Thursday, 28 October 2010

இந்தா தமிழா, இதுதான் ஐ.நா!




Lanka overcoming, polarization and distrust - Buhne

October 27, 2010 10:30 am

Pictured here Sri Lankan External Affairs Minister G।L। Peiris in conversation with United Nations Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator Neil Buhne at the UN office in Colombo at the 65th UN Day celebrations. Pic by Eranga Perera
Sri Lanka is overcoming the polarization and distrust associated with a long conflict, United Nations Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator Neil Buhne said addressing the 65thUN Day celebrations. He added that, more than most countries Sri Lanka is positioned to move beyond that and take advantage of the opportunities an interconnected world offers - to improve peoples’ lives.

It is Sri Lankans who will make this happen. However the United Nations can help Sri Lanka use the universal values of tolerance, mutual respect and human dignity to do this - values which are central in Dhamma Pada, the Bhagavath Gita, the Quran and the Bible. The progress made so far needs to be recognized – whether it is in terms of the progress towards the Millennium Development Goals, or in the accomplishments of the people displaced as they return and rebuild their lives with the support of the Government, the UN system and international organizations, civil society and the private sector, Buhne said.
Full speech delivered by Buhne;
Address by the United Nations Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator at the United Nations 65th UN Day celebrations.
Mr. Minister, Excellencies, friends of the United Nations, colleagues,
Thank you for joining us to mark the 65th anniversary of the founding of the United Nations. For the United Nations system to be effective in a country, it needs strong partnership and many friends. We are grateful for the Minister’s presence here tonight. It is a mark of the support the Government ofSri Lanka provides for our work – which we need if we are to effectively support the Government’s efforts to improve lives. We appreciate greatly the presence of so many partners and friends tonight - whom we work with every day in our efforts to help all Sri Lankans meet their goals for the future.

The Secretary-General said “despite our problems, despite polarization and distrust, our interconnected world has opened up vast new possibilities for progress”. This is perhaps even truer for Sri Lanka than for other countries. Sri Lanka is overcoming the polarization and distrust associated with a long conflict. But more than most countries it is positioned to move beyond that and take advantage of the opportunities an interconnected world offers - to improve peoples’ lives.

It is Sri Lankans who will make this happen. However the United Nations can help Sri Lanka use the universal values of tolerance, mutual respect and human dignity to do this - values which are central in Dhamma Pada, the Bhagavath Gita, the Quran and the Bible. The progress made so far needs to be recognized – whether it is in terms of the progress towards the Millennium Development Goals, or in the accomplishments of the people displaced as they return and rebuild their lives with the support of the Government, the UN system and international organizations, civil society and the private sector.

As the Secretary General says, UN Day is a day on which we resolve to do more. Here in Sri Lanka that means continuing to help those who suffered the most during the war, whether that is a widow in Anuradhapura who lost her husband, or a fisherman in Batticaloa, who lost his house and his livelihood twice – first in the Tsunami and then during the conflict, or a family in Mullaitivu who were displaced multiple times, and now returned back to a damaged house and are planting their land for the first time since 2007, while grieving the loss of a family member. It means helping them put back together their homes, their farms and their hearts.

Here in Sri Lanka it also means helping the country take advantage of the opportunities development can bring – and supporting the government in ensuring that as this happens inequalities become less rather than more. It means helping the country to adapt to changes – including climate change so that peoples’ lives are not made worse as the climate changes. It means recognizing and promoting, and preserving the richness, diversity of Sri Lanka’s environment and people, and helping the world to appreciate and recognize that unique beauty.

So as the Secretary General said, let us re-commit ourselves to the charter to “promote social progress and better standards of life in larger freedom.”

ஈழத்தமிழினமே தமிழினியை விடுவிக்கப் போராடு

ஈழத்தமிழினமே தமிழினியை விடுவிக்கப் போராடு
தமிழினி தொடர்ந்தும் விளக்கமறியலில்

October 27, 2010 02:38 pm
கைது செய்யப்பட்டுள்ள தமிழீழ விடுதலைப் புலிகள் அமைப்பின் மகளிர் பிரிவு தலைவி எனக் கூறப்படும் தமிழினி தொடர்பில் எடுக்க வேண்டிய நடவடிக்கைகள் குறித்து சட்டமா அதிபரின் ஆலோசனையைக் கோரியுள்ளதாக இரகசிய பொலிஸார் நீதிமன்றில் கூறியுள்ளனர்.
தமிழினி தொடர்பில் மேற்கொள்ளப்பட்ட விசாரணைகள் அடங்கிய அறிக்கை சட்டமா அதிபருக்கு சமர்பிக்க்பட்டுள்ளதாக கொழும்பு நீதவான் நீதிமன்றில் அறிக்கை ஒன்றை சமர்பித்து இரகசிய பொலிஸார் குறிப்பிட்டுள்ளனர். சட்டமா அதிபரின் ஆலோசனைக்கு அமைய சந்தேகநபர் தொடர்பில் எடுக்க வேண்டிய நடவடிக்கைகள் குறித்து அறிவிக்கவுள்ளதாக இரகசிய
பொலிஸார் தெரிவித்துள்ளனர்.
இந்தக் கருத்துக்களை பரிசீலனைக்கு எடுத்துக் கொண்ட கொழும்பு பிரதம நீதவான் ரஸ்மி சிங்கப்புலி சந்தேகநபரை அடுத்த மாதம் 15ம் திகதிவரை விளக்கமறியலில் வைக்குமாறு உத்தரவு பிறப்பித்துள்ளார்.

LTTE chief's case closed

Year after death, LTTE chief's case closed
A Subramani, TNN, Oct 26, 2010, 02.53am ISTCHENNAI:
The LTTE supremo, Velupillai Prabhakaran, is no more the prime accused in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case. In the first official acknowledgment by India of the LTTE supremo Velupillai
Prabhakaran's death, a designated court for Tada cases in Chennai has dropped all charges against him, on the basis of a CBI report.
"The case against the absconding accused A1 Prabhakaran, A2 Pottu Amman alias Shanmuganathan Sivasankaran is hereby dropped and the charges against them ordered abated," ruled the designated judge, K Dakshinamurthy, a couple of weeks ago.
The case and charges against Prabhakaran's trusted lieutenant and LTTE intelligence chief Pottu Amman were dropped based on the report filed by the CBI's Multi-Disciplinary Monitoring Agency (MDMA),
which was formed in 1998 to probe the wider conspiracy behind Rajiv's 1991 assassination. Under Indian law, charges against the accused abate automatically on their death.
On May 18 last year, capping the defeat of LTTE, the Lankan government declared the death of Prabhakaran in battle. Though photographs of the bullet-riddled body of the LTTE leader were released to the world, the island-nation had not yet issued a formal death certificate authenticating his death. In the case of Pottu Amman, Lanka has not furnished any photos or certificates, fuelling rumours all over the Tamil diaspora that the two were still alive.
However, last year, when a case pertaining to the 1989 assassination of the moderate Tamil politician A Amirthalingam came up for hearing, the Lankan police filed a report declaring that Prabhakaran and Pottu Amman were dead.
About six months ago, the MDMA filed a report based on the Lankan government's disclosure, stating that the case could be closed as the two LTTE leaders were dead, as acknowledged by Sri Lanka itself.
India officially acknowledges death of Prabhakaran- Rajiv assassination case closed
Tuesday, 26 October 2010 16:13 (Colombo Lankapuvath)
The LTTE supremo, Velupillai Prabhakaran, is no more the prime accused in the Rajiv Gandhi assassination case. In the first official acknowledgment by India of the LTTE supremo
Velupillai Prabhakaran's death, a designated court for Tada cases in Chennai has dropped all charges against him, on the basis of a CBI report.
"The case against the absconding accused A1 Prabhakaran, A2 Pottu Amman alias Shanmuganathan Sivasankaran is hereby dropped and the charges against them ordered abated," ruled the designated judge, K Dakshinamurthy, a couple of weeks ago reports Indian Media.
The case and charges against Prabhakaran's trusted lieutenant and LTTE intelligence chief Pottu Amman were dropped based on the report filed by the CBI's Multi-Disciplinary Monitoring Agency (MDMA),
which was formed in 1998 to probe the wider conspiracy behind Rajiv's 1991 assassination. Under Indian law, charges against the accused abate automatically on their death.
On May 18 last year, capping the defeat of LTTE, the Lankan government declared the death of Prabhakaran in battle and with their death the charges against them were dropped by the Indian Government as the dead cannot be convicted.
Courtesy- Times of India
http://lankapuvath.lk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=10060:india-officially-acknowledges-death-of-prabhakaran-rajiv-assassination-case-closed-&catid=46:general&Itemid=70

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