasted valuable cash from the US Oprah Whinfrey show on totally USELESS projects, splitting the entire Community by supporting only or mainly the Islamic Community around us.
There are many real Tsunami victims, such as us – and our non-Muslim neighbours, such as Tamils and Sinhalse- who swear on oath that we all have not received a single cent (or anything else) from anyone, incl. Mercy Corpse.
Kind, caring and concerned PRIVATE citizens have trusted large organization too much – and funded nothing but their elaborate lifestyle in our region.
In Tamil, the word “N.G.O.” is pronounced: “E.N.J.O.Y.” they do enjoy life in the tropics – with your kindly donated money – that is our opinion and experience here.
Do not believe their PR exercises!

look at true Community feed back, such as:
www.arugam.info
and search for the performance of Mercy Corpse and other time and cash wasting NGO’s – specially the Red Cross.
Arugam Bay Hotel Association
AbHa
Arugam Bay
Eastern Sri Lanka

Relevant for AbaY?

Archive for June 29th, 2007

Uncertain Future for Tissa VitharanaA?a??a??s Proposals to the A.P.R.C

by D.B.S. JEYARAJ

Cabinet minister and All Party Representative Committee (APRC) chairman Prof. Tissa Vitharana participated at a forum held on June 18th at the Sri Lanka press institute. The gathering comprised journalists, media activists and publishers.

The forum was intended to encourage more discussion in all three linguistic media about Prof. VitharaneA?a??a??s working paper submitted to the APRC. Vitharana was hopeful of formulating a final draft in about six weeks time.The APRC itself has met 27 times during the past eight months.

On the following day President Mahinda Rajapakse met with members of the APRC conference in Parliament. According to media reports Rajapakse has stated that A?a??A? the APRC was primarily for the benefit of India and the Western nationsA?a??A?.

[President Mahinda Rajapaksa meeting British Prime Minister Tony Blair, Aug 2006]

It was a stratagem to demonstrate to the International Community (IC) that a political process was on.

Rajapakse disappointed many minority community members by his frank admission of what he envisaged the APRCA?a??a??s role to be.

The President also re-iterated his stance on what the final product will be. Sri Lanka was to be a unitary state. The unit of devolution was to be the district.

Rajapakse also mildly admonished Vitharana about some newspaper reports attributed to the Professor.

Rajapakse was unhappy that an impression had been conveyed through the media that the unitary state was out and that the devolution unit would be the province.

The president advised Vitharana to be careful about the media and inform him privately of dissenting viewpoints.

It had transpired during the discussions at the press institute forum that there was a difference between the Tissa Vitharana paper and the Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) position.

There was congruence between the chief opposition United National Party (UNP) stance and that of the Vitharana proposals.

But the SLFP stance was sharply divergent on the essentials from that of Vitharana. Now Rajapakse was confirming that the SLFP position on unitary and district as unit were non – negotiable.

During the discussions at the Press Institute forum Prof. Vitharana stated that there should be a consensus between the SLFP and the UNP to successfully implement whatever agreed upon at the APRC. It also required support of the majority of other political parties. Now it was being made clear by Rajapakse that such a consensus could only be on the basis of an inflexible SLFP stance.

Despite the worthwhile efforts of Prof. Vitharana to steer the APRC through troubled waters there is a school of thought which doubts his bona fides on the issue. This school opines that the APRC was a mere sham initiated by Rajapakse to con the world and buy time till his security forces established categorical supremacy over the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).

The APRC was doomed from the start as agreement among diversely extreme points of view could not be reached. To go along with the APRC exercise therefore was either a conspiracy or sheer naivete on VitharanaA?a??a??s part this school of thought, felt.

[Prof. Tissa Vitharana] Cheap arcoxia

This writer agrees partly with the notion that Rajapakse had ulterior motives in convening the APRC. I am also doubtful about a positive result from the APRC. But I do not agree with the charge that Vitharana is a catspaw of Rajapakse. I feel that the veteran Samasamaajist has been fihting a lonely battle to evolve something concrete out of the APRC.

While Rajapakse may have had his own reasons for appointing Vitharana, the APRC chairman has been striving hard to achieve solid results. If Vitharana fails the consequences will be tragic indeed!

This writer is not naively optimistic about the APRC . It is not that one has suspended disbelief about reality . It is more a case of trying to support the best of the limited choices available.

If the APRC fails we would have lost another chance to reach an acceptable political solution. In the absence of such a solution the rationale for the on going war gets strenghened and A?a??A?legitimisedA?a??A? further. Therefore this column will continue as far as possible to support exercises like the APRC .

It is in this context that this writer has lent consistent support to the APRC and has endorsed the majority expert report and also the Vitharana working paper. The APRC and experts panel have not been ideal fora where like – minded people converged to formulate just and reasonable solutions.

They have in a sense been battle- grounds reflecting the divisions in the Sri Lankan polity. They have also been fora where political games reminiscent of Byzantine intrigues are being played.

In spite of this climate several persons have risen above race and religion to try and arrive at solutions beneficial to the Country at large rather than parochial interests.

VitharanaA?a??a??s working paper itself was necessitated due to the divisions among members of the experts panel appointed by President Rajapakse. The expert panel was expected to assist the APRC in devising a basis for discussion. But the expert panel itself got divided.

Eleven members comprising Six Sinhala, Four Tamil and One Muslim submitted a proposal described as the majority report. Four Sinhala experts presented another report called the minority report. Two other Sinhala members came up with a dissenting report each.

The expert panel majority report was the most progressive of all reports in form and content. Besides it had multi – ethnic support whereas the other reports were by members of the majority community alone.

But Rajapakse supported by the ethno – fascists and national socialists adopted a hostile attitude towards it.There was a concerted campaign against it although the IC as well as many political parties like the UNP supported it.

With four expert reports circulating and the President being opposed to the best of them all the APRC was in a state of turmoil. Further progress seemed impossible.

It was at this juncture that Vitharana surmounted the challenge by coiming out with his own working paper as a basis for discussions. The Vitharana proposals were essentially based on the majority export report.

It was not identical and dropped a few of the more controversial elements but retained the substance of the majority expert report.The APRC was on track again.

Once again, this was not to RajapakseA?a??a??s liking but the President went along with the motions of the APRC. But Medamulana Mahinda did two things that undermined prospects of APRC success.

Firstly he welcomed into Government folds eighteen MPA?a??A?s from the UNP. In one stroke Mahinda rendered the SLFP – UNP agreement worthless. Without a SLFP – UNP bi – partisan consensus the APRC was under a cloud because agreement between the two major parties was a pre- requisite for any solid achievement.

The second thing was MahindaA?a??a??s imposition of his opinion on the SLFP recommendations to the APRC. The SLFP committee headed by Prof. Wiswa Warnapala had persons like Sarath Amunugama and Dilan Perera as members. It was expected that the SLFP report would be commendable and an improvement on the 2000 draft bill.

The final report was a great disappointment to say the least. Unitary was emphasised and the unit was to be district/ village. The hand of Rajapakse in this dilution was transparent.

Against this backdrop it appeared that the APRC would not yield any worthwhile result as President Rajapakse had clearly foreclosed any chance of a viable, equitable and acceptable option emerging.

Still Tissa Vitharana persisted in trying to make the APRC work. Vitharana was working on the twin premises that the SLFP proposals were not the government proposals and that they were not final.

On this basis there was room to hope that meaningful efforts could make Mahinda Rajapakse revise his stance. One way was for constituent parties in the Government to exert pressure. The second was for members of the APRC and other political groups outside to mount pressure.

Other avenues were for civil society and media to help form public opinion. There was also the International Community. Discreet yet intensive pressure was expected from these sections.

The APRC and experts panel etc may very well have proceeded at a slow, leisured pace but for International pressure. Initially Rajapakse hoped to drag the APRC on for an unusual period of time. During this space he was optimistic of the armed forces routing the LTTE and acquiring much real estate in the North – East.

Once a military victory was achieved on ground then the APRC became irrelevant. It was for the Rajapakse regime to impose a forced peace and enforced political solution.Whether a total military victory is possible is one question. Whether a military victory sans a just political solution will resolve the problem is another question.

But the IC was not deceived. India in particular was pressurising Rajapakse intensely. This led him to declare specific deadlines. In recent times some Western nations also have shifted focus to the APRC. They feel that the APRC is the only visible silver lining today in a gloomy political sky.

The IC is not telling Colombo to call off the war against the LTTE. It is only saying dont violate democratic freedoms and human rights while fighting. More importantly the IC opines that a military solution alone is not feasible and that only a political settlement will be durable.

Therefore the IC wants an effective political solution to be achieved. The IC does not say that military efforts should be abandoned and that only a political search should be undertaken. What it requires is a credible, peace process to be on parallel to the military campaign.

Unlike the earlier stage where the IC felt a peace process could be effective only between the GOSL and LTTE , the stance this time is, that the process should be as much inclusive as possible and that a solution acceptable to a majority of opinion should be evolved.

Majority does not mean Sinhala alone but there is no denying that no solution within a united Sri Lanka will work unless a majority of the numerical majority support it.

It is in this context that the IC is supporting the APRC and evinces keen interest in its progress. The APRC has many flaws and a success is not guaranteed but it remains the best option available.

The ideal of course would have been for the GOSL and LTTE to sincerely explore the federal option in terms of the Oslo declaration. But both parties have been very insincere in that.

Under those circumstances the only alternative now is the APRC. In democracy one has to choose from what is available and not what is desirable.

However much the IC may back the APRC , its ultimate success depends on Sri Lankans themselves. Whatever the external input it is Sri LankaA?a??a??s problem alone and in the final analysis Sri Lankans have to resolve it. This is the IC position too.

So despite fits and starts, ups and downs, the APRC was seen as positive forward movement. The working paper submitted by Tissa Vitharana as basis for discussions was seen as credible. The expectation was that further discussions could enhance it further.

But now Mahinda has upset theA?a??A? dodang karatheA?a??A?. By stating openly to APRC members what the solution ought to be. He has also said the APRC is only to impress the IC that Colombo is keen on a political settlement.

Rajapakse has undermined the credibility of both the APRC and Prof. Vitharana. Some parties particularly those from minority commuities may feel the exercise is pointless hereafter. Future sittings of the APRC could become akin to a lame duck session of parliament.

But this column in the words of Dylan Thomas does not believe in A?a??A?going out gently into that good nightA?a??A? but in A?a??A?raging against the falling of thelightA?a??A?. The towel should not be thrown in prematurely.

The APRC should not be allowed to fade away. Instead efforts should be made to strengthen it further and seek ways of utilising it to greater advantage.

The plus point of the APRC at this stage is the Tissa Vitharana proposals. These have been criticised severely by both the Sinhala and Tamil hardliners. Rajapakse is clearly dissatisfied with them. This shows that these proposals have their merits.

It is this columnA?a??a??s view that no solution within a united Sri Lanka will succeed under a rigidly unitary structure. The substance of devolution should amount to federalism or quasi – federalism.

However if one is realistic then one has to accept that in a climate where federalism is a A?a??A?F- wordA?a??A? to many people on both sides of the ethnic divide, a straight course to the federal idea is difficult. Moreover Rajapakse through his myopic A?a??A?chinthanaA?a??A? has tied himself down to a unitary state.

Under these circumstances adopting a pragmatic approach is necessary. The Tissa Vitharana proposals are the best of what is available. The best ones in recent times were the GL – Neelan package and the majority expert report.

But these are not in the picture now unless the Tamil United Liberation FrontA?a??a??s Veerasingham Anandasangaree resurrects the GL – Neelan package and brings it on to public domain again instead of chirping incessantly about an Indian federal model.May of the suggestions made in the majority expert report have been adopted/adapted by Vitharana.

So the Vitharana proposals remain the best bet of what is available before the Country. More importantly it enjoys the distinction of being the A?a??A?officialA?a??A? position of the APRC to date. It has many commendable features but has shortfalls too.

But it can be improved upon if there is a will. Even Rajapakse can be persuaded into changing track if a united front is presented. For this some measures need to be taken.

[Ranil Wickremasinghe, UNP leader at a rally in Gampola on May 19th, 2007 – Pic:UNP.lk]

The onus is primarily on Ranil Wickremasinghe and the UNP. Wickremasinghe spends most of his time pointing out the negative aspects of RajapakseA?a??a??s policies and complaining to the IC about it. What is required of him is a more , determined effort. One place for Wickremasinghe to prove his fighting abilities can be the APRC itself.

The UNP should take the lead in pursuing an acceptable and equitable solution through the APRC. Instead of letting it fail the UNP should utilise it to greater advantage. Wickremasinghe himself can make a political statement – metaphorically and literally – if he himself attends the APRC once as a demonstration of his concern.

The various political parties representing the minority communities could join forces on a principled basis. Given the conduct of these parties hanging on to MahindaA?a??a??s A?a??A?SatakaA?a??A? I have my doubts whether they will ever rise to the occasion but nothing can be finalised without trying.

One sincerely hopes that the minority parties could present a strong position contrary to that of the SLFP and Rajapakse at the APRC.The Lanka Sama Samaaja Party (LSSP) and the Communist party (CP) could also play a part in formulating a non – SLFP viewpoint at the APRC.

There is also the fact that the SLFP is not unanimous in its position on the APRC. Though Rajapakse is trying to take the SLFP to a pre – 1956 position many stalwarts feel that the party should not go below its avowed position in 2000 when the draft bill was presented.

SWRD Bandaranaike used to say that A?a??A?rivers do not flow backwardsA?a??A? but Mahinda and his fellow travellers from the ethno- fascist camp want the SLFP to flow backwards in terms of the partyA?a??a??s commitment to devolution. So there is space for hidden persuasion within the SLFP too.

There is also room for more positive public opinion being formed through progressive sections of the media. Civil society can play its part too. The International community too could take the initiative in exerting pressure on Rajapakse.

[Peace hoarding, sponsored by a Sri Lanka media organization at the dawn of last year – Pic: HumanityAshore.org]

It seems obvious that the President is trying to use the APRC as a cosmetic exercise to hoodwink the IC and buy time. But this sword can cut both ways. If a determined effort supported by the IC is made then Rajapakse could be presented with a A?a??A?fait accompliA?a??A? at the APRC.

If the President chooses to disregard the A?a??A?consensusA?a??A? of opinion at the APRC he will stand exposed. Therefore he would do his best to avert such a possibility and subvert the APRC. The need of the hour is to resist such moves.

For that efforts should be made firstly to prevent the APRC from sinking into oblivion and secondly to utilise it fruitfully and evolve a reasonable set of proposals devolving maximum powers to a large unit of devolution. Tissa VitharanaA?a??a??s proposals can be the foundation for this.

Let us remember that the search for greater devolution amounting to federalism / quasi – federalism is not for or against the LTTE. It is for the silent majority of Tamil people who want to live with equal rights in a united but not necessarily a unitary Sri Lanka. At the same time it must be emphasised that devolution would help greatly in bridging the urban – rural divide and also help equalise uneven development among regions. For all this the quest to share power must not remain an unfinished task.

DBS Jeyaraj can be contacted on: djeyaraj@federalidea.com

34 comments June 29th, 2007

Treatment of digoxin overdose

Will Mangala Samaraweera disown his Sinhala Ideology?

by Kusal Perera

How could one interpret or understand the effort taken by Mangala and his prop A?a??A?Mahajana WingA?a??A? (MW) after they placed their policies for public scrutiny? Others may have their own interpretations, but this is mine. For Mangala was very insistent that their list of A?a??A?dreamsA?a??A? is for discussion and debate by all and sundry. And quite honestly, my one line citation to it is, A?a??A?good dreams they are, but even crutches wouldnA?a??a??t make them walkA?a??A?.

[Mangala Samaraweera and Sripathi Sooriyarachchi amidst supporters]

Yes, crutches would only make them stand and stare at the dilemma around. The very selective approach in presenting the MW thinking depicts the seriousness of the dilemma the Sri Lankan politics is in, including Mangala. The dilemma is no linear slide down. Thus the contradictions and reluctance in facing the reality in its bitterest form. The very reason why the A?a??A?introductionA?a??A? to the policy statement captioned A?a??A?Dare to Dream! Towards A New Sri Lankan OrderA?a??A? is stretched into almost three, A4 size pages to stress on a A?a??A?glorious pastA?a??A? is to compromise with the very Sinhala extremists the document indirectly finds fault with. All those romantic quotes selected to justify the emphasized glory is out of context and heralds no such glory. The ancient past that never lacked feudal infighting quite contrary to what was quoted out of context in the MW policy document was that fathers, sons, brothers, wives and concubines, uncles and nephews conspired and killed each other to either save oneA?a??a??s throne or rob anotherA?a??a??s. And that was what the introduction was all about. There in fact is no serious break with traditional political thinking when compromising with Sinhala extremism, which is a pity.

That said in a very affirmative tone, what most would say A?a??E?yesA?a??a?? to is the straight forward criticism of the present government in the MW document. The conclusion Mangala has reached in it is that we are at the edge of the precipice of a failed state, if not already failed, will not be disputed. And also the description of A?a??E?form and contentA?a??a?? of this regime which is ridden with corruption, nepotism and inefficiency. Most importantly the issues raised on human rights violations and the ethnic war, are certainly right. They are all good criticism and criticism alone would not be enough to forgive Mangala, his supporters and his erstwhile ally the JVP for the burden they heaped on the people. Leading this country to live under this situation is no sin that can be easily forgiven and forgotten. Mangala making a public apology at the first media conference, nevertheless is a good and civilized way in getting started. But Mangala needs to go beyond criticism and break from all those negative strapping that he wanted for the sake of political power, to be forgiven. Despite that, Mangala has qualified on another creditable platform with his decision to break from political power he aspired to and challenge it openly. And itA?a??a??s for that hard decision taken, this policy document is considered for discussion for that too needs to be respected in this country.

On the positive side of the policy document is the diagnosis of our national ailments. One, it says A?a??A?the constitution that gives one individual unlimited executive powersA?a??A? is the first glitch. Two is the A?a??A?lack of an appropriate political solution to an unending ethnic conflict.A?a??A? and the third, is the A?a??A?complete lack of a focused, well planned national policy on developmentA?a??A?. And concedes rightly that all are symptoms of, as well as reasons for the same festering wound. The point of contention with Mangala nevertheless is whether such deep socio political rotting could be treated without opening up and suturing.

LetA?a??a??s ponder on issues discussed beneath the caption, A?a??A?Complete Overhaul of the CountryA?a??a??s Government and Political SystemA?a??A?. ItA?a??a??s not enough to say A?a??A?we dream of an independent Election CommissionA?a??A?. ThatA?a??a??s wishful thinking not at all decent for a political leadership to stop at. Mangala knows quite well the 17th Amendment to the Constitution that establishes independent Commissions was openly flouted by the powers that be. Therefore at least now if he is dreaming of an independent Election Commission, the policy position on the 17th Amendment has to be explained more firmly and with clarity. Will Mangala and MW push for amendments that would stop all Presidents from tampering with the appointment of all independent Commissions? Or else the independent Elections Commission would remain a sweet dream.

In that same vein, what is a miss in all what the MW proposes under 1.3 to 1.8 that covers parliamentary elections and its many facets is the future projection that they themselves see in a negotiated settlement for the ethnic war. The MW proposes sharing of power, subjected to majority consensus – an issue I would come to a little while later – but forgets that any sharing of power to what ever unit at the periphery, takes away quite a large slice of responsibility from the present parliament of 225 Members. The parliament at national level would then be only and mainly responsible for national policy, national defence, foreign policy and the like. Therefore, what logically arises first is not the issue of crossing over or the type of people nominated under the national list, but how many should be elected to the parliament that takes up only national issues after devolution. LetA?a??a??s not forget that India elects only 552 Lok Sabha Members for its population thatA?a??a??s almost 55 times bigger than ours. Without going into such depths in voter representation, what complete overhaul of government and political system will there be, as claimed?

The second most important issue identified by the MW in their policy document presented for social dialogue is the ethnic war. Their thinking is captured as A?a??A?2. Finding a Solution to the Ethnic ConflictA?a??A? with three sub sections under it. Diversity in our society the document notes, is not a problem that needs sitting down for discussions to find a solution, and to achieve peace through devolution of power within an indivisible countryA?a??A?. This sure is very good phrasing of an answer to a political issue that runs into logger heads with Sinhala chauvinist protests. But itA?a??a??s plain dodging when taken with other statements of policy. They are all plain abstract statements that avoid the mess that we face today.

What of today and how do we wake up tomorrow to the bloody conflict that the government keeps protracting? Will Mangala and his MW want to strengthen the Cease Fire Agreement (CFA) in order to provide space to salvage the lost peace talks? This is a crucial issue they donA?a??a??t even mention in their policy document. They donA?a??a??t accept there is still a CFA in its legal form and the SLMM mandated to watch over all violations. It is silently side stepped, for it was he and the JVP who campaigned to tear the CFA apart and burn it, till they formed their own government in 2004 April and installed their own President in 2005 November. They donA?a??a??t even look at Interim Steps, till some day the negotiations could start.

What is MangalaA?a??a??s and his MWA?a??a??s position on the proposals that are with the APRC? What will they support? The majority proposal? Without taking up clear positions on these current issues, it is ridiculous to say they A?a??A?believe that this divergence of opinions within our society need not be an obstacle to finding a lasting and durable peace that is acceptable to the majority of our citizens.A?a??A? Will the majority accept a negotiated peace, unless there is an open and constructive dialogue in society on current issues that leads to negotiations with a reactivated CFA that actually works on the ground?

Let this be precise and clear. Issues of human rights violations, abductions and breaking down of law and order that Mangala continues to criticize are all out crops of CFA violations that in real politics relates to the governmentA?a??a??s desire to press forward with an undeclared war. That is this governmentA?a??a??s policy in satisfying the Sinhala sentiments on which it came to power. Sinhala sentiments that Mangala and the JVP projected against a negotiated solution. Today, if Mangala and his MW want to dissociate with this war, dissociate with all violations of human rights, abductions and break down of law and order, then they have to dissociate themselves with the very Sinhala ideology they crowned in society; The Sinhala ideology that allows and justifies all social crimes under the banner slogan of eradicating terrorism.

That is the truth of present day politics and if Mangala wants other political parties, all democratic forces and progressive elements to engage in a dialogue with his MW, then he would have to say where exactly he stands on these issues quite openly. That may not open a dialogue with the JVP at this moment which is mortally afraid a broader alliance including the UNP would compel the President to dissolve parliament and go for an election. It is now clear that democracy, justice and fair play within a New Sri Lankan Order as dreamt by Mangala and his MW are opposites of what they stood for all these years. The choice is now open. One can not dream of riding two horses at the same time in opposite directions. Dreams that blur clarity of political positions on immediate and urgent issues wouldnA?a??a??t find feet to walk on credible grounds. So, it is over to Mangala and his MW to clear these positions for a more serious dialogue.

11 comments June 29th, 2007

Why is Sinhala Lion Flag Representing Muslim Majority Amparai District?

Even as efforts are underway to resolve the ethnic crisis through power sharing arrangements new developments threaten to upset the delicate ethnic prevalent in the North – East. A long standing grievance of the Tamil and Muslim people in the Eastern province is that of demography being altered through state aided colonisation schemes. Amparai in the East is the only district in Sri Lanka where the Muslims are the single largest ethnicity. Yet A?a??A?colonisation A?a??A?has reduced that majority status considerably. Disturbing evidence has come to light that fresh initiatives are on to dispossess Muslims of their lands in Pottuvil electoral division. Pottuvil itself is seen as the entry – point of Sinhalaisation in the East. The choice of a A?a??A?lionA?a??A? associated with the majority community as the symbol for Muslim majority Amparai district has heightened anxiety further. Land has become a crucial issue in evolving satisfactory and fair systems of devolution for Sri Lanka.

Children in Sainthamaruthu, Ampara District
[Photo: HumanityAshore.org]

The coalition of Muslims and Tamils for Peace and Coexistence (CMTPC) has released a special report focussing on this issue. It is titled A?a??A?Territorial Claims, Conquests and Dispossession in the A?a??A?New EastA?a??A?:The Growing concerns of the Muslims of Amparai.

The Federal IdeaA?a??A? reproduces that report in full:

Territorial Claims, Conquests and Dispossesion in the A?a??E?New EastA?a??a??: The growing concerns of the Muslims of Amparai

Coalition of Muslims and Tamils for Peace and Coexistence (CMTPC)

The new flag for the Eastern Province, introduced by the government, displays three animals: a lion symbolizing the Amparai district, an eagle for Trincomalee and a fish for Batticaloa. Batticaloa has long called itself the land of the A?a??A?singingA?a??A? fish, but why an eagle was chosen for Trincomalee is unclear.

The use of the Sinhala lion to represent the Muslim dominated Amparai district is terrifying: erasing the Muslim presence in the east, it is a potent symbol of the reality on the ground- the Muslims do not count in the larger context of our ethnic conflict.

The east is the testing ground for the success of any resolution to the conflict. All of our communities need to feel a sense of well being and belonging for peace and stability to prevail. But recent actions of the government and forces aligned to it are increasing the sense of insecurity felt by different communities.

The use of the lion for Amparai district suggests that this is a continuation of the post-independence Sinhalisation of the Eastern Province that has found new and brutal fervour under the administration of President Mahinda Rajapakse.

We speak here with alarm and with concern of specific acts by state agencies that continue the dispossession of the Muslim people through land acquisition and demarcation by the state. The Muslims of the Pottuvil region, who are already in a insecure position have in recent times felt the brunt of the heavy hand of state sponsored programmes.

These programmes have created anxiety and fear in the community. The Pottuvil region is multi cultural and multi ethnic, with an ethnic break down of 78.11% Muslims, 19.79% Tamils and 2.11% Sinhala. Traditionally, the different communities had co-existed peacefully with 90% of the population engaged in agriculture and the rest 10% in other forms of employment.

We give here four incidents or acts that have a direct bearing on the welfare of the people of the region:

1. The gazette notice dated 1454/26 of July 2006, declares that 1531 hectares of land of the Lahugala district secretariat of the Ampara District will be declared a National Park, which will be referred to, hereafter as the A?a??A?Lahugala-Kithulana National ParkA?a??A?. Since the borders of the Pottuvil and Lahugala Divisions are still under dispute (ref. Alfred Silva commission) Pottuvil Muslims feel that through this move the government is trying to take over land along the Lahugala Pottuvil main road that the Muslims have had access to and had been the means of livelihood for most of the people there.

2. On the 25 of the September, 2006, a letter signed by the Chair of the Lahugala Pradeshiya Sabha, to the Ministry of Public Administration, with copies to the President and the Minister of Labour Mr. Mervyn Silva, requested the annexation of the three gramasevaka divisions, Sarvodaya puram, Sinna Ulle, and Pasarichennai, (Periya Ulle) with the Lahugala Division, citing discriminatory practices of the officers against minority Sinhala and Tamil villagers. The ethnic break down for these three grama sevaka divisions shows an overwhelming Muslim majority: (91.5% Muslim, 4.7% Sinhala, 3.8% Tamil). So the motive for moving a Muslim majority area into a larger Sinhala unit in this instance is easily apparent.

3. In December 2005, official inquiries were made about identifying all the places of Buddhist worship and Dagabas in the Ampara district. A letter dated and signed by the G.A. of Ampara addressing the Pradeshiya Lekam makes this request. In Pottuvil alone they have indicated 07 places as sites of Buddhist heritage (Sangamankanthai, Kirimetiaaru, Pottuvil town, Muhuthumahaviharai, Eatham, Thaharampolla, Rottaiviharai).

4. It has also been brought to our notice that a thousand acres surrounding the Shasthiravelli STF camp in the Pottuvil region was previously under consideration as a High Security Zone, which had led to annexation of land that has traditionally been used by the people of the region. Now it has been declared as Shasthiravelli Temple land. There was a protest by the people of Pottuvil demanding access to this area in April 2007.

It is unclear whether all these four concurrent developments have progressed any further. For instance it is not clear if the request for the three gramasevaka divisions, Sarvodaya puram, Sinna Ulle, and Pasarichennai, (Periya Ulle) to be annexed to the Lahugala Division will go forward.

The Divisional Secretary of the Pottuvil District in a letter to the G.A. Ampara gave a detailed response, denying all charges of discrimination. He further noted that fishermen who came from other parts of the country indulged in unlawful occupation of state land and transgressed existing rules governing the buffer zone of the coastal areas and had been demanding permits for their illegal activities which were not acceded to by his office. As far as we know the matter has not progressed beyond this point but there are clear signs that there is growing pressure to push this issue further.

These acts of acquisition or potential annexation, taken in isolation, might seem purely bureaucratic or in the interests of military security. The policies can in fact be justified as being driven by important principles such as the conservation of nature, the right to equality for all ethnic communities and fair governance, the preservation of Sri LankaA?a??a??s ancient history and national security.

While these principles should be recognized and not dismissed, it is important to recognize the context in which these policies are being implemented and the agenda of those pushing these policies. If one approaches it from the perspective of history, the history of the minority communities, these acts emerge as part of a history where state-aided programmes have brought about demographic changes in the east. In this instance, these acts appear to be aimed at dispossessing the Muslim majority population of their land.

Pottuvil is politically an isolated division but it has featured prominently in the demographic and administrative battle for the East. Situated on the edge of Ampara district with a majority Muslim population, it has been used as the entry point for Sinhalisation of the east. Muslims politicians often neglect this division, leaving it to the consideration of one or the other of the two ruling parties (UNP or SLFP).

It is sandwiched between two Sinhala areas, Panama and Lahugala. Lahugala and Panama are two non-contiguous areas brought together as one DS division-Lahugala DS. When the Ampara district was created, a large Sinhala population was added on giving the district one of the oddest looking boundaries – a coastal belt linked to a truncated inland area, making crystal clear the ethnic agenda of the central government to avoid the emergence of a clearly Muslim-majority district. Like in other areas of the East and the North where new Sinhala names have proclaimed the expansion of the Sinhala colonization programme, Ampara too has undergone symbolic and demographic changes owing to state aided colonization programmes.

Amparai remains the play thing of ambitious politicians. The M.P for Amparai, who was formerly the Deputy Minister in charge of Mahaweli Development is back in power as Minister for Planning and Implementation and is in an influential position to steer the course of events in this unfolding story of annexation. He has, in fact, written a letter to the District Secretary of Pottuvil on 20th April, 2007, requesting/demanding that the thousand acres surrounding the Shasthiravelli STF camp be allocated to the Shasthiravelli temple.

The developments cited above follow other recent changes in land demarcation. In December 2005, the boundaries of the Pottuvil region were redrawn (which are still in dispute), where some of the land belonging to people from Pottuvil was brought under Panama Pattu, causing great difficulties to them, where language and transport were concerned.

Furthermore, and more importantly, grazing land that was traditionally used by the Pottuvil people was brought under Panama Pattu, leading to loss of access to this land and the subsequent decline in the 40, 000-cattle-strong livestock economy of the district. The redrawing of the boundaries of the Pottuvil region discriminates in many ways against the Muslim majority population The people of Pottuvil had already been dispossessed, by the enactment of the buffer zone in the region following the tsunami.

The redrawing of the boundaries exacerbates the situation of shortage of land for the people in the region. . They were not consulted in any of the actions; they had no say in what affected them most. The annexation of land by the state, land that has been traditionally used by the people of the region, as grazing land and for seasonal cultivation spells great loss to the economy and the welfare of the people. Steps need to be taken to protect forest cover and to ensure that the land is used in a sustainable manner; but this should be done by taking into account the needs and rights of the local people.

Arugam Bay in the Pottuvil region, is one of the biggest tourist attractions, not only of the east, but of the entire country and is a piece of prize real estate coveted by politicians and big business alike. In the wake of the tsunami and its destruction, the state instituted land-protection programmes including a buffer zone, which were perceived as serving the interests of big business from outside at the expense of those of the people of the area.

The acts of annexation are accompanied by other symbolic representations of appropriation, symbolic of conquest and hegemony. Buddhism in Sri Lanka, which in its fundamentals is a religion of peace and tolerance, is an integral part of state hegemony and is often experienced by minority communities as state aggression. Conquest of land is symbolized by what is perceived as Sinhala Budhisisation. In this respect, the erection of the statue of the Buddha among minority dominant areas has always spelt trouble, exacerbating ethnic tensions and in some instances, leading to outright confrontation.

Much of the time, the erection of a statue is not done by local Buddhists but by groups or agencies associated with the state. For instance, Ulle, a majority Muslim area in the Pottuvil region and a tourist hot spot, has been at the heart of the controversy of seemingly competing interests from the time of the tsunami. Two days after the tsunami in the midst of the disruption, dire loss, and anguish felt by the people all around, a statue of the Buddha on a podium was erected under cover of night, leading to acrimony and unnecessary conflict. In this climate, we cannot but be alarmed at the Buddhisisation, topographically, on the part of the state and see it as a sign of a Sinhala-Buddhist domination.

There are other disturbing accounts accompanying our narration. On March 21 2007, the JHU and the breakaway LTTE group TMVP, led by Karuna discussed issues collaboration regarding the protection of the cultural heritage of the eastern province. At the meeting, the JHU also raised issues of conservation in the East. This meeting was a part of a wider JHU strategy to take to another level the protection of Buddhist cultural and religious sites and to champion environmental issues.

The JHU politician Champaka Ranawaka is the Minister for Environment and Natural Resources. Thus the JHU is in a powerful position to push forward its campaign. Reports of the meeting contained references to A?a??A?evil elementsA?a??A? that were seeking to destroy cultural monuments. In the context of the JHUA?a??a??s anti-minority rhetoric this A?a??E?evilA?a??a?? can mean only one thing. Subsequently, we have had people of the region report to us that members of the Karuna faction had been threatening the people of the area with eviction orders from the A?a??A?sacred Buddhist landsA?a??A? they were A?a??A?occupying.A?a??A?

This has created considerable panic among the people, who have been exposed to a number of strategies to progressively dispossess them of their land. Also, TMVP, like its parent organization, the LTTE, has been attempting to establish its dominance over the Muslim community in the east, and is mimicking the LTTEA?a??a??s policies of violence against Muslims targeting and appropriating their lands.

Like the LTTE, whose ideology and practices it finds impossible to break away from, the Karuna faction too, is deeply mired in ethnicising the conflict in the east, increasing the sense of insecurity felt by the Muslims of the region. The collaboration between Sinhala Buddhist forces and TMVP itself might be short lived, but it emerges from the ultra-nationalists positions of extremism from both the Sinhala and Tamil communities, who insist that Muslims are interlopers and aliens on their homeland. Such actions if not condemned and eradicated from their very inception, can intensify fears of ethnic cleansing and exacerbate ethnic hostilities beyond repair.

The massacre of ten Muslim labourers in Radal Kullam (Radella) on September 17 2006, has made the Muslim community even more vulnerable in the face of increasing threats to their security and livelihood. Apart from the massacre itself, what followed in its trail has sparked wide spread controversy, in particular the manner in which the government and forces allied to the government covertly tried to cover up the incident.

While the local Muslim community claimed that the STF was responsible either directly or in complicity with local Sinhala Home Guards, the state and its allies sought to blame the LTTE. Those determined to blame the LTTE went to the extent of virtually taking hostage the sole survivor of the massacre, by diverting the ambulance from a hospital in Kalmunai to Ampara; by forcing the survivor to give an interview to MP A.L.M. Athaualla and by preventing the victimA?a??a??s family from meeting him in the first few days.

The state media on the other hand reported that the Muslims were blaming the STF because the STF had taken an active role in curbing illegal felling. Local Muslims, however have a different version. They placed the cause for the massacre on a series of conflicts over land, including one incident that happened just a day before the incident. This particular conflict arose over the attempt to use an area of the burial grounds, specifically demarcated for Muslims, to bury a Sinhalese person and STF intervention on behalf of the Sinhalese community. Local Muslims feel that the massacre was a warning to the Muslim Community; they should not vie for control of the land.

The issue of land grabbing and dispossession in the East is a complex and acrimonious issue, with political actors and ethnic communities exchanging charges that the opposing communities are using multiple methods to secure more territory. Forcible annexation and violence, land sales, poverty and a host of other factors have altered and continue to alter the ethnic geography of the east. An additional issue is the ethnicisation of bureaucracy and administration with administrative divisions marking ethnic boundaries.

The issue of land is tied to this ethnicisation of state bureaucracy, with Central Government, line ministries, GAs, land officers and GNs all forming a part of the struggle for securing and maintaining control of the land. This is the corollary of the ethnicisation of politics and the ethnic conflict itself. Thus, policies that show, for whatever reason, ethnic biases are viewed with suspicion. It is important to study and understand local situations and histories in addressing the fears and well being of different communities.

For instance, since its establishment the Amparai District has never had a GA from Sri LankaA?a??a??s minority communities. Local communities be they Muslim, Tamil or Sinhala often become the pawns of powerful blocs, testing the limits of age-old coexistence. Where the Muslim community of the east is concerned, the threats they face do not come from neighbouring Sinhala communities but from the state.

As we have noted above, the progressive dispossession of the Pottuvil people, through decree and by state sponsored forces, put the Muslim population in the region as a whole under great stress. There is an acute shortage of land in the region and the Muslim population feels the economic down slide accompanying these acts of appropriations.

The continuing trend of land grabbing is alarming. Land is the corner stone of any solution to the conflict in the east. It is a crucial factor in the resolution of the ethnic conflict in terms of power sharing. The state and other interested parties must act with the utmost caution in any policy implementation that might affect any particular community unjustly or serve to deepen ethnic disharmony.

The issues we have highlighted above deal with the Muslims in Pottuvil but this a larger problem common to other communities in the East. Even as we write, we have reports of the gazette notification of the declaration of large areas of land in Trincomalee, in the Sampur division, being taken over as High Security Zones. This needs to be looked into in careful detail as well.

The entire country is turning into a battleground, in the war between the State and the LTTE. The recent expulsions, of Tamils from Colombo, remind us of past acts of pogroms and ethnic cleansing: July 1983 and October 1990, the eviction of Muslims of the north by the LTTE, the slaughter of Sinhala peasants in the east by the LTTE.

In this context we also need to be concerned about other less spectacular and yet as significant and insidious moves by the state against ethnic minorities, increasing the fears and insecurities of the marginalized. The Muslims of the east feel beleaguered by the increasing violence and uncertainty surrounding them. They are over powered by state actions over which they have absolutely no control. This state of affairs needs to change immediately.

Peace and security for all the people in the east will be the ultimate test of any programme of power sharing. It is the primary responsibility of the state and other political and civil organizations to address the fears of the minority communities in the east, as an urgent issue, whether they be Muslim, Tamil or Sinhala, and work toward putting an end to the terror that is stalking the region. We request civil activists and concerned persons to explore this matter further in order to arrive at a just and equitable alternative to state aggression against minority communities.

_________________________________________________

Coalition of Muslims and Tamils for Peace and Coexistence

The coalition of Muslims and Tamils is a Sri Lanka based organization-comprising Muslim and Tamil identified persons who as a general principle are committed to pluralism and social justice in all its forms. Specifically, we are committed to the peaceful coexistence of Muslims and Tamils in the country, particularly in the north and east, and to a just and equitable solution to the ethnic conflict.

We can be contacted at: peaceandcoexistence@yahoo.com

Please visit our website : www.ctmpc.blogspot.com

20 comments June 29th, 2007

Bi- Partisan Political Platform Needed For Peace Process Success

by Namini Wijedasa

Reacting adversely to international criticism and creating xenophobia will only distance Sri Lanka from the world, a senior diplomat warned last week, adding that the country must immediately start a dialogue locally and with the international community on the concerns that have been raised.

A?a??A?It is true that perhaps there are misunderstandings abroad about what is happening here,A?a??A? said H M G S Palihakkara, who retired as Foreign Secretary six months ago. A?a??A?It may also be true that the credit is not given to the government about the enormous efforts it has deployed, both to take counter measures against terrorism as well as to advance a political process.

A?a??A?But to react adversely to criticismA?a??A? to say that we have no problems amongst ourselves and that the foreigner is the sole source of our problemA?a??A? is not the way to proceed. We have to engage them in a constructive dialogue and not distance them with a combative monologue, thereby creating xenophobic sentiments quite unfamiliar to Sri Lanka.A?a??A?

It was PalihakkaraA?a??a??s first press interview since leaving the Sri Lanka Foreign Service after 27 years. Earlier – speaking at the launch of a book on the peace process – he pointed out that Sri LankaA?a??a??s peace process had been highly externalized only because the country had failed to solve its own problems.

A?a??A?There is this feeling that the foreignersA?a??A? always try to overlook what the LTTEA?a??a??s doing and are blaming the government,A?a??A? the seasoned diplomat told LAKBIMAnEWS. A?a??A?I believe this is not a helpful attitude. Diplomacy is all about engaging people who donA?a??a??t perhaps understand your problem. That is how the European Union ban on the LTTE was achieved.A?a??A?

When asked about the governmentA?a??a??s current policy on the LTTE, he said everyone agrees terrorism has to be dealt with. But, A?a??A?while we take the military component of our overall strategy forward, there should be a parallel political process.A?a??A? A?a??A?What is happening now is that the political process got so lagged behind,A?a??A? he noted. A?a??A?ThereA?a??a??s no question that you need a military component. But without a parallel political process, you canA?a??a??t reap the benefits you accrue from the military process.A?a??A?

The alleged human rights violations are a huge problem, Palihakkara said. Referring to abductions, he agreed that there may be some A?a??A?mischief makersA?a??A? who engaged in this activity for financial or political gain. A?a??A?At the same time, there are very serious charges of abduction and disappearance which, as the prime minister himself mentioned regarding a similar issue, the elected government should take responsibility for and investigate.A?a??A?

A?a??A?The problem is that we cannot say disappearances are taking place but it is not possible to find out who is doing it,A?a??A? he stressed. A?a??A?That is not a healthy situation for any elected government or for the country.A?a??A?

He also said that if actions taken to investigate these offences donA?a??a??t provide quick results, there could be both governance and economic repercussions as the atmosphere conducive to tourism, investment and other economic activity gets affected. Sri Lanka could face international strictures that will reflect badly on the country.

Palihakkara felt criticism of the government on human rights should not be seen as A?a??A?helping the LTTEA?a??A?. A?a??A?I donA?a??a??t think criticizing anyone for human rights violations can be construed as helping anyone else because respecting human rights is a constitutional obligation,A?a??A? he observed. A?a??A?If you ignore human rights, you do so at your own peril as an elected government.A?a??A?

Was the international community bullying Sri Lanka? A?a??A?IA?a??a??m not sure about the terminology used,A?a??A? he replied, A?a??A?but certainly, we are being pressured. There are all kinds of international pressure that can be brought to bear. We have to remove the causes of these pressures, not react adversely to them. We have had pressures before and we managed to address and ease them.A?a??A?

Palihakkara accepted that the international community may be practising double standards. A?a??A?Double standards are a reality in realpolitik,A?a??A? he noted. A?a??A?In diplomacy and inter-state relations, there are no cast iron principles. They are dictated by different interests. Interests and principles donA?a??a??t always coincide. A?a??A?We have to be realistic about it. We donA?a??a??t have the luxury of preaching morality in international relations.A?a??A?

He also said that for the peace process to succeed, Sri Lankan needed a bipartisan political platform. A?a??A?Until that happens, Prabhakaran will be very happy to talk now, fight later, talk again and fight again, and so on,A?a??A? he asserted.

A?a??A?Frankly speaking, I donA?a??a??t think itA?a??a??s a good idea that each party tries to accommodate Mr Prabhakaran,A?a??A? Palihakkara continued. A?a??A?That is what they are doing. Each party, whether the SLFP or the UNP, is trying to accommodate Prabhakran.. And for the sake of election gain, they donA?a??a??t try to accommodate each other.A?a??A?

A?a??A?We have within our competence both the prescription and the will to come up with the political solution backed by substantial and brave military gains,A?a??A? he added, calling on the major parties to fight elections on issues outside the conflict.

[Courtesy: Lakbima News]

PottuVille – Arugam – Panama Matters

June 29th, 2007

Even as efforts are underway to resolve the ethnic crisis through power sharing arrangements new developments threaten to upset the delicate ethnic prevalent in the North – East. A long standing grievance of the Tamil and Muslim people in the Eastern province is that of demography being altered through state aided colonisation schemes. Amparai in the East is the only district in Sri Lanka where the Muslims are the single largest ethnicity. Yet A?a??A?colonisation A?a??A?has reduced that majority status considerably. Disturbing evidence has come to light that fresh initiatives are on to dispossess Muslims of their lands in Pottuvil electoral division. Pottuvil itself is seen as the entry – point of Sinhalaisation in the East. The choice of a A?a??A?lionA?a??A? associated with the majority community as the symbol for Muslim majority Amparai district has heightened anxiety further. Land has become a crucial issue in evolving satisfactory and fair systems of devolution for Sri Lanka.

Children in Sainthamaruthu, Ampara District
[Photo: HumanityAshore.org]

The coalition of Muslims and Tamils for Peace and Coexistence (CMTPC) has released a special report focussing on this issue. It is titled A?a??A?Territorial Claims, Conquests and Dispossession in the A?a??A?New EastA?a??A?:The Growing concerns of the Muslims of Amparai.

The Federal IdeaA?a??A? reproduces that report in full:

Territorial Claims, Conquests and Dispossesion in the A?a??E?New EastA?a??a??: The growing concerns of the Muslims of Amparai

Coalition of Muslims and Tamils for Peace and Coexistence (CMTPC)

The new flag for the Eastern Province, introduced by the government, displays three animals: a lion symbolizing the Amparai district, an eagle for Trincomalee and a fish for Batticaloa. Batticaloa has long called itself the land of the A?a??A?singingA?a??A? fish, but why an eagle was chosen for Trincomalee is unclear.

The use of the Sinhala lion to represent the Muslim dominated Amparai district is terrifying: erasing the Muslim presence in the east, it is a potent symbol of the reality on the ground- the Muslims do not count in the larger context of our ethnic conflict.

The east is the testing ground for the success of any resolution to the conflict. All of our communities need to feel a sense of well being and belonging for peace and stability to prevail. But recent actions of the government and forces aligned to it are increasing the sense of insecurity felt by different communities.

The use of the lion for Amparai district suggests that this is a continuation of the post-independence Sinhalisation of the Eastern Province that has found new and brutal fervour under the administration of President Mahinda Rajapakse.

We speak here with alarm and with concern of specific acts by state agencies that continue the dispossession of the Muslim people through land acquisition and demarcation by the state. The Muslims of the Pottuvil region, who are already in a insecure position have in recent times felt the brunt of the heavy hand of state sponsored programmes.

These programmes have created anxiety and fear in the community. The Pottuvil region is multi cultural and multi ethnic, with an ethnic break down of 78.11% Muslims, 19.79% Tamils and 2.11% Sinhala. Traditionally, the different communities had co-existed peacefully with 90% of the population engaged in agriculture and the rest 10% in other forms of employment.

We give here four incidents or acts that have a direct bearing on the welfare of the people of the region:

1. The gazette notice dated 1454/26 of July 2006, declares that 1531 hectares of land of the Lahugala district secretariat of the Ampara District will be declared a National Park, which will be referred to, hereafter as the A?a??A?Lahugala-Kithulana National ParkA?a??A?. Since the borders of the Pottuvil and Lahugala Divisions are still under dispute (ref. Alfred Silva commission) Pottuvil Muslims feel that through this move the government is trying to take over land along the Lahugala Pottuvil main road that the Muslims have had access to and had been the means of livelihood for most of the people there.

2. On the 25 of the September, 2006, a letter signed by the Chair of the Lahugala Pradeshiya Sabha, to the Ministry of Public Administration, with copies to the President and the Minister of Labour Mr. Mervyn Silva, requested the annexation of the three gramasevaka divisions, Sarvodaya puram, Sinna Ulle, and Pasarichennai, (Periya Ulle) with the Lahugala Division, citing discriminatory practices of the officers against minority Sinhala and Tamil villagers. The ethnic break down for these three grama sevaka divisions shows an overwhelming Muslim majority: (91.5% Muslim, 4.7% Sinhala, 3.8% Tamil). So the motive for moving a Muslim majority area into a larger Sinhala unit in this instance is easily apparent.

3. In December 2005, official inquiries were made about identifying all the places of Buddhist worship and Dagabas in the Ampara district. A letter dated and signed by the G.A. of Ampara addressing the Pradeshiya Lekam makes this request. In Pottuvil alone they have indicated 07 places as sites of Buddhist heritage (Sangamankanthai, Kirimetiaaru, Pottuvil town, Muhuthumahaviharai, Eatham, Thaharampolla, Rottaiviharai).

4. It has also been brought to our notice that a thousand acres surrounding the Shasthiravelli STF camp in the Pottuvil region was previously under consideration as a High Security Zone, which had led to annexation of land that has traditionally been used by the people of the region. Now it has been declared as Shasthiravelli Temple land. There was a protest by the people of Pottuvil demanding access to this area in April 2007.

It is unclear whether all these four concurrent developments have progressed any further. For instance it is not clear if the request for the three gramasevaka divisions, Sarvodaya puram, Sinna Ulle, and Pasarichennai, (Periya Ulle) to be annexed to the Lahugala Division will go forward.

The Divisional Secretary of the Pottuvil District in a letter to the G.A. Ampara gave a detailed response, denying all charges of discrimination. He further noted that fishermen who came from other parts of the country indulged in unlawful occupation of state land and transgressed existing rules governing the buffer zone of the coastal areas and had been demanding permits for their illegal activities which were not acceded to by his office. As far as we know the matter has not progressed beyond this point but there are clear signs that there is growing pressure to push this issue further.

These acts of acquisition or potential annexation, taken in isolation, might seem purely bureaucratic or in the interests of military security. The policies can in fact be justified as being driven by important principles such as the conservation of nature, the right to equality for all ethnic communities and fair governance, the preservation of Sri LankaA?a??a??s ancient history and national security.

While these principles should be recognized and not dismissed, it is important to recognize the context in which these policies are being implemented and the agenda of those pushing these policies. If one approaches it from the perspective of history, the history of the minority communities, these acts emerge as part of a history where state-aided programmes have brought about demographic changes in the east. In this instance, these acts appear to be aimed at dispossessing the Muslim majority population of their land.

Pottuvil is politically an isolated division but it has featured prominently in the demographic and administrative battle for the East. Situated on the edge of Ampara district with a majority Muslim population, it has been used as the entry point for Sinhalisation of the east. Muslims politicians often neglect this division, leaving it to the consideration of one or the other of the two ruling parties (UNP or SLFP).

It is sandwiched between two Sinhala areas, Panama and Lahugala. Lahugala and Panama are two non-contiguous areas brought together as one DS division-Lahugala DS. When the Ampara district was created, a large Sinhala population was added on giving the district one of the oddest looking boundaries – a coastal belt linked to a truncated inland area, making crystal clear the ethnic agenda of the central government to avoid the emergence of a clearly Muslim-majority district. Like in other areas of the East and the North where new Sinhala names have proclaimed the expansion of the Sinhala colonization programme, Ampara too has undergone symbolic and demographic changes owing to state aided colonization programmes.

Amparai remains the play thing of ambitious politicians. The M.P for Amparai, who was formerly the Deputy Minister in charge of Mahaweli Development is back in power as Minister for Planning and Implementation and is in an influential position to steer the course of events in this unfolding story of annexation. He has, in fact, written a letter to the District Secretary of Pottuvil on 20th April, 2007, requesting/demanding that the thousand acres surrounding the Shasthiravelli STF camp be allocated to the Shasthiravelli temple.

The developments cited above follow other recent changes in land demarcation. In December 2005, the boundaries of the Pottuvil region were redrawn (which are still in dispute), where some of the land belonging to people from Pottuvil was brought under Panama Pattu, causing great difficulties to them, where language and transport were concerned.

Furthermore, and more importantly, grazing land that was traditionally used by the Pottuvil people was brought under Panama Pattu, leading to loss of access to this land and the subsequent decline in the 40, 000-cattle-strong livestock economy of the district. The redrawing of the boundaries of the Pottuvil region discriminates in many ways against the Muslim majority population The people of Pottuvil had already been dispossessed, by the enactment of the buffer zone in the region following the tsunami.

The redrawing of the boundaries exacerbates the situation of shortage of land for the people in the region. . They were not consulted in any of the actions; they had no say in what affected them most. The annexation of land by the state, land that has been traditionally used by the people of the region, as grazing land and for seasonal cultivation spells great loss to the economy and the welfare of the people. Steps need to be taken to protect forest cover and to ensure that the land is used in a sustainable manner; but this should be done by taking into account the needs and rights of the local people.

Arugam Bay in the Pottuvil region, is one of the biggest tourist attractions, not only of the east, but of the entire country and is a piece of prize real estate coveted by politicians and big business alike. In the wake of the tsunami and its destruction, the state instituted land-protection programmes including a buffer zone, which were perceived as serving the interests of big business from outside at the expense of those of the people of the area.

The acts of annexation are accompanied by other symbolic representations of appropriation, symbolic of conquest and hegemony. Buddhism in Sri Lanka, which in its fundamentals is a religion of peace and tolerance, is an integral part of state hegemony and is often experienced by minority communities as state aggression. Conquest of land is symbolized by what is perceived as Sinhala Budhisisation. In this respect, the erection of the statue of the Buddha among minority dominant areas has always spelt trouble, exacerbating ethnic tensions and in some instances, leading to outright confrontation.

Much of the time, the erection of a statue is not done by local Buddhists but by groups or agencies associated with the state. For instance, Ulle, a majority Muslim area in the Pottuvil region and a tourist hot spot, has been at the heart of the controversy of seemingly competing interests from the time of the tsunami. Two days after the tsunami in the midst of the disruption, dire loss, and anguish felt by the people all around, a statue of the Buddha on a podium was erected under cover of night, leading to acrimony and unnecessary conflict. In this climate, we cannot but be alarmed at the Buddhisisation, topographically, on the part of the state and see it as a sign of a Sinhala-Buddhist domination.

There are other disturbing accounts accompanying our narration. On March, the JHU and the breakaway LTTE group TMVP, led by Karuna discussed issues collaboration regarding the protection of the cultural heritage of the eastern province. At the meeting, the JHU also raised issues of conservation in the East. This meeting was a part of a wider JHU strategy to take to another level the protection of Buddhist cultural and religious sites and to champion environmental issues.

The JHU politician Champaka Ranawaka is the Minister for Environment and Natural Resources. Thus the JHU is in a powerful position to push forward its campaign. Reports of the meeting contained references to A?a??A?evil elementsA?a??A? that were seeking to destroy cultural monuments. In the context of the JHUA?a??a??s anti-minority rhetoric this A?a??E?evilA?a??a?? can mean only one thing. Subsequently, we have had people of the region report to us that members of the Karuna faction had been threatening the people of the area with eviction orders from the A?a??A?sacred Buddhist landsA?a??A? they were A?a??A?occupying.A?a??A?

This has created considerable panic among the people, who have been exposed to a number of strategies to progressively dispossess them of their land. Also, TMVP, like its parent organization, the LTTE, has been attempting to establish its dominance over the Muslim community in the east, and is mimicking the LTTEA?a??a??s policies of violence against Muslims targeting and appropriating their lands.

Like the LTTE, whose ideology and practices it finds impossible to break away from, the Karuna faction too, is deeply mired in ethnicising the conflict in the east, increasing the sense of insecurity felt by the Muslims of the region. The collaboration between Sinhala Buddhist forces and TMVP itself might be short lived, but it emerges from the ultra-nationalists positions of extremism from both the Sinhala and Tamil communities, who insist that Muslims are interlopers and aliens on their homeland. Such actions if not condemned and eradicated from their very inception, can intensify fears of ethnic cleansing and exacerbate ethnic hostilities beyond repair.

The massacre of ten Muslim labourers in Radal Kullam (Radella) on September, has made the Muslim community even more vulnerable in the face of increasing threats to their security and livelihood. Apart from the massacre itself, what followed in its trail has sparked wide spread controversy, in particular the manner in which the government and forces allied to the government covertly tried to cover up the incident.

While the local Muslim community claimed that the STF was responsible either directly or in complicity with local Sinhala Home Guards, the state and its allies sought to blame the LTTE. Those determined to blame the LTTE went to the extent of virtually taking hostage the sole survivor of the massacre, by diverting the ambulance from a hospital in Kalmunai to Ampara; by forcing the survivor to give an interview to MP A.L.M. Athaualla and by preventing the victimA?a??a??s family from meeting him in the first few days.

The state media on the other hand reported that the Muslims were blaming the STF because the STF had taken an active role in curbing illegal felling. Local Muslims, however have a different version. They placed the cause for the massacre on a series of conflicts over land, including one incident that happened just a day before the incident. This particular conflict arose over the attempt to use an area of the burial grounds, specifically demarcated for Muslims, to bury a Sinhalese person and STF intervention on behalf of the Sinhalese community. Local Muslims feel that the massacre was a warning to the Muslim Community; they should not vie for control of the land.

The issue of land grabbing and dispossession in the East is a complex and acrimonious issue, with political actors and ethnic communities exchanging charges that the opposing communities are using multiple methods to secure more territory. Forcible annexation and violence, land sales, poverty and a host of other factors have altered and continue to alter the ethnic geography of the east. An additional issue is the ethnicisation of bureaucracy and administration with administrative divisions marking ethnic boundaries.

The issue of land is tied to this ethnicisation of state bureaucracy, with Central Government, line ministries, GAs, land officers and GNs all forming a part of the struggle for securing and maintaining control of the land. This is the corollary of the ethnicisation of politics and the ethnic conflict itself. Thus, policies that show, for whatever reason, ethnic biases are viewed with suspicion. It is important to study and understand local situations and histories in addressing the fears and well being of different communities.

For instance, since its establishment the Amparai District has never had a GA from Sri LankaA?a??a??s minority communities. Local communities be they Muslim, Tamil or Sinhala often become the pawns of powerful blocs, testing the limits of age-old coexistence. Where the Muslim community of the east is concerned, the threats they face do not come from neighbouring Sinhala communities but from the state.

As we have noted above, the progressive dispossession of the Pottuvil people, through decree and by state sponsored forces, put the Muslim population in the region as a whole under great stress. There is an acute shortage of land in the region and the Muslim population feels the economic down slide accompanying these acts of appropriations.

The continuing trend of land grabbing is alarming. Land is the corner stone of any solution to the conflict in the east. It is a crucial factor in the resolution of the ethnic conflict in terms of power sharing. The state and other interested parties must act with the utmost caution in any policy implementation that might affect any particular community unjustly or serve to deepen ethnic disharmony.

The issues we have highlighted above deal with the Muslims in Pottuvil but this a larger problem common to other communities in the East. Even as we write, we have reports of the gazette notification of the declaration of large areas of land in Trincomalee, in the Sampur division, being taken over as High Security Zones. This needs to be looked into in careful detail as well.

The entire country is turning into a battleground, in the war between the State and the LTTE. The recent expulsions, of Tamils from Colombo, remind us of past acts of pogroms and ethnic cleansing: July 1983 and October 1990, the eviction of Muslims of the north by the LTTE, the slaughter of Sinhala peasants in the east by the LTTE.

In this context we also need to be concerned about other less spectacular and yet as significant and insidious moves by the state against ethnic minorities, increasing the fears and insecurities of the marginalized. The Muslims of the east feel beleaguered by the increasing violence and uncertainty surrounding them. They are over powered by state actions over which they have absolutely no control. This state of affairs needs to change immediately.

Peace and security for all the people in the east will be the ultimate test of any programme of power sharing. It is the primary responsibility of the state and other political and civil organizations to address the fears of the minority communities in the east, as an urgent issue, whether they be Muslim, Tamil or Sinhala, and work toward putting an end to the terror that is stalking the region. We request civil activists and concerned persons to explore this matter further in order to arrive at a just and equitable alternative to state aggression against minority communities.

_________________________________________________

Coalition of Muslims and Tamils for Peace and Coexistence

The coalition of Muslims and Tamils is a Sri Lanka based organization-comprising Muslim and Tamil identified persons who as a general principle are committed to pluralism and social justice in all its forms. Specifically, we are committed to the peaceful coexistence of Muslims and Tamils in the country, particularly in the north and east, and to a just and equitable solution to the ethnic conflict.

We can be contacted at: peaceandcoexistence@yahoo.com

Please visit our website : www.ctmpc.blogspot.com

Entry Filed under: Federalidea

15 Comments Add your own

  • 1. Susith Ruwanpura | June 29th, 2007 at 9:21 am

    Muslims live all over Sri Lanka. Sinha Flag is the national flag. If they want to live under one of their flgs, they need consider migrating to a Muslim country and and live there happily. Sri Lanka is the country of Sinhalese, and Sinhalese welcome all ethnic and religios people to live peacefully sharing the country. These curious muslims want another problem created. The government has the right to create colonies, and no one has a right to object, because no body owns any provice of the country

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    2. Jeronimo Azavedo | June 29th, 2007 at 9:54 am

    Absolute claptrap. The muslims are in the East because of state aided colonisation. The Portuguese persecution of arab traders resulted in the Muslims appealing to Senerat, Emporer of Ceylon and King of Kandy and he allocated land for the Muslims in the east to save them from Portuguese persecution.

    So if state aided colonisation is an issue, the very existence of muslims in the East should be questioned.

    The greatest beneficiaries of state aided colonisation are the Tamils, with millions settled by colonial powers to work the cinnamon, rubber, tea, coffee and tobacco plantations in Jaffna.

    Those who benefitted from state aided colonisation are today opposing it to serve their prejudices.

  • 3. A peace loving citzen in Ampare | June 29th, 2007 at 1:47 pm

    As had been explained by the Eastern Provincial Council Sri Lanka, the flag of the Eastern Province had been designed by the Cultural Department of the Eastern Provincial Council and it contains three symbols which were embodied in the district flags used since independence where Trincomalee had an Eagle, Batticaloa a Fish and Ampare and animal similar to a lion found in ancient Sri Lankan flags. These symbols have existed with out any protest for over 60 years and why is the sudden alarm. Muslim encroachment was quite visible in the Pothuvil area since of late, creating fears among Tamils and Sinhalese.

  • 4. Mathy | June 29th, 2007 at 3:20 pm

    The Governments planned colonisation was started a long time ago with a motive of changing the demographic pattern of the society. When I look at the comments made by two un-civilised people (Susith and Jeromino), I think the country has no alternative other than dividing in to two.
    If muslims face discrimination in the second state, then their struggle for freedom will start. It all depends on how we get civilised and learn to live in harmony,

  • 5. Thamilan | June 29th, 2007 at 3:25 pm

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    Susith Ruwanpura,

    Sri Lanka is not the country of the Sinhalese, the rightful claimer to the Islands are Veddhas (also Tamil), second claimers are Chola, Pandiya, Chera and Pallava Tamils (who originally inhabits and inhabited North and East long before VijayaA?a??a??s arrival due to the rich pearl fishery controlled by the Tamil Empires) and then third are the Sinhalese (mixture of Bengal and Tamil Blood).

    If you want a place to call Sinhala homeland then I suggest you go back to where Vijaya and his 700 followers were born because Tamils of Tamil Nadu and Tamils on this Island will never accept your pathetic claim. Just because you hold the majority does not give you sole ownership of the Island.

    You are forgetting that if the Tamils at that time werenA?a??a??t welcoming to foreigners like Vijaya, you wouldnA?a??a??t be here talking trash. For the last 60 years the Sinhalese have done what the white men did to the Natives of the Americas. If the LTTE fails to remind the estimated 16 million who have the right to claim the Island then for sure the 70 million Tamils will remind you (if you still choose not to listen then annihilation of the Sinhalese are inevitable).

    Jeronimo Azavedo,

    Get your fact straight. The British brought poor Tamils from the mainland to work in the Tea plantation in the Hill areas, not in Jaffna. Tamils in the East, North and North West were on the Island long before the arrival of Vijaya. The Sinhalese never had a state and never aided any of the minorties.

    By the way, because of the Sinhalese and the rivalry between the two Sinhalese kingdoms the Portugese got a foothold in Sri Lanka. They invited the white men whom at the ended suppresed Tamils (after defeating the Jaffna Kingdom), Muslim and they specially suppressed their inviters (the Sinhalese) in a brutal manner unimaginable.

    This whole island is in ruin because of the hospitable culture of the Tamils, if we were more like the Japanese then we wouldnA?a??a??t have had this problem in the first place.

  • 6. wassa | June 29th, 2007 at 3:34 pm

    The singahlese king gave the muslims land when they were persecuted by Indians and others under one condition.They came to the Singhala king and asked about staying in Sri Lanka and the king granted permission and said A?a??A?as long as you take Singhalese names and speak singahalese that is okA?a??A?.But they did not want to integrate into the Singhalese society.This is very difefrent from Irish,Scottish and Welsh who live in Engaland.They all integrated in England like Chinese in Thailand.There are 16%Chinese in Thailand but speak Thai and take all Thai names and at school study in Thai only and there are no Chinese holidaysvalid in Thailand.Muslims never integrated in England too and all these separate talks destroy countries whoever the Ethnic group is.In Sri Lnakan flag green color represents Muslims.
    There are many Mosques in Anuradhapura as well as in Rome, Italy.Can we make a temple or church in Saudi Arabia?I dont think so.

  • 7. Suresh M | June 29th, 2007 at 3:37 pm

    What were you thinking when you wrote this page? Do you know the climatic condition of Jaffna? Coffee, Tea, Rubber, Cinnamon. Pity you.

  • 8. wassa | June 29th, 2007 at 3:40 pm

    Muslims are living happily among Singahalese but where there are only Muslims they want there own flags.This is utter rubbish and a road to separatism.15% Tamils want one third of the Sri Lanka.This is the only place for singhales people and everybody is welcome to stay here without making problems.During the liberation struggle against Portugese,Dutch,English and Cholas Singahlese were the ones who fought to secure Sri Dalada and the Sinhalaese kingdom.These separatists have to think about it,In East there are many lands that were belong to temples during the Singhalese kings were occupied by Muslims and Tamils at the moment.

  • 9. Baptist, UAE | June 29th, 2007 at 4:02 pm

    Sucessive sinhala governments have been sinhalaising the traditional tamil and muslim dominated east through re-drawing of borders, annexing sinhala villages from other districts, colonisation force and forceful eviction of people. In the 1930s Sinhalese constituitted only 8% of the popluation of the east; now they are near 30% if not more. Such a change has not brought about by natural demographic changes. The creation of A?a??E?digamadullaA?a??a?? of what should have been the muslim dominated Amparai district into a sinhala dominated area is a major point in case. Recent eviction of Tamils from Muthur and Sampoor is another. The disunity amongst Tamils and Muslims is assiting such atrocities. If we Tamils are fighting for our rights and liberation of our land, we cannot deny the Muslim brothers who share the same language and homeland, their rights. We must support them in their fight for justice., not suppress them. I think it is about time the tamil leadership openly recognise the muslims as a distinct ethnic group, their traditional lands, and equal status. If a separate Tamil nation is to be established, it should guarantee devolution of powers and fair representation to the muslims, and guarantees to the traditional sinhala villages falling withinh north & east of equality and protection. Otherwise we can not claim to be fighting for a just cause, rather we will be a mirror image of the oppressive sinhala governments we are fighting against.

  • 10. dias | June 29th, 2007 at 5:55 pm

    It is ironic that the self procalimed peace group, A?a??A?Coalition of Muslims and Tamils for Peace and CoexistenceA?a??A?, in its prologue says, A?a??A?Specifically, we are committed to the peaceful coexistence of Muslims and Tamils in the country, particularly in the north and east, and to a just and equitable solution to the ethnic conflict.A?a??A?

    ArenA?a??a??t you interested in peaceful co-existence with the Singhalese? May be the Singhalese would have felt comfort had it been worded A?a??A? A?a??A?. Muslims and Ramils and Singhalese A?a??A?A?a??A?.

  • 11. naguleshan | June 29th, 2007 at 8:23 pm

    Tamils speaking SrI Lankans, including Muslims, enjoy the privilege to live every corner of the country, making their homeland everywhere.

    But a Sinhala man / woman cannot do the same. They become a minority in the NE, whereas in the South and the West no one cares for percentages of ethnicity.

    Why?

  • 12. ernest macintyre | June 29th, 2007 at 10:48 pm

    Your photograph here of young boys in Sainthamaruthu, like so many other photos of young children within terribly stricken communities, is the only encouraging light within A?a??A? the encircling gloomA?a??A?. They A?a??A?know not,A?a??A? in the Darwinian sense of the survival of the species, what we older people have done.

  • 13. Jeronimo Azavedo | June 30th, 2007 at 3:02 am

    The plantations and state aided colonisation, follow european conquest of Sri Lanka. The first kingdom to fall to the portuguese was the Kingdom of Jaffnapattnum and it was here where the first plantations were established, Tobacco. I refer you to the accounts of the kingdom of Jaffna pattnum of Captain Major Mascarenas which show tobacco as the largest revenue of Jaffna for the Portuguese at the time.

    This period also shows large scale Tamil plantation workers brought into Jaffna from South India and the introduction of some 5000 deep wells in Jaffna- which are in effect South Indian wells.

    Before this the wells of Jaffna were like the wells in the rest of the country, where you walk down to the water and the water is at your foot level.

    The population composition of Jaffna also changed during this period, with the Sinhalese of Jaffna also completely becoming extinct.

    But there are still todate, over 1000 Sinhala place names in Jaffna which remain in a Tamilised form. Sanga thana has become Sanga Thanai, Aliya Wala has become Aliya walai, Maracci rata has become Wadamarachchi and Thenamarachchi, Weligama has become Welikamam.

    This pattern was repeated for Cinnamon, rubber, coffee and tea plantations of Sri lanka with over one million state aided colonisation of Sri Lanka, displacing significant numbers of the Sri Lankan population and rendering them landless.

    The Muslims were settled in the East by Emporer Senerat, because the Portuguese were battling the arabs for the sea trade and they were persecuting the muslims in the West. They approached Senerat and seeked refuge and was granted refuge in the East, which was a part of the Kandyan Kingdom of Senerat, the father of Maha Astana, later Raja Singha II of Kandy.

  • 14. Anand. G. | June 30th, 2007 at 3:09 am

    Why create more complicated issues out of a symbol in a flag when you have your plate of problems already overflowing. If you are looking for peace (in any form) the first thing to avoid is nit picking.

  • 15. Thamilan | June 30th, 2007 at 11:11 am

    Jeronimo Azavedo,

    Jaffna Kingdown was the first to fall but who invited the Europeans? It was the Sinhalese. Jaffna was the land of pure Tamils, maybe they had some Sinhalese traders, but it was never dominated or never will be dominated by the Sinhalese. Over 1000 Sinhalese place name? Yeah they also borrowed all the Tamil words to make the Sinhalese language, in that case of course you can claim that there are more then 1000 names in Jaffna that are Sinhalese. The courts of the Sinhalese Kingdoms used Tamil as the official language not Sinhalese (because the language was not developed enough). People like you are the ones who believe that Buddha flew on a cloud and that he offered Lanka to the Sinhalese. Wake up to the reality.

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No matter what – these two successful US businesses managed to collect huge sums.
In the name of Arugam Bay. Ms. Whinfrey actually “Reached out”. To her ball pen and signed a cheque for a million US Dollars – where the rest Millions have gone we can only guess (Harpo Inc. still owes the people of AbaY $300 dating from an agreement Jan. 2005 for exclusive video footage transmitted to them by us)
So much for the advertised 5 year plan Ditropan xl generic cost of Mercy Corpse – it started in 2005 and finishedA?A? sometime in 2006.

growth-limit-zone.gif

For the somewhat …technical minded:
Every school boy might understand the above illustration. It shows a tree near a fairly low power line, maybe 440V, in New Zealand.
In the clever NGO case of educated US Mercy Corps all sea side trees at Arugam Bay were planted DIRECTLY UNDER our much higher, 33,000V Main East Coast power line.
The simple natives of AbaY wish to thank the US for sending such ‘experts’ to our island!
Crops have Mercy on our uneducated Souls….

Observation:
It is very sad to report that Mercy Corps has totally failed in just about every task they undertook in our area.
It is however also realized and accepted, that Ms. Robinson acted in good faith, she really tried to do her level best for the Community. She simply chose to support the wrong people, and listed to the wrong local advice – that’s all.

In a week or so, we hope to publish a totally differed story.
This will demonstrate how a huge Organization did NOT at all act in good faith, they did NOT try to do the best to their abilities:
These guys actually refused to help the injured, actually stole from the Community, caused willful criminal damage and are locally known as ‘Die Rote Kotze’ (‘The Red Vomit’); for good and later explained reasons.
These weird people still have a police report pending against them and tried to silence us after attempts to sue us in Genevre failed miserably.
Wait for our report and evidence! It is all well documented!
We gave them a last chance to respond and live up to their given promises to make amends. But of course they feel they are soooo well known and they simply don’t care about us – the stupid Tsunami victims.

Kill-Not-She…! Who? Our Island?

Sri Lanka seen heading back to civil war A?a??a?? on an even larger scale

“All we hear is war,” says Tavakumar, a 43-year-old rebel who only uses one name, patrolling a road a few miles (several kilometers) from the front. “I’m ready to fight.”

Five years after a cease-fire brought a measure of relief to Sri Lanka, a ferocious ethnic war is again raging between the government dominated by the country’s predominantly Buddhist Sinhalese majority and the Tamil Tigers, separatists seeking a homeland for the largely Hindu Tamil minority.

The signs of a deepening conflict are everywhere: soldiers in full battle gear patrolling Colombo, the increasingly fortified capital; sandbagged bunkers and trenches going up all over the rebel-held north.

Both sides claim to be observing the truce, which remains officially in place. But clearly it has left neither side satisfied, and now it has completely collapsed. The rebels are mounting renewed attacks, including a bus bombing last June that killed 64 people, and Sri Lankan forces are pushing farther into rebel territory, with officials openly saying they aim to militarily crush their enemy.

“We want to destroy them, the Tiger bases, all these things,” Defense Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapakse told The Associated Press in an interview. Rajapakse, brother of President Mahinda Rajapakse, survived a Tamil suicide bombing of his motorcade in December.

Amid the spiraling violence, the AP secured permission to cross the front lines and make the first visit by foreign journalists to insurgent territory since the war reignited in August.

In Kilinochchi, the main rebel-held city, the cease-fire seemed a distant notion as a pair of warplanes dropped flares to light up a rebel mortar position in the jungles beyond town. Farmers and insurgents scrambled into dank, makeshift bomb shelters as the jets dropped their bombs, obliterating a rebel mortar position.

Nineteen years of suicide bombings, jungle clashes, torture and village massacres, from 1983 until the truce was signed in 2002, took an estimated 65,000 lives on this West Virginia-sized island of 20 million people off India’s southern tip.

Since August, about 3,000 more have been killed and 160,000 displaced, most in eastern Sri Lanka where the government has plowed through relatively lightly defended rebel territory.

Next up, officials say, is the rebels’ heavily fortified northern heartland, a would-be Tamil state of about 500,000 people with courts, traffic cops, a forestry department and a legal code that bans adultery and pornography.

It’s territory the rebels say they’ll defend with everything they’ve got.

“The fighting in the north is going to be more intense and the (rebels) probably won’t withdraw,” as they did in the east, said Jehan Perera of Sri Lanka’s National Peace Council, a think tank. “Battlefield losses will be heavier.”

There’s also growing concern about the rise in human rights violations. The rebels and government allied militias are both alleged to have abducted A?a??a?? and in some cases killed A?a??a?? hundreds of civilians, and there are well-documented cases of top government officials threatening critics of the war, especially journalists.

The roots of the conflict stretch back to the years after independence from Britain in 1948, when the government gave Buddhism a prominent role and declared Sinhala the sole official language.

The result was widespread discrimination against Tamils, until war broke out in 1983.

The 2002 cease-fire negotiated by Norwegian diplomats raised hopes which were reinforced two years later by a belief that the Indian Ocean tsunami would force the warring sides to work together for national recovery. But by late 2005, sporadic shootings and bombings were back. Most A?a??a?? such as a bus bombing that killed 64 people in June A?a??a?? were blamed on the Tigers, who many believed were trying to force the government to make concessions at the negotiating table.

If that was their strategy, it backfired spectacularly.

Mahinda Rajapakse had been elected president in late 2005 in part by Sinhalese hard-liners who viewed the cease-fire as a betrayal. In August, he opted for all-out war, while claiming to be honoring the cease-fire and only responding to rebel provocations.

He is being cheered on by hard-line Buddhist monks who see themselves as guardians of the island’s Sinhalese culture, and, increasingly, by many ordinary Sinhalese. A recent poll by Colombo’s respected Center for Policy alternatives found nearly 60 percent of the Sinhalese supported a military solution.

source:
http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/05/06/asia/AS-FEA-GEN-Sri-Lanka-At-War-Again.php

Arugam Bay

Pottuvil: Simmering pot of ethnic tension

Lasix treatment hypertension By Wilson Gnanadass in Pottuvil
At a time when media attention and peace keeping efforts are understandably focused on Sri Lanka to bring an end to the ongoing ethnic conflict, a dangerous mix of developments is taking place in Pottuvil, in the south eastern part of the island.
Armed conflicts plague the northern part of Sri Lanka while a disintegrating economy along with human rights violations and even threats to freedom of expression are driving the south deeper into mayhem.
However, in Cialis pills cost Pottuvil, although life has returned to normal after the clash between the Karuna group and the Pradeshiya Sabha took place last month, beneath the surface tension lingers between different communities.
A deeper assessment into the life of all three communities shows that although there is a thirst for ethnic co-existence, there is a barrier separating them.
Still, Pottuville no doubt is a bustling town and Arugam Bay is certainly safer than Colombo, stated one hotel manager.
Division between Tamils and Muslims
From time immemorial, Tamils and Muslims have been living as members of one family in Pottuvil, a predominantly Muslim region. A record number of intermarriages have been reported from these areas. The dialects of the communities are mixed.
In between two major Muslim towns there are several Tamil villages, and Tamils and Muslims have mingled with each other for business, education and various other reasons.
However, today that relationship is strained. For the first time in the history, the Tamils celebrated their New Year festival without inviting the Muslims. Tamils working in Muslim shops were told to leave their jobs or else face the consequences.
The forced separation has disturbed and hurt both Tamils and Muslims. Muslims blamed the Karuna faction for the latest development, while KarunaA?a??a??s men blamed the Muslim politicians.
Both communities traded charges at each other without realising they were bringing about the separation of the century-old cherished bond.
PS issue
Wittingly or unwittingly, the April 9 incident over a Pradeshiya Sabha (PS) building has dampened the relationship between the communities.
While the Karuna faction attempted to acquire the building by force, the Muslim dominated PS managed to retain the ownership of the building legally. The PS is dominated by Muslims. Tamils in the region are represented by only one member. To KarunaA?a??a??s men, this is a big hitch.
According to them, the Tamils are underrepresented and they claimed to be the sole representatives of the Tamils, a claim rejected by the Tamils.
However, KarunaA?a??a??s men pointed out that the Tamils were given step-motherly treatment by the majority Muslims, and added they were present to give the Tamils leadership. They also expressed anger at the Muslim politicians.
KarunaA?a??a??s men stated that all leading jobs in the town were given to the Muslims and the Tamils were being trampled, and vowed to correct this error.
TMVP repression
Since the defection of Karuna from the LTTE in 2004, the correlation of the Tamils and Muslims has become estranged.
The Karuna faction established political quarters almost in every town in the east and in Pottuvil too an office was set up. The office according to eye witnesses has served as a A?a??E?Kangaroo CourtA?a??a?? to deal with issues pertaining to the day to day life of Tamils and Muslims.
A?a??E?Kangaroo CourtA?a??a??
In one instance, a 24-year-old man was beaten for three hours by three men of KarunaA?a??a??s group over a personal problem he had had with his wife.
On another occasion, a female who was employed in a Muslim shop under a Muslim for the past 10 years was asked to immediately step down with no reasons given.
Besides, the Muslims have also been issued summons by KarunaA?a??a??s men and have been questioned for hours. This has annoyed a majority of the Muslims since the Karuna group has even got involved in personal affairs of the people.
Senior Muslim citizens and even members of the clergy perceive these events initiated by Karuna group as a deliberate attempt to bring about a division between these two ethnic groups.
Shadow member of Pottuvil PS, A.M. Mohamed Thajudeen is of the view that the actions of KarunaA?a??a??s men are provocative and might at some point provoke the Muslim youth also to take up arms.
He said after the April 9 incident, the relationship between the two groups has been strained but added efforts were being made to rebuild the relationship.
He is of the view that this is a byproduct of government strategy since KarunaA?a??a??s group is allegedly supported by the state. A?a??A?The government should not ignore our appeals. We have lodged entries with the police against these men, but to no avail,A?a??A? he said.
He said KarunaA?a??a??s men were not only getting involved in the PS matters but also into the personal affairs of the Muslims. A?a??A?Why are they getting involved in this fashion?A?a??A? he questioned.
Muslims fear that they could be driven out of the east in a manner similar to how the Muslims in the north were chased out of their traditional habitat by the LTTE in 1990.
Burning issues
The Muslims have been confronted with an array of issues which they view as calculated efforts by the government to suppress them.
In Palayadivettai, Kirankovai, Muslims have been cultivating in nearly 502 acres of land for several years.
As cultivation began and business grew, the war broke out, forcing them out of this area. Several attempts to obtain permits from the divisional secretary to continue cultivation also failed due to the ongoing conflict.
During the period when Opposition Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe became prime minister and the Ceasefire Agreement was signed with the LTTE, the Muslim cultivators had returned to Palayadivettai to continue cultivation.
The District Coordinating Committee (DCC) that met in Ampara during this time has also decided to grant permits to the cultivators.
While the Muslims have been involved in cultivation since the, the present government decided to bring a halt to it.
The Wildlife Department that met on April 27 in Lahugala has decided to convert this piece of land that has been used for human cultivation into a land to grow vegetation for elephants.
This would bring an end to the cultivation being done by over 250 Muslim farmers who have been cultivating on this particular land and earning a living for the past 25 years.
In another instance, the Lahugala Pradeshiya Sabha chairman in a recent letter to the government has expressed his desire to incorporate three grama sevaka divisions of Pottuvil into the Lahugala Divisional Secretariat Division.
Muslims claim that the land coming under the three grama sevaka divisions have been used for cultivation by them for the past several years on an annual permit basis. They believe this is part of a programme by the government to expand the Shastrawela Temple in Panama.
Harassment
Their woes do not end at that. In another instance, the Muslims have also faced harassment in Pasaradichenai.
Pasaradichenai is a 10-acre Muslim burial ground. However, settlers from the south have encroached on this land over the years. A survey has revealed that the Muslims have lost nearly three acres of land.
When a complaint was lodged with the police and relevant government authority, the cemetery had been divided among the communities proportionately. In this instance too the Muslims had to lose a couple of acres from their original burial ground.
Munai in Arugambay is a cultivation plot, where around 20 Muslim farmers owned lands and engaged in farming.
According to Yasimbawa Adam Bawa (51), he owned two acres of land in Munai but during the time when the LTTE drove Muslims out of the north in 1990, the Muslims in this area had also been chased out by the LTTE.
However after 1994, when the situation calmed down, he along with other Muslim cultivators had returned to their land. But to their dismay they had not been allowed to carry out cultivation by the Tamil and Sinhala settlers.
Bawa was also in possession of the government permit given to him by the district secretary but he said today he and other farmers were not allowed to engage in any farming in their own land.
Lack of confidence
If the 1990 mass exodus of Muslims from the north forced them to lose confidence in the LTTE, the massacre of 10 Muslims at Irathalvettu, Pottuvil on September 17, 2006 led to their losing confidence in the government too. The presence of Karuna group compounds this.
The Muslims in Pottuvil do not wish to accept that the massacre of the 10 Muslims was carried out by the LTTE.
According to Pottuvil Pradeshiya Sabha Vice Chairman M.B. Abdul Majeed, it is almost one year since this incident took place but the government is yet to complete its investigation. He added the manner in which one of the survivors, Meera Mohideen was being protected by the state casts suspicion on the government.
A?a??A?In between two predominant Muslim towns A?a??a?? Pottuvil and Akkaraipattu A?a??a?? there are several small Tamil villages. The Muslims keep shuttling between these two towns daily. If the LTTE wanted to kills us, they could have planted a claymore mine or set up a bomb in one of the busses plying in between these two towns,A?a??A? he said.
A?a??A?The location where these 10 Muslims were brutally assassinated was surrounded by the Lahugala STF Camp, Sengamam STF Camp, Third Mile Police Post, Pottuvil Police Station, Arugam Bay STF Camp and Shastrawela STF Camp. How can one expect the LTTE to penetrate into this highly fortified area and commit such a heinous crime in broad daylight? This is questionable,A?a??A? he added.
Discrimination
Be that as it may, the Sinhalese who have been deeply rooted in these areas for several decades also lead a life of poverty and distress.
For the grief-stricken fisher folk, life there is a constant battle. Some of them have gone there from the deep south to continue the legacy left behind by their fathers and forefathers, while for others it is a fresh start.
For a few others, their presence was not due to own choice but since they followed false promises by southern politicians. A?a??A?Only now we know we have been cheated,A?a??A? they said.
D.V. Padmasiri arrived in Pottuvil 25 years ago. He is a father of three. He was forced to follow his parents from the south. His parents were engaged in fishing.
Life for Padmasiri is difficult. He talks of discrimination and not being able to gain what the Muslims gain. A?a??A?This is a worry for all of us,A?a??A? he said.
He said life there, however, was free of tension. According to him there are no police, no government officials, no checks and no barriers. A?a??A?We do everything according to our wants. Nobody checks us,A?a??A? he said.
Suranga Janakantha, father of one, has been living in Ulla, Pottuvil from childhood. He had come with his parents and enrolled himself at the only Sinhala school found in Pottuvil. The Sinhala Maha Vidyalaya caters to 120 Sinhalese students.
He is of the view the Sinhalese peasants were discriminated against by the majority Muslims.
A?a??A?We could not even get our due share after the tsunami. The government promised to construct houses for us. But all the government institutions here are dominated by the Muslims, and therefore we lost the chance of getting houses. For each house, the authority here dominated by the Muslims demanded Rs. 50,000 as commission. Where can we go for this money? Therefore, we decided to live in cadjan huts,A?a??A? he said.
He said the Sinhala community is on good terms with the Tamil community but not with the Muslims since A?a??A?they are dangerous.A?a??A?

source:http://www.nation.lk/2007/05/06/newsfe2.htm

Sri Lankan defence secretary menaces newspaper editor

By Nanda Wickremesinghe
24 April 2007

In a further attack on democratic rights, Sri Lankaa??s defence secretary Gotabhaya Rajapakse last week threatened the editor of the English language Cheap zofran Daily Mirror Renagel 800 price over two articles in its April 16 and 17 editionsa??the first dealing the activities of a pro-government militia, known as the Karuna group, and the second with the appalling conditions facing Tamil refugees in the East.

The threat is the latest in a long line of steps by the government to suppress any criticism of the military and its offensive against the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The defence secretary is the brother of President Mahinda Rajapakse, who has plunged the island back to war since winning office in November 2005.

After the articles were published, an enraged Gotabhaya Rajapakse telephoned the newspapera??s editor Champika Liyanarachchi, who reported him as saying: a??Dona??t be surprised if the Karuna faction turns violent against you. If that happens dona??t expect any security from the government to protect yourself.a??

Rajapakse then demanded that the editor resign or he would force management to dismiss her on the grounds of preventing a reprisal against the newspaper. Referring to journalist Uditha Jayasinghe, who wrote one of the articles, the defence secretary bluntly told Liyanarachchi: a??Ia??ll exterminate hera??.

In Sri Lanka, such comments cannot be regarded as idle threats. Over the past year, nine media workers, mostly Tamil journalists, have been murdered in circumstances that strongly suggest the involvement of the military or associated paramilitaries such as the Karuna group. Rajapaksea??s refusal to provide protection is tantamount to an invitation for a physical attack on the newspaper and its editor.

The article on April 16 entitled a??Armed Karuna faction running its writ in Pottuvila?? graphically exposed the governmenta??s lie that the security forces are not cooperating with the Karuna group. Muslims in the eastern town of Pottuvil angrily told the Daily Mirror that Karunaa??s armed thugs move around freely, threatening people and extorting money. A coalition known as the Peace Secretariat for Muslims (PSM) had protested to the government and the international co-chairs of the peace process to no avail.

a??Maintaining law and order is the duty of the police, and in special cases the army has a role to play. But in Pottuvil the police, including the STF (police commandos) and the army have become mere bystanders while the Karuna group is running the writ through the town,a?? a PSM spokesman told the newspaper.

The Rajapakse government has repeatedly rejected the LTTEa??s demands to disarm paramilitaries such as the Karuna group as required by the 2002 ceasefire agreement, claiming that they were not operating in areas under government control. The Daily Mirror confirmed the security forces are allowing the Karuna group and other militias to openly threaten and extort. Behind the scenes, they undoubtedly operate with sections of the military in carrying out far greater crimes, including abduction and murder.

The second article, written on April 17 by Uditha Jayasinghe, was titled a??Muttur IDPs [Internally Displaced Persons]: Battling a man-made tsunami in the guise of wara??. It explained the appalling conditions confronting refugees as a result of the militarya??s offensives in the Trincomalee and Batticaloa districts. Its interviews and comments undermined the governmenta??s claims to be conducting a??humanitarian missionsa?? to assist people a??trappeda?? in LTTE-areas.

The reality is that since last July the army has conducted a series of aggressive operations to seize LTTE territory in open breach of the 2002 ceasefire. To stampede the local population, the military has deliberately shelled and bombed civilian areas, resulting in hundreds of deaths and driving hundreds of thousands to flee. These refugees are now living from hand to mouth without adequate food, shelter and medicine in camps throughout the East. Those displaced from Muttur have been living in such conditions since last August.

After the Daily Mirror made his comments public, the defence secretary lamely denied threatening the newspapera??s editor, saying all that was involved was a a??frank exchange of ideasa??. Writing on the defence ministry web site, Rajapakse claimed he had told Liyanarachchi the two articles were a??detrimental to the national securitya??. One article, he stated, promoted a??racial hatreda??, while a??the other was trying to damage the good image of the Security Forcesa??.

What is clear from Rajapaksea??s comments is that, in the name of a??national security,a?? the government and the military are demanding an end to all, even the most limited, criticism of the war. The threats against the Daily Mirror are a further warning of the methods being used. Under the current state of emergency, President Rajapakse has extensive powers to muzzle the media, but has refrained from using them to avoid provoking further political opposition.

The Editors Guild of Sri Lanka issued a statement, declaring: a??We consider this a serious threat to media freedom and also to editorial independence…. The Guild totally condemns the behaviour of a senior government official.a?? The Free Media Movement (FMM) also criticised the remarks, stating: a??Given the volatile situation in the country, the FMM also fears that this threat sends a chilling message to the media community at large in Sri Lanka.a??

President Rajapakse has attempted to repair the political damage. According to the newspaper, he telephoned Liyanarachchi and a??promised an investigationa?? into the threats. The Daily Mirror responded by hailing the initiative and promoting the illusion that the president, unlike his brother and other officials, was seriously interested in peace.

a??At a time when President Rajapakse is engaged in the arduous task of uniting the country to bring much desired peace, the behaviour of this nature on the part of his trusted lieutenants, could be condemned as attempts at cutting ground from under his feet,a?? the editorial stated. It has also noted that Karuna had informed Liyanarachchi that his group would not harm her.

Like Rajapaksea??s claims to be a??a man of peacea??, his efforts to parade as a champion of media rights are simply window dressing. A statement by the governmenta??s Media Centre for National Security (MCNS) continued the campaign against the Daily Mirror, provocatively declaring: a??The government believes that the latest allegation against the defence secretary is part of a wide plan to remove him from office to satisfy the aims of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam.a??

The governmenta??s assault on the media is in fact intensifying. Just one day before Liyanarachchi was threatened, Subash Chandrabose, editor of the magazine Nilam and a contributor to other Tamil news media, was killed in the northern border town of Vavuniya.

Standard Newspapers, which published a leading Sinhalese-language weekly Mawbima and the English-language weekly Sunday Standard, was forced to cease operations on March 29 after the government froze the companya??s assets. The Terrorist Investigation Division (TID) of the police arrested the companya??s spokesman and financial director, Dushyantha Basnayake, under the Prevention of Terrorism Act, and has detained him without charge since February 27.

During the past year, Mawbima reported on government corruption and human rights violations. Its journalists questioned the governmenta??s role in the spiralling number of abductions and a??disappearancesa?? as fighting between the military and the LTTE escalated. The media group belongs to a friend of former senior minister Mangala Samaraweera who was sacked in February after falling out with the President Rajapakse. Both the president and the defence secretary accused Mawbima of supporting the LTTE and undermining a??national securitya??.

These measures against the media are part of a wider attack on the democratic rights of ordinary working people. As it intensifies the war and the accompanying assault on living standards, the Rajapakse government cannot tolerate any criticism or exposure of its lies.

source:

http://www3.wsws.org/articles/2007/apr2007/sri-a24.shtml

Annual Rapport

AbHa Arugam B Buy prednisone no script ay Hotel Association (est. 1999) usually publishes its annual report on 31st March.
This year, 2007, we dismissed the more appropriate idea of posting our views and experiences on the troubled Eastern Coast on April Fools Day, 1st April, 2007.
Following the impressive WW1 style air show at our int. airport recently, that is.
And the ongoing saga with useless organizations wasting donor’s cash where they can on doubtful ‘projects’.
Nobody could possibly believe what we are going through right now, in any event.
The situation here, locally, is far worse than after the natural disaster of 2004.
We are facing a huge man made problem, for some time to come as it seems.
It has been made worse, because this time round nobody seems to care, worldwide.
But most of all: Because all our hope of sanity returning one fine day has nearby gone.

AbHa has now, sadly, lost its only sponsor, the SVH at Arugam Bay.
The Siam Order urispas 200mg View Hotel, itself a very badly affected Tsu. victim, has always been the only source of AbHa’s moderate income.
AbHa itself never received a single rupee from anyone else – and all our services were provided totally FREE to everyone. AbHa never charged anyone for anything.

Looking back, we are proud to recall how much we managed to achieve with so few funds!
Now the little SV Hotel is itself as good as bankrupt, and fighting for its own survival.
In short, all home grown and our true Community based projects are shelved – the ENJOY’s with all their financial might have won this particular round.
By ignoring and even obstructing AbHa.
AbHa will remain active just on this web site, and may gain strength to fight for the poor people in the East once again – if someone comes forward to trust us with a few rupees to carry out any given ‘Project’ for the Common good.
Meanwhile we just continue to sit back, watch and report what is going on around your famous Bay.
Don’t expect any huge progress from any of the so-called ‘active’ NGO’s:
Most of them are busy in Berlin, London, New York or Bangkok – and of course they are always ready to be seen at the Happy Hours at our top hotels in Colombo!

AbT/Ha

Buying femara

This used to be our the header to our site.
It has now been moved into the archives to make room for our new “Surfer’s Blog”

AbT/Ha

Edit

Arugam Bay Hotel Association (AbHa) is a non-profit organization conceived in 1999 and formed 2001 with the sole aim to attract visitors to the Bay and to improve the lifestyle of all its natives and residents.

Arugam Bay Tourist Association (AbTa) was formed after the Tsunami and concentrates more on local issues. The AbTa home page (www.visitarugambay.com) gives more details.

This site is designed to be totally independent, and hopefully will compliment all efforts made by both Associations in future. The goodwill is here!

History/ Background
With the arrival of a well funded US Agency A?a??A?Mercy CorpsA?a??A? in 2005 AbHa has largely been withdrawn from local politics. Since then AbHa only concentrated on the Promotion of the Bay abroad. AbHa could be considered as Arugam BayA?a??a?? Foreign Office.

Together we are Strong! Indeed!
AbHa realized, much earlier than September, 2006, that cooperation leads to mutual benefits and makes us strong as a Community.
If we could have a common voice and strong International and maybe even a National lobby it would lead to many improvements of the Bay. Our aim is after all to and better the life quality of its nicely mixed bunch of residents. see above: AbHa.

At a full Association meeting in 2002 a democratically elected chairman, Mr. Rahim, was soon found.
It did not turn out to be a huge success – because nothing was done for years.
Even in difficult times, like in December 2004 the Bay appeared to have no leader or coordinator. AbHa webmasters decided it was time to act and the first self help group in the entire Asian disaster was borne on Dec. 26th itself; by-passing the elected, sadly dormant committee.

AbHa became a highly successful model, with a very good cash for work program, totally free Internet access and the first and only Tsunami Early Warning Centre in Sri Lanka – At great loss to the Community AbHa was unfortunately never once supported when donation dripping NGOA?a??a??s had to compete with each other by staging with various publicity stunts during 2005. No place for us.
We proposed to use a neutral website to coordinate all the help and avoid duplications where the same person receives assistance from fearlessly competing global Aid organizations. Again we were ahead of our timeA?a??A?..:
No takers for our forward looking, modern ideas!
Otherwise a A?a??E?fishermanA?a??a??, who may never even have seen a single boat in his life time would not have ended up owning a fleet of a dozen or so by now.
We have lived overseas, were are much better informedA?a??A?..and we regret that we are not so easy to impress as a simple native.
For example, we feel that at the every least a badly damaged – or maybe even vanished Tourist Hotel should at the very least receive help to the tune of one single fishing boatsA?a??a?? value. We didnA?a??a??t get anything at all.
However:
New AbTa was formed with the full support of a somewhat far too idealistic and inexperienced Ms. Lyn Robinson of A?a??A?Mercy CorpsA?a??A?, whom as a person and persistence and durability we totally underestimated at the time – to be fair.
Unconfirmed reports indicate that history will show our mistake my well be reciprocal.

Our correspondent at the time (see archives) actually welcomed US LynA?a??a??s new, if somewhat undermining and as turned out to be Community splitting initiative in March 2005.
However, AbHa, whom never charged its members a single rupee, could not agree with the demand of a very high membership fee; specially for such an unproven, new Association.
How could we we agree with a brand new business structure, chaired by a non elected chairman?
AbTa was hence established without us. It certainly was a remarkable result of the A?a??A?Changing livesA?a??A? policy by a US lady sitting on the Board with 1 Million USD in her pocket at the time, representing Ms. O. WhinfreyA?a??a??s A?a??A?reaching out to the victims in the Arugam BayA?a??A? by means of a A?a??E?generousA?a??a?? donation.
Various further money collecting appeals were made during an emotional show or two featuring our plight in the Bay.
Why come and further collect from us, who lost near everything? ThatA?a??a??s how we thought and wondered at the time.

Further, the new board seems to have been pre-arranged with an unproportionally high content of Muslim enterprineurs, given the fact that most hotels & near all the guests in AbaY are non-halal.
Later declarations by new AbTa claiming Arugam Bay to be a Muslim town and ladies should cover up, even when on holiday reinforced our fears of an unwarranted influence for a resort set out to cater mainly for western visitors.
AbHaA?a??a?? position is that we are happy to accept and respect PottuVille is a Muslim settlement; indeed many visitors are surprised to find such a strong Middle Eastern influence with many Bin Laden look a-likes running from the one tea shop to the male only market. This is fairly unusual in a Buddhist nation to say the least.
Safe bet: You will not find one single, legal bottle of liquor in town.
You will never be bothered by any wild boar or domestic pig either. The paradox is that A?a??E?PottuVille Wild Boar is actually a National delicacy (but it actually comes from Panama, further South).
AbHa is proud to state that Arugam Bay different. The resort is a consistency very peaceful, (hmmA?a??A?usually..we mean..apart A?a??A?.09/06A?a??A? i think), but a beautiful, happy, mixed place where people of all faiths and heritage live and work together for many, many years.
There are Muslim, Tamil and Sinhalese Hotels on the A?a??E?SunrisestripA?a??a??, a few popular hotels are even run by mixed marriage foreign immigrants.
AbHa believes that there is no religious problem at all; all we observe is a huge lifestyle conflict, between us and the town which fully governs us, PottuVille.
Many wish we could be connected more with Panama or Lahugala, because the lifestyle gulf is far less deep in this direction; there are many old resorts on the South and West.
Muslims are very proud of their religion.
Events in the five few years since 2001 have shown that not everybody wants to take a well earned vacation in the Middle East, camp near a mosk or reject a fresh beer or glass of wine.

In a Bhuddist nation we are happy to Buy cheap albendazole without prescription offer beach life and moderate forms of entertainment, mainly catering to foreign visitors.

After nearly 2 years we realize that with our contribution and the cooperation between all the Tsu. affected businesses Arugam Bay would without doubt have received much more help.
Inter Community rivalry, much unfounded jealousy have even irritated many casual visitors.
Many good meaning NGOA?a??a??s came, wanted to help: But left again due to confusion and mistrust in our own Community:
We have to learn to WORK together, praise each otherA?a??a??s good points.
It is totally unproductive to continue to talk bad about A?a??E?the othersA?a??a??:
We are all in one boat; Remember: We were given one chance. Did we really make the best out of Dec/2004? Our new chance and fresh beginning?
AbHa does not think so and we wonder if we should get involved again.
What do you think?
Can our new web site A?a??E?blogA?a??a?? ever compete with a highly professional, much more powerful Mercy Corps site: Wishing you would Visitarugam Bay?
Indeed, why should we – we should work together for the common good!
If you like our open, down to earth approach and honest thoughts; please support us & leave a comment!
AbHa has never received any funds or support from anyone apart from the founder member of the Siam View Hotel (SVH).

Bright Ideas

osram-night-sensor-lamp-15w-es.jpg_41278888_lightbulbbbc2031.jpg

But no power.
What to do? Wobble the head?

Most so-called “active” NGO’s actually hate Arugam.info.
We only seem to run them down in public.
We do. With good reason.
Why on earth don’t they ever come up with a real bright idea for a change?
Arugam.info is not part of any ENJOY and we never have been given any official funds to this day.
Q.:
What would AbHa do if they had just a tiny fraction of the cash all the Orgas. waste, every day?
A.:
The priorities of the concerned underdog change all the time.
To demonstrate allow us to give you one single example of what worries us right now.
USAid has used its obvious influence and they had a brand new transformer installed near their office. In record time.
Something we tried to do for the past 10 years was completed yesterday, in just 3 days: The US air conditioners were not performing well at their end of Arugambay or whatever.
But of course there is a serious power problem, everywhere.
As a result the mains voltage now drops at the other, opposing end of town.
What to do? As the Sri Lankans would say? And wobble with the head.
Today, is the day when Australia has outlawed the old, incandescent highly inefficient light bulbs. We quote: “saving the country’s greenhouse gas emissions by 4 million tonnes by 2012″.

Arugam.info recalls that with very limited funds and very little power as from January 2005 only energy efficient lights were supplied by AbHa to AbaY residents – free of charge.

Why doesn’t some Donation dripping NGO come up with the idea to change one for one:
One museum-type 1879 Edison patent’s heat bulb for a new, low energy bulb for EVERY household in the famous, but underpowered Bay?
What is wrong with making remote AbaY the first energy efficient village in Asia: Wouldn’t that be a real compliment to sanity and progress?
Further, it would actually be a low cost, high profile, ecological and highly “sustainable” “Project” (sorry: but we are truly sick of all these empty NGO slogans!!) which the locals would really LOVE. It would also educate the Natives to become more power efficient. And as a result, Arugam would have decent power again, at both ends of town, consume less fossil fuels and save cash for the Nation and every home.

Why?

Because the poor population can’t afford the new low energy lamps! They cost more than twice as much, but actually last more than 4x longer! Cheaper in the long run, but costly to buy in the first place. That’s why everyone keeps on buying the ancient cheap, crap, heat bulbs. This great “project” would save everyone money on high CEB bills.
And better still they get it for FREE, perhaps with a pretty Mercy Corpse (or so) sticker on each bulb…..sorry: Oprah Whinfrey’s preferred partners embrace only Las Vegas “Lights of Hope” to show their highly paid TV & PR teams what US help and changing lives is all about.
Q.: How many Americans does it take to change a 100W light bulb??
A.: Arugam.info does not have an answer we could print.

Sadly we are still not funded by anyone, but we remain confident that we have better ideas than most. We are locals as well as professionals after all.
And for a change 😉 we feel that our own ‘Community’ based “Sustainable” ‘Projects’ actually are what they claim and aim to be Order levlen ingredients .
Meanwhile nearby NGO’s light up their brand new buildings with power guzzling lamps.
The uneducated natives have an excuse. They have no knowledge and no funds.
What justification will we eventually hear from XXXX???? organization when judgment day has come? (We will name and shame them; don’t worry! Right now AbHa simply wants to record local events for future history).
Will they say “We had no funds available to buy 10 energy bulbs”?
To light up the new Community Tourist Office and local show piece?
Or do the XXX-experts Cheap biaxin 500 have no knowledge or education?
Or maybe the simple answer is: ‘We don’t really care’.
…..As long as their own jobs are secure they don’t.
This appears to be the thinking of our E.N.J.O.Y.s -In a nutters shell…..
See today’s related links and more info on this subject:
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/science/nature/4667354.stm
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/6378161.stm
http://www.banthebulb.co.uk/

300px-polemounttransformer02.jpg

Mercy Corps departs

mercy-corpse.gif

Mercy Corps received 1 Mill. US$ from the Oprah Winfrey Show, to be spent on “Changing Lives” in Arugam Bay.
The idealistic and well motivated Ms. Lyn Robinson implemented various “lively hood programs”, until her departure last autumn.
Nombre generico de arcoxia AbHa and Arugam.info has always been cold shouldered by Mercy Corps, and there has been an uneasy relationship, which resulted in a a lack of information flow and some misunderstandings.
However, Arugam.info Purchase lasunana is happy to admit that M/c was perhaps the best of any NGO ‘active’ in the Bay.
However, can we now ask “How wise was the 1 Mill.$ actually invested?”

1.) Concrete Block factory: No longer in operation
2.) Bicycle rentals: Never worked,all bikes sold for cash
3.) Kali Motorbike rentals: All 5 motorbikes sold for cash – at a fraction of the value
4.) Garment factory: Bankrupt – No orders!
5.) Garbage Tractor: Parked up, never goes out, no money for Diesel
6.) Chicken Farm: No Chickens
7.) Donated Fridges: Compressors burned out due to mains power fluctuation’s
8.) 100,000 ‘Las Vegas’ lights of Hope: All broke, see above, + rain
9.) Street Trees: OK, growing. But many will be uprooted when the road is done
10.) Street lights: Never on. House owners can’t pay the electricity bills anymore
11.) Boats, nets, engines: All sold for minimal cash
12.) Small side Roads: Substandard, unprofessional.A?A? All will be redone by UNOPS
12.) Small restaurants: All closed. No business, too much competition all round
13.) Internet: No more Internet in the entire Bay. Cut off by SLT (bill arrears)
AbHa advised Ms. Lyn that the American Dream might simply not work in Sri Lanka.
Here not everyone is cut out to be a successful business man.
It hurts to see that this seems to be the sad result of the best funded, most involved and most successful organization the Bay has had the pleasure of welcoming after Dec/2004.
As mentioned, Mercy Corps ignores us, our advice and this web site – so maybe there are many more successful investments we don’t know about.
The Bay’s own Tsunami warning system will also be switched off as soon as the Inmarsat prepaid credit is run out – Mercy Corpse had no funds available for this Community project, run by proven survivors, in every way.

Eastern Concerns

Forget the de-merger and resolve land disputesWhile the Tamil party representatives say that the de-merger is likely to lead to more destruction, Muslims are of the opinion it is they who will finally have to bear the brunt of all these problems.

By Wilson Gnanadass
The bifurcation of the northern and eastern provinces through a Supreme Court order of October 16 has further compounded the lives of the Tamils and Muslims.

Today, both the Tamils and the Muslims living in these provinces are confused over the court order and wonder why this was affected when loads of problems faced by them have not yet been solved by the government.
Questions are also raised on who has benefited out of this exercise to separate the two provincesA?A?that were merged in 1989, following the Indo-Lanka Peace Accord signed between Sri Lankan President J. R. Jayewardene and Indian Prime Minister Rajiv Gandhi.

The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) have vehemently opposed the de-merger, while the Muslims feel the merger means A?a??E?nothingA?a??a?? to them for their problems, they say, are greater in proportion. Therefore, they say the government should have first looked into other pressing issues rather than wasting time in separating the provinces.
While the Tamil party representatives say that the de-merger is likely to lead to more destruction, Muslims are of the opinion it is they who will finally have to bear the brunt of all these problems. The countryA?a??a??s two major Muslim political parties – the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) led by parliamentarian Rauf Hakeem and National Unity Alliance (NUA) led by Housing Minister Ferial Ashraff, have expressed deep concern over the situation, while also stating that the de-merger was not in any event going to ease the existing tension or salvage the Muslims from the depths they have fallen into.

To an average Muslim in the East, it is not the merger or the de-merger that matters. But what matters is an immediate solution to the long standing land disputes, prevalent among the Muslim villages. Many Muslims have also been killed due to land problems but the government has still not paid attention to this issue.

Land issues
Traditionally, improper demarcation of lands in Muslim districts has caused severe tension among the Muslims in the East.
Recently, 10 Muslims were killed in Ullai in Pottuvil electorate due to land disputes and many hundreds have been killed in the past, due to the same issue.

Repeated representations to the government to find a solution, has fallen on the deaf ears of authorities.
If a referendum was called for by the Elections Commissioner to determine whether the people wanted the merger or not, majority of the Muslims, according to a survey, might have voted against the de-merger.

The Muslims, contrary to statements made by the government, did not want a de-merger until their problems were solved. However, the sudden decision to de-merge the North and East has forced them to silently protest against it.
Under the J. R. Jayewardene regime, Pradeshiya Sabhas have been created in the Muslim areas without any consultation with the Muslim parties. This has been followed by arbitrary distribution of lands by the respective Pradeshiya Sabhas and state aided colonisation, under the pretext of developing the area.

In this exercise, a large extent of lands belonging to the Muslims has been grabbed by the state.
For instance, it is pointed out that there is no clear boundary demarcated between Lahugalla and Pottuvil, Alayadivembu and Akkaraipattu, Erakaman DS division and Akkaraipattu DS division.

Muslims are now of the opinion that the government should have first looked into sorting out this lapse rather than de-merging the North and East, that they say is likely to cause more destruction than ever before.

Travesty of justice
Muslims say, in 1987, with the signing of the Indo-Lanka Accord, when the Provincial Councils came into effect, they were given step-motherly treatment through land demarcation.

They said the government at that time opted to allocate 368. 3 square miles (sq.m) in Lahugalla for a population of 7,085, while in Pottuvil the Provincial Council opted to allocate 103.9 sq.m to a population of 19,831.
In the Sinhala dominated Vevagampattu, 6,585 people have been living in 260 sq.m, while in the Tamil/Muslim dominated Sammanthuraipattu some 40,700 people have been living in just 99 sq.m.

The Muslims, therefore, are of the view that the government should have first given consideration to these issues rather than bifurcating the North and East, which they say did not mean anything to them.

The Muslims have also mounted pressure on SLMC and NUA to take this matter up with the government at the negotiating table. It has been the desire of these two parties too, to place the land issue as one of the conditions for supporting the peace process and also supporting the de-merger, but unfortunately, the Supreme Court had already taken this decision.

****

GovernmentA?a??a??s plan
Whether one likes it or not, the North and East are separated. Arguments and debates over this could continue for months or for years, but the fact remains that North and East are divided.

On the instruction of the Eastern governor Rear Admiral Mohan Wijewickrama, President Mahinda Rajapaksa has appointed S. Thiyagalingam as the Chief Secretary for the Eastern province. He was the Secretary for the Northeast Education and Cultural Ministry under the merged Northeast. Earlier, the Muslim parties recommended that a person from the Muslim community should be appointed as the Chief Secretary for the East, but government sources say a suitable person could not be found for this post.

The government has also decided to temporarily administer both provinces from Trincomalee. The eastern administration is now being carried out at Tuwaramkadu, six miles away from the Trincomalee town, while the northern administration is being carried out in the Trincomalee town itself. The government has also decided to construct a new building in Vavuniya to transfer the northern administration there after one year.

****

SLMC not consulted
Meanwhile, SLMCA?a??a??s General Secretary and parliamentarian, Hasan Ali says that though the SLMC commands the authority of 11 Pradeshiya Sabhas of the 13 in the Eastern province, the government did not have the common courtesy to consult the party, prior to taking any decision with regard to the de-merger.

He said that if the government could not solve the land issues that have been faced by the Muslims during the time when the two provinces were joined, it cannot be expected for them to solve this issue now.

He said the SLMC has been agitating for a separate Muslim district for a long time but has now lost hope of gaining it. A?a??A?We now realise that the government is not sensitive to our fundamental issues,A?a??A? he said. He said, though moderate political parties have governed the country since 1958, they have been subject to extremist pressures and even today, the present government was subject to extreme opinions of the Marxist JVP.

A?a??A?Therefore, we are confident that the government will not be in a position to deliver the goods to the minority,A?a??A? he added.
He says the SLMC is disturbed over the Supreme Court decision for two reasons. Firstly, he says, the government that was aware of the moves made by certain individuals, to go to courts challenging the merger, could have consulted his party.
Secondly, he says, when a plethora of problems faced by the Muslims could not be solved by the government, it was highly unnecessary to waste time on the de-merger.

****

Azwer welcomes the move
Former Parliamentary Affairs Minister and Presidential Adviser on Muslims Affairs, A.H.M.Azwer has welcomed the move taken by the Supreme Court.

He says what the Muslims face today, is the reality and that no one could have ever determined their fate.
He said the de-merger will enable the Muslims to gain political power, self respect and a province of their own.
He says this will teach a lesson or two to the Tamils who wish to perpetuate their fiefdom in the North and East. He adds, under Tamil dominance in the North and the East, the Muslims have been forced to face untold hardship, and this type of action would put Tamil dominance in place. A?a??A?The genuine fears of the Muslims can now be obliterated with the de-merger. We can have our own chief ministers and our own administration,A?a??A? he said.
He also questioned as to how Muslims could trust the Tamils, given the past history of mass scale exodus forced on the Muslims by the LTTE in 1990.

He is of the opinion that the Muslims will have to live independently under a united Sri Lanka. A?a??A?The Muslims are not willing to be slaves under another particular community,A?a??A? he said.

He said Muslims may be Tamil speaking people but they cannot share the claim by the Tamils for a separate state. A?a??A?Our problems are different and our claims are different. Therefore, we must be left alone,A?a??A? he said.

****

V. Anandasangari describes govt. plan as destructive Order avanade

The UNESCO Peace Award winner V. Anandasangari maintains that the de-merger will be more destructive than constructive.
He says a de-merger introduced at a time when the people were running for their lives had no meaning.
He says most of the government machinery in the Northeast was defunct and that the government could have invested its time on streamlining the defunct machinery rather than introducing something which was not in the long run, going to pay dividends.
A?a??A?In a merged council, the Sinhalese could have been looked after like how Tamils are looked after in the Sinhala dominated provinces. I really donA?a??a??t understand why and how all of a sudden the de-merger came about. It is very unfortunate, but we canA?a??a??t help but face it,A?a??A? he said.

He said he could not fathom who will be the beneficiary of this exercise and it was his view, only the JVP would benefit out of this.

A?a??A?The government should have given the people a chance to decide. This is a highly sensitive issue and therefore the government should have treated this with sensitivity. But unfortunately a rash decision has been taken,A?a??A? he added.
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****

Ferial says it is not a matter for concern
Housing Minister Ferial Ashraff says, to an average Muslim, what mattered was his day-to-day problems rather than either the merger or the de-merger.

She told The Nation, the long standing issues faced by the Muslims have still not been solved and therefore, the Muslims do not feel for either the merger or the de-merger.

She says the de-merger was not required at a time when both the government and the LTTE were engaged in war.
A?a??A?When we talk about it, I think we are talking in terms of the Muslim and Tamil interests. When talking about the Muslim interest, I donA?a??a??t think it is the merger or de-merger that bothers them. We have other problems and whether these provinces are merged or de-merged, it does not become an issue for our community,A?a??A? she said.

She further said, when the provinces were merged, the Muslim problems were never looked into. A?a??A?As for us, we maintain that it is not the merger or the de-merger but the day-to-day problems faced by the Muslims that will have to be dealt with,A?a??A? she said.
She also said as far as the national issues were concerned, the Muslims would have been preferred to go into the issues of North-East before the change to status quo.

A?a??A?Basically, we have a war situation here. I donA?a??a??t understand why this came up at this stage,A?a??A? she said.
She said unresolved land disputes is the main problem faced by the Muslims and added if Muslims are appointed to the administrative systems these issues could have been looked into with deeper interest.

A?a??A?I would continue to ask for better treatment by the government officials for all the people in the East,A?a??A? she said.
She also said her party, NUA, has been asking for an additional Secretariat in Ampara district for a long time but to no avail.
She said the people were forced to travel to Trincomalee to attend to their personal needs.

A?a??A?Our people had a lot of problems going to Trincomalee and we have been agitating for an additional Secretariat in Ampara. It will be good if the government can establish an administrative unit at least in Kalmunai,A?a??A? she added.

source:
http://www.nation.lk/2007/01/07/newsfe4.htm

Arugambay/Ampara Cultural sites in Danger

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Cultural sites in crisis

Drastic decline in tourist arrivals: Not enough funds to even pay salaries

By Kelum Bandara

The Central Cultural Fund is in a financial crisis and is forced to seek public assistance to carry out conservation work, a top CCF official said. He attributed it to the drop in tourist arrivals in 2006.

The cultural tourism is the major source of income for the Fund to maintain its conservation sites such as Jethawanaramaya, Abhayagiriya, Sigiriya and Galle Fort which have also been declared as world heritage sites.

The official told the Daily Mirror yesterday they were able to record an annual turn over of Rs. 550 million in 2004 by selling tickets to tourists, but the income dropped drastically after the tsunami catastrophe in December of the same year.

He said they collected only Rs. 296 million in 2005, and the situation was gradually picking up towards the early part of 2006.

However, the official said, the matter took a turn for the worse after the escalation of hostilities between the security forces and the LTTE posing a major threat to the tourism industry.

A?a??A?The income declined to Rs. 18 million last month. We need at least Rs. 42 million to pay salaries of our 2500 employees attached to various sites,A?a??A? he said.

He said the travel advisories issued by some European countries affected them severely.

A?a??A?True, there is an increase in tourist arrivals from India and Pakistan. But most of them are not cultural tourists. We need more and more tourists from Europe to increase our earnings,A?a??A? he said.

In this context, the CCF requests people to volunteer to work in cultural sites such as Abhayagiriya and make cash donations to maintain the projects.

A?a??A?Even a donation of Rs. 100 is quite welcome. Those who make donations of Rs.100, 000 will receive a valuable souvenir from us,A?a??A? he said.

The Archaeological Department has suspended conservation work at some sites such as Udaganawa, Buttala and Deegawapiya in Ampara due to financial constraints.

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read the original article:
http://www.dailymirror.lk/2007/01/02/front/01.asp

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Personal view from Our own Correspondent:
“If this means they are selling our Nation’s most valuable assets just in order to survive:
It simply demonstrates how the entire Nation seems to feel at this difficult time.
These days everybody seems to be sacrificing something of previous high value the in our former paradise.
That could be pride, honesty, decency or just material things like selling pieces of heritage, your beach boy body or a piece of your father’s home land.”

Competition

Congratulations! Monic & Philip!
You are confirmed to be the winners of AbaY’s “Best Surf Photo” competition.
Your photo, as below is this year’s winner!
You have won a FREE two week stay in Sibo treatment augmentin Arugam Bay,A?A? to be taken at anytime during 2007.
Sponsored by AbHa.
Reminder:
Our Pyridium 200 mg price “Romantic/most Memorable Couple Photo” competition closes Tomorrow.
Please send your final entry Quickly to:
ArugamFoto@Gmail.com
The winners will be announced and published HERE before the end of this Year, 2006!
To see all the contestants so far click here:
http://picasaweb.google.com/arugamsurf


Rajapaksa anniversary: The grim realities


Rajapaksa anniversary: The grim realities

  • Heavy arms procurements as both sides prepare for escalation of conflict
  • Defence Ministry forms company for import of arms but serious questions arise
  • After the Budget, focus now on Prabha’s heroes’ day speech

By Iqbal Athas

President Percy Mahinda Rajapaksa today marks an important milestone in his political career – the completion of a year in office as President, Head of Government, Head of Cabinet, Minister of Defence and Commander-in-Chief of the armed forces.

Nothing has been more exacting in the first of his six year tenure than the spheres of defence, security and peace. Just weeks after assuming office, the Security Forces and Tiger guerrillas were engaged in skirmishes. One blamed the other for the actions. It escalated gradually. The guerrillas launched a major military campaign to lay siege on the Jaffna peninsula. Though undeclared, that saw the birth of Eelam War IV.

Despite the early confrontations, he succeeded in reviving peace talks with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). That was in Geneva in April, this year. It came after the talks remained suspended since February 2003 during the tenure of the former United National Front (UNF) Government. The next round, however, in Geneva failed. Yet, it was revived again. Government and LTTE delegations met in Geneva on October 28 and 29 but the talks collapsed on an unexpected issue – the re-opening of the Muhamalai end of A-9 highway. The issue has quite clearly distanced the two sides from the negotiation table and forced them to focus on the battlefield.

Thus, a climate for resumed peace negotiations has virtually disappeared. On both the Security Forces and the Tiger guerrilla sides, there have been hectic military preparations to cope with imminent threats from each other. The Security Forces have gone on a high state of alert countrywide. For the first time, unprecedented security preparations have gone into effect in the South. President Rajapaksa and his government leaders are taking part in ceremonies today to mark his first year in office. They do not want the guerrillas to mar them.

In guerrilla dominated areas in the North and East, fears of strikes by the Security Forces have led to enhanced measures by them. Ahead of LTTE leader, Velupillai Prabhakaran’s “Maveerar (Great Heroes) Day” address the guerrillas fear Security Forces may strike at their positions. This, they worry, is to mar ceremonies that begin tomorrow (Monday) during the “great” heroes week. They engage in religious observances to remember their dead cadres.

The week culminates with Mr. Prabhakaran’s 52nd birthday when he delivers his address.

It is in this grim backdrop that President Rajapaksa looks to his second year in office. The deadlock over the re-opening of the A-9 highway has diminished the prospects of an early resumption of peace talks. It has consequently increased the spectre of a heightened Eelam War IV. That has left President Rajapaksa with little choice but to ensure a much greater military preparedness by the Security Forces.

On Thursday President Rajapaksa, in his capacity as the Minister of Finance and Planning, introduced in Parliament his Government’s second budget. It made no reference to a significant rise in defence expenditure. Yet, the much revised Rs 108.67 billion in the current year will rise to Rs 1.29 billion in 2007 – a reflected increase of 28 per cent. That constitutes a 45 per cent increase in defence spending. Further revisions cannot be ruled out.

Defence Spokesman Keheliya Rambukwella told Simon Gardner of Reuters “when sovereignty of the state is threatened, it has to be safeguarded.” He was also quoted as saying “Defence professionals will have to look into (what to buy) – basically what you need to defend the country.”

In fact, some hectic military procurement is under way. For obvious reasons one cannot detail all of them except to say some of the capital assets are enormously expensive. A company has been formed under the Ministry of Defence to exclude middle men in deals involving military hardware. It has sought commissions on the deals entered with foreign suppliers. The money is to be spent on troop’s welfare. Yet, the MoD has also renewed its call for the registration of suppliers for the year 2007. Almost all the deals are being touted as Government to Government. However, there were also ones that raised very serious questions where some of the transactions involving millions of rupees, to say the least, amounted to “highway robbery”. Those clearly raised doubts on whether the practice of churning out millionaires and billionaires in Sri Lankaa??s separatist war still continues.

In this war, the Army, Navy, Air Force and even the Police have had to periodically replace or update military hardware. It has happened whenever fighting has escalated leading to loss, damage or wear and tear of some equipment.

In an unusual development, personnel of the Sri Lanka Air Force have spoken openly about the Government acquiring four aircraft. Four of them are undergoing training at the Indian Air Force facility in Chandigarh which is the premier training base for Mig-27 and Mig-29 aircraft. Their remarks were reported by the Press Trust of India (PTI) on Wednesday.

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Three of Army’s Main Battle Tanks (MBTs), damaged during the ill planned Muhamalai offensive that ended in a debacle, lay in Tiger guerrilla controlled side. The Army lost six tanks valued at Rs 60 million.

The Government has contracted for the purchase of four Mig-27 aircraft from Ukraine, one of the major defence deals under President Rajapaksa’s administration. The Army lost six Czech built T-55 Main Battle Tanks during the ill planned offensive in Muhamalai on October 11. This turned out to be a devastating debacle with over 146 officers and men killed. See picture on this page of three such tanks lying damaged in guerrilla dominated part of Muhamalai. It is no secret that such tanks would have to be replaced. So would be the Dvora Fast Attack Craft (FACs) lost during battles with Sea Tigers, the most recent one on November 9 (The Sunday Times – Situation Report November 12).

In fact, the Navy has been handicapped for a considerable period of time. A scandalous deal to procure guns manufactured in 1985 as the main armament for FACs was called off. After exposures in The Sunday Times a Commission of Inquiry was appointed to probe the matter. The inquiries are continuing. But the Navy is yet to receive a replacement weapon. There are fears that new snags may delay the process further.

Yet, the Navy has now begun to face the brunt of the guerrillas. Yesterday, they foiled an attempt by Sea Tigers to mount an attack on the Navy base and the adjoining police station in Talaimannar. Some ten Sea Tiger boats had first attacked two Navy Inshore Patrol Craft (IPCs) and later headed towards the base. The Navy men resisted guerrilla gunfire from sea. They disabled four Sea Tiger boats. Air support came moments later. They hit two more guerrilla craft. Thereafter the Sea Tigers withdrew. Navy officials in Talaimannar said on the telephone that ten bodies of guerrillas were seen floating in the sea. One sailor was killed and five others were injured.

This was the first major incident in a week and came amidst fears of major guerrilla attacks ahead of November 27. Intelligence sources said yesterday that further guerrilla attacks could not be ruled out before this date.

The measures by the Government to further bolster the strength of the Security Forces (and even the Police), a marked contrast from the two previous Governments, are not altogether one sided. According to intelligence sources, the LTTE had succeeded in smuggling in a variety of military hardware in the past months. These sources say they are continuing to do so. Such items had included vast quantities of artillery ammunition, mortar shells, explosives and surface-to-air missiles. Some of the ship-to-trawler transfers heading to the shores were disrupted by the Navy.

All this means that both the Government and the LTTE are preparing themselves to be stronger at war. Logically that would mean the introduction of more hardware and the intensification of the war. This, no doubt, would further distance them from the peace process. More importantly, the accent from both sides, as a New Year approaches would be on a stepped up Eelam War IV.
Those challenges come for President Rajapaksa at a critical moment. The Government is facing accusations of human rights violations. Last Monday President Rajapaksa promulgated an Extraordinary Gazette notification appointing a Commission of Inquiry to probe 15 cases involving such violations.

On Tuesday, envoys of Donor Co-chairs of the Peace Process, the United States, the European Union, Japan and Norway, are meeting in Washington D.C. to examine the situation in Sri Lanka. The Government has already launched diplomatic initiatives to explain its own position vis-A?-vis the issues to be discussed. With that over, Mr. Prabhakaran’s message will follow.

President Rajapaksa leaves on November 25 on a three-day private visit to India. He is expected to meet Prime Minister Manmohan Singh and other Indian leaders to explain the Government’s position with regard to several key issues.

Also due to leave for the United States is the Commander of the Army, Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka, who has been at the forefront of the military campaign against the LTTE. He and his family are Green Card holders in the US having won a lottery earlier. Such a card is a forerunner for US citizenship.

Lt. Gen. Fonseka is due to arrive in Washington D.C. on November 26. He has sought meetings with senior military officials at the Pentagon and State Department officials for November 27 and 28. He will thereafter travel to Oklahoma before returning to Sri Lanka.

Lt. Gen. Fonseka’s one-year term as Army Commander comes to an end on December 6, this year. Government sources said yesterday a decision on an extended period would be made upon his return.

As he steps into his second year in office, President Rajapaksa, faces a formidable challenge. He will have to take tough decisions on tougher issues to save a nation that is in the throes of a serious crisis.

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Commission to probe 15 major incidents
President Mahinda Rajapaksa has issued a proclamation appointing a Commission of Inquiry to probe 15 recent incidents of killings and disappearances which have led to an outcry over human rights violations. They will be assisted by panel of non Sri Lankans who are “International Independent Group of Eminent Persons” to be appointed by him.

The proclamation published in a Gazette Extraordinary on November 13 urges them to inquire and report within one year the following aspects:

  1. The facts and circumstances pertaining to each of the incident investigated and inquired into by the Commission of Inquiry.
  2. The descriptions, nature and backgrounds of persons who have directly suffered death, injury or any other physical harm as a result of the incidents investigated and inquired into by the Commission of Inquiry.
  3. The circumstances that may have led to or resulted in those persons referred in paragraph 2 above, suffering such death, injury or physical harm.
  4. The identities, descriptions and backgrounds of persons and groups of persons, who are responsible under the applicable laws and legal principles of Sri Lanka, for the commission of deaths, injury or physical harm to any person during, in the course of, or as a result of any of the incidents investigated and inquired into by the Commission of Inquiry.
  5. Having regard to relevant circumstances and possible reasons that may have influenced or been relevant to the conduct of investigations, examine and comment on the nature, propriety and efficacy of the investigations conducted into the incidents investigated and inquired into by the Commission of Inquiry.
  6. Recommend measures that should be taken in accordance with the laws of Sri Lanka, against those persons identified under paragraph 4 above.
  7. Recommend appropriate measures of reparation to be provided to the victims of serious violations of human rights investigated and inquired into by the Commission of Inquiry and to their next of kin.
  8. Recommend measures that should be taken by the Government of Sri Lanka in order to prevent the occurrence of incidents in the nature of those investigated and inquired into by the Commission of Inquiry.
  9. Any other recommendations considered by the Commission of Inquiry as being relevant on its findings in terms of this Warrant.

The 15 incidents listed for probe by the Commission of Inquiry are:

  1. The assassination of the Foreign Minister of Sri Lanka Hon. Lakshman Kadirgamar, PC.
  2. The killing of 17 (seventeen) aid workers of the International non-governmental organization ActionContre La Faim, in early August 2006
  3. The alleged execution of Muslim villagers in Muttur in early August 2006 and the execution at Welikanda of 14 persons from Muttur who were being transported in ambulances.
  4. The assassination of Mr. Joseph Pararajasingham, Member of Parliament on 25th December 2005
  5. The killing of (five) 5 youths in Trincomalee on or about 2nd January 2006.
  6. The assassination of the Deputy Director General of the Sri Lanka Peace Secretariat Mr. Ketheesh Loganathan on 12th August 2006.
  7. Death of fifty one (51) persons in Naddalamottankulam (Sencholai) in August 2006.
  8. Disappearance of Rev. Nihal Jim Brown of St. Philip Neri’s Church at Allaipidi on 28th August 2006.
  9. Killing of five (5) fishermen and another at Pesalai beach and at the Pesalai Church on 17th June 2006.
  10. Killing of thirteen (13) persons in Kayts Police area on 13th May 2006.
  11. Killing of ten (10) Muslim villagers at Radella in Pottuvil police area on 17th September 2006.
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  13. Killing of sixty eight (68) persons at Kebithigollewa on 15th June 2006.
  14. Incident relating to the finding of five (5) headless bodies in Avissawella on 29th April 2006.
  15. Killing of thirteen (13) persons at Welikanda on 29th May 2005.
  16. Killing of ninety eight (98) security forces personnel in Digampathana, Sigiriya, on 16th October 2006.

The Commission is headed by Supreme Court judge Justice N.K. Udalagama and comprises Upawansa Yapa, Dr. Devanesan Nesiah, K.C. Logeswaran, Manouri Muttetuwegama, Jezima Ismail, S.S.S. Wijeratne and Ahamed Javid Yusuf.

The Commission will hold public sittings. When the sensitive nature of the information and material relating to national security are dealt with, the Commission is empowered to hold sittings in camera. The Commissions proceedings will be without prejudice to ongoing investigations, legal or judicial proceedings now under way. The Inspector General of Police, Commanders of the Sri Lanka Army, Navy and Air Force have been called upon to provide necessary protection and assistance to the Commissioners, officials and the group of eminent persons and witnesses of the Commission.

In his proclamation, President Rajapaksa has declared it was his intention to, within two months of the receipt of the Commission’s report, to initiate action. This is through relevant authorities of the Government of Sri Lanka and the Attorney General. This will include the initiation of criminal proceedings, where necessary, against persons found to have been responsible for committing serious violations of human rights.

He has also said that it was also his intention to publish the findings of the Commission in a Government Gazette. However, this would exclude any material prejudicial to or absolutely necessary for the protection of national security and public safety.
The proclamation notes that the appointment of the Commission of Inquiry follows allegations made by certain parties, regarding the commission of serious violations of human rights. This is in the context of (a) the ongoing terrorist activities against the Government of Sri Lanka, its security forces and its people, and (b) the counter measures adopted by the security forces and the police, to arrest, suppress, or terminate such terrorist activities.

Travesty of our place names

There is no reason why Colombo, Galle and Jaffna cannot revert to Kolamba, Gaalla and Yahapane, except that the political will to bring about such change is still missing

How important the proper pronunciation and spelling can be to a nationA?a??a??s identity was demonstrated by the French Government when it prohibited the use of the British word jet or A?a??E?jetlinerA?a??a?? by the French. The punishment for transgression was imprisonment. After the law came into effect a jetliner had to be called A?a??E?le grande porteurA?a??a??. The rest of the world may pronounce the name of their capital city as A?a??E?Paris,A?a??a?? but to the French it will always be A?a??E?PareeA?a??a??.

To what extent a successful modern state like France will go, in order to protect its national identity, is seen by this example. The assertion of oneA?a??a??s national identity is not chauvinism. It proceeds from the necessity to reassure oneself of oneA?a??a??s sense of self respect and self esteem.

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Sri Lanka still wants to continue the servile mentality of the colonial era as seen by its toleration of the ridiculous pronunciation of local place names by inept radio and TV announcers.

Pataha or Patana?

The latest casualty in this list is Digampataha (also spelt as Diganpataha). This name became an unfortunate casualty along with the 97 unarmed sailors who became victims of the suicide bomb blast on October 16. All concerned, including armed forces spokesmen and the audiovisual media, pronounced this name incorrectly, as Digam-patana. The print media followed suit by spelling it as such. However, this last casualty seems to be recovering somewhat in the mass media, after the local population staged a mass protest against the whole incident. Ordinary folk like this writer, know that a A?a??E?patahaA?a??a?? is a natural pond or small lake. A A?a??E?patanaA?a??a?? is a stretch of open land, covered with grasses like mana and illuk. A?a??E?DiganaA?a??a?? is the name given to a long strip of flat uncultivated land bordering a stretch of paddy fields.

MMC/KMC

The Tamil name A?a??E?KandiA?a??a?? is still being used almost exclusively for the Hill Capital in the heart of the country. A concerned Mayor, Tilak Ratnayake once changed the acronym KMC to MMC (Mahanuwara Municipal Council). Its use as such continued to be in force even after his death, but it has again been changed back to KMC. However, even now, letters addressed (in English) to Mahanuwara are recognised as valid by the Postal Department, which dutifully delivers all such letters.

The need for self-esteem

Is this servile mentality an outcome of a faulty education policy? Good educationists see the learning process as a form of need fulfilment. (A?a??A?One man can lead a horse to the water but fifty cannot make it drink.A?a??A?) Unless that need to learn is created in the child, all that it is taught will at best, be useful only for the purpose of passing examinations. It fails to be A?a??E?internalisedA?a??a??. The American psychologist Maslow, saw that a childA?a??a??s needs are arranged in a hierarchy. The need to learn comes only after the more basic needs have been satisfied. For instance a child suffering from hunger does not have the need to absorb what it is taught.

Therefore, some governments try to see that the child receives a midday meal in school and also provide the material for school uniforms. But that is not enough. A child who is not hungry also needs recognition in the form of A?a??E?love and affectionA?a??a??. A good teacher knows how to do it, by appreciating the childA?a??a??s work and praising its good efforts. That creates some A?a??E?self-esteemA?a??a?? in the child. That in turn leads to A?a??A?self-actualisationA?a??A? or creative stage, of a childA?a??a??s learning process where what is learnt becomes internalised.

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Developing every childA?a??a??s self esteem may become a problem in crowded classes of today. But the state-centred French system seems to have achieved that and produced a nation justly proud of its own language. The lack of self esteem amongst the products of our education system becomes all too clear in the damage being wilfully caused to seating facilities provided in buses and the railway.

Some far-sighted visionaries have rightly seen the need to create self-esteem among our armed forces. They fight better and will even sacrifice their most precious lives, when they possess self-esteem. It is self-esteem that can prevent them from taking the law into their own hands even under conditions of extreme stress.

Coming back to place names, we were dismayed to see the way that even top brass of the armed forces pronounced some place names in the areas where fighting had taken place recently. For instance Mavil Ara was referred to as Mavil Aru. It is the stream issuing from Mavila or A?a??E?Great SwampA?a??a??. The excuse may be that it has been marked in the map as Mavil Aru by Tamil surveyors. In Europe too we have A?a??E?the AarA?a??a?? and in India A?a??E?the GangaA?a??a?? both of which simply mean A?a??E?the RiverA?a??a??. Now that the name Sampur has been shown to be corrupt Tamil for Somapura, should we continue to call it Sampur?

How Sinhala place names have been continuously modified to look like Tamil names (with the blessings of an unconcerned Survey Department) can be illustrated by just one example. EverybodyA?a??a??s attention was recently focussed on a place referred to as A?a??E?Kanjikudichchi AruA?a??a??. In fact there has been no such name (unless it has been so altered to in the recent metric scale maps). It was marked on the one inch-to-a mile (Pottuvil) map published in 1968, as A?a??E?Kangikadichi AarA?a??a??. The spelling especially that of Aru as A?a??E?AarA?a??a?? and not Tamil A?a??E?AruA?a??a??, shows that it is a Sinhala name. Kangikadichi Aar as such, has even found a place in the Gazetteer on Ceylon published by the United States Board on Geographic Names.

What had happened here was that Sinhala people who lived in this sparsely populated area had provided the name of this stream to the Tamil surveyor.

The Tamil for Sinhala A?a??E?kandiyaA?a??a?? is A?a??E?kangu.A?a??a?? Hence the name was recorded as beginning with A?a??E?KangiA?a??a??A?a??a?? half Tamil and half Sinhala. That the actual Sinhala name was Kandi-kaedichcha Ara becomes very clear when one looks at the survey map which shows that this is a stream once had two bunds or A?a??E?kandiA?a??a?? built across its course, to form the two tanks (now abandoned) also shown in the map. Today we find that these bunds have been breached by the force of the current when the stream was in spate, after a heavy rainy season thus giving rise to its correct proper name. Looking for the etymology of that name, going only by the present pronunciation of it as Kanjikudichchiaru, will lead one only to some semantic trash! The same applies to Mutur when it is incorrectly spelt as Muttur by the print media.

At least two other place names in the Madakalapuwa District points to the fact that it was held by Sinhala residents as a royal fief or A?a??E?Biso(bandara)-gamaA?a??a?? during the Kandyan Period. The present name A?a??E?Vandara-moolaiA?a??a?? is the same as A?a??E?Bandara-gedaraA?a??a?? in Sinhala. A?a??E?GedaraA?a??a?? and A?a??E?gamaA?a??a?? are sometimes interchangeable (e.g. in A?a??E?malagamaA?a??a?? for A?a??E?malagedaraA?a??a??). Hence Vandaramoolai is the same as Bandaragama found in other parts of the island.

Another such name pronounced as A?a??E?Kaaththaan-kudiA?a??a?? is simply A?a??E?Kaaval-kutiyaA?a??a?? in Sinhala, or A?a??E?Watch HutA?a??a?? in English.

Only A?a??E?CeylonA?a??a?? to A?a??E?Sri LankaA?a??a??

Other countries in this region like India and Bangladesh have quite rightly asserted their individuality by gaining international recognition of pre-colonial names like Chennai and Mumbai for Madras and Bombay, as well as Kolkata for Calcutta. We have only managed to change A?a??E?CeylonA?a??a?? back to Sri Lanka. There is no reason why Colombo, Galle and Jaffna cannot revert to Kolamba, Gaalla and Yahapane, except that the political will to bring about such change is still missing. So much for building up a Sri Lanka national identity.A map of Sri Lanka where place names are marked in Tamil will depict them as Kolompu, Kali and Yalppanam.

In fact, not many current place names could be recognised in such a map printed in Tamil. However, most place names in the Northern and Eastern Provinces have already been changed so as to look like Tamil names. However, a country can have only one set of officially recognised place names in order to avoid legal issues. Whatever their other faults were, the British left behind lists of place names for each Province with standardised spellings for the most part. English spelling is conventional and does not reflect the sound of the spoken word phonetically. As such these lists (not easily found today,) do not depict the correct pronunciation of Sinhala place names.

What the Census and Statistics Dept. has been able to achieve since independence is to transliterate the names in these lists back to Sinhala script, resulting in some glaring pronunciation mistakes. Even for that list of less than 30,000 place names, we are obliged to the United States Board on Geographic Names. This does not speak much for a country where King Pandukabhaya demarcated all village boundaries, and recorded them, as far back as the year 427 BC.

Officially recognised list

It is high time that the State in Sri Lanka study the place names that have undergone unwarranted changes in how they came to be pronounced after the periods of Portuguese, Dutch and English Rule. Sinhala language and its nomenclature was precise and meaningful. That was why even the English and Burgher lawyers are known to have preferred to have their land deeds drawn up in the Sinhala language.

Therefore, giving attention to the preparation of an officially recognised list of all place names in the island, is of paramount importance.

The Tamils can continue to pronounce the place names in their own way if they choose to do so, but the official spelling remains unchanged. Under British rule, the original Sinhala names of tea, rubber (and even coconut) estates were replaced by English ones, for the most part. But the Tamil estate workers who came from India coined their own names for each of these estates.
The FergusonA?a??a??s Directory listed all these estate names in English and Tamil, while most of the original Sinhala names were allowed to be forgotten.

~ By D. G. A. Perera.

seeA?A? the original article:
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