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Tuesday, December 03, 2013

யுத்த இழப்புக் கணக்கீட்டால் சொத்திழக்கும் தமிழர்!


தற்போது ஆரம்பிக்கப்பட்டிருக்கும் குடிசன மதிப்பீட்டில் வெளிநாட்டில் உள்ளவர்களின் வீடுகள் பற்றிய விபரங்கள் தெரியவரும்,

வெளிநாடுகளில் உள்ள வடக்கு மக்களின் அனைத்து சொத்துக்களும் அரசுடமையாக்கப்படும்! 

அரசாங்கம் அதிரடி அறிவிப்பு
December 02, 20131:37 pm

வெளிநாடுகளுக்கு சென்று அங்கு வசித்து வரும் வடமாகாணத்தை சேர்ந்தவர்களின் சொத்துக்கள் காணிகள் மற்றும் வீடுகள் அரசுடமையாக்கப்பட உள்ளதாக சிறிலங்கா அரசாங்கம் அறிவித்துள்ளது.

தற்போது ஆரம்பிக்கப்பட்டிருக்கும் குடிசன மதிப்பீட்டில் வெளிநாட்டில் உள்ளவர்களின் வீடுகள் பற்றிய விபரங்கள் தெரியவரும் என்றும் அரசாங்கம் தெரிவித்துள்ளது.1982ம் ஆண்டின் பின்னர் போர் காரணமாக ஏற்பட்ட சொத்து மற்றும் உயிர்ச் சேதங்கள் தொடர்பிலான கணக்கெடுப்பு ஆரம்பிக்கப்பட்டுள்ளன.

போர் காரணமாக முழுமையாக நாட்டை விட்டு வெளியேறி வாழ்ந்து வரும் வடக்கு மக்களின் சொத்துக்களும் இவ்வாறு அரசுடமையாக்கப்பட உள்ளது. முக்கியமாக விடுதலைப்புலிகளின் ஆதரவாளர்களின் வீடுகள் என இனங்காணப்படும் வீடுகளை உடனடியாக அரசுடமையாக்க நடவடிக்கை எடுக்கப்பட்டுள்ளதாக சிறிலங்கா பாதுகாப்பு அமைச்சு அறிவித்துள்ளது.

போர் காரணமாக வடக்கில் இருந்து சுமார் 10 லட்சம் பேர் இலங்கையில் இருந்து வெளியேறி வெளிநாடுகளில் புலம்பெயர்ந்து வாழ்ந்து வருகின்றனர். இவர்களின் வீடுகளை விடுதலைப் புலிகள் பயன்படுத்தி வந்ததுடன் பின்னர் இராணுவத்தினர் அவற்றை கைப்பற்றி பயன்படுத்தி வருகின்றனர்.

US: Patience With Sri Lanka Could 'Wear Thin'


Assistant Secretary of State Nisha Biswa

US: Patience With Sri Lanka Could 'Wear Thin'
WASHINGTON December 3, 2013 (AP)
By MATTHEW PENNINGTON Associated Press

International patience could wear thin with Sri Lanka unless it takes action to address allegations of atrocities during the island nation's civil war, the top U.S. diplomat for South Asia said Tuesday.

Assistant Secretary of State Nisha Biswal stopped short of endorsing a deadline set last month by British Prime Minister David Cameron, who said he would call for a U.N.-backed inquiry into allegations of war crimes unless there was progress on postwar reconciliation by March.

A U.N. report has suggested Sri Lanka's military may have killed up to 40,000 civilians in the final months of the war in 2009 as it crushed ethnic Tamil rebels, who are also accused of atrocities.

Biswal urged Sri Lanka to take concrete steps on its own, particularly on issues of accountability.

"We would like to see Sri Lanka address these issues through its own processes, and we hope that can in fact be the case," Biswal told reporters, adding that recommendations of a Sri Lankan-government appointed reconciliation commission pointed the way forward.

She said without real progress the patience of the international community "will start to wear thin."

The government of President Mahinda Rajapaksa has so far ignored calls for a thorough local inquiry into war abuses and says it will not allow any international probe. He denies allegations of abuses by the army.

Since the Tamil Tigers' 27-year battle for an ethnic homeland ended, Rajapaksa's grip on power has tightened. Recent reports of media harassment and rights abuses have also raised alarms, although a convincing victory for the main ethnic Tamil party in provincial elections in northern Sri Lanka in September were seen as a small step toward devolution of power.

Biswal, portfolio covers South and Central Asia, also voiced concern Friday about political violence in Bangladesh, where street clashes between rival factions have killed about 40 people and wounded hundreds in the past month.

The opposition is resisting government plans to hold a general election on Jan. 5 unless Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina allows a neutral caretaker administration to oversee the polls.

Biswal, who recently visited Bangladesh, called for the major political parties to come together and work out a compromise "that will allow for elections to take place that the people of Bangladesh have confidence in and feel are credible."

She said failure to achieve a peaceful political transition poses the greatest obstacle to Bangladesh continuing its progress of the past decade in areas such as reducing child and maternal mortality and improving food security.

Analysts fear the political chaos could exacerbate the economic woes of the country of 160 million people and lead to radicalization in a strategic pocket of South Asia.

David Cameron calls for China investment in UK’s HS2



December 2, 2013 9:49 am
David Cameron calls for China investment in UK’s HS2
By Kiran Stacey in Beijing FT UK

David Cameron has opened the door to Chinese investment in the High Speed 2 rail line from London to the north.

Premier Li said: “The two sides have agreed to push for a breakthrough and progress in co-operation in the areas of nuclear power and high speed railway.” He added that Mr Cameron’s trade trip, the largest business delegation the UK has led to the country, would “push the UK-China relationship into a new stage”.
“Just like the high-speed trains,” he said, “we need to grow this relationship at a higher speed.”
It builds on the message from the prime minister, who last week told an audience at the V&A Museum: “I’m very interested in what’s happening in terms of high-speed rail in China . . . In terms of HS2, I very much welcome Chinese investment into British infrastructure.”

Mr Cameron will spend his first day of a three-day trip to China in meetings with the three most senior members of the Chinese government: Mr Li, Zhang Dejiang, the chairman of the standing committee of China’s National People Congress, the largely ceremonial parliament, and Xi Jinping, the president.
The visit is his first to China since November 2010, and the first since the current regime took over in November 2012. British ministers had until recently been refused meetings with their Chinese counterparts after the prime minister met the Dalai Lama in London in May 2012.

Mr Cameron has made trade the focus of his trip, despite concerns over human rights violations in China. He said the British government wanted to support “the judicial protection of human rights”, but made it clear that discussions between the two countries over the issue would be held separately next year.

The form of any Chinese investment in HS2 is as yet unclear, but British officials stressed there would be no direct investment in the construction phase of the line, which is due to be funded by the taxpayer. This leaves open the possibility of the Chinese bidding for the concession to run HS2 or investing in peripheral schemes around the route such as developments around stations when the route opens in the 2030s.
The move could prove controversial, deepening Chinese ownership of British infrastructure projects. The UK’s first nuclear power station to be built in a generation was agreed to last month, with the backing of EDF, the French energy company, and various Chinese investors.

Mr Cameron insisted that his government should not be embarrassed about its increasing reliance on Chinese capital. Speaking to journalists, the prime minister said: “I’m not embarrassed that China is investing in British nuclear power, or has shares in Heathrow airport, or Thames Water, or Manchester airport. I think it’s a positive sign of economic strength that we are open and welcome to Chinese investment. That gives, if you like, the British government more firepower to use the capital investment we have for more roads and railways and other things.”

The prime minister also repeated his call for an EU-China trade deal, which he said would boost European businesses and encourage China to liberalise its economy. Mr Cameron has positioned Britain as the greatest champion of such a deal, to the delight of his Chinese hosts, despite European concern that it could lead to domestic manufacturers being undermined by cheap Chinese imports.

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

தமிழ் ஊடகங்கள் மூடிமறைத்த ஜெயா அரசின் செங்கல்ப்பட்டுக் கைதிகளின் மாவீரர் நினைவு மண்டபத் தகர்ப்பு!




TN Police thwart LTTE Martyrs' Day
 by Our Chennai Correspondent

Tamil Nadu Police have thwarted attempts made by Sri Lankan refugees to commemorate LTTE martyrs at the Chenkalpattu refugee camp on Tuesday (26).

A special police team stormed the camp and demolished the commemorative stone and removed all decorations put up in yellow and red inside the camp premises, reports from Chennai said.

The Special Chenkalpattu Camp, which houses around 100 Lankan refugees, was also thoroughly searched by the special police team, which had banned the commemoration.

The Sri Lankan refugees who had made arrangements for the commemoration chanted slogans against the Tamil Nadu Police and the Government of Chief Minister J. Jayalalithaa, for interrupting the commemoration ceremony.

Police officers responding to the Chenkalpattu Lankan refugees, said they would not be allowed to commemorate LTTE cadres as the outfit is proscribed in India, sources said.
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குறிப்பு: இந்தக் கோர நிகழ்வை, பண்பாட்டுப் படுகொலையை தமிழ் ஊடகங்கள் திட்டமிட்டு மூடிமறைத்து விட்டன. ஜெயா அரசின் செங்கல்ப்பட்டுக் கைதிகளின் மாவீரர் நினைவு மண்டபத் தகர்ப்பை மட்டுமல்ல, முள்ளி முற்றத் தகர்ப்பையும் இவை ஒருமித்து மறைத்து விட்டன.ஜெயா அரசின் சட்டமன்றத் தீர்மானங்களுக்கு செஞ்சோற்றுக் கடன் தீர்க்கும் பொருட்டு இந்த ஈனச்செயலை இவர்கள் செய்துள்ளனர்.இந்த சந்தர்ப்பவாத சமரச துரோகப் பாதை, இவர்கள் யாருக்கு சேவகம் செய்கின்றார்கள் என்பதைத் தோலுரித்துக்காட்டுகின்றது.

Will China leave Rajapaksa in the lurch?

Will China leave Rajapaksa in the lurch?

China's recent advice to Sri Lanka that she should improve on her human rights record, had apparently caused shockwaves to reverberate within the higher echelons of government, sources revealed. The magnitude of government's angst in relation to the statement issued by Chinese Foreign Ministry is easily
conceivable, when the subsequent clarification by the Chinese Embassy, is looked at in its proper perspective.

 The Chinese Embassy did not deny the statement of its Foreign Ministry, which advised the Sri Lankan Government to improve on its human rights record. The clarification by the Embassy merely states that the local media had twisted the statement issue by the Chinese Foreign Ministry. Those in the know of backroom manoeuvrings in such matters, may well surmise that the Embassy's statement could have been inspired by the government so as to dispel any doubts in the minds of the common masses who are somewhat conditioned to think that China will act as a safety net when the country is faced with hostile forces in the UNHRC.

A notable fact in this issue is that the Chinese statement on human rights in Sri Lanka comes right after it was admitted as a member of the UNHRC. Before it was elected to the UN body as a member, and when any motion was brought in condemnation of Sri Lanka's human rights record, China sprang to its defence
without any hesitancy. This apparent change of tact by China in relation to the human rights position of the country is rather enigmatic, at least in so far as the government is concerned.

Heavily dependent on China

It is no secret that the Rajapaksa Government depends heavily on Chinese goodwill to help it get out of trouble when serious human rights and war crimes allegations are brought against the country in the UNHRC. In fact, the government has been able to plant it in the minds of its supporters, purely by dint of repetition.

However, those opposing the government dislike China for protecting the Rajapaksa Government. The peoples' differing sentiments on this issue apart, one fact stands out clearly. It is that, Mahinda plays the China card internally or externally, exclusively for political advantage. Internally, it keeps his government strong as his supporters assume that he has the fullest backing from China. Externally, he uses it to chaste India when he deems it necessary to do so.

In light of the foregoing, it may not be too far from the truth if one were to think the statement of the Chinese Foreign Ministry was a body blow to the Rajapaksa Government. Ipso facto, India cannot be more comfortable when quietly savouring the developing scenario. So far, the mandarins of the Indian foreign office were in a quandary as to the possible outcome of India's tight squeeze on Sri Lanka, by voting for the UNHRC resolution at Geneva. They felt alarmed that India, by subscribing to a Western agenda against Sri Lanka on its human rights record, was losing its influence in South Asia, thereby giving an advantage to
China. But now that China has also taken up the call for the protection of human rights as an issue in Sri Lanka, India must feel vindicated. It is not irrelevant here to consider what made China issue a statement which could in all probability rattle the Rajapaksa Government. It reminds one of a parallel situation which arose during the presidency of J.R. Jayewardene. When the war was raging in the North during his tenure, India made an all out effort to sabotage Sri Lanka's war against the terrorists. What JR did then was to send his Finance Minister, Ronnie de Mel, to America, to get help for the country's war effort. Quite interestingly,
when Ronnie met the then American Secretary of State, he did a rather unusual thing. He led Ronnie to a map hanging on the wall of his office and showed him the distances between Sri Lanka, America and India. He advised him to tell his government to settle their contentious issues by mutual agreement.

How America saw the conclusion of the India-Sri Lanka Peace Accord at the time is described in the book titled, Indian intervention in Sri Lanka, as quoted below.

 US Interests

 "Was Indian dominance over Sri Lanka a loss to the US? The letters exchanged in the July 1987 Accord was a clear loss for the United States in the Indian Ocean region, but in spite of this implication, the US Government praised the Accord. The letters referred to the availability of ports, particularly Trincomalee, the Trincomalee oil tank farm deal, the broadcasting facilities and the presence of foreign military and intelligence personnel. Even though all of these concerned US interests in the region, US policy which is based on long-term strategic interests was to ignore and establish a strategic alliance with India. This explained the US reaction to the Indo-Lanka conflict and the ethnic crisis in Sri Lanka.

An official of the Bureau of Research and Intelligence of the US State Department, Washington D.C., informed the author that the letters of the Accord was a direct attack on American interests. The then US Ambassador in Colombo, James Spain, disagreed. He said: "(It) depends on which pair of glasses you put on.

Nobody wanted the facilities of the Indians, and the Indians were scared of." Commenting further on the Accord, Spain said: "Both the Sri Lankans and the Indians got what they wanted out of each other." When asked whether the Americans were aware of the Accord in advance, Spain said: "We first got to know about it when the ongoing discussions between the Voice of America and the Sri Lanka Broadcasting Corporation were suddenly suspended."

India important to the US

At this time, America should have helped Sri Lanka, especially in view of the fact that it had agreed to provide certain requests made by America, namely facilitation of setting up of a VOA relay station in the country, and granting Trincomalee oil tanks leasing facilities to an American company. Due to Indian influence, America might have decided to withhold its support to Sri Lanka as India was more important to it. In like manner, if by any chance China was to be asked by India who would be more important to it from the two sides, there would be little wonder if it did not choose India over Sri Lanka. If India conveys to China directly, or indirectly through America, that it has no complaint against China having investment projects in Sri Lanka as long as it goes along with them in the matter of human right issues pertaining to the country, they would naturally prefer to work with India and the international community. This will be to China's advantage as it could then hold up its own human rights record in better light.

China's true commitment to human rights issues will be brought under the spotlight when the Sri Lankan case is brought to the UNHRC next March.

Americans back Iran deal by 2-to-1 margin: Reuters/Ipsos poll

Even if the Iran deal fails, 49 percent want the United States to then increase sanctions and 31 percent think it should launch further diplomacy. But only 20 percent want U.S. military force to be used against Iran.
 Reuters/Ipsos poll

Americans back Iran deal by 2-to-1 margin: Reuters/Ipsos poll
BY MATT SPETALNICK
WASHINGTON Tue Nov 26, 2013 8:49pm EST

(Reuters) - Americans back a newly brokered nuclear deal with Iran by a 2-to-1 margin and are very wary of the United States resorting to military action against Tehran even if the historic diplomatic effort falls through, a Reuters/Ipsos poll showed on Tuesday.

The findings were rare good news in the polls for President Barack Obama, whose approval ratings have dropped in recent weeks because of the botched rollout of his signature healthcare reform law.

According to the Reuters/Ipsos survey, 44 percent of Americans support the interim deal reached between Iran and six world powers in Geneva last weekend, and 22 percent oppose it.

While indicating little trust among Americans toward Iranian intentions, the survey also underscored a strong desire to avoid new U.S. military entanglements after long, costly wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Even if the Iran deal fails, 49 percent want the United States to then increase sanctions and 31 percent think it should launch further diplomacy. But only 20 percent want U.S. military force to be used against Iran.

The survey's results suggest that a U.S. public weary of war could help bolster Obama's push to keep Congress from approving new sanctions that would complicate the next round of negotiations for a final agreement with Iran.

"This absolutely speaks to war fatigue, where the American appetite for intervention - anywhere - is extremely low," Ipsos pollster Julia Clark said. "It could provide some support with Congress for the arguments being made by the administration."

Tehran accepted temporary restrictions on its nuclear program in exchange for limited relief from tough economic sanctions under the Geneva deal, which the White House sees as a "first step" toward ensuring that Iran cannot develop an atomic bomb.

Obama and his aides are casting the Iran deal as the best alternative to a new Middle East conflict as they push back against skeptical lawmakers and close U.S. ally Israel who accuse Washington of giving up too much for too little.

A number of lawmakers, especially Republicans, have insisted they will try to enact stiffer new sanctions, which the Obama administration says would poison the negotiating atmosphere during the six months allotted to achieve a long-term accord.

But signs of significant public support for the Iran deal could give some of Obama's own pro-Israel Democrats, who may fear being branded as inadequately supportive of the Jewish state in the 2014 U.S. congressional elections, political cover to stick with the president.

SUPPORT FOR ISRAEL REMAINS HIGH

Reflecting deep suspicions over Iran's sincerity after more than three decades of estrangement between the two countries, the poll shows that 63 percent of Americans believe Tehran's nuclear program is intended to develop a bomb - although Iran says the project is only for civilian purposes.

Despite that, 65 percent of those polled agreed that the United States "should not become involved in any military action in the Middle East unless America is directly threatened." Only 21 percent disagreed with the statement.

There was every indication, however, that American public support for Israel remained high despite Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's denunciation of the Iran deal as a "historic mistake" and new strains in U.S.-Israeli relations.

Fifty percent supported the notion that the United States "should use its military power to defend Israel against threats to its security, no matter where they come from." Thirty-one percent disagreed.

Even as the poll showed a moderately favorable response to Obama's attempt at rapprochement with Iran, the diplomatic breakthrough did not appear to have offered any immediate political boost at home to the embattled president. Foreign affairs rarely trump domestic matters in terms of presidential popularity.

"This might have an effect on some of the political dialogue," Clark said. "But I don't think it's a game-changer that's going to reverse the tide from the president's current pretty negative approval ratings."

A separate Reuters/Ipsos tracking poll on Tuesday showed Obama's approval rating languishing at 38 percent, with 56 percent disapproving of the way he is handling his job. He spent the past three days on a swing through Western states trying to recover lost ground over his flawed healthcare rollout.

The final outcome of Obama's Iran engagement strategy remains uncertain, but success would mean a big legacy-shaping achievement that might help to polish what is widely perceived to be a less than stellar foreign policy record.

But if the talks break down and Iran dashes to build an atomic bomb before the West can stop it, Obama could go into the history books as the president whose naivete allowed the Islamic Republic to go nuclear.

The precision of Reuters/Ipsos online polls is measured using a credibility interval. In this case, the poll - which was conducted from Sunday through Tuesday with 591 respondents - has a credibility interval of plus or minus 4.9 percentage points.

(Reporting by Matt Spetalnick; Editing by Alistair Bell and Peter Cooney)

Punish those who celebrated Mahavir – JHU

Sobitha helaurumaya
Punish those who celebrated Mahavir – JHU
Published on Wednesday, 27 November 2013 20:06

Ruling UPFA affiliate Jathika Hela Urumaya demands the government enforces the law and punishes those who had celebrated the LTTE heroes day and formulates new laws if the existing ones are inadequate to mete out the punishment.

In a statement, JHU leader Ven. Omalpe Sobhitha Thera says TNA MP S. Sridharan had made a nearly ½ hour speech in parliament in which he had referred to the birthday of Velupillai Prabhakaran and the LTTE heroes day, describing the slain LTTE chief as a national hero and a liberator.

Also, lamps were lit and red and yellow flowers offered at Karaveddi Pradeshiya Sabha in Jaffna to remember dead LTTE cadres, attended by TNA members.

The statement says that from time to time since the defeat of the Tamil separatist Tiger terrorism in 2009, the TNA and pro-LTTE groups had tried to hold such remembrances.

By now, the TNA, which serves as the LTTE’s front, has been bold enough to extend such acts to parliament.

Also north chief minister Vigneswaran had compared Prabhakaran to freedom fighter Keppetipola, while Suresh Premachandran called for a taking up of arms once again, says the Thera.

The military has been saying over and over again that it is illegal to hold LTTE heroes days and remembrances, while the police spokesman said the law would be enforced against those who hold such events.

The law should be enforced now to prevent a recurrence before it is too late, and the government has a responsibility to nip those attempts in the bud, the JHU leader adds.

Parliament: TNA MP condemned for lionising dead Tiger leader

 '' I request Sritharan to consider Sri Lanka as a country of one nation comprising several communities," Minister Dissanayake said.

MP.Sritharan
Parliament: TNA MP condemned for lionising dead Tiger leader
November 26, 2013, 9:20 pm
By Saman Indrajith

The government and the Opposition joined forces in Parliament yesterday to condemn a speech delivered by TNA Jaffna District MP S. Sritharan, praising the dead LTTE leader Velupillai Prabhakaran. He said that Prabhakaran was a national hero and called upon Tamils to commemorate his death.

MP Sritharan was condemned by MPs of both sides for attempting to deliver the Mahaveera commemorative lecture in Parliament.

Sritharan, participating in the second reading stage debate on Budget 2014, read out from a piece of paper that he had brought into the Chamber. He was delivering his speech in the Tamil language. There were several MPs, on both sides, listening to Sritharan’s speech. After he had delivered a speech, lasting nearly

half an hour, on the life of Prabhakaran and justifying the LTTE’s violence, Higher Education Minister S. B. Dissanayake said the MP had violated the country’s laws. "I came here today to deliver a speech on the budget, but now I am compelled to talk about something else. Prabhakaran was a criminal who killed not

only Sinhalese but also Tamils. Who killed the leaders of EPDP, TULF, and TELO? It was Prabahakaran! He was the one who caused irrecoverable losses to the Tamil community by killing Tamil leaders such as Lakshman Kadirgamar and Neelan Thiruchelvam.

Prabahakaran also killed his own people who tried to surrender to the government."

Minister Dissanayake requested MP Sritharan not to fan the flames of racial hatred and not to depict a ruthless terrorist as a hero. Prabahakaran had killed so many innocent civilians and looted their monies and jewellery. It was very pathetic that MP Sritharan was calling for a Mahaviru Commemoration to mark

Prabhakarans’ birth anniversary. I request Sritharan to consider Sri Lanka as a country of one nation comprising several communities," Minister Dissanayake said.

UNP Kurunegala District MP Akila Viraj Kariyawasam, too, condemned Sritharan’s attempt.

Vanni District UPFA MP Hunais Farook, got up raising a point of order and requested the Chair to remove all Sritharan’s statements promoting ethnic and racial disharmony.

The presiding Member was Deputy Committee Chairman Chandrakumar Murugesu, representing Jaffna District. He ordered that all what MP Sritharan had mentioned, in violation of Standing Orders, of Parliament, be expunged from the Hansard.

List of MPs who obtained liquor permits to be presented to Parliament today: Nalinda Jayatissa

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