Tuesday, April 2, 2013


Ten students enter SAITM

by Aisha Nazim-2013-04-02 


The Inter-University Students' Federation (IUSF) yesterday condemned the government's move in which 10 students were granted scholarships to study at the South Asian Institute of Technology and Medicine (SAITM), stating that the Higher Education Ministry should focus on developing state universities, instead.


State universities currently lack basic facilities, with the Rajarata Medical Faculty being short of 37 teachers, the IUSF said.


Speaking to Ceylon Today, IUS Convener, Sanjeewa Bandara, pointed out that the government was doing nothing to benefit society or improve the situation of undergraduates who are unable to get into State universities due to lack of space, but is instead endorsing private universities by granting scholarships to selected students to enroll in those institutions.


Scholarship amounting to Rs 70 million was really granted to 10 students who achieved good results in the GCE A/L Science stream to continue their studies at the Malabe Private Medical College. Bandara claimed, if the scholarships had been granted to the State universities instead, the number of student intakes could be increased, and thereby they would not need to enter private universities for higher studies.


"Granting students scholarships to study at the Malabe Private Medical College only goes to show that the government is undermining State universities. If the funds had been granted to improve State universities, more students would benefit in the long run," he said.


When Ceylon Today contacted officials at the Higher Education Ministry for clarification regarding the issue, none of the officials, including the Secretary to the Higher Education Ministry, were available for comment.

Sri Lanka monks arrested over anti-Muslim attack

Placard
Sri Lanka's police arrested three Buddhist monks on Monday over the destruction of a Muslim-owned clothing store that heightened religious tensions in the country, an official said.
Police superintendent Buddhika Siriwardena said the monks were detained four days after a mob of Sinhalese-Buddhist men vandalised and torched a section of the three-storey building in the Pepiliyana suburb of Colombo.
"Three monks were arrested after they surrendered today," police spokesman Buddhika Siriwardena told AFP. "They will be taken before a magistrate tomorrow. We are looking for more suspects."
Officials said the monks were among 17 held in connection with Thursday's attack which the main Muslim party in the ruling coalition said was a "sequel" to an on-going hate campaign against Muslims and other religious minorities.
Local television footage, some of which is posted on the YouTube website, showed a Buddhist monk bringing down a store CCTV camera in front of a cheering mob outside the Fashion Bug store, watched by at least four police constables.
Another monk is seen threatening a news cameraman who was later hospitalised after being assaulted by the mob.
Sri Lanka's newly-formed monk-led Bodu Bala Sena, or Buddhist Force, has denied any involvement and urged the government to bring the culprits to justice and clear the group's name.
The BBS was successful last month in forcing Islamic clerics to withdraw the 'halal" certification of food saying it was an affront to the majority non-Muslims in the country.
As the anti-halal move gripped the country, President Mahinda Rajapakse, who is a Buddhist, urged monks not to incite religious hatred.
The owners of the clothing store said Thursday's attack had "shocked and disturbed us a great deal and instilled fear in the minds of our staff members in carrying out their day to day work".
Muslims, who constitute about 10 percent of the country's 20 million population, are the second largest minority after the mainly Hindu ethnic Tamils. Seventy percent of the population are Sinhalese, most of whom are Buddhists.
Thursday's attack which raised safety fears among Muslims, was followed by another incident, this time against the main Tamil political party, in the island's north on Saturday.
The opposition Tamil National Alliance (TNA) said their meeting in the town of Kilinochchi was disrupted by a stone-throwing mob which had also attacked their vehicles and damaged a building while police looked on.
The military denied security forces were involved in Saturday's attack and insisted that the police had prevented a further escalation.
The United Nations estimates that Sri Lanka's ethnic civil war claimed at least 100,000 lives between 1972 and 2009, when Tamil separatist rebels were crushed in a major military offensive by government forces.
aj/ami