Friday, January 09, 2015

Sri Lanka’s new president sworn in

Maithripala Sirisena ends dynastic rule of Mahinda Rajapaksa, with election described as most significant for decades

Sri Lanka Awaits Results Of 2015  Presidential Election

 Sri Lanka’s newly elected president Maithripala Sirisena leaves the opposition leader’s office. Photograph: Buddhika Weerasinghe/Getty Images
Sri Lanka’s new president, Maithripala Sirisena, was sworn in on Friday after final results from historic polls made him the clear victor over the incumbent Mahinda Rajapaksa.
The result, which surprised many onlookers, ends a decade of rule that critics said had become increasingly authoritarian and marred by nepotism and corruption.
Analysts described the election as the most significant for decades in the island nation and a last chance for democracy. Many predicted widespread violence before, as well as after, polling. In the event, however, the transfer of power appeared to proceed smoothly.
“With this victory we will implement the 100-day programme in our election manifesto,” Sirisena told jubilant crowds in Colombo after his swearing-in. Sirisena had promised to change Sri Lanka’s constitution to drastically reduce the power of the president and return the country to a parliamentary system with a prime minister as its leader.
Sirisena also promised that he would not run again for president. He thanked Rajapaksa for conceding defeat but called for future campaigns to be “much more mature” and blasted the state media for its coverage.
“Even though they carried out character assassination and vilified me, I can say I had the maturity to bear it all as a result of my long political experience,” he said.
He took the oath of office with senior supreme court Justice Kanagasabapathy Sripavan, bypassing the country’s chief justice, who was installed by Rajapaksa in a widely criticised move to expand his authority even more.
Sirisena then swore in opposition leader Ranil Wickremesinghe as the prime minister.
Rajapaksa, who had called early elections in November confident of a win, conceded defeat on Friday morning and vacated his official residence hours before the official announcement.
Sirisena, 63, received 51.2% of the votes in Thursday’s election and Rajapaksa got 47.5%, said the elections commissioner, Mahinda Deshapriya.
The veteran politician Sirisena, who resigned from the government to lead the opposition, told his supporters that they shouldn’t “even hurt anybody’s feelings”.
“The honour of this victory is in your peaceful conduct,” Sirisena said.
The result ends the rule of the longest-serving leader in the region.
Celebratory firecrackers could be heard exploding in Colombo, the cultural and commercial capital, after the president’s office said Rajapaksa had met the leader of the opposition to accept the victory of his challenger.
Sirisena announced his candidacy hours after Rajapaksa, 69, called the election. The farmer-turned-politician united a fractured opposition and told voters he would root out corruption and undo unpopular constitutional reforms that have concentrated powers under the presidency.
In successive campaign speeches he attacked the Rajapaksa clan for seeking to perpetuate dynastic rule. Three Rajapaksa brothers held senior posts and the president’s 28-year-old son was widely seen as being groomed as an heir.
Observers said the unexpected challenge from the former health minister destabilised the incumbents.
“It definitely threw them. They’ve not been on their game,” said Alan Keenan of the International Crisis Group.
However, Sirisena, like Rajapaksa from the Sinhala majority, has not signalled any departure from the previous government’s hard line on reconciliation with the country’s Tamil minority.
Though significantly calmer than elections in 2010, the campaign was nonetheless marred by more than 400 incidents of violence, according to monitors, and allegations of fraud and intimidation.
Rajapaksa won handsomely in 2010, surfing a wave of popularity after overseeing a final bloody victory over ethnic Tamil separatists and ending a crippling 26-year civil war. He was seeking an unprecedented third term, having pushed through a constitutional amendment.
“We should also not forget President Rajapaksa was beneficial to the country, especially during his first term,” said Nayanajith Thilakarathne, a vehicle parts dealer in Colombo.
The decision to seek early polls may have been more an acknowledgement of growing unpopularity than a statement of strength, however. The benefits of economic growth have failed to reach the poor, especially in rural areas.
Corruption and apparent nepotism also led to anger.
“Good governance is the most important issue now. The common man should feel that rule of law applies to everyone across the board without any discrimination,” said Fritz Fernandez, a lecturer in the capital.
An adamant refusal to move on reconciliation with the Tamil minority and growing sectarian violence denied Rajapaksa votes among other constituencies.
Votes from the ethnic Tamil-dominated former war zone in the north of the country and Muslim-dominated areas appear to have played a key role in Sirisena’s victory.
According to one report, in the Tamil stronghold of Kilinochchi, Sirisena got nearly three-quarters of votes cast.
Rajapaksa fell out with the west over allegations of war crimes involving the deaths of many thousands of Tamil civilians in the final phases of the civil war in 2009, and refused to cooperate with a UN-mandated investigation, becoming increasingly close to China. He was also blamed for successive crackdowns – including alleged murders – of opponents, human rights campaigners and other critics.
The opposition has promised to address international concerns over war crimes and normalise relations with western nations as well as India.
Narendra Modi, the Indian prime minister, said he had spoken to Sirisena to congratulate him.
The first foreign dignitary to travel to Sri Lanka after the polls will be Pope Francis, who arrives next week for a three-day visit.
The new president will have to lead a potentially fractious coalition of ethnic, religious, Marxist and centre-right parties, however and any prolonged political instability will open the way for a Rajapaksa comeback. He has also given no indication that he will differ significantly from his predecessor on issues such as post-war reconciliation or on his broadly rightwing economic policy.
There are still fears of trouble ahead.
“Our culture is such that there is always a chance of post-election violence,” said Paikiasothy Savaranamuttu, of the Colombo-based Centre for Policy Alternatives, before the vote.
[SOUCE:theguardian.com]


Tuesday, August 27, 2013

Relatives of Sri Lanka's missing vent grievances at U.N



JAFFNA, Sri Lanka | Tue Aug 27, 2013 

(Reuters) - Protesters in Sri Lanka criticised the United Nations for a second day on Tuesday during a visit by U.N. Human Rights Commissioner Navi Pillay who is assessing rights in a country still divided by a 27-year war.
Angry members of the majority Sinhalese community protested in the capital, Colombo, on Monday, calling on Pillay to get out of the country and stop criticising its rights record.
Pillay visited the northern town of Jaffna on Tuesday, which was at the heart of a bid by members ethnic minority Tamil guerrillas to break away and where protesters criticised the United Nations for not protecting them.
"The U.N. failed in its responsibility," said Ananthi Sasitharan, a 42-year mother of three girls, who holds out hope her missing husband is alive, perhaps in a secret detention camp.
The husband, Velayutham Sasitharan, was a top Tamil rebel leader.
Sasitharan was demonstrating with about 300 other people outside the town's main library where the Pillay had a meeting.
They said they had protested after failing in their bid to meet Pillay to discuss their grievances over disappearances and what they see as land-grabs by the military.
The Sri Lanka government battled separatist Tamil guerrillas from 1983 until finally defeating them in 2009.
Tens of thousands of civilians were killed in the final months of the war, a U.N. panel said earlier, as government troops advanced on the rebels' last stronghold.
Many hundreds of people, most of them Tamils like Sasitharan's husband, simply disappeared.
INTERNATIONAL PRESSURE
Sasitharan said her husband had surrendered to the military on May 18, 2009, a day before the government declared victory over the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam rebel group.
"I am confident that he is alive. He is somewhere in a secret detention centre," she told Reuters.
Pillay's seven-day visit comes after a second United States-sponsored U.N. resolution in March this year urged Sri Lanka to carry out credible investigations into killings and disappearances during the war, especially in the brutal final stages.
A U.N. panel said earlier it had "credible allegations" that Sri Lankan troops and rebels both carried out atrocities and war crimes, and singled out the government for most of the responsibility for the deaths.
Sri Lanka has come under international pressure to bring to book those accused of war crimes and boost efforts to reconcile a polarised country. But it has rejected the accusations of rights abuses.
In July, President Mahinda Rajapaksa, under pressure from the United Nations and the West to address the question of rights abuses during the war, ordered an inquiry into mass disappearances.
According to human rights activists in Jaffna, more than 700 people disappeared in the final phase of the war between 2006 and 2009. Some said loved ones had been abducted by unidentified men in white vans.
Sasitharan and other relatives of the missing can only hope.
Sri Lanka's military spokesman, Ruwan Wanigasuriya, said he had no information about Sasitharan's husband.
"There are lists of all the detainees and the released people after the rehabilitation ... There are records of all of them," he said. "Anybody can get them from police."
(Editing by Robert Birsel)

Tuesday, July 02, 2013

Sri Lanka bans Time 'Buddhist Terror' edition


Sri Lanka has banned July 1 issue of Time magazine over its cover story on Myanmar's Buddhist-Muslim clashes, which it said could hurt religious sentiment on the island, an official said on Tuesday.

Customs department spokesman Leslie Gamini said they held the issue because it carried a photo of a prominent Myanmar monk under the headline: "The Face of Buddhist Terror".

"By operation of law these magazines will be confiscated," Gamini told AFP. "We did not allow this issue to be distributed in Sri Lanka because we felt it could hurt the religious sentiments of the people."

Buddhist-majority Sri Lanka, where tensions with Muslims and other minority religious communities have been rising, is the second country to censor the edition after Myanmar also blocked it.

The online version of the magazine was still available, however.

Religious tensions spiked in Sri Lanka this year after a radical Buddhist group objected to the halal certification of food in the country, overseen by Muslims.

Several mosques as well as Muslim-owned businesses were targeted by radicals, sometimes led by saffron-robed Buddhist monks.

President Mahinda Rajapakse, who is a Buddhist, urged monks earlier this year not to incite religious hatred and violence.

Several episodes of religious fighting in Myanmar have exposed deep rifts in the Buddhist-majority country and cast a shadow over widely praised political reforms since military rule ended two years ago.
In March at least 44 people were killed in sectarian strife in central Myanmar with thousands of homes set ablaze.
Communal unrest last year in the western state of Rakhine left about 200 people dead and up to 140,000 displaced, mainly Rohingya Muslims.


Read more: http://www.foxnews.com/world/2013/07/02/sri-lanka-bans-time-buddhist-terror-edition/#ixzz2XuTUp7bJ

Tuesday, April 03, 2007






!!!!!!!SING-UP NEW AND GET $10 NOW!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

Add Google Checkout Buttons next to your Paypal Buy Now Buttons in one click
In the cool and easy tool department, here’s a nice quick hack I just finished: a tool that helps you add Google Checkout buy buttons to your PayPal Buy Now Buttons. This tool gives you an easy way to add Google Checkout as another puchase option, give your users more choice about their checkout process, and save on free transaction processing. Ecommerce is all about choice:-) Here’s how it works:

First signup to create a Google Checkout merchant account, it takes 5 minutes. When you create your account, in the Settings/Integration tab check the box: “Allow shopping carts with name/value pairs to be sent to Google.”
Then use the Google Checkout Buttons Appender page: it lets you add Google Checkout Buttons to any of your existing static html pages using Paypal Buy Now Buttons: you just need to specify your Google Merchant Id and the url of your site and click submit. The Google Checkout Buttons will contain the same product name, price and quantity as the existing Paypal Buttons.
Test the new buttons to check they do what you expect: click the Checkout Buttons one the new page and determine wether the informations have been copied correctly.
Copy the generated HTML and replace your page with it.
If you plan to use this tool often, specify your Google Merchant Id and use the link at the bottom to generate a bookmarklet. Bookmark the generated link. Then everytime you browse one of your page that contains at least one Paypal Buy Now Button, you can add Google Checkout Buttons simply by clicking on the bookmark.

This script currently only migrates simple unencrypted Paypal Buy Now Buttons that specify at values for these at least item_number, item_name and amount. It does not handle taxes and shipping. If you have pages that have more needs than that, please send me their url so that I can have some test pages to improve the tool.

Use it at your own risks: this is very much a personal work in progress. If you are interested in the source code this script is part of the open source project Google Checkout HTML API utilities. Use the project’s issue tracker to log bugs, and the Google Checkout Developer Forum for feedback.


Wednesday, February 14, 2007

Dialog TV Launch. Another Succesful Marketing Campaign by Dialog

Few weeks ago I wrote this article comparing the marketing skills/sense of Dialog and Celltel. Today, I want to add further credits to Dialog's latest marketing effort.

So it's official now, and Dialog is into showbiz! Dialog launched their satellite television channel as "Dialog TV" recently. I'm not going to cover about the technical stuff about Dialog TV, since I believe Lanka Media Outlook and TV & Radio Sri Lanka blogs would be more than happy to give you loads of information very soon.

I'll stick to what I know the best. Dialog TV's launch campaign.

Satellite TV is not a new thing for Sri Lankans. But with Dialog TV it's different. Because, for the first time Dialog is taking the Satellite TV to the mass market of Sri Lanka. Until now, only the Rich up class market was the target segment for satellite TV.

For me, it's a well executed marketing plan by Dialog TV. Satellite Television, is a product which is more attractive to young children and the teenagers obviously, given the fact that more elderly people lacks the time to be spent in front of a TV set, and switch across 40 or 50 channels. In fact, I lack my time to watch the exisisting free to air channels in Sri Lanka.

I'm sure this is the case with most of the working class in this country, no matter how much they earn.

So, the barrier before Dialog was not affordability. They have enough customers with the potential income levels to afford a satellite TV connection, but they are not in the "right" mood to purchase due to time constraint.

On the other hand, the most lucrative set of "users" of satellite TV, doesn't have the spending power to make their own purchase decision, because either they are still at school, not earning enough to afford a satellite dish.

The marketing problem to be solved is; your best lucrative market, who are dieing to buy a Dialog TV connections don't have the purchasing power. On the other hand, the people who got the purchasing power, are not "willing" to buy a connection, because they don't have time to watch TV.

So, as a marketer how do you tackle this?

Simple. Just merge the two segments. Create a marketing message addressed at the one's who have the purchasing power, and focus on the "emotional bond" they have with the other segment; teenagers.

If I quote a Dialog TV advert, "Your Parent's didn't know 1000 things, but you know 10,000 things. Let your children know 100,000 things. Open the eye for Satellite TV era" (Some thing similar to this.)

Now, the message passed is "You should buy a Dialog TV connection, to support your young ones".

I think, this worked perfectly to the Sri Lankan market, because it created a sudden awareness among 40 Plus adults (Who, earlier were not enthusiastic about satellite TV much), and pushed them to consider buying a Dialog TV connection to the household.


Whether things worked really well for Dialog would be known only to them. If the campaign is a success, by now they should be getting a lot sales leads for new connections by mid/high income earning, middle class adults around all the cities.

Saturday, November 18, 2006

Sirasa Super Star Season 2 BeginsWithout a doubt it was the most watched television program in Sri Lanka. From little kids to old ladies, from Kataragama to Anuradapura, every one gathered around the TV's when Sirasa Super Star Season 1 was aired. It was all together a whole new experience for Sri Lankan music lovers.

Thousands competed, but at the end there was only one super star, which happened to be Ajith Bandara the lad from Kurunagala.

But, there were few other super stars introduced in the season one. No need to mention about Shihan Mihranga, who became a household name for every Sri Lankan in absolutely no time.

It's all set for the season 2 of Sirasa Super Star. Applications are being called, and the news is this time we have thousands more compared to the season one. Preliminary round competition has started from Dambulla this time.

From today onwards, this site will cover virtually everything related to the hit TV show Sirasa Super Star Season 2.

Be with us to share latest information and photo's about the show, the competitors, the winners, and to discuss about the stars of the season one too. Yes, to discuss about Shihan, Malith and all!
ADB Deemed Effective, But Could Do Better, Survey Finds

(14 November 2006) - ADB is viewed as effective and largely successful
in its work, but there is room for improvement, according to the first
ever independent ADB perceptions survey, conducted of more than 700
opinion leaders in 30 member countries.

Read the full story:
http://www.adb.org/Media/Articles/2006/10966-regional-survey/default.asp

It's Raining again in Colombo!

I'm not going to post anything new today. Ooops! It's raining heavily out here in Colombo. SE monsoon has arrived.
While I was driving to work this morning, along flooded Colombo streets, very interesting thing came to my mind!
CMC election is on 20th!
One party who is contesting for that election is proudly claiming "We ruled Colombo for 50 years" Is this the outcome of that? Flooded streets in Colombo?
The drainage system is so poor. What has these people done over all these 50 years.

Well we'll see what people of Colombo have to say on 20th. Whether they gonna give them another 5 years or.... what ever.

By the way, if you haven't casted your vote for "Have your say" on Sanath, why don't you take a look at it?

Thanks & have a nice day.

BBC, Sirasa News, Free media and Terrorism


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If you are looking for Sirasa News first, read this as well. You'll see the whole truth about Sirasa News first.
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Good day every one!

Couple of weeks back, we heard the news that Sri Lankans living in UK organized a huge protest against BBC. They were blaming the UK based media giant for being biased to LTTE, in their reports about Sri Lanka.
Few days later BBC came up with a reply in their website! They, are trying to point that, both GOSL & LTTE is accusing them for being biased to the opponent, and highlighting it as a proof for how impartial they have been through all these years!

When going through all these news feeds, I was thinking about our local media. How they behave in the face of recent set up in the country, specially after the suicide bombing at Army HQ.

I've watched almost all the TV news channels during past few weeks, and read all national news papers, just to grasp some idea about "what's going on in north & east (and whole SL) these days"Apparently what I noticed is, Sirasa news is giving almost "equal" or some times "more" chances to news items promoting the ideology of tigers.For example, they've quoted a TNA MP, to say "recent civilians killings in kytes is done by Navy" as the headline to cover that story (Ofcourse Later they've given a chance for a navy spokesman to deny the charges), while other channels covered the story, starting from Navy's denial statement.And for me it seems, to Sirasa both Keheliya Rambukwella & Thamil Chelvan are equal citizens! One is the spokesman for GOSL, and the other for LTTE.True, a media should be impartial and unbiased.But is this the same way CNN behaved about al quida?Is this the same way BBC behaved about London Tube bombing?Isn't it the duty of a media institution (nationally established) not to telecast news items which demolish the moral of the armed forces, when the country is at edge of war?Is it fair, for Sirasa to give equal coverage to LTTE press releases, and their statements, which could be harmful for the moral of the armed forces and by large of the general public?
Is Sirasa TV news first act as pro LTTE?
Have your say! I'll keep you posted on this in the future too.


Unofficial Sirasa Blog!

When I was going through my statcounter data, I noticed, for past few days I've been getting few visits to this blog from the keyword "Sirasa TV Blog".

Then I realized, this blog has Unofficially become the "official Sirasa Blog", given the amount of posts I've dedicated for topics related Sirasa and Sirasa News.

So, until Maharaja decides to blog himself, and start the "official Sirasa Blog", I declare this as the "Unofficial Sirasa Blog" :-)

Because, you don't have to watch Sirasa TV or Sirasa news. I will watch it on behalf of you, and report here! (LOL)

Ok, now for the benefit of all my readers here at the "Un official Sirasa Blog", I will list down all my previous blog posts related to Sirasa and Sirasa News.
Scholarships for Sri Lankan students

On the birth anniversary of Mahatma Gandhi, the Indian High Commission in Sri Lanka launched a programme to award scholarships to 100 A level students, four from each of the 25 districts in the country.

Known as the Mahatma Gandhi scholarship, it envisages an award of Rs. 1, 500 every month to each selected student for a period of two years. The districts covered include areas controlled by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam. The number of awardees from 2007 onwards would go up to 200.

Separately, the Swarajya Foundation, a non-governmental organisation, launched the Mahatma Gandhi Centre. Inaugurated by Indian High Commissioner Nirupama Rao, the Centre seeks to promote concepts such as non-violence, equality, social cohesion, harmony and environment.

At another function organised by the Sri Lanka-India Society, Sri Lanka Constitutional Affairs and National Affairs Minister D.E.W. Gunasekera delivered the \"Gandhi memorial oration-2006\" on the relevance of Mahatma Gandhi to the efforts for resolution of ethnic conflict in the island nation.