Posts tagged ‘right to protest’

February 6, 2011

Do you have visuals of attack on News Forst at Punchi Borella – MTV/SIRASA

by sd


February 05, 2011: The Newsfirst media team covering the protest march last evening at Punchi Borella was set upon and their video camera was taken away by a certain group that attacked the protest march.It was done when the team was recording the event on video.

The incident, where our cameraman and his fellow journalist was assaulted and his camera being snatched away may have been recorded in your camera, mobile phone or any other device.In the event that you are in possession of such visuals, Newsfirst would like to have access to such visuals on condition that your identity would not be revealed

Read the full story here

February 6, 2011

UNP looking at legal action over Punchi Borella attack

by sd

 

After the attack - campaign went ahead

February 5, 2011, 7:00 pm
By Franklin R. Satyapalan

The UNP is considering legal action over Friday night’s attack on its candle- lit procession demanding the release of Gen. Sarath Fonseka, the party’s General Secretary Tissa Attanayake said yesterday. Several people were injured in this attack by goons armed with steel rods who set upon the protesters and their vehicles causing damage running into millions. Police said yesterday that no suspects had been arrested with the media spokesman, SSP Prashantha Jayakody, saying that the organizers had said that they were carrying out their protest at the Borella junction where maximum protection was provided. However, contrary to the original, plan they had moved towards Punchi Borella where some persons performing a Bodhi Pooja asked them to go further away.

READ MORE

December 20, 2010

WE ASSAULTED STUDENTS AT DEHIWALA; STRIPPED THEM NAKED IN PERADENIYA, SAYS SB

by sd

December 19, 2010: We assaulted the protesting students at the Dehiwala Higher Technical Institute and chased them away leaving them only with their underwear and in Peradeniya, we stripped the fasting students naked and chased them away, said a beaming S. B. Dissanayake, Minister of Higher Education yesterday.

The minister made this statement attending a workshop held in Colombo yesterday on the theme ‘Preparing for a strategic plan to develop skills’, taking place for all institutions affiliated to the Ministry of Higher Education.

He said that the violent behaviour of students at universities could not be prevented when such an environment was prevalent.

“Students turn violent because they know they could afford to do so. The students of the Dehiwala Higher Technical Institute chased away its director and occupied his official quarters.

“Venerable monks, it took me only four minutes to slap two or three on their ears and chase them away. It took only four minutes. They ran along the streets in their underwear around 8pm. Now there’s no hum.

“In Peradeniya, they had put up a hut and was conducting a big fast. We went around 3am. We wanted to embarrass them a little. We stripped them naked and chased them away,” said the Higher Education Minister S. B. Dissanayake.

http://www.newsfirst.lk/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=15093:we-assaulted-students-at-dehiwala-stripped-them-naked-in-peradeniya-says-sb&catid=1:latest-news&Itemid=18

October 21, 2010

Sri Lankan police attack protesting students

by sd

By Panini Wijesiriwardena
21 October 2010

The Sri Lankan courts denied bail on Monday to 18 university students arrested during a police attack on a protest last week demanding the release of six other students. The arrests are part of government efforts to suppress broad student opposition to the privatisation of universities and worsening conditions on campuses.

The students have been charged with “unruly behaviour” under the draconian Prohibition of Ragging and Other Forms of Violence in Educational Institutions Act, which was revived in April. Under the law, university authorities have sweeping powers to ban student political activities, including protests and occupations, and to call police onto campuses. Many offences cited under the Act are unbailable and liable to imprisonment for up to ten years.

More than 2,000 students took part in the protest last Thursday in central Colombo to demand the release of their fellow students. The protesters marched to the Ministry of Higher Education and occupied the building for about an hour before attempting to leave by bus. Hundreds of riot police blocked off all the roads and assaulted students with clubs, belts, tear gas and water cannon. Eight injured students were hospitalised.

One student told the WSWS: “The police caught me and attacked me. I fell down and my right elbow was injured. They hit me with belts on my head and all over the body. Then they took me to Cinnamon Garden police station. There were another 20 students. Four of us were taken to the police station at about 8 pm and kept there until about 3 am before being taken to hospital. But others had wounds to their bodies. They were even not taken to a doctor.”

Another student described being grabbed by police when he tried to free a colleague: “When they attacked, I fell down. Then several policemen kicked me brutally. My nose started to bleed. Then they dragged me into the ministry and told me to wash my face. After that they took us to the police station. There is a contusion on the back of my head.”

Police also attacked journalists and photographers. Journalist Bigun Gamage from Lankadeepa told the Sunday Times: “The students said they would leave the [nearby] park peacefully. The police allowed them to leave. But as soon as the students came out, the police started to assault them again. The students scattered, but the police continued to hit anyone they could catch. We saw a group of 10 policemen beating up one student. The officers chased away the others who were standing and watching.”

The police surrounded the reporters and lashed Gamage with belts. When one of Gamage’s colleagues tried to help, he was dragged away and beaten up. When reporters showed their government-issued journalist identity cards, the police abused them. Journalist associations held a protest on Tuesday condemning the attack.

The police objected to bail when the arrested students were produced in court, claiming that they had damaged ministry property, an offence under the Public Property Act. Colombo Chief Magistrate Rashmi Singappuli ordered students be remanded until October 29.

Backing the police, Higher Education Minister S.B. Dissanayake insisted that the Anti Ragging Act would continue to be enforced. “We are going ahead with the objective of making this country a centre for education in the region. In the process, one, two or three students could be expelled or imprisoned and that would not be an issue. Not only one or two, in the process of restructuring our universities, we will punish even 500 or for that matter even 1,000 students,” he warned.

Dissanayake’s comments about transforming the island into “a centre of education in the region” point to far-reaching plans to turn higher education into a money-making venture by privatising the most lucrative aspects of universities and potentially bidding for foreign students. Already the government has approved the establishment of foreign-affiliated universities that will charge exorbitant fees.

On October 16, Rohan Rajapakse, acting vice chairman of the University Grants Commission (UGC) told the state-owned Daily News: “Sri Lanka intends to bring in a new University Act shortly which will pave the way to open private universities in the country legally as the current University Act does not permit private universities in Sri Lanka.”

Government is slashing public expenditure on education as part of the austerity measures being demanded by the International Monetary Fund (IMF). The budget for 2010 has already cut the deficit to 8 percent of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) this year—down from nearly 10 percent last year. Government expenditure on education has fallen from 2.67 percent of GDP in 2006 to 2.08 percent in 2009.

Last week’s demonstration was called by the Inter University Student Federation (IUSF), which is aligned with the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP). Like the JVP, the IUSF is based on a mixture of Sinhala communalism and populist demagogy. It is notorious on university campuses for the use of thuggery against its political opponents, including the International Students for Social Equality (ISSE).

Higher education minister Dissanayake has exploited the JVP’s methods to justify violent police repression. In an interview with Lakbima on Monday, he declared that in order to “free the universities,” the government would “sack these [JVP] thugs”. Dissanayake’s comments are a warning to all students that the government will not hesitate to use the police to suppress any opposition to its policies.

Despite its militant rhetoric, the IUSF is steering students into a political dead-end by promoting the futile conception that the government can be pressured to drop its plans. In response to the latest police assault, IUSF convenor Udul Premaratna announced that his organisation will carry out more protests shortly to demand the release of all students held in remand.

The IUSF and JVP now criticise the government but they were in the forefront of bringing President Mahinda Rajapakse to power. The JVP helped draw up Rajapakse’s 2005 election program, which included restarting the civil war against the separatist Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), and actively campaigned for his election victory. At the time, the IUSF’s slogan was “Motherland first”—that is, before university education. It gave its blessing for the military to operate on the campuses.

The JVP is currently in alliance with Sarath Fonseka, the former army commander responsible for the ruthless operations against the LTTE, who ran as the joint opposition candidate in the presidential election in January. In the course of the election campaign, Fonseka made clear his support for pro-market restructuring and thus by implication the IMF’s demands for large budget cuts, including to education.

The International Students for Social Equality condemns the brutal police attack on university students. We demand the unconditional dropping of all charges against the jailed students and their immediate release.

At the same time, the ISSE calls on students to reject the politics of the IUSF and JVP. The struggle to defend free university education and to halt the privatisation plans necessarily involves a political struggle against the government. Students cannot carry out this fight alone. They have to turn to the working class to build an independent movement to fight for a workers’ and farmers’ government based on socialist policies. The ISSE calls on students to form ISSE branches in every university and to fight for this program.

http://www.wsws.org/articles/2010/oct2010/sril-o21.shtml

September 9, 2010

FR Petition By The JVP ( right to protest)

by sd

The JVP today (9) filed a fundamental rights (FR) petition in the Supreme Court over the arrest of its members in Galle on August 12.

DNA parliamentarian and JVP Propaganda Secretary Vijitha Herath said the Galle police had assaulted two JVP MPs Ajith Kumara and himself and JVP Southern Provincial Councilor Nalin Hewage while they were in police custody at the Galle Police Station.
Herath last month lodged a complaint about the incident with the Inspector General of Police (IGP) at the Police Headquaters in Colombo calling for an impartial investigation into the incident.
The JVPers were arrested after they participated in a protest calling for the release of former Army Commander and DNA Leader Sarath Fonseka in Galle last month.

http://www.thesundayleader.lk/2010/09/09/fr-petition-by-the-jvp/

September 7, 2010

Police in the buff to succour Rajapakses – Stop all buses travelling to Colombo (to protet)

by sd

Tuesday, 07 September 2010

Buses traveling from various parts of the country to Colombo today have been stopped by the police and are being unnecessarily checked say our reporters. As a result even those who go on excursions and pleasure trips have been harassed and confronted with serious issues they point out.

A number of temporary police barricades have been erected on Galle road, Kandy road, High-level road, Negombo road and Horana road which are the main roads leading to Colombo. According to our reporters barricades have been set up one at each kilometer.

Meanwhile, several buses carrying people travelling to participate at the agitation organized by the JVP in Colombo today have been stopped by the police. The police have threatened owners of buses that have arrived from Anuradhapura, Bakamoona, Polonnaruwa, Galle, Matara, Akuressa and Hakmana and had turned them back.

Our reporters say senior police officers of many police stations in the island have been deployed for this operation.

http://www.lankatruth.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=6636:police-in-the-buff-to-succour-rajapakses-stop-all-buses-travelling-to-colombo&catid=34:lead-news&Itemid=50

August 23, 2010

TNA MPs face court cases for participating in a rally

by sd

2010-08-23
The Hatankudu Police has filed a case against three TNA MPs, provincial councilor, and head of the Unemployed Graduates Union for organizing and participating in a protest march in Batticaloa on August 11 against the unemployed graduates in the East.

The case has been filed by the police before the Batticaloa Magistrate claiming the protest had been organized without receiving the required permission. The court has asked TNA MPs P. Ariyanenthran, P. Selvaraja, S. Yogeswaran, provincial councilor Thurairatnam and Unemployed Graduates Association
Head to be present in court when the case is to be taken up on September 4.

TNA MP P. Ariyanenthran said that since the Emergency Regulations pertaining to protests have been removed, there were no barriers to hold protests in the country.

http://www.lankanewsweb.com/news/EN_2010_08_23_005.html

August 12, 2010

Leaders of DNA including Vijithe Herath arrested – Right to protest

by sd

The General Secretary of the DNA Member of Parliament Vijithe Herath, Member of Parliament Ajith Kumara and the JVP Member of the Southern PC Nalin Hewage have been arrested by police immediately after the agitation the DNA held in Galle today.

The Members of Parliament have been assaulted and taken into custody when they went to Galle Police to make a complaint regarding the police attack on the agitation says our reporter. The Members of Parliament are being detained at the police station at the moment.

http://www.lankatruth.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=6400:leaders-of-dna-including-vijithe-herath-arrested-&catid=34:lead-news&Itemid=50

July 27, 2010

Police attack group of students, two injured & two arrested ( right to protest)

by sd

Tuesday, 27 July 2010 08:09

A group of students from Kelaniya University putting up posters against the brutal police killing of Susanthe Bandara, the third year student of the Faculty of Natural Sciences and Social Sciences of the University of Ruhuna, have been assaulted by personnel of Kiribathgoda Police today (27th) morning. Two students who were injured in the police assault have been admitted to Colombo National Hospital. Two other students have been arrested by the police.

http://www.lankatruth.com/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=6253:police-attack-group-of-students-two-injured-a-two-arrested&catid=34:lead-news&Itemid=50

July 26, 2010

Six uni students arrested ( for putting up posters)

by sd

Monday, 26 July 2010 08:31

By Sherwani Synon

Six university students have been arrested by the police for putting up posters saying that police officials involved in the death of Ruhunu university student Susantha Aruna Bandara should be arrested.

Speaking to Daily Mirror online the spokesperson for the Inter University Students Federation (IUSF), Udul Premaratne said these students were arrested last night in Nugegoda while they were putting up these posters.

While two Sri Jayawardenepura University students were arrested by the Kirulapone police, four students of the Indigenous medical faculty of the Colombo University were arrested by the Welikada police.

The students are placed in remand custody at present. He further said that the police had also removed cut outs placed at the Kelaniya , Sri Jayawardenepura and the Indigenous medical faculty of the Colombo University.

“We will be filing  a case at the Supreme court within this week as we think this is a violation to our freedom of expression,” Udul said.

Meanwhile, when Daily Mirror online contacted Police media spokesman SP Prishanth Jayakody, he said he wasnt aware of such an incident as he had not recieved any details of these arrests. (Daily Mirror online)

http://www.dailymirror.lk/index.php/news/5349-six-university-students-arrested.html

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