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Sunday, October 25, 2009

Fuel crisis continues

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* “This payment was due from January, but we decided not to carry out any our trade union action due to the war situation in the country. Now that the war is over, we cannot accept excuses any more,” a CPC trade union leader said.
* Fuel shortages arose due to a “go slow” campaign by a JVP-backed joint front of trade unions in the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC) in support of a wage increase.
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Fuel crisis continues
2009-10-25 14:57:17 The Sunday Times LK
The fuel crisis continued for the third consecutive day today with many of the fuel station remaining close or curtailing their supplies.
A large number of motorist and private buses kept away from the roads as the supply of fuel was unlikely to return to normal on Monday though CPC workers were due to return to work as usual tomorrow.
"In one of the sheds in Wattala two groups were fighting each other over fuel supplies while in some other stations they were selling fuel at extra prices", Anil Kumara a Trishaw driver said.
He said that he remained in the queue for for two hours to obtain fuel.
"Due to the fuel shortage we were forced to cancel our plan to go for an entertainment show in Colombo, thogh we had brought the tickets for the show", Vijitha Perera, a businessman from Maharagama said
Crucial talks between CPC unions and President Mahinda Rajapaksa are scheduled for Monday, but unions say if their demand for the salary increase is not received they were planning for a bigger strike with other sectors.(DW/AD)
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Saturday, October 24, 2009

European Parliament resolution of 22 October 2009 on Sri Lanka

European Parliament resolution of 22 October 2009 on Sri Lanka
The European Parliament ,
– having regard to its previous resolutions of 18 May 2000(1) , 14 March 2002(2) and 20 November 2003(3) on Sri Lanka, of 13 January 2005(4) on the tsunami disaster in the Indian Ocean, of 18 May 2006(5) on the situation in Sri Lanka and of 5 February 2009(6) on Sri Lanka, – having regard to the open letters of the European Commissioner for External Relations of 16 June 2009 and 21 September 2009 on the situation in Sri Lanka,
– having regard to the Council conclusions of 18 May 2009 on Sri Lanka,
– having regard to Rule 122 of its Rules of Procedure,
A. whereas all the territories in the north of Sri Lanka formerly held by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eeelam (LTTE) have been retaken,
B. whereas 25 years of conflict, which ended with the defeat of the LTTE in 2009, have resulted in more than 90 000 deaths,
C. whereas, following the end of the conflict, more than 250 000 Tamil civilians are being held in camps for screening and resettlement, where there are serious concerns about overcrowding and inadequate access to clean water, sanitation and medical facilities and where they have no freedom of movement,
D. whereas the Sri Lankan Government denies humanitarian and human rights organisations adequate access to the camps,
E. whereas the international community must continue to provide humanitarian aid, including trained staff,
F. whereas the Sri Lankan Government needs to be generous and proactive in addressing the concerns and interests of its Tamil citizens and to implement rapidly and fully the 13th Amendment to the Sri Lankan Constitution, as well as further and significant devolution measures so that the Tamil peoples, too, see the defeat of the LTTE as a liberation,
G. whereas the human rights situation is unlikely to improve without the involvement of permanent international observers, in particular from organisations such as the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC),
H. whereas numerous journalists covering the conflict and the post-conflict situation in Sri Lanka have experienced violence and intimidation,
I. whereas Sri Lanka's economic recovery will depend greatly on foreign direct investment and also on continued EU support,
J. whereas large areas of former conflict zones are contaminated by anti-personnel mines and other explosive debris of war,
1. Deeply deplores the fact that more than 250 000 people are still detained in camps and calls on the Sri Lankan Government to take all necessary steps to organise the quick return home of those detained, as well as the urgent delivery of humanitarian assistance to them, in line with its obligation to protect all people under its jurisdiction; emphasises the need to give the ICRC and the UN specialised agencies a key role in this process;
2. Calls on the Sri Lankan authorities to grant humanitarian organisations free access to the camps in order to provide those detained with the necessary humanitarian assistance, particularly with the imminent arrival of monsoon rains in the north of the country;
3. Urges society worldwide to continue providing humanitarian patronage, in order to contribute to a lasting peace, and calls on international donors to link funding for the camps to compliance with commitments on resettlement and to implement a time-limited programme of assistance to the camps;
4. Calls on all Tamil leaders to commit to a political settlement and to renounce terrorism and violence once and for all;
5. Insists that the Sri Lankan Government is under an obligation to apply international human right standards in judicial proceedings against members of the LTTE;
6. Recognises Sri Lanka's development of a National Action Plan for the Promotion and Protection of Human Rights;
7. Calls on the Sri Lankan Government to expedite plans for reconciliation and regional devolution as included in the country's constitution;
8. Urges the Sri Lankan Government to stop the repression of the media under anti-terrorist legislation and to allow freedom of the press; and calls on it, now that the conflict has ended, to review its anti-terrorist legislation and to ensure that all alleged violations of media freedom are the subject of full, open and transparent investigations;
9. Urges the Sri Lankan Government to give further and increased attention to the clearance of landmines, the presence of which presents a serious obstacle to rehabilitation and economic regeneration; calls on it, in this regard, to take the very positive step of acceding to the Ottawa Treaty (Convention on the Prohibition of the Use, Stockpiling, Production and Transfer of Anti-Personnel Mines and on their Destruction), and urges the Commission, in particular, to sponsor additional support for urgent mine-clearance work in Sri Lanka;
10. Welcomes the introduction of the Victim and Witness Assistance and Protection Bill, which is currently at second reading in the Sri Lankan Parliament;
11. Takes note of holding of local elections in northern Sri Lanka;
12. Instructs its President to forward this resolution to the Council, the Commission, the governments of the Member States, the UN Secretary-General, the Secretary-General of the British Commonwealth, the International Committee of the Red Cross, Human Rights Watch, the International Campaign to Ban Landmines, the Government of Sri Lanka and all other member countries of the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation.
(1) OJ C 59, 23.2.2001, p. 278. (2) OJ C 47 E, 27.2.2003, p. 613. (3) OJ C 87 E, 7.4.2004, p. 527. (4) OJ C 247 E, 6.10.2005, p. 147. (5) OJ C 297 E, 7.12.2006, p. 384. (6) Texts adopted, P6_TA(2009)0054.
Source: EP Sri Lanka

Thursday, October 22, 2009

அமெரிக்க ஏகாதிபத்தியம் ஒழிக

ஒபாமாவின் முள்வேலி முகாம்

Pakistan fighting sparks exodus
The country's Jalozai refugee camp, 35km southwest of Peshawar , houses nearly 4,000 people
Aslam Din, a Pakistani tribesman, right, stands beside his daughter Sameeda Gul, who was allegedly injured in a suspected U.S. missile strike in Spalaga village, at a local hospital in Miran Shah, the main town of the Pakistani tribal region of North Waziristan, Wednesday, Oct. 21, 2009.
(MORE)

Wednesday, October 21, 2009

India was ready to grant US$ 2.6 bn to SL

In case of IMF’s refusal
India was ready to grant US$ 2.6 bn to SL
by Saman Indrajith
Public Administration and Home Affairs Minister Dr. Sarath Amunugama yesterday (20) told parliament that India was ready to provide US$ 2.6 billion to Sri Lanka in case the IMF had not granted its loan facility.
He said that Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh had even told the IMF on one occasion that India would supply that amount of funds it did not approve the standby credit facility for Sri Lanka.
"Such was the kind of friendship this government has developed with neighbouring countries," he said.
The government would never forget the assistance and backing of regional governments, such as India and Pakistan, Sri Lanka received during desperate times.
"Indian Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee had telephoned the Indian representatives of the IMF and instructed them to support Sri Lanka’s case.
Prime Minister Man Mohan Singh himself had said that if the IMF would not approve the loan facility to Sri Lanka, India would give it," Dr. Amunugama said.

Tuesday, October 20, 2009

மே17 இற்குப் பிந்திய புதிய புலப்பெயர்வு -2

76 ஈழ அகதிகளுடன் கனடாவுக்குள் நுழைந்த '' ஓசன் லேடி '' என்ற கப்பல்
76 ஈழத் தமிழர்களுடன் '' ஓசன் லேடி'' கப்பல் ஒன்று கனடாவைச் சென்றடைந்துள்ளது. கடந்த சனிக்கிழமை கனடிய பொலிஸார் பிரிட்டிஷ் கொலம்பியா கடலின் கனடா கடற்பரப்பிற்குள் வைத்து குறித்த சந்தேகத்துக்கு இடமான கப்பலை கனேடிய கடற்படையினர் கைப்பற்றியுள்ளார்கள்.கப்பலானது இலங்கையிலிருந்து அகதிகளுடன் வந்தாகக் கருத்தப்பட்ட போதும், எங்கிருந்து கப்பல் புறப்பட்டது என விசாரணைகளில் இருந்து தெரியவரவில்லை. கப்பலில் வந்தர்வர்கள் கனடாவில் குடியேற அனுமதிக்குமாறு அவர்கள் கோரிக்கை விடுத்துள்ளனர். இவர்கள் அனைவரும் பிரிட்டிஷ் கொல்பியாவில் உள்ள ஒரு சிறையில் வைத்து கனடா காவல்துறையினர் விசாரணை நடத்தி வருகின்றனர்.
தகவல்: பதிவு இணையம்

'US fund manager cleared of funding terrorism'

'US fund manager cleared of funding terrorism'
COLOMBO (AFP) – Sri Lankan-born hedge fund billionaire Raj Rajaratnam was investigated for allegedly funding Tamil Tiger rebels, but there was no evidence against him, the Central Bank of Sri Lanka said Monday.
US authorities on Friday charged Rajaratnam, 52, with fraud after saying they had uncovered the biggest ever case of insider-trading by a hedge fund.
He was among several wealthy overseas Sri Lankans whose donations to a Maryland-based charity, the Tamils Rehabilitation Organisation (TRO), are suspected of making their way to the separatist Tamil Tigers.
"At the time Mr. Rajaratnam made the donations, the TRO was not banned by the Sri Lankan government, nor the US. It was a donation made in good faith," the central bank's investigations unit chief, D.K. Wijesuriya, told AFP.
The central bank is the leading investigating authority in Sri Lanka for all financial transactions that are suspected of breaching money-laundering laws.
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) are considered a terrorist organisation by Sri Lanka, the United States and the European Union. After decades of civil war, the government declared victory over the LTTE in May.
Wijesuriya said their investigations did not uncover any wrongdoing by Rajaratnam, who he said had given the money to the TRO for reconstruction work following the December 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami.
The TRO was outlawed in Sri Lanka in November 2007 and its assets were frozen a year later.
Sri Lanka's securities regulator said there were no probes on Rajaratnam's dealings in the island's tiny 10-billion-dollar bourse.
"None of his trades ever aroused our suspicion. This (the US charges) came as a surprise," the Securities and Exchange Commission director general, Channa de Silva, told AFP.
Federal prosecutors in New York charged Rajaratnam, founder of the Galleon Management hedge fund, with securities fraud and conspiracy to commit securities fraud.
Sri Lankan shares tumbled 3.1 percent in morning trade Monday on fears of economic fallout from the US case against Rajaratnam, who has substantial business interests on the island.
Rajaratnam, who had his primary education in Sri Lanka, is the world's 559th richest person according to Forbes magazine with a net worth of 1.3 billion dollars.
Sri Lanka's justice ministry thanked Rajaratnam last month for donating millions of dollars to rehabilitate child soldiers conscripted by the Tamil Tigers.(MORE)

We will decide fearlessly- President

Armed forces' sacrificed not in vain :
(By : Rasika Somarathna in Matale)
Even though terrorism had been defeated certain forces which preached separatism and who tried to divide the country were still at large. "We are closely monitoring the situation and to defeat this and in the struggles ahead to build a new country we shall not fear to take necessary decisions in the face of any dangers that we may face," said President Mahinda Rajapaksa. (MORE)

China ready to work with EU

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