Author name: Super Admin

අපේ ආහාර පද්ධතිය අර්බුදයක – කාන්තා ගොවීන්ට විසඳුම විය හැකිද?

ආහාර මිල ශීඝ්‍රයෙන් ඉහළ යාම, ආහාර හිඟය, ප්‍රධාන ආහාර සඳහා ආනයන මත යැපීම – ශ්‍රී ලංකාව මේ වන විට විශාල ආහාර අර්බුදයකට මුහුණ දී සිටී. ආහාර දරා ගැනීමේ හැකියාව අතින් දුප්පත්ම රටවල් පහේ පළමු ස්ථාන පහට ශ්‍රී ලංකාව හිමි වී තිබේ (සංවර්ධන අධ්‍යයන ආයතනය, 2021). ආහාර මිල ඉහළ යද්දී ගොවීන් තම නිෂ්පාදන සඳහා නිසි මිලක් ලබා ගැනීමට පොරබදමින් සිටිති. අපේ ආහාර දැනට නිපදවන ආකාරයට අපේ පෘථිවියට තබා ගත නොහැකි අතර, ශ්‍රී ලංකාව ද ඊට ව්‍යතිරේකයක් නොවේ. රසායනික යෙදවුම් මත අධික ලෙස යැපීම නිසා සෞඛ්‍ය, පාරිසරික හා ආර්ථික අර්බුදයන්ට අප දැඩි ලෙස ගොදුරු විය හැකිය. ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ බිඳුණු ආහාර ක්‍රමය වෙනස් කිරීම සඳහා ප්‍රතිපත්ති හා භාවිතයන්හි වෙනස්කම් වල අවශ්‍යතාවය මෙතරම් පැහැදිලිව පෙනෙන්නට නොතිබුණි. අපේ ආහාර පද්ධතියේ මූලික වෙනසක් අවශ්‍යයි. කාන්තාවන්ට එයට නායකත්වය දිය හැකිද? ජාතික ප්‍රතිපත්ති රාමුව තුළ ඔවුන්ගේ දායකත්වය පිළිගැනීම හෝ පිළිබිඹු නොවුවත් ශ්‍රී ලංකාවේ කෘෂිකාර්මික අංශයේ කාන්තාවන් ඉතා වැදගත් කාර්යභාරයක් ඉටු කරති. ආහාර නිෂ්පාදනයේදී කාන්තාවන්ගේ දායකත්වය ඉතා වැදගත් වේ. තමන්ගේම ප්‍රජාවන්ගේ සිට බහුජාතික සමාගම් දක්වා විවිධ මට්ටම් වලින් බාධක පැනවුවද, ගොවීන් දේශීය ආහාර පද්ධති ශක්තිමත් කිරීම සඳහා නොපසුබට උත්සාහය පෙන්නුම් කරති. දේශගුණික විසඳුම් වලට නායකත්වය දීමට, ස්ත්‍රී පුරුෂ සමාජභාවයේ වෙනස්කම් බාධක වලට පිටුපාමින් සහ අඛණ්ඩව ලෝකය පෝෂණය කිරීමට ගොවීන්ගේ හැකියාවන් රජයන් හා සංවර්ධන ආයතන විසින් බෙහෙවින් හීන කර ඇත. ගොවීන්ට සහ ග්‍රාමීය කාන්තාවන්ට කෘෂිකාර්මික නිෂ්පාදන සම්පත් වලට සමාන ප්‍රවේශයක් ලබා දීමෙන් ඔවුන්ට සහ ආහාර පද්ධතියට බලපාන ප්‍රතිපත්ති හා භාවිතයන් පිළිබඳ කථිකාවන් අර්ථවත් ලෙස සම්බන්ධ කර ගැනීමට සහ ඒවාට බලපෑම් කිරීමට හැකි වේ. සාමූහික වශයෙන් අපි පුළුල් කතිකාවක් ගොඩ නැගීම සහ ඒ වෙනුවෙන් පෙනී සිටීම, දේශීය ආහාර නිෂ්පාදනය සඳහා කාන්තා දායකත්‍වය ඉහළ නංවන අතර ආහාර සුරක්‍ෂිතතාවය ශක්තිමත් කරයි. මූලික ගොවීන්ගේ සිට ව්‍යවසායකයින් දක්වා වටිනාකම් දාමය ඉහළ නැංවීමට ගොවීන්ට සහය වීම. දේශීය ආර්ථිකයට ගොවීන්ගේ දායකත්වය පිළිගෙන ඔවුන් නායකයින් හා සංවර්ධන හවුල් කරුවන් ලෙස නිරූපනය කිරීම. කාන්තා ගොවීන්ගේ ග්‍රාමීය ණයගැතිකම් විසඳීම සඳහා තිරසාර සූරාකෑමෙන් තොර විසඳුම් ලබා දීම, ප්‍රජා ඔරොත්තු දීමේ ශක්තිය ශක්තිමත් කිරීම සහ දේශගුණික විසඳුම් සඳහා ගොවීන්ගේ හැකියාවන් ස්පර්ශ කිරීම. නීතිය සහ සමාජය භාරය සහ සවිස්ත්‍රි කාන්තා ව්‍යාපාරය එක්ව ලෝක ආහාර දිනය සහ ලෝක ග්‍රාමීය කාන්තා දිනය සැමරීම සඳහා 17.10.21 දින පැවැත්වෙන මහජන සාකච්ඡාවක් සංවිධානය කර තිබේ. පහත දැක්වෙන කරුණු පිළිබඳව ප්‍රසිද්ධ සංවාද ඇති කිරීම මෙම උත්සවයේ අරමුණයි: කාන්තා ගොවීන්, ආහාර ස්වෛරීභාවය සහ කෘෂි විද්‍යාව ග්‍රාමීය ආර්ථිකයේ කාන්තාවන් පොදු ව්‍යාපාර ආරම්භ කිරීම, සමානාත්මතාවයේ අස්වැන්න: ආහාර ස්වෛරීභාවය සඳහා මාවත සකසන කාන්තා ගොවීන්. ඉහත සඳහන් සාකච්ඡා වල කාන්තා ගොවි නායිකාවන්, විද්වතුන් සහ ප්‍රජා සහ සිවිල් සමාජ නායකයින්ගේ නියෝජනයක් ඇත. මෙම  මහජන සංවාදය 17.10.21 පෙ.ව. 9.00 සිට ප.ව. 1.30 ට ආරම්භ වන අතර  ඒ සඳහා zoom හරහා සම්බන්ධ විය හැකි අතරම, Law and Society Facebook පිටුව සහ  YouTube නාලිකාව ඔස්සේ වැඩසටහන සජීව ලෙස විකාශය කෙරේ.

අපේ ආහාර පද්ධතිය අර්බුදයක – කාන්තා ගොවීන්ට විසඳුම විය හැකිද? Read More »

Vertical living in Colombo – a housing design for all income categories?

by Anuradhi Jayasinghe The COVID-19 pandemic has brought the issue of the maximum utilisation of scarce resources to the forefront – particularly, the issue of land use. The Sri Lankan mindset, influenced by cultural sentiments on possessing house ownership, has been traditionally driven by the need to own a plot of land and then build a house on it. This process is perceived by most Sri Lankans as an achievement regardless of the hardships and costs throughout the process. However, because of land scarcity, the rising prices of available lands and the costs of building a house, people in Colombo have moved onto other options. For instance, they tend to buy already-built houses but not those built in separate plots of land – such as condominiums and apartments. Some have moved away from Colombo in search of plots of land which are affordable to build their own houses. But this second option has created yet another challenge – traffic congestion.  The pandemic has highlighted the benefits of living that aligns with culturally ‘sentimental’ mindset of having separate houses in one’s own plot of land. Millennial lifestyles in Colombo – lives lead in apartments – have sometimes failed to respond to the pandemic. Complying with pandemic guidelines (e.g. maintaining social distancing) and maintaining mental, material, and social wellbeing simultaneously is quite impossible when living inside highly concentrated and high rise buildings. Life in an apartment in Colombo is not the same for everyone because living in an apartment (either in a formal and luxurious setting or informal highly concentrated high-rise apartments) has not been the first choice for everyone. This is definitely the case for residents of underserved areas who have been relocated and resettled involuntarily in these high-rises. During the last lockdown, the residents of the Siyapath Sevana Housing Scheme in Dematagoda launched protests claiming that the Rs.5000/- allowance by the government was not enough. This could be mainly due to the loss of the livelihoods of these residents who have previously lived in the Colombo 7 area. Still, these residents are struggling with this dilemma while being tagged as low-income families. This is another example of failed housing development programs in Sri Lanka although this re-location programme has been regarded as one of the most effective approaches next to on-site upgrading of under-served settlements. The re-settlement program seems to have only considered just shifting the residents from one place to another but not the livelihoods that they have engaged with. Moreover, residents in these highly concentrated high-rise flats have an equal chance of facing disease outbreaks as they were when they were living in their previous houses, within small separate plots of land with shared sanitary facilities. As opposed to living horizontally, these residents are now living vertically with the same congestion. It is true that now they have separate sanitary facilities yet, the shared spaces for instance when using elevators facilitate the easy spread of diseases like COVID-19. This is different from other luxurious apartment systems in Colombo where they have enough facilities, especially with regard to the space given per family. For instance, very few people use one elevator at a time due to the higher availability of elevators in a luxury condominium. Moreover, residents living in very formal and luxurious apartments are not experiencing the same challenge in collecting food during the lockdown as for the residents in high-rises such as the Siyapath Sevana scheme. The majority of the Siyapath Sevana residents are daily wage earners, and Sri Lanka still lacks an effective ration distribution program during lockdowns to feed those who need it the most. Above all, the high rising buildings for low-income residents are not equipped with facilities to promote the mental health of young and adults. If they were supported with such facilities for the residents to enjoy – for instance, libraries, indoor playgrounds, and gyms – they could live considering themselves as within in a bio-bubble during the lockdown. The resettlement approaches of underserved communities under the Colombo City beautification project has tried to fit all income categories into the same design – the vertical living design. Nevertheless, the components or the facilities and the wellbeing aspirations of the design differs between poor and rich. The pandemic has proved that relocating low-income communities into vertical designs is a failed approach not only for the wellbeing of the residents but also to adapt to future pandemic scenarios. Thus, urban planning must be inclusive of disaster-risk-reduction planning and be a response to secure equal wellbeing aspirations by planning equitable cities. According to Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), such measures includes continuous assessment of the needs of the dwellers and identifying the resources for planning and implementing responses together with preparing for a resurgence. Life in a city concentrated with people and activities is vulnerable to various stresses, both man-made and natural. As such, urban city planning is facing another challenge but has not yet been recognised – climate change risks. Urban development and climate change policies in Sri Lanka are planned and implemented in isolation, making cities more vulnerable to the impacts of climate change. Agriculture, water resources and coastal zones are the most popular among climate change discourses in Sri Lanka. However, changes in the microclimate are no exception to risk with the current speed of climate change, especially the hot and humid climate found within the high-rise buildings with compromised wind movements in Colombo city. Increasing temperatures will exaggerate the ill conditions for wellbeing within the highly concentrated high-rise buildings. In addition, residents cannot afford air conditioners and increasing electricity bills to adapt to the increased temperature. Initiatives such as the installation of solar panels to ease the electricity burden of these residents is also absent. Guidelines proposed for the COVID-19 pandemic includes living in a place with an ample amount of sunlight and good ventilation. Most constructions in the Colombo district have altered wind movements, and the residents in concentrated high-rise buildings are the victims of the adverse consequences of such constructions. This is just one example of how wealth inequality

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CSO’s demand for timely, transparent, scientific, evidence-based, accessible vaccination plan | කාලෝචිත, විනිවිධ පෙනෙන, විද්‍යාත්මක, සාක්ෂි පදනම් කරගත් ප්‍රවේශ විය හැකි එන්නත් සැලැස්මක් සඳහා සිවිල් සමාජයන්හී ඉල්ලීම් |Equality for All – Unless all are Safe

CSO’s demand for timely, transparent, scientific, evidence-based, accessible vaccination plan We, the undersigned, as citizens of Sri Lanka and members of civil society collective, express grave concern in the implementation of the vaccination drive in Sri Lanka. We call for greater transparency and a scientific approach in the vaccination program. Click here to read in English   කාලෝචිත, විනිවිධ පෙනෙන, විද්‍යාත්මක, සාක්ෂි පදනම් කරගත් ප්‍රවේශ විය හැකි එන්නත් සැලැස්මක් සඳහා සිවිල් සමාජයන්හී ඉල්ලීම් ශ‍්‍රී ලංකාවේ පුරවැසියන් සහ සිවිල් සමාජ සාමූහිකයේ සාමාජිකයන් ලෙස පහත අත්සන් තබා ඇති අපි, ශ‍්‍රී ලංකාවේ එන්නත්කරණ යාන්ත‍්‍රණය ක‍්‍රියාවට නැංවීමේ පිළිවෙල පිළිබඳව දැඩි අවදානයෙන් පසුවන්නෙමු. අපි මෙම එන්නත්කරණ ක‍්‍රියාවලිය පිළිබඳව දැඩි විනිවිදභාවයක් සහ විද්‍යාත්මක ප‍්‍රවේශයක් ඉල්ලා සිටිමු. සිංහල භාෂාවෙන් කියවන්න உரிய நேரத்திலான, வெளிப்படைத்தன்மை, மிக்க, அறிவியலபூர்வமான, சானறுகளின் அடிப்படையில், பெற்றுக்கொள்ளக் கூடிய நிர்ப்பீடனத் திட்டத்திற்கான சிவில் சமூகக் கூட்டமைப்பி ன் கோரிக்கை  கீழே ஒப்பமிட்டுள்ள நாங்கள் இலங்கைப் பிரசைகள் என்ற ரீதியிலும் சிவில் சமூகக் கூட்டமைப்பின் உறுப்பினர்கள் என்ற ரீதியிலும் இலங்கையில் தடுப்பூசியேற்றல் நடவடிக்கைகள் தொடர்பாக எமது தீர்க்கமான கரிசணைகளை வெளிப்படுத்துகின்றௌம். தடுப்பூசியேற்றல் நிகழ்ச்சித்திட்டத்தில் பாரிய வெளிப்படைத்தன்மைக்காகவூம் அறிவியல் அணுகுமுறைக்காகவூம் நாம் வேண்டுகோள் விடுக்கின்றௌம். தமிழில் படியுங்கள்

CSO’s demand for timely, transparent, scientific, evidence-based, accessible vaccination plan | කාලෝචිත, විනිවිධ පෙනෙන, විද්‍යාත්මක, සාක්ෂි පදනම් කරගත් ප්‍රවේශ විය හැකි එන්නත් සැලැස්මක් සඳහා සිවිල් සමාජයන්හී ඉල්ලීම් |Equality for All – Unless all are Safe Read More »

Women’s political participation in Sri Lanka’s 2020 Parliamentary Election

As Sri Lanka prepares for Parliamentary elections to be held in the month of April, we urge all political parties to fulfil the commitments they have made nationally and internationally to strengthen women’s political participation in the country. Women’s issues feature heavily in the campaign promises of all parties during any election, while the number of women in their nomination lists remain inadequate. We thus call on parties to place women with a commitment to gender equality in winnable positions on party lists and in constituencies. The support from the respective parties must however extend beyond the nomination. It is essential to ensure continued support for women candidates through adequate financing and fostering a safe environment in which they can campaign. Despite high social indicators, women continue to face many challenges in Sri Lanka. These challenges are compounded by other struggles they may face due to their ethnicity, religion, socio-economic background, or sexual orientation and gender identity. Experienced and committed women representatives could be a significant step in addressing these issues, through policy development and sustainable change. We recognise that restrictive gender norms and patriarchal values contribute to the underrepresentation of women in civic and political spaces. We call upon all policy makers to challenge these norms and biases, so that women, men, and all who do not conform to stereotypical gendered roles can contest on a level playing field. On this International Women’s Day, LST urges all parties to use the forthcoming election to increase women’s political participation and support women’s leadership, ensuring that women’s voices are in focus as a step towards this larger goal. Sri Lanka cannot achieve its potential unless it is founded on a policy of inclusive participation.

Women’s political participation in Sri Lanka’s 2020 Parliamentary Election Read More »

LST statement on the Presidential pardon for Shramantha Jayamaha

The Law and Society Trust is appalled that the Presidential pardon has been used to release Jude Shramantha Jayamaha – a man convicted of brutally murdering a young woman, Yvonne Jonsson, at the Royal Park apartment complex in 2005. This is the second presidential pardon given in quick succession that has done much to undermine the rule of law and the judiciary in Sri Lanka. We are informed that ‘many religious leaders, former Supreme Court Judges, lawyers, civil society leaders and youth leaders (yet to be named)’ have made representations to President Sirisena, recommending sympathetic consideration of the appeal for granting a Presidential pardon, but as many have condemned and criticized this move. The arguments expressed by these champions of Mr Jayamaha have not expressed a single word in consideration of the victim and her family. While we reject the death penalty and have publicly declared this stance, we do believe that punishments must be meted out for heinous crimes. Mr. Jayamaha committed a heinous crime and acquiring a PhD. in prison does not absolve him of his actions. We are moved to ask if this pardon was discussed and endorsed in cabinet and whether the wider impact of this action was considered. Besides the gross injustice done and disrespect shown to the victim and her family, and to the judiciary, it sends a message to the world that due process and justice has little value in Sri Lanka. If Sri Lankans are not assured of the rule of law and justice, who will have confidence in Sri Lanka – be it as investors or as tourists? It creates a belief that one does not have to fully pay for the consequences of wrongdoing. We live in trepidation that with the days left for the presidential elections more damage of this nature may be done. We urge all the presidential candidates to assure the country that they will not damage our judicial institutions further, in this manner and will act with responsibility. We urge the Bar Association and civil society committed to promoting and upholding human rights to condemn this action and consider what remedial actions may be taken. This is also the time to reflect on the commitment made in 2015 to abolish the Executive Presidency. That it is an institution that is vulnerable to abuse is further reiterated through such actions. We further urge that constitutional reforms are undertaken to ensure that the power to pardon is exercised in consultations with the Cabinet and the Attorney General so that ill-conceived decisions are not made in the future.

LST statement on the Presidential pardon for Shramantha Jayamaha Read More »

Ampara civil society organisation’s report launched blocked by Election Commission

The Law and Society Trust (LST) is deeply concerned with the decision that impeded the launch event of a report published by the Human Elevation Organisation (HEO) in Addalachchenai, Ampara on October 12th, 2019. HEO, a partner organisation of the People’s Alliance for Right to Land (PARL), compiled a report on land issues in the Ampara district titled ‘Land, Grabbing – Denial of Our Existence’. The Election Commission blocked the launch event that was scheduled to take place at the Al Sakki Hall in Addalachchenai, stating it to be in breach of election laws. A few days prior to the event, the organizers communicated with the area politicians and informed them that in accordance with instructions sent by the Election Commission, they should not attend the event. The event was designed as a discussion forum for civil society and the aggrieved community. On the day of the launch, the organizers, community members, regional and national activists, and the media, gathered outside the blocked venue, and questioned government officials who arrived on the scene, as to who would be accountable to them for their lost lands. The citizens of Ampara face a myriad of land-related issues, and LST believes the Presidential Election should not impede them from speaking out about their issues. Whilst we respect the Election law, and recognize the importance of its proper implementation, it should not be a barrier for citizens to raise their grievances and hold those in power accountable, particularly at an important political moment such as a Presidential Election.

Ampara civil society organisation’s report launched blocked by Election Commission Read More »

Responding to Easter Attacks: Role of New Social Imaginaries

Panel discussion and launch of the publication “Islamic Extremism: Clash of Civilizations or Clash within Civilization” by Vidura Prabath Munasinghe and Kaushalya Ariyarathne. Discussion Panel Malathei de Alwis Sivagnanam Jeyasanker Sharmila Seyyid Nirmal Ranjith Devasiri Date – May 28, 2019 Time – 3 pm Venue – ICES Auditorium, Kynsey Terrace, Colombo 08  

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assorted-color social media signage

Social Media Declaration 2019

The Law and Society Trust was among 16 organisation that developed a code of conduct for Responsible Social Media use in Sri Lanka, that has now been published as the Social Media Declaration Colombo 2019. The Declaration recognises the inviolable importance of the freedom of expression on or over social media, yet at the same time, encourage and strengthen the ethical, progressive, democratic and pro-social use of social media. LST is also a signatory of the Declaration. ‘Social media’ is under increasing scrutiny within the present Sri Lankan context. The resulting discourse on Freedom of Speech and Human Rights shows a lack of understanding of the complex nature of social media, or of the nuanced ideals of democracy or Freedom of Expression, especially by those in decision-making positions. The signatories of the Declaration believe that through the measures outlined, it would be possible to “create a progressive environment on the Sri Lankan social media sphere, to ensure beneficial experiences, devoid of harassment for all users.” Read the Declaration online here: www.socialmedialanka.org

Social Media Declaration 2019 Read More »

LST requests President to convene the Parliament

The Law and Society Trust is deeply concerned with the current developments in Sri Lanka and we urge the President to resolve this impasse by speedily re-convening Parliament and enabling Parliament to determine which member of Parliament has the support to lead the government.The Law and Society Trust is deeply concerned with the current developments in Sri Lanka and we urge the President to resolve this impasse by speedily re-convening Parliament and enabling Parliament to determine which member of Parliament has the support to lead the government. The constitutional process for appointing the Prime Minister and outlining the parameters of the President’s powers were established through the 19th Amendment and it should be followed. There is also a history of democratic agitation that led to enacting of the 19th Amendment. Disregarding it so summarily is a threat to the democratic process. Ordinary citizens are cynical of the delays in re-convening Parliament. They express sentiments publicly that it gives the members the opportunity to barter their votes to the highest bidder. This is not healthy for Sri Lanka’s democracy. The Law and Society Trust was established in 1982 and is witness to the highs and lows of Sri Lanka’s political developments. We advocate respecting peoples right to political participation and their right to select their representatives through a free and fair process.

LST requests President to convene the Parliament Read More »

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