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    <updated>2011-04-30T21:38:54Z</updated>
    
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    <title>Why did the the Rajapaksas lie to the people of Sri Lanka?</title>
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    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc-mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4262" title="Why did the the Rajapaksas lie to the people of Sri Lanka?" />
    <id>tag:transcurrents.com,2011://1.4262</id>
    
    <published>2011-04-30T21:26:19Z</published>
    <updated>2011-04-30T21:38:54Z</updated>
    
    <summary>By Tisaranee Gunasekara The state has a right under international law to ensure its national security and to defend itself against armed attacks…. Those ends do not however justify all means to achieve them; all actions for those legitimate purposes...</summary>
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        <![CDATA[<p><b>By Tisaranee Gunasekara</b></p>

<p><i>The state has a right under international law to ensure its national security and to defend itself against armed attacks…. Those ends do not however justify all means to achieve them; all actions for those legitimate purposes must comply with the requirements of international law…”— The Darusman Report</i></p>

<p><b>N</b>e plus ultra (Not further beyond): the inscription believed to have been carved on the Pillars of Heracles (Straits of Gibraltar), warning seafarers against venturing any further. In politics there is a ‘Ne plus ultra’ line which cannot be crossed with impunity. </p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>The LTTE, by attacking civilians, conscripting children and murdering political-opponents, ventured far beyond this line, time and again. The revulsion caused by these excesses caused an international backlash; according to the Darusman Report, “By 2006, 32 countries had listed the LTTE as a terrorist organisation…. LTTE fundraising and arms procurement abilities were severely constrained thereafter.”</p>

<p>Remarkably, of these 32 countries, many were Western nations home to large Lankan-Tamil communities. Though sympathetic to the Tamil cause, most either helped Colombo or remained neutral, as the Tiger sank under the deadweight of its colossal crimes and errors. As the Report points out, “Many Sri Lankans and others round the world were relieved that the….LTTE renowned for its brutality was defeated……. However many people in Sri Lanka and elsewhere were deeply disturbed about the means used to achieve the victory…”</p>

<p>That is the crux of the matter: the Lankan regime is being faulted in the Darusman Report not for battling and defeating the LTTE, but for being blasé about the safety and wellbeing of civilian Tamils during and after the war. Contrary to the regime’s assertions, the Report accepts Sri Lanka’s right to defend herself militarily: “International law….respects the legitimate interests of a state like Sri Lanka facing a threat like the LTTE.” Thus the Report is not anti-war. It critiques the regime for causing avoidable civilian casualties; for example, it alleges that the UN hub in the No-Fire-Zone was shelled on January 24, 2009: “The United Nations security officer, a highly experienced military officer….discerned that the shelling was coming from the south, from SLA positions…. When United Nations staff emerged from the bunker…. mangled bodies and body parts were strewn all around them, including those of women and children. Remains of babies had been blasted upwards into the trees…. Although LTTE cadres were present in the NFZ, there was no LTTE presence inside the United Nations hub….”</p>

<p>The Report also alleges that the Army shelled civilian groupings even where UAV identification was possible: “On 8th April 2009, a large group of women and children, who were queued up at a milk powder distribution line…..were shelled…… Some of the dead mothers still clutched cards which entitled them to milk powder for their children.”</p>

<p>The Report severely critiques the regime for treating civilian Tamils with brutal insensitivity, post-war. For instance, it argues that “by keeping Menik Farm and other farms closed, and failing to release the IDPs, it did not allow the IDPs to seek shelter with relatives.” Since the camps lacked even basic facilities, this closed-door policy caused avoidable sufferings and preventable deaths. The Report also faults the Lankan regime for its failure to offer Tamils a New Deal: “Nearly two years after the end of fighting the root causes of the ethno-nationalist conflict between the Sinhalese and Tamil populations of Sri Lanka remain largely unaddressed and human rights violations continue”. (In fact, the regime is planning to turn the 13th Amendment into a dead-letter by transferring the powers of elected provincial councils into non-elected Jana Sabhas controlled by Presidential-sibling Basil Rajapaksa).</p>

<p>The regime accuses the Darusman Report of creating national-disunity. Sadly it is the Rajapaksas who wantonly wasted an ideal opportunity to create a genuine Sri Lankan identity, post-war. In its death throes, the Tiger abandoned all pretexts, and demonstrated that it did not care an iota for Tamils. For instance, according to the Darusman Report, “…in mid-April, LTTE cadres….forcibly recruited hundreds of young people from Valayanmadam Church….. Parents begged and cried for them not to be taken away to fight and to an almost certain death, but to no avail.”</p>

<p>The psychological conditions for weaning Tamils away from the LTTE/Eelam and winning them for a Lankan future were thus very much present, post-war. This potential could have been realised had the Rajapaksas not depicted and treated all civilian Tamils as actual/potential Tigers, had they appealed to impulses of kindness and generosity in the South rather than encouraging triumphalism and cultivating a fear-psychosis. Post-war, the Rajapaksas opted not for mercy and reconciliation, but for collective punishments and revengeful justice. This choice, rather than the Darusman Report, is responsible for Sri Lanka’s current condition as a psychologically-divided country.</p>

<p>When the UN Secretary General appointed his Advisory Panel, the regime enacted a tragicomedy and declared that it will neither recognise the Panel nor deal with it. And yet, as the Darusman Report reveals, the regime, while thundering insults at the Panel publicly, did engage with it secretly, behind the back of the nation: “The Government of Sri Lanka provided an explanation of the philosophy that frames its approach to accountability both in written responses to questions from the Panel and in a meeting on 22 February 2011 in New York….”</p>

<p>Why did the Rajapaksas lie to the people? Was it because they wanted to persuade the Panel not to come up with an adversarial report while using the Panel’s existence to ignite patriotic-hysteria locally? Mahinda Rajapaksa’s outburst of juvenile-euphoria about being voted No. 4 on the Time magazine’s list of influential persons demonstrates, yet again, that underneath his anti-Western bluster our President yearns to shine, not in Beijing and Tehran, but in Washington and London. Was this why the regime secretly cultivated a moderate image in New York while maintaining an anti-UN and anti-West façade in Colombo?</p>

<p>Having painted itself into a corner, Colombo is hoping that Delhi will come to its rescue. To achieve this purpose the Rajapaksas will make economic concessions to India and promise political concessions to Tamils. Will Delhi fall for it, again, ignoring the welter of emotions in Chennai on this issue? Can Delhi afford international intervention on its doorstep, given the Kashmiri factor?</p>

<p>On May 1st, the Rajapaksas are expected to launch their anti-UN Pada/Rath Yathra. According to the regime, it is the patriotic duty of all Lankans to dismiss the Report in toto. Anyone who thinks the Report should be read and analysed, let alone investigated by an independent body, is thus deemed an anti-patriot.</p>

<p>The Tiger creed demanded that Tamils cultivate an unconditional and unquestioning faith in the Leader, if they did not want to be castigated as traitors. As the Darusman Report pointed out “Vellupillai Pirapaharan demanded absolute loyalty and sacrifice and cultivated a cult-like following. Internal dissent was not tolerated….” This meant maintaining a ‘patriotic’ silence, as the Tiger went from excess to execrable excess. That path of total-submission to the Leader’ ended not in Eelam but in utter and total defeat. If we give the Rajapaksas a carte blanche in the name of patriotism, an equally unpalatable end will await us, someday.</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>NDP Statement on UN Panel Report on Accountability for War Crimes in Sri Lanka</title>
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    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc-mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4261" title="NDP Statement on UN Panel Report on Accountability for War Crimes in Sri Lanka" />
    <id>tag:transcurrents.com,2011://1.4261</id>
    
    <published>2011-04-30T02:33:46Z</published>
    <updated>2011-04-30T03:04:53Z</updated>
    
    <summary>On April 28, 2011, New Democratic Leader Jack Layton issued this statement on the United Nation’s report on Sri Lanka: “The New Democratic Party fully supports the recommendations made in the recently released independent UN Panel Report on accountability during...</summary>
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        <![CDATA[<p><b>On April 28, 2011, New Democratic Leader Jack Layton issued this statement on the United Nation’s report on Sri Lanka:</b></p>

<p><b>“T</b>he New Democratic Party fully supports the recommendations made in the recently released independent UN Panel Report on accountability during and after the war in Sri Lanka.</p>

<p>“The UN Report reveals that “there are credible allegations, which if proven, indicate that a wide range of serious violations of international humanitarian and human rights law were committed both by the government of Sri Lanka and the LTTE, some of which amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity.”<br />
</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>“We believe those responsible must be prosecuted and urges the UN to launch an immediate and independent investigation.</p>

<p>“The NDP has proposed a motion in the House of Commons to form an all-party committee to support an independent inquiry into human rights violations in Sri Lanka. Unfortunately the motion was defeated by the Conservative Party.</p>

<p>“Our motion demanded the Government of Sri Lanka and the United Nations to work together with the international community to establish an international investigative body.”</p>

<p>New Democrat candidate Rathika Sitsabaiesan (Scarborough-Rouge River) and special advisor on Tamil issues, added:<br />
“During this war atrocities took place while media and international bodies were not allowed in, or to report out. The NDP has always supported an independent inquiry into human rights violations in Sri Lanka and will continue to work towards this.  We will work toward a Parliamentary study on the human rights violations in Sri Lanka.”</p>

<p><em>(Wikipedia on NDP: The New Democratic Party (French: Nouveau Parti démocratique), commonly referred to as the NDP, is a social-democratic federal political party in Canada. The party is regarded as falling on the left in the Canadian political spectrum)</em></p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>'Media's role and responsibility towards building a strong democratic nation'</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc/2011/04/medias_role_and_responsibility.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc-mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4260" title="'Media's role and responsibility towards building a strong democratic nation'" />
    <id>tag:transcurrents.com,2011://1.4260</id>
    
    <published>2011-04-30T02:29:11Z</published>
    <updated>2011-04-30T02:30:50Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Seminar in Colombo by FMM The Free Media Movement will host a seminar titled ‘Media’s Role and Responsibility Towards Building a Strong Democratic Nation’ and launch the book ‘Martyrs of the Freedom of Expression’ in Sinhala, Tamil and English, compiled...</summary>
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        <![CDATA[<p><b>Seminar in Colombo by FMM</b></p>

<p><b>T</b>he Free Media Movement will host a seminar titled ‘Media’s Role and Responsibility Towards Building a Strong Democratic Nation’ and launch the book ‘Martyrs of the Freedom of Expression’ in Sinhala, Tamil and English, compiled by Seetha Ranjanee on behalf of the Free Media Movement, to mark World Press Freedom Day.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>The event is being held at the Mahaweli Centre auditorium at 3.30 p.m. on May 3 and will have Ariyananda Dombagahawattha chairing the seminar, with Gamini Viyangoda, K. W Janaranjana and Lakshman Gunasekara as guest speakers.</p>

<p>The Free Media Movement invites all those who value democracy to attend the event.</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Assistant Secretary of State Robert O. Blake, Jr. Travels to Maldives and Sri Lanka</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc/2011/04/assistant_secretary_of_state_r.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc-mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4259" title="Assistant Secretary of State Robert O. Blake, Jr. Travels to Maldives and Sri Lanka" />
    <id>tag:transcurrents.com,2011://1.4259</id>
    
    <published>2011-04-29T16:54:40Z</published>
    <updated>2011-04-29T16:55:42Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Media Note Office of the Spokesman, US Dept. of State Washington, DC April 29, 2011 U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Robert O. Blake, Jr. will travel to Maldives and Sri Lanka April 30-May 5,...</summary>
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        <![CDATA[<p>Media Note<br />
Office of the Spokesman, US Dept. of State<br />
Washington, DC</p>

<p>April 29, 2011</p>

<p><strong>U</strong>.S. Assistant Secretary of State for South and Central Asian Affairs Robert O. Blake, Jr. will travel to Maldives and Sri Lanka April 30-May 5, 2011. He will meet with government officials, civil society representatives, and political leaders in both countries.<br />
</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>In Sri Lanka, Assistant Secretary Blake will also visit USAID-supported programs and meet with local leaders in Kilinochchi and Mullaitivu.</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Multi-partisan approach to address UN Panel report is desirable</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc/2011/04/multipartisan_approach_to_addr.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc-mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4258" title="Multi-partisan approach to address UN Panel report is desirable" />
    <id>tag:transcurrents.com,2011://1.4258</id>
    
    <published>2011-04-29T16:41:02Z</published>
    <updated>2011-04-29T16:53:48Z</updated>
    
    <summary>By National Peace Council The UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon has released to the public the report of the Expert Panel he appointed to advise him on human rights issues in relation to the last phase of Sri Lanka's war....</summary>
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        <![CDATA[<p><strong>By National Peace Council </strong></p>

<p><strong>T</strong>he UN Secretary General Ban Ki-Moon has released to the public the report of the Expert Panel he appointed to advise him on human rights issues in relation to the last phase of Sri Lanka's war.  The panel of experts has called on the UN Secretary General to immediately set up an independent international mechanism to investigate credible allegations that both the Sri Lankan government and LTTE committed serious human rights violations, including some that could amount to war crimes and crimes against humanity, in the months before the decades old civil war ended in 2009.<br />
</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>The National Peace Council is of the view that there are a number of constructive options available to the Sri Lankan government that could address international and domestic concerns. The Government could set up its own investigating mechanism that meets international standards as an alternative to the UN report's recommendation of an international investigative mechanism. The creation of such a national mechanism would need to be inclusive of opposition and ethnic minority participation in its design and implementation.</p>

<p>In addition, the Government can quickly carry out the measures suggested by the Expert Panel which could bring immediate relief to victims and advance normalisation in the country, including repealing the Emergency Regulations and the Prevention of Terrorism Act; resolving outstanding disappearance cases; ensuring due process for remaining LTTE detainees; and providing relief measures for victims and survivors of the conflict, including by publicly accounting for civilian deaths and facilitating the recovery and return of human remains to their families.</p>

<p>The Government can also make several policy changes addressing the root causes of the war by cooperating with minority and opposition parties to devise a just and mutually acceptable political solution. The Government should express its willingness to compensate financially those who have suffered owing to excesses in the war. .Perhaps the body should function like the former South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission. All these should be discussed with the Tamil political parties and the Opposition and consensus reached.<br />
Sri Lankan society needs its own space to negotiate and foster its own approach to peace.  We are concerned that changes sought to be imposed from the outside will make ethnic relations even worse and hamper seriously the reconciliation process. We welcome the government response that the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission it has appointed can look into issues raised in the Expert Panel report and make its own assessment.</p>

<p>NPC believes that the most sustainable path forward in the country will have to be constructed within the country and in a manner that will ensure that all of the Sri Lankan people make their own investment in the processes of democratization and peace with justice.</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>CPJ urges UN to intervene and investigate the apparent targeting of LankaeNews</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc/2011/04/cpj_urges_un_to_intervene_and.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc-mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4257" title="CPJ urges UN to intervene and investigate the apparent targeting of LankaeNews" />
    <id>tag:transcurrents.com,2011://1.4257</id>
    
    <published>2011-04-29T02:53:55Z</published>
    <updated>2011-04-29T02:58:29Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Committee to Protect Journalists, NY, NY cpj.org A Pugoda magistrate's court ordered the country's Telecommunications Regulatory Commission to suspend Lanka eNews within Sri Lanka while it tries the site's detained journalist Shantha Wijeysooria for contempt of court, according to local...</summary>
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        <![CDATA[<p><strong>Committee to Protect Journalists, NY, NY<br />
</strong><em>cpj.org</em></p>

<p><b>A</b> Pugoda magistrate's court ordered the country's Telecommunications Regulatory Commission to suspend Lanka eNews within Sri Lanka while it tries the site's detained journalist Shantha Wijeysooria for contempt of court, according to local and international news reports. Wijeysooria was detained Monday and remanded into custody during a hearing today until May 12, the reports said. The charge, which related to an article about a magistrate of the court, Aravinda Perera, was upheld despite the website's apology for publishing it, according to the reports. The website said it would appeal the decision.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>CPJ has called on the United Nations and the diplomatic community to intervene and investigate the apparent targeting of the website. </p>

<p>"We call on the appeals court to overturn this order and allow Lanka eNews to continue to publish in Sri Lanka" said CPJ Deputy Director Robert Mahoney. "This suspension is the Sri Lankan authorities' latest effort to silence an independent news outlet."</p>

<p>Lanka eNews editor Sandaruwan Senadheera fled Sri Lanka in 2010 after receiving threats during presidential elections. Two days before the elections took place, the site's columnist and cartoonist  Prageeth Eknelygoda was abducted; his whereabouts are still unknown.</p>

<p>News Editor Bennet Rupasinghe was arrested March 31 for allegedly threatening another man, and the website's Colombo offices were targeted by an apparent arson attack in January, according to CPJ research.</p>

<p>Sri Lanka appeared fourth on CPJ's 2010 Impunity Index, a list of countries where journalists are killed regularly and governments fail to solve the crimes. It calculates unsolved journalist murders as a percentage of each country's population.</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>Nationalistic fury is good for the government, terrible for Sri Lanka</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc/2011/04/nationalistic_fury_is_good_for.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc-mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4255" title="Nationalistic fury is good for the government, terrible for Sri Lanka" />
    <id>tag:transcurrents.com,2011://1.4255</id>
    
    <published>2011-04-29T02:36:09Z</published>
    <updated>2011-04-29T02:40:30Z</updated>
    
    <summary>from THE ECONOMIST IN RECENT years the default mode for Sri Lankan diplomats has been a posture of affronted national dignity beneath a mask of outraged, sanctimonious innocence. This week, after the publication of a report by a panel of...</summary>
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        <![CDATA[<p>from THE ECONOMIST</p>

<p><b>I</b>N RECENT years the default mode for Sri Lankan diplomats has been a posture of affronted national dignity beneath a mask of outraged, sanctimonious innocence. This week, after the publication of a report by a panel of experts for the United Nations on the final stages of Sri Lanka’s 26-year civil war, some were recalled to Colombo for “consultations”. Maybe they are brushing up their indignant-repudiation skills.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>The war culminated in May 2009 with the army’s crushing of the rebel Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. Its climax was marked by ruthlessness and callous disregard for human life. The panel concluded that “there is a reasonable basis to believe that large-scale violations of international humanitarian and human-rights law were committed by both sides”. Since hardly any of the Tigers’ leaders outlived the war, it is the government of Mahinda Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka’s president, that is in the dock.</p>

<p>It is probably too much to hope the government might adopt a fresh approach to these familiar allegations. There were always at least three ways to tackle them. It could, early on, have argued brazenly that the benefits of ending the war outweighed the cost in human life. The Tigers were as vicious and totalitarian a bunch of thugs as ever adopted terrorism as a national-liberation strategy. Or the government could have insisted that its army’s behaviour was largely honourable, but that some regrettable abuses may have occurred, which would be thoroughly investigated.</p>

<p>Instead, it chose a third path: to lie, and to lie big. It insisted that it pursued a policy of “zero civilian casualties”. Even as its forces shelled the shrinking “no-fire zone” in which the Tigers held some 330,000 civilians as human shields, it either denied it was doing so, or promised to stop and did not. It kept foreign observers out and bullied the local press into silence. The UN report found that “tens of thousands” were killed in January-May 2009, with most civilian casualties caused by government shelling.</p>

<p>The report relates little that has not appeared in accounts by human-rights groups. But it is unusually blunt, perhaps reflecting exasperation at the Sri Lankan government’s obstructive, aggressive tactics. The three-member panel is distinguished enough to shrug off Sri Lanka’s accusations of bias. The chair, Marzuki Darusman, is a former attorney-general of Indonesia. The report calls the conduct of the war “a grave assault on the entire regime of international law designed to protect individual dignity during both war and peace”.</p>

<p>The government, however, is now too deeply wedded to its strategy of denial to back down even an inch. It lobbied hard against the publication of the UN report, arguing it would damage efforts at national reconciliation. Now that Ban Ki-moon, the UN secretary-general, has ignored its objections, it has whipped up a frenzy of national resentment against the perceived calumnies. This goes down well at home. Standing up to foreign bullying only enhances Mr Rajapaksa’s popularity among the ethnic-Sinhalese majority. Responding to the report, the president has said he would be happy to sit in the electric chair on behalf of his country. A huge turnout is expected for May Day rallies at which he has asked for a show of support for his government.</p>

<p>If the report has brought Mr Rajapaksa short-term political benefits at home, he may also conclude that the diplomatic fallout is easily manageable. Sri Lanka is not without supporters. Just days after the end of the war in 2009, the UN’s Human Rights Council passed a resolution praising its victory, condemning Tiger war crimes and overlooking altogether allegations against the Sri Lankan army. Of its diplomatic allies back then, India is now less staunch. But China and Russia remain firm defenders of the rights of sovereign governments to quell secessionist movements, and do not seem squeamish about the means.</p>

<p>They may be even keener, after the UN-authorised intervention in Libya, to show that was the exception to a rule of non-interference. So Sri Lanka will continue to resist calls for any formal inquiry into the war beyond the “Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission” (LLRC) it established. Though due to report soon, the commission has failed to earn credibility.</p>

<p>In the long run, however, the semi-official status the UN report gives allegations of war crimes will haunt this government. The well-organised, far-flung Tamil diaspora will hound Sri Lanka’s leaders when they go abroad, and put pressure on foreign governments to demand accountability. Skilled at exploiting the rivalry between India and China, whose arms supplies helped win the war, Sri Lanka’s diplomats may argue that they no longer need the West. But, proud of Sri Lanka’s democratic traditions, they will smart at being seen as front men for a shoddy dictatorship, engaged in what now looks like a desperate cover-up.</p>

<p><b>After such knowledge, what forgiveness?</b></p>

<p>Though perceived foreign slights may enhance the government’s standing at home, it is there that the concealment of the truth about the war’s end will do most damage. It is not as if there were no witnesses. Some 300,000 people know first-hand parts of what happened. When the LLRC held hearings in the north, scene of the fighting, survivors told harrowing tales of loss and asked where missing loved ones were. Without answers, it is hard to see how they can be “reconciled”.</p>

<p>Nor does the government show any sign of moving towards a political settlement, to meet the grievances of the Tamil minority that fuelled the conflict. Gordon Weiss, the UN’s spokesman in Colombo during the end of the war, predicts in a forthcoming book (“The Cage”) that Tamil emigration will continue, “encouraged by political stagnation, a lack of rights and rule by fear”. And also by the government’s continued refusal to countenance any serious investigation into how it won the war. <i> ~ courtesy: Banyan ~ The Economist ~ </i></p>]]>
    </content>
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<entry>
    <title>Minister G.L. Peiris to diplomats: 'Government of Sri Lanka does not consider the Darusman Report as a UN document'</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc/2011/04/minister_gl_peiris_to_diplomat.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc-mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4254" title="Minister G.L. Peiris to diplomats: 'Government of Sri Lanka does not consider the Darusman Report as a UN document'" />
    <id>tag:transcurrents.com,2011://1.4254</id>
    
    <published>2011-04-28T17:02:58Z</published>
    <updated>2011-04-28T17:04:17Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Minister of External Affairs briefs diplomatic community on Darusman Report via www.mea.gov.lk The Minister of External Affairs Prof. G.L. Peiris addressed the Colombo-based diplomatic corps at the Ministry of External Affairs in Colombo today to convey the response of the...</summary>
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        <![CDATA[<p><strong>Minister of External Affairs briefs diplomatic community on Darusman Report</strong></p>

<p><i>via www.mea.gov.lk</i>        </p>

<p><b>T</b>he Minister of External Affairs Prof. G.L. Peiris addressed the Colombo-based diplomatic corps at the Ministry of External Affairs in Colombo today to convey the response of the Government of Sri Lanka on the substantive aspects of the Darusman Report.  The Minister stated that the Government of Sri Lanka was no longer constrained to comment substantively as the Report is now in the public domain.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>The Minister went on to highlight some of the fundamental deficiencies, inherent prejudices and malicious intentions that characterize the Darusman Report.  These flaws pertain not only to the contents of the Report, but also to the methodology followed in arriving at its conclusions.  The Minister stated categorically that the Report is legally, morally and substantively flawed.</p>

<p>The Minister of External Affairs made the following points during his briefing :</p>

<p>The Government of Sri Lanka does not consider the Darusman Report as a UN document, as it has not been mandated by any inter-governmental or multilateral forum.  The document is the product of a personal initiative taken by the Secretary-General.  Furthermore, the mandate of the Panel is purely advisory in nature, as stated in its Terms of Reference.</p>

<p>The Minister explained that since the end of conflict, the Government of Sri Lanka is engaged in the delicate task of forging national unity and progress through reconciliation, rehabilitation and reconstruction.  After almost three decades, the Government has been successful in restoring peace, stability and security in all parts of the country.  The Government is dealing with critical post-conflict issues, with a view to erasing the pain and anguish of the past, while at the same time consolidating national unity and future progress.  We have made significant progress relating to resettlement of internally displaced persons, restoring livelihood in conflict- affected areas, reintegration of former child soldiers as productive citizens, rehabilitation of detainees, de-mining, restoring democratic processes in the North and East as well as reconstruction of housing and infrastructure.  We are moving gradually and confidently forward.   The Minister noted that none of these positive developments have been reflected in the Report.</p>

<p>Furthermore, the controversial contents of the Darusman Report and its public release at this stage obstruct and retard this positive momentum, and it creates divisions.  At the same time, the Report will feed into the political agendas of those who wish to destabilize the country. <br />
     <br />
The Minister stated that the Government questions the fundamental legal basis of the conclusions arrived at by the Panel.  The Report itself states that it is not a fact-finding or an investigative body.  Notwithstanding this, the Panel comes to the preposterous conclusion that violations of international humanitarian law have occurred in Sri Lanka, and that “credible” evidence of violations is available to them. The Panel has also decided that these “sources” and the “Panel’s substantive records will be classified as strictly confidential…..”.   In other words, Minister Peiris pointed out that none of the so-called sources and material according to which the Panel claims to substantiate their conclusions, can be examined or verified by the public at large, or the Government of Sri Lanka.  This is in flagrant violation of procedural fairness and principles of natural justice known to all civilized society.   Therefore, the Government of Sri Lanka seriously questions the credibility and basic fairness of the so-called “process” outlined by the Panel, which has led to its conclusions.  Consequently, the Minister emphasized that the Government is strongly opposed to any recommendations for further action arising from such a flawed basis.  </p>

<p>Minister Peiris noted that the Darusman Panel on its own accord, expands its mandate to compile what amounts to their unique and flawed version of the contemporary socio-political history of Sri Lanka.  The entire conflict with the LTTE is erroneously and dangerously characterized as a “struggle for the existence of the Sinhalese and Tamil peoples”.  This creates no doubt as to the Panel’s ultimate intentions, particularly when the Panel proceeds to characterize the LTTE as “the most disciplined and most nationalist of the Tamil militant groups”.  This is despite the reality that the LTTE killed more Tamil leaders than Sinhalese leaders, and perpetrated the worst imaginable atrocities on the Tamil people for almost thirty years.  The bias of the experts is also evidenced when they state that the conflict ended “tragically”.  The end of terrorism was a moment of great joy for the people of Sri Lanka, while it no doubt ended “tragically” for the LTTE’s ambitions to impose their rule by force over the people of the North and East of Sri Lanka.</p>

<p>Such inherent prejudices and ethnically contrived language is further evidenced in the Report’s account of “individual soldiers” helping Tamil civilians escape the clutches of the LTTE at the end of the conflict.  The Sri Lanka Government had very explicitly instructed its military to provide all possible assistance to the people crossing over to the cleared areas.</p>

<p>The Minister stated that in this regard the Government of Sri Lanka is concerned about current developments arising from the Panel Report.  Inflamed by the biased contents of the Report, some Tamil groups have expressed the view that given the treatment described in the Report, there is no alternative to a separate State of Tamil Eelam.  It is also most regrettable that a respected personality such as the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Ms. Navi Pillai has questioned the very nature of the conflict in Sri Lanka by stating that violations have occurred “under the guise of combating terrorism”.   Minister Peiris recalled that over thirty democracies worldwide have designated the LTTE as a “terrorist” group.<br />
   <br />
The Minister noted that the allegations in the Darusman Report are presented as a narrative account of events during the last stages of the humanitarian operation, instead of under their legal classification.  The events are therefore recounted as a true “horror story” aimed at arousing emotion and causing revulsion and contempt.  Strangely, it is also stated that “this account should not be taken as proven fact”.  This begs the question as to whether the account is fact or fiction, Minister Peiris stated.  </p>

<p>Minister Peiris noted that the political motivations of the Panel are further reflected in their comments on the family of H.E. President Mahinda Rajapaksa.  The Panel makes allegations of nepotism against the President of Sri Lanka, citing as examples that Hon. Basil Rajapaksa is the Minister of Economic Development and Hon. Chamal Rajapaksa is the Speaker of Parliament.  Minister Peiris highlighted to the diplomatic community that Hon. Basil Rajapaksa had been elected with the highest number of preferential votes from the District of Gampaha, and was therefore a democratically elected representative of the people.  Minister Peiris pointed out that Hon. Chamal Rajapaksa, the Speaker of the Parliament of Sri Lanka, has been an elected Member of Parliament for over twenty years and furthermore, his appointment in the capacity of the Speaker of the Parliament was seconded by the Chief Opposition Whip of Parliament, reflecting bipartisan consensus.</p>

<p>Minister Peiris also regretted that the Panel demonstrates their pre-determined bias against the domestically constituted mechanism to deal with a range of issues relevant to the conflict with a view to promoting reconciliation and confidence among people – the LLRC.  The LLRC consists of persons of high integrity and independence and with significant experience.  In the process of their work, the LLRC had obtained testimony from civilians affected by the conflict in all parts of the country, including in the North and the East.  With a view to providing urgent relief, the LLRC submitted their interim recommendations to the Government of Sri Lanka.  The Government of Sri Lanka has already commenced implementation of the LLRC recommendations through the Inter-Agency Administrative Committee (IAAC).  While the Government is awaiting the outcome of the LLRC, the Panel has arrived at the conclusion that the LLRC lacks credibility even before its work has been completed.  This exposes the fact that the ultimate pre-determined motive of the Panel is to hasten their objective of establishing an “international mechanism”.  This is in blatant violation of all accepted legal norms that domestic processes need to be exhausted prior to resorting to external judicial proceedings.</p>

<p>In summary, the Government of Sri Lanka finds that the processes adopted by the Darusman Report and the conclusions arrived at are biased and fundamentally flawed from every conceivable point of view.  The Report is divisive and unhelpful at a time when Sri Lanka is engaged in the delicate task of dealing with post-conflict issues, reconciliation and progress.</p>

<p>Nevertheless, Minister Peiris reiterated that the Government of Sri Lanka is clearly resolved to continue its cooperation with the United Nations.  As correctly pointed out by the UN Secretary-General, primacy should be accorded to the domestic process underway.   The Darusman Report refers to many issues which are alleged to have occurred in Sri Lanka and which are currently subject to a domestic process.  The conclusions of the externally constituted Darusman Panel working from New York should not take precedence over the conclusions, still awaited, of the domestic process.</p>

<p>In a parallel process, Minister Peiris said that the Government has also initiated discussions with elected representatives of the Tamil community with a view to arriving at a long-term political solution.  The fifth round of these talks is scheduled this week.  This process will address both the immediate post-conflict humanitarian issues, as well as the need to evolve appropriate political and constitutional arrangements.  </p>

<p>Minister Peiris requested Sri Lanka’s friends in the international community to assess these facts fairly and in a balanced manner and to give the people of Sri Lanka the opportunity to reach their full potential in a peaceful, stable, prosperous and united country.  Based on the mandate of the people at local, provincial, national and Presidential levels, the Government is working confidently towards achieving these objectives.</p>

<p>Minister Peiris concluded by stating that it is not the Government’s intention to create any “mass protests” and agitation relating to the Darusman Report as alleged by some.  We are not instigating hysteria nor violence or embarrassment to the UN community and to foreign Missions.  Such allegations have been levelled by those with political agendas to blacken the image of the country at this sensitive moment. </p>

<p> <br />
<i>Ministry of External Affairs</i><br />
Colombo 1</p>

<p>28th April 2011  </p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>UK Foreign Office welcomes UN Panel of Experts report on Sri Lanka</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc/2011/04/uk_foreign_office_welcomes_un.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc-mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4253" title="UK Foreign Office welcomes UN Panel of Experts report on Sri Lanka" />
    <id>tag:transcurrents.com,2011://1.4253</id>
    
    <published>2011-04-28T00:32:01Z</published>
    <updated>2011-04-28T00:34:02Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Statement by UK Mission to the UN The Foreign Office welcomed the UN Panel of Experts report on the alleged violations of international human rights and humanitarian law during the military conflict in Sri Lanka. The UK has consistently called...</summary>
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        <![CDATA[<p><strong>Statement by UK Mission to the UN </strong></p>

<p><strong>T</strong>he Foreign Office welcomed the UN Panel of Experts report on the alleged violations of international human rights and humanitarian law during the military conflict in Sri Lanka.</p>

<p>The UK has consistently called for an independent and credible investigation to address these allegations which is why we fully supported the decision of the Secretary-General to establish the Panel of Experts.  </p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>The report sets out the importance of a genuine and independent investigation, so that allegations of abuses are seen to have been addressed. We encourage Sri Lanka to use its response to the UN report and the report’s recommendations to strengthen the process of accountability and support lasting peace and security.  </p>

<p>The serious nature of the allegations in the report underline that these allegations, and the issue of accountability for them, must be resolved before lasting reconciliation can be achieved in Sri Lanka.</p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>"Darusman Report" is fundamentally flawed in many respects</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc/2011/04/darusman_report_is_fundamental.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc-mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4252" title="&quot;Darusman Report&quot; is fundamentally flawed in many respects" />
    <id>tag:transcurrents.com,2011://1.4252</id>
    
    <published>2011-04-28T00:27:29Z</published>
    <updated>2011-04-28T00:28:51Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Statement by Ministry of External Affairs, Sri Lanka The Government of Sri Lanka refers to the release by the UN Secretary-General of the “Darusman Report” on accountability in Sri Lanka. The Government of Sri Lanka reiterates its position that the...</summary>
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        <![CDATA[<p><strong>Statement by Ministry of External Affairs, Sri Lanka</strong></p>

<p><strong>T</strong>he Government of Sri Lanka refers to the release by the UN Secretary-General of the “Darusman Report” on accountability in Sri Lanka.  The Government of Sri Lanka reiterates its position that the “Darusman Report” is fundamentally flawed in many respects and that among other deficiencies, the Report is based on biased material, which is presented without any verification.  </p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>Following the end of conflict, the Government of Sri Lanka, has given the highest priority to post-conflict reconciliation, rehabilitation, reconstruction and development.  The Government is in the process of addressing these challenges and has recorded significant success on many fronts, including in the resettlement of internally displaced persons, restoring livelihood in conflict affected areas, release of former child soldiers recruited by terrorists, rehabilitation of detainees, de-mining, restoring democratic processes in the North and East as well as in the reconstruction of housing and infrastructure.  We are moving gradually and confidently forward along a process that will consolidate national unity and progress.   </p>

<p>The public release of the Report at this stage is divisive, and disrupts our efforts to reinforce peace, security and stability in Sri Lanka.  It feeds into the political agendas of interested parties.</p>

<p>The Government of Sri Lanka however notes that the Secretary-General has correctly acknowledged the primacy of domestic responsibility in this regard.  The Government has put in place of its own accord a domestic mechanism dealing with a range of issues relevant to the conflict with a view to promoting reconciliation and confidence among people.  UN Member States have welcomed this measure.  Furthermore, the Government has established an Inter-Agency Committee consisting of seven key Ministries in order to proceed with the interim recommendations of the domestic mechanism, the LLRC.  The objective of the Government is to provide urgent relief and to engender a sense of confidence among the people affected by the conflict and give impetus to the reconciliation process.  The areas in which action has already commenced relate to land issues, law and order, administration and language issues as well as socio-economic and livelihood issues.  These actions have been initiated as a follow-up to the matters identified through the LLRC, deriving from testimony received from affected civilians in the country including from former conflict areas.  The conclusions of the externally constituted “Darusman Panel” working from New York should not take precedence over the conclusions, still awaited, of the domestic process.  </p>

<p>The “Darusman Report” refers to many issues which are alleged to have occurred in Sri Lanka and which are currently subject to a domestic process.  This material can be looked at by the LLRC should it wish to do so, depending on its own assessment of the contents. </p>

<p><br />
<em>Ministry of External Affairs</em><br />
Colombo </p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>United States welcomes public release of the UN Panel of Experts’ report on Sri Lanka</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc/2011/04/united_states_welcomes_public.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc-mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4251" title="United States welcomes public release of the UN Panel of Experts’ report on Sri Lanka" />
    <id>tag:transcurrents.com,2011://1.4251</id>
    
    <published>2011-04-28T00:24:59Z</published>
    <updated>2011-04-28T00:26:17Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Statement by Ambassador Susan E. Rice, U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations, on the Release of the UN Panel of Experts' Report on Sri Lanka Susan E. Rice U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations U.S. Mission to the...</summary>
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        <![CDATA[<p><strong>Statement by Ambassador Susan E. Rice, U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations, on the Release of the UN Panel of Experts' Report on Sri Lanka</strong></p>

<p><em>Susan E. Rice</em><br />
<strong>U.S. Permanent Representative to the United Nations <br />
U.S. Mission to the United Nations</strong></p>

<p>(Apr 25, 2011) <strong>T</strong>he United States welcomes today’s public release of the UN Panel of Experts’ report on Sri Lanka. We appreciate the detailed and extensive work of the panel and believe it makes a valuable contribution to next steps that should be taken in support of justice, accountability, human rights, and reconciliation in Sri Lanka. We commend the Secretary General for his decision to release the report publicly.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>The United States has been at the forefront of efforts to support an effective, transparent post-conflict reconciliation process in Sri Lanka that includes accountability for violations by all parties. The report highlights the need for an independent and full accounting of the facts in order to ensure that allegations of abuse are addressed and impunity for human rights violations is avoided. We strongly support the Secretary General’s call for the Sri Lankan authorities to respond constructively to the report and underscore our belief that accountability and reconciliation are inextricably linked.</p>]]>
    </content>
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<entry>
    <title>'One country's ability to bury the evidence of war crimes endangers how civilians are treated in all other conflicts' - Guardian UK</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc/2011/04/one_countrys_ability_to_bury_t.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc-mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4250" title="'One country's ability to bury the evidence of war crimes endangers how civilians are treated in all other conflicts' - Guardian UK" />
    <id>tag:transcurrents.com,2011://1.4250</id>
    
    <published>2011-04-28T00:21:25Z</published>
    <updated>2011-04-28T00:23:13Z</updated>
    
    <summary>No-inquiry zone: Truth and accountability are not divisible, and a single failure of international justice is also a collective one Guardian UK Editorial, Jun 27, 2011 When Richard Goldstone, the judge who headed a UN fact-finding mission to Gaza, partially...</summary>
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        <![CDATA[<p><strong>No-inquiry zone: Truth and accountability are not divisible, and a single failure of international justice is also a collective one</strong></p>

<p><em>Guardian UK Editorial, Jun 27, 2011</em></p>

<p><strong>W</strong>hen Richard Goldstone, the judge who headed a UN fact-finding mission to Gaza, partially recanted last month – an act that was disowned by fellow members of the mission – the saga was used as Exhibit A in the case against the UN. The organisation, it was claimed, was so inherently biased against Israel that it lacked the moral authority to investigate it. Where was the Goldstone report about Sri Lanka, some asked?</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>A UN panel has just produced such a report about the carnage of civilians which took place two years ago when government forces crushed the Tamil Tigers. It is as hard-hitting as anything Goldstone produced, and therefore is just as likely to be shelved. The point is that truth and accountability, let alone international justice, are not divisible. One country's ability to bury the evidence of war crimes endangers how civilians are treated in all other conflicts. A single failure of international justice is also a collective one.</p>

<p>That there is credible evidence that government soldiers targeted civilians, shelled hospitals and attacked aid workers in the final months of the war against the Tamil Tigers is indisputable. That the Tigers used civilians as human shields and shot those attempting to flee the carnage at point-blank range is equally true. Tens of thousands died as a result of these twin brutalities. The zone that the government established in the north-east of the country in the final months of its civil war was an area where savagery was organised on a daily basis. Civilians queueing at a food distribution centre would be shelled while President Mahinda Rajapaksa's office instructed the army to stop what it claimed it had not been doing. It was a no-journalist, no-aid-worker zone, but it was anything but a no-fire zone.</p>

<p>Two years on, the goal has to be to establish an independent inquiry into these events. The Sri Lankan government has consistently opposed the UN, and at one point organised demonstrations against UN staff in Colombo. It has established two ad hoc bodies, but no one has been held accountable. Its supporters claim that anything more trenchant would endanger the peace that has reigned on the island since. All of these arguments are self-serving.</p>

<p>That leaves the UN itself. The secretary general, Ban Ki-moon, claims he lacks the authority to order an inquiry into the mass killings without the consent of the Sri Lankan government, which is not a member of the international criminal court, or a decision by an appropriate international forum of member states. Human Rights Watch is right to disagree. Having fought to establish the panel, the UN secretary general has a responsibility to finish what he started. <em>~ courtesy: The Guardian UK ~ </em></p>]]>
    </content>
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<entry>
    <title>Wall Street Journal calls on 'leaders abroad to tread carefully' on SG's Panel report on Sri Lanka</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc/2011/04/wall_street_journal_calls_on_l.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc-mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4249" title="Wall Street Journal calls on 'leaders abroad to tread carefully' on SG's Panel report on Sri Lanka" />
    <id>tag:transcurrents.com,2011://1.4249</id>
    
    <published>2011-04-27T17:06:25Z</published>
    <updated>2011-04-27T17:13:33Z</updated>
    
    <summary>Focus on fixing the democracy before investigating the past, as "there's a real danger that an international war-crimes investigation would do more harm than good", Wall Street Journal says in an Editorial, April 27, 2011: Sri Lanka and human rights...</summary>
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        <![CDATA[<blockquote>Focus on fixing the democracy before investigating the past, as "<strong>there's a real danger that an international war-crimes investigation would do more harm than good</strong>", Wall Street Journal says in an Editorial, April 27, 2011:</blockquote>

<p><strong>S</strong>ri Lanka and human rights activists around the world are in an uproar over a report released by a United Nations panel this week on the final months of the island nation's bloody civil war. The survey may prove illuminating, so far as it goes, in terms of understanding what happened during those violent six months in 2009. The greater risk is that the international response will tip Sri Lanka closer to losing the peace.<br />
</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>Colombo's final military push through the Northern Province between January and June 2009 displaced hundreds of thousands of Tamil civilians. As the fighting neared its conclusion, the terrorist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam used thousands of civilians as human shields to try to thwart the army's advance. A three-man panel assembled by Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has investigated allegations of atrocities at that time. The bulk of the U.N. report concerns charges that the government didn't do enough to avoid killing civilians and may even have targeted them.</p>

<p>These are serious allegations that deserve an airing. It's hard to see how Sri Lanka can build a stable multi-ethnic society as long as members of its Tamil minority believe they were victims of crimes that have been shoved under a carpet. </p>

<p>But that is where the U.N. and other international parties are in danger of running off the rails. The report calls for a more formal U.N. investigation, perhaps culminating in a war crimes tribunal. That call has been echoed by various human rights groups and may find a sympathetic hearing among some governments. It could prove to be the wrong approach for Sri Lanka.</p>

<p>Sri Lanka's problem is not a lack of interest in getting at the truth of the war's final days. On the contrary, opposition presidential candidate and one-time war hero Gen. Sarath Fonseka made waves during his campaign last year by suggesting a willingness to blow the lid on alleged human-rights abuses while he was head of the war effort. Courageous journalists have tried to write about those events, too. Whether politically or morally motivated, such public discussion will be critical moving forward.</p>

<p>Tamil civilians fled the war zone in northern Sri Lanka in April 2009. Rather, the problem is the measures President Mahinda Rajapaksa has taken to stifle that discussion. Gen. Fonseka was arrested and court-martialed after he lost the election. Journalists have repeatedly come under attack, including one war critic, Lasantha Wickrematunge, who was killed by unknown assailants as the final offensive ramped up in 2009. </p>

<p>Cartoonist Prageeth Eknaligoda, also a critic of the government, has been missing for nearly a year and a half. Earlier this year, the offices of opposition news website Lanka eNews were burned in an apparent arson attack, and its editor Bennette Rupasinghe was briefly jailed on questionable charges late last month before being let out on bail.</p>

<p>Against this backdrop, there's a real danger that an international war-crimes investigation would do more harm than good. The "international community" already is deeply discredited in many Sri Lankan eyes for its failure to stand against the neo-Marxist Tigers as they waged bloody battle on Sinhalese and Tamil civilians alike. As the war neared its conclusion, foreign powers criticized the military effort without ever offering a plausible alternative.</p>

<p>For the U.N. or some other institution to launch a formal tribunal now would only allow Mr. Rajapaksa to bolster domestic support among the ethnic majority Sinhalese by playing the nationalism card. His government already is trying to dismiss this week's U.N. report on exactly those grounds, suggesting the process has been unfair and politicized. Given the U.N.'s track record, it will be easy for Mr. Rajapaksa's supporters to credit such arguments, undermining his domestic opposition.</p>

<p>The international community would do better to focus on building the institutions that will eventually allow Sri Lankans to grapple with their own war history. That might mean, for now, focusing less on the end of the war and more on issues such as demanding greater press freedom and a more open political process. </p>

<p>Leaders could also press Colombo to revisit last year's constitutional amendment eliminating presidential term limits, which cleared the way for Mr. Rajapaksa to entrench himself in power. The U.N. report raises such issues, but the report's focus on war crimes has distracted from these points. These issues don't cut across nationalist lines and could lead to a more stable Sri Lanka with more justice for all of its citizens.</p>

<p>Sri Lanka is at a critical moment as it emerges from a decades-long war and rebuilds its politics and economy. There are worrying signs the Rajapaksa government already is heading in the wrong direction. That makes it even more important for leaders abroad to tread carefully, lest they inadvertently push the country back into sectarian strife. <i>(courtesy: Wall Street Journal)</i></p>]]>
    </content>
</entry>
<entry>
    <title>A lasting political solution through power sharing</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc/2011/04/a_lasting_political_solution_t.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc-mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4248" title="A lasting political solution through power sharing" />
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    <published>2011-04-27T02:30:17Z</published>
    <updated>2011-04-27T02:50:52Z</updated>
    
    <summary>by M A Sumanthiran (text of SJV Chelvanayakam Memorial lecture 2011) I consider it a great honour to have been asked to deliver the Thanthai Chelva memorial oration this year. Last year too I had the honour of delivering the...</summary>
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        <![CDATA[<p><strong>by M A Sumanthiran</strong></p>

<p><em>(text of SJV Chelvanayakam Memorial lecture 2011) </em>  </p>

<p><strong>I </strong>consider it a great honour to have been asked to deliver the Thanthai Chelva memorial oration this year. Last year too I had the honour of delivering the key-note address at the annual commemoration ceremony held in Jaffna on the 26th of April. Today, I am doubly delighted since Thanthai Chelva’s true disciple Mr Sampanthan presides over this event. I am truly humbled by this singular honour bestowed on me.</p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>Some years ago, at a ceremony to unveil the bust of Dr Colvin R de Silva at the Colombo Law Library, Colvin’s junior-most junior, Ms Chamantha Weerakoon Unamboowe recounted an anecdote. One day Colvin was greatly worried about a criminal appeal that he was going to argue before the Supreme Court that day. Chamantha had told him, “Sir, why are you so worried; half the criminal law of this country was made by you”, to which Colvin is supposed to have replied: “And the other half was made because they did not listen to me”!</p>

<p>I think it would be right to say that the state of our country is what it is today, because they did not listen to Thanthai Chelva. Ironically, it was Colvin who eventually did not listen in the Constituent Assembly in the early 1970s, after having himself prophesied in 1956: “Two languages – one country; one language – two countries”.</p>

<p>The first Republican Constitution of 1972 gave the last rites to the slow death for ethnic co-existence in this country that started when a unitary constitution was handed to us by the departing British. Having earned the distinction of being the first Asian country to enjoy universal suffrage, we buried all the benefits of democracy to this island by ignoring the rich diversity of its Peoples and their different heritages, and treating it like a homogenous society. In my view, fundamentally what really suffered was democracy itself, since the system of government that was enacted in 1948, undermined the very essence of it.</p>

<p><strong>Wikipedia has the following definition for Democracy:</strong></p>

<blockquote>“Democracy is a form of government in which all citizens have an equal say in the decisions that affect their lives. Ideally, this includes equal (and more or less direct) participation in the proposal, development and passage of legislation into law. It can also encompass social, economic and cultural conditions that enable the free and equal practice of political self-determination.” </blockquote>

<p><em>It continues later,</em></p>

<blockquote>“[M]ajority rule is often listed as a characteristic of democracy. However, it is also possible for a minority to be oppressed by a "tyranny of the majority" in the absence of governmental or constitutional protections of individual and/or group rights… It has also been suggested that a basic feature of democracy is the capacity of individuals to participate freely and fully in the life of their society.”</blockquote>

<p>This is perhaps why, Thomas Jefferson, in his inaugural address, on 4th March 1801, stated that,</p>

<p>“Though the will of the majority is in all cases to prevail, that will, to be rightful, must be reasonable; the minority possess their equal right which equal laws must protect, and to violate would be oppression”</p>

<p>This is also the reason why when Britain granted Dominion Status to the island of Ceylon, a prohibition was placed on the legislature on passage of any bill that disadvantaged one community or granted a privilege to one community over the others. According to Section 29(2) of the Ceylon (Constitution) Order in Council, Parliament was not competent to pass laws that,</p>

<blockquote>a) Prohibit or restrict the free exercise of any religion; 

<p>b) or make provisions of any community or religion; or make provisions of any community or religion liable to disabilities or restrictions to which persons or other communities or religions are not made liable; or </p>

<p>c) confer on persons of any community or religion any privilege or advantage which is not conferred on persons of other communities or religions; or </p>

<p>d) alter the constitution of any religious body except with the consent of the governing authority of that body. <br />
Any law that might be passed which conflicted with these four provisions was expressly declared to be null and void and of no legal effect.</blockquote> </p>

<p>Lord Pearce on behalf of the Privy Council described this prohibition in the case of The Bribery Commissioner v. Ranasinghe in this way:</p>

<blockquote>“[Article 29(2)] represents the solemn balance of rights between the citizens of Ceylon, the fundamental conditions on which inter se they accepted the Constitution: and these are therefore unalterable under the Constitution.”</blockquote>

<p>Professor Lakshman Marasinghe says that the Privy Council may have had the benefit of a plethora of background material to have been able to come to the conclusion that Section 29(2) was an unalterable, entrenched feature of the Soulbury Constitution. These may include the following:</p>

<p>During the debate on the Ceylon Independence Bill in the House of Commons in November 1947, the then Secretary of State for the Colonies, Mr. Creech Jones declared:</p>

<blockquote>“I should perhaps also mention that the Government of Ceylon, while able in the future to amend their own Constitution, has felt that the provisions of the existing Constitution safeguarding minorities should be retained. 

<p>“(The Government of Ceylon) would obviously not wish to provoke any controversy on these issues in Ceylon.</blockquote> </p>

<p>Thus… the provision barring discriminatory legislation will be retained by the Ceylon Government.” <br />
This was in reply to the concern raised by Mr Gammans, from the Conservative opposition when he said:</p>

<blockquote>“The Second danger which Ceylon faces is one which the right Hon. Gentleman, the Secretary of State for the Colonies has not mentioned except very shortly today. It is that Ceylon is not a single racial unit. There were two races in Ceylon, the Sinhalese and the Jaffna Tamils, who are in the northern part of the Island, and number 1,500,000, out of a total of 6,500,000. They differ from the Sinhalese race, language, religion, and to a large extent, in background. They are extremely capable and intelligent people. I have had a lot to do with them because they played a very large part in development of Malaya. It was the Jaffna Tamils who came over in large numbers and started the railways and Government services. Where there is a racial minority in the country the danger is that it may become a permanent political minority, Ceylon’s evolution on a democratic basis is bound to fail.”</blockquote>

<p>Many years later, in 1963, Lord Soulbury, writing the foreword to B H Farmer’s Ceylon: A Divided Nation, himself regretted that his Commission did not recommend the entrenchment of guarantees of fundamental rights, on the lines enacted in the constitutions of India, Pakistan, Malaya, Nigeria and elsewhere.</p>

<p>Around the same time the founding father of Singapore, and former Prime Minister, Lee Kuan Yew commented as follows:</p>

<p>“When Ceylon gained independence in 1948, it was the classic model of gradual evolution to independence. Alas, it did not work out. One-man-one vote did not solve a basic problem. The majority of some 8 million Sinhalese could always outvote the 2 million Jaffna Tamils who had been disadvantaged by the switch from English to Sinhalese as the official language.”</p>

<p>This then was the real ‘ethnic’ problem that has besieged this country – the problem being that a significant section of the citizenry was excluded from exercising any meaningful democratic choice in respect of all matters in which they rivaled the major community. The problem was that of a permanent minority that could not have a say in respect of their political destiny in this island. This did not only afflict the Tamils; a very important section of the country – the Burghers – left Sri Lanka in great numbers. The safety-valve in the form of Section 29(2) did not work; it was a failed experiment by the British who thought that an entrenched prohibition to safeguard the People who were inferior in number would solve the issue of ensuring full and inclusive citizenship to all the Peoples who inhabited the island. Full and equal access to political power for all citizens could not be achieved within the unitary model constitution that was granted to us.</p>

<p>Instead of such a unitary model, the British Government utilized the model of the linguistic States and other different forms of federations, in countries where different linguistic and ethnic communities live. Those models have largely contributed to neutralizing ethnic tensions and rivalries. Unfortunately, however, in Ceylon the call for a federal structure of governance by the Ceylon Federal Party (ITAK) fell on deaf ears. Within two years of independence, on 18-12-1949, Thanthai Chelva made this call at the inaugural meeting of the ITAK held at the Government Clerical Services Union building in Maradana.</p>

<p>It is pertinent to state here that although the All Ceylon Tamil Congress (ACTC) did not make such a demand prior to independence the Kandyan League and notably S.W.R.D. Bandaranayake mooted the federal idea. Bandaranayake wrote six letters to the Ceylon Morning Leader in 1926 seeking to introduce the idea of federation. In his famous Jaffna lecture on 17th July 1926 he openly advocated a federal system of government for Ceylon and stated that the model of federation obtaining in Switzerland afforded a better example for Ceylon.</p>

<p>The Kandyan League advocated a federal Ceylon with three provinces, one of which to be the Northeast province, in their submissions before the Donoughmore Commission. Thus, it was the Kandyan Singhalese who first advocated for the merger of the North and the East. Later the Communist Party of Ceylon and other left allies sought a federal constitution before the Soulbury commission.</p>

<p>Although the ACTC did not specifically choose between a federal or a unitary form of government, it nevertheless was stridently opposed to the Soulbury Commission report. The issue was not a choice between two theories, but a practical one where the fruits of democracy eluded the Tamil People and the other minority communities on account of their inferior numbers. G G Ponnambalam travelled to London and argued that in a country like Ceylon where communal divisions were so wide and deep-seated, the major community should not be given an absolute majority. He sought at least 33% representation in the legislature for Ceylon and Indian Tamils who constituted more than 25% of the population.</p>

<p>Once independence was granted under the Soulbury Constitution and after the passage of the Citizenship Act, which the ACTC opposed, Ponnambalam joined the Government in an attempt to try out ‘the consensual model’ of politics. However, five years later saw him disillusioned and resigning his cabinet portfolio on 2nd November 1954, stating,</p>

<blockquote>“… [a]fter five years of  co-operation, I yet see unmistakable signs of the desire for the establishment of racial hegemony under the guise of majority rule…I now find myself a more determined advocate of Tamil nationalism…”</blockquote>

<p>Thanthai Chelva though, realised within two years of independence that simple majoritarian rule will not benefit the Peoples who were minorities in Ceylon; not even with the seemingly entrenched provision contained in Section 29(2) of the Soulbury Constitution. That this constitutional experiment had failed was clear from the passage of the Citizenship Act in 1948, the Indian and Pakistani Citizenship Act in 1949 and finally the Official Language Act in 1956. The structure of governance needed to be radically altered to ensure the full and inclusive citizenship of all the Peoples of this country and for democracy to have any meaning at all, particularly to the permanent minorities on account of their inferior numbers. Within the next ten years two agreements were made with two Prime Ministers representing the two major political parties and both were unilaterally abrogated – even when neither of those Agreements would have converted the country into a ‘federation’ in the classical sense of the word. The defeat of the resolutions proposed by the ITAK to the Constituent Assembly, one by one, by simple majority votes, is a clear demonstration of the malady, but it also then ushered in a Constitution, ironically said to be ‘autochthonous’, leaving out the Tamil People from the very exercise of constitution-making of the ‘Republic’. This then is the central point I would like to make: it is not the descriptive terms one can give to the governance structure of the country [‘unitary’, federal’, etc.] that maters, but the actual realisation of the fruits of democracy and consequently of full and inclusive citizenship to all the Peoples.</p>

<p>A government BY the governed would necessarily entail granting access to political powers to the people. It is axiomatic that the two – the governor and the governed – are one and the same. But if by the composition and size of different Peoples, one People continuously govern the other People that would not only be a negation of democracy, but a clear case of political oppression as well. Such a scenario is antithetic to all forms of democratic rule.</p>

<p>How does one then redress the situation in cases where the country concerned is composed of different Peoples or of different ethnic, religious and linguistic backgrounds? There is no one model that is the panacea for all. But whatever the model, it must ensure that all citizens of the country have full and equal access to the political powers they can exercise as the realisation of the democratic ideal. And in my humble view, one does not have to re-invent the wheel or propound an altogether new theory. There are many tried and tested models of such power-sharing arrangements in many countries around the world today.  The important thing is that it must achieve the objectives of democracy – and all the Peoples of the country will have full and inclusive access to their citizenship. There are many theories that are very attractive, but if they are not useful or practical, they don’t mean anything. We will do well to learn from ancient Chinese wisdom that “a knife must cut; if not it is not a knife”. Mr Sampanthan has recounted to us many times his reply to the late Lakshman Kadirgamar on protecting the sovereignty of Sri Lanka. He says that sovereignty is not a brittle object to be contained in a glass box and protected. It is something that is vibrant and useful. Thus it is not just enough to state in the constitution that sovereignty vests in the people, but it must be ensured that all citizens share in that sovereignty fully and inclusively.</p>

<p>One of the ways in which political power can be shared among the different Peoples of a country is by devolving those powers to smaller units at provincial or regional levels. This model is particularly effective if the permanent minority in a country is actually a majority in certain provinces or regions. There are many examples of this, but the best is nearest to us in India where the lines of division between States are on linguistic or ethnic lines.</p>

<p>In Sri Lanka , the Tamil speaking people have historically inhabited the North and East provinces, while the Singhalese have lived in the other parts. As we all know, this is not exclusive occupation of different regions, but predominantly that is how they have shared this island. Therefore, any meaningful power-sharing arrangement between the Tamils and Singhalese must necessarily take advantage of this historic geographic fact.</p>

<p>It is true that people can have emotional attachment to land. But it must be remembered that land cannot ever be more important than the people who inhabit it. This truth was brought home to me about five years ago when I attended a peace seminar in India, at which conflicts in different parts of the world were examined. At the session on Kashmir, a peace-activist from there asked the audience whether Kashmir belonged to India or Pakistan. The participants, almost all of them young Indians, in unison cried out “India”. Then he asked them this tricky question: “When you say Kashmir belongs to India, do you mean the people of Kashmir or that valley - that land?” Eager to give a politically correct answer those young people said that they meant the people of Kashmir. Then that peace-activist accusingly told them, “No, you did not mean the people; you meant that land only, because the Kashmiris are saying, “Well if you say we belong to you, where were you when our sons were killed on the streets? Where were you when our sisters were raped? Where were you when our fathers were abducted and taken away? If you thought we belonged to you, you would have spoken up for us at those times. You are only interested in the land, not in us, the people!”</p>

<p>We are yet to recover from the dreadful war that was fought on our soil two years ago, said to be a humanitarian operation to liberate the Tamil people. The question that must be answered honestly is whether it was to liberate the people or to re-take the land. If it is the people, then certainly the rights of those people will take precedence over all apparent attraction towards the lands. This is not a novel attraction.  Systematic state-sponsored colonization was carried out since Independence in 1948 with a view to changing the demographic pattern of the North and East. According to a religious census of 1827, the Sinhalese population in the Eastern province was around ½ %; according to the official census of 1881 and 1921 the Sinhala population in the Eastern province was around 4 %, when the country attained independence in 1947 the Sinhala population in the Eastern province was around 9 %, at the time of the B.C pact the Sinhala population in the Eastern province was around 13 %, at the time of the D.C pact the Sinhala population in the Eastern province was around 19 %, as per the 1981 census the Sinhala population in the Eastern province was around 25 %. Between 1947 the year of independence and 1981, the last available census for the North and East, the increase in the Sinhala population island wide was 238 %, approximately two and a half times; while the increase in the Sinhala population in the Eastern province in the same period, 1947 – 1981, was 888 %, approximately nine times.</p>

<p>These facts were placed before the Supreme Court and acknowledged in the judgment which declared that the manner in which the merger of the North and East was brought about in 1987 was ultra vires.</p>

<p>The problem with a People whose political aspirations are not met and whose intrinsic dignity is offended is that they can make a huge nuisance of themselves! As a distinguished visitor from Rwanda a couple of years ago said: if we do not let our minorities live in peace, their brethren who have fled the country will make sure that we cannot live in peace! The outworking of this nuisance value can either be cyclic or mutations in form over time or both. That is why short fixes like the offer of development will not work in the long-term. The basic problem is one of access to powers of governance and not one of improvement in the quality of life. Therefore, for any solution to be a lasting one, it must directly address the root cause, which is full and equal access to powers of governance as an embodiment of their full and inclusive citizenship of the country.</p>

<p>In order to achieve a model of effective power-sharing we can perhaps look at various models that have been successful in many countries that grapple with the issues of plural societies. The following are some examples:</p>

<p><strong>Basque </strong>  </p>

<p>Basque Country is an autonomous community of Spain located on the Spanish and French boarder along the coast of the Bay of Biscay. In 1979, Basque became Spain’s first autonomous region with the passing of the Guernica Statute, which granted the Basque region autonomy over finances and local police forces, and provided that Basque language would be the official language of the region.  The Basque government is the only regional government in Spain to have authority over all taxes.  It also retains authority over internal security, industry, economic planning, banking, transport, energy resources, rural and urban development, agriculture and fisheries, social services, culture and public works.  The Spanish central government has authority over the Basque judicial system and services such as water ports, airports and immigration.</p>

<p><strong>Belgium</strong></p>

<p>Belgium is an independent, sovereign state divided into two three Cultural Communities and three territorial Regions.  The three Communities and Regions are organized according to the three official language communities in Belgium: the French, Dutch, and German-speaking communities.  Belgium first initiated the concept of separate Communities in 1970 with the establishment of two Cultural Communities and territorial Regions for the French and Dutch-speaking populations.  A German Community was established in 1973.  The Community/Region structure is enshrined in the 1993 Coordinated Constitution of Belgium.</p>

<p><strong>Chittagong Hill Tracts</strong></p>

<p>The Chittagong Hill Tracts making up an autonomous region in eastern Bangladesh are comprised of hill districts home to 13 distinct tribes collectively referred to as the Jumma people.  Of Sino-Tibetan descent and predominantly Buddhist, the tribes differ greatly from the rest of the Bangladeshi population, who are Bengali and Muslim.  In the 19th century, when the region was under British rule, the British gave the Hill Tracts a degree of self-rule.  In 1955 the Hill Tracts were under the absolute control of Pakistan as part of East Pakistan.  They then came under control of the newly established Bangladesh government, following independence from Pakistan in 1971.  In 1997, a Peace Accord established the Chittagong Hill Tracts Regional Council (CHTRC) with responsibility over issues including vocational training, primary education and secondary education, land and land management, local police, tribal law and social justice, youth welfare, environmental preservation and management, local tourism, improvement trust and other local government organizations, licensing for local trade and business, water resources, money lending and trade, and taxation.</p>

<p><strong>Jammu and Kashmir</strong></p>

<p>Jammu and Kashmir is an autonomous entity within India.  India’s claim of sovereignty over Jammu and Kashmir is contested by Pakistan, and the region has been at the center of conflict between India and Pakistan since 1947.   Of the region’s inhabitants 64% are Muslim and 32% are Hindu.  Autonomy status for Jammu and Kashmir is enshrined in the Indian Constitution of 1957 and the Kashmir Constitution of the same year.  The Indian Constitution identifies Jammu and Kashmir as a unique state within India.  The local government has exclusive authority over police, gas, education, hospitals, unemployment, land tenure and the running of local government.  The government of Jammu and Kashmir also has the power to regulate movement of peoples to and from Jammu and Kashmir.</p>

<p><strong>Northern Ireland </strong></p>

<p>Northern Ireland is part of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. Northern Ireland was the only region in Ireland that did not gain independence following the 1916 Easter Uprising and the establishment of an Irish Free State in 1921.  Violence between separatist Catholics and unionist Protestants has plagued the region.  Attempts at reconciliation and accommodation intensified in the mid-1980s and continued with little result until 1996.  The negotiations culminated in the 1998 Good Friday Agreement, which established a complex governance system whereby different matters affecting the region are dealt with by different governing institutions.</p>

<p><strong>Palestine</strong></p>

<p>Present-day Palestine is comprised of the Gaza Strip, on the east coast of the Mediterranean Sea, and the West Bank, west of the Jordan River. The joint Declaration of Principles on Interim Self-government Arrangements was announced in Oslo, Norway in 1993.  The Palestinians–Israeli Interim Agreement on the West Bank and the Gaza Strip was announced in 1995.  The 1993 Declaration provided for a Palestinian interim government comprised of a Palestinian Council and Executive Authority, which would handle governmental affairs for the Palestinians for five years, at which time the two parties would meet to negotiate the establishment of a separate Palestinian state.  The 1995 Agreement transferred governing powers to the Palestinian Council and the Executive Authority.  It also established a Palestinian police force and other organs for public security.</p>

<p><strong>Quebec</strong></p>

<p>Quebec is a province of Canada.  It is located between the Canadian province Ontario to the west and the Canadian Maritime provinces to the east. Originally a French colony founded in 1534, Quebec has a culture rooted in French language and tradition. There is a significant percentage of the population who believe that Quebec can only preserve its unique culture through independence from Canada.  Two referenda on Quebec’s political status were held, first in 1980 and again in 1995. Neither received the required majority to trigger secession from Canada.  In 1987, the Canadian government amended the Canadian constitution to give greater powers to the Quebec provincial government.  No concessions were made to Quebec following the 1995 referendum, though it was narrowly defeated by a vote of 50.6% against to 49.4% in favor of independence.</p>

<p><strong>Scotland</strong></p>

<p>Scotland is a distinct state within the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.  Scotland has been united with England and Wales in the United Kingdom since the 1707 Act of Union.  The Act of the Union provided that Scotland would retain a separate legal system, church, national bank, currency and flag.  Additionally, Scotland was reserved a fixed percentage of representation in the British Parliament and home rule in local government, education and social functions.  Following a 1997 Scottish referendum, the Scotland Act was passed in 1998, establishing a separate Scottish Parliament, the first since 1707.  Under the Act, the United Kingdom retained responsibility over foreign policy with Europe, defense and national security, economic stability, common markets for goods, employment legislation, social security and transport safety regulations.  Scotland has authority in all other areas.</p>

<p>For a power-sharing arrangement to be successful, people in their provinces and regions must have a say in their own political destiny. But their participation and exercise of the powers of governance must be real and not fanciful.</p>

<p>So far no real attempt has been made to change that flawed structure of government and make it real and accessible to the Tamil People. The present Constitution with all its amendments needs to undergo a radical change if it is to provide the Tamil People full and equal access to government as an expression of their citizenship. The pseudo devolution of powers one finds in the present Constitution is not real and not entrenched and does more to exacerbate the conflict than address its causes.</p>

<p>Thus, we will do well to re-visit the vision of Thanthai Chelva, of a country in which every citizen has the space to exercise his or her full and equal right to citizenship and by that contribute to the lasting advancement and flourishing of all her Peoples.</p>]]>
    </content>
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<entry>
    <title>The Sri Lankan sapphire from Pelmadulla in Kate Middleton's engagement ring</title>
    <link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc/2011/04/the_sri_lankan_sapphire_from_p.html" />
    <link rel="service.edit" type="application/atom+xml" href="http://transcurrents.com/tc-mt/mt-atom.cgi/weblog/blog_id=1/entry_id=4247" title="The Sri Lankan sapphire from Pelmadulla in Kate Middleton's engagement ring" />
    <id>tag:transcurrents.com,2011://1.4247</id>
    
    <published>2011-04-27T02:07:16Z</published>
    <updated>2011-04-27T02:23:06Z</updated>
    
    <summary>By M.S.Shah Jahan Super slim Kate-Catherine Elizabeth Middleton, 29, the princess-to-be has a worry over her engagement ring with Ratnapura sapphire. Kate has slimmed down so much that she had to shrink her famous engagement ring to fit her finger...</summary>
    <author>
        <name>transCurrents</name>
        
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    <content type="html" xml:lang="en" xml:base="http://transcurrents.com/">
        <![CDATA[<p><strong>By M.S.Shah Jahan</strong></p>

<p><strong>S</strong>uper slim Kate-Catherine Elizabeth Middleton, 29, the princess-to-be has a worry over her engagement ring with Ratnapura sapphire. Kate has slimmed down so much that she had to shrink her famous engagement ring to fit her finger as the dazzling sapphire and diamond band is too big for her size H finger. Princess Diana too wore it on the same finger.</p>

<p><img alt="PWKMTC426.jpg" src="http://transcurrents.com/tc/PWKMTC426.jpg" width="300" height="271" /></p>

<p><em>Prince William & Kate-Catherine Elizabeth Middleton ~ pic: http://www.officialroyalwedding2011.org/ </em></p>]]>
        <![CDATA[<p>A Royal source said: “The band was turning. Kate absolutely adores it and didn’t want to cause fuss. The bride asked Royal jewellers G Collins and Sons to make it smaller attaching two tiny platinum beads to the inside of the bottom of the Sri Lankan sapphire ring from slipping. That will make it a size I, one notch up from Kate’s finger width to ensure it remains comfortable. She was terrified it will fall off during the wedding. A bride’s worst nightmare is looking down and seeing her ring has fallen off. One can only imagine how this will be magnified when you are marrying the future King of England.”</p>

<p>William said he had given his mother’s famous engagement ring to his fiancée so that his late mother would “not miss out” on the royal wedding. In February 1981, when Diana Spencer was placed in the spotlight right after the wedding proposal of Prince Charles, the same spotlight focussed on her wedding ring too. Garrard Jewelers who is the British’s royal family’s official crown jeweller, created a lovely ring out of a magnificent 12 carat oval Sri Lankan blue sapphire of the bluish hue with 14 solitaire cut diamonds on the side, and set in 18-carat white gold forming an elegant and very elaborate setting.</p>

<p>Garrard Jewellers who is responsible to maintain, keep, and secure the jewellery, crown, and treasures of the British monarch, has been serving the monarchy from 1843 up to the present and they supply all the jewellery needs of the Queen and everybody else in the family.<br />
 <br />
<strong>Sri Lankan gem</strong></p>

<p>This 12 carat blue sapphire was born [mined] in Pelmadulla, Ratnapura district. The Queen Elizabeth II selected it out of the array of 50 fine gems displayed at the President’s House by the Sri Lankan gem community for her choice as a gift, when she visited Sri Lanka in 1980.The owner was young Ansar Jabir, scion of Beruwala’s Jabir family. The cost of the gem stone was shared by a few frontline gem dealers of that day.</p>

<p><iframe title="YouTube video player" width="350" height="227" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/ovFwNZHclMk" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>

<p>A diamond may be a girl’s best friend, but a sapphire represents the woman itself. EDB has sponsored a website http:// www.ceylonsapphire.co.uk at a cost of Rs. 3.4 million to promote Sri Lanka as a gem hub and propagate that Diana’s/Kate’s engagement ring sapphire is from Ceylon/Sri Lanka.</p>

<p>Diana’s engagement ring started the trend for other couples to choose colour stones for their jewellery instead of limiting themselves to diamonds. Chief beneficiaries were Sri Lanka, Burma, Madagascar and Kashmir. The latter’s blue sapphires fetch few times more than that of the rest in the international market for its rarity and beauty.</p>

<p>Western media has been wrongly circulating news that the sapphire was purchased from Garrads. Further London’s The SUN newspaper last week quoted the sapphire ring is of £ 32 million value. This is an irresponsible reporting, totally wrong and grossly exaggerated. On November 29, in Christies’ auction in Hong Kong, a fine quality Kashmir Sapphire of 11.24 carats fetched US$ 1,273,823 that is £ 781,500. Presently a 42 carats Kashmir sapphire in New York with a price tag of US$ 10 million is the highest in the market, still far away from £ 32 [taipan@sltnet.lk]. Therefore, £ 32 million value is mere imagination.</p>

<p>A slew of cut-price imitations too hit stores across the world like in 1981 and, with the wedding on April 29 the demand is still high that jewellers all over the world continue to make money even as they struggle to meet the customer demand.</p>

<p><strong>Diana’s engagement ring</strong></p>

<p>The National Sapphire Company based in New York that witnessed surge in business back in 1981 after Diana’s engagement to Prince Charles, witnessed its website crash as online visitors rushed to place orders for the Diana engagement ring replicas immediately after the announcement of the Williams-Kate Middleton wedding. The company has so far sold engagement rings most priced around $2,500. Princess Diana had many fabulous pieces of jewellery and her jewellery collection was estimated to be worth over 30 million dollars.</p>

<p>William used his mother’s dazzling engagement ring to pop the question while the pair was on holiday in Kenya. “I had been planning it for a while and carrying it around with me in my rucksack for about three weeks before the proposal. Any guy out there will know; it takes a certain amount of motivation to get you going. I literally would not let it go, everywhere I went I was keeping hold of it because I knew this thing, if it disappeared I would be in a lot of trouble. It just felt really right out and it was beautiful at the time. I had done a little bit of planning to show my romantic side. It went fine,” said William.</p>

<p>Kate admitted that the proposal had come as a shock. “We were out with friends and things so I really didn’t expect it all. I thought he might have thought about it. It was a total shock when it came,” she said. Asked about the daunting prospect of marrying into the royal family, Kate said: “I know that if I’m working hard and pulling my weight, working hard and playing hard at the same time, then everyone I work with can see that I’m there and pulling my weight”</p>

<p>Wills and Kate first met each other while they were both studying history of art at St Andrews University in Fife, Scotland. Their romance didn’t go public until a skiing holiday in Switzerland in 2004, but the prince scotched rumours of an early engagement, saying: “I don’t want to get married until I am at least 28 or maybe 30.” They split up in 2007 as the demands of the prince’s career in the Armed Forces increased but they were secretly united within weeks. As their long courtship progressed, Britain’s tabloid press dubbed her “Waity Katie.”</p>

<p>The wedding will be the biggest royal event since Prince Charles married Diana 30 years ago. Previous big royal occasions, such as that of Queen Elizabeth’s coronation in 1953 or the jubilees of 1977 and 2002, have seen huge celebrations across Britain. Such events also generate greater interest in the royals.</p>

<p>Even though Prince William lobbied for a relatively low-key wedding, suggesting the guest list be stripped of Commonwealth officials, politicians, European royals and newspaper editors, in favour of friends and family, the wedding is still shaping up to be quite a big affair. While Diana/Charles wedding was watched by 750 million people, Kate/William is estimated to be viewed by 2.5 billion all over the world, not only on television but also on Internet, iPad, mobile phone, etc.</p>

<p>The wedding is not technically a state event that somewhat limits the protocol requirements applied to the guest list, but royal obligations still dictate that a large number of the 1,900 or so seats go to guests from the world of politics. Queen Elizabeth II has invited 50 guests, Prince Charles and his wife Camilla chose another 250, the same number as William and Kate invited, while Kate’s family made another 100 invitations. Europe’s royal families, long close to the Windsor’s are expected to be well represented.</p>

<p><strong>Guest list</strong></p>

<p>William and Kate have showed their modern side by inviting a number of close friends, guests from the charities they work with. Kate has used her influence to invite the butcher, shopkeeper and pub owner from her home village of Bucklebury. Though guest list is still kept secret details have begun to leak out. Soccer star David Beckham will be there with his pop star wife Victoria. Elton John who has been invited because of his friendship with the late Princess Diana, is attending with his gay partner David Furnish.</p>

<p>Some leading religious figures are invited. The Venerable Bogoda Seelawimala, the head priest at the London Buddhist Vihara monastery has been invited primarily to show the royal family and the British government’s respect for Buddhist tradition. Probably he will be one of the few guests at the wedding of the year wearing orange and burgundy Buddhist robes. The list will include Islamic and Hindu leaders as well as those from other faiths.</p>

<p>President Barack Obama and his wife Michelle were not invited and many other international leaders will be watching on TV.</p>

<p>The wedding ceremony is expected to give Britain a much-needed boost, with most of the countries in Europe suffering from crippling spending cuts. In a kingdom forced to tighten its belt, a showpiece royal wedding could lift the national mood, giving subjects a glittering event to focus on rather than the Coalition Government’s spending cuts.</p>

<p>Meanwhile Prime Minister David Cameron, who is holding a street party in Downing Street with his wife Samantha, has urged Britons to follow his lead and hold street parties to celebrate the wedding. “It’s a special day for everyone in Britain. It’s a chance for all of us to come together and celebrate the great things about our country.”</p>

<p>Sandie Dawe, chief executive of tourism agency VisitBritain, said the wedding would be “an enormous boost for the British tourism industry” as the Royals are one of the biggest draws for foreign tourists visiting Britain, and the money that comes into England from tourists will be more than the money put out for the wedding</p>

<p><strong>Wedding dress</strong></p>

<p>Details of the wedding dress and the gown’s designer also remain secret. But the bride’s gown will cost 30,000 pounds and Pippi’s [Kate’s 27-year-old sister Philippa Middleton] dress will cost 20,000 pounds. Kate’s make-up will be natural and fuss-free. James Pryce of Chelsea’s Richard Ward Salon, who did Kate’s hair style when she announced her engagement is tasked with creating the royal bride’s hair style. Rumour has it that Kate is considering wearing her hair half-up, half-down and she might opt for flowers in her hair instead of a tiara.</p>

<p>People are anxious to know what jewellery she will wear for her big day. Is that Princess Diana’s Cambridge emerald choker, which is her wedding gift from the queen? Or the necklace presented by King Khalid of Saudi Arabia or a drop diamond necklace from Harry Winston given to the queen in 1979 and loaned to Diana on numerous occasions?</p>

<p>The wedding cake is created by British designer Fiona Cairns of a multi-tiered traditional fruit cake with cream and white icing. The matrimonial dessert will also feature a strong British floral theme, using the intricate piping elements of the Joseph Lambeth method. For the reception at Buckingham Palace, the couple has also asked McVitie’s Cake Company to create a chocolate biscuit cake especially from a Royal Family recipe as per Prince William’s request. To add more icing to the chocolate cake, celebrated Indian choreographer and entertainer Sandip Soparrkar and his dancer wife, Jesse Randhawa, will perform Ballroom dance for guests at the Buckingham Palace.</p>

<p>Besides, Kate Middleton was voted more beautiful than Princess Diana by an online poll conducted by the social networking site BeautifulPeople.com which is headquartered in Copenhagen. “That was a big surprise - that she surpassed [fourth-ranked] Princess Diana,” said Greg Hodge, the managing director of the site. “Kate Middleton comes in very fashion-forward. She’s living this fairy tale and is about to become the most famous princess in the world.”</p>

<p><strong>Bigger fashion icon</strong></p>

<p>Kate was also hailed as a bigger fashion icon in a poll of 2,000 women across the UK. The salute follows her stylish public appearance. Sales of “high-gloss” shampoos and hair lotions have leaped by 27 per cent in the past month as girls rush to copy her shimmering look. Well, after Jacqueline Kennedy Princess Diana romped the world and now it is Princess Catherine’s turn.</p>

<p>Though Kate Middleton wows the crowds, she admits to feeling stressed out about her big day. When she was asked, if she was nervous ahead of the big day, Kate replied: “Yes, of course I am. I can’t believe it’s coming so soon now.” Prince William also recently revealed he was hit by apprehension ahead of the big day and said his knees were “tapping” at the wedding rehearsal.</p>

<p>She will spend her last night as a single woman with her family at the Goring Hotel, not far from Buckingham Palace.</p>

<p>Following the marriage, the couple will live in north Wales, where the second-in-line to the British throne will continue to serve with the Royal Air Force.</p>

<p>William said they were “hugely excited” and “looking forward to spending the rest of our lives together”. Kate said she and the prince would start a family. William while echoing his fiancée’s sentiments said that they would “get over the marriage thing first and then look at the kids”. Oh yes this is the ultimate goal of every couple and the Royals cannot be an exception.</p>

<p>Honeymoon? Well that is also an important subject in this celebrity wedding. It could be in Eastern Europe, Africa or an island in Indian Ocean. On the day Wills & Kate, say “I do”; we people from the Pearl of the Orient, Wish You Both a Happy Married Life!</p>]]>
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