UNP and SJB kick-start talks to work together

The United National Party (UNP) and the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) have kicked off key talks to explore the possibility of working together.

SJB MP Harin Fernando told Daily Mirror that he met UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe and discussed opportunities to work together.

“I met Ranil Wickremesinghe. I told my leader I’m going to meet him because he also wanted to have a chat and to see how we can work together. Our General Secretary has opened up a conversation,” Fernando said.

He said that Wickremesinghe had requested the SJB to have talks with UNP Deputy Leader Ruwan Wijewardena and work out an arrangement.

“I think Ruwan has an ideal opportunity because he’s young. He worked with us. We have been together as a team,” Fernando said.

However, Wickremesinghe ruled out a possible merger between the UNP and SJB. When contacted, a spokesman told Daily Mirror after speaking to Wickremesinghe that there will not be a merger.

Instead, Wickremesinghe said he is open to working with the SJB on key issues. “We need to get all of them on one platform because we are fighting a regime that is very difficult. So if you are to fight against corruption, malpractices, we need to come into a common platform, leaving our political differences aside,” Fernando said.

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SLPP Crisis Takes New Turn: General Secretary Wants Weerawansa To Apologise Over “Insulting Remarks” On Party Leadership

Taking the internal division within the SLPP government to a new height, SLPP General Secretary Sagara Kariyawasam today asked Minister Wimal Weerawansa to tender an apology to the public on the SLPP leadership.

In an interview with a weekend newspaper, Weerawansa said President Gotabhaya Rajapaksa should be made the leader of the SLPP as he is currently isolated in the Presidential Secretariat with a coterie of bureaucrats.

“How can he make such statements about the SLPP leadership? This is not this party nor does he have any standing the SLPP. He should mind the affairs of his own party. He doesn’t have any right to say that Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa should be removed and President Gotabhaya Rajapaksa should be appointed in his place,” Kariyawasam added.

In the same interview, Weerawansa also hit out at Kariyawasam saying he was not bothered by the disappointment of the SLPP General Secretary who was dished out a parliamentary seat for being a “servant”.

‘We have no problem with him being sad. I have a problem if the people of the country feel sorry for the actions we take. That’s the only problem we have. Those who came from the national list and won seats do not understand the paramount importance of defending the mandate given by the people. The post of National List Member of Parliament is a gift that is given to someone for being a servant,” Weerawansa added.

Parliament to convene tomorrow

The Committee on Parliamentary Business met today (8) under the chairmanship of Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena, decided to convene Parliament during the next four days.

Accordingly, the Secretary General of Parliament Dhammika Dasanayake said the regulation issued by the Minister of Labour under an Extraordinary Gazette which was presented in the Parliament on January 21 under the Employees Provident Fund Act will be taken up for debate tomorrow.

Following the commencement of Parliament tomorrow (9) at 10.00 am, time will be allotted for oral questions by the Members of Parliament until 11.00 am. Subsequently the debate will begin at 11.00 am and will continue until 4.30 pm.

The adjournment motion moved by the ruling party will be taken up for debate from 4.30 pm to 5.30 pm, Mr. Dasanayake said.

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Proposed changes to National Flag: Still at ministerial level: Govt

The proposed changes to Sri Lanka’s National Flag remain at ministerial level, and have not been brought before the Cabinet as of yet, stated Cabinet Spokesperson Keheliya Rambukwella.

During a news briefing held early this week, Defence Secretary (Retd.) General Kamal Gunaratne said that proposals have been made to amend the lion in the National Flag.

A committee appointed at the Home Affairs Ministry has taken these proposals into consideration.

When contacted, Rambukwella told The Sunday Morning that, according to the Defence Secretary, a committee had been appointed to look into the suggestions, but they have not been put forward to the Cabinet yet.

“They are still at the ministerial level. There have been requests and certain concerns from certain people saying that this is not the right thing. So, an opportunity has been given to submit their proposals to list out the reasons. I believe what he (Gen. Gunaratne) said was that there have been certain proposals, and that they are under consideration at the ministerial committee level,” he said.

When queried about the groups that have raised concerns, Rambukwella said that he was unaware of anything further in this regard, and that the Defence Secretary should be consulted for relevant information.

Commenting further on the proposed changes, he said that they were regarding the format of the lion. “There will be no significant change, and that is what Gunaratne said,” the Minister added.

Despite attempts made to contact him, Gen. Gunaratne was not available for comment.

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Pakistan Prime Minister to visit Sri Lanka on February 22

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan is scheduled to visit Sri Lanka on February 22 on a two day official visit, according to Sri Lanka’s Foreign Ministry.

Pakistan PM will hold talks with President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa and Foreign Minister Dinesh Gunawardena during his stay in Colombo.

He will be the first head of state to visit the country after Covid 19 pandemic.

According to a Sunday Times report, Foreign Ministry sources have said Pakistan, which is currently a member of the UN Human Rights Council, is lobbying Muslim countries in the UNHRC to vote against a UN resolution that is due to come up on February 23 against Sri Lanka.

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SLPP leadership should be given to the President – Wimal

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa should have been appointed the leader of the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) after he was elected as the head of state since he was not an experienced campaigner in the political arena, Minister of Industries Wimal Weerawansa said.

Pointing out that it would be inappropriate to isolate him to the Presidential Secretariat as this would weaken the cordial link between the President and the Members of Parliament, he said that it would not be conducive to the social, economic and political well-being of the incumbent government as well as the country.

The Minister made these comments in an interview with the ‘Sunday Lankadeepa’.

Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa is the leader of the SLPP while Basil Rajapaksa functions as the National Organiser.

“Confining Gotabaya Rajapaksa to a coterie of bureaucrats at the Presidential Secretariat is an impediment to the well-being of the country” – Industries Minister Wimal Weerawansa

While noting his concerns on certain people with vested interests who have been working vehemently to realise their own personal agendas, he said that he was deeply saddened by these efforts which would have devastating repercussions to the government.

The Minister also said that he was perplexed about the lack of effort to stop this harmful situation from developing further and questioned as to whose aspirations they were trying to realise.

India fumes as China gets northern power projects

India has lodged a strong protest with Sri Lanka on the award of a tender to a Chinese company to set up three renewable energy projects in outlying islands off the Jaffna peninsula.

The protest, the Sunday Times learnt, came even before the Cabinet of Ministers decided not to give India and Japan the East Container Terminal in the Colombo Port. This also provoked a strong protest from India.

The protest was triggered by the Department of Information releasing the decisions of the Cabinet. The renewable energy project was approved by the Cabinet on January 18.

Diplomatic sources said India’s protest was on the grounds that such a move would raise security concerns for it. The islands concerned are the Delft Island, Analativu and Nainativu. The sources said the islands, separated by the Palk Strait from India, were in close proximity to India’s coast.

The Delft Island is only 48 kilometers away from the Indian coastal town of Rameshwaram.

The energy project’s local partner, the Ceylon Electricity Board, has finalised matters related to the project by identifying lands for the joint venture with Etechwin of China. The funds for the project are to come from the Asian Development Bank.

The US$ 12 million project has been awarded to MS/Sinosar-Etechwin Joint Venture in China.

The award to the Chinese company was recommended by the Cabinet-Appointed Standing Committee on Procurement.

Under the project, international competitive bids were called to instal hybrid renewable energy systems in the three islands utilising the accessible energy resources to improve the efficiency of the prevailing energy network.

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Biden administration throws its weight behind new Geneva resolution – The Island

Ahead of the 46th sessions of the Geneva-based United Nations Human Rights Council (UNHRC) scheduled to begin later this month, newly elected US President Joe Biden’s Democratic Party has raised Sri Lanka accountability issues in a recently submitted Resolution, with the focus on appointment of military officials, including that of Gen. Shavendra Silva as the Commander of the Army.

The UNHRC consists of 47 countries divided into five groups. The UK took over Sri Lanka matter in the wake of the US quitting the UNHRC in June 2018. It now heads the Sri Lanka’s Core Group.

Silva, the first General Officer Commanding (GoC) of the celebrated 58 Division was named the Commander of the Army by President Maithripala Sirisena.

Sirisena’s successor, Gotabaya Rajapaka, appointed Silva the Chief of Defence Staff (CDS) and subsequently promoted him to the rank of General.

Democratic Party Congressman Brad Sherman, a ‘very’ close associate of professional activists within the Global Tamil Diaspora has tabled a Resolution in the U.S. Congress charging President Gotabaya Rajapaksa administration of engaging in harassment and intimidation of human rights defenders and enforced disappearances, and protecting war criminals, Daya Gamage, former political specialist of the US State Department said.

Bradley James Sherman is the US Congressman representing California’s 30th congressional district since 2013.

The author of Tamil Tigers’ debt to America Gamage explained how the change in US administration had started to bring in ‘initial bearing’ on Sri Lanka with Congressman Sherman making a move. Gamage said that the US stand on the accountability issues should be examined against the backdrop of a statement attributed to Foreign Secretary Admiral Jayanath Colombage that the political change wouldn’t have any bearing on Sri Lanka.

Gamage said that in spite of the US not being a member of the UNHRC, it would throw its full weight behind the push for a new Resolution to be moved at the forthcoming sessions.

Here are four areas the Congressional Resolution on Sri Lanka has touched:

Whereas the Government of Sri Lanka has promoted high ranking military officials suspected of forcibly disappearing persons and bearing responsibility for war crimes, including Lieutenant General Shavendra Silva, and has failed to hold accountable other current military officials accused of war crimes.

Whereas, during the 26-year civil war ending in 2009 between government forces and the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, tens of thousands of Tamils were forcibly disappeared by the police, military, and paramilitary operatives

Whereas, according to a 2020 United Nations Special Rapporteur’s report, “no observable progress has been made on pending cases, including habeas corpus applications into the disappearance of Tamil Tigers and members of their families who surrendered during the final days of the war”.

Whereas lawyers, human rights defenders, and victims involved in cases of enforced disappearances face intimidation, harassment, and violence, particularly since Rajapaksa became President.

The Island learns that since the initial government reaction to the US slapping travel ban on Gen. Shavendra Silva and his immediate family members an year ago, the government hadn’t made representations to the US or UNHRC. The government ignored an opportunity to take up the Army Commander’s issue in the wake of the recent declaration made by the then US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo regarding the Army Commander’s matter. When the media raised the US travel ban on the Army Commander at a joint media conference given by Pompeo and Foreign Minister Dinesh Gunawardena, the one-time CIA Chief said “All right. Thank you. I think there were three questions there. The last one, look, it’s a legal process in the United States. We’ll always continue to review it. We want to make sure we get it technically, factually, and legally right. We’ll continue to do that.”

Well informed sources said that the UK spearheading the moves for a new Resolution at the UNHRC had told the Sri Lankan government in no uncertain terms that it was determined to go ahead with the project. Sources said that Secretary of State for Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Affairs and the Minister for South Asia Lord Ahmad of Wimbledon explained their stand to Minister Gunawardena and the Sri Lankan High Commission in London.

Tamil political sources said that they had the required support to secure a new Resolution at the forthcoming session. Sources said that a petition forwarded by three Tamil political parties represented in parliament to UNHRC members as well as the HR Commissioner received approval from those who mattered. Sources pointed out that the HR Commissioner’s latest report on Sri Lanka took the Tamil parties’ petition into consideration.

Chinese hand seen behind blocking India’s bid to develop ECT at Colombo port – The Hindu

Beijing strikes back

China is said to have succeeded in blocking India’s efforts to gain a presence in Colombo port, a regional container transhipment hub, as the skirmishes along the border and the Centre’s pushback against Chinese goods and investments spills over into a strategic port project that India is keen to build, ironically, to check growing Chinese presence in the region.

Earlier this week, the Sri Lankan cabinet is understood to have scrapped a tripartite memorandum of cooperation (MoC) signed in May 2019 with Japan and India to develop the East Container Terminal (ECT) at Colombo Port in the wake of strong protests from port unions. Instead, Sri Lanka is believed to have offered the proposed West Container Terminal (WCT) project to India and Japan.

The first phase of the 2.5 million twenty-foot equivalent units (TEUs) capacity ECT terminal was completed in May 2015 involving a single berth of 440 metres, alongside water depth of 18 metres, but is yet to start operations.

Sources tracking the project in India believes that China put the “spanner” in the works.

Aside from its strategic interests, China has a commercial interest to stall India’s participation in a container loading facility in Colombo port. China’s state-run China Merchants Port Holdings Company Ltd holds an 85 per cent stake in the 3 million TEUs-capacity Colombo International Container Terminals Ltd (CICT), a joint venture terminal runs with Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA).

SLP is the state-owned operator of commercial ports in Sri Lanka.

Unprecedented resistance

“The unprecedented resistance to India’s investment in Colombo raises concerns on whose behest all this is being triggered,” an Indian official overseeing the project said. “Such a fully orchestrated and coordinated campaign against Indian involvement in Colombo terminal has to be funded by somebody, it cannot be homegrown,” he stated.

General (Retd) R M Daya Ratnayake, Chairman, SLPA, was not available for comment.

Sri Lanka’s ‘take it or leave it’ offer to India and Japan for developing WCT has put the government in a quandry. A government-to-government MoC will help Sri Lanka bypass rules on public procurement which are done through open tenders only.

“If a MoC is not there, even the West Container Terminal cannot be offered to a pre-selected single party or group. It should then go under public tenders in line with our rules and procedures,” a Sri Lankan official briefed on the project said.

“So, an MoC is needed to offer the WCT without going through a public tender process to companies nominated by India and Japan,” he said.

The move to backtrack on developing ECT jointly with India and Japan “met the expectation of the general public that it should be run as a state-owned facility,” he said.

Sri Lanka also cited Japan’s insistence to extend a loan to the ECT project and not bring the money as an investment to justify calling off the MoC as the terms of the pact had changed.

As per the MoC signed by the previous Sri Lankan government, the Japanese government had to provide a loan to the project basis which the project was structured as a 51:49 joint venture.

However, the party running the government in Sri Lanka decided not to accept a loan from Japan to check the country’s rising debt profile and wanted the money as an investment in the project.

However, the Indian official countered this claim saying that “Japan has insisted on coming in as an equity investor in the project”.

Ball is now in India’s court

“The ball is now in India’s court; I think the WCT is a very good answer to India’s strategic and security needs in the region,” the Sri Lankan official stated.

Outlining the merits of WCT for India, the official said that both ECT and WCT were similar capacity terminals. The only difference is that the ECT is partly completed and can be put into operation quickly by erecting used cranes or in 18-20 months if new cranes are ordered now.

The WCT has to be built from scratch and could take at least three years to start operations.

With 85 per cent stake in WCT, the India-Japanese consortium will be able to run the terminal with full autonomy; unlike in ECT where SLPA will be a majority shareholder with 51 per cent stake.

“With 51 per cent majority stake held by SLPA, the ECT will be treated as a public company under Sri Lankan laws and come under the scrutiny of the government auditor and procurement would have to follow the public procurement guidelines. This will hamper the private firms from operating freely,” the official said.

Besides, the WCT has a 20-metre water depth, while all the existing three terminals at Colombo have a draft of 18 metres.

“Over the next few years, when the ship capacity requires depth beyond 18 metres, the WCT will be the only terminal which can take more than 18-metre draft ships,” the official added.

Tamil’s Walk For Justice Attacked by Sinhalese Mob – No Arrests By Police – Police Impartiality Questioned

The third day of Tamil’s Walk For Justice march in Sri Lanka was attacked by Sinhalese mob, when the walk was leaving the Eastern city of Trincomalee.

The Police and Armed Special Task Force (STF) which was constantly intimidating, threatening and erecting road blocks to prevent the Tamil’s walk, did not make any arrests of the Sinhalese mob for attacking Tamil’s Walk For Justice participants . Raising fears that the Police and Special Task Force (STF) are openly siding with the majority Sinhalese community and allowing attacks on the Tamil minority.

Large crowds are joining this walk and the walk is attracting more people everyday, despite threats and intimidation by the Police.

This walk for justice was organized by North and East Civil Society Organizations to protest abuses against Tamils and to highlight Tamil’s joint appeal to UN High-Commissioner for Human Rights and to UN Human Rights Council member states. This appeal included a request to Refer Sri Lanka to the International Criminal Court (ICC) for War Crimes, Crimes Against Humanity and Genocide committed against the Tamil people by the Sri Lankan State.

Interestingly, Tamil Members of Parliament were sidelined in this Walk and was not allowed to play any role in this Walk.

In a dramatic turn of events Catholic Bishop of Trincomalee Bishop Christian Noel Emanuel was served with stay order by the police from participating in the Walk for Justice for Tamils.

This walk started on February 3rd from Pothuvil in the Eastern province and will end in Polihandy in the Northern province on February 7th.

Link to the Rally: https://youtu.be/CGYKkZxfqZ0

The Walk is to highlight the following issues:

1) Continuing land grab in Tamil areas and converting Tamil’s traditional and historical places into Sinhalese areas by establishing Buddhist temples after destroying Hindu temples. As of now around 200 Hindu temples were effected.

2) Muslims who died due to COVID are cremated against the wishes of the families and against Islamic teachings.

3) Tamils in the upcountry have been urging for pay raise of 1,000 rupees, but the Government is not responding to their demands.

4) Since the war ended ten years ago, militarization of Tamil areas is continuing and Tamils historical identity is destroyed with the aim to change demography in favor of Sinhalese, using different government departments, especially archeological department. Also, Government sponsored Sinhalese settlements are continuing.

5) Tamil cattle owners are facing numerous problems, where their gracing areas are being occupied by Sinhalese and their cows killed.

6) PTA has been used to imprison Tamil youths without charge or trial for over 40 years are now being used against Muslims.

7) Tamil political prisoners have been imprisoned for years without trial. The Government have pardoned Sinhalese on a regular basis, but none of the Tamil political prisoners were pardoned.

8) Families of the enforced disappeared have been protesting to find their loved ones, but the Government refuses to give them an answer.

9) Tamils have been denied the Right to Remember their war dead, as demonstrated by denying remembrance events, destruction of cemeteries of the was dead and demolition of memorials.

10) Government is targeting Tamil journalists who cover these abuses and Tamil Civil Society activists who protest these abuses.

11) To Implement Tamil’s Joint Appeal to UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and to UN Human Rights Council Member States, which includes a request to Refer Sri Lanka to International Criminal Court (ICC) for War Crimes, Crimes Against Humanity and Genocide committed against the Tamil people by the Sri Lankan State.

For information contact:

1) : S. Sivayoganathan: + 94- 77-906-0474

2) Velan Suwamikal: +94-77-761-41 21

Email: civilsocietyfromnortheast@gmail.com
S. Sivayoganathan
Tamil Civil Society Forum
+94 77-906-0474
civilsocietyfromnortheast@gmail.com

Tamil’s Walk For Justice