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Archive for August, 2009
Yes I will appeal
Hey’ Master I am hungry !

Police claimed to have recovered two claymore mines in Angulana, Moratuwa Friday morning. The mines were located hidden in a bare land. The bomb disposal squad rushed to the site and defused the two mines. However, civil sources in Angulana said the alleged detection of two claymore mines in Angulana had been a ruse to divert the attention of the people of Angulana who are furious over the killing of two Sinhala youths by the police personnel manning the Angulana police station at that time.
Investigations into the discovery are underway, according to police sources.
The bombs weighing 24 and 11 kilos each were believed to have been meant to be fixed on a three wheeler to target a crowded area, police said.
Published on 30 August, 2009 , Tamilnet
Sri Lanka Truth
Deviyangema pihitai !
All for family dynasty. The ordinary people have silently whishpered deviyangema pihitai !
Lanka Truth has reported President Mahinda Rajapakse using the executive powers he is vested with has allowed Chief Minister for Uva PC to hold the post of Basnayake Nilame of Ruhunu Katharagama Temple by issuing a special gazette notification.
Lawlessness In The Police
: An Open Letter To All Parliamentarians On The Need To Urgently Deal With Lawlessness In The Police I am writing this on behalf of the Asian Human Rights Commission on a matter that is, I am sure that of great importance and urgency to all the members of parliament, whatever political party they might belong to.
This is the issue of extreme lawlessness within the policing system which is causing shock, scandal and fear among the people. There is no doubt that you will agree on the seriousness of the problem and there is a need to act decisively to change this situation. The executive president and the prime minister have acknowledged the problem and made public statements regarding the issue. However, there is no sign of any serious effort or an indication of a plan to deal with this national problem. Mere prosecution of a few police officers of lower ranks relating to a few incidents is no real response to this enormous crisis.
All the newspapers have been forced to recognize the extent of the problem and even judging by the coverage of almost all the papers this weekend it is quite clear that the people in all parts of the country are agitated by the extent of the abuse of power by police officers and the threat they pose to the lives of the people. That the people need to be protected from the police is becoming a common saying repeated frequently. In the year 2001 members of all political parties tried to address the collapse of many public institutions including that of the police.
By rare unanimity all parliamentarians adopted an amendment to the constitution known as the 17th Amendment which created some limited approach to bring about meritocracy instead of politicized institutions so that these public institutions could in some way be revived. For a short period the 17th Amendment was implemented to a limited degree. Among the commissions appointed was the National Police Commission and in the short period of the existence of an independent National Police Commission many of the serious problems of the policing system began to be addressed to a limited extent.
However, this effort was abandoned and there was a return to the pre-2001 situation. This situation became even worse with the intensification of the internal civil conflict when, due to the climate of war, all others problems were forgotten. Today, Sri Lanka’s policing system has been described as completely lawless, corrupt and having no regard for human life. Extra judicial killings often disguised as some sort of self defense killings, torture and extortion have become the common feature exhibited at all police stations.
The absence of even limited discipline within the police has also become visible where even person who are charged with murder at high courts and facing trial continue to work as police officers. While there have been allegations of extremely serious crimes from all parts of the country there are hardly any serious investigations into these crimes. A few years ago a former Attorney General, K.C. Kamalasabeyason started the initiative of referring all serious allegations of extra judicial killings and torture to Special Investigation Units of the Criminal Investigation Division. Within a very short time over 60 inquiries were conducted by the SIUs where there was adequate evidence to indict the officers. Over 60 indictments were filed under the Convention against torture, cruel and other inhuman punishment Act, No. 22 of 1994.
Many of these cases are still pending before trial courts. However, later the Attorney General’s Department ceased to refer these complaints to the SIUs and now the inquiries are handed back to the senior officer of the stations where the offenses are committed. This practice of the senior officers of the same police area conducting inquiries has been condemned as not being impartial and as a means of intimidating and harassing the complainants and the witnesses.
Further the government’s promise to pass a witness protection law has not been honoured. The bill that was proposed for this purpose is still pending in parliament. In several instances persons who have complained against the police have been killed and many others have been harassed and seriously harmed. The absolute impunity that is given to the police has contributed to the absolute loss of discipline. Drunkenness has become a common feature and bribery and extortion by abuse of powers of arrest and detention is now also a common feature.
The OIC and other officers who are accused of killing two young persons in Angulana have also been accused of being drunk. The member of parliament of the area has publicly stated that he earlier received complaints of these officers being drunk in the evening and assaulting people. He said he complained about the matter but that nothing happened. Throughout the country such drunkenness is widespread and these officers often assault people in the most ruthless fashion. There is hardly anything anyone can do about this situation. As you would very well know, links with criminal elements and the police are visible everywhere.
It is a common saying that now the criminals receive protection whereas complainants are often harassed. When there is such high perception of links between criminals and the police naturally the confidence in the institution is going to be extreme low. It has been revealed in the cases before the courts that the police often tamper with documents. False entries are made in order to make people suspects of grave crimes such as possession of large doses of drugs for which there is no bail. In other cases where people have made complaints against the police entries are either removed or in other ways tampered with in such a way to obstruct the administration of justice. Despite of this problem being highlighted so often no police officer has yet been charged in court for obstruction of justice by tampering with the police books.
This practice of tempering with books is treated as a joke. In 2004 the Ministry of Justice appointed a committee to inquire into the delays in adjudication. One of the causes they found was the police officers who are supposed to attend court failing to attend or seeking dates in order to attend to other matters. The lack of cooperation between the police and the courts has not only caused delays but also affected the criminal justice process in particular because the investigating function relating to crime is in the hands of the police. Much of the problem of policing in Sri Lanka is due to the neglect of the high ranking officers from ASPs to the IGP who have failed to carry out their duties of supervision and monitoring. Instead when there are complaints many of these higher officers unscrupulously cover up the errant police officers.
If there is to be any solution to the lawlessness within the police, and there must be such a solution, the persons who should be dealt with at the very start are the high ranking officers beginning with the ASPs up to the IGP. If this is not done nothing will change despite of public statements of the government and others. As parliamentarians of this country it is your duty to discuss this affair in the parliament as a matter of extreme national importance and therefore without any political bias on the basis of parties. The type of unanimity that existed in 2001 needs to be repeated but with a better form of intervention on the issue with the better knowledge of the problem and determination to resolve it. Perhaps the immediate appointment of a parliamentary subcommittee to discuss the needed police reforms with the adequate mandate with a duty to report within the shortest possible time should be at least a beginning to deal with this problem. Calling for public views on the subject will without doubt bring in many interventions on this issue. What is of paramount importance is to take the first step without delay and to start dealing with the problem of police lawlessness decisively.
If there is no real intervention on your part on this crucial national issue it will be letting down the people and will cause greater problems of insecurity and loss of life, liberty and property.
Yours sincerely,
Basil Fernando
Executive Director
Asian Human Rights Commission, Hong Kong

| The Church of Sri Lanka has remembered Fr. Nihal Jim Brown (pictured), a priest of the diocese of Jaffna, who died in August 2006 during clashes between the government army and Tamil Tigers in Allapipiddy in the north. Friends, brother priests, relatives and aid workers have honoured the memory of the priest at a Fr. Nihal Jim Brown ceremony organized by the Christian Alliance for Social Action (CASA) at the auditorium of the Caritas-Sedec in Colombo. “When he disappeared Fr. Brown was only 34 years”, says Fr. Ravichandran, friend and brother of the priest. “He was born in 1972 and was ordained in 2004. He started his mission in the parish of Allaipiddy in early August of 2006 and after only ten days he disappeared”. The priest of the diocese of Jaffna disappeared three years ago during clashes between army and Tamil Tigers near his parish in Allaipiddy. From 2006 until the end of the conflict the number of religious and humanitarian workers killed or missing during the war are over 70. Authorities’ silence shrouds their fate. The church entrusted to the young priest was immersed in the war zone between the military and Tamil rebels. On 20 August 2006, the fighting arrived on the doorstep of the parish. In order to protect the faithful from bombs Fr. Brown opened the church. The ensuing battles caused 20 deaths and nearly 100 injured. The priest asked the military for permission to bring the survivors to hospital. The last witness to see him at a Navy check-point, claimed that he was in the company of his assistant Wenceslaus Vimalathas, a 40 year old and father of five children. An officer of the Sri Lanka Navy was threatening them. There has been no more news of Fr Brown and Vimalathas once they left Allaipiddy. Three years on from their disappearance, relatives and the Church of Sri Lanka have not given up their quest for answers as to the two men’s fate. Msgr. Thomas Savundaranayagam, Bishop of Jaffna, has tried in every way to get news about Fr. Brown but without success. Ainslie Joseph, head of the CASA, tells AsiaNews: “In 2007 we even wrote to President Mahinda Rajapaksa, but we have not received any reply”. From 2006 until the end of the conflict, the number of religious and humanitarian workers killed or disappeared during the war stands at 70. Total silence surrounds their fate. “The authorities have not made any investigation, and no committee of inquiry has been set up – Joseph says – but we can not remain silent before the priests and the workers who sacrificed their lives on a mission to do good” Sri Lanka Truth
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Ahankara Hong Kong nagare


Diya Alla

Picture

Mess after mess in exams
Stop playing with younger generation.
Daily Mirror has reported following crisis after crisis at the school term tests and the Advanced Level Examination, the Grade Five Scholarship Examination also ran into controversy today with the education authorities failing to send the required number of copies of the question paper to a centre in Galle.

