Friday, November 29, 2013

Panelists discuss 'Sri Lanka's unfinished war' at FrontLine Club

28 November 2013
A preview screening of the BBC World documentary ‘Sri Lanka’s unfinished war’, which outlines several cases of rape and torture against Tamils in the North-East, took place at the Frontline club today.
The screening was followed by a panel discussion with the producer of the documentary, Frances Harrison, producer of the No Fire Zone documentaries, Callum Macrae and policy and advocacy manager at Freedom from Torture, Sonya Sceats. The Sri Lankan High Commission to the UK refused an invitation to participate in the discussion. 
The panel, chaired by a barrister at a London chamber who acted as a rapporteur to investigate the impeachment of Sri Lanka’s Chief Justice, Sadakat Kadri, discussed various issues and answered questions from the audience.
Full discussion can be viewed below.
Macrae  outlined that the lack of credibility of any investigative initiative set up by the Sri Lanakan government,
“The Sri Lankan government has an endless history of commissions that have amounted to nothing. And I think we’re going to see a lot in the run up to the UN sessions in March. I think a spurious reconciliation commission will be offered with the unfortunate help of South Africa, which will be used as an excuse to prevent things form happen. I’m sorry but from what they’ve done in the past, we can guarantee that almost any investigation will be spurious.”
Speaking on David Cameron’s attendance of the Commonwealth Heads of Government meeting, Callum Macrae reiterated,
“Now we have to keep on the pressure, and make sure that what was started is continued.”
Commenting on the issue of deaths during the entire phase of the war, Frances Harrison, said,
“I think it’s an incredible positive thing if it can be done in a transparent and credible way. But for that to have any meaning in Sri Lanka, it would have to have some sort of international observer or involvement.”
Policy advisor for Freedom From Torture, Sonya Sceats, outlined that currently Sri Lanka was producing the most torture cases worldwide.
Regarding allegations that torture evidence were fabricated for asylum claims, Sceats said,
“Unfortunately this is a rumor that we hear a lot. To this day we have not seen a shred of evidence that supports this claim. The UK border agency finally agreed to remove that allegation after we challenged it, but unfortunately the rumour still circulates in the tribunal.”
“All of our doctors examining courses are required to consider if there is fabrication. We have produced over 120 reports of victims that were tortured in the aftermath of the conflict. This is a claim that has no basis."
Responding to a question regarding the systematic nature of torture, Francis Harrison, outlined the need for an independent investigation into the torture and that there was enough investigation for the UK to investigate the cases and trace back accountability.
Callum Macrae went on to say,
“The nature of the sexual assaults, executions within such a disciplined army means you can trace the responsibility in command right to the very top.”
Concluding comments on the ongoing ethnic re-engineering and oppression in the North-East, Callum said,

“The continued failure of the international community to provide justice for the Tamils could result in another armed conflict.”

TNA Sampanthan Speech to parliament 

28 Nov 2013

Still Counting the Dead
(The Hon.  R.  Sampanthan)-Posted on November 29, 2013
Mr. Deputy Speaker, I am happy to follow the Hon. Minister of  External Affairs, the Hon. (Prof.) G.L. Peiris. His Excellency the President in  his capacity as  Minister of  Finance has presented his 9th Budget. When he presented his 9th Budget,  he  had also  assumed  duties as  Chairman of the Commonwealth. This would, no doubt, entail additional  duties and responsibilities, which hopefully would have a beneficial impact  on governance in  this country.

What Is Fundamentally Wrong With The 2014 Budget?


 by Laksiri Fernando 
( November 29, 2013, Sydney, Sri Lanka Guardian) The economic fundamentals overtly appear strong in the 2014 budget with the objectives of reducing the debt rate, budgetary deficit and sustaining a reasonable growth rate. That is when we look at the budget from a conventional economic point of view or a ‘bourgeoisie’ stand point, to be more precise. But what is the point of a budget in a developing country like Sri Lanka if it doesn’t address the key challenges in the socio-political system, not to speak of any socialist or progressive objectives? 
This article focuses on the budget’s implications on the provincial council system or the country’s fiscal devolution. 

Submission To Missing Persons Commission

By Chandra Jayaratne -November 29, 2013 |
Chandra Jayaratne
Chandra Jayaratne
Mr. H. W. Gunadasa
Colombo TelegraphSecretary to the Commission,
The Commission to Investigate into Complaints Regarding Missing Persons,
9/8. Suranimala Place,
Colombo 6.
Dear Sir,
Submission to the Commission to Investigate into Complaints Regarding Missing Persons
In terms of the invitation published in the Media under your hand, dated 31st October 2013, calling for written submissions, I am pleased to make the under noted submissions:
The Commission should interpret the scope of its Terms of Reference as set out in the Warrant issued by His Excellency the President, taking cognizance of the reasons and historical background leading to the appointment of the Commission, the expressed recommendations of the Lessons Learnt and Reconciliation Commission and the expectations of the family members of missing persons.
As the main intention of the investigation is to systematically address all complaints of missing persons, the Commission needs to initially make public, a certified list of complaints of missing persons followed by verification whether such persons are living, dead or in legal custody through an investigation of the  their current status and their likely whereabouts, where applicable. The Commission also needs to extend the scope of their terms of reference to include the investigation of, where necessary, the circumstances leading to disappearances and the associated failure of law enforcement personnel in upholding the rule of law. In addition the Commission should address issues of legal redress and compensation to family members for death or disappearance of their loved ones.
Other significant consequences of disappearances which need to be addressed are livelihood support to families, safety, security and assistance in obtaining death certificates where applicable. Psychosocial support and rehabilitation treatment to family, where necessary, in addressing post traumatic stress disorders should also receive the attention of the Commission. State assistance is important to fulfill funeral rites in bringing finality to loss of loved ones in order to fulfill the envisaged process of truth and reconciliation.

Fr Johnpillai reveals details of death threat by alleged SL operatives

TamilNet[TamilNet, Thursday, 28 November 2013, 17:21 GMT]
Parish Priest of Our Lady of Guadalupe in Trincomalee, on Thursday, described, in an email released to media through the Catholic mission sources in the East how two armed men, claiming to be Sri Lankan intelligence operatives threatened him on 26 November. When the priest asked them to show proof, they refused. But, as the questioning was rapidly becoming a heated argument, one of the operatives suddenly told the priest that he would give him proof of his identity, caught Fr Johnpillai by his priestly garb, pushed him against the wall pointing a pistol at his head and threatening to shoot him. 

Full text of the report on the incident by Rev. Fr. S. S. Johnpillai, the parish priest of Guadalupe Church in Trincomalee, follows:


Fr S.S. Johnpillai
Fr S.S. Johnpillai
On 26th November evening I was in the cabana attached to the parish house reading the newspapers. There was no one in the church premises as it was dark already, the helpers who do the cleaning and the sacristan were busy elsewhere. 

Unexpectedly two men appeared out of nowhere wanting to meet the parish priest and asking me whether I am him. I said I was. One of them said they would like to question me. They did not introduce themselves and I thought I should ask them who they were in order to verify their identity. 

I was told that they were from the intelligence unit but they have me no proof. They rudely instructed me to answer their questions and not inquire about them. I refused to reply to their questions unless they revealed proof of their identity. They became furious and used filthy language.

They accused me of saying a mass to honour the birthday of the LTTE leader Mr. V. Prabhakaran at 0600 hours that day, which I denied. I did not however deny that I had the usual daily mass that I always have during the weekdays.

As a priest it is my obligation to offer mass and I did so without fail. 

Adding to the accusation, they went on to accuse the Catholic priests from Jaffna and Mannar of being anti-government and pro-LTTE saying they were leading the flock astray. Likewise Catholic priests in Trincomalee who make efforts to join their colleagues in other Tamil dioceses. 

I rejected their statement, reiterating that we do our duty as a Catholic priest tending to the flock as a shepherd.

They replied that they knew me very well and said when I was in Muttur parish I tried to disturb religious harmony by preventing Muslims from buying Tamil land close to the church. 

Having said that, they began to abuse me with filthy words. The discussion was rapidly becoming a heated argument, when one of them suddenly said to me he would give me proof of his identity and caught me by my priestly garb and pushed me against the wall and pointed his pistol at my head, threatening to shoot me.

I was speechless in shock and fell to the ground as they left, promising to return with a superior officer half an hour later. I was warned that I should not go out until they returned and they threatened me not to inform the police officers in the police post next to the church. I followed them and managed to note down the motorbike number they used. Unfortunately there was no license plate. The conversation I had with them was in Sinhala in which I am able to converse fluently. But I realised that one of them who spoke Sinhala did not appear to me Sinhalese because of his accent; he introduced himself as Safreer.

When they left the church premises I called the Bishop’s vicar and vicar general over the phone passing on the information, and they in return informed the police officer in charge of the area. But the police could not identify the perpetrators.

Wigneswaran spurns Devananda’s invitation to co-chair NP DDCs


article_image
by Shamindra Ferdinando- 

EPDP leader Douglas Devananda wants the Northern Province Chief Minister, retired Justice C. V. Wigneswaran, to co-chair District Development Councils (DDCs) in the Northern Province, in accordance with the government’s wish to work closely with the recently elected Northern Provincial Council (NPC) administration.

Before the first NPC polls, Minister Devananda shared the responsibility with Northern Province Governor, Maj. Gen. (redt) G. A. Chandrasiri, one-time Security Forces Commander, Jaffna.

Minister Devananda said that CM Wigneswaran could succeed Northern Governor Chadrasiri.

Minister Devananda was responding to a query by The Island in the wake of CM Wigneswaran boycotting the Jaffna and Kilinochchi DDC meetings on Nov 19 and 20, respectively.

The five-party Tamil National Alliance (TNA) won the first Northern PC poll on Sept 21. Minister Devananda said that irrespective of political differences they would have to work together at district as well as provincial level for the benefit of the northerners.

Of the 38-member NPC, the TNA secured 30, including two bonus seats, whereas the UPFA and the SLMC shared the remaining eight seats.

Minister Devananda urged CM Wigneswaran not to spurn an opportunity to work together.

TNA sources told The Island that the party was of the view that the NPC could work on its own.

OHCHR launched today a new guide for civil society on how to follow up HR recommendations

Image: OHCHR launched today a new guide for civil society on how to follow up HR recommendations
Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights launched a new guide for civil society on how to follow up HR recommendations. It may offer good examples on how to increase the efficiency and visibility of international procedures and standarts at the national level.
Monday, 18 November 2013, by Belarusian HRH
This Guide, issued by the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), focuses on how civil society can follow up on recommendations of United Nations (UN) human rights mechanisms and mandates or bodies.
The Guide also refers to tools to facilitate civil society follow-up activities.  It is available in Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Russian and Spanish.
The new the Practical Guide for civil society on how to follow up on United Nations human rights recommendations describes methods and activities that civil society actors can use to promote the implementation of human rights recommendations as well as existing follow-up procedures and practices of UN human rights mechanisms and how civil society can participate.
Complemented by real experiences contributed by civil society actors and OHCHR field presences, the Guide offers a menu of options from which civil society actors can select on the basis of their own priorities and capacity.
The Guide is being translated into Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish. The High Commissioner for Human Rights will launch the Guide in an event in Geneva to which you are invited. The launch will take place on Friday 29 November from 16.00 to 17.30 in Palais des Nations, room XXIII, Geneva.
***
The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR) is a United Nations agency that works to promote and protect the human rights that are guaranteed under international law and stipulated in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights of 1948. The office was established by the UN General Assembly on 20 December 1993 in the wake of the 1993 World Conference on Human Rights.

Sara Demands Apology From Lankadeepa; Denies CBK – Sunethra – Special Canadian Rep Meeting Story

Colombo TelegraphNovember 29, 2013 
Denying the story carried by the Sinhala daily Lankadeepa “Karaliye Perali” Column, Dr. Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu says that he was out of Sri Lanka from the 10th to the 17thNovember and never met with any “special representatives “from Canada on the beaches of Koggala before the CHOGM or since.
Lankadeepa Columnist wrote; Dr. Saravanamuttu along with former President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga and Ms. Sunethra Bandaranaike engaged in a “special discussion on the politics of the country” on the “Koggala beaches “with “special representatives “ from Canada.
We publish below the letter to Lankadeepa in full;
Dr Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu - Executive Director - CPA
Dr Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu – Executive Director – CPA
Mr. Siri Ranasinghe
The Editor
Lankadeepa
Wijeya Newspapers Ltd
08 Hunupitiya Cross Road
Colombo 02.
29.11.2013
Dear Sir,
I am writing to you with regard to a reference to me in your newspaper of today in a Column titled “Karaliye Perali” by Ranjana.
The reference to me states that during the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting held recently in Colombo, I, along with former President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga and Ms. Sunethra Bandaranaike engaged in a “special discussion on the politics of the country” on the “Koggala beaches “with “special representatives “ from Canada.  Your columnist goes on to state
“We have come to know that the government and the President were subjected to severe criticism in this discussion.
The above reference to me in a newspaper that claims to uphold the highest standards of media professionalism and ethics is indeed both shocking and depressing.  The reference to me demonstrates a shoddy disregard for accuracy in reportage. I was out of Sri Lanka from the 10th to the 17thNovember and never met with any “special representatives “from Canada on the beaches of Koggala before the CHOGM or since.
Accordingly, please publish this letter in full in the next edition of your newspaper and with the same prominence accorded to the column in which the reference to me appears.  Furthermore as a newspaper that claims to engage in serious journalism, I expect your organization will also publish an apology for this blatantly inaccurate and misleading reportage concerning me.
Please note, if my letter is not published as requested, I will have no choice but to consider recourse to other means of ensuring my rights are protected.
In the public interest, I will be releasing this letter to the media.
Yours sincerely
Dr. Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu

The Channel 4 ‘documentary’


By Neville Ladduwahetty- November 28, 2013,

President Mahinda Rajapaksa meeting a Channel 4 journalist in Colombo during the recently-concluded CHOGM


article_imageIssues raised in the C4 Documentary will not go away, as they are driven by political imperatives of Governments such as UK, Canada and India, and not by the truth. These imperatives are influenced by constituencies in countries where they have the potential to tip political fortunes of Governments one way or another.


Britain’s Prime Minister David Cameron is reported to have stated:"I was very clear that we need a proper independent inquiry into what happened, particularly at the end of the war, which C4 proved with that excellent documentary showing some truly chilling and appalling scenes"(Sunday Island, November 17, 2013). Another report in the same paper states: "Let me be very clear if an investigation is not completed by March, then I will use our position on the UN Human Rights Commission and call for a full, credible and independent international inquiry".

SRI LANKA: Realities Of An 'International Investigation'

Nov-28-2013
http://www.salem-news.com/graphics/snheader.jpgIt is pertinent that anyone calling for an international investigation do so under the powers of Article 99 of the UN Charter routing this through the UNSG instead of the UNHRC for more effective action and avoiding political factors...
Mahinda Rajapaksa
Mahinda Rajapaksa has opted for an internal investigation into alleged war crimes committed by Sri Lankan troops during the conflict with the Tamil Tiger rebels [EPA]
(COLOMBO, Sri Lanka) - It is important to point out that nobody should have any illusions of where an "international investigation", if conducted through the U.N. Human Rights Council (UNHRC), is leading to. If an international investigation is commissioned by the UNHRC as promised by March 2014, it does not mean the Rajapaksas will be taken to court the next day. Just a normal murder trial can take years so you can imagine a trial for genocide and how much evidence will need to be presented.
The holy and the unholy

Editorial-


Archbishop Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith has, at a meeting with the UNP Leadership Council members, lambasted an alleged government move to set up a ‘casino city’ north of Colombo, while calling for the abolition of the executive presidency among other things. Ven. Maduluwawe Sobhitha Thera, too, has flayed the government for trying to open up gambling dens. This kind of activism on the part of religious leaders is to be appreciated at a time when the Opposition is in disarray and the UPFA juggernaut is careening down the hill. There has to be some countervailing force against a government with a steamroller majority.

One couldn’t agree with the Cardinal more! But, the question is where to find a principled political leader who really wants to scrap the executive presidency. One may have to conduct a search for such a person with the help of a lighted lantern in broad daylight a la Diogenes. Politicians want that institution abolished only when they are in the Opposition. That was a main plank of President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s platform during the 2005 presidential election campaign. President Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga also made a similar pledge before coming to power. Gen. Sarath Fonseka promised to do away with the executive presidency when he challenged President Rajapaksa in the presidential race in 2010, but he changed his tune subsequently when he thought victory was within sight.

It is not being argued that the executive presidency should be retained or the Opposition should stop campaigning against it. The point we are trying to make is that none of the present-day politicians could be trusted as they have at heart anything but the national interest. Democrats who fight for people’s rights metamorphose into dictators upon being voted into power or when their interests are threatened even while they are in the Opposition as could be seen from the current power struggle in the UNP. Luckily for politicians their election manifestoes aren’t legally binding and their promises are not taken seriously by the voting public.

Urging the incumbent president to abolish the executive presidency is an exercise in futility. Politicians thirst for power, and now that the presidential term limit has been removed, no president will ever want to let go of executive powers. However, if the Opposition gets its act together it could reduce the executive president to a mere figurehead.

When J. R. Jayewardene was President, Prime Minister Ranasinghe Premadasa lamented in Parliament that a peon had more powers than he. But, the executive president becomes a peon to all intents and purposes when his or her party loses power in parliament; the prime minister becomes the de facto president in such a situation. We saw this happen in 2001, when the UNP-led UNF formed a government; President Kumaratunga was not only reduced to a peon, as it were, but also harassed at Cabinet meetings which she chaired ex officio.

The UNF government blundered by capitulating to the LTTE and compromising national security in the process. Else, it could have checkmated CBK without enabling her to use the draconian constitutional provision which allows the President to dissolve a government one year after its formation, to sack it. If the UNP rectifies its mistakes and works itself into the ground again, it may be able to turn the tables on the government as it did in 2001.

One cannot but agree with the Cardinal on the need to oppose government’s efforts to build what the Opposition calls a casino economy with the help of some wealthy foreigners. But, what about the existing casinos run by locals? We see quite a number of them with ornate portals guarded by bouncers in the city. Why are the vociferous anti-casino activists silent on these places? Most of all, horse racing has ruined many families whose heads bring home not the bacon but the so-called race paper. Why hasn’t there been any campaign against ubiquitous bookies? Let these questions be posed to the religious and political leaders going at full tilt to keep Packer at bay while their campaign against social evils is commended.

Video: BBC World News Global Interview With Dr Chris Nonis

Chris NonisNovember 29, 2013Colombo Telegraph
BBC World News Global interview with Dr Chris Nonis,Sri Lankan High Commissioner to the UK

Recasting Caste: War, Displacement And Transformations

By Francesca Bremner -November 29, 2013
Dr. Francesca Bremner
Dr. Francesca Bremner
Colombo TelegraphWe return home, but not to the same place. (Bender & Winer, 2001:15)
I explore the transformation of caste identity that occurs when the social ties and spatial practices anchoring people to place and each other are torn asunder by war. Achille Mbembe (2003) points out that, spatial relations on the ground are rewritten while occupations rage, territory is fought over and modes of control come into operation. The narratives collected in this study illustrate Mbembe’s insight into spatial relations. It traces the new history forged at the intersection of different modes of control—the State and the LTTE—by the subjects of this study.
My research was conducted in a Tamil village in the North East of Sri Lanka hitherto referred to as Ramyapuram. Caught in the middle of the Civil War between the Sri Lankan Government and the Rebel group, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), the village was affected from 1985 until the end of the war in 2009.
This article is based on interviews I conducted with the villagers over a period of three months in 2005. The people in the village had suffered during the war and were wary of an outsider. Building trust was not easy in a climate of fear and distrust, especially in a setting where informants had been used by both the State and LTTE to target the villagers. I interviewed 25 women during this three month period. These interviews were semi-formal conversations conducted over lunch, tea and the exchange of recipes in which fragments of narratives emerged over a period of time. These fragments repeatedly coalesced around the axis of caste, and I began to realise the importance of caste in the construction and transformation of identity in the experience of war. The destruction of lived spaces, being confined within refugee camps and the surveillance of the land spaces involved the transformation of spatial practices. This plays an important role in this study.
Since the women identified the period between 1985 and 1993 as one of devastation and change, this article is based on their experience during this period, and focuses on the narratives of women who consider themselves at the low end of the village hierarchy based on caste.          Read More

Military gave arms training for northern schoolchildren!


child soilders 2The Colombo government’s response every time war crimes allegations are being levelled relating to the killings of thousands of Tamils during the final stage of the war, has been that its military is well disciplined and that it was the LTTE which had used the Tamil people as a human shield. Also, that the government has given a new lease of life to the Tamil people after the war.

As per results of the northern provincial council elections, the so-called awakening brought from Colombo is clearly rejected, and the pictures below are evidence to what extent the north has been militarized.

In the name of leadership training, these pictures confirm, that students of government schools have been given arms training. Principals, teachers and students of over Grade Eight have been taken to military camps and given arms training under the cover of leadership training, and offered them military ranks.

As the government has been making various statements regarding the recent allegation that it has militarized schools, these pictures show the status of the so-called leadership training.

Rubert Soysa’s Exhibition At Paradise Road Galleries

RS
Colombo TelegraphNovember 21, 2013
This will be Rubert Soysa’s sixth exhibition at Paradise Road Galleries. Soysa is one of Sri Lanka’s more established artists, best known for his abstract paintings depicting both figurative and abstract form. Born in Sri Lanka, Soysa studied art at the Government College of Fine Arts in 1973.
Rubert Soysa
Rubert Soysa
He held his first solo show at the Vansbro Public Library in Sweden and thereafter continued to exhibit his work in Sri Lanka, Bangladesh, Syria, Cuba, Bulgaria, India, South Korea, and throughout Europe.
In this, his latest exhibition, Soysa focuses more on the figurative with portraits and the female nude as his main subject. The artist has introduced new media into his work, incorporating layers and texture using cardboard and other materials. The composition of the canvas in some pieces play with proportion and geometrical shapes.
This exhibition will remain open until 13 December 2013. Paradise Road Galleries is located within The Gallery Café, 2 Alfred House Road, Colombo 3. Open 10am to midnight daily. Tel +94 112582162

India Is Our Largest Neighbour And The Most Important Country In The Region

By Gotabaya Rajapaksa -November 29, 2013
Gotabaya Rajapaksa
Gotabaya Rajapaksa
Colombo TelegraphI am honoured to deliver this keynote address at the opening session of the fourth annual “Galle Dialogue”. On behalf of the Government, I take this opportunity to welcome to Sri Lanka the many distinguished foreign speakers and delegates at this conference. I also extend my best wishes to the many illustrious Sri Lankan participants at this event. The Galle Dialogue is fast becoming an important fixture in the calendar of international maritime conferences, as shown by the fact that speakers and delegates from 35 countries are taking part in this event. As with the recently concluded Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting, this is a very positive indication of Sri Lanka’s increasing stature in international affairs since the dawn of peace four years ago. This is something about which all Sri Lankans are justly proud.
The very appropriate theme chosen for this year’s Galle Dialogue is “Emerging Maritime Trends in the Indian Ocean”. Throughout history, the Indian Ocean has been a major conduit of international exploration, migration and commerce. Many of the world’s first civilisations evolved around or in proximity to its shores. Trade along or through the Indian Ocean was an important feature from early in human history. Aided by the seasonal monsoons, merchant vessels travelled east and west across the Indian Ocean for many centuries dating back to antiquity. The ancient Greeks, Romans, Persians and Chinese all traversed the Indian Ocean, often stopping in this country, before the first modern Europeans led by Vasco de Gama in 1497 came to these seas. During the era of European colonialism, the Indian Ocean and its littoral nations became sought after possessions of many empires. The British emerged as the major power in the region in the early 19th century. With the rapid development over the last two centuries of Europe, the United States, and later Japan, the Indian Ocean receded temporarily from global prominence. During this period, the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans were the world’s most important oceans. In recent years, however, there has been a pronounced shift in focus back to the Indian Ocean. A few simple facts demonstrate why this is.                  Read More
Gota’s secret Italian tour is an absolute lie: No 
meeting with Pope nor did Italy’s defense 

Ministry give appointment- it is all ‘black 

money’ craze

(Lanka-e-News- 28.Nov.2013, 11.55PM) It has come to light that the Rajapakse regime’s announcement regarding SL defense secretary Gotabaya Rajapakse’s tour of Italy is an absolute lie , as he has in fact gone to Italy to open a secret account to deposit his ‘black monies,’ according to reports based on Lanka e news foreign service. 

Following the Lanka e news report on Gotabaya’s Italian tour ,the regime desperately explained that he went to Italy as a special representative of the President to meet and invite Rev. Pope Francis to visit Sri Lanka. 

The true picture is Gotabaya had gone to Italy to transfer his black money to a secret account in Italy , and hence the regime’s explanation is to camouflage the truth.

The reason corroborating this true picture is:

There is a procedure and custom to be followed when a country wishes to invite the Vatican Pope. That is, either the country’s leading Christian clergy council including the Cardinal should decide to extend an invitation , or the country’s Diplomatic mission High commissioner should abiding by the protocol invite him. Both these procedures have not been followed.

At least Gotabaya who claimed he is the President’s representative should have obtained an official appointment from the council of the Vatican Pope, which too had not been done. 

Gotabaya had met the Pope on a Wednesday when the ordinary public could see him following a queue, in which event he can only hand over his gift basket , but cannot meet with the Pope.

Intriguingly , even the SL ambassador there , Bennet Cooray had not accompanied Gota to meet the Pope. Though efforts were made to meet the Pope through a Father there named Nevil, the latter had been unable to help Gota. Finally , the father Nevil had not even gone to the Vatican city with Gotabaya.

To invite the Pope , at least a Cabinet Christian Minister who is a government lackey ought to have been sent instead of Gotabaya ,a Buddhist . Besides , Gotabaya is a notorious government servant and a sinner tainted with war crime charges who is not at all suitable to do that errand of the President. Indeed such an individual being sent to invite the Pope is tantamount to insulting the Pope if not trying to make the Pope also a sinner.

In the official publication of the Vatican ‘Osarvathore Romano’, the special representatives of countries who met the Pope are revealed along with their photographs, but in the case of Gotabaya , though it was announced that he was a special guest of the Pope on the 20 th of November , in the ‘Osarvathore Romano’ of last week , nothing at all was revealed about this meeting or the invitation. This is because Gotabaya had met the Pope in the same way as any other ordinary citizen . 

The group of SL media coolies who stoop to anything for filthy lucre and selfish gains had of course reported that Gotabaya’s invitation was accepted by Pope and he will visit SL in the first month of next year which is just a fabrication , for when Lanka e news inquired from the Pope’s media division they stated nothing of that sort had been finalized so far.

Meanwhile a request made by Gotabaya to the internal security Minister , Italy for a meeting had been rejected , explaining that if the request has originated from the SL Defense Minister or its Deputy Minister , that could be considered , and they have no necessity to meet the defense secretary.

In this connection , a spokesman for Italy’s internal defense Ministry speaking to Lanka e news at length explained, in 2008 when SL was informed to lodge complaints against the LTTE with the Institution in Germany that classifies world terrorist organizations , and the A .I.A. the international court for war located in Netherland as war crime charges are likely to be mounted against SL, the latter paid no heed.. ‘Hence the defense secretary meeting us now is of no avail as it is too late,’ he noted. 

In July 2009 , a group of representatives of the internal security Ministry arrived in SL to apprise the latter of this , ‘but our Ministry’s advice was disregarded by SL ,’ he added.

Moreover , now the SL government is allied with sections of the LTTE terrorists and are carrying on activities with them . Don’t these actions of the government jeopardize the lives and interests of those groups who opposed the LTTE at that time? he questioned. We know very well the purpose of Gotabaya’s tour of Italy , he told with a smile. The SL defense secretary’s whole gaze was fixed on St. Marino for obvious reasons , he quipped.