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Thursday, March 21, 2013

Providing  resources for school children 

A ceremony was organized to provide instruments for school children who are living in selected six welfare camps as displaced people due to the war since 1990 on 3 th of March 2013 at the agrarian school in Maradanamadam, Jaffna.   
This ceremony was organized by the  Jaffna district fisher organization being leaded National Fisheries Solidarity Movement.




More than 600 children  as well as about 30 parents participated to the ceremony representing six camps such as Needavan, Sabapathi, Konatkulam, Pilleyar, kannagi and Selvepuram-.  Miss. Julias who is the chair person of the “ Punkalar” organization of women headed families played the main role of the ceremony.  Prof. V.P. Sivanadan in Jaffna university participated as the chief guest and Prof. Susei Anandan   ( geography section in the university of Jaffna) Hon. Father Jayakumar( former director of SEDEK ) Mr. S. Sukirthan( president of the local government in Tellippali, Walikamam North) Mr. T. Prakash( president of local government in Walikamam South) Mr. Siril Anthony Kusin  ( President of society of displaced people) Miss. S. Sahila ( President of “ Tharaka” society of women headed families) also participated to the ceremony.

Miss. Lavina Hasanthi who is the women coordinator of National fisheries Solidarity Movement explained the objectives of the program. According to her, support to develop the educational situation of the children of women headed families which are living in the six  welfare camps as well as three villages facing many economical difficulties  providing school instruments for them and the issues of the people who are living in the camps since 1990 are to be concerned for the government officials for resettling them were the mains objectives of the program.

Expressing the invitees, they said that the people who are living yet in the camps should be resettled soon. People are facing many difficulties. They have to move even  form the welfare camps because land owners have requested the people to release their land because welfare camps have been built in the privet properties. So, people are going to displace again.

Two children who participated to the program shared their experience as refuges in the camps explaining their existing situation of their life.  Finlay, school instruments provided to the children.   There was considerable media coverage for the ceremony. 

Thursday, January 10, 2013

Is Poverty a Sin? ( Merciless World )

Rizana Nafeek executed in Saudi Arabia

President Rajapaksa and the Government deplores the beheading of Miss Rizana Nafeek
Rizana Nafeek the Sri Lankan housemaid who was sentenced to death in Saudi Arabia was beheaded last morning in Dawadamy, Saudi Arabia, according to the Ministry of External Affairs (MEA). Despite the assurances given as recently as last week by various diplomatic sources that she would be released, Despite assurances as late as last week from Sri Lanka’s Ambassador to Saudi Arabia that she would be released, the Saudi Arabian government went ahead with her execution
The relatives of the beheaded Sri Lankan maid Rizana Nafeek gather outside their home in Muttur, Trincomalee. Pic by M.Murasil the Saudi Arabian judiciary went ahead with her execution.
“President Rajapaksa and the Government deplores the beheading of Miss Rizana Nafeek,” a statement by the MEA released last evening said.
Last Saturday President Mahinda Rajapaksa sent a second appeal to the King of Saudi Arabia seeking her release and calling for a deferment of the execution until a settlement was reached between the parents of the deceased and the reconciliation committee negotiating on behalf of the Sri Lankan government.
“The Government of Sri Lanka pursued all avenues to have Miss Rizana Nafeek released from the death row and sent several Ministerial delegations that included the recent visits of Minister of External Affairs Prof. G. L. Peiris, Minister of Foreign Employment Promotion and Welfare, Dilan Perera, the delegation led by Governor of Western Province, Alawi Moulana, religious leaders and senior officials of the Ministry of Foreign Employment Promotion and Welfare and the Ministry of External Affairs,” according to the MEA.
Rizana had gone to Saudi Arabia in April 2005 to work in the house of Saudi Arabian national Naif Jiziyan Khalaf Al Otaibi. While she was bottle-feeding an infant in her care, on 25th May, 2005 the child had choked and died soon after.
She had been arrested on the day of the incident and according to Saudi Authorities confessed to the killing of the child. However she had later retracted her statement, claiming that her initial confession had been obtained under duress. In 2007 a threemember panel of judges from the Dawadami High Court headed by Chief Justice Abdullah Al-Rosaimi found Rizana Nafeek guilty of murdering the four-month-old child. An appeal against the beheading of the accused was filed on behalf of Rizana by a Riyadh-based law firm, later that year.
“The Government of Sri Lanka arranged for an appeal against the death sentence with the assistance of the Asian Human Rights Organisation based in Hong Kong, but the Superior Court of Saudi Arabia had confirmed the death sentence, according to the statement by the MEA.
Sri Lankan authorities had attempted to meet the father of the deceased but he had refused to meet any persons seeking a pardon for the housemaid. The case was shifted between higher and lower courts in Saudi Arabia.
However in September 2010 the Supreme Court in Riyadh upheld the death sentence. In October that year President Mahinda Rajapaksa sent the first letter to the government of Saudi Arabia requesting clemency for Nafeek.

Source : http://sundaylankadeepa.newspaperdirect.com/epaper/viewer.aspx