Sri Lanka marks word population reaching seven billion mark

(October 31, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) A child born at the Castle Street hospital at 12.01 am today was symbolically considered the child born marking the reach of the seven billion population figure. Similar events were held worldwide and was considered only a symbolic gesture.

The child picked was born to a 23 year old Dinushika Dilani whose husband is a private bus driver. The child was named as Muthumali.

Terrorism Charges – Judging Ourselves

| by Gaja Lakshmi Paramasivam

(October 31, Melbourne, Sri Lanka Guardian) Sri Lankans on both sides of the ethnic divide are accusing each other of Terrorism. Those driven by hearsay, would blindly follow the side they like. Those using Intellectual Discrimination would tend to join the side that comes out ‘right’ and those using belief would take the side with deeper need, and discipline confidentially the ‘other’ side.

30 October 2011 - CHOGM, Commonwealth Leaders Retreat today at the Kings Park, Perth Western Australia.©Annaliese McDonough/Commonwealth Sectretariat.
This morning, I read the article ‘Getting to the truth of Nandikadal ‘ by Ms Kishali Pinto Jayawardena, published in Sri Lanka Guardian. Later, I read also read the article ‘Pro-Tiger groups gang up against Lanka in Australia’, in Sri Lanka’s Sunday Times.

The substance I identify with, through these articles, would depend on which of the following three dominates my thoughts: - Belief; Intellectual Discrimination or Hearsay?

Belief based thoughts would generally be steady and be in common with others we identify with. I identified with much of the analyses by Ms Jayawardena as a professional. I could not however, identify with the following by Ms. Jayawardene: ‘What indeed is the point of the upcoming report of the Lessons Learnt Commission when its interim recommendations have not yet been implemented?'

As per the Sunday Times, our Minister for Foreign Affairs, the Hon Kevin Rudd, says in this regard:

Question: How important is it to have a human rights watch? Do you think and then also are you concerned about Sri Lanka's human rights record…?

Kevin Rudd: ‘On the particular question of Sri Lanka that you raise the Australian national position. When it comes to human rights problems in Sri Lanka, it is well documented. We simply say very clearly to our friends in Sri Lanka that it is of fundamental importance that the upcoming reconciliation commission report deal with the various questions which have now been raised in the UN report on allegations of human rights abuses within Sri Lanka. Furthermore the Australian national position is that the UN Human Rights Council needs to revisit its earlier deliberations on this matter. These are generally the position of many governments across the world. When it comes to the Commonwealth agenda itself the Commonwealth Foreign Ministers' Meeting, Heads of Government Meeting provide opportunities also to raise these matters. ‘

I receive the above by our Minister, Mr. Rudd, on the basis of our Common Belief as Australians and also as per his Department’s inclusion of me in Community meetings – which I believe happened due to my belief in the issue at the ‘National level’. It happened naturally - without any calculations on my part. When we ‘believe’ – whatever we witness with this belief in our hearts – is ‘good’ for us. Those observed facts confirm our inner Truth. Facts witnessed without belief go towards structuring the problem and therefore the solution. They do not go to the root of the solution.

From the point of view of Ms Jayawardene, LLRC’s final report may have lesser value due to lack of implementation of its interim recommendations. This seems like the interim stage of the above three that influence our thoughts. The interim stage is the Intellectual stage at which we allocate ‘rights and wrongs’. The Australian Government has NOT found the Sri Lankan Government ‘wrong’ nor have Australian Tamils found the Tamil Tigers ‘wrong’. They are both receiving facts and reports as per their Belief and/or are merely repeating hearsay. Hearsay used without belief is frivolous and needs to be dismissed by the observer. If used, it would dilute the power of belief for the observer/user.

How does one distinguish between the two? The Australian courts did not distinguish between the two and therefore they kept dismissing my complaints as being ‘frivolous’. They became the media through which respondents delivered their verdict. If this was lacking in belief and does not show clear use of Common Measure; it automatically damages the common belief of the institution and nation that gives the judges their authority to judge. Where a judge has neither belief nor a common measure – the judge needs to dismiss her/himself through the side s/he believes in.

Mr. John Dowd of the same system as Mr. Rudd, and the Australian media – have accepted the respective sides as being of substance. This shows a big difference between our social justice system and our legal system. The same person (Mr. Dowd in this instance) is more accepting of evidence from minorities now that he is in the social system than when he was in the legal system. Our political system is the rich middle-class – swaying more at the moment with the social system rather than the legal system.

We derive value from the Social system – by stepping back after our work has been done – and observing the outcomes without influencing them either way. To my mind, this is the essence of Lord Krishna’s Geetha – which recommends that we do the work and not expect benefits. The benefits would come as per our needs and the needs of the society we are a part of. We vote and then ‘accept’ the outcome. We discriminate, judge for ourselves and then leave the rest to the system that has the responsibility to deliver outcomes that confirm our work and investments. To influence the system at the final stages is to apply duress. The more we identify with the judgment of the system – the more our belief in the system would be strengthened and v.v. My belief in the Australian Administrative and Legal systems was drastically reduced after they ‘failed’ me. Some of it has been since restored through various parts of the Federal Government showing recognition for the feedback they get from me. The deeper the need the greater the value of the response. My belief itself did not diminish – it took other forms – primarily – myself.

The essence of this problem to my mind is that both sides want to say the other was ‘wrong’. Allocating Rights & Wrongs as per common measures helps us include in the issue and our thinking, those who are not physically close to us. To the extent those others – for example Australian Government in this instance – believe in that system – we are strengthened and motivated by their belief – even if we do not see them or hear about them. Belief in Common connects us naturally and continuously. Once we believe, we have the natural ability to influence the system/person we believe in as if they are a part of us. Then they would deliver the outcomes as if we have delivered them ourselves.

At the moment, our Federal Government, through Mr. Rudd, is the one I identify most with, in this CHOGM part of this issue. I identify on the basis of my belief as per my contribution at Government level, for which I did not receive and/or derive direct benefits. That belief based investment was made back then and the dividends are happening now – without me directly influencing the Australian Government. I am yet to observe evidence of such identification by the Sri Lankan Government, in global values. Instead, they sound very defensive.

As per my mind, Australian Tamils do not have an official structure of global standards to be able to present their case through such a structure. As a community – they/we have not identified a leader of global standards of Democracy, amongst themselves. Hence Australian Tamils work largely through the ‘Common Belief’ system. Australian Tamils who have worked to bring this issue to the Australian Public, to the extent of their belief in Australian Public would naturally influence the Public. If this is strong, and the Government of Australia endorses it, they would have political gain to that extent. The recent death of a Tamil refugee in Sydney’s Villawood detention centre, would have naturally added strength to the importance of this issue, in the eyes of the Australian Public who are very sensitive to such ‘deaths in custody’. Australians driven by Intellectual Discrimination know that such deaths would be ‘wrongs’ in terms of Global status. Majority ‘rights’ we identify with, lead us to believe in that system through which rights and wrongs are allocated. At belief stage ‘rights’ become good and ‘wrongs’ become bad.

If the two sides to this ethnic conflict are to use ‘rights’ and ‘wrongs’ they both need to strengthen their respective Administrative and Legal systems. As they stand now, they rank far below the Australian system. Once strengthened, they need to first judge themselves. The side that still depends on others’ endorsement is not yet independent. Likewise, the side that uses others’ system due to the higher status of those others.

One who is able to stay within Belief, would – at the group level – not find fault on the basis of rights and wrongs but would recognize them as good and bad – light and dark – which naturally exist side by side. Such persons would share their higher goodness to bring about equilibrium – commonness. This takes the work to the root of the issue – where there is no differentiation between problem and opportunity. Only those persons are real leaders in Democracy. They would naturally work any democratic system at that level. Belief is a Divine power and it works irrespective of whether the other side returns our belief or not. If they do not, and we still believe – we are the other side also and therefore we are the whole. Those who believe would observe and be happy even though they may not get any credit. That is the value of Commonness without which there can be no democracy. The beginning and end of Democracy is this Commonness.

The outcomes that satisfy and make happy, true Sri Lankans, true Australians and /or true Global citizens – are the only valuable outcomes. Others are frivolous – however glamorous they may seem. In terms of CHOGM, as per my identification, the statement that LLRC report is the basic document for us to be led by – is a valuable outcome for Sri Lanka, Australia and the Global Community.

Those who believe, that either side are ‘Terrorists/War Criminals’ already have the cure. If they believe that their goodness is greater than the other side – they would include and become wholesome. They can afford to. If they do not believe this but just believe that they are good – then they must stay away from that other side.

If they are using rights and wrongs – instead of belief and facts that confirm that belief – they need to use Highest Common Measure and show the outcome as applied to themselves and then as applied to the other side. The process needs to be done – step by step and needs to be transparent – so that the exercise would be beneficial to those seeking similar solutions. Thus far the two sides have not been able to find an independent judge acceptable to both. Hence they need to judge themselves and publish their judgments about themselves and about each other – using the Common Measure. Then we are our own UN – developed bottom-up. All other parts of UN are irrelevant to us.

Time of Reason, Treason, Democracy & Hypocrisy

| by Gamini Weerakoon

(October 31, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Is it: The Time of Reason or Treason, The Time of Light or Darkness, the Time of Humanitarianism or Barbarism or The Time of Democracy or Hypocrisy?

All that we can say is that we are living in interesting times.‘May you live in interesting times’ is a Chinese curse, and you may not have a choice in the matter.
These are indeed interesting times whether in this blessed island or in the rest of the world.

Sri Lanka in these times is setting the pace, as you will realise.

Wars and humanitarian wars

You may have read about the wars of Attila the Hun, Genghis Khan, Persian, Greek and Roman conquerors, the Crusaders, Arab conquerors English and European colonialists and American neo colonialists.

But have you heard of any of them waging a ‘humanitarian war’? No. They had straightforward purposes for war – plunder, murder, plain grabbing of land and property, robbing the temples of their gods, killing natives by cutting their necks and throwing them to the crocodiles,etc.

Sri Lanka was the first to declare a ‘Humanitarian War’ and now the world powers are going in for such humanitarian wars. Take the example of Libya. The United Nations adopted a Resolution to enforce a No-Fly-Zone over Libya purely for humanitarian purposes. They wanted to save poor innocent Libyan civilians from being massacred by their beloved leader Muammar Gaddafi.

Saving civilians

NATO forces comprising the Americans and Europeans bombed Libya back into the Stone Age or even beyond into the ages before such as the Mesozoic and Paleolithic ages just to save poor Libyan civilians being massacred! And now the Libyans are said to be dancing on the streets in joy after being liberated but bombed into the Stone Age or even beyond. Collateral civilian damage? Yes, but that is inevitable in such a humanitarian war, as its proponents say.

Western nations and their media, the doughty defenders of human rights saw no violation of human rights of the Libyan leader. Gaddafi was better dead than alive, says The Economist in its latest issue and suggests that whoever who pulled the trigger on Gaddafi should be considered a hero and not investigated as a war criminal!

No such honour has been proposed for those who pulled the trigger on Velupillai Prabhakaran but charges of war crimes are being attempted on Sri Lankan army personnel who are alleged to have pulled the trigger on Prabhakaran’s cohorts by Western powers! A stunning explanation is provided by The Economist for the double standards of the doughty defenders of human rights. ‘Different standards apply to the superpower and its allies. They seek to assert such standards as being universal.

This is a demonstration of Western arrogance, democracy and hypocrisy at its best.

But there are a few glitches even in a humanitarian war on Libya. No war can be – even in this Hi-Tech Age – all 100 percent clean surgical strikes. There will be few bloody messes such as what happened to Muammar Gaddafi.

Western values

NATO fighter planes attacked the Libyan leader’s convoy presumably to prevent him from escaping and Gaddafi had to flee in his vehicle. Then some non- humanitarian freedom fighters captured him and we all know about his ghastly end.

Ban Ki-moon and the UN, Western powers and even Third World nations are aghast at what happened. Laws of Western civilization say that you can hound a man to death in the most inhuman way but his body must be disposed of in a humanitarian way. Even in Sri Lanka there were many outspoken critics such as Alavi Moulana and Rauf Hakeem about the way Gaddafi was killed. They were his friends and perhaps their political organisations were beneficiaries of Gaddafi’s munificence.

But it was not only them. The government and the UNP too for once were in agreement in the condemnation of the treatment accorded to Gaddafi in his last moments. The UNP for once got it right when they went further and said that before condemning and calling for an investigation into the death of the former Libyan leader, the government should call for an investigation into the killing of their colleague Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra.

The UNP’s contention it appears is that like charity, humanitarianism too should begin at home.

Time of reason

Mahinda Rajapaksa, a great friend of Gaddafi, once journeyed to the Libyan Desert to exchange fellow revolutionary greetings. It was rumoured that the latter had pledged a $ 500 million loan during our troubled times but that it had not materialized. Despite friendship with Gaddafi, the Rajapaksa regime has recognised the Interim Government of Libya that threw out Rajapaksa’s friend. That indeed is correct diplomacy. In international relations between nations there are no permanent friends, only permanent interests.

While on the subject of diplomacy we wonder whether Sri Lankan diplomacy is traversing through the phase of the Time of Reason. A prime objective of diplomacy and the purpose of diplomats we are told is to make friends and influence people and countries with which we have diplomatic relations.

But it is indeed paradoxical that some of our diplomats are the causes of furores and uproars at places where they have been stationed. A great part of their efforts is spent on denying allegations of war crimes.

True, LTTE fellow travellers are behind it all but is the purpose of dispatching diplomats to foreign countries at great cost, to provoke implacable enemies of a country? It is like adding fuel to fire. Is it diplomatic and does it stand to reason? Attempting to reason it out is however fraught with the danger of being accused of treason for we are dealing with something sacrosanct: war heroes.

Mixed blessings

‘Living in interesting times’ may not be a curse as the Chinese believe, all of the time. The many events taking place with rapidity in this once sleepy island may be considered a blessing to the Rajapaksa government. For instance, this is budget time and for whatever government it is a time when promises that were made are recalled in rupees and cents.

Our cricketers now playing against Pakistan in the desert sands have been a disaster and not provided the anticipated euphoria to distract attention from broken promises such as increased pay hikes for public servants. The doctors are demanding a five-fold salary hike and that should have set the others in motion.
Fortunately Duminda Silva has provided the fireworks and that have gripped the nation. If that fails to hold public attention till budget blues are over, we can have the ever ready entertainer Mervyn Silva. He can hitch up his sarong and make demands as he has done on TV: Threaten to cut off the arms of butchers who sell meat; remove animals meant for sacrifices to gods by force; ban liquor sales in ‘his electorate’ and as and when he pleases; threaten the media when they embarrass him while also telling parents and teachers that whatever happens in schools, should have his approval.

And what do spokesmen for the law abiding democratic government of Sri Lanka say: It is the fault of the people for electing such representatives!

But why does the all powerful party leader select him as an MP and let him run riot? Democracy or hypocrisy?

GKCC: Hope for depositors from the SC?

| BUSINESS EDITORIAL

(October 31, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) We are happy the role we played to bring the plight of the 7,000 plus GKCC Depositors to the attention of the higher levels of government is hitting home. This week the Chief Justice herself Hon'ble Shirani Bandaranaike took a firm stand on the perplexing delay in reaching a settlement. When the matter came up before the Supreme Court (SC) recently, the Chief Justice - clearly noting the inordinate delay - observed there should be some urgency in the matter by the time Courts go into vacation by the first week of December.

The proposal made by lawyers to
Lalith  Kotelawala  Interest should be
calculated at 6% from the date of
deposits until December 2008 is unfair
 by the depositors. This, in many cases, 
will eventually result in the depositors
 having to pay back GKCC.
While the government and its many spokesman tell the country and the world Sri Lanka has been made attractive to foreign FDIs and increasing local investment, Prof Sunil Watawala informs the SC GKCC's assets - like the ENT Hospital and other valuable real estate - have not attracted the interest that would have been the evidence of a vibrant economy. This tells the actual story of the real state of the fiscal state of the country. Besides, it appears the SC has not been provided with a list, including value, of assets held by GKCC when it collapsed in December 2008. The speculation is the value of these in actual terms that day was far in excess of the current due of Rs.29 billion. How and the dates in which some of these valuable assets changed hands, how large sums in deposits were surreptitiously withdrawn by directors and key officials of the Ceylinco Group will expose many scandalous deals.

The proposal made by lawyers to Lalith Kotelawala Interest should be calculated at 6% from the date of deposits until December 2008 is unfair by the depositors. This, in many cases, will eventually result in the depositors having to pay back GKCC. The reality is many of them were meeting their monthly home expenses via the interest from their deposits. A fairer solution, we would assume, is to arrive at an aggregated rate of around 12% upto the date of settlement.

Prof Watawala's Committee also appears to have taken far too long in coming out with their final Report. The reason may have been the somewhat high salary of Rs.200,000 plus expenses per month they have paid themselves and it, therefore, follows the longer it takes to file the report the more lucrative for them. If that much hyped Corporate Responsibility factor was to have played a part in this matter - that involved the life and death of hundreds of thousands - these accountants should have done their part sans any emoluments.

While it is astonishing is this high-profile matter has escaped a resolution despite the passage of nearly 3 years, the new development the SC at its highest level is calling for early and, hopefully, a more reasonable formulae of resolution - will be welcome by the 7,000 depositors condemned to near poverty from the heights of the comforts of the middle class lives that was their lot for them and their families when they entrused the good name of the Kotelawalas with their entire lives savings. Interestingly, while Rupert Madoff spends his days behind bars in New York Lalith Kotelawala spends his days in comfort and spendour in his sprawling villa - with the occasional live rock band providing him the pleasure of his favourite ditties in airconditioned comfort in Colombo. Surely, a different kind of Tale of Two cities.


People awakened for eradication of poverty

| by Milinda Rajasekera

(October 31, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The International Day for the Eradication of Poverty which is observed throughout the world coincided this year with the ‘Occupy Wall Street’ movement, a campaign of protest launched in the US against bankers, financiers and politicians accused of ruining global economies and condemning millions to poverty and hardship through greed. This campaign has gathered momentum and it is sweeping across many countries.

Violent and destructive protests have to be curbed, but the real remedy to the present public unrest lies in the adoption of effective measures to reduce, if not, to eliminate the sharp disparities that exist in the utilization of national and international wealth and resources.
In Sri Lanka the IDEP was observed with a programme held in Matara at the Weligama Urban council Hall with the participation of Minister of Economic Development Basil Rajapaksa, as the Chief Guest. United Nation's Organization designated this day, begun in 1993, to promote awareness in eradicating poverty and destitution in all countries, particularly in developing countries - a need that has become a priority towards development.

The importance of eradicating poverty becomes clear when the effect of poverty on society is taken into consideration. Viscount Samuel in his book ‘Belief and Action’ brings out the nature of poverty thus, “Of the many hindrances to welfare in our civilization none is more destructive than poverty. Poverty fetters men’s lives; it lowers physique, vitiates happiness, and evokes resentment and bitterness. From the protest and struggle against it springs the widespread social unrest, which is one of the main causes of the uneasiness and instability of our times.”

It was the late President R.Premadasa’s poverty alleviation programme, ‘Janasaviya’ that marked the beginning of an organized effort to alleviate poverty in this country. Although it did not succeed in fully realizing its objectives, yet it served to relieve a wide section of people of their burden of poverty. The People’s Alliance Government that assumed power in 1994 replaced the former with the ‘Samurdhi’ programme which declared as its objectives the alleviation of poverty and creating opportunities for the youth, women and the disadvantaged. The main thrust of the programme constituted consumption grants to low income households. These programmes, no doubt, have made an impact on the problem of poverty. The statistics show that poverty in this country has been reduced to 8.9 percent in 2010 from 15.2 percent in 2007. Of course, the reliability of these statistics for gauging the level of poverty in the country is called into question by some. They regard the attempt made at measuring poverty by its income and expenditure method as misleading.

It is evident, however, that these programmes have not succeeded in reaching the goal of eradicating poverty in real sense which is a larger objective that involves accomplishment of several other aspects, apart from relieving people of the burden of living costs by granting monthly allowances. The larger goals include provision of expanded access to health and education facilities, proper housing, free time and leisure, security, widened participation in policy formulation, equal opportunities for self-enhancement and so on.

It is not only those living below the so-called poverty line that are deprived of the above facilities and services, but even those belonging to higher income categories. There are hundreds of thousands of families in the latter category, particularly the salaried classes that undergo immense financial difficulties today. They find it hard to supply the needs of their families. The major part of their incomes is spent on children’s education and medical requirements, the costs of which have risen very high in recent times. What is left for spending on food and other essential needs is awfully inadequate. The result is widespread malnutrition among children and adults.

It is these handicaps experienced by the disadvantaged sections in countries that have found expression in the ongoing protests on a global scale. These protesters are particularly annoyed by the gap between the haves and have-nots that keeps widening despite various poverty alleviation programmes and pious intentions expressed by political leaders to eliminate or reduce these disparities and to relieve those disadvantaged of the burden of living. They see that the existing economic order makes the rich richer and poor poorer.

Their anger grows when they observe that those handling the centres of financial activities adopt corrupt and fraudulent methods to satisfy their greed for wealth and luxurious living. Instead of diverting a fair and reasonable proportion of the income they make, more often than not, at the expense of the ordinary people, to improve the lot of the disadvantaged sections that sink in the mire of penury, they utilize their huge profits to bask themselves in the lap of luxury and extravagance.

A tinge of jealousy spurring some of these protesters on cannot be ruled out. This is an impulse, though unhealthy, that inexorably springs in the human heart. When Marx presented his political philosophy of socialism advocating equality of opportunity and equal distribution of wealth as its main theme, it was condemned by some as a theory that sprang from jealousy and hatred of the rich. But the validity of that theory dawned on the people and their agitations and protests compelled governments to adopt measures to eliminate social injustice the existing systems spawned. Although Marxism as a movement suffered setbacks around the world in recent times, the social injustices it sought to eliminate continued to torment people and it is these injustices that have now been highlighted in the present wave of protests.

Violent and destructive protests have to be curbed, but the real remedy to the present public unrest lies in the adoption of effective measures to reduce, if not, to eliminate the sharp disparities that exist in the utilization of national and international wealth and resources. The ruling authorities in countries – including ours - are now compelled to be alert to the developing trend showing that people are no longer prepared to lie dormant allowing what is justifiably due to them to be frittered away or enjoyed by a minority of rulers, their henchmen and cronies.



The hypocrisy of East or the putting the blame on other

| by Dr. Edward Perera
Letters to Editor

(October 31, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) It is quite interesting to see how the pro and anti Mahinda Rajapakse regime people in the country have got themselves divided into two main groups and resort to having bitter arguments.

The group that defends the Sri Lanakan government has become sentimental in the nature of supporting their blunt arguments while the opposite groups try to bring the facts to light enabling impartial readers and listeners to draw their own conclusions.

One thing is clear. It is highly beneficial to the people who praise the ruling faction as they can try their luck to enjoy government granted privileges. But sooner or later they would realize that these perks are not meant for everyone who praises the ruling lot.

Over 40,000 people sat for the Korean language test recently and only less than one fourth got through it. Beside the fact that they all were cramming hard and dreaming of an overseas job, only a very small number out of this 9000 odd successful applicants will have the real luck to win this chance. They are the cream of henchmen of the ruling lot.

I took this above mentioned example just to explain how pathetic the situation is in Sri Lanka even for the pro government people. Purely on merits or performance, no candidate would achieve his or her goal.

The people live with hopes, I would rather say with illusions have no other option than saying yes to the system, no matter how corrupt it is. Some go beyond this “yes” and try to find “potential” or “possible” enemies outside Sri Lanka as it could bring more lucrative benefits for them in a competitive manner. Still they are not the last group that will become disenchanted with the rulers as some spiritless cowards would continue their unconditional support till last moment. They belong to the really sick group and will not even have the chance or time to jump on the next band wagon as it will be too late for them.

Of course, Sri Lanka has enemies everywhere in the World. Just pointing a lifeless finger to West would cause more problems than what we have at the moment. The rulers are not blind to identify the real enemy within but they only turn the blind eye to the enemy at home. Why? Inattentively, it is the most conspicuous way to distract people from domestic issues.

I would say, not only the present government but the whole political system or the process is degenerated in Sri Lanka. It started long ago in the post independence era and the present President too learnt all his survival strategies and tactics during this period. He was just another fellow-runner. The question is; can he change the society? I say no. Why? It is too dangerous for him.

Is there any potential way to rescue the system and protect the country? Yes! How? Not to distract people from real issues just for the sake of survival but to be honest and accountable for one’s actions. It will definitely lead to good governance.


He was abducted, tortured & plotted to be killed but he continues to fight for justice

An Interview with Thushara Jayarathna

(October 31, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) Here is an Interview with Thushara Jayarathna who filed the case against Namal Rajapakse, son of President Rajapakse. It is widely believed that the Head of Law College facilitated Namal Rajapakse to have extraordinary benefits during the final Law exam, which benefits were not facilitated for others sitting the exam. 

I would request your help in presenting my case before the international Human Rights Court in Geneva. I believe that what took place in the Law College examination is not only a sign of the institution compromising its own examination code, but also sets a dangerous precedent.
Despite submissions on this basis - the case was recently dismissed by the court. “Political interfered especially by the President who is the father of Namal Rajapakse may have influenced the decision taken by the court,” Thushara has pointed out.

But Thushara , an energetic and intelligent guy who says he is never going to give up the continues to fighting for justice. Thishara has talked to the Sri Lanka Guardian from Colombo and expresses his feelings on present and his future plans:

01. Tell us briefly about your back ground?

I am Dasanayaka Mudiyansalage Thushara Jayarathna, from Nugegoda. I was registered at the Law College under registration no : 17988. I won gold medal in ‘addressing the jury’ and I was a captain of the law college debate team. Currently I am hiding myself due to security reasons. After my abduction my father suffered brain hemorrhage. Now he is severely handicapped. My mother has also become a disabled person. I have no source of income and now I‘m totally living out of welfare from my friends. 

02. You fundamental rights petition has been rejected by the court; how doyou feel? 

I filed fundamental rights petition with the assistance of a local Human Rights Group and Attorney At Law Lakshan J.S. Dias. On 25 October 2011, Deputy Solicitors General Shavendra Fernando and Nerinpulle objected to the case being accepted – on the basis of the application being ‘out of time’. D.S. Wijesinghe PC appeared for Namala Rajapakse, made the same objection and the case was dismissed after the Court heard my submission to the above objections. I feel is that this judgment does not satisfy intentional standards and also that the Judiciary have been influenced by President Mahinda Rajapase. I believe this is a judgment under political influence. From the bottom of my heart, I thank my lawyer and all those who helped me, despite knowing that this was likely to happen. To me, their help was an act of belief in Justice and in my courage.

03. Did you yourself witness Mr. Namal Rajapakse who is a son of the President Rajapakse and currently Member of Parliamentof the ruling party, being facilitated with auxiliary benefits that other students did not have, when he sat the exam conducted by the Law College of Sri Lanka? 

On 3rd December 2010, I made an official complaint about irregularities in the Law College examination system. I registered also a complaint at the Keselwaththa Police Station. Following my complaint which garnered a lot of attention within the college, in the media and by the Asian Human RightsCommission, I was summoned before college authorities on 11th January2011 and asked to explain the exact nature of the irregularities. I then listed three main complaints as follows:

1. The college allowed Mr. Namal Rajapakse to appear for his exam in an air-conditioned room with internet facilities. This is in direct contravention of rule 60 of the college's own exam code as well as article 12(1) of the constitution. Rule 60 of the exam code clearly states that candidates may not have any books or learning aids with them for the duration of the examination. It also does not allow mobile phones - even if they have been switched off. However Mr. Rajapakse was allowed an internet enabled computer on his table. I saw Mr. Rajapakse enter that hall and I clearly stated as much at the time of registering my complaint.

2. The question paper on the third day was leaked. I witnessed two candidates discussing the question paper before the exam began.

3. The college registrar used the Law College official phone line to make a threat to my life on 6th December 2010. I was thus, as a result of these threats , in no condition to appear for the Accounts paper.

The head of the institution then informed me that he would make a copy of my statement available to me. However I have not received a copy todate. The honorable principal of the Law College then stated to local media that I had made the complaint against the institution and went on to dismiss the complaints as mere hearsay, on the basis I was not fluent in English. I immediately wrote a letter to the Honorable Chief Justice on 26th of January 2011, strongly condemning these statements. I am making arrangements to send you acopy of the letter as an attachment. In the letter I clearly stated that my complaints were not based on hearsay but on what I had personally witnessed (seen and heard) and known. I sent the letter by registered post.

With regards to the death threat I received, I would like to draw your attention to a statement by the former Chief justice to BBC Sandeshaya, where he said that if any candidate was allowed to appear for the exam in an air conditioned room it would be a clear and serious violation of the institute's own exam code and would indeed call the entire examination system into question. The Hon. Principal made a statement to the media saying that Namal Rajapakse was given an AC room in which to sit for the exam since there was no space in the other examination halls. In my letter sent to the Chief Justice, I pointed out that this claim was absolutely false, since there was plenty of space to accommodate candidates in my own examination hall. The Hon. Principal then made a statement to the media that a decision concerning me had been made on the 17th. However after I sent my letter to the Chief Justice, the Hon Chief Justice, in a response to BBC Sandeshaya, said that a decision in this regard had not been taken as yet and that the matter was still under investigation

04. How do you feel about your security? Are you under threat because you tried to find justice against the unjust?

I hope that you may know after this case that I was abducted; I was beaten up in my own home and made to forcibly sign documents. I was hiding myself in Hatton church after I escaped from the Hatton Police who abducted me and tried to kill me. Hatton Police ordered the parish priest to hand me over to them. In terms of my current situation, no one has come forward to help me, because according to my knowledge they too have got threats. I live with my friend and am undergoing difficulties as I change my location every day.

05. What is your future plan? 

I would request your help in presenting my case before the international Human Rights Court in Geneva. I believe that what took place in the Law College examination is not only a sign of the institution compromising its own examination code, but also sets a dangerous precedent. If this is allowed to continue, I believe that we may soon be faced with a situation where the children of prominent politicians will be allowed to appear for even the Law College entrance examination in unfair conditions. I assure all concerned that I will fight to reestablish the Rule of law until my last breath. I humbly request all right thinking people to help me in my pursuit for Justice.


Syria Imperative

| by Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich

( October 31, London, Sri Lanka Guardian) The Assad regime in Syria is facing increased scrutiny for its handling of demonstrators. The Syrian opposition has asked for arms and NATO intervention similar to what was witnessed in Libya. Washington Hawks such as former presidential candidate and U.S. Senator John McCain have called for military intervention in Syria to “protect civilians.” The call for the use of military force to “protect”.

A member of a pro-Islamic human rights group holds up a sign which reads 'We remember Hama', during a demonstration to protest Syrian president Bashar al Assad and his regime, outside the Syrian Embassy in Ankara, on August 1, 2011. Syria's defiant president praised his troops on Monday as the army pressed on with a deadly crackdown on anti-regime dissent, even as international condemnation swelled ahead of a UN meeting on the crisis.
Given the demonstrated lack of regard for human life and the aversion to justice (Iraq, Palestine, Lebanon, Afghanistan, Pakistan, etc.), what lies behind the imperative to intervene in Syria?

The protest movements in Syria started in Daraa -- dubbed the epicenter of the anti-Assad protests. Daraa, traditionally supportive of Syria's ruling Baath Party, suffered from reduced water supply triggering massive protests against the local administration and the regime for failing to deal with the acute water scarcity in the region. Water.

Therein lies the crucial motivation behind the support, agitation, and arming of Syrians against their government by those who endorse ‘humanitarian wars’. It would be naïve to believe that the ‘humanitarian’ interest in Syria comes on the heels of the uprisings in the region given that water has been and continues to be a critical determinant of state security and foreign policy between Israel and Syria (as well as Lebanon) dating back decades.

It was the 1967 war which resulted in the exponential expansion of Israeli water sources including the control of the Golan Heights (also referred to as the Syrian Golan). For decades, Syrian Golan and the return of its control to Syria has posed a major obstacle to the Israeli-Syrian peace negotiations. Israel’s water demands make it virtually impossible to accommodate this process. In fact, even with full control of the Golan, Israel’s water crisis in 2000 were so acute that it prompted Israel to turn to Turkey for water purchase.

In addition, Syria’s presence in Lebanon since the outbreak of the Lebanese civil war in 1975 played a crucial role in hindering Israel’s never-ending water demands. Although the 1955 Johnston Plan (under the auspices of the Eisenhower administration) proposed diverting water from Lebanon’s Litani River into Lake Kinneret, it was not officially formulated, though it remained an attractive prospect. In 1982, Israeli forces established the frontline of their security zone in Lebanon along the Litani. Numerous reports alleged that Israel was diverting large quantities of Litani water.

Syria’s presence in Lebanon and the 1991 Lebanese-Syrian Treaty of Brotherhood, Cooperation and Coordination, was a challenge to Israel and its diversion of water. When Syria replaced Israel as the dominant power in southern Lebanon in May 2000, Israeli fears grew that Syrian success in controlling the Golan and by extension, Lake Kinneret, would have a devastating effect on Israel.

Perhaps this helps explain the fact that on September 13, 2001, while the United States was recovering from the shock of 9/11, the influential and powerful JINSA (Jewish Institute for National Security Affairs) had a statement available as to how the U.S. should proceed. As part of its recommendations, it pointed the finger at not only at Afghanistan and Iraq, but also presented Iran, Pakistan, Syria, Sudan, the Palestinian Authority, Libya, Algeria (and eventually Saudi Arabia and Egypt) as danger spots. Shortly thereafter, in May 2002, the “Axis of Evil” was expanded to include Syria.

The next logical step was for the United States to pass and implement the Syrian Accountability Act and the Lebanon Sovereignty Restoration Act which in addition to sanctions, called for the withdrawal of Syrian troops from Lebanon. The troops remained until April 2005. They were forced to leave a few short months after the assassination of Prime Minsiter, Rafik Hariri when Syria was accused of involvement in the murder. Clearly, Syria was not the beneficiary of the assassination.

Without a Syrian presence, Lebanon was made more vulnerable, facilitating the 2006 Israeli attack and invasion of water-rich Southern Lebanon.

While Israel lost the public opinion war in Lebanon and Syria remained intact amidst the accusations and chaos, it became necessary to once again put Syria in the spotlight. In 2007, Syria stood accused of having a nuclear bomb program. As a member of the NPT, rather than reporting such suspicions (unfounded) to the IAEA, Israel, with a green light from the United States, bombed a factory which it alleged was involved in nuclear weapons activities.

Israel’s attack on Syria on 6 September 2007, remained secret until it was revealed by the former prime minister (1996-1999) and the then opposition leader, Binyamin Netanyahu -- the current Prime Minister of Israel.

Netanyahu took office in March 2009. In April 2009, a U.S. funded London-based satellite channel, Barada TV, started broadcasting anti-regime propaganda into Syria. Barada TV’s chief editor, Malik al-Abdeh, is a cofounder of the Syrian exile group Movement for Justice and Development headed by Anas al-Abdah. It is crucial to note that the pro-Israel Dennis Ross a former fellow at the AIPAC created Washington Institute for Near East Affairs, who is currently a senior advisor to Barack Obama, was present in a 2008 meeting with Anas al-Abdah. Although the meeting took place in early 2008, the theme of the meeting was: “Syria in-transition”.

Prophecy or planning, doubtless, there are many Syrians who do have grievances against their government and demand more rights. In this sense, their cause is no different than the many protests we witness on a daily basis around the world – including the United States. What is tragic about the Syrian situation, is that the imperative for intervention in Syria is not based on a genuine desire to help the people. The peoples’ grievances is being used as a means to arm them, have them killed, and create the need for an intervention in order to promote Israeli interests.

The Syria imperative is Israel’s gain paid for with the blood of the Syrian people.

Soraya Sepahpour-Ulrich has a Master's degree in Public Diplomacy from USC Annenberg For Communication and USC School of International Relations, Los Angeles. She is an independent researcher, public speaker, radio commentator, political columnist, and peace activist living in California.

Beware Of Western Imperialism

| by S. L. Gunasekara

(October 31, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) The foul and wholly unforgivable murder and subsequent desecration of the corpse of Muammar Al Gadaffi horrified virtually the whole world – that murder was particularly horrifying to Sri Lanka because Gadaffi was a true friend of Sri Lanka, namely `a friend in need’. It would be recalled and must never ever be forgotten that when the sanctimonious affluent western nations such as United States and Great Britain strained every nerve, muscle and fibre of their beings to prevent us from liberating our country from the cancer of terrorism by starving us of funds – i.e. by preventing the IMF from giving us the standby facility of some US $ 500,000,000/-, it was Gadaffi who came to our aid by offering us money. It was only thereafter that the IMF agreed to give us that facility.

Although the western nations now make a hue and cry about the manner in which Gadaffi was murdered and the manner in which his body was desecrated and call for inquiries in respect of that, one would have to be a complete imbecile to be fooled and/or deceived by such transparently fraudulent devices adopted by the West to whitewash its manifold sins.

These belated cries of horror from the West are, not so strangely, completely at odds with the earlier reactions of their leaders like the modern `Uncle Tom’, namely, Barak Obama, David Cameron and Nicholas Sarkozy who exhibited nothing but `triumphalism’ and limitless joy about the murder of Gaddafi with Sarkozy and Cameron making plans to appropriate to themselves [i.e to Britain and France] such of the oil wealth of Libya as they could. The Modern `Uncle Tom’, Barak Obama, on the other hand hailed the death of Gaddafi as heralding the liberation of Libya and actually boasted about how the forces of NATO which he unashamedly still claims to have intervened to save civilian lives (!!) achieved their objective which ended with the death of Gaddafi without putting a single American soldier on the soil of Libya.

He was actually boasting about how the forces of NATO murdered Libyans and destroyed their property on their soil from safe positions several thousand feet in the air – i.e. shooting, bombing and destroying Libyan human beings and property like clay pigeons at a shooting gallery with no risk to the shooters. One does wander whether this ‘Uncle Tom’ would made a similar boast about how one other notorious American war criminal Harry S Truman caused to be committed genocide of the Japanese people by slaughtering hundreds and thousands of Japanese civilians of all ages and genders without endangering a single American soldier by dropping atom bombs on Hiroshima and Nagasaki from the safe `haven’ of their aircraft several thousand feet up in the air. No doubt this ‘Uncle Tom’ would be proud of that endeavour.

Be that as it may, America and its partners in crime in NATO have good reason to be glad and indeed to rejoice about the furore caused over the manner of the death of Gaddafi and the desecration of his corpse – for it DIVERTS THE ATTENTION OF THE WORLD FROM THE IMPERIALIST DESIGNS OF THE AFFLUENT COUNTRIES OF THE WEST AND AMERICA IN PARTICULAR WHICH SEEK ABOVE ALL TO SUBDUE AND SUBJECT ALL POORER AND WEAKER COUNTRIES OF THE WORLD to their will, to interfere to their hearts content in their internal affairs and to be the arbiter of what is right and wrong for them and for all peoples on this earth.

These intentions of this modern ‘Uncle Tom’s’ country and the other Caucasian States have been more than amply manifested by their wholly unconscionable acts of commission and omission.

Let us for the moment examine the salient features their on going campaign in the recent past:-

a) They, led by the United States with its obedient lapdog the once ‘Great’ Britain invaded Iraq and lynched its Head of States Saddam Hussein after hunting him and his family (in a way akin to that in which the so called English ‘gentlemen’ hunt the harmless fox) on the proven fraudulent pretext that there were in Iraq, weapons of mass destruction. It must here be remembered that both United States and the once ‘Great’ Britain indisputably did have weapons of mass destruction in their respective armories. However, they used the fraudulent pretext of there being such weapons in Iraq when there were none to go to that country, slaughter over a million of its citizens with state of the art weaponry, most of which was fired from aboard ships and aircraft far from the reach of the Iraqi defenders of their land, laid waste that country and occupied it for about a decade.

Clearly, the Western aggression against Iraq had nothing to do with weapons of mass destruction but had everything to do with their desire to target and murder Saddam Hussein who would neither bow down to them nor do their bidding like an obedient servant.

It is now evident that the US soldiers on the soil of Iraq enjoyed immunity from the legal process of Iraq which is something that could only be enjoyed, not justly, but by force of arms, by an army of occupation. The fact that the modern ‘Uncle Tom’ Barak Obama has now decided to pull out all American troops from Iraq before the end of the year because the Iraqi government has decided to end that outrageous immunity and to make Americans subject to the laws and the law enforcement agencies of that Country like anybody else on its soil shows the extent of his delusion that America and its citizens are some super beings who are above the laws of other Countries even when they commit crimes on their soil !!.

b) When the Saudi Arabian Osama Bin Laden committed some acts of terrorism in the United States which, compared to the acts of terrorism committed by Prabhakaran and the Tigers in Sri Lanka, become like some scuffles at a children’s tea party, the United States together with its co- conspirators/lap dogs in NATO and the West invaded a third country, Afghanistan, slaughtered Afghans and Pakistanis on the pretext of fighting terrorism while, on the other hand, protecting the Tiger terrorists in Sri Lanka and later `invaded’ Pakistan in stealth and secrecy and murdered Bin Laden after capturing him alive in Pakistan.

c) Later when the citizens of countries of the Middle East who had been under the jackboots of dictators commenced rebelling in Tunisia and then Egypt, and America found to its delight that their bete noire Gaddafi was facing the same fate, they sent their aircraft to destroy the forces of Gaddafi on the fraudulent pretext that they were doing so to save civilians. If their purpose was to save civilians, the question arises how those very forces (an unmanned Drone of the United States and some French fighter craft) bombed a convoy of vehicles of Gaddafi fleeing for their lives. How civilians could be saved by bombing some human beings fleeing for their lives is beyond comprehension to any reasonable man. The reason for the West’s invasion of Libya is therefore obvious. It was to target their bete noire Gaddafi and see him murdered and not any kind of concern that they purported to have for civilians. If as the United States and their co-conspirators such as their lapdogs Great Britain and France seek to make out, they were only concerned about saving civilians how is it that same concern did not affect or motivate them when the Americans and the French were slaughtering Vietamese civilians in Vietnam, Cambodian civilians in Cambodia, when the American puppets the Duvaliers were slaughtering civilians in Haiti, or, if they were concerned about democracy and human rights why they did not launch a similar campaign against their puppets in Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Yemen to name but a few?

d) While going through the cosmetic measure of banning the LTTE they sought to control Sri Lanka and to prevent us from liberating ourselves from the cancer of terrorism by seeking to bludgeon us into committing national suicide by having another set of peace talks by declaring another disastrous ceasefire and engaging in so called "peace talks" with the LTTE while knowing full well that engaging in such a measure would only give the LTTE a new lease of life. Why did they do this? The answer is clear, for one thing, each of those countries has a significant number of Tamils sympathetic to the LTTE living and having voting rights in those countries, and secondly if Sri Lanka freed itself of terrorism as it was obviously about to do, the influence of the West on Sri Lanka would decline into insignificance.

e) If indeed the United States and other western countries were really concerned about justice and decency, how is it that they never intervened or sought to support us against India (one of the biggest markets of the rapacious west) WHEN INDIA, AGAINST ALL NORMS OF CIVILIZED CONDUCT TRAINED, ARMED AND EQUIPPED SEPARATIST TAMIL TERRORISTS TO MURDER SRI LANKANS ON SRI LANKAN SOIL AND DESTROY OUR PROPERTY;

f) How is it that when India, by as outrageous a step as could have been taken by an allegedly friendly neighbour professing friendship to a smaller country like Sri Lanka unforgivably intimidated Sri Lanka into stopping our offensive against Tigers when we were on the verge of victory in 1987 AND THEREBY CAUSED HUNDREDS OF THOUSANDS OF DEATHS AND MUTILATIONS OF OUR CITIZENS THAT FOLLOWED BECAUSE OF CONTINUOUS TIGER TERRORISM FROM 1987 TO 2009, NONE OF THESE WESTERN COUNTRIES WITH PURPORTED CONCERNS FOR HUMAN RIGHTS JUSTICE AND EQUITY INTERVENED OR RAISED EVEN A WHISPER OF PROTEST ON OUR BEHALF ???

g) Even today, one finds these western countries with their hands dripping with blood and reeking with filth and perfidy demanding international Tribunals to investigate the internal affairs of Sri Lanka such as the conduct of our own armed forces in the last days of the war while making no such request of whatever nature for any kind of investigation, national or international into their own conduct in invading the Islamic countries such as, Libya, Afghanistan and Pakistan and encouraging and supporting tiger terrorism in Sri Lanka?

All this, to my mind shows a distinct pattern of these western states taking seriously the stupid concepts of the long dead Rudyard Kipling about the alleged "White Man’s Burden" and using that pretext to further their hegemonic ambitions to control the entire world.

It is time that we in Sri Lanka as well as all other endangered nations – those nations which are small, poorer and/or less powerful than the United States and its cohorts woke up and banded together to resist their fell designs and maintain our independence and sovereignty despite whatever the rapacious west may seek to do to them and us.

One of our main tasks in this endeavour would be to sideline and/or ignore the fifth columnists in our land, namely the acolytes of the West, particularly in those Non- Governmental Organizations which are funded by the Western Countries and to convert India which is fast becoming a client state of the West to see the light and become aware that these affluent Western Countries will use it and then cast it aside like a used condom because to the West, principles are things that matter not one whit, and all that matters is expedience and the acquisition of power and wealth..

New Delhi’s anti-Tamil maneuverings challenged in Jaffna

| by P. Sivakumaran

(October 30, Colombo, Sri Lanka Guardian) New Delhi’s Congress parliamentarian Dr. Sudharshana Natchiappan who was leading a team of ‘international parliamentarians’ visiting Jaffna, was asked by news reporters, whether the visit was planned by India to bail out Colombo from war crimes accusations when a momentum is building up for international investigations of the crimes. The visit of the team brought by Natchiappan was timed for the Commonwealth Meet in Perth where war crimes of Sri Lanka and even its expulsion is a topic of discussion and was also timed for the US visit of the Tamil National alliance (TNA). The Indian Foreign Secretary supported Colombo to be the venue for the next Commonwealth Meet and rejected the idea of Commonwealth monitoring human rights and rule of law in the member countries. After being covert for some time, India once again openly props up genocidal Sri Lanka.

India is more concerned than the Rajapaksa clan in denying and hiding the crimes of genocide committed and being committed against Lankan Tamils, because if the Rajapaksa clan is exposed there will be at least the chauvinistic section of the Sinhala nation to back it, but if the elements in New Delhi are exposed there will be nobody to back them and there will be only an uprising in Tamil Nadu, political observers in Jaffna commented.

Anxiously denying the accusing question of the Jaffna reporters, Natchiappan said that he had not brought the international parliamentarians but they had come on their own wish.

But while answering other questions, Natchiappan conceded that he had brought the delegation to help ‘development’ in the North and East.

In answering another question, he also conceded that there are allegations about Congress parliamentarians being pro-Sinhalese.

The visit of the team led by Natchiappan enraged civil circles in Jaffna as its one-way meeting held at the Sri Lanka Government Agent’s office was only showcasing the ‘development’ in the occupied land of Lankan Tamils to the delegates.

The civil society and NGO participants of the meet felt that the purpose of the visit was to simulate a feeling among the delegates that there is ‘normalcy’ in the occupied Tamil land and everybody is bothered only about ‘development’.

When the Sri Lanka Government Agent in Jaffna, Mrs. Imelda Sugumar told the delegation about return of normalcy in Jaffna, she was interrupted and confronted by the Joint President of the NGOs in Jaffna, Mr. CVK Sivagnanam, citing the terror situation in Jaffna.

The NGO and business chamber representatives also accused India for failing to arrest the encroachment of Indian fishermen. Natchiappan cited ‘hearing’ about attacks on Tamil Nadu fishermen by the Sri Lanka Navy and was harping on fishermen of both sides talking on the issue.

When the business chamber representatives confronted him asking how could the encroachment take place without the joint connivance of the Navies of India and Sri Lanka, Natchiappan was silent.

Answering the questions of the news reporters after the meeting at the Sri Lanka Government Agent’s office, Natchiappan said that he had to lead the delegation to Jaffna, as the ten Tamil parties convened by him and met at New Delhi had failed to arrive at a consensus.

Confronting Natchiappan’s statement, TNPF stalwart Gajendrakumar Ponnampalam said that the Tamil parties that met at New Delhi had actually arrived at a consensus on the national question and when they were about to sign the document, intervening into the scene, Dr. Natchippan had told them that any declaration had to be ‘within the framework of the 13th Amendment.’ Thus the consensus failed to come in a document, Gajendrakumar said.

Talking to media, TNPF General Secretary S. Kajendren accused Dr. Natchiappan, a Rajya Sabha parliamentarian not popularly elected from Tamil Nadu, for scheming on behalf of New Delhi to disrupt Lankan Tamil polity polarizing into asserting to its right to self determination.


Saigon 1975, Kabul 2012: Will Pakistan be ultimate beneficiary?


l by B. Raman

(October 30, Chennai, Sri Lanka Guardian) The situation in Kabul should pose increasing concerns not only to the US and Afghanistan, but also India. The steady weakening of the security situation in the Afghan capital a year before the US Presidential elections is reminiscent of the weakening of the security situation in Saigon, the Vietnamese capital, in 1974, which inexorably led to the capture of Saigon by the Vietcong and the hasty withdrawal under humiliating conditions of the US forces in 1975.

Afghan security forces are seen near the building which was occupied by militants in Kabul, Afghanistan , September 2011 – Photo by AP
2. The steadily deteriorating situation in Kabul was once again highlighted by a suicide attack against a bus carrying International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) personnel on October 29,2011, in which five US soldiers, eight American civilians, three Afghan civilians and one Canadian were killed. The attack, for which responsibility has been claimed by the Taliban, was carried out by a vehicle-borne suicide bomber. The incident has been described by local observers as one of the worst ground attacks against foreign troops in Kabul since 2001.

3. There were two other incidents the same day---- but away from Kabul. In the first reported from the South, three ISAF soldiers were reportedly killed by a man in Afghan army uniform. The gunman was ultimately killed. 

4. In the second incident outside Kabul, a teenage girl carried out a suicide attack on a building of the Afghan intelligence agency, the National Directorate of Security, in the eastern province of Kunar, killing herself and wounding several NDS personnel.

5. In September, there was a commando style attack on the US Embassy and the ISAF headquarters in Kabul which lasted 20 hours, causing many casualties in the area around---but not in the US Embassy itself. The US blamed the Haqqani network for these attacks and started a PSYWAR campaign against the Pakistan Army and its Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), for allegedly using the Haqqani network for promoting Pakistan’s strategic objectives in Afghanistan.

6. The war of words between the US and Pakistan and US threats of an aid cut-off if Pakistan did not sincerely act against the network have had no impact on the ground situation in Afghanistan as seen from the incidents of October 29 in Kabul and outside.

7. The latest incidents illustrate that while the US may be making headway in its counter-terrorism operations against Al Qaeda and its terrorism affiliates, it is badly stuck up in its counter-insurgency operations against the Taliban and the Haqqani network. The US pressure on Pakistan to act against the Haqqani network has come too late---- long after the Taliban and the Haqqani network succeeded in infiltrating into Afghan territory, and in establishing a wide network of sleeper cells, which are no longer dependent on the sanctuaries in the Pakistani territory for their sustenance and motivation.

8. Even in the unlikely event of Pakistan acting against the sanctuaries of the Haqqani network in Pakistani territory, the presence of many well-motivated and well-trained sleeper cells inside Afghanistan would continue to come in the way of US attempts to reverse the ground situation.

9. The Pakistan Army already visualises tactical advantages and a likely strategic turning-point in the ground situation in Afghanistan. The tactical advantages arise from the success of the Taliban and the Haqqani network in establishing a network of sleeper cells inside Afghan territory. The strategic turning-point visualised by Pakistan would, in its calculation, arise from an increasing pressure in the months before the Presidential elections on President Barack Obama to find a way out for extricating the US out of Afghanistan without humiliation or a loss of face for the US.

10. The Pakistan Army feels that only it will be in a position to prevent a humiliating situation for the US for which Washington will have to pay a price in the form of coming to terms with the ground reality of a Pakistani presence and control in Afghanistan and a dilution of the Indian presence and influence. Easing of the US pressure on Pakistan to act against the anti-India jihadi groups such as the Lashkar-e-Toiba (LET) could be part of this price.

11. It would be unwise of India to view Pakistan as a cornered nation without any exits unless it acts against terrorism emanating from its territory. It is presently a cornered nation all right, but the deteriorating ground situation in Afghanistan and the ultimate US dependence on Pakistan to avoid a humiliating withdrawal could provide Pakistan with a feasible exit option.

12. India should undertake an exercise as to how much of its presence and influence in Afghanistan would be sustainable in the event of a weakening of the US position and how to sustain it. We should not extend and expand our direct and open presence and influence beyond realistic limits. A greater injection of realism into our Afghan policy is called for. 

( The writer is Additional Secretary (retd), Cabinet Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and, presently, Director, Institute For Topical Studies, Chennai, and Associate of the Chennai Centre For China Studies. E-mail: seventyone2@gmail.com Twitter : @SORBONNE75 )


Trotsky the Jew

Joshua Rubenstein’s new biography obscures the Russian revolutionary’s violent extremism while overemphasizing his Jewishness

Leon Trotsky (Library of Congress)

l by Richard Pipes

(October 30, Sri Lanka Guardian) According to Amazon.com, there are presently in existence 199 biographies of Leon Trotsky—almost a quarter as many as there are of Marilyn Monroe (810). Joshua Rubenstein’s new work, Leon Trotsky: A Revolutionary’s Life, is a specialized one issued by a Yale series called “Jewish Lives,” which is “designed to illuminate the imprint of eminent Jewish figures” on culture, broadly defined. There is no question that genetically speaking, Trotsky was a Jew. But personally and culturally, he emphatically denied any connection with the Jewish people. Quoting from my book Russia Under the Bolshevik Regime:

Trotsky—the satanic “Bronstein of Russian anti-Semites”—was deeply offended whenever anyone presumed to call him a Jew. When a visiting Jewish delegation appealed to him to help fellow Jews, he flew into a rage: “I am not a Jew but an internationalist.” He reacted similarly when requested by Rabbi Eisenstadt of Petrograd to allow special flour for Passover matzos, adding on this occasion that “he wanted to know no Jews.” At another time he said that the Jews interested him no more than the Bulgarians. According to one of his biographers [Baruch Knei-Paz], after 1917 Trotsky “shied away from Jewish matters” and “made light of the whole Jewish question.”

So, it is questionable whether Trotsky can be properly treated as an “eminent Jewish figure.” He certainly would have resented it. He had no idea what caused anti-Semitism, claiming it to be “one of the more malignant convulsions of capitalism’s death agony,” as if it had not existed in the Middle Ages, long before capitalism was born.

He was a renegade. This did not help him to make a successful career in the party. He was resented as a Jew as well as someone who during the decade preceding the Bolshevik power seizure relentlessly criticized Lenin and his followers. His prickly personality also was of no help, contrasting with Stalin’s joviality during the years the two struggled for power.

The situation for Jews in pre-1917 Russia, which shaped Trotsky’s personal and political trajectory, was very difficult. Except for rich merchants and those with a university degree, they were confined to the so-called Pale of Settlement. They were excluded from government posts and altogether treated as second-rate subjects. On occasion, they were victims of vicious pogroms in the course of which they were beaten and killed and their homes looted. This caused many of them to emigrate and the rest to turn to left-wing ideologies. The prevalent opinion was that the Bolsheviks were heavily supported by Jews, but the results of the only free elections held under Bolshevik rule, those to the Constituent Assembly in November 1917, revealed that the Bolshevik vote came not from the Pale of Settlement but mainly from the armed forces and the cities of Great Russia, where hardly any Jews lived. The census of the Communist Party conducted in 1922 showed that only 959 Jews had joined it before 1917. If subsequently the proportion of Jews in the Communist Party exceeded their proportion in the country’s population, so too was that the case in Italy under Fascism. It simply attests to the fact that the Jews are a very articulate and politically engaged people.

Rubenstein, the author of a life of the Soviet writer and journalist Ilya Ehrenburg, has written a competent summary biography of his protagonist. The book adds little that is new to the existing literature, and it has some strange omissions. Trotsky’s role in the Civil War during which he commanded the Red Army—arguably his main contribution to the Bolshevik cause—is disposed of in a few cursory pages. I also found strange the author’s offhand assertion that under the Bolsheviks “the proletariat had succeeded in gaining control of the government.” Where and when? The workers had next to no influence on the policies of the Soviet government, which were managed by intellectuals.

In view of the murderous paranoia of Stalin, it is tempting to gloss over Trotsky’s own ruthlessness and to depict him as a humane counterpart to his rival. This is quite unwarranted. Without a question, Trotsky was better-educated than Stalin and was altogether a more cultivated human being. But his radicalism was not much different than Stalin’s. Rubenstein cites a statement by Trotsky as the motto of his book: “Nothing great has been accomplished in history without fanaticism.” Really? In art, in science, in economics? In fact, fanaticism, which is uncritical belief in something, has always obstructed true accomplishment.

Let us scrutinize briefly Trotsky’s views on such key issues as forced labor, terror, and concentration camps—the outstanding features of the Stalinist regime. On forced labor, Trotsky had this to say in 1921:

It is said that compulsory labor is unproductive. This means that the whole socialist economy is doomed to be scrapped, because there is no other way of attaining socialism except through the command allocation of the entire labor force by the economic center, the allocation of that force in accord with the needs of a nation-wide economic plan.

I imagine that if Stalin was present at the Third All-Russian Congress of Trade Unions, at which Trotsky made these remarks, he must have nodded in agreement. In view of Trotsky’s own sentiments, it is likely that if he had succeeded Lenin, we would have witnessed in the Soviet Union much the same oppression of labor as he did under Stalin.

Trotsky had no qualms about introducing into Soviet Russia political terror. Barely two months after the Bolsheviks had seized power, he said:

There is nothing immoral in the proletariat finishing off the dying class. This is its right. You are indignant … at the petty terror which we direct at our class opponents. But be put on notice that in one month at most this terror will assume more frightful forms, on the model of the great revolutionaries of France. Our enemies will face not prison but the guillotine.

He defined the guillotine (plagiarizing the French revolutionary Jacques Hébert) as a device that “shortens a man by the length of a head.” This grisly remark, incidentally, is cited by Rubenstein.

Trotsky demonstrated that this was not empty rhetoric during the rebellion at the Kronshtadt naval base in February 1921. The sailors of Kronshtadt were early and prominent supporters of the Bolsheviks, helping them in October 1917 to seize power in Petrograd and later to defend that city from the Whites. But the sailors gradually became disenchanted with the new regime. In March 1921 they formed a Provisional Revolutionary Committee and refused to obey Moscow’s orders. Upon arriving in Petrograd, Trotsky demanded that the mutineers throw themselves on the mercy of the Soviet government and ordered that the families of the mutineers be taken hostage; one of the regime’s appeals to the rebels threatened that if they continued to resist they would “be shot like partridges.” Trotsky organized the military assault on the island where the base was located: When some of the Red Army soldiers defected to the rebels, he ordered the execution of every fifth soldier who disobeyed orders. The island eventually fell. Trotsky was not proud of his role in this event, as demonstrated by the fact that in his memoirs he hardly mentioned it.

Though the fact is little-known, it was Trotsky, not Stalin, who introduced into Soviet Russia the concentration camp, an institution that under Stalin developed into the monstrous Gulag empire. Trotsky did this in May 1918 in connection with a rebellion of Czech ex-prisoners of war who, en route to the Far East to sail to the western front, rebelled when an attempt was made to disarm them. In August of that year, to protect the railroad line running from Moscow to Kazan, Trotsky ordered a network of concentration camps to be constructed to isolate “sinister agitators, counterrevolutionary officers, saboteurs, parasites, and speculators” who were not executed or subjected to other penalties. Lenin fully agreed with these measures. By 1919, concentration camps were established in every provincial capital. In 1923, Russia had 315 concentration camps with 70,000 inmates.

These facts will not be found in Rubenstein’s book, which, without being an apologia, nevertheless tends to glide over the more savage features of Trotsky’s thought and behavior. My own judgment of Trotsky coincides with that of George Orwell, made in 1939 when Trotsky was still alive and cited in this book:

[Trotsky] is probably as much responsible for [the Russian dictatorship] as any man now living, and there is no certainty that as dictator he would be preferable to Stalin, though undoubtedly he has a much more interesting mind. The essential act is the rejection of democracy—that is of the underlying values of democracy; once you have decided upon that, Stalin—or any rate someone like Stalin—is already on the way.

Richard Pipes is emeritus professor of history at Harvard University and the author of 22 books.