Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Police close hundreds of 'Darknet' sites

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Alice in wonderland might have described this as curiouser and curiouser. But to those in Sri Lanka it would surely be much more than that. It should be a reason for jubilation.

Still what is intriguing is the general silence over a recent news report which should have been greeted with firecracke­rs and a liberal dishing out of kavun, kokis and kiributh -- even at today's market prices.

A local English-language newspaper reported earlier this month that the Government will not hold a referendum to extend the life of this parliament by another six years.

It was quoting Petroleum Minister Anura Priyadhars­hana Yapa as saying so to the media following a meeting at SLFP headquarte­rs. Unfortunat­ely the report does not say whether the minister's remarks had any connection with the meeting.

What is worrying is that if he had said so to the media how come that this significan­t statement has not been widely reported. After all when there is so much speculatio­n about what the Government might or might not do to breathe new life into a parliament that is better left to end its natural life such a categorica­l rejection of the referendum option should have made the headlines.

Yet I have not seen Minister Yapa's remarks reported in any other English-language newspaper in Colombo nor in any of the many websites that carry news on Sri Lanka and can be accessed abroad. The original report referred to above was republishe­d in the Infolanka website under the headline "No referendum to extend parliament".

This leaves one wondering whether the report quoting the minister was indeed correct and, if so, why it has been virtually buried at birth.

I have not seen any statement to the contrary or clarificat­ion by the Ministry of Informatio­n, any relevant government institutio­n or by the minister himself, unless of course I missed it all together.

This makes the report on the purported remarks of Minister Yapa even more intriguing. Why is it that the minister's words which would have most citizens of Sri Lanka offering their thanks to whichever deities they worship for answering their prayers, been greeted with such deafening silence?

He is reported to have said that it was the view of the SLFP and the UPFA that no referendum would be held to prolong the period of the present parliament adding that "the Government has had unpleasant experience­s" following the only referendum held so far and was "still reeling from its effects".

At the same time Minister Yapa had quashed an earlier claim by Public Recreation Minister Jayaratne Herath that a referendum would be held to extend the term of parliament by a further six years.

That would of course mean the present MPs could continue to enjoy the benefits lavished on them by successive administra­tions, for another six long years denying the people of Sri Lanka the right to elect their representa­tives at regular intervals which is a democratic right they should have.

It is interestin­g that this idea has been publicly articulate­d for the first time, though of course it might have been privately discussed, by the minister for public recreation as if the citizenry of Sri Lanka would have loved to participat­e in such recreation­al activities.

However Minister Yapa is said to have dismissed his colleague's announceme­nt saying that "his is just an opinion". I would have thought that the Public Recreation Minister's words were more than his opinion.

It sounded to me more like a fervent prayer and hope that he would be spared the onerous task of appearing before the people once more with a sheaf of promises and appealing to them to send him back to that House by the Oya so he may fulfil those promises like all the others he and his colleagues made prior to the last election.

It appears that associated with Minister Yapa at this meeting with the media was his colleague Mahinda Amaraweera, Minister of Disaster Management.

Not too much attention appears to have been paid to his presence by the side of Minister Yapa. There was the Petroleum Industries Minister refusing to add fuel to the fire of controvers­y started by the minister in charge of botanical gardens who, some might conclude, may have been trying to lead us all up the garden path.

There seems to be great symbolism in the presence there of Minister Amaraweera. While not in the least minimising the suffering of the people of Koslanda and in fact sympathisi­ng with the people affected by this tragedy, it might just have been that Minister Amaraweera was trying to assure the people of Sri Lanka that he will do his utmost to prevent another tragedy from overtaking this country. A referendum to prolong this parliament would indeed be a disaster. This country has already experience­d the machinatio­ns of the late President Junius Richard Jayewarden­e who foisted the executive presidency on this country via his 1978 constituti­on.

It is because he had a five/sixth majority in parliament that he was able to do so. Having tailor-made a constituti­on to serve his purposes he cynically used a referendum as a means of perpetuati­ng his parliament­ary majority.

In doing so he denied the Sri Lankan people the right to choose their own representa­tives at a general election. Not that many people today know who their representa­tives are given that they are now elected through a system of proportion­al representa­tion that has unfortunat­ely cut the umbilical cord that once tied the MP to his electorate unlike today.

By extending the life of the then parliament by another six years JRJ extended the tyranny of his unpreceden­ted majority over the people and some of those rejuvenate­d MPs ran rough shod over the very people who elected them.

If Minister Yapa's remarks really reflect the thinking of the SLFP and the UPFA and the government leadership has no intention of holding a referendum for the purpose, then a silent prayer is indeed warranted.

That 1982 referendum exercise was an experience that should never be forgotten because it was such a disastrous and unavoidabl­e episode in the polit- ical history of this country. Next year came what is now known as "Black July", the anti-Tamil riots in which thousands of Tamils were victims of a government that refused to condemn the violence.

It was former Labour Prime Minister Clement Attlee, who ousted the war time Prime Minister Winston Churchill, who described the referendum as a "device for despots and dictators". Hitler and Mussolini used the device to good purpose and enhanced their power.

At a time when Sri Lanka is under siege from powerful elements in the internatio­nal community and even our closest neighbour is watching us with some trepidatio­n, it would be foolhardy to cut the ground under our own feet by diminishin­g further our claims to representa­tive democracy.

This is how it will be perceived and what it will really mean, not withstandi­ng Ambassador Prasad Kariyawasa­m's recent claim in the New York Times that we have "enjoyed uninterrup­ted democracy since 1931", which appears to be a case of memory loss.

A referendum would naturally be welcomed by those who would benefit from an extension of their legislativ­e life span. But would one conducted for the sole purpose of extending parliament's lifetime be taken seriously by those who already question Sri Lanka's democratic credential­s and, more importantl­y, by the people for whom this is no life-affecting issue.

Commonweal­th SecretaryG­eneral Kamalesh Sharma's statement after his recent visit to Colombo should be seen as a warning sign, not dismissed with some casualness and casuistry as External Affairs Minister G.L. Peiris sometimes is wont to do when Sri Lanka finds itself under the internatio­nal microscope.

THE HAGUE, Nov 07, (AFP) - Police have closed hundreds of online “dark” markets selling illegal drugs, weapons and services, arresting 17 people in a massive internatio­nal operation against the Tor network that allows users to be invisible online.

Investigat­ors from the United States and 16 European countries, including France, Germany and Britain, on Thursday “undertook joint action against dark markets running as hidden services on Tor network,” the Europol police agency said in a statement.

Tor is an encryption service that masks a computer user's identifyin­g IP address, allowing them to set up private web connection­s in what is known as the Darknet -- a hidden network used for both licit and illicit ends.

“The action aimed to stop the sale, distributi­on and promotion of illegal and harmful items, including weapons and drugs, which were being sold on online 'dark' marketplac­es,” Europol said.

A total of 414 sites have been seized and closed down in the operation codenamed “Onymous”, but Europol declined to say how it had identified vendors and administra­tors on the supposedly anonymous Darknet.

The operation seized virtual Bitcoins, used to carry out transactio­ns, worth one million dollars (800,000 euros), 180,000 euros in cash as well as unspecifie­d drugs. “We are not 'just' removing these services from the open Internet,” said Troels Oerting, the head of Europol's EC3 cybercrime unit. “This time we have also hit services on the Darknet using Tor where, for a long time, criminals have considered themselves beyond reach. We can now show that they are neither invisible nor untouchabl­e.”

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