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  • Starvation in Vaharai

    As the last reserves of food ran out amongst the Tamil people in the Vaharai region, the United Nations warned of an impending crisis this week.

    But Sri Lanka’s military tightened its blockade and continued to shell refugee camps in the Tamil Tiger-held enclave.

    Thousands of refugees in Vaharai protest against the Sri Lankan government embargo. Photo TamilNet

    “A humanitarian tragedy is unfolding in Vaharai and the international community should not remain silent any longer, the Tamil Rehabilitation Organisation (TRO) said.

    “The situation in Vaharai is grave and demands an urgent response,” the United Nations office in Colombo said this week.

    “15,000 people are isolated without access to food or basic supplies as stocks are decimated,” the UN said.

    “Displaced people and residents are trapped in a conflict zone with hardly any food, medicine or clean water,” the ICRC (International Committee of the Red Cross) said.

    The Sri Lankan military has maintained a total embargo on supplies into the area since October as part of a major onslaught against the LTTE in the east.

    Only one convoy of humanitarian aid has been allowed in since then. And that was on November 29th, after the government of Sri Lanka (GoSL) briefly came under intense pressure from the international community.

    That pressure has tailed off, even as Sri Lanka has stepped up its military offensives against the LTTE in the east, directing indiscriminate bombing and shelling at human concentrations in the area.

    “We stand ready to assist those still trapped in Vaharai. These persons are the most vulnerable of the vulnerable,” the UN’s Acting Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator, Amin Awad, said in a statement.

    “We must always recall that it is the most weak who remain behind – the elderly, the sick and the disabled. They are still without access to food, emergency medical services, and shelter, and continue to be caught in the middle of relentless fighting,” Awad added.

    In a desperate appeal on Friday, the TRO said there was food for only one or days.

    But, amid silence from the international community, the embargo has not been lifted.

    “We only have enough food for one or two more days,” TRO’s Vaharai Director of Operations, Mr. Moorthy, told reporters in a telephone message from there.

    “The people are suffering and there is nothing that we can do due to the SLA embargo on food and medicine.”

    “It is the responsibility of the GoSL and the international community to ensure that these civilians are not made to suffer due to a lack of food, medicine or the threat of bombing or shelling.

    After refugees around Vaharai hospital were targeted by Sri Lankan heavy guns, the TRO pleaded for the area to be defined a ‘safe haven.’

    The Sri Lankan military says it will capture Vaharai within a month and says it will not ease the pressure on the region.

    After taking control of the eastern province in the next two months, Sri Lanka’s military will recapture the areas held by the Liberation Tigers in the north of the island, the Army (SLA) Chief, Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka, said last week.

    On Tuesday Sri Lankan artillery shells hit the Verugal area to the north of Vaharai, killing two people and wounding nine others. The victims had fled shelling in Vaharai on Tuesday.

    Vaharai hospital was hit during Monday’s bombardment which was directed at a refugee encampment around it.

    Three people were killed and eleven wounded.

    Four critically injured civilians were moved by the ICRC to Valaichchenai District hospital in government-controlled territory. One of the four succumbed to her injuries at Valaichchenai hospital.

    “[We] urgently appeals to all parties to the conflict to respect their obligations under international humanitarian law and thus ensure that the civilian population and civilian objects are respected and protected at all times,” the ICRC said.

    “This law prohibits attacks against civilians and civilian objects in all circumstances.”

    Tamil parliamentarians are appealing to the international community to act.

    Last week Batticaloa district parliamentarian, S. Jeyanandamoorthy, urged Ban Ki-moon, the new UN Secretary General, to prevail upon the Sri Lankan government to declare a safe-haven Vaharai for civilians to take shelter in.

    "The international community that has played a role in the peace process, has a moral responsibility over the Tamils, as a people, suffering in the hands of a failed post-colonial state," Mr. S. Jeyanandamoorthy.

    The GoSL has already rejected an earlier call to declare a humanitarian zone encompassing the Vaharai hospital and the surrounding areas for the protection of the civilians.

    Meanwhile, 20,000 people who last month trekked through jungles to escape the SriLankan shelling by crossing into government controlled areas are also living in miserable conditions, the UN said.

    “Despite reaching relative safety they still they face many problems and an uncertain future,” a UN news report said.

    Even government controlled parts of the Tamil-dominated are running short of food.

    “Sites are hosting people at twice their actual capacity, the district is facing a potential food shortage and many families have been separated in flight or during transport to emergency sites,” according to the head of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) field office in the town of Batticaloa, Yoko Akasaka.

    Many of those fleeing Vaharai and gone into the enclave to escape Sri Lankan offensives against their homes in areas such as Sampur in the Trincomalee district.

    UNHCR has offered the authorities assistance in organizing so-called “go and see” visits so that community leaders and other volunteers can visit their former homes, many further north of Vaharai in Trincomalee district, and decide whether return would be safee.

    “Many people first fled to Vaharai because of violence elsewhere and they are worried about whether it will be safe to go back,” Ms. Akasaka said.

    “They simply don’t know where they will be safe. Even here, there are reports of abductions from displacement sites.”

  • Not ignorance, but indifference.
    Former United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s action plan, titled ‘In Larger Freedom: Toward Development, Security and Human Rights for All’, addressed three priorities that included “freedom to Live in Dignity”.

    In the area of human rights, Annan asserts that priority should be placed on taking concrete steps to reduce selective application, arbitrary enforcement and breach without consequence. His specific recommendations include:

    (i) The “responsibility to protect” should serve as the basis for collective action against genocide, ethnic cleansing and crimes against humanity. If a state is unable or unwilling to assume this responsibility, the international community needs to act, including enforcement action by the Security Council as a last resort.

    (ii) The rule of law should be strengthened and all treaties relating to the protection of civilians should be ratified and implemented. Cooperation with the International Criminal Court and other international or mixed war crimes tribunals should be promoted and the International Court of Justice should be strengthened.

    But in Sri Lanka, “freedom to Live with Dignity” is currently non-existent for Tamils of the NorthEast.

    Thousands of civilians have died in the past few months alone and more than 350,000 people have fled their homes.

    The UN threatened to suspend aid operations in Sri Lanka after the international ceasefire monitors (SLMM) blamed the Sri Lankan military for the execution on August 6th of 17 local staff of "Action Contre la Faim."

    A signed agreement by the government with the LTTE to share international tsunami aid with Tamils in LTTE-controlled areas has never been implemented.

    Meanwhile, the arbitrary bombing of schools, villages and refugee camps carried out by Sri Lankan state on its own citizens appears to be done with a total lack of concern for any consequences of its actions.

    In the name of fighting terrorism, blockades and economic sanctions are being applied as collective punishment to Tamil civilians with no apparent concern for their devastating impact.

    These actions by the state are all well recorded and recognized by several national governments, INGOs and the UN itself.

    If such a situation does not warrant action by the UN and the international community, it is doubtful the Secretary-General’s action plan will ever have an applicable environment.

    The silence of the international community to the reality unfolding in Sri Lanka’s Northeast is shocking to the Tamils, both there and, especially, in the Diaspora. There is a saying in Tamil that you can wake someone who is sleeping but not someone pretending to be asleep.

    The international community not only exerts significant influence over Sri Lanka but has also, to a great extent, presided over the last five years of the conflict management. But now it simply walks away when confronted with the result of its action.

    The principles loudly articulated when action was taken by the international community against the LTTE when fresh bans were imposed on the LTTE last year are no longer spoken about.

    Instead the Sri Lankan government is able to proceed with impunity.

    The callous disregard for Tamil lives is also reflected in the enthusiastic response from the international response to the Sri Lanka’s offer of economic partnerships, including ventures in conflict zones, with the blatant aim of bringing in new partners in the war against the Tamils

    The lone stance taken by Germany in regards to funding projects in Sri Lanka was heartening, but this falls far too short and comes far too late to have any impact on restraining the state.

    It is of little wonder that discussions amongst the Tamils, particularly amongst the Diaspora, is increasingly dominated by the position that the there is no option but self-defence in the face of the state’s escalating violence.

    The ongoing aggression by the Sri Lankan government and the apparently deliberate inaction by the international community are quickly removed the doubts of the dwindling number of Tamil sceptics of this argument.

    The book ‘We did nothing’ by Linda Poleman is serves as an eyeopening read for those who still expect international action to halt state aggression against Tamils. Polman's observations about UN response in Rwanda should also serve to shatter complacency about international commitment to humanitarian norms.

    Today’s international environment does not offer any legitimate space to armed non-state actors defending their basic human rights of their people even in the face of well planned and executed genocides.

    Anyone with a nominal understanding of the past sixty years of Sri Lanka’s history is aware of the onslaught against the Tamils by the Sri Lankan State and also how the response of the Tamils correspondingly escalated to an armed struggle.

    It is the sheer unwillingness of the international community to respond in appropriate ways during the early stages of this conflict that led to what they now call “a terrorist problem.”

    Outlining his Action Plan to Prevent Genocide, Mr. Annan said the first step must be to prevent armed conflict by addressing the issues that cause it.

    “We must attack the roots of violence and genocide: hatred, intolerance, racism, tyranny, and the dehumanizing public discourse that denies whole groups of people their dignity and their rights,” he said.

    Protecting civilians during war is a second step in thwarting potential genocides, the Secretary-General said, noting that in more and more conflicts non-combatants, including women and children, are no longer just “caught in the crossfire” but have become the direct targets of violence and rape.

    “Wherever civilians are deliberately targeted because they belong to a particular community, we are in the presence of potential, if not actual, genocide,” he said, warning the international community that it could no longer afford to be blind to this grim dynamic.

    “Let us not wait until the worst has happened, or is already happening,” the Secretary-General concluded.

    “Let us not wait until the only alternatives to military action are futile hand-wringing or callous indifference. Let us be serious about preventing genocide. Only so can we honour the victims whom we remember today. Only so can we save those who might be victims tomorrow.”

    But Annan’s inescapable logic has no relevance in a today’s global politics dominated still by interests, rather than principles.

    It is more than evident that the international community’s (in)actions in Sri Lanka are based entirely on calculated opposition to the LTTE and support for the state than anything else, especially a desire for a just peace.

    How can the Tamils respond to the state’s violence? They are denied the space to legitimately respond in meaningful ways.

    But dying is no alternative.

    The Tamils cannot console themselves, that, just as in Rwanda and Darfur, the international community will sincerely regret its inaction after yet another genocide.

    The Tamils have proved their astonishing resilience by refusing to succumb to the unprecedented might thrown at them.

    A community with such tenacious survival instincts and bound by a strong affinity with their culture and language will not relent.
  • New War
    There can be no doubt that 2007 will be one of full-scale war in Sri Lanka. Army commander Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka was emphatic last week; his forces would clear the east within a month and then concentrate to destroy the LTTE in the north, he vowed. President Mahinda Rajapakse shares his confidence. The government is rolling out the political dimensions of the Sinhala hegemonic project - especially the de-merger of the Northeast Province - with a new urgency.
     
    The administration's confidence is infectious, with even the splintering main opposition UNP also now loudly proclaiming the need to defeat terrorism - while also clinging to the notion that there must be a political solution. The ultranationalists of the JVP and JHU no longer stand out as the entire southern polity bays for a total military victory. Even the so-called Sinhala left is hurrying to the bandwagon. And even the international community, while still insisting that there can be no military solution to the ethnic question, has both backed off to give Sri Lanka the space to attempt one and is also providing the required support for it. This confidence in a military solution comes primarily from the past few months of battlefield retreats by the LTTE. We see nothing served by arguing the contrary; we will merely point out that this is not the first time the LTTE has been emphatically written off by the Sri Lankan state and the international community.
     
    However, whatever the reality of LTTE strength, this moment ought to be an eye-opener for the Tamils. As confidence in the military solution has grown, so has enthusiasm waned - both in the south and in international capitals - for power-sharing with the Tamils. For years now we have been told that the LTTE was the Tamils' problem, that the Tigers' hard line was precluding a lasting solution.
     
    But amid a conviction the LTTE can be destroyed, all insistence on a political solution has evaporated. The present situation highlights the Tamils' core dilemma: who can force a lasting solution out of the Sinhala-dominated Sri Lankan state? Who can guarantee our political rights or even our physical security? The international community (which so officiously appointed itself 'Co-Chairs' of the peace process years ago) has gone silent, rousing itself only when attacks blamed on the LTTE occur. There is (an unsurprising) collaborative silence as scores of Tamils perish in the state's violence. None of the passionate defenders of human rights that emerged during the peace are to be heard now - though some self-serving charlatans who profited from liberal laments (mixed with a little LTTE-bashing) during President Chandrika Kumaratunga's 'war for peace' continue with business as usual. In short, the Tamils find themselves, as ever, facing the Sinhala lion on their own. Except for India. Ironically history repeats itself as Delhi is again compelled by local pressures and familiar misgivings to confront a rampant Sinhala nationalism at Sri Lanka's helm.
     
    But President Rajapakse is confident enough of his military project to openly disregard Delhi's demands. His vision of Sri Lanka is framed not by a one of devolution, but of radical demographic change. That is why the de-merger of the NorthEast Province (NEP) has been rushed through. The JVP filed the Supreme Court case, paving the way for President Rajapakse to realise the division of the Tamil homeland in practice. In short, President Rajapakse intends to clear the Tamils from the east. His military campaign began last April with a broad-front onslaught to drive the Tamils out of Trincomalee. He has continued this murderous campaign since, herding our people down the eastern coast, destroying village after village as he went. He has done so with the approval of the international community and to the enthusiastic applause of the Sinhalese. It remains to be seen what, if anything, India can do to dissuade President Rajapakse from his war, especially when he is convinced he is fulfilling the tenets of the Sinhala revolution his SLFP party inaugurated in 1956.
     
    In the meantime the Tamils have to confront a new reality. Unwilling to accommodate our political aspirations, Sri Lanka and the international community have taken the Tamil struggle back to the battlefield. We are once again on familiar ground. The Tamils are again confronted with the same choice they faced in 1995 after President Kumaratunga hoisted the lion flag over occupied Jaffna and turned to the Vanni: unite or perish. Now, as then, our community, both in the homeland and amongst the Diaspora, must come together. Once again we have to alleviate, as best we can, the suffering in Vaharai and the rest of the Northeast. Once again we have to stand firm against Sinhala efforts to destroy us.
  • How war became possible
    When President Mahinda Rajapakse British Premier Tony Blair last August, he had already resumed the war against the LTTE,  Photo colombopage.com
    One year after he came to power, Sri Lanka’s President Mahinda Rajapakse can be justifiably pleased with himself. He is well on his way to executing his stated vision and delivering on his election pledges to the Sinhala heartland.
     
    Rajapakse never made any secret of his intents. In fact he laid out its broad contours in his election manifesto, ‘Mahinda Chinthana,’ and openly declared his views later.
     
    Sri Lanka’s stuttering peace process was a ‘short sighted’ project implemented in ‘haste’ he said. The 2002 Ceasefire Agreement (CFA) and the international monitoring mechanism would be ‘reviewed’ if he won.
    The interventions of the Co-chair’s (the US, UK, Japan and Norway) would be restricted whilst greater ‘cooperation’ would be sought with China, Russia and Pakistan.
     
    As far as solving the decades long conflict, his administration would reverse the sellout of his predecessors and ensure the undivided (read unitary) state stood.
     
    Any solution would not be ‘trapped’ within concepts of a Tamil homeland or self-determination, he warned.
     
    He would, however, come up with a solution. But only after (read if) it received a ‘majority consensus’ – shorthand for approval of the Sinhalese majority.
     
    He insisted he was for peace, naturally. But he also set timeframes for the LTTE to ‘renounce separatism, demilitarize (read disarm), enter into the democratic process and discussion of a final solution and implementation such a solution.’
     
    Early into his tenure the LTTE, as expected, rejected any negotiations based on a ‘unitary’ state and insisted on Tamil homeland and self-determination as the basis for talks.
     
    Rajapaksa smoothly shifted gears into the next phase of his project – the implementation of his real solution to the ethnic question.
     
    A core aspect of Rajapaksa’s solution is the dilution of any Tamil claims to a traditional homeland. In practice that means ensuring regions where Tamils constitute a majority are demographically undermined.
     
    And that, as can be expected, means colonization, ethnic cleansing and the redrawing of boundaries.
     
    This is not the first time in the conflict that the Sri Lankan state has embarked on such a policy of demographic reengineering.
     
    But it is the first time it is being done with the international community in close attendance.
     
    That the Sri Lankan armed forces would launch a war in the east has long been known. This newspaper, in its June 29, 2005 and April 19, 2006 editions, outlined the rationale of this eventuality.
     
    But the wholesale expulsion and scattering of the Tamil population is Rajapakse’s variant of the plan.
     
    After the April 2005 suicide bombing that wounded Army Chief Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka, the armed forces responded with a massive bombardment of LTTE-controlled areas in Trincomalee district. Over 40,000 people were displaced.
     
    Whilst there has been sporadic criticism of the disproportionate response few discerned the ethnic cleansing which had begun for what it was.
     
    And yet few international actors have protested when it did become clear.
     
    The long-standing policy of blocking food and medical aid to Tamils in the region is another facet of an integrated strategy. This has also failed to draw an international reaction.
     
    Even now, despite the dire situation in Vaharai and Verugal, Rajapakse’s fundamental policy of mass displacement has been met with silence (read tacit approval) by the international community.
     
    Notably, displaced from Sinhala colonies and most of the Muslim community have been quickly resettled in Trincomalee. It is the Tamils who are still being scattered.
     
    There is no doubt that, provided Rajapakse’s war goes according to plan, aggressive colonization of Tamil areas and redrawing of local electoral zones will follow swiftly.
     
    Almost every decade since the 1950’s has seen such state-aided colonization projects being implemented, supported by official and paramilitary violence against the Tamils.
     
    And that was long before Vellupillai Pirapaharan, the LTTE or 1983.
     
    In the meantime, Rajapakse has been systematically addressing the ‘betrayals’ of the five years of peace process.
     
    He has effectively sidelined the Norwegian facilitators and the Sri Lanka Monitoring Mission (SLMM) as he had pledged to do (the peace envoys were subjected to a verbal shelling, the SLMM chiefs to a literal one).
     
    In the last few months Rajapakse has systematically rendered the CFA meaningless. He closed the A9 highway in August (a ‘standing’ breach of Clause 2.10) and in December he re-introduced Prevention of Terrorism legislation (a ‘standing breach of Clause 2.12).
     
    At the time of his election, his liberal and leftist advocates argued that Rajapakse’s electoral pacts with the ultra- Sinhala nationalists were merely opportunistic and that he would follow more centric policies once he gained power. They were quite wrong.
     
    With hindsight it is clear that Rajapaksa is not a typical politician mired in coalition politics. He is in fact a single minded Sinhala nationalist President who has assembled a close team of trusted hardliners and is rolling out a calculated plan to deliver on his nationalist pledges.
     
    The cotorie includes two of his brothers - Gobathaya, a former Army officer who has been appointed Defence secretary and Basil, a de-facto chief of staff and trouble shooter in the administration. Another key team member is Army Chief Fonseka, Gobathaya’s former commander.
     
    This team has now presided over a series of major offensives against the LTTE, throughout much of the past year.
     
    The CFA is an utter irrelevancy in their calculations, though for appearances sake, the logic of ‘defensive offensive’ is trotted out to the Colombo embassies.
     
    With a series of victories against the LTTE under Rajapakse’s belt, it is no accident that parallels are being drawn to the Sinhala king Duttu Gemunu, who famously vanquished the Tamils to safeguard the island for the Sinhalese.
     
    Rajapakse himself has taken to referring to the conflict as one between him and Pirapaharan (or between the ‘Sinhala Hero’ and the ‘Vanni Hero’, as he once arrogantly told Tamil parliamentarians who came to plead for Vaharai with him).
     
    Despite having restarted the war, Rajapaske has been careful to provide a plausible excuse for international inaction: he is said to be seeking a ‘southern consensus’ on a political solution to offer the Tamils.
     
    Seasoned observers would say he already has a consensus: ‘defeat terrorism and protect the unitary state.’
     
    Even the opposition UNP, riven by internal dissent, is only half heartedly clinging to the Oslo and Tokyo declarations on federalism (lest anyone forget, the Oslo Declaration also reiterates the salience of the Tamil homeland).
     
    Yet the international community continues the pretence that Rajapakse is seriously engaged in working out a power-sharing package ahead of pursuing a negotiated solution.
     
    But all of Rajapakse’s actions (except the All Party Committee) points to the exact opposite: an all-out war against the Tigers and the dismantling of Tamils’ claims to their homeland in the island’s Northeast.
     
    The premeditated and ruthless policies of starvation and mass killing directed against the Tamils, particularly in the eastern province, are comparable to those used at the height of military onslaughts by previous Presidents.
     
    And under the new PTA and Emergency Regulations, the disappearances of pro-independence or autonomy (now federalism) Tamils has rocketed.
     
    Even before then, large numbers of civil society activists, academics, humanitarian workers, journalists and other key elements of Tamil society have been targeted for assassination and ‘disappearance.’
     
    The term genocide should not be lightly used. But it is the institutionalized and multi-faceted (physical, cultural, biological, etc.) nature of the oppression against Tamils by Sri Lanka’s Sinhala-dominated state that make it applicable.
     
    For their part, the international community has consciously aided many aspects of Rajapakse’s phase of this long-running slow genocide.
     
    It should be remembered that the Sri Lankan military, including most of its senior officers, have all been trained by the United States and likeminded states.
     
    It should also be remembered that the vast war machine that Rajapaske inherited and is now unleashing has been carefully (re-)built since 2002 with international assistance and funding.
     
    It was being prepared long before Rajapakse came to power, for whoever might be in office. Such support is part of what Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe (who was expected to be President now), smugly called the ‘international safety net under the peace process.’
     
    With the LTTE seen as the central problem, the peace process was, for the international community, an elaborate exercise in counter-insurgency. The war machine was partly deterrence to keep the LTTE in the negotiation process and partly preparation for the possible eventuality of a return to war.
     
    But even if this international logic is taken at face value, what is truly shocking is that there has been barely a murmur about the wide-scale violence being unleashed upon the Tamils as a whole (and not just the LTTE).
     
    Human rights and international humanitarian law, it seems, are not universal principles, after all.
     
    It has been argued – and this is the view of some policy makers in Western capitals – that the LTTE and the Tamils brought the present crisis on themselves by boycotting the Nov. 2005 elections.
     
    That allowed Rajapakse, who took the overwhelming majority of Sinhala votes, to come to power despite his arch-rival, Wickremesinghe taking the Muslim, Hill Country Tamils and some Sinhala votes.
     
    But this logic of blaming of the victim is flawed for very clear reasons.
     
    The fact that Tamils are a numerical minority in Sri Lanka leaves them ever vulnerable to majoritarian domination. The return of a Sinhala hardline government prepared to revoke power-sharing agreements and reinstate supremacist policies and will always be a clear and present danger.
     
    Throughout the peace process, the implied protection against such an eventuality was, of course, the international community.
     
    But if this were truly so, then it shouldn’t matter who comes to power in Sri Lanka.
     
    However as Rajapakse has amply demonstrated, even international treaties such as the Indo – Sri Lanka agreement, are worthless unless they are backed by credible powers that the Tamils can call on for support.
     
    Although few believed that the international safety net extended to protecting the Tamils from the Sinhala-dominated state, the international community’s tacit endorsement of Rajapakse brutal actions is the prime reason that humanitarian crises have erupted across the Northeast.
     
    Indeed, last year this column warned that Rajapakse had nothing to lose from attempting a military solution:
     
    Were he to pursue a negotiated solution, he would have to concede to some form of federalism, something he and his Sinhala constituency found unacceptable.
     
    However, were he to launch a war and succeed, then he could dictate the terms of a weaker solution. On the other hand, if the war failed, then he would be back at the negotiating table discussing no more than federalism, because that was the ceiling the international community had set on Tamil aspirations.
     
    So the ferocious war being thrust upon the Tamils is not the result of a series of unfortunate and unforeseen events though last year.
     
    Rather it is a result of a combination of factors.
     
    Firstly, the local and international preparations to contain the Tamil struggle (including the rebuilding and expansion of the Sri Lankan military and economy) that have been underway since the peace process started in 2002;
     
    and, secondly, the ascension to power of a hardline President, who despite his unabashed Sinhala-nationalist mind-set, has the support of the same international community that was underwriting the peace process.
     
    With arms flowing in from his international allies via Pakistan and with financial support assured from Japan and other donors, it would seem there is very little standing between Rajapakse and a new ethnic map of Sri Lanka. Except for the LTTE, of course.
     
    In short, what is unfolding in the Northeast is not a consequence of the international community being unable to influence Sri Lanka’s internal politics.
     
    Rather, it is the reverse. It is because, despite all the warning signs, the international community actively intervened to stack the cards against the Tamils and to reinforce the Sinhala-dominated state against them.
     
    That is why is so quiet out there now.
     
    The game, meanwhile, is on. Again.
  • The name makes the news

    When does a rebellion become a revolution? That's easy — when it wins. When does an uprising attain the level of an insurgency and qualify as an insurrection? That's harder to answer because the meanings of those synonyms flow into one another.

    And when do all of the preceding amount to a civil war? That term usually denotes the struggle of an armed group of citizens within a nation seeking forcibly to seize control of the government from those in power. But that does not reflect the complexity of the war in Iraq today, which makes it hardest of all to define.

    The linguistic dogmas of civil wars past are inadequate to the stormy present. In olden times — a generation or so ago — civil war required each major combatant to control some territory, have a functioning central authority and be recognized by some outside country — or some combination thereof. But guerrilla operations, suicide attacks on civilians, secret foreign support angrily denied, counterfeit uniforms and splintered insurgent forces supported by foreign terrorists make obsolete the past definitions of civil war — especially when the insurgents or terrorists are trying to overthrow a new government backed by a coalition of foreign troops.

    Small wonder, then, for the current verbal warfare in the United States over what label we should attach to the hostilities in Iraq. The Bush administration prefers sectarian strife between Shiite and Sunni religious groups, triggered by terrorists and Saddamists backed and supplied by totalitarian Iran and Syria. That language emphasizes the global stakes in the central front of the war on terror and supports goals of ensuring stability of the elected government followed by withdrawal of our troops over time. The furthest that administration spokesmen will go is to use the civil war phrase with qualifiers.

    Contrariwise, the departing UN secretary general, Kofi Annan, took the position two weeks ago that civil war was not nearly a strong enough description.

    "When we had the strife in Lebanon and other places," he told the BBC, "we called that a civil war. This is much worse."

    In the debate among Americans, advocates of a more rapid withdrawal see the coalition led by the U.S. not as building a democracy after liberation from a dangerous dictator but as an interloper in a civil war, and consider it only realistic to press for adoption of that label. In pressing that phrase, they get across the message "We don't belong in the midst of another country's internal conflict."

    Soon after the recent U.S. election victory of Democrats, the definers of the nature of the fight as a civil war made a tactical lexical breakthrough in the media. A few days after The Los Angeles Times began describing the fighting in Iraq with that phrase, Matt Lauer of NBC announced that his network had adopted the usage.

    Lest this be seen as a "Cronkite moment," recalling the CBS anchor's denunciation of the Vietnam War as being "mired in stalemate," James Poniewozik of Time magazine noted that "polls and common sense indicated that most Americans already believed Iraq's sectarian fighting was a civil war."

    The Iraq Study Group's report took pains to avoid the phrase.

    In The New York Times, under the headline "A 'Civil War' in Iraq Is Putting Words on Trial in America," its media reporter, David Carr, noted that for months the newspaper had been modifying civil war with phrases like "on the brink of" and "on the verge of.'

    Call the fighting what you like, but the name you choose to give the hostilities, strife, violence or war not only reflects your view about the current state of affairs but is also an indication of where you stand on what the policy should be.

    Labels are the language's shorthand for judgments.

    Extracts of IHT article published on December 17, 2006

  • The fatal fantasy
    In the ruined city of Falluja, behind the lines of giant sandbags and barbed wire that surrounded a tiny American outpost, I sat in my body armour and helmet and thought of George F Kennan, the grand old man of American diplomacy.

    I was thinking of the brilliant young Kennan who during the late 1920s and 1930s gazed out on the crumbling European order from Berlin and Prague and read the signs of the coming world conflict.

    In Falluja I met his reincarnation in the person of a junior State Department official.

    This bright, aggressive young man spent his 20-hour days rumbling down the ruined streets with reluctant marine escorts, meeting Iraqis and writing tart cables back to Baghdad or Washington telling his bosses the truth of what was happening on the ground.

    As I watched him joking and arguing with the local sheikhs, politicos and technocrats I thought of the indomitable young Kennan of the inter-war years, and of how, if the American effort in Iraq could ever be made to “work”, only undaunted and farseeing young men like this one, Kennan’s spiritual successor, could make it happen.

    This was October 2005, on the eve of the nationwide referendum on Iraq’s proposed constitution. I had come to Falluja, the heart of rebellious Anbar province, to see whether the Sunnis could gather the political strength to vote it down.

    The Sunnis had boycotted the first postSaddam election. This time, after Herculean efforts of persuasion by the American ambassador, most Sunnis were expected to vote. Would they affirm the political process or doom it?

    After midnight, in the dimly lit American bunker on the eve of the vote, the young diplomat suddenly leant forward and confided quietly: “You know, tomorrow you are going to be surprised. Everybody is going to be surprised.

    People here are not only going to vote. People here — a great many people here — are going to vote yes.”

    I was stunned, but I took his words as an invaluable bit of inside wisdom from the American who knew this ground better than any other.

    As I travelled from polling place to polling place a few hours later, however, Fallujans told me of their hatred for the constitution, which they believed was meant to divide and destroy Iraq. In fact, 97% of those who voted in the province voted no.

    With all his contacts and commitment, with all his energy and brilliance, on the most basic and critical issue of politics on the ground my young “Kennan” had been entirely, catastrophically wrong.

    You know that in a country torn by a brutal and complicated war those Iraqis who are willing to risk their lives by meeting Americans are very often dependent on the Americans for their livelihoods and survival. You know that the information these Iraqis draw on is limited, and that what they convey is selected to please their interlocutor.

    You know that much of your information comes from a thin, inherently biased slice of Iraqi politics and Iraqi life.

    But hundreds of conversations lead you to think, must lead you to think, that you are coming to understand what’s happening in this immensely complicated, violent place. You come to believe you know.

    As this precious stream of flickering knowledge travels “up the chain” from those collecting it on the shell-pocked ground to those in Washington offices ultimately making decisions based upon it, the problem of what we really know intensifies.

    Policymakers, peering second, third, fourth-hand into a twilight world, must learn a patient, humble scepticism.

    Or else, confronted with an ambiguous reality they do not like, they turn away, ignoring the shadowy, shifting landscape and forcing their eyes stubbornly toward their own ideological light. Unable to find clarity, they impose it.

    Anyone seeking to understand what has become the central conundrum of the war — how it is that so many highly accomplished, experienced and intelligent officials came together to make such monumental, consequential and obvious mistakes — must see beyond what seems to be a simple rhetoric of self-justification.

    Extracts from The Sunday Times Review article, ‘The fatal fantasy’ published December 10, 2006
  • Rest in peace, Bala Annai
    Bala Annai, as you were once a Marxist I don’t know if you believed in God and heaven and such things, but wherever your atman is now I hope you are looking upon your people gathered here today to say goodbye.

    Look at your people Bala Annai: you helped us find our dignity, helped us find our self-respect, find our humanity.

    Though you did not fire a shot in anger, you were a warrior as powerful as any that have fallen in battle. Your mind was a weapon more deadly than any our oppressor throws against us. Your courage a shield that would withstand any blow. Your wisdom a national treasure that enriched us all; you were Bhima to our Yudishtara; anna to our anna.

    For those of us growing up in another land you helped us understand what we were fighting for. You helped bridge that gap that sometimes separates us. You made us realise that we are not terrorists and that our path was just. You gave us the courage to say I am a Tamil and demand respect.

    Look at your people Bala Annai – from Toronto to Thiruconamalai – from Wembley to Vanni – from Melbourne to Mullaithivu – your people have gathered to bid you farewell and to show the world how much you were loved.

    Look at us: students and surgeons; factory workers and farmers; doctors and doormen; professionals and peasants – your people stand united in all our glorious diversity.

    Look at your people in Vaharai - again suffering at the hands of our oppressors. Look at your people in the Diaspora in their massive houses but with no place to call home.

    The people you fought so tireless for…the people you sacrificed so much of yourself for.

    You gave us a voice Bala Annai: when no one would listen - you spoke of injustice; when others tried to use us as pawns you spoke with self-respect; when we were accused of being irrational and barbaric you spoke with enlightened clarity; when our oppressors spun tales of deceit you spoke truth.

    You spoke at Thimpu; you spoke with India; you spoke with Chandrika amma and Ranil mama; you even went to Geneva. Surely you must have known they would not give us what is ours? Surely you must have known their words were cheap?

    Yet you spoke Bala Annai, somewhere inside you found the strength, you found the faith in humanity, you found the courage to trust our oppressor so that no more lives would have to be sacrificed.

    You showed the world our movement and our people wanted a just peace; you showed the world that our people had war thrust upon us; we do not lust for blood; we would rather quench our thirst with the water that flows through the streams of our land.

    They say that politics is the art of the possible, and you knew it was possible for us to live in our own land with dignity and pride, you knew it was possible for our two nations to live side by side. You knew that our movement would not rest until our people could hold their heads high. But our oppressor does not know now what you knew then Bala Annai.

    But look at your people carefully Bala Annai…look in their eyes…can you see it? It is not the dullness of defeat and humiliation…no it is the sparkle of self-respect and pride… our spirit is not broken.

    At this dark time we mourn your passing but we know…we know you will be reborn in a free Eelam…your tiny feet will walk upon the fertile soil of a Vanni free of fear. Your ears will hear waves crashing on a liberated beach in Batticaloa. Your eyes will look upon a Nallur Murugan who is not shackled by our oppressors. Your nose will smell the salt air that blows in across Trincomalee harbor. You will drink your mother’s milk in our motherland Bala Annai – these things will come to pass…this is our legacy to you…there is debt we must erase.

    While we know we must say goodbye, we make this promise to you Bala Annai: your people will not rest until your dream of a free Eelam is realized; your people will seek peace at every juncture; but we will not cower as our oppressor seeks to crush us; your people will treat our oppressor with the same humanity that brought to back to the negotiating table time after time; your people will speak out for themselves now that your voice is silenced.

    Rest now bala Annai you must be tired, age will not weary you, your eyesight will not fail you, nor will you stoop. We will remember you standing tall, the giant of a man you were. Join Kittu Annai, Theelepan Annai, Malathi Acca and all the other maveerar who have gone before you.

    Do not worry for Adele Acca - a nation awaits to wipe her tears, a thousand sisters will hold her hand as she bids you farewell, there will be a thousand sons to light her funeral pyre when her time comes.

    It says in the Bible that ‘unless a wheat grain falls into the earth and dies, it remains only a single grain; but if it dies it yields a rich harvest’ - many grains have fallen into the soil of Eelam – the time to harvest is near.
    Rest in peace, Bala Annai.
  • A day of national grief
    It was a day of national mourning. In a moment of shared grief, Tamils across the world gathered on Wednesday Dec 20 to pay their respects to Anton Balasingham, the Tamil Tigers’ theoretician and chief negotiator.

    At his funeral in London an estimated 50,000 Tamils from Britain, across Europe and other Diaspora centres, queued patiently to place wreaths and flowers alongside Mr. Balasingham’s body lying in state at Alexandra Palace.

    At a funeral ceremony conducted simultaneously in Kilinochchi and another in Mullaitivu in Vanni, tens of thousands of Tamils thronged to pay their respects also.

    Footage from Vanni was broadcast live to London. The ceremony in London was relayed live across the world – North America, India, Australasia and Vanni.

    Tens of thousands attended the funeral in London.


    Thousands attended another ceremony in Canada that day. But hundreds flew to London for the funeral there, including one large group which chartered its own jet.

    Tamils from across Europe travelled to London in coaches for the funeral. Planes were chartered by some Tamils from Norway.

    Some who had attended earlier memorial events in Sydney and Melbourne also flew to London.

    Mr. Balasingham’s casket, topped by a large wreath of white lilies, was placed at the front of the Palace’s Great Hall at 8:00 a.m. on Wednesday.

    It was escorted in by an honour guard of youth, white gloved and dressed in black suits.
    Mr. Balasingham’s body was dressed in the traditional white verti, his preferred garment.

    A brief initial ceremony was held attended by hundreds of Tamil activists, dressed in black suits and black sarees. Some had flown from other Diaspora centres around the world.

    The Tamil activists then filed past the casket, placing flower petals on Mr. Balasingham’s body.

    The doors to the Great Hall were then opened and the activists were followed by a long line of people who also placed flower petals at Mr. Balasingham’s feet.

    Families with children, youth and older Tamils were among those paying respects.

    Many wept openly, others prayed. Some lifted young children so they could place petals also.

    Dozens of wreaths and bouquets were placed alongside the casket by mourners as they passed. Community organizations from across the world sent representatives with wreaths.

    ‘Voice of the Nation’ said one wreath, the title bestowed on the LTTE theoretician by the Tigers. ‘Bala Uncle’ said another, the title by which many LTTE cadres addressed him.

    Thousands of people waited outside the venue on a freezing cold day as the queue snaked back from the Palace’s Great Hall, where thousands more were waiting. Hundreds of activists urged mourners to keep moving in an effort to give those waiting an opportunity to pay their respects.

    Thousands waited patiently in the freezing weather to pay their respect.

    In Vanni, senior LTTE commanders, led by LTTE leader Vellupillai Pirapaharan, gathered to garland a lifesize image of Mr. Balasingham.

    Several gave speeches saluting Mr. Balasingham’s myriad of contributions to the Tamil freedom struggle. Some spoke of their personal connections with ‘Bala Uncle’ and their individual grief.

    The day of shared grief was also a moment of united national pride. All sections of Tamil society came together in common appreciation of the freedom struggle and Mr. Balasingham’s role in taking it forward.

    Expatriates and their brethren in the homeland, stood together in line, as did young and old, white and blue collars, rich and poor.

    Second and third generation youth conversed in halting Tamil with recent migrants about what ‘Bala Anna’ meant to them, of his role in the evolution of ‘our struggle.’

    Conservative elders, familiar with Mr. Balasingham’s efforts since the early eighties waited in line with teenagers, the latter’s self-assured swaggers tempered by the solemnity of the occasion.

    At 3 p.m. Mr. Balasingham’s casket was carried out of the packed hall in a procession led by the honour guard, followed by a large wreath of ‘Eelam’ in the national colours of red and yellow.

    In Tamil Nadu, large numbers paid their respects as the major political parties there praised the LTTE’s veteran negotiator.

    In a message to Adele, Balasingham's wife, DMK president and Chief Minister M. Karunanidhi said the LTTE theoretician had “won the hearts and minds of Tamils the world over.”

    Karunanidhi recalled that Mr. Balasingham had worked tirelessly “to uphold the spirit of Eelam.”

    MDMK general secretary Y. Gopalasamy (Vaiko), said Mr. Balasingham had made “a Himalayan contribution to the welfare of Sri Lanka Tamils.”

    “The Tamils in Sri Lanka have lost a treasure and a brave son,” he said.

    Dravida Kazhagam leader K. Veeramani said: “That his life should have come to an end when the Eelam issue has reached a critical phase only doubles the agony of his passing away.”

    A four-person Norwegian delegation attended Mr. Balasingham’s funeral in London.

    International Development Minister Erik Solheim, who had worked with Mr. Balasingham since 1999 in Oslo’s peace efforts in Sri Lanka, and with whom he had become firm friends, gave a short speech.

    Saying he had come to make a personal comment as a friend, not a political speech, Mr. Solheim said Mr. Balasingham had passed away when he was most needed.

    He said Mr. Balasingham had shown his strength and dignity to the very end. Despite his illness, the LTTE theoretician’s concern was for the suffering of his people in Sri Lanka.

    “He was a sincere person. He was on the very few people [in the peace process] who never lied to me amongst many people from all communities,” Mr. Solheim said, a former Norwegian Special Envoy to Sri Lanka said.

    At a memorial event in Oslo earlier in the week, Mr. Solheim’s successor, Mr. Jon Hansen-Bauer praised Mr. Balasingam for his invaluable contribution to the peace efforts, and said Norway will miss a much valued friend.

    “He has many friends, and I have not met a person, both among Tamils and Singhalese, who did not respect him for his steadfastness,” he said.

    “Anton Balasingham was a theoretician. I had great pleasure discussing with him the key thinkers in Europe and relate their philosophy and approach to the peace process in Sri Lanka,” Mr. Hansen-Bauer, a senior academic, said.

    “With the demise of Mr. Balasingham, the LTTE has lost its Chief negotiator; the Tamil people have lost one of their most important spokesman; an unbeatable power standing for the Tamil people, forcefully articulating their rights.

    “And, Norway will miss a trusted friend. A central wall in the building of ‘Peace’ constructed painstakingly block-by-block, has fallen.”

  • Depopulation is part of Rajapakse's genocidal war
    Displaced people flee Vaharai, which is under daily bombardment by Sri Lanka's military. Photo Rukmal Perera / Daily News

    The Northern region of Batticaloa district is being rapidly de - populated of people. 

    People living amid great hardship in areas controlled by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) there are moving out to the relatively safe areas controlled by the Government of Sri Lanka (GOSL).

    There is a propaganda war on. The GOSL says the people are fleeing from LTTE oppression and seeking liberty in GOSL areas.

    The LTTE says the Government is driving out these people in a systematic campaign of ethnic cleansing.

    Meanwhile the people are on the move seeking refuge and safety. All they want is to be safe and exercise that fundamental freedom - the right to life.

    The Koralaipattru North region has been impoverished and backward even during the best of times. Its economy is mainly based on fisheries, agriculture, forestry and livestock and dairy. The outbreak of war has affected it drastically.

    With the LTTE gaining control of the region it became systematically deprived and deliberately targeted. This northern region of Batticaloa district is separated from Southern region of Trincomalee district by the Verugal river.

    The Koralaipattru North region had around 10 - 12,000 permanent residents in April this year. Then came the deliberate bombing and shelling of Tamil areas in the Muthur East region of Trincomalee district.

    This campaign was undertaken with the ostensible purpose of driving the people out of the strategic Sampoor area. The people fled southwards moving from place to place in search of safety as aerial bombardment and artillery shelling intensified.

    The bulk reached the Koralaipattru north region and took up temporary residence as IDPs. The number of people in Koralaipattru north swelled up to more than 50,000.

    Their troubles however were not over.

    The GOSL began deliberately curtailing the movement of people and transport of medicine, building materials, food, essential goods etc to and from the Koralaipattru north division generally known as Vaakarai region.

    GOSL also conducted several aerial bombings of the area. Artillery was also used to fire into the area. The GOSL of course justified these attacks and stringent measures on the grounds of security.

    While the LTTE oriented hostilities provided the security forces with a convenient excuse to target the Vaakarai - Verugal region there was also a larger objective.

    The Sinhala - supremacist regime of President Mahinda Rajapakse has a major politico - military objective.

    It wants to de - link the North and East and then bring the Eastern province under its full control.

    In the process the regime also wants to depopulate Trincomalee district of Tamils and drive Tamils living in LTTE controlled areas in Batticaloa - Amparai into GOSL dominated regions.

    This is in effect a scorched earth policy where many Tamils will be deprived of dwellings and livelihood and reduced to a hand - out dependent life in refugee camps in their land of historic habitation.

    The security forces game plan seems to be that of a southern push in Trincomalee and a Northeastern push in Batticaloa to take the Vaakarai region.

    Against the backdrop of such an elaborate politico - military design the people of Vakarai region - both permanent and temporary - are regarded as being of no consequence.

    The deaths, destruction and displacement undergone by them will only be “collateral damage”. The stakes however are high and both sides have been fighting fiercely to win or more importantly not to lose. Inhuman methods have been employed.

    The GOSL has restricted food and essential items being taken to the Vaakarai region.

    Quantities amounting to less than half of what is required have been taken irregularly. Movement to and from the area has been restricted for nearly ten weeks.

    Access by ICRC, UNHCR and SLMM are severely curtailed. Artillery attacks have been launched regularly.

    In a display of callous disregard for civilised norms refugees housed in schools have been victimised on many occasions. Nearly a hundred civilians have been killed and more than two - hundred injured in these attacks.

    The LTTE request for a ‘safe haven’ in Vaakarai was pointedly ignored.

    A slow exodus in search of safety and relatively better conditions began.

    It was Mao Ze Dong who compared guerrillas to fish and the people to an ocean. If the ocean is drained then fish will flounder. Likewise a region bereft of people will render guerillas vulnerable.

    The LTTE did not want that to happen. So the LTTE enforced strict controls. The people would have come out sooner but for LTTE prevention.

    No people on earth can continue to suffer like the people of Vaakarai. There had to come a breaking point.

    The first signs came when the LTTE began moving out some cadres, artillery and military assets out of the region. The people realised the LTTE was not going to hold out much longer.

    Adding to their woes was the weather that would make existence a tremendous burden. This fear of bad weather provided further impetus to the refugee outflow.

    So the people began moving out. Initially it began as a trickle but soon became a flow. From hundreds a day the outflow increased to thousands per day.

    After some attempt to prevent the exodus the LTTE apparently gave up. The local tigers from the area did not have the heart to prevent the people from going out.

    The IDP figure of people taking refuge in Other areas of Batticaloa has reached 27,837 on December 21st evening, more than half of the population in Koralaipattru North.

    Given the current rate of movement this figure is likely to exceed 35, 000 in a few days unless the LTTE enforces firm restrictions.

    The people living in Koralaipattru North are moving out primarily to eke out a life of relative safety.

    They have been pushed to this position by the series of harsh, inhuman measures adopted by the GOSL to drive them out.

    The GOSL has reached the heights of hypocrisy when it says the people have escaped from tiger tyranny to seek liberty in Government areas.

    The GOSL has used brute force and inhuman methods to persecute a voiceless segment of its population and drive it away from its habitat for politico - military reasons.

    This is part of the genocidal war being waged by Colombo.

    With Vaakarai region being rapidly de - populated GOSL security forces are likely to escalate military activity soon. Massive aerial bombardment and artillery attacks will be launched. The civilians remaining in Vaakarai will be regarded as “tigers” and treated as such.

    The on going de - population of Koralaipattru indicates what lies in store for Eastern Tamils currently.

    Sampoor was ethnically cleansed of Tamils. A high security zone bereft of Tamils is being established.

    A similar re-play with slight modifications is likely in Vaakarai too. This pattern is likely to emerge in other theatres of conflict in the East.

    Later the North too will be afflicted in the same manner.

    The Tamil homelands are being systematically ravaged and de - populated. A scorched earth policy is being implemented ruthlessly.

    Only the Western nations and India can curb the Rajapakse administration.

    The Tamil people are on the edge of disaster. The regime is all out to wreak havoc.

    The International Community can halt it if it wants to.

    Edited, original published Dec 23, 2006

  • Violence round up - week ending 24 December

    24 December

    ● LTTE cadres repulsed an attack by the STF inside LTTE controlled Kanchikudichcharu area in Amparai district. A group of STF soldiers from Thandiyadi and Kanchirankuda Camps infiltrated up to 2 km inside into the LTTE territory and took cover near Kanchikudichcharu school where a fierce fighting broke out when an LTTE foot patrol came under attack. Three STF soldiers were injured in the retaliatory shelling by the LTTE, and the infiltration group retreated to barracks. LTTE cadres Nishanthan and Jegan were killed in the attack. The STF claimed that it has recovered 2 T-56 rifles, 1 walkie-talkie and 196 rounds in the search operation.

    ● Sri Lankan forces arrested four Tamil youths in a combined search operation conducted by the SLA and Police in Dehiwala, Colombo. Two of the arrested youths are residents of Puttur and Achchuveli in Jaffna district and the rest from Kaduwela area in Colombo.

    ● Seven Tamil youths including a woman were arrested in Habaraduwa in Galled district and in Kandy town in two separate cordon and search operations conducted by security forces. The security forces arrested a Tamil youth and woman when they were walking along Dalada Veediya in Kandy Town. Five Tamil youths were arrested in Habaraduwa in Galle district.

    ● Appathurai Insam, 22, from Udupiddy area disappeared after he went for prayer in a temple in Udupiddy.

    ● Rasenthiram Illankeswaran, 29, a trader from Chunnakam was reported missing after he went to Maruthnarmadam bazaar area.

    ● Annamalai Anbarasan, 30, a civilian from Valvettiturai disappeared on his way to Jaffna town from his home.

    23 December

    ● The SLA launched an artillery barrage simultaneously from three directions, Kallaru SLA camp, north of Vaharai, Karadikkulam, in the west and from Mankerni SLA camp in the south towards Kathiraveli, Kandalady, Palchenai, Vammiveduvan, Vellayadimadu and Uriyankattu villages in the Vahara region. The artillery barrage continued for more than 8 hours. Vaharai hospital reported artillery explosions 200 meters close to Vaharai hospital.

    ● LTTE combatants successfully repulsed an attack by the SLA and its collaborating paramilitary group from Black Bridge SLA camp at Chenkalady in Batticaloa on the LTTE held Karadiyanaru area. Three SLA troopers were seriously injured while no one was injured on their side, the LTTE said. The clash took place near the LTTE FDL positions in Koduvamadu into which the SLA tried to penetrate. Two houses, home gardens and paddies belonging to residents in Karadiyanaru area were damaged in the mortar firing launched by the Chenkalady SLA camp. None of the inhabitants was hurt, though four goats were killed.

    ● Armed men opened fire on SLA patrol unit troopers who were conducting a search for armed persons said to be moving around at Manandy in Vadamaradchi, killing one and seriously injuring two of the SLA troopers. The attack on the SLA troopers who were engaged in a search operation launched on information that armed persons were in Thikkam, were fired upon when they were emerging out of liquor distillery in the Thikkam area.

    ● Armed men opened fire on persons returning from a funeral killing two on the spot and seriously injuring six, at Puthukudiruppu in Batticaloa. The two killed were identified as Navaratnam Sivendran, 23, of Puthukudiruppu and Sellathamby Gunasingham, 31, of Thalankuda. The wounded were identified as Kunarathnam Kanesalingam, 22, Karunakaran Thiyagarajan, 23, Muthulingam Mogan, 34, Sanmugam Satheeswaran, 22, Poopalappillay Kagendiran, 26 and Kirushnappillai Thevakumar, 22. The armed men, hiding by the road along which the victims were returning after participating in the funeral of Sinnan Soundaran of Beach Road at Puthukudiruppu, opened fire.

    ● Two armed men following on a motor cycle opened fire on two civilians riding a motor bicycle along Kachai Road at Kodikamam in Thenmaradchi, killing one on the spot and seriously injuring the other. The dead man was identified as Sinnathamby Ketheeswaran, 34, from Thavasikulam in Kodikamam. The injured man, Nallathamby Rajathurai, 63, who is being treated at the Intensive Care Unit of the hospital is a relative of the dead Ketheeswaran. Kachai Road, along which the shooting took place, is situated within Thenmaradchi area where SLA troopers are always present.

    ● A Tamil youth, identified as Mayuran, working in a telecommunication center along 37th Lane in Wellawatte, Colombo was abducted by unidentified persons.

    ● Subramaniam Rubanthas, 33, a family man from Kodady in Jaffna was missing after he left to Chavakacheri from his home.

    22 December

    ● SLAF Kfir jets bombed a Mullaithivu suburb. This followed a similar bombing raid on Wednesday, when Vanni observed the funeral of LTTE theoretician and Chief Negotiator Mr. Anton Balasingham. At that time SLAF bombers targeted a suburb in Puthudiyiruppu in Mullaithivu district.

    ● A youth, from Thunalai, Pandaitharippu in Valigamam, whose family members had complained to the SLHRC Jaffna office of his disappearance earlier, was found to be held at the Special Detention Police Camp at Kankesanthurai by Jaffna SLHRC officers, when they went on their weekly visit to the Special Detention Camp.

    Manoharaseelan Thevaseelan, 21 who was discovered at the Special police detention camp by SLHRC Jaffna officials, headed by its co-ordinating officer S. Surenthirarajah, accompanied by legal officer M. Remedius. Thevaseelan's family members had complained to the SLHRC Jaffna office that he had been missing since he went to work and they suspected SLA and the paramilitary cadres collaborating with it had abducted Thevaseelan.

    In the context of many youths missing in Jaffna peninsula, alleged to be abducted by the SLA and its paramilitary group, the news of Thevaseelan being held by the police without his family being informed of his arrest, was a shock to the community, confirming their suspicions that killings and abductions of youth are closely connected to the SLA and its paramilitary cadres.

    ● Armed men opened fire on the office of Karuna group on New Muhathuvaram Road in Batticaloa injuring one Karuna group member. There were more than eight Karuna group members inside the office at the time of the shooting. The firing on the Karuna group office, located in front of the Batticaloa Petroleum Corporation, lasted for nearly 15 minutes.

    ● Sebastiampillai Aneenthiran, a family man aged 31 from Kayts, one of the Jaffna islets, was found missing after he had gone to buy provisions at the local shops.

    ● Kanthiah Latheesan, a 20 year old student from Moolai, Vaddukodai disappeared after he went to attend classes in private tutory at Kannathidy in Jaffna town.

    A student, Vijayathas Aravinthan, 17, from Valvettithurai in Vadamaradchy was forcibly taken away from his house by armed men arriving in a Buffel armoured car and a white van.


    21 December

    ● Two children were seriously injured when a mortar shell, launched from the Kumburumoolai SLA camp at Kiran in Batticaloa, fell and exploded on a house in Kiran. V. Sathurjini, 2, and T. Suman, 9, both from Kiran, were playing in the front yard of the house.

    ● The SLA handed over the dead body of a youth to Vavuniya hospital claiming the youth was killed in a fight between the SLA and the LTTE at Nedunkulam area in Kidachoori in Vavuniya when five LTTE cadres entered 50 meters into SLA held area. An SLA trooper also showed the Vavuniya District Magistrate 2 claymores, 2 hand grenades, 2 jackets, 2 magazine rounds they claimed to have recovered from the site of the incident.

    ● A 70 year old patient suffering from pneumonia succumbed to his illness at the Vaharai hospital for want of medicine, Dr. Thurairasa Varatharajah of Vaharai hospital said. The doctor had earlier made an urgent appeal to transfer 7 critically ill patients warded at Vaharai hospital for further treatment to Batticaloa Teaching hospital to the ICRC and the Deputy director of health services in Batticaloa, but the patients are yet to be taken to Batticaloa Teaching hospital. K. Nagendran 70, of Palchenai is the patient who died of high pneumonia fever.

    20 December

    ● Unidentified persons triggered a claymore device concealed in a rubble heap along the A9 route at Thandikulam in Vavuniya, seriously injuring a SLA trooper. The claymore attack, targeting the SLA troopers on a tractor, took place close to the site near Thandikulam Agriculture Farm School where five SLA troopers including an officer were killed on November 18 in a similar claymore attack.

    ● Valvetithurai police recovered the dead body of Thangarasa Tharmakulasingham, 24, of Thunalai east, Karavedy in Vadamaradchi, among shrubs in a deserted place at Vallaiveli in Vadamaradchi. He had a 9 mm gunshot wound to the head. His parents said he had been abducted forcefully by armed men in a white van Tuesday on Nelliady road while he was riding his bicycle. The family members of Tharmakulasingham said they suspect the SLA and the collaborating paramilitary cadres, to be behind the abduction and killing. Tharmakulasingam was previously arrested along with another youth by the SLA who accused them of lobbing hand grenade on the SLA troopers at the Nelliady camp. They were acquitted for want of evidence by the district court, the parents added.

    ● Armed men clad in military fatigues abducted 19 youths, 16 boys and 3 girls, from a private bus en route to Colombo from Kattankudy at Korakallimadu in Kiran, in Batticaloa district. The abductions have taken place on Katankudy - Polonnaruwa route, heavily guarded by SLA soldiers. Parents of six children have lodged complaints with the Police. Parents who opposed the abductions were beaten by the kidnappers, alleged to be paramilitary cadres of Karuna Group.

    19 December

    ● Two LTTE cadres were transferred to Kilinochchi from Amparai to face disciplinary action for enlisting underage youths from a tuition centre in Thirukkovil. All the 23 civilians, including the 21 students, in the custody of an LTTE unit attached to a training camp, were freed after an internal investigation initiated by LTTE Commander Ram. Two teachers, Tharmarasa Vigneswaran and Velupillai Uthayakumar, were among the persons taken by the LTTE unit from the tuition centre. The Tigers have outlawed recruitment of under-17s and participation in combat of under-18s.

    ● A paramilitary cadre of Karuna Group was killed and another wounded when unidentified gunmen armed with RPG launchers attacked the office of the group in Kalmunai town, Batticaloa. The paramilitary office, located between a police post and the STF camp in Kalmuani, was completely damaged in the attack. STF officials identified the killed Karuna cadre as "Castro."

    ● Two armed men shot dead the owner of a hairdressing saloon, Anthonypillai Pirabakaran, 32, a family man, close to Athiady temple on the Thondamanaru - Valvetithurai road in Vavettithurai in Vadamaradchi at his saloon. The killing, which took place in an area continuously monitored by the SLA troopers, has shocked Athikovilady residents.

    18 December

    ● Unidentified men using pistols shot dead three cadres of the paramilitary Karuna Group standing along the Main Road near Chenkalady market in Batticaloa. One civilian standing by was seriously injured in the shooting. The three dead victims were identified as Sellathamby Suthan, 22 of Krishnan Temple Road, Valaichenai, Packiarasa Nithyarasa allias Illamoliyan, 20 of Kalmadu Road, Vinayagapuram, Valaichenai and M. Iniyavan 18, of Kali Kovil Road, Mavadivembu. The injured civilian were identified as Kathirgamathamby Kovinthan, an auto rickshaw driver from Uma Mill Road in Kommanthurai, Batticaloa.

    ● Three armed men driving a car shot dead three men and injured a woman at their house at Chalampaikulam in Vavuniya. Two of the dead men were identified as Arunachalam Arulkumar from Sittandy in Batticaloa, and Mr Sulojan from Vavuniya. The third man killed is said to be from Killinochchi. The injured woman is Sulojan Mathanalogini, 22.

    ● M. S. M. Casim, 46, resident of Sainthamaruthu in Kalmunai and a father of one, a Police Sergeant attached to Kalmunai in Amparai district, shot himself dead at the Kalmunai police station lodge, using his friend's AK47 rifle.

    ● Three youths who left their homes Friday morning to go to Chavakacheri in Thenmaradchi were reported missing by their parents at the SLHRC Jaffna office. One of the youths was on his motor cycle while the other two went riding bicycles and all three had to pass Chemani area between Chavakacheri and Jaffna, close to the SLA camp, where two months ago many youths had mysteriously disappeared. Sooriyakumar Suhanthan, 20 from Thavady, Kokuvil, and two friends Nahanathan Senthoorapiriyan, 17 and Nahanathy Parthipan, 18, both form Araly Road, Jaffna are the three youths reported missing. The two youths had chosen to trade in coconuts as their families were on the edge of poverty, the parents said. The two friends had gone on their bicycles while the youth from Thavady had gone riding his motor cycle.


    Subramaniam Rubanthas, 33, a family man from Kodady in Jaffna was missing after he left to Chavakacheri from his home.
  • Jaffna NGOs increase security
    Both international and local Non-governmental organizations (NGOs) in Jaffna are reinforcing security arrangements around their offices due to violent incidents and abductions taking place close to their offices, TamilNet reported.

    Offices of ICRC, UNHCR, UN (pictured), TRO and several other NGOs are located in Temple Road in Nallur Jaffna, also known as the 'VIP' road.

    The wall enclosing the UN office compound is being strengthened and raised to ten feet making it difficult for anyone to trespass or break-in. ICRC office is constructing an additional iron fence four feet high to prevent invaders.

    A representative of an international NGO who wish to remain anonymous said, that the hand grenade attack in front of ICRC office, the sporadic clashes between the Sri Lanka Army (SLA) troopers and unidentified armed men on Temple road where the ICRC office is located, the burning of the Tamils Rehabilitation Office (TRO) and the abduction of Halo Trust employees have created an environment of insecurity among the NGO community.

    The SLA and the police have increased patrols in Temple road in recent weeks.
  • TNA meets Indian Premier over Tamil plight

     

    Mr. Singh met five TNA  MPs and Mr. Subaveera Pandiyan (2nd r), representative of DMK leader Karunaniddhi. Reports said the meeting was 'very warm and positive.' Photo TamilNet
    In what some analysts say is a major shift in Indias policy towards Sri Lanka, Prime Minister Manmohan Singh met last Friday  with leaders of the Tamil National Alliance, the islands largest Tamil party, known for its pro-Tamil Tiger stance.

    This is the first time that the top Indian leadership was meeting a group openly aligned with the LTTE, banned in 1992 after being blamed for the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi.

    The Asian Age reported that observers in India feel that it could well be the beginning of a process, sponsored by Tamil Nadu chief minister M. Karunanidhi, to break the ice with the LTTE and bring pressure on Colombo.

    The TNA team, led by Parliamentary Group leader, R. Sampanthan, had met Mr Karunanidhi at Chennai on Wednesday December 20, and briefed him on the situation back home. The DMK is an important constituent of the UPA government.

    Mr. Singh was accompanied by India’s national security adviser M.K. Narayanan and foreign secretary Shivshankar Menon to the 45-minute meeting.

    "It was a very fruitful meeting with the Prime Minister. He expressed concern about the denial of human rights to the Tamils by the Sinhala government and assured that India would do its best to ensure we live in peace and dignity," said Mr Selvam Adaikalanathan, leader of TELO, one of the constituents of the TNA.

    “This is a very encouraging development for us,” he said.

    Mr. Sampanthan quoted Prime Minister Singh as saying that India was committed to a peaceful resolution of the conflict in a manner acceptable to the Tamil-speaking people.

    Coming at a critical juncture in the decades-old ethnic conflict, the meeting with the Indian Premier was "of tremendous significance" and was bound to have "significant impact on the coming future", he said.

    In telling contrast to the snub they received the last time they came to India three months ago, when both Prime Minister Singh and chief minister Karunanidhi refused to meet them, the Tamil team members were treated as state guests this time, the Asian Age opinioned, adding Dr Singh, in fact, came out of his office to receive the delegation with folded hands.

    After being led to the meeting room, Mr Sampanthan and his senior colleague, Mavai Senathirajah, draped shawls around the Prime Minister to show their warmth.

    However, the expected meeting with UPA chairperson Sonia Gandhi did not take place as the Congress president was touring Uttar Pradesh. Though she was personally unavailable for the Tamil delegation, Mrs Gandhi had sent word to Prime Minister Singh recommending he meet the Lankan MPs, the Asian Age reported.

    The previous administration in Tamil Nadu of AIADMK leader Jayalalithaa had cracked the whip on anyone even mildly supporting the LTTE.

    But by late last year, even the AIADMK was warming to the Eelam cause.

    Now there are public rallies almost every day by various Tamil parties across the state, either demonstrating against the Sri Lankan government for the ‘genocide’ of Tamils in the island or, last week, condoling the death of LTTE ideologue Anton Balasingham. His black-bordered posters are plastered all over Chennai and elsewhere in the state.

    Indeed, the pro-Eelam support has never been so high-pitched since the assassination of Rajiv Gandhi by the Tamil Tigers in 1991, the Asian Age reported.

    Tamil Nationalist Movement leader Pazha Nedumaran arranged a well-attended condolence meet for “Balanna” (Balasingham) in the city last week.

    Dravidar Kazhagam leader K. Veeramani, presided over yet another condolence meeting last Thursday, at which Mr Karunanidhi’s daughter, Kanimozhi, was among the important speakers, urging that India should step in to halt the Eelam tragedy.

    The Eelam supporters have bagged a star campaigner now in Ms Kanimozhi, the chief minister’s daughter, who makes no bones about her strong feelings in support of the Tigers, who she insists are the “sole representatives of the Lankan Tamils.”

    “The sooner India acknowledges this by lifting the ban against the LTTE the better. The Tigers have expressed regret (for the Rajiv assassination) and we should leave things at that. We should not get stuck to the past and continue making more mistakes. Instead, we must move towards a solution and take the LTTE along, because only they are the true representatives of the Lankan Tamils,” Ms Kanimozhi said.

    It is unlikely that she has not discussed her Eelam views with her father and it is even more unlikely she would pursue her line if he had objected, the Asian Age opinioned.

    Meanwhile, pro-Eelam rallies continued in Chennai with the Dravidar Kazhagam organising an all-party "human chain" last Friday in which the ruling DMK too participated.

    "We are condemning the attacks on Tamil civilians by the Sinhala forces and the continued denial of food to people in Jaffna by the closure of the A-9 highway. India must intervene," said DK president K. Veeramani, who lead Friday’s demonstration.

  • Sri Lanka splits Northeast into three
    Despite strong opposition from India and the rest of the international community, the government of President Mahinda Rajapakse is accelerating the demerger the Northeast province.

    The NEP administration has been split into one for the northern province and one for the eastern province, with Trincomalee district, with the coveted eastern harbour kept as third separate entity.

    The move is a direct assault on the Tamil assertion of a homeland in the island, the recognition of which was implicit in the formation of NEP as part of the Indo-Sri Lanka accord in 1987.

    The military officer who had been appointed governor of the NEP by President Rajapakse confirmed to reporters Sunday that the de-merger was proceeding as planned.

    Rear Admiral (Retd) Mohan Wijewickrama was last week sworn in before President Rajapakse as governor of the eastern province.

    "From 1 January 2007, we have no choice but to run the two provinces separately," Wijewickrama told the Sunday Island yesterday. "Finances have already been appropriated separately for the two provinces."

    Fresh appointments are also to be made to the northern and eastern provincial councils in keeping with the Supreme Court ruling two months ago that the 1987 merger was “illegal and void.”

    The Northern and Eastern Provinces were temporarily merged under the 13th Amendment following the Indo-Sri Lanka Peace Accord in 1987.

    The merger was challenged in the Supreme Court earlier this year by the ultra-nationalist Janatha Vimukthi Perumana (JVP) with the tacit support of President Rajapakse’s government.

    Until the JVP challenged the merger, the temporary merger was being extended by a Presidential decree every year.

    But the Supreme Court’s ruling on the NEP was specifically about the modalities of the merger, rather than the notion of the merger itself.

    However, despite calls by the international community, particularly India, for the Rajapakse government to carry through the proper merger of the two provinces, the government has instead abrogated the 1987 agreement with India.

    "I have already started appointing the secretary, deputy secretaries and heads of department to the two provinces, the filling of higher positions has almost been completed," Wijewickrama said.

    "A lot of structures are in place and they just have to be divided into two. Thus, there will have to be two secretaries of education, health and so on. There will also be two treasuries."

    The Sunday Times reported that the northern province will be administered from Vavuniya and the eastern province from Kalmunai.

    The staff of the Northern and Eastern Provincial Council office based in Trincomalee is to be divided between the Northern and Eastern Administrative Secretariat offices, the paper added.

    But Wijewickrama rejected the report, saying: “Both administrative offices will be temporarily located in Trincomalee until an alternative location is found for the northern provincial council.”

    Sri Lanka’s move to split the Northeast are a slap in the face for India.

    Not only does it directly contradict the terms of the Indo-Sri Lanka Accord, it runs contrary to an explicit call by the Congress government in Delhi that the Northeast remains merged pending a referendum in the east once ‘conducive’ conditions prevail there.

    The point was made directly by Indian Prime Minister Manmohan Singh personally to Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse, once during the NAM summit in Havana in September and again last month when the latter visited Delhi.

    The Co-Chairs of the now moribund peace process – the US, EU, Japan and Norway – have also called repeatedly this year for the Northeast not to be de-merged.

    The international community had seen the merged Northeast province as a tool to address the Tamil demand for self-autonomy for the regions they have traditionally inhabited.
  • 80% of tsunami affected in NE still homeless
    Sri Lanka fell silent to remember its 31,000 dead on the second anniversary of the Asian tsunami, with the United Nations criticising the rehabilitation efforts hindered by the renewed conflict.

    The island, which received huge amounts of money for reconstruction, has failed to complete much of the rebuilding, with officials admitting that only about 56 per cent of the work has been finished.
    A family in Mullaitivu mourns victims of the 2004 tsunami. Photo TamilNet


    President Mahinda Rajapaksa admitted last year that the country had failed to do enough to help the survivors and thousands still live in "tent villages" along the coast.

    Sri Lanka, one of the worst-hit countries, attracted US$ 3.2 billion in foreign aid pledges, but the state auditor general in September 2005 noted that out of the US$ 1.16 billion, only 13.5 per cent had actually been spent.

    Moreover, most of these reconstruction efforts have been directed to the Sinhala south.

    Almost 80% of people displaced in the Northeast by the December 2004 tsunami have not been resettled or have been driven out again by Sri Lankan military action, the Tamil Rehabilitation Organisation (TRO) said this week.

    The TRO blamed several key factors of the slower implementation of tsunami recovery activities in the Northeast compared to the rapid recovery that is seen in the south of Sri Lanka.

    These included the disproportionate allocation of governmental resources to the Northeast, Colombo’s rejection of a landmark aid sharing and management structure (P-TOMS), the centralization of bureaucracy and decision making in Colombo and the government’s slower rate of fund disbursement tsunami affected people in the NorthEast.

    Furthermore, with fewer international NGOs (per capita) working in the Northeast compared to the south, less funds and other resources (per capita) were available in the NorthEast, TRO said.

    “The difficulties that NGOs have in working in the Northeast due to government restrictions, regulations and harassment [were another factor],” TRO said.

    The TRO’s protest comes as both outgoing UN Secretary General Kofi Annan and former US President Bill Clinton, Annan’s special envoy for tsunami recovery, singled out Sri Lanka for criticism.

    Mr. Annan said the renewed conflict between the Sri Lankan government and Tamil Tigers was making the reconstruction effort "even more difficult".

    Both Annan and Clinton said that the tsunami had produced an impetus for peace in Aceh, Indonesia.

    "Alas, in Sri Lanka that spirit has not been sustained. Instead, the spiral of tension and open conflict, which had wrought so much misery and destruction over the years, has resumed," Annan said.

    “Tragically, the tsunami has not had a similar impact on reconciliation in Sri Lanka, where the recovery will be continue to be hampered until the parties resume a serious dialogue and reestablish the cease-fire,” Clinton said.

    Simmering violence between Sri Lanka Army-backed paramilitaries and the LTTE exploded into direct confrontations between the military and the Tigers in the middle of 2006.

    In April the military began large scale bombardments of LTTE-controlled areas, after a suicide bomber wounded the Army chief.

    Over 200,000 people, mainly Tamils, have been displaced by repeated military operations and bombardments since then. Hundreds of civilians have been killed and many more wounded.

    "I am deeply disheartened by this turn of events. Let me remind all parties of their obligation to respect human rights and international law, and particularly to protect and allow access to the civilian population," Annan said.

    Even the TRO’s tsunami related projects are on hold due to the prevailing “security situation” and the Central Bank’s freezing of the TRO’s bank accounts for six months from August for ‘investigations.’

    Approximately US$ 800,000 was in ‘project specific’ accounts at the time of freezing, 80% of which come from international NGOs, the UN, the government itself, ADB, World Bank, and various other multi-lateral and bi-lateral donors, TRO said.

    Meanwhile in a statement issued Tuesday this week to mark the second anniversary of the devastating tsunami, the LTTE condemned the Sri Lankan government’s campaign against the Tamils.

    The tsunami had left “deep scars on the Tamil psyche,” the statement said. “In the early hours that day, within a few seconds, in excess of 17,000 Tamils died. Many more thousands were injured. 344,000 people became refugees having lost their homes. Tamil cities and villages were razed to the ground.”

    “Ten countries in the Indian ocean faced similar devastation. … The tsunami did not discriminate between ethnicity, religion or language.”

    “The devastating tsunami also brought out, in an unprecedented manner, the concern of the humanity. As the media took the news of the devastation to all corners of the world, the tragedy shook the conscience of fellow humans all around the world.”

    Humanitarian agencies and many governments gathered with enormous sums of money to assist. “Sri Lanka had a unique place in their plans; The international community planned to use the opportunity to also create goodwill between the divided ethnic groups.”

    “[But] the sunami that shook the conscience of humanity failed to wake the conscience of the Sinhala government immersed in the Sinhala Buddhist hegemonic philosophy.”

    “This government treated the tsunami as a welcome means of destroying the Tamil people,” the LTTE said.

    Instead of seeing the suffering of the Tamil people, the government “imagined and celebrated that the Tamil leadership and the naval wing of the Tamil force lay destroyed by the tsunami.”

    The Sri Lankan media was totally occupied with reports of this nature, the statement pointed out.

    The Sri Lankan government, “ignoring the fact that two thirds of those affected in the island were from the Tamil homeland, channelled all international tsunami aid to the Sinhala areas. It used the volunteers and the security forces that came to assist from several countries to rebuild the Sinhala areas.”

    “The responsibility of caring for the devastated Tamil people fell on the shoulders of the LTTE. It is well known to the world that the recovery work in the Tamil homeland was exemplary. The structures put in place by the LTTE for tsunami reconstruction was praised world wide.”

    “The assistance from their Tamil brethren living around the world went a long way to help the affected Tamil people. Many international humanitarian agencies also came forward to channel their assistance through the structures put in place by the LTTE. The Government of Italy also gave its assistance directly to the LTTE.”

    “All of this assistance went a long way to alleviate the misery of the Tamil people.”

    “[But] not a drop of the international assistance given to the Government of Sri Lanka reached the Tamil homeland.”

    Instead, “relief convoys sent from the northern parts of the Tamil homeland to the eastern parts of Tamil homeland of Trincomalee, Batticaloa, and Amparai, were stopped and redirected to the Sinhala areas by the Sri Lankan military and [Sinhala nationalists].”

    The international community is well aware of the government’s conduct, the LTTE said, pointing to how Mr. Annan and Mr. Clinton were both denied access to the northern areas devastated by the tsunami.

    Referring to the PTOMS, the LTTE said “[we] came forward to create a joint structure with the Government of Sri Lanka to implement reconstruction projects with international aid and facilitation. This too was thrown to the dustbin by the Government even though this joint structure was promoted by the international community.”

    Even now, assistance to the Tamil people devastated by the tsunami has not progressed beyond the temporary shelter phase, the LTTE said.

    Instead the government has begun to openly wage another war on a people who have been devastated by decades of war and the tsunami, the statement said.

    Singling out the Vaharai region, which is being bombarded and blockaded by Sri Lankan security forces, the LTTE said: “while tsunami affected Sinhala people are resettling in new homes, the worst affected Tamils are being chased even from their temporary shelters.”

    On Tuesday, as tsunami anniversary memorial prayers were being held in Vaharai, Sri Lanka’s military launched a sustained bombardment.

    Sri Lanka Airforce (SLAF) Kfir fighter jets bombed Kathiraveli and Palchenai residential areas while artillery and rocket fire was directed from Sri Lanka Army camps in Mankerny, Kadjuwathe.
  • Violence round up - week ending 17 December
    16 December

    ● The SLA continued shelling from the Kallar SLA camp towards LTTE controlled Kathiraveli region. Krishnapillai Venukanthan, 19, from Echilampattu, Trincomalee area who earlier was displaced to Kathiraveli was seriously injured in the SLA shell attack.

    ● The SLA and Police recovered a powerful claymore mine weighing 2kg from Kandasamy Kovil Road in Vavuniya. Vavuniya police closed the road and sent the residents to the temple for safety, before the SLA bomb squad diffused the mine.

    ● An eleven year old boy was seriously injured when an Unexploded Ordnance he found behind his house exploded at Aalam Veethy, Meeravodai, Batticaloa. The injured boy was identified as A. Peroskhan whose face, hands, stomach and legs have been badly injured.

    ● Seven IDPs travelling from Kathiraveli to Vaharai in a two-wheel tractor were killed when an artillery shell fired by the SLA exploded on their vehicle. Fellow passengers told the officials that they had to bury the dead before returning to Kathiraveli.


    15 December

    ● Fourteen Vaharai IDPs fleeing to Valaichennai by sea were killed when their boats capsized (see separate story).

    ● S. Raveendranath, the Vice Chancellor of the Eastern University of Sri Lanka, who was forced to resign his post recently following threats from the paramilitary Karuna Group, went missing from a High Security area in Colombo. Raveendranath, 55, and father of two girls, was living in Colombo as his resignation was not accepted.

    ● Batticaloa district ICRC handed over the bodies of six LTTE cadres killed in an ambush by the SLA and its paramilitary troopers at Miyankulam. The LTTE cadres, injured in an earlier battle, were being taken for treatment across the Colombo-Batticaloa road at Miyankulam, when they were ambushed. Three of the dead were identified as Ethirmannasingham Kannathasan, alias Sujithan, 18, of Kardiayanaru, Batticaloa, Abraham Ronard Antony, alias Thamil Mannan, 18, of Thanthamalai, Kokatticholai, Batticaloa and Tharman Jegan, alias Vipunakaran, 19, of Uthayanmoolai, Sithandy, Batticaloa. Details of the other three are not available.

    ● Kallaru SLA in Trincomalee launched shells on Kathiraveli civilian settlements in Vaharai in LTTE territory, killing two civilians and seriously injuring three. The SLA shells were directed against the Kathiraveli Kali Temple and its surrounding areas. One shell exploded on a house seriously injured the three residents occupying the house.

    ● The STF stationed at Pattiruppu Bridge in Batticaloa launched mortar shells on LTTE territory in Porathivu. The LTTE retaliated with mortar fire, and two civilians were injured in the exchange. Seven houses and an Irrigation department building were damaged in Kalavanchikudy.

    ● All NGOs in Jaffna are reinforcing the security arrangements at their offices in the light of the violent incidents and abductions taking place around the area recently. Offices of ICRC, UNHCR, UN, TRO and several other NGOs are located in Temple Road in Nallur Jaffna, also known as ' VIP' road. The wall enclosing the UN office compound is being strengthened and raised to ten feet making it difficult for anyone to trespass or break-in. ICRC office is constructing an additional iron fence four feet high to prevent invaders.

    A representative of an international NGO who wish to remain anonymous said the hand grenade attack in front of ICRC office, the sporadic clashes between SLA troopers and armed men on Temple road where the ICRC office is located, the burning of the TRO office and the abduction of Halo Trust employees have created an environment of insecurity among the NGO community.

    ● The body of a family man with stab wounds was found inside his house at Mirusuvil north, in an area close to the SLA FDL in Thenmaradchi north. A motorcycle and another vehicle of Murugesu Sathiyanathan, 55, had been stolen by the killers. He lived alone after his family moved to Point Pedro in Vadamaradchi north when shelling intensified at the FDL position.

    ● Four armed men in two vehicles in Vepankulam in Vavuniya, called a trader out of his shop in Sinhalese and opened fire using T-56 type assault rifles, killing the trader, Ambikaipahar Manickavasagar, 59. on the spot.

    ● The bodies of two youths with gunshot injuries to their heads were found at Pichchaikulam in Murunkan, Mannar district.


    14 December

    ● Officials of the SLHRC in Jaffna said that they have received several complaints of the SLA confiscating the National ID cards of young men and women during cordon and search operations, and refusing to return them.
    Officials said SLA soldiers request the individuals to come to the SLA camps to get the cards back, but the youths have to make several visits before the SLA returns the cards. Several complaints made by the victims relate incidents of harassment and disruption to their normal life without the ID cards. Students have complained of having to miss school fearing being caught by the SLA soldiers without the IDs.

    ● A Muslim protestor was killed and 8 wounded when Police fired at the protestors in Kathankuddy town, Batticaloa. The town was in turmoil for the eighth consecutive day as police used bullets and teargas to control crowds which have set fire to a police sentry post, four auto rickshaws, four shops and four banks in Kathankudyy town. Orthodox Muslims, engaged in a spate of anger against the Islamic Sufi sect, demand the remains of M. S. Abdul Payilvan, one of the leaders of Sufi sect, be removed from Katthankudy soil and buried elsewhere. Mohammad Mustafa Mohammad Rafik, 38, was killed on the spot when police opened fire at the protestors. At least 25 houses were set on fire by the mob. A number motorcycles were destroyed.

    ● A Police Sub Inspector was injured when unidentified persons hurled hand grenades on a Buffel Armed Personnel Carrier (APC) taking police officials from Batticaloa Police headquarters. The police were on their way to a meeting with Muslim leaders to discuss ways to diffuse the escalating tension in Kattankudy, Batticaloa. M. Chandrasena was admitted to the Kattankudy district hospital. The attack took place along the Batticaloa ­ Kalmunai road in Kattankudy town where Police, SLA and STF in large numbers maintain a strict security. Two grenades were thrown at the Buffel when the curfew was in force.

    ● Gunmen shot dead a fisherman of Koyilkudiyiruppu, Thambuthottam in Chavakachcheri area, Jaffna, while he was returning from fishing in Kachchai Sea. Gunmen waited for Nagalingan Jeyendran, 41, living near a SLA base in the area, on the road away from his home, shot him dead and escaped.

    ● Two men riding a motorbike shot dead a youth near the 4th Cross street in Thumpalai Road, Point Pedro. Tharmathas Mohanathas, 21, a fisherman living on Light House Lane, Sea Street was walking to Point Pedro Town along Thumpalai road when he was shot. The killing took place in the same area where two youths on their way to the Hospital disappeared one month earlier. Police have not been able to trace the abductors or the victims.

    ● Unidentified persons lobbed a bomb on the house of K. P. S. Hameed, Vice-chairman of Ottamavadi Predeshya Sabai, at M.P.C.Road in Meeravodai, Ottamavadi. Though he and his family were in the house when the bomb exploded, no one was hurt. Mr. Hameed, a father of two children and a former Police Sub-inspector, was elected to his post in the Predeshya Sabai election in Meeravodai on a UNP ticket.


    13 December

    ● SLA troopers attacked a convoy of wounded LTTE cadres transported by the LTTE medics from Vaharai to LTTE controlled Karadiyanaru for medical treatment via sea route. SLA reports said 5 Tigers were killed. They also claimed a wounded SLA soldier, K.M.S. Ratnayake, who had been in LTTE custody since 8 October and was being transported by the Tiger medics, was captured. According to SLA claims more than 9 were wounded in the attack.

    LTTE's Military Spokesman Irasiah Ilanthirayan said the SLA has attacked an unarmed medical transport and described the attack, a “cowardly” act. “Wounded LTTE fighters and a wounded Sri Lanka Army man were being transported our medics,” Mr. Ilanthirayan said. “Also, a group of civilians who wanted to move out of Vaharai but not to a Sri Lanka Army controlled territory, were sent in the medical transport,” he said.

    ● Armed men abducted Rajukamal Raj, 16, from his house at Kali Kovil road in Araiyampathy, Batticaloa and shot him dead near Selvanagar junction in Ariyampathy from where Kathankudy police recovered his dead body. The police said that the youth may have been subjected to interrogation before being killed by the armed men who abducted him.

    ● Jaffna police issued a directive barring drivers from parking their vehicles in the central area of Jaffna town, except in seven places demarked for parking. Vehicles violating the directive will be confiscated, the Police warned. The SLA and police allocated these parking places mainly in civilian residential areas away from SLA and police sentry points.


    12 December

    ● A lorry speeding through Kalmunai hit two Muslim civilians at Mavadipalli, Sammanthurai in Amparai district, killing both on the spot. The allegedly drunk Sinhala driver sped without stopping, hitting two more Muslim civilians in Sammanthurai town killing one and seriously injuring the other, and continued along on recklessly hitting two more Muslim civilians injuring both before stopping. Enraged Muslims in Sammanthurai town, set fire to the lorry throwing the driver's assistant into the fire, killing him.

    The crowd stoned the police force and another high officer who tried to control the crowd. STF troopers, called in for assistance, opened fire on the crowd injuring three. The three dead men were identified as M. Nawfath, 25, M. Larief, 32, a father of one and Mohideen, 53, a father of five. The three injured in the STF shooting are Munas, 26, Riyas, 32 and Mubeen, 23. The owner, driver and assistant of the lorry are Sinhalese.

    ● Pottuvil police recovered the body of a male civilian with severe bodily injuries from a well in the premises of the office of the Veterinary Surgeon of Vaddiveli in Pottuvil, Amparai. The victim was identified as Kanapathypillai Mochinathan, 48, of Vaddiveli, a carpenter by profession who left for work on Friday but failed to return home.

    ● SLAF Kfir jets dropped eight bombs in four sorties on the villages of Kattumrivu, Kathiraveli and Palchenai in LTTE held territory in Batticaloa district. No casualties were reported though four houses of civilians were badly damaged.

    ● Civilians in Kathiraveli, Palchenai, Vammivettuvan and Kandalady, fleeing artillery and Multi-Barrel Rocket fire from SLA positions had sought refuge in Vaharai hospital. If not for this evacuation from the bombed areas, many lives would have been lost.

    ● Intermittent shelling from Kallaru in Trincomalee, and Kadjuwathe, Punanai, Mankerny in Batticaloa and Singapuram in Polanaruwa SLA bases were made on LTTE held areas. The shells, falling and exploding near Vaharai Hospital, pose great danger to the lives of the people who have sought shelter there.

    ● Armed men opened fire on the policemen posted at the entrance of Uthayan Tamil daily office located in the Jaffna HSZ, seriously injuring one of them.

    ● Two armed men shot dead an employee of the Jaffna Teaching hospital at his house at Udupiddy in Vadamaradchi. The body of Paramsothy Anananthakumar, 47, a father of five, with more than six gunshot wounds, was taken to hospital for post-mortem examinations.


    11 December

    ● Unidentified persons triggered a claymore device, targeting a bus in front of Al Hithaya School on Amapari Road in Akkaraipattu, seriously injuring six policemen and two civilians. The six policemen were identified as S. M. Sathath, 42, Nizar, 30, Mohamed Lebbe, 43, Marsup, 32, S. Amaradasa, 52 and Santhirakantha, 20. The civilians were Pirathaban, 22 from Thirukovil, the driver and S. Bala, 34, the conductor of the bus. The claymore blast, exploding 500 meters from Amparai town, damaged an electricity transformer nearby, completely cutting off electricity supply to Amparai city.

    ● Armed men abducted Thangarasa Kanthan, 16 of Pandiyirupu, Kalmunai at Kalmunai in Amparai district and shot him dead.

    ● An unidentified man shot dead a policeman attached to Palameenmadu police station at Kurukalmadam, Batticaloa. The assailant had followed the policeman and shot him while he was waiting for a bus. S. Chandrakumar, 34, a father of two, had been returning from two day's leave to see a sick child.

    ● A 50 year old civilian, caught in the cross fire in a clash between unidentified armed men and a SLA road patrol unit at Kokuvil in Jaffna was killed on the spot. The Kokuvil clash lasted for 15 minutes and came in the wake of a hand grenade attack by unidentified persons on SLA troopers, seriously injuring two of them.

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