Tamils from across Europe gathered in Geneva Saturday to commemorate the life Murugathasan Varnakulasingham, who died in February last year to draw attention to the plight of hundreds of thousands of Tamils being starved and killed in the Vanni, Sri Lanka. The commemoration coincidentally followed soon after former UN official, Gordon Weiss, admitted that the Sri Lankan government was responsible for the deaths of up to 40,000 Tamil civilians in the last days of the war alone. This is a figure far larger than the 7,000 the UN had previously claimed as being the number killed in the Vanni, but even that figure was disputed by the Sri Lankan government.
"We Tamils, displaced and all over the world, loudly raised our problems and asked for help before [the] international community in your own language for three decades. But nothing happened ... So I decided to sacrifice my life ... The flames over my body will be a torch to guide you through the liberation path," Murugathasan had said in a letter he left near his body before self-immolating himself in front of the UN office in Geneva.
Marking the anniversary of his death, the protestors said it was still not too late for the UN to act, as the Tamils continue to be oppressed in
“It is time the UN recognized the deliberate genocide of Tamils in
The event began with the raising of the national flag, followed by a moment of silence in memory of all the Tamils who have been killed in the war. The flame of sacrifice was lit by Mr Murugathasan’s father, following which all those gathered laid floral tributes in front of a Mr Murugathasan’s picture. Speakers from across