Wednesday, March 19, 2014

how can sri lanka commit ware crimes .Cannot even find a hangman

Sri Lanka hangman hunt after gallows scare off executioner
(AFP) – 5 days ago  


Colombo — British and Australian nationals have volunteered to be Sri Lanka's next executioner after the most recent hangman fled in panic when he saw the gallows, a prison official said Friday.
Commissioner-General of Prisons Chandrarathna Pallegama said he has received e-mails from two Britons and three Australians offering their services -- some for just the price of board and lodging in the prison.
"They have not given details of their current employment status," Pallegama told AFP, adding he was surprised by the interest foreigners had shown for a job that pays just $85 a month.
"They all appear to be very keen to take the job. Some would do it for food and accommodation in the prison."
The most recent executioner abandoned his post last week after coming face-to-face for the first time with the gallows where the last hanging was carried out in 1976, Pallegama said.
"He was scared and fled in panic," Pallegama said. "But I want to make it very clear that our law does not allow me to employ foreigners in any capacity at the prison."
Prison authorities hired two executioners last year. Both quit after a few months even though neither had to carry out a hanging, but they were required to carry out menial office jobs.
Pallegama said officials had stepped up a search for a hangman following increasing calls to end a de facto 38-year-old moratorium on hangings following an increase in big crimes.

Ananthi alleges Sumanthiran silenced her in Geneva

Ananthi alleges Sumanthiran silenced her in Geneva

TNA, Tamil Diaspora split over US-led resolution backed by UK

March 7, 2014, 9:40 pm 

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By Shamindra Ferdinando

Arift has emerged in the Tamil National Alliance (TNA) with one of the most prominent Northern Provincial Council members, Ananthi Sashitharan publicly accusing TNA National List MP, M.A. Sumanthiran of having deprived her of an opportunity to address UNHRC members at a recent crucial meeting in Geneva due to her alleged past involvement in the LTTE.

 Ananthi was married to Velayutham Sasitharan alias Elilan, a hardcore terrorist who masqueraded as the LTTE’s Trincomlaee District political leader during the Ceasefire Agreement arranged by the Norwegian government in February 2002. Ananthi represents the Illankai Tamil Arasu Kadchi (ITAK), the dominant partner of the five-party alliance comprising the TELO, PLOTE, EPRLF, TULF and ITAK.

 Addressing the media at the Jaffna press club on Thursday, an irate Sasitharan charged that MP Sumanthiran had scuttled her plans in Geneva, where she was to press representatives of 18 member states of the UNHRC to demand that the US-led resolution recommend an international investigation into war crime allegations. MP Sumanthiran, she alleged was basically seeking the support of member states for the US resolution.

 MP Sumanthiran didn’t respond to an SMS message we sent him. The MP was in Australia this week to pressure the Australian government to co-sponsor US-led resolution.

 Sasitharan claimed that those who had believed that the ongoing Geneva session would lead to a war crimes probe were frustrated and those who led Tamils speaking people to believe that a tough resolution would be presented to the UNHRC had deceived them.

 She warned that the youth would be disillusioned unless the international community ensured that those responsible for war crimes were punished. The international community should take the responsibility in such an eventuality, she said.

 Emphasising that there hadn’t been any restrictions imposed on her before she left the country for engagements in Geneva with a TNA delegation, Sasitharan alleged that after a couple of meetings there, MP Sumanthiran had advised her not to address UNHRC representatives direct.

 Commenting on MP Sumanthiran’s strategy in Geneva, Sasitharan alleged that the National List MP had failed to push for an international war crimes probe though the Northern Provincial Council (NPC) had passed a resolution demanding ex external probe on accountability issues. Fielding questions, Sasitharan acknowledged that the MP had discussed the role allegedly played by Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa in the militarisation of the Northern Province, the takeover of land belonging to Tamil speaking people as well as the fate of those who had surrendered to the army and the missing.

The TNA won the first Northern Provincial Council election last September. Sasitharan polled the second highest number of preferential votes after Chief Minister, C.V. Wigneswaran

allow living to live in harmony

Geneva, India, and American Imperialism

March 7, 2014, 12:00 pm 

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Prof. G.L. Peiris addressing UNHRC session in Geneva

By Izeth Hussain

At the moment of writing I have not had access to the full text of the US Draft Resolution on Sri Lanka that has been presented at the UNHRC Meeting in Geneva. But the most important fact about it is known: there will be no meaningful action of any sort at the present stage, and there will be such action only after the lapse of another year if Sri Lanka fails to show that there has been progress in taking credible action on internal investigations into war crimes etc. In the meanwhile there will be no international investigations into war crimes and no sanctions, both of which were being confidently anticipated. We don’t of course know what might happen by the time of the final vote on the Resolution. But it does seem that what threatened to be a dazzling Western pyrotechnic display at the expense of Sri Lanka has turned out to be a damp squib – not pathos for Sri Lanka but bathos for the US and the West.

What went wrong for the latter? Probably nothing. We are probably witnessing the unfolding of a game plan worked out between the US and India in 2011, as I argued in my article The Ban Ki-moon Conspiracy.(Island of May 2, 2011). Everything falls into place, in my view, if were recognize the fact that the outcome in Geneva depends not on the US, not on the Eu, not on the international community, but on India as I argued in my article Dawn on the Ethnic Front? In the Island of February 17. I quote from that article: "The present expectation is that the UNHRC vote will go against us I believe that the best way of countering that possibility would be to get India to act on our behalf, not necessarily openly but effectively. There are several reasons why India could have very special clout with the Western bloc. It is a regional power and an emerging great power, for which reason the Western bloc would very probably be prepared to recognize that Sri Lanka is India’s turf.

"I have in mind two other reasons as well. As I have been arguing in earlier articles the Sri Lankan Tamil ethnic problem is really an Indo-Sri Lankan ethnic problem because Delhi can never ignore the fall-out in Tamil Nadu of what happens to the SL Tamils. India is therefore an integral part of the SL Tamil ethnic problem, not just an ancillary factor. The Western bloc would therefore probably recognize that India should have a legitimate say in any action to be taken against Sri Lanka in connection with the SL Tamils. My other reason why India could have very special clout with the Western bloc is my theory propounded in 2011 that the Us and India were engaged in a benign conspiracy to make Sri Lanka move towards a political solution and ethnic reconciliation by using the threat of war crimes investigations as an instrument of pressure. My guess, for all these reasons, is that the US – which will be the prime mover behind any anti-Sri Lankan Resolution – will go along with India if the latter adopts firm positions against war crimes allegations and sanctions".

A clarification is due at this point. The interests of India and the US in regard to Sri Lanka are not identical. For the US the fate of the Sri Lankan Tamils is of no great moment whereas for India it could be of vital importance, vital in the sense that under certain contingencies it could even threaten the very unity of India. We do not know what dark forces might not be unleashed by the coming to power of the neo-Fascist BJP. On the other hand, the issue of war crimes investigations probably matters little or nothing to India, except as an instrument of pressure. It could matter much more for the US as it could serve the purposes of American imperialism – I will explain this point later.

The reason why India would not be enthusiastic about war crimes investigations, or rather would be against them – perhaps accepting them only if they are of a token order – is that they would be incompatible with moving meaningfully towards a political solution of the ethnic problem and ethnic reconciliation. Our Government has in recent weeks taken to emphasizing this argument and giving it central importance. However this argument can be taken seriously only if the Government is really serious about moving towards a political solution and ethnic reconciliation. But for almost five years it has given the contrary impression: it sees no need for any special action towards a political solution or ethnic reconciliation because all that will follow if the Tamils accept the gifts of the benign Rajapakse Government which embodies the will of the majority.

There might apparently be a case for arguing that war crimes investigations will not be really divisive if the actions of both sides – the Government forces and the LTTE – are investigated, and the investigations are not limited to the final phase of the war. There will be impartiality if there is no invidious focusing on the actions of the Government forces alone. May be, but it is impossible to believe that the whole process of investigations involving allegations and counter-allegations and detailed enquiries stretching over years will not further polarize and envenom our ethnic relations,, making impossible the spirit of mutual accommodation required for ethnic harmony. The dead cannot be resurrected and our primary obligation is to the living. This means that accountability has to follow at some stage after the process of ethnic reconciliation takes hold.

The Congress Government is practically certain of losing the next elections, and it would not want to leave office with the record of having been a party to the creation of an insuperable problem for Sri Lanka. The ethnic problem has to be sorted by the next Indian Government on the basis of a quadripartite agreement or understanding involving the SL Government, the SL Tamils, the Indian Government, and Tamil Nadu. That will probably become inevitable unless the present SL Government changes course and becomes fully democratic, which could lead to a political solution. For these reasons it seems very probable that the Indian Government would want to see that war crimes investigations are postponed.

There is a new factor that could make the US give much weight to what India wants. I refer to Ukraine, the most momentous development in international relations since 2000, which will come to be seen retrospectively as a landmark, a landmark in the US imperialist strategy of containing Russia. I am influenced to think along these lines by my experience of Russia from 1995 to 1998. At that time Russia was in a state of collapse but it was apparent that it would, sooner rather than later, get a grip on itself and re-establish itself as a power that the rest of the world has to reckon with. That is happening under Putin. The American Empire has been in decline since the 1970s and is most certainly doomed. But Russia can establish itself as the centre of a Eurasian configuration, not an imperialist centre, but some sort of centre exercising influence in an important segment of the world. Kissinger and Brzezinski, both of whom influenced American foreign policy even after they left office, saw all that very clearly and advocated a policy of containment of Russia. That policy has consisted of expanding NATO right up to the borders of Russia and the prizing away from Russian control and influence of some countries on the Russian periphery. That is how we have to make sense of ongoing developments in Ukraine.

But what has all that got to do with India? I used to think that the special, very special Indo-Soviet relations were a product of the Cold War and had disappeared after the collapse of the Soviet Union. During my spell in Moscow I found that that was far from being the case. The prestige and influence of India in Russia was really on a grand scale, partly a result of the fact that over many decades India sent many of its ablest diplomats to Moscow. The point I am getting to is that the US will give much to loosen or break the Indo-Russian special relationship. That means, I think, that if India wants the US to forget about international investigations into war crimes in Sri Lanka, the US will probably do so. (Izethhussain@gmail.com)

west helped ltte-- elam war

Some observations on the Eelam war

March 8, 2014, 7:28 pm 
KAMALIKA PIERIS

Sri Lanka’s armed forces were praised and admired long before the Eelam victory of 2009. The US Pacific Command team which evaluated the Sri Lanka army in 2002 said the soldiers were well motivated and were confident as a team. They were well trained, knew their weapons, and were proficient in the skills expected of them. ‘Maneuvers in close proximity to automatic weapons fire were rapid,’ they noted. Soldiers had a good understanding of LTTE warfare and knew how to defeat the LTTE. They had maintained a fighting spirit amidst tremendous hardships and it was this spirit that had prevented more drastic defeats. The army would have succeeded better if the entire system were committed to that end, they concluded.

The deputy head of the Naval Monitoring team of the SLMM, Lars Bleymann was on board "Pearl Cruiser II" when it was attacked by the LTTE in 2006. He wrote to the Navy high command thanking the navy, from the bottom of his heart, for saving his life. He said that the officer in charge and his crew behaved in exemplary manner. The OIC was calm, collected, never wavered, and never lost coolness. His crew carried out his orders. They are a credit to the navy and the Sri Lanka Navy is in very good shape, he said.

On another occasion, the head of the International Committee of Red Cross had written to Rajiva Wijesinha ‘Your men either at sea or on land, carried out their tasks in an exemplary manner. Whether it be to protect the state and its citizens or the care of the sick and wounded they displayed a strict discipline and respect for rules of engagement and at the same time a very respectful and kind attitude to help those in need.’

Geneva Convention (Additional Protocol II, 1977) is the only regulation that is of any use to a government engaged in civil war. This Protocol supports the right of governments to preserve national unity, protect territory, and maintain law and order in a civil war situation. This Protocol prohibits others from meddling in the war or interfering with any actions the government chooses to take on the matter. Sri Lanka has not signed this Protocol and therefore cannot make use of these valuable clauses. When asked why Sri Lanka did not do so, officials have no answer. Observers ask, was it deliberate? The present trumped up ‘war crimes’ charges are due to this omission. The Ottawa landmine treaty prohibits the use production and stockpiling of anti personnel mines. We have not signed that either.

The armed forces faced many obstacles when fighting this war, including sabotage. When the government negotiated to buy RM 70 multiple rocket launchers from Czechoslovakia, there was an attempt to scuttle the deal and the Czech manufacturers had to retain lawyers to proceed with the sale. The purchase was made but the plane carrying the launchers vanished after leaving Czechoslovakia. It was found in a former soviet republic. Sri Lanka made representation and the plane was allowed to take off. When the plane arrived in Sri Lanka, the Czech technicians in Colombo found that wires had been cut in both machines. They repaired the launchers with the help of SLAF technicians. The second aircraft carrying two more launchers was intercepted by fighter aircraft of a Middle Eastern country and forced to land in a military airport. It was held there for three weeks. An East European country had to make representation on behalf of Sri Lanka to secure the aircraft’s release. These rocket launchers were urgently needed by the army. LTTE fighting strength came primarily from their rocket launchers.

Some sections of the media also engaged in sabotage by publicizing arms purchases. Specifications of the newly acquired fire finding equipment were published. Sensitive combat information was made public. Navy said they could have targeted another LTTE vessel in addition to the ones they hit in 2003 if the media had not announced navy operations in advance. They charged that they could have destroyed at least four more LTTE ships in 2003 and 2006 if the media had not published sensitive information.

Military experts from UK, USA and India, three countries which opposed the war, were given an inside look at our armed forces. US Pacific Command invited by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, carried out a comprehensive study of the armed forces, to see whether the government could defeat the LTTE. They assured, in their top secret report that this would not happen. The army did not have the necessary equipment. Air force did not have a comprehensive air operational plan and lacked the equipment needed for surveillance and reconnaissance. They should acquire cluster bombs. US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) was invited to advise on Sri Lanka’s intelligence. They used this to sit in on intelligence briefings. Lt Gen Nambiar and Vice Admiral Jacob (India) were invited to advice on Jaffna high security zone and a special sea route for LTTE. General Rose (UK) came to advise on military reform.

When it became clear that the government was going to win the war, the western powers wanted President Rajapaksa to stop the war. When Kilinochchi fell in January 2009 USA, UK, Norway and France followed by India and Japan tried to force this. These countries were trying to save the badly cornered LTTE. The pressure exerted on President Rajapaksa was enormous. Representatives of UN, UNDP, ICRC together with the ambassadors for USA, India and European Union met the Foreign Minister. USA threatened to withhold the promised 9 million dollar loan unless a ceasefire was declared and foreign intervention was allowed. UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon sent his chief of staff, Nambiar to meet the President. UN wanted an immediate ceasefire. USA wanted a meeting between the UN representative and Prabhakaran as well.

In the first three Eelam wars, Sri Lanka succumbed to international pressure and the military offensive was stopped when the army was about to win. The Rajapaksa government refused to do this. President Rajapaksa firmly stated that he was not going to stop the war. They were going to fight to the finish. Nothing short of unconditional surrender could save the LTTE. The UN was not needed. LTTE could contact the President through the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC).

USA had also wanted President Rajapaksa to offer a general amnesty to the LTTE. This coincided with the unilateral ceasefire declared by the LTTE when they found they were losing. President Rajapaksa refused. The government could not offer an amnesty, he said. Even if the top leaders surrendered the government would go ahead with legal proceedings against them for crimes committed. It was also too late for the LTTE to negotiate a deal with the government. President said that he would not accept Prabhakaran as party to any future settlement. Nothing could be more ridiculous than allowing LTTE to take part in negotiations when it had lost it fighting capability.

About two months before the final battle at Nanthikadal lagoon, USA had offered to evacuate the top LTTE leaders and their families. There were secret negotiations to take away Prabhakaran, Sea tiger wing leader, Soosai, intelligence wing leader Pottu Amman and their families, numbering over 100. US wanted them to surrender to a third party. Sri Lanka insisted that LTTE must surrender to Sri Lanka and not to a third party. Weerawansa said the west had asked Prabhakaran to lay down arms to a third party because if he was arrested he would tell the government how the west had helped him with the war.

double standards - Crimea and Geneva:Reverse lessons

Crimea and Geneva:Reverse lessons for the Rajapaksa regime and Diaspora separatism

March 8, 2014, 7:21 pm 

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by Rajan Philips

What is happening in Crimea is what diaspora separatism would love to have happening in Sri Lanka. And Russia is one country that the Rajapaksa regime would be hoping to rely on to prevent northern Jaffna becoming a South Asian Crimea. But what Russia is doing in Crimea is almost a casual demonstration of the fulfillment of separatist aspirations, on the one hand, and an inconsiderate frustration of the textbook expectations of national sovereignty and security – in a country called Ukraine. At one point, Russia even invoked R2P of all things to justify its army getting out on the streets of Crimea, exercising its ‘Responsibility to Protect’ the Russians who are a minority in Ukraine but a majority within Crimea. Shoved virtually to the sidelines, notwithstanding all the puffed up rhetoric about diplomatic isolation and economic retaliation, are the West and the NATO – the flagship defenders of R2P and occasional promoters of separatist aspirations. Tough luck (more like, up yours), says Putin, grandson of Lenin’s cook, PhD in resource economics, possessed of his own - rather manic - sense of Great Russian history, and reinforced by KGB training.

Let us shift focus to Geneva, where the shoes are reversed and even mixed up. While Crimea exploded out of nowhere in the last fortnight, Geneva has been the stage for a slow moving drama (with year-long Acts and half-yearly Scenes) of undramatic resolutions that never rise up to the worst fears of the Rajapaksa regime or the best expectations of the diaspora groups. And in Geneva, it is the West that stands accused, by Russia among others, of trying to unnecessarily meddle in Sri Lanka’s internal affairs. But the West’s alleged meddling in Sri Lanka is nowhere near what Russia is doing in Ukraine. The leaked draft resolution for this month’s UNHRC meeting is mostly incremental ‘muddling through’ from last year’s resolution. The draft changes are more about acknowledging developments in the past year than about radical action items for next year. Yet, the changes are enough to worry the Rajapaksa regime because the annual agony has started to sap the regime’s energy so much so there could be fatigue failure even without a regime change.

Where is India?

What about India? India has played both sides in Geneva, displeasing the diaspora first and angering the Rajapaksa government later. India played wordsmith to the 2012 resolution famously, or infamously, adding the qualifying words "in consultation with and with the concurrence of the government of Sri Lanka" to the mandate given to the Office of the High Commissioner. Those words have been struck out in the leaked draft resolution for 2013. But on Crimea, India reportedly is the only major country "appearing to publicly lean towards" Russia at a time of overall lack of open support barring of course Syria’s Assad. Even China is cagey. While advocating peaceful resolution of the conflict, National Security Advisor Shiv Shankar Menon has spoken of Russia’s "legitimate interests" in Ukraine provoking protestations from the Ukrainian Embassy in Delhi.

Sri Lankan ‘readers’ of international affairs will obviously be interested in India’s stance on Crimea because geographical comparisons are unavoidable even if they are farfetched. In a scenario of Jaffna becoming Crimea, the cloak of Russia will fall on India. Lo and behold, one would hope that Chief Minister Wigneswaran would be able to forestall any lunatic effort in the Northern Provincial Council to copycat the resolution of the Crimean parliament to call for a referendum to secede from Ukraine and join Russia. But history teaches us that political lunacy cannot be ruled out anytime, especially in election time and that too in India. Ukraine and Crimea are not going to bother the voting masses of India who seem sufficiently fed up with the Congress dynasty and necessarily want change even if that change would bring the anti-Muslim Merchant from Gujarat to the Central Government in Delhi. But foreign policy will be election fodder for India’s chattering classes and we can stay tuned to hear what the BJP and the actors in Tamil Nadu have to say about Russia and Crimea. All of this will be over-read and over-analyzed by Sri Lankan and diaspora ‘readers.’

And the Muslims

Adding to the complexity of comparisons but forgotten in the Russian-Ukrainian debate are the Crimean Tatars who have as much, if not more, claim to the peninsula as the Slavs, be they Russians or Ukrainians. The deportation of the Tatars out of Crimea began under the imperialist Tsars and ended with Stalin (the Georgian who became Russian) who packed them off en masse to Siberia. To the Tatars, their land was colonized by the Russians after they were deported. The Tartars have been returning to Crimea after the collapse of the Soviet Union and are now uneasily sandwiched between the Ukrainians and the Russians. The Muslims in Sri Lanka can justifiably find their parallels in Crimea.

In an inexplicable show of annoyance, President Rajapaksa is reported to have lashed at the SLMC leader, Justice Minister Rauf Hakeem, for providing documented information to the UNHRC about the attacks on Muslim and Christian places of worship by pro-government extremist groups. I say inexplicable because I have never seen any report about the President either publicly or privately taking to task the perpetrators of these attacks or their highly placed sponsors. To his credit, Mr. Hakeem is said to have held his ground saying that he has as much control over the SLMC as others have over the different constituent parties of the UPFA. Making a folksy point, he compared the President’s concern to the absurdity of trying to hide a pumpkin in a plate of rice. The President’s lashing out is even more inexplicable if he is serious about getting the support of the Muslim countries in Geneva. True to form, External Affairs Minister GL Peiris presented statistics, which no one believes including the presenter, that the places of worship of all religions have come under attack and the attackers are being apprehended by the police. In other words, the government is protecting religious equality. More laughable is his now worn out argument that the fact that judges have been dealt with for their misdemeanors in accordance with the constitution should not be taken as an attack on the independence of the judiciary by the government.

Back to the future

What sense can one make by juxtaposing Crimea and Geneva? Together, in my view, Crimea and Geneva illustrate the limits or bounds beyond which diaspora separatism and the Rajapaksa regime cannot do much. Crimea is what diaspora separatism would love to have but cannot have, and Geneva is what the Rajapaksa regime would love to shake off but cannot shake off. But in politics, as in life, we never know enough about what we can do, and know even less about what we cannot do. So misplaced comparisons will be made and unrealistic expectations and paranoid overreactions will ensue as per usual. The prospect of the two sides drawing reverse lessons is my wishful thinking, but is unlikely.

In a broader sense, the showdown in Crimea is not merely a "Cold War redux", but is also Europe going back to the nineteenth century. It was about an year before the outbreak of the celebrated 19th century Crimean War (1853-1856), that Marx famously corrected Hegel that all great world-historic facts and personages appear twice, but "the first time as tragedy, the second time as farce." And we have it again. The Crimean war itself was a bloody mid-century farce. It was brutal, but shadow boxing according to Marx and Engels. Even though their views were not widely known at that time, subsequent history has confirmed their assessment. In the tragedy of that shadow, at least for the English speaking world, rose Florence Nightingale and modern nursing, as well as Tennyson’s versification of the "Charge of the Light Brigade".

It was a war triggered by the fight over the control of the Holy Land between the Catholics led by France and Orthodox Christians led by Tsarist Russia. Russia lost to the combined forces lead by France and Britain. But the aftermath of the Crimean War led Europe into a new flux that saw the emergence of Bismarck’s Germany, the eventual outbreak of the First World War and the Russian Revolution itself. Today’s Crimean showdown is, on the one hand, a manifestation of one of the unfinished questions of the revolution, and, on the other a comeuppance for European machinations against Russia after the fall of the Soviet Union.

The unfinished question is of course the national question. The Soviet Union did not fall to capitalism as one huge market but disintegrated along pre-existing fault lines of the Slavs (Russians, Ukrainians, Belorussians), the Balts (Latvians, Lithuanians, Estonians), the Caucasians (Georgians, Armenians, Azerbaijanis), and the Central Asians (Uzbecks, Kazakhs, Tajiks, Turkmenians, Kirgiz). Post-Soviet, the Europeans, especially through NATO, have been insensitively encircling what is left of the old Russia, through the former Warsaw countries and Soviet Republics. For Putin, Ukraine became the instance where Russia would draw the line, rather cross the line. His motives and methods are highly questionable, but comparisons to Hitler are outlandish. Equally outlandish are comments that Putin is getting away as an international cowboy because there is a weak Sheriff in the White House. To his credit, President Obama knows more about what he cannot do than about what he can do. It is remarkable that Putin and Obama have been able to maintain contact through long phone conversations. It is even more remarkable that despite the tension, the Russian and Ukrainian soldiers and the people in Crimea have been able to maintain their calmness and interact peacefully with one another. As the wife of a Ukrainian soldier remarked, that is what she would expect the leaders to do as well.
 

CRUDE CALLUM CALUMNY - Chris Nonis

CRUDE CALLUM CALUMNY - Chris Nonis

Gutter journalism passed as ‘Pulitzer material’
Allegations are such unmitigated, unsubstantiated rubbish
‘Your crude journalism exposes both Callum and your calumny”, said the Sri Lankan High Commissioner in the UK, Dr Chris Nonis, responding to the latest Channel 4 video timed to coincide with UNHRC sessions in Geneva, and purporting to be about rights abuses by Sri Lankan forces.
His reference was to Callum Macrae the producer of the so called Channel 4 documentary series on alleged abuses by Sri Lankan forces during the 2009 assault on the LTTE.
‘Your allegations are such unmitigated and unsubstantiated rubbish that you make even gutter journalism appear to be Pulitzer Prize-winning professionalism. Your latest attempt to denigrate Sri Lanka is a continuation of your pernicious campaign that has already been exposed in the book Corrupted Journalism Channel 4 and Sri Lanka,” High Commissioner Nonis stated.
What makes your journalism doubly dubious and obnoxiously unbalanced is that you expect us to comment on footage which, in fairness, we have not even been given the opportunity of seeing or hearing.
It is a pity that your continuing propagandist vendetta against Sri Lanka only continues to undermine the process of reconciliation and healing that we have undertaken after a near three-decade long terrorist war.
It is certainly not going to help those in Sri Lanka you pretend you are helping but who only wish to live in peace without external meddling and posturing, Dr Nonis added. Meanwhile, the Sri Lanka Army spokesman states that the release of the latest video about Sri Lanka by Britain’s Channel Four has been timed for the UN Human Rights Council Session. Military media spokesman Brigadier Ruwan Wanigasuriya added the latest video was no different from the other videos Channel Four had telecast earlier. He rejected in total the charges levelled in the new Channel Four video. 

DOUBLE STANDARDS Snowden calls for help to ‘fix’ US spying Edward Snowden speaking

Snowden calls for help to ‘fix’ US spying

Edward Snowden
 speaking at the SXSW Conference through a teleconference from Russia on Monday.
RUSSIA: American whistle blower Edward Snowden urged the South by Southwest (SXSW) conference audience to help “fix” the US government spying on its citizens.
“South by Southwest and the tech community, the people in the room in Austin, they're the folks who can fix this,” Snowden said on Monday at the South by Southwest Interactive Festival in Austin through a teleconference from Russia. “There's a political response that needs to occur, but there's also a tech response that needs to occur.”
The SXSW marked the first time the former security contractor has spoken to the American public directly since he left the United States and gave thousands of classified National Security Agency (NSA) documents to journalists.
Speaking to an audience of thousands, Snowden said he does not regret his decision to leak NSA documents.
“Would I do it again? Absolutely. Regardless of what happens to me, this is something we had a right to,” he said.
“I took an oath to support and defend the Constitution. And I saw the Constitution was being violated on a massive scale,” he added, to applause from the 3,000 people in the auditorium at the Austin Convention Center.
During his speech, Snowden took questions both from the audience and from Twitter. The first question he answered was from Tim Berners-Lee, who created the World Wide Web 25 years ago. Berners-Lee asked Snowden what he would change about the nation's surveillance system.
“We need public oversight ... some way for trusted public figures to advocate for us. We need a watchdog that watches Congress, because if we're not informed, we can't consent to these (government) policies,” Snowden replied.
Hugh Forrest, director of SXSW Interactive, said Snowden wanted “to talk to a tech-focused audience about the importance of building the next generation of online tools that protect user privacy.”
The 10-day SXSW festival which began on Friday concludes on March 16.
- PRESS TV 

WELL TIMED SELF DEMOLITION

WELL TIMED SELF DEMOLITION

It seems decisively to be end game for Channel 4 and Callum Macrae. There is conclusive evidence that so called key witnesses in his so called documentaries on Sri Lanka were known LTTE agents on the Tamil Tiger pay list, and after this fact was revealed by Lord Naseby in the British House of Parliament, Macrae is now in his last gasp, coming up with more impromptu works of fiction targeted for the Geneva UN HRC sessions, 2014.
When the witnesses from his tele fictions are called, Macrae will surely have the very little that is left of his reputation in tatters...
His latest so called documentary release purports to show videographed evidence of human rights abuses including rape by members of the armed forces.
The scenes are very probably staged, but even if they are not, they say nothing, as there is episodic footage of people being carried into vehicles -- and scenes purporting to show wounded men and women.
A so called forensic pathologist asserts, looking at the grainy pictures, that there is enough evidence to say that some of those shown in the video images were sexually abused.
This man must have extraordinary microscopic eyesight and amazing forensic skills to inspect grainy video images and determine from his vantage, that people who figure in them have been sexually violated.
As stated before, the footage is very probably of scenes staged for full theatrical impact, but even assuming that the scenes are authentic, there is hardly anything here that could even remotely implicate the Sri Lankan forces.
For example, there are scenes purportedly of supposed Sri Lankan army soldiers carrying those who appear to be wounded people and loading them bodily onto military vehicles.
At one point the soldiers appear to be discussing whether a person being attended to should be put into the vehicle or not.
Eventually, somebody appears to say in Sinhalese that one person ought to be left behind.
This appears to be the classic application of the principle of triage in the context of combat. Those who are determined to be beyond help are left for dead while those who can be dispatched to hospital are taken. This is to ensure that some will survive when obviously all cannot.
This seemingly normal application of triage in a war situation which is obvious from the footage, in fact paints the Sri Lankan soldiers in a good light. They seem to be keen on transporting the victims of war, civilian or LTTE cadre, to hospital.
This meshes in well with the image of Lankan soldiers as rescuers as depicted in the film The Last Phase which was Sri Lanka’s counter to the fictionalized Killing Fields productions.
There is also an allusion to the language used by the soldiers in some places which is ridiculous in terms of proving anything.
These are fighting men in a theatre of war and they can speak to each other in any way they want, and in a situation of raging combat, it is highly unlikely they will communicate in the dulcet tones of convent nuns.
If less than parliamentary language is a criteria for beginning to investigate war crimes, all schoolboys this big match weekend in Sri Lanka -- Tamil, Muslim and Sinhalese -- run the risk of being marched off to the Hague.
All this is written down after assuming that the footage is authentic, which is rather unlikely with emerging evidence that the Star Channel 4 witnesses have all been bought and paid for Tiger operatives, as Lord Naseby asserted in the British House of Parliament.
With an installment on the ready before each key event -- be it UNHRC sessions, CHOGM or some banshee Tamil Tiger bash -- it is the theatrical aspect and nothing else that is conspicuous in the Channel 4 productions.
This time Macrae is particularly lame in his reasoning that it takes one look at his recent production for any reasonable individual to conclude that it is indeed end game for this mountebank, with it being clear that in his last gasp he is straining to do his best with no material at his disposal.
His brief and notorious career as ‘a freelance documentary producer’ is definitely reaching its bitter end which is why he seems to be keen now on moonlighting as some sort of anti Sri Lankan advocate in the civil society circuit. Such people of course usually don’t even make a feeble show of having credible material at their disposal at all, and therefore this ‘filmmaker’ can slide into inevitable oblivion in whichever hole in wall NGO he chooses for his retirement. 

Religious leaders lash out against Geneva resolution

Religious leaders lash out against Geneva resolution

Disna Mudalige
The resolution against Sri Lanka at the UNHRC constitutes unwarranted interference in the internal affairs of an independent and sovereign nation, representatives of the Inter-Religious Alliance for National Unity said at a press conference at the Government Information Department yesterday.
Alliance President and Sabaragamuwa University Chancellor Ven. Prof. Kamburugamuwe Vajira Thera said all people should set aside political and other divisions and confront this challenge in unison.
The thera said the resolution undermines the hard won freedom and peace of the country. He said certain powerful nations are envious of the fact that Sri Lanka is trying to stand on its own feet after years of colonial invasions and 30 years of disastrous terrorism.
The thera observed that all religious and ethnic groups are working in unity towards the prosperity of the country, while healing the wounds of the past. "Under the leadership of President Mahinda Rajapaksa, the Northern and Eastern Provinces have seen an unprecedented development within a short period after the war, making it impossible to imagine that those areas had once been a battlefield. Even the foreign delegates who visited the country in the post war phase had been astonished by the massive transformation taking place," he said.
The thera said the international community should allow sufficient time for the internal mechanism - the LLRC- to be implemented in the country. Alliance Co-Chair Rev. Fr. Sarath Hettiarachchi said those who make false allegations about human rights violations in Sri Lanka are actually trying to campaign to win the votes of the Tamil diaspora that supports the LTTE.
He said at this crucial moment all people have a duty to line up with the leadership of the country to defeat the anti-patriot and opportunistic segments within the country who demand international inquiries on the last stages of the war. Fr. Hettiarachchi said these anti-national groups who depend on NGO funds have now become desperate as they could no longer earn money in the name of war. Alliance Co-Chair Moulavi Hassan Moulana said all people irrespective of their religion, ethnicity or political divisions suffered alike due to prolonged LTTE barbaric acts, adding that no human rights agency, activist or international media channel cared about the woes of the people during that time. He said the UN Human Rights Commissioner has more grave issues in the contemporary world to focus on rather than interfering in affairs of a country enjoying newly found peace and unity. Ven. Galagama Dhammaransi Thera and Ven. Pallekande Rathanasara Thera also spoke.