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  • UN nods ‘fight to the finish’

    The position taken by UN Security Council Friday, February 27, indicating no go beyond ‘hearing’, and the considerate briefing of John Holmes largely endorsing and trusting Colombo’s agenda and assurances for civilians, are read between the lines by international political observers as a ‘knowing wink’ at Colombo to pursue its offensive.
     
    Alternatively, the UN stance either paves way for intervention by interested powers outside of the UN or perhaps reveals an actuality that the UN can be shaken not when people face genocide, but only when ground realities endanger the Sri Lankan state, observers said.
     
    While the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon on Tuesday, February 24, called for a suspension of fighting and beginning of political discussions, John Holmes, Under Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Coordinator, who briefed the Security Council Friday spoke of tackling underlying political issues only after the end of fighting.
     
    “It appears that the UN Secretariat’s public call is undermined by a more private green light to the Sri Lankan military’s offensive in north Sri Lanka”, reported Inner City Press on Friday.
     
    In British Parliament Wednesday, Liberal Democrat MP Edward Davey questioned British Foreign Secretary David Miliband why Britain’s representative in UN earlier failed to support a briefing on Sri Lanka while ministers in London call for ceasefire.
     
    Miliband replied: “I am sorry to hear the hon. Gentleman talk in that way, because he knows that a failed resolution—one that faces a veto—is worse than no resolution at all, and it would strengthen precisely the forces that he and I oppose. I can assure him that our diplomats, whether in New York or in the region, are all working off the same script, which is one that has been set by the Prime Minister and me.”
     
    The British silence at UN on Friday may mean that the UN Security Council is still not seasoned to consider the plight of Tamils in Sri Lanka.
     
    At the beginning of the UN briefing Russia said that it is only a ‘one-time hearing’.
     
    The permanent representative of US was not present during the briefing.
     
    The British representative at UN, John Sawers, who earlier said that the LTTE’s long ‘blighting’ of Colombo should be brought to an end, neither demanded a presidential statement of the council after the briefing nor answered questions put on Sri Lanka by the media, according to Inner City Press.
     
    Interestingly, John Holmes admitted his ‘knowing’ stance on events.
     
    When asked by Inner City Press on reportedly mischievous translations he received while visiting civilians in Vavuniyaa, he replied, “you should credit me with enough intelligence to assess what people told me, surrounded by the military’s armed guards”.
  • … May Need Bailout as debt drains reserves
    Sri Lanka may need a bailout from international donors to help pay its debts as the island’s 26- year civil war draws to a close.
     
    Since August, the South Asian nation has spent half its foreign reserves, now $1.7 billion, on supporting its currency, paying debt and buying imports. That doesn’t leave much after the government shells out another $900 million due in 2009. The reserves aren’t getting replenished as the ailing world economy pummels exports and overseas investors flee emerging markets.
     
    President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s government is unwilling to turn to the International Monetary Fund, which requires austerity measures in return for loans. Securing financing from other countries may be challenging for a nation whose credit rating from Standard & Poor’s is the lowest apart from those of Bolivia, Pakistan, Grenada, Argentina and Lebanon. Fitch Ratings downgraded its outlook on Sri Lanka today.
     
    “Sri Lankan authorities have to act fast to beef up the country’s reserves,” said Ashok Parameswaran, senior emerging markets analyst at Invesco Inc. in New York. “Otherwise, they may have to devalue their currency significantly.”
     
    Since December, countries including Russia, Vietnam and Kazakhstan have weakened their currencies rather than use reserves to prop them up. That has made imports costlier, reducing demand for goods from overseas.
     
    Neighbouring Currencies
    Sri Lanka kept its exchange rate at about 108 rupees per dollar between January and October 2008 to slow inflation, even as the currencies of neighbouring India and Pakistan weakened. The Sri Lankan rupee has since dropped to 114.95.
     
    “Sri Lanka has relaxed the rupee in stops and starts, but they need a controlled devaluation,” said Agost Benard, a Singapore-based sovereign analyst at S&P. “The implicit currency peg will have to change and that’s one of the long-term solutions to the nation’s foreign-exchange problems.”
     
    S&P cut Sri Lanka’s rating by one level in December to B, five steps below investment grade. Fitch Ratings lowered the nation’s rating outlook to negative from stable because of “heightened concern” over a “marked” decline in the nation’s reserves. It affirmed Sri Lanka’s rating at B+, which is four levels below investment grade and unchanged since April 2008.
     
    Sri Lanka is banking on currency swaps with central banks, sales of treasury bills and bonds and offering higher interest rates on deposits to citizens living abroad to boost reserves.
    Tamil Tigers
     
    Once the northern region of the country is recovered from the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, peace will lead to more remittances and aid for construction of houses, schools and hospitals, said P. Nandalal Weerasinghe, chief economist at the Central Bank of Sri Lanka. This will provide “some balance of payments support,” he said.
     
    The Tamil Tigers, who have been fighting for a separate homeland, have retreated from most of the northern part of the island nation. They now control a pocket of only 87 square kilometers (34 square miles) in the Mullaitheevu region in the northeast, the Sri Lankan Defense Ministry said Feb. 22.
     
    John Keells Holdings Plc, Sri Lanka’s biggest diversified company, last week doubled its stake in Union Assurance Plc, a local insurer, to 74 percent. The company said it’s anticipating that the liberation of Tamil Tigers-occupied territories will spur demand for finance and insurance.
    To be sure, the dispute hasn’t ended yet.
     
    “Although there is the possibility of outright military defeat of the Tamil Tigers, a potentially different style and lower-intensity conflict will continue to pose a risk to growth prospects and public finances,” S&P’s Benard said.
     
    Still Raiding
    Tamil Tigers launched an air raid in the Sri Lankan capital, Colombo, on Feb. 20. Their two aircraft were shot down, one crashing into a building housing the Inland Revenue Department and the second north of the city.
     
    Sri Lankan police yesterday arrested a Tamil newspaper editor in connection with the air raid, prompting a protest by media rights group Reporters Without Borders.
     
    At the end of November, Sri Lanka had 1.4 trillion rupees ($12 billion) of foreign debt outstanding. Its total debt is 3.4 trillion rupees, or 75 percent of the nation’s gross domestic product, according to S&P.
     
    Liabilities increased as Sri Lanka, which spends a fifth of its annual budget on defense, borrowed from local and foreign sources to build roads and ports, among other spending. The nation’s budget deficit has averaged 8.7 percent of GDP in the past decade.
     
    Debt ‘Distress’
    Sri Lanka must reduce reliance on dollar-denominated short- term commercial borrowings to ease public debt “distress,” the IMF said in October. It called on the government to weaken the rupee as part of a “comprehensive policy package that would underpin confidence in the currency.”
     
    The central bank said Jan. 19 that it will neither let the currency fall nor approach the IMF for a bailout to pay for imports and repay its debt.
    On Feb. 19 Governor Nivard Cabraal said the central bank received $200 million from Malaysia, declining to reveal the terms of the deal or whether it was a swap or any other facility with Bank Negara Malaysia. Bank Negara didn’t respond to an e- mail sent by Bloomberg News for comment.
     
    “It’s unlikely that Sri Lanka will go to the IMF for funds,” said Dushni Weerakoon, deputy director of the Institute of Policy Studies in Colombo. “At whatever cost, they will try to raise small sums from other countries.” 
  • Negative outlook for Sri Lanka…
    Sri Lanka’s credit rating outlook was downgraded to negative following the ‘marked’ decline in the country’s foreign exchange reserves.
     
    Down grading Sri Lanka’s credit rating outlook from stable to negative, Fitch Ratings on Friday February 27, rated Sri Lanka’s long-term foreign currency rating at B+, four levels below investment grade.
     
    Fitch also cited concerns about the stresses in the country's balance of payments, its fiscal deficit and the government's increased reliance on foreign-currency borrowing in recent years.
     
    "Without a sharp contraction in domestic demand to curtail imports, or a significant depreciation of the exchange rate to otherwise correct the trade imbalance, Sri Lanka may not have access to sufficient international funding to cover the current account shortfall and its international debt repayments, resulting in ongoing pressures on official reserves," the rating agency said in an email statement.
     
    Credit rating was not the only economic indicator that projected a bleak outlook for the country. In the same week the rating was downgraded the local currency hit an all time low value and the parliament was told that the country’s outstanding debt is at an all time high.
     
     
    All time low
    Sri Lanka's rupee, which has been steadily losing value in the past few months, hit a new all-time low of 115.75/95 a dollar on Friday February 27 amid import dollar demand from state banks, according to brokers.
     
    "The dollar is sold at 115.75 level and the offer is at 115.95," said a currency broker, who asked not to be named.
     
    Three other dealers confirmed the rate. "State banks are buying dollars for import bills, while one state bank still sells dollar at 114.25."
     
    Record debt
    On Thursday February 19, Sri Lanka’s Revenue minister, Ranjith Siyambalapitiya announced in the parliament that the country’s  total debt in the past 8 years had exceeded Rs. 3,400 billion.
     
    The minister further said that interest costs stemming from local and foreign loans had more than doubled during the same period.
     
    From 2001 to 2008, the country’s total local and foreign debt amounted to Rs. 3,436,837 million and by the end of last year interest costs per year was at a record Rs. 210 billion. An increase of Rs. 16 billion compared to the Rs. 94 billion interest costs in 2001.
     
     
    Presidential confession
    Sri Lankan political leaders who have been claiming that
    President Rajapakase’s Mahinda Chnintana has saved Sri Lanka from the devastation of the global economic meltdown, are now starting to realise the direction the country’s economy is heading.
     
    Rajapaksa speaking at a SAARC meeting last week labelled the financial crisis as a "common challenge to our region and to the world".
     
    "The effects of synchronised slow-down in developed economies, can reach us sooner than later," Rajapaksa cautioned.
     
    Sri Lanka’s economic growth slowed to 6.3 percent in the third quarter of 2008 from 7 percent in the previous three-month period as declining overseas demand eroded the country’s key exports - tea, rubber and textile.
  • Diaspora Tamils continue protests
    Tamils across the world held demonstrations and rallies highlighting the ongoing genocide of Tamils in Sri Lanka and urging the international community to intervene to stop the suffering of their kin and kith back home.
     
    Washington
    Nearly seven thousand U.S. and Canadian Tamils filled the Ellipse at the southern perimeter to the White House on Saturday February 21, as a show of solidarity with the more than 250,000 Tamil civilians undergoing daily aerial bombardment and artillery attacks in Vanni.
     
    The rally, organized jointly by the US-based activist group, Tamils Against Genocide (TAG) and several local organizations, drew a record crowd, dewarfing the "hurriedly arranged" counter-rally organized by supporters of Colombo, an AFP report said.
     
    A memorandum submitted to the State Department South Asia official demanded:
     
    Publicly condemn the atrocities committed by the Sri Lankan government.
     
    Ask the Government of Sri Lanka and the LTTE to allow unfettered access for international humanitarian aid agencies and journalists into the conflict zone.
     
    Exert political, economic or other pressure on Sri Lanka for an immediate ceasefire.
     
    Use your goodwill with Sri Lanka’s neighbors to exert pressure on Sri Lanka, and, together with the co-chairs bring about an immediate ceasefire.
     
    Help find a political solution where the Tamil people living in Sri Lanka and exiled in other countries are allowed to determine the terms of coexistence with the Sinhalese state based on the universally accepted principle of self-determination.
     
    Geneva
    More than 15,000 Diaspora Eelam Tamils from all over Europe gathered in front of the UN office in Geneva in Switzerland Friday, February 20 voicing their demands calling the Sri Lanka government of stop the war on Tamils at once.
     
    The representatives of the Eelam Tamils youth organizations handed a memorandum to the officials of the UN, during the demonstration.
     
    The demonstrators began their march from the park next to Geneva Railway Station bearing placards showing slogans such as, ‘We want Tamil Eelam’, ‘Our Leader is Pirapaharan’ and ‘Sri Lanka Government stop the war!’

    The demonstrators paid their homage to Murukathasan who had immolated himself in front of the UN office in an attempt to draw the attention of the world to the unending sufferings of the Vanni Tamils in the artillery barrage and bombings by the armed forces of Sri Lanka.

    Oslo
    Hundreds of Norwegian Tamils including many youngsters gathered in front of Norwegian parliament Monday, February 23 where they urged Norway government to help bring about a ceasefire immediately to stop the genocide of Tamils in Vanni.
     
    Tamil Youth Organization (TYO), which organized the demonstration in which members of Norway political parties addressed the gathering, submitted a memorandum to Norwegian parliament.
     
    “Sri Lanka government has unleashed a merciless genocidal war on the Tamils creating a humanitarian disaster in Vanni and we are demonstrating here today to stress the need to stop the war on the Tamils immediately,” TYO representatives said.

    Paris
    Thousands of Tamils marched in Paris on Saturday, February 28 to denounce the Sri Lankan government's genocide of the Tamils.
     
    TYP, who organised the march  said over 7000 people came together to protest against Sri Lanka’s genocide of Tamils..

    The marchers shouted slogans such "EU impose a truce", and "The Sri Lankan president is a murderer", and "Stop the Tamil genocide".
  • The Diaspora as genocide resistors
    Last issue we looked at the continuing failure of the United States, and its diplomatic allies, the co-chairs of the Sri Lankan Peace Process and leading European governments to comply with their obligations to the Tamil people under the 1948 UN Convention on Genocide. In this second part, we look at what ‘Genocide Resistors’ – particularly the Tamil Diaspora – can do to achieve compliance.
    Under the International Criminal Court (ICC) rules there is no time limit (statute of limitations) for prosecution of the particular crime of genocide, so heinous is it.
     
    In 2008 - unlike in 1958, 1977 and 1983 – Europe and North America have significant populations of motivated and politically organised Tamil citizens.
     
    This Diaspora can and must lobby for implementation of their host countries legal obligation to punish the genocides of 1977 and 1983, and the ongoing genocide today.
     
    Further, this legal understanding must form a base for Diaspora activity.
     
    Any mass protest seeking implementation of the UN Convention against genocide is not just entirely lawful: it is a civic duty, for it is a civic duty of citizens to highlight illegalities committed by their government.
     
    The Tamil Diaspora globally must ask the state and federal governments of their countries to recognise the genocide of Eelam Tamils and to abide by their UN treaty obligations to prevent and punish this genocide.
     
    If the Sinhala State is a genocide perpetrator, there are many genocide resistors. These are invariably Diaspora and local Tamil organisations that operate in an atmosphere of harassment, prejudice and even race hate.
     
    But to prevent or intimidate the genocide resistors - Tamil community organisations - from protesting against Tamil genocide is also collusion in the genocide.
     
    So for example given that July’s Ponghu Tamil event had as one objective among others the prevention of genocide of the Tamil people, the attempts by the Sri Lankan embassy and officials of “friendly” governments to obstruct these could constitute collusion.
     
    Blatant forms of collusion in genocide include sales of weaponry, surveillance or other military equipment to a government that is perpetrating genocide, as well as provision of military consultancy.
     
    Collusion includes military agreements that benefit from the proceeds of genocide: for example strategic naval use of the Trincomalee harbour, made possible by the forcible displacement of Tamil civilians, destruction of their lives and habitats.
     
    Collusion includes commercial agreements to benefit from the proceeds of genocide – for example land, access to the sea, oil, titanium and other natural resources acquired or made possible by the killing and forcible displacement of Tamil people from their traditional habitats.
     
    Collusion includes the direct or indirect financing of the perpetrators of genocide. Where aid is provided for “legitimate purposes”, that aid should be monitored so as to ensure it is not being misused. If there is lack of transparency or accountability – the aid should be withheld rather than risk it being used to perpetrate genocide. To fail to monitor such aid, knowing that conditions for genocide exist, is reckless at best, collusion at worst.
     
    With respect to Eelam, we see many international governments engaging in the forms of collusion outlined above: benefiting commercially or militarily from the proceeds of the genocide, for example, and providing weapons, training and advice.
     
    They do so with impunity, because they believe they can get away with it: they expect the Tamil people to be militarily crushed and so do not expect to be called to account.
     
    But the Tamil Diaspora must continue to assume good faith on the part of the international community and to persist with its case for justice.
     
    In addition to the Diaspora’s duty towards the Tamil people, the Diaspora has a civic duty (to their host countries) to ask their governments to comply with the UN convention.
     
    The first step is for the Tamil Diaspora to inform all key decision makers – including and especially the relevant ambassadors, members of parliament, Foreign office and State department officials – that we hold that genocide is taking place.
     
    We must then ask them to agree with us. If they do not, we can ask for reasons and engage in dialogue.
     
    This notification of genocide must be made individually as well as to the relevant department as a group – to each person as well as their department or office – so that people can be held individually accountable.
     
    In summary the Diaspora must first build awareness of genocide – so that international collaborators cannot later say: “I did not know.”
     
    As a first step in notification, one can cite recognition of genocide by individual politicians, specific political parties, the international media and civil society.
     
    Such popular recognition precedes official government recognition.
     
    For example, the Times of London recognised genocide in 1983 saying “"Genocide is a word that must be used with care; but how else is one to describe the impulse which guided the Sinhalese lynch-mobs this week." 
     
    “The Hindu” and numerous Tamil publications in India have taken a similar position in 2009. The Toronto Star ran a headline in January “Tamils protest Genocide”.
     
    Elected Tamil politicians, both in Sri Lanka and Tamil Nadu in India have recognised genocide.
     
    For example, the Hindu recently ran a headline, quoting DMK leader Kanimozhi: “Tamils gradually being wiped out in Sri Lanka”.
     
    There is widespread recognition among the political parties of Tamil Nadu of the ongoing genocide of Tamils in Sri Lanka.
     
    MDMK leader Vaiko, VCK President Thirumavalan, PMK leader Ramdoss, the Communist Party of India, and many other Tamil Nadu politicians have recognised the genocide of Tamils in Sri Lanka.
     
    Vaiko has written to the Indian Premier, Manmohan Singh warning him of the genocide of Tamils. He cannot later say: “I did not know”.
     
    In Sri Lanka itself, the Tamil National Alliance, have repeatedly recognised genocide and called upon International governments to act.
     
    Many Tamil media figures such as film director Seeman and Oscar and Grammy nominated musician M.I.A. (Maya Arulpragasam) have come out to recognise genocide. Poets, artists and actors have recognised genocide.
     
    For the record, the Diaspora must then seek formal recognition of the continuing crime of genocide (as opposed to specific individual acts).
     
    Governments that refuse to acknowledge genocide (because this will require them to comply with the UN convention) may nevertheless be persuaded to recognise “Acts of genocide” as first step.
     
    The Diaspora must invoke the UN Convention for the Prevention and Punishment of Genocide and seek action against current genocide. Economic sanctions against the perpetrating government, military and travel restrictions are such actions.
     
    The Diaspora must ask that its own efforts to prevent genocide must be fully assisted by their own governments.
     
    The Tamil Diaspora has demonstrated against tremendous odds its determination to resist genocide and its overwhelming support for a Free Eelam.
     
    We toil in the face of both thinly veiled intimidation and malignant prejudice under euphemisms such as the “war on terror”.
     
    But it is the International community’s wilful refusal to prevent genocide, their obstruction of Tamil efforts to resist genocide, their willingness to benefit from the proceeds and even active collusion in it, that remains the real crime.
  • Black Air Tiger urges Vanni youth to join for final battle
    Colonel Rooban, one of the two Black Air Tigers who flew LTTE aircrafts hitting Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF) Headquarters and the SLAF base at Katunayake Friday, in a letter left behind, urged the Tamils in Vanni to join the Liberation Tigers and strengthen the LTTE's military forces in the fight against the Sri Lanka Military forces.
     
    English translation of excerpts of Rooban’s statement in Tamil:

    “You are aware that our expatriate Eelam Tamils are very active on conductive non-violent protests including extreme self-sacrifice of self-immolation world-wide to show solidarity with us. While the enemy is single-mindendly on a mission to destroy us, I urge you to strengthen our Leader’s hands, and join in this inevitable last battle against our enemy.

    “The intensity of destruction unleashed against our people exceeds that of the similar acts by Adolph Hitler engineered to exterminate Jews. I am grateful for your continued fight against our enemy, especially amidst the recent atrocities in the hospitals and safe areas by the genocidal State armed forces.”
     
    “Sri Lanka Army (SLA) is not discriminating different age-groups while it slaughters our people. I joined the movement during my college days to combat the harassment meted out to my family and relatives through forced displacement. We need more and more youths and able people to join our forces to increase our military strength.

    “We have enough armaments. We urgently need man-power. Only safeguarding our nation and land, you will be able to perform your sacred duty of providing safety and security to your parents and relatives. I ask you to have faith in your Leader, and to strengthen him; we will reach our goals towards liberation very soon.

    “Dear beloved people of Vanni, while we march with explosives inside the lion’s den, let’s show the strength of Tamil people. I have never dreamed of wasting one’s precious life; However, I feel privileged and proud that I can become a black tiger to earn respect for my people and my homeland.”

    “Thirst of Tamils, Tamil Homeland.”
  • State Security
    The people of Vanni are being savaged by the Sri Lankan state with the support of the international community. Having hemmed over 250,000 terrified Tamils into an enclave in their home district of Mullaitivu, the Sinhala military is attacking them with artillery, rockets, cluster bombs and incendiaries. Having unilaterally and arbitrarily defined what it mockingly calls a 'safe zone', President Mahinda Rajapakse’s government is confidently slaughtering the terrified civilians who fled into it. Over two thousand Tamil people, including seven hundred children, have been killed in the past two months. For months the government has maintained a blockade. Each day dozens of wounded civilians bleed to death for lack of medical supplies. Deaths from starvation have now begun.
     
    The international community is well aware of all this. UN and ICRC staff from inside the Mullaitivu enclave are providing daily briefings. So are their colleagues in Vavuniya and Colombo. The UN's satellites have accurate pictures of the refugee camps, as well as the shelling and bombing and the dying. The British government admitted in Parliament that the Colombo government is prepared to commit acts of genocide. If it so wishes, the international community could stop the carnage; it is a fiction that this impoverished, indebted island state cannot be bent to the will of the world.
     
    Yet, for all that talk in the past few years about 'Responsibility to Protect', 'international humanitarian law', 'human rights' and so on, what we are seeing is simply indifference to the slaughter of the Tamils. A myriad of Tamil protests, petitions and pleas have failed to produce a response. Much was expected when the UN sent one of its top humanitarian officials. He came, he saw, he praised the murderous regime in Colombo and then he went. Human Rights Watch report issued a shocking report on the very day Sir John Holmes - accompanied by a Sri Lankan minister and the military - toured one of the government's concentration camps in Vavuniya. It was simply ignored. The briefing he gave to the UN Security Council was devoid of criticism of the government.
     
    Instead, the international community continues to blame the Liberation Tigers. Apparently, it is the LTTE, not the Sinhala state, that is the cause of the Tamils' suffering. And instead of pressing the Sinhala state to stop its genocidal attacks, the international community is offering to evacuate the people from Mullaitivu to the concentration camps in Vavuniya and Jaffna. In the past two decades, one in four Tamils have been driven from their homes - either abroad or to squalid refugee camps in the island. The international community is content with this. Yet, the Tamils must be handed over to the Sinhala state.
     
    When the Serbian military laid siege to Sarajevo for three years, the UN ran food convoys to the Bosniak people. It did not offer to evacuate them from their homes into Serb-run camps. When the Sudanese military and militia began massacring the people of Darfur, there was no question of moving them into government-run concentration camps. Yet, apparently the Tamils must be handed over to Sinhala state.
     
    As we have argued before, the suffering being heaped on our people by the Sinhala military and the international community is for one purpose: to make us give up our demand for self-determination and submit to Sinhala hegemony. Indeed, that is why for the past three decades, the state has been able to brutalize our people with absolute impunity. At no stage has the international community intervened to protect us. Never has it stood up for us. Instead it has always praised the Sinhala ethnocracy as a democracy and lavished aid, weapons and political support.
     
    The vehemence of the international-backed onslaught against Tamil civilians is a direct consequence of the ferocity of LTTE resistance to the Sinhala military. Whilst Colombo holds forth coloured maps and pictures of the debris of war it has captured, it hides the bloody war of attrition underway inside those parts of Vanni over which the Lion flag was raised. Contrary to the hopes and expectations of the international community, the LTTE is not going to buckle this time either, despite the redoubled efforts of the Sinhala state.
     
    This is the key lesson for the Tamils: the future the international community envisages for our people - and thinks appropriate for us - is to be incarcerated in concentration camps and subject to the whim of the Sinhalese. If we wish any other future, then we must take our own steps to shape it. And unless the Tamils have the protection of our own state with our own armed forces, we will always be at risk from the Sinhala state.
  • Meanwhile India supplies vital drug for treating injured soldiers.
    India has agreed to supply a vital drug in short supply in Sri Lanka for post surgery treatment for the injured soldiers, according to media reports.
     
    Nimal Siripala De Silva , Sri Lankan Health Minister, told the Sri Lankan Parliament that India has agreed to supply peathadine, a vital pain killer medicine used post surgery, for the injured Sri Lankan soldiers.
     
    Responding to concern raised by Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) over the shortage of the drug in the country, Minister De Silva admitted that there was a shortage of this drug in hospitals in Anuradhapura due to problems in importing it.
     
    "Fresh stock of this medicine is due to come from India in the next few days," he said.
     
    Peathadine, is classed as a narcotic and is administered to patients post surgery as an anaesthetic. The drug requires special regulations for importing it.
  • Lack of antibiotics force doctors to re-amputate patients in Vanni
    The medical care system Vanni is on the verge of complete collapse and the doctors are in deep despair due to lack of lifesaving medicines and necessary equipment required treat patients, according to the Regional Director of Health Services (RDHS) in Mullaiththeevu district.
     
    Full text of the letter, dated 15 February, 2009, follows:

    Secretary
    Ministry of Health
    Suwasiripaya
    Colombo

    Dear Sir,

    Situation Report for the current week

    I am in deep despair, much same as my colleagues with me, while starting to write this letter as we have been cursed to witness yet another pathetic scene of scores of dead and injured brought to the Puthumaththalan Hospital following shelling attack at Ampalavanpokkananai, the adjoining village situated well within the new safety area. We are confused and clueless on how to confront this situation of mass causalities with bare minimum facilities available.

    Our health care system is on the verge of complete collapse with the abandoning of all the rest of temporary hospitals functioning at Udaiyarkaddu, Suthanthirapuram and Thevipuram, leaving Puthumaththalan as the only operational health facility. Being a small school building transformed into a primary surgical care unit, there is little space and poor infrastructure, hardly sufficient to provide even basic standards in emergency surgical care to the large influx of war wounded daily more than a hundred on average – sometimes as high as 200.

    Though we are working round the clock despite being physically and mentally exhausted, lack of lifesaving medicines required for surgical operations and post operative management-parenteral high potency antibiotics, anesthetics esp. Ketamine, intravenous fluids, surgical consumables and accessories – and on top of all, absence of an aseptic operation theatre, seriously affecting the outcome in many cases. We were in total frustration when we had to re-amputate the limbs at higher levels in days after initial lifesaving amputations, just because of lack of IV penicillin and other antibiotics essential to prevent fatal sepsis. If we are not going to receive at least IV antibiotics, anesthetics and surgical consumables in minimum amounts ASAP, we may not be able to provide even emergency first aid to the war wounded. Therefore, it is mandatory to maintain a stable and safe transportation service, via land or sea route, to transfer the war wounded and of course other acutely ill medical patients including obstetric and paediatric emergencies, in order to reduce high mortality and morbidity rates.

    I have to mention with pain that we have recorded at least 04 child deaths due to diarrhoeal diseases and death of 02 elders due to acute respiratory distress during this week indicating the high vulnerability of the IDPs living under most tragic conditions with out any basic amenities or adequate healthcare support. The safety area declared during this week compression of a narrow strip of coastal land approximately 10 sq km, with thick resident population now, with the additional 2 lakh IDPs taking refugee in the area, drinking Water and dispose refill we going to be problems. The preventive health services have been inadequate: The ante natal and well baby clinics are really held; EPI vaccination program’s got disturbed due to inability to maintain the vital cold chain; water and sanitation facilities are hardly sufficient and poorly supervised; acute and chronic malnutrition are very much likely soon as unemployment and starvation are the rules of time. If this situation continues further, control of communicable disease, especially water borne, may become impossible and could thus cause havoc.

    Therefore we as medical officers remain here to rescue our own people from disaster despite the risks, would like to urge you to use your good offices to support and strengthen us to deliver our noble services with dedication.

    Thanking you
    With kind regards,


    Dr.T.Varatharajan
  • Colombo killed 700 children in 2 months – Voice of Tigers
    Voice of Tigers, the official radio of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam on Sunday, March 1 said Sri Lankan armed forces have killed 2,018 Tamil civilians in January and February in Vanni and that 700 of the victims were children.
     
    The VoT has been airing a program, "Bridging the beloved" (Uravup Paalam), where civilians have been providing details of their missing family members and whereabouts of the remaining members in the hope of locating their missed ones.

    Some families were reporting that children as young as 5 years of age were missing during the artillery barrage by the Sri Lanka Army while they were displacing from a location to another. The radio broadcast has become a main source of information assisting people to find their kin and kith.

    The US based Human Rights Watch, in its report issued on 20 February, have also put the civilian casualty figures at 2,000.

    Newly obtained information places total civilian casualties at 7,000, with 2,000 deaths, the HRW said.

    “During a three-week period from January 20 to February 13, 2009, independent observers in the Vanni collected information on 5,150 civilian casualties-1,123 deaths and 4,027 injuries-from the current fighting. This number was derived from a compilation of reports that recorded individual casualties, the date and place of the attack, and the nature of the attack," the HRW report stated.

    Air attacks with cluster bombs, fire bombs and artillery barrage with cluster fitted shells have been systematically deployed by the Sri Lankan forces on civilian targets.
  • WFP delivers Food by sea but amount only enough for a day.
    A new sea route to deliver urgently needed relief to tens of thousands of civilians people in Vanni has been opened following food convoys through land route remain suspended for more than a month. 
     
    However only a fraction of the food required is reaching the people despite rising concerns over a growing food crisis.

    As most internally displaced persons are now concentrated in a new safety zone along the eastern coastline of Mullaitheevu district, the sea route is seen as a viable alternative to reach those in need. 
     
    On Wednesday February 26, World Food Programme (WFP) transported some 40 metric tons of food - enough only to feed some 80,000 people for a single day - by sea to the government-designated safety zone in the Vanni, where approximately 300,000 internally displaced Tamils are living.
     
    The first delivery by sea was made on Wednesday 18 February. It was also a fraction of the amount needed.
     
    “Pressurised by international community, the Colombo government allowed the transportation of a meager amount of food – 30 tonnes – for a population of 300,000”, said LTTE's Puthukkudiyiruppu Political Head C. Ilamparithi, following the delivery.
     
    Calling the relief an eye-wash Ilamparithi further added: "When distributed the amount each one would be getting is 100 grams: roughly 66 grams of flour, 20 grams of Dahl and 14 grams of sugar per person".
     
    Following the deliveries by sea, Adnan Khan, WFP Representative and Country Director in Sri Lanka said: “Now the challenge is to sustain this activity and ship sufficient quantities of food to meet the needs of tens of thousands caught in the conflict,”
     
    According to WFP calculations, 40MT can only feed about 11,500 people for a week and according Khan, WFP’s goal is to deliver up to 300 metric tons of food commoditieper week by boat. s
     
    “Food assistance is urgently needed for those still trapped in the conflict zone,” Khan added.
     
    Commenting on the suspension of land route Khand said: “The security situation since 16 January has not been conducive for food convoys to go in,”
     
    “The resumption of [land] convoys will only be possible if there is a lull in the conflict, but right now that’s not happening.” Khan added.

    WFP began food convoys to the Vanni on 2 October after its relocation from Kilinochchi in the Vanni following the government banning relief agencies from operating in the conflict zone where they are most needed.

    A total of 11 WFP convoys comprising up to 60 trucks at a time continued until 16 January, when they were suspended following delays in Sri Lankan authorities granting permission and escalation in fighting that resulted in convoy personnel being trapped in the Vanni for almost a week.
  • HRW: SLA ‘slaughtering civilians’
    Human Rights Watch (HRW) based in New York has accused the Sri Lanka Army (SLA) of ‘slaughtering’ civilians with indiscriminate shelling in its attempt to finish off the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
    HRW, in a a 45-page report published on February 19, following a two-week fact-finding mission to northern Sri Lanka, estimated 2,000 civilians have been killed and 5,000 have been injured in January alone and called on the Sri Lankan government to end its "indiscriminate artillery attacks" on civilians.
    The New York based group has criticized the Sri Lankan Government’s conduct, particularly in their handling of an estimated 36,000 civilians, who have fled the conflict zone.
    James Ross, legal and policy director at Human Rights Watch, said: "This 'war' against civilians must stop. Sri Lankan forces are shelling hospitals and so-called safe zones and slaughtering the civilians there."
    "Sri Lankan forces are shelling hospitals and so-called safe zones ad slaughtering the civilians there." Ross added.
    The rights group also criticized the Sri Lankan Government’s conduct in its handling of an estimated 36,000 civilians, who have fled the conflict zone.
    Commenting on the treatment of internally displaced people by the Government, Ross said, “They are held by the Government in squalid military-controlled camps and hospitals with little access to the outside world”.
    “The Government seems to be trying its best to keep its role in their ordeal away from public scrutiny." Ross added.
    The HRW representative is not alone in expressing his concern over the proposed “welfare villages”, which are being enforced by the Government.
    Prominent Tamils worldwide, including India, Britain and Sri Lanka have likened these “welfare villages” to the conditions of concentration camps set up by the Nazi government during the Second World War under Hitler’s rule.
    The UN Under-Secretary General for Humanitarian Affairs, John Holmes urged the Government to ensure the camps met international standards during his visit this week.
    Holmes said, "Our concern is ... to make sure international law and principles are being fully met in the transition period before they return to their homes once military operations are over."
    However, Rights groups say the plans for these “welfare villages” violate international law and monitoring camp conditions is difficult whilst the Government insists on blocking most journalists and aid workers.
    In its report Human Rights Watch also condemned the LTTE for "increased brutality" towards trapped civilians and accused the organisation of preventing civilians from leaving the conflict zone.
    However, these unsubstantiated accusations have been dismissed by LTTE political chief B. Nadesan as “malicious propaganda”.
    In a recent interview Nadesan declared “There are 300,000 people who want to stay with us because they are confident that we are their guardians”.
  • LTTE aircrafts target SLAF in Colombo
    Two Tamileelam Air Force (TAF) aircraft on Black Air Tiger mission carried out successful air raids diving into Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF) Headquarters in Colombo and into the SLAF base at Katunayake, according to the LTTE.
     
    One air craft targeted the Slave Island area where the SLAF Headquarters is located and the other the SLAF base at Katunayake between 9:20 and 9:45 p.m. Friday, February 20.
     
    As the LTTE aircraft approached around 9:30 pm, Colombo plunged into darkness and anti-aircraft fire lit up the night sky. Thousands of tracer bullets were fired from all the corners of the city, including the Katunayake International Airport.

    Eyewitnesses near Slave Island reported a loud explosion. A canteen worker, Ranjith Dissanayake, 45, said he saw the aircraft hit the tax office. "There was a huge explosion and I was thrown on the ground," he said.
     
    47 persons, including Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF) airmen, were rushed to hospital from Slave Island. Several of the wounded have sustained serious injuries, the sources said. Two of them succumbed to their injuries.
     
    At least 6 persons were wounded inside Katunayake airbase.

    The Tigers released photograph of the two Black Air Tigers, Col. Roopan and Lt. Col. Siriththiran with LTTE leader Velupillai Pirapaharan before embarking on their mission.

    Both the TAF pilots have earlier been decorated with Blue Tiger award for having carried out successful air raids on enemy targets, according to a news release issued by the LTTE.
     
    The air raid is seen as major embarrassment to Sri Lankan Government which recently claimed it had destroyed the last air strip used by the LTTE.
     
    The attack also put stop to Sri Lanka’s false propaganda that the war is coming to an end and clearly shows that the LTTE retains its ability to stage strategic strikes.
  • SLAF jet shot down over Mullaiththeevu
    A Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF) bomber was shot down in Mullaiththeevu on Friday February 27 at 11:25 am, according to civilians sources in Iranaippaalai.
     
    Several civilians saw the jet explode in mid-air as it was beginning an attack run towards an unidentified locality. A huge plume of smoke followed after the flaming debris fell to earth, they said.
     
    The LTTE did not comment on the attack. Meanwhile, Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF) spokesman Wing commander Janaka Nanayakara has denied the report that one of their aircraft was shot down in Vanni.

    The civilians observers could not say in whose controlled area the wreckage had fallen. The Sri Lankan army (SLA) is locked in fierce clashes with the LTTE in areas west of Puthukkudiyiruppu.

    The civilians could not identify the aircraft type - SLAF operates Israeli built Kfirs and Mig-27s – and could not say what had brought the plane down. Defence writers observing Sri Lanka have long said the Tigers do not have surface-to-air missiles (SAMs).

    The civilian sources in Iranaippaalai said, however, that the SLAF, which continuously attacked Mullaiththeevu stopped flying over Vanni for 3 days after the LTTE launched an air raid against SLAF installations in Colombo last Friday night.

    Sri Lanka claimed that both LTTE aircraft were shot down Friday before the pilots dropped their bombs and that one plane flew into the Inland Revenue building after being hit by anti-aircraft fire.

    The LTTE said their pilots, who were earlier awarded with Neelap Puli Viruthu (The Blue Tiger Award) for five consecutive and successful flight operations of attack, were on a Black Air Tiger mission and gave military rank of Colonel and Lieutenant Colonel to the pilots.
  • Privacy goes public in Sri Lanka
    It was just past 10 p.m. when the hulking bus sputtered to a stop at this military checkpoint, 70 miles from the front lines of this country's civil war.
     
    The passengers quietly exited the bus and stood behind the razor wire, identification cards in hand. The men split off into one line. A far smaller number of women went into a separate row, some cradling sleeping babies.
     
    But it was the women's line that took twice as long to navigate. That's because female officers rummaged through women's purses and bags before moving on to their breasts, even feeling the insides of their bras for explosives.
     
    They didn't stop there. They patted down their groins and occasionally looked inside their underwear. Pregnant women routinely had their swollen bellies squeezed or prodded, just to make sure.
     
    Women are often singled out for scrutiny because, in Sri Lanka's 25-year civil war, more than two-thirds of the Tamil Tiger suicide bombers have been women, according to experts from the New York-based Council on Foreign Relations.
     
    The group, known officially as the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, has had the highest number of female suicide bombers in the world and was the first to widely use women in suicide attacks, according to the FBI and military experts.
     
    A woman from the rebel group's Black Tiger cadre killed former Indian prime minister Rajiv Gandhi in 1991. More recently, on Feb. 9, a female suicide bomber from the Tamil Tigers detonated explosives at a checkpoint as female officers in the Sri Lankan army frisked her. The blast killed 28 people, according to government reports.
     
    In Sri Lanka, an Indian Ocean island of 21 million where modesty is a virtue and women still wade into the sea in billowing saris, the focus on women at checkpoints can be painful - some turn red and even cry as they are being frisked.
     
    Overall, Sri Lanka's stepped-up security - the routine traffic stops, countless checkpoints, car searches, bag checks and frisking - is testing the boundaries of what people here are willing to endure for the sake of their safety.
     
    The experience could serve as a barometer for other countries forced to balance civil freedoms and privacy rights against the need to protect residents from terrorism.
     
    Across much of South Asia, suicide attacks and bomb blasts are increasing.
     
    In India, which suffered terrorist attacks in eight cities last year, frisking has become a part of daily life at malls, movies theaters, five-star hotels and even hospital emergency rooms.
     
    Women's groups are pushing not only for more female guards, but also for some basic protections, such as separate curtained-off areas, more metal-detecting wands and fewer hands-on searches, which some rights groups say are an affront to women in a region where nakedness is still highly taboo.
     
    "You really feel humiliated. Even when a female is putting her hands all over your body, men are often watching," said Roshan Farid, 39, a researcher for a women's rights group in Sri Lanka.
     
    She passes through about 14 checkpoints during her trips from the capital of Colombo to the northern region of Mannar.
     
    "On my way home, there are about nine checkpoints where no female officers are working."
     
    In Sri Lanka, the level of security is ratcheted up after every attack.
     
    The country is hyper-militarized, and the movement of its residents is tightly regulated, especially now that the Sri Lankan army has cornered the LTTE in a tiny patch of jungle.
     
    "The frisking in Sri Lanka now is very intimate, and it feels shocking and rude," said Ila Kumar, an Indian woman who frequently makes business trips to Colombo. "But it's a question we are asking in India and maybe all over the world, also: Is it worth it if it stops even one female with a bomb in her bra?"
     
    Sweeping emergency regulations introduced in August 2006 in Sri Lanka have given the security forces expansive powers of search, arrest, detention and seizure of property.
     
    They are also permitted to hold individuals in unacknowledged detention for up to 12 months, according to Human Rights Watch.
     
    Sri Lanka's defense minister, Gotabhaya Rajapaksa, the brother of President Mahinda Rajapaksa, defended the searches, comparing the country to the United States after the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks, when some Americans bristled at having to remove their shoes and belts at airports.
     
    "People complain about checkpoints and roadblocks," the defense minister, who once lived in California, said in an interview.
     
    "But what we are doing is saving innocent lives. This is what terrorism has done to us. We don't want to do it."
     
    Few people question the need for checkpoints in a conflict that has claimed 70,000 lives and is being waged by a group that the United States has labeled a terrorist organization.
     
    Tamil Tigers say they want a separate homeland after decades of discrimination at the hands of Sri Lanka's Sinhalese Buddhist majority.
     
    With the conventional ground war in Sri Lanka apparently nearing an end, experts expect suicide attacks to increase, especially in urban areas. That could put the country's minority Tamil civilian population at risk of increased ethnic profiling, referred to here as Traveling While Tamil.
     
    Some groups have suggested allowing a third party to monitor checkpoints, and several women's groups have demanded that female guards be present, especially at rural outposts, which often have only male guards.
     
    "No one is disputing the need for checkpoints," said Meenakshi Ganguly, a researcher at Human Rights Watch.
     
    "But there needs to be more training in Sri Lanka to screen civilians in a respectful way. Right now, it's the behavior of a victor's army. Tamils feel like second-class citizens."
     
    The heart of the war has centered on the discrimination that Tamils, who are largely Hindu and make up about 12 percent of the population, have felt for decades in Sri Lanka, said Beate Arnestad, a Norwegian filmmaker who made a 2007 documentary, "My Daughter the Terrorist," about two female Tamil Tiger suicide bombers.
     
    "Who won't be brainwashed if the only experience you have in life is such a cruel war," Arnestad said.
     
    "The female suicide bombers think, 'I would rather die with a weapon in my hand, defending the cause, than become a victim of the war.' They think the Tigers saved them, the Tigers are the way to have freedom," Arnestad added.
     
    Many of the women joined the Black Tiger squad because they felt respected and secure within that force, after reports of Sri Lankan army soldiers sexually assaulting Tamil women, Arnestad said.
     
    For many women, the fear of checkpoints has been heightened by stories of rape and harassment at the hands of those supposedly trying to restore order.
     
    Padmini Ganesan, 65, a Tamil schoolteacher, said many Tamil women remember the 1996 case of Krishanthi Kumaraswamy, an 18-year-old student who had just completed her school exams when she tried to cross a checkpoint in the northern city of Jaffna.
     
    She was gang-raped and strangled by Sri Lankan soldiers and a police officer, according to published reports at the time. To cover up their crime, the perpetrators also killed the student's mother, her brother and a neighbor who helped look for her.
     
    The Sri Lankan government, which was at first slow to investigate the case but eventually yielded to international pressure, convicted the soldiers and the police officer, sentencing them to death.
     
    "Every Tamil remembers the Krishanthi case," Ganesan said. "For us, the checkpoints are sort of a slow-motion thing, the trauma and the fear that we go through."
     
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